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- Early Western Civilization
- Egyption Tomb 5
-
- Egyptologists had lost interest in the site of tomb 5, which had been
- explored and looted decades ago. Therefore, they wanted to give way to
- a parking lot. However, no one would have ever known the treasure that
- lay only 200 ft. from King TutÆs resting place which was beyond a few
- rubble strewn rooms that previous excavators had used to hold their
- debris.
-
- Dr. Kent Weeks, an Egyptologist with the American University in Cairo,
- wanted to be sure the new parking facility wouldnÆt destroy anything
- important. Thus, Dr. weeks embarked in 1988 on one final exploration of
- the old dumping ground. Eventually he was able to pry open a door
- blocked for thousands of years, and announced the discovery of a life
- time. "We found ourselves in a corridor," he remembers. "On each side
- were 10 doors and at end there was a statue of Osiris, the god of the
- afterlife."
-
- The tomb is mostly unexcavated and the chambers are choked with debris,
- Weeks is convinced that there are more rooms on a lower level, bringing
- the total number to more than 100. That would make tomb 5 the biggest
- and most complex tomb ever found in Egypt, and quite conceivable the
- resting place of up to 50 sons of Ramesses II, perhaps the best known of
- all the pharaohs, the ruler believed to have been MosesÆnemesis in the
- book of Exodus.
-
- The Valley of the Kings, in which Tomb 5 is located, is just across
- the Nile River from Luxor, Egypt. It is never exactly been off the
- beaten track. Tourism has been brisk in the valley for millenniums:
- graffiti scrawled on tomb walls proves that Greek and Roman travelers
- stopped here to gaze at the wall paintings and hieroglyphics that were
- already old long before the birth of Christ. Archaeologists have been
- coming for centuries too. Napoleon brought his own team of excavators
- when he invaded in 1798, and a series of expeditions in 19th and early
- 20th centuries uncovered one tomb after another. A total of 61 burial
- spots had been found by the time the British explorer Howard Carter
- opened the treasure-laden tomb of King Tutankhamun in 1922.
-
- BritainÆs James Burton had burrowed into the site of Tomb 5 in 1820,
- and decided that there was nothing inside. A dismissive Carter used its
- entryway as a place to dump the debris he was hauling out of TutÆs tomb.
-
- In the late 1980s, came the proposed parking area and WeeksÆ concern.
- His 1988 foray made it clear that the tomb wasnÆt dull as Burton said.
- Elaborate carvings covered walls and referred to Ramesses II, whose
- own tomb was just 100 ft. away. The wall inscriptions on the companion
- crypt mentioned two of RamessesÆ52 known sons, implying some of the
- royal offspring might have been buried within. Then, came last monthÆs
- astonishing announcement.
-
- For treasure, the tomb probably wonÆt come to close to TutÆs because
- robbers apparently plundered the chamber long time ago. No gold or fine
- jewelry has been found so far, and Weeks does not expect to find any
- riches to speak of. The carvings and inscriptions Weeks and his friends
- have seen, along with thousands of artifacts such as beads, fragments of
- jars that were used to store the organs of the deceased, and mummified
- body parts which tell historians a great amount about ancient Egypt
- during the reign of its most important king. "Egyptians do not call him
- Ramesses II," Sabry Abd El Aziz, director of antiquities for the Qurna
- region said. " We call him Ramesses al-Akbar which means Ramesses the
- Great."
-
- During his 67 years on the throne stretching from 1279 B.C. to 1212 B.
- C., Ramesses could have filled an ancient edition of the Guinness Book
- of Records all by himself: he built more temples, obelisks and
- monuments; took more wives(eight, not counting concubines) and claimed
- to have sired more children (as many as 162, by some accounts) than any
- other pharaoh in history. He presided over an empire that stretched
- from present-day Libya to Iraq in the east, as far north as Turkey and
- southward into the Sudan.
-
- Today, historians know a great deal about Ramesses and the customs of
- his day. However, the newly explored tomb suddenly presents scholars
- with all sort of puzzles to ponder. For one thing, many of the tombs in
- the Valley of the Kings are syringe-like, plunging straight as a needle
- into the steep hillsides. For reasons nobody yet knows, says Weeks,
- this one "is more like an octopus, with a body surrounded by tentacles."
-
- The body in this case is an enormous square room, at least 50 ft. on a
- side and divided by 16 massive columns. In Ramesses æday the room would
- have seemed positively cavernous; now it is filled nearly to the top
- with rubble washed in over the centuries by infrequent flash floods.
- Anyone who wants to traverse the chamber has to crawl through a tight
- passage, lighted by a string of dim electric light bulbs where the dirt
- has been painstakingly cleared away.
-
- At the end of his claustrophobic journey lies the door Weeks found, and
- the relatively spacious corridors beyond. It is here, as well as in
- two outermost rooms that the artifacts were discovered. Weeks says,
- "The tomb was pretty well gone over in ancient times." The
- archaeologists have tracked down a record of one of those robberies
- which in about 1150 B.C. A 3,000 year old papyrus fragment housed in a
- museum in Turin, Italy which recounts the trial of a thief who was
- caught in the Valley of the Kings. He confessed under torture that he
- had broken into Ramesses IIÆs tomb and then returned the next night to
- rob the tomb of RamessesÆchildren, which across the path.
-
- Additional artifacts could lie buried if, as Weeks believes, the tomb
- had unusual split level design. The ceilings of the corridors to the
- left and right of the statue of Osiris slope downward and then drop
- abruptly about 4 ft. Moreover, the doors that line the corridors all
- lead to identical 10 ft. by 10 ft. chambers. The openings are only
- about 2.5 ft. wide which is too narrow to accommodate a princeÆs
- sarcophagus. That suggests to Weeks that the rooms werenÆt burial
- chambers but rather chapels for funeral offerings.
-
- Hieroglyphics above each painting make it clear that the pharaohÆs
- firs, second, seventh, and 15th sons were buried in Tomb 5. Many of the
- engravings show Ramesses presenting one or another of the newly deceased
- young men to Re-Harakhty, the god of the sun; Horus, the falcon headed
- god of the sky; or Hathor, goddes of motherhood, who is often depicted
- as a cow. These scenes reflect the belief that pharaohs were demigods
- while alive and that life was merely a short term way station on the
- road to full deity.
-
- Anything that researchers learn in Tomb 5 about RamessesÆoldest son,
- Amen-hir-khopshef, could be especially significant to religion
- scholars. Cautions Weeks: " IÆm not saying that we will prove the
- validity of the Bible,but scholars are hungry for any new information
- about this crucial time in Judeo-Christian history."
-
- The great buildings boom got under way as soon as Ramesses took throne
- at age 25, right after he discovered that the great temple his father
- Seti I had begun at Abydos was a shambles. The new pharaoh summoned his
- coursties to hear his plans for completing the work. Then, he went on
- to built dozens of monuments, including a temple at Luxor and Karnak and
- the cliff temples at Abu Simbel which were rescued from waters rising
- behind the Aswan Dam in the 1960s.
-
- In an age when life expectancy could not have been much more than 40,
- it must have seemed to his subjects that Ramesses would never die. At
- 92, the pharaoh went to join his ancestors and some of his sons in the
- Valley of the Kings. His internal organs were removed and placed in
- vessels known as canopic jars, and the body was embalmed and gently
- wrapped in cloth. Archaeologists found that the embalmers has even
- stuffed peppercorns into the monarchÆs nostrils to keep his aquiline
- nose from being flattened by the wrappings.
-
- Ramesses was then placed in a sarcophagus and interred, along with
- everything he would need to travel through the afterlife: The Book of
- the Dead, containing spells that would give the pharaoh access to the
- netherworld; tiny statuettes known as Ushabti, which would come alive to
- help the dead king perform labors for the gods; offering of food and
- wine; jewelry and even furniture to make the afterlife more
- comfortable. ItÆs likely, say scholars that Ramesses IIÆs tomb was
- originally far richer and more elaborate than King TutÆs.
-
- Unlike several other tombs in the valley, RamessesÆhas never been fully
- excavated. A French team is clearing it now, and the entire tomb could
- be ready for visitors within five years, but it is not expected to offer
- archaeologists any surprises. Tomb 5 is a completly different story.
- Weeks says " We have never found a multiple burial of a pharaohÆs
- children. We have no idea at all what happened to the most of the
- pharaohÆs children." Archaeologists either have to assume that Ramesses
- II buried his children in a unique way, or they have to consider the
- possibility that theyÆve overlooked a major type of royal tomb.
-
- Archaelogists still havenÆt resolved many basic questions about Tomb
- 5; when the tomb was built, over what priod of time it was used. Some
- answers could pop up as the excavations progress. Says Weeks " LetÆs
- hope the tomb yields a whole lot of new bodies. Then, medicos can get to
- work on them, and find out what therse princes were like, whether they
- had toothaches, how long they lived."
-
- WeeksÆteam plans to return to Tomb 5 for the month of July. Their goal
- is to get enough inside to explore the staircases and lower level.
- Weeks stimates that it will take at least five years to study and map
- the entire tomb, protect the decorations, install climate controls and
- electricity and shore up the precarious sections. Says Abdel Halim Nur
- el Din, secretary-general of egyptÆs Supreme Council of Antiquites: "
- WeÆre in no hurry to open this tomb to the public. We already have 10
- or 12 that they can visit." It is more improtant to preserve the tombs
- that have already been excavated, say the Egyptians, than make new ones
- accessible.
-
- The recent find gives scholars hope that more can be discovered even
- in this most explored of EgyptÆs archaeological sites. Notes the
- antiquities departmentÆs Abd El Aziz: " We still havenÆt found the tombs
- of Amenhotep I or Ramesses VIII," he says. " We have 62 tombs in the
- Valley of the Kings, but in the Western Valley, which runs perpendicular
- to it, we have discovered only two tombs.
-
- The pharaohs would be pleased to know they have held on to a few of
- their secrets. After all, they dug their tombs deep into hillsides,
- where the crypts would be safe from the rabble and robbers. However,
- they never counted on was the need for parking lots