Posted on 02/16/2014 2:27:10 PM PST by SunkenCiv
Photos by Jon Chase/Harvard Staff Photographer -- Genetic investigation continues to uncover more about King Tut, Egypts most famous pharaoh. Marc Gabolde, the director of the archaeological expedition of Universite Paul Valery-Montpellier III, told his Harvard audience that he is convinced that Tuts mother was his fathers first cousin, Nefertiti.
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King Tut (King Tut)
Now when he was a young man,
He never thought he'd see
People stand in line to see the boy king.
I liked the DNA evaluation that TUT was Irish! A later article said he was related to half of the men in Europe. That kinda took the fun out of it.
If three generations of first-cousin marriages look like a brother-sister marriage, I wonder what that says about maybe 20 generations of first-cousin marriages among most Muslims?
Quiet ! Not the camel. Tut was before the invention of Islam.
Why is he considered the most famous pharaoh,he left behind the most fabulous stuff?
” I wonder what that says about maybe 20 generations of first-cousin marriages among most Muslims?”
It says, massive amounts of birth defects, and a preponderance of idiots!
Yep, this Reuters article says:
The results showed that King Tut belonged to a genetic profile group, known as haplogroup R1b1a2, to which more than 50 percent of all men in Western Europe belong, indicating that they share a common ancestor. Among modern-day Egyptians this haplogroup contingent is below 1 percent, according to iGENEA.I'm going to guess that Egypt, with its fertile land, was invaded early on by some Celtic tribe coming from the north along the eastern Mediterranean coast, who became the new ruling class.
Much like the British nobility is descended from Vikings. (The Normans (North-men) who invaded England in 1066 were descended from Vikings who had earlier settled in northern France).
However, I was one of those who stood in line at the Boston Museum of Fine Arts to see the display back in the day. It really was mind blowing.
True,true, true...
He’s my favorite honky.
Bonnie Grey Jumping "King Tut" over auto, cheyenne frontier day 1925,
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I already knew that Ramses the Great had red wavy hair. That would go along with them being related to modern Europeans.
His tomb survived because he wasn’t one of the famous pharaohs. The tombs of the really famous pharaohs had long since been robbed. Basically his was overlooked.
Wikipedia says:
Tutankhamun seems to have faded from public consciousness in Ancient Egypt within a short time after his death, and remained virtually unknown until the 1920s. His tomb was robbed at least twice in antiquity, but based on the items taken (including perishable oils and perfumes) and the evidence of restoration of the tomb after the intrusions, it seems clear that these robberies took place within several months at most of the initial burial. Eventually the location of the tomb was lost because it had come to be buried by stone chips from subsequent tombs, either dumped there or washed there by floods. In the years that followed, some huts for workers were built over the tomb entrance, clearly not knowing what lay beneath. When at the end of the 20th Dynasty the Valley of the Kings burials were systematically dismantled, the burial of Tutankhamun was overlooked, presumably because knowledge of it had been lost and his name may have been forgotten.
It was the “most famous” reference that I was asking about. I have watched the History channel every time King Tut has been featured. He died so young it must be the amount of artifacts that makes him famous, not something he did.
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