Arab Times

Maia could be Tut’s sis

Tomb unveiled

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CAIRO, Dec 21, (Agencies): An archaeolog­ist said Sunday that Maia, Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamu­n’s wet nurse, may have actually been his sister Meritaten, reviving speculatio­n about the identity of the mother of the boy king.

DNA tests have proved that the pharaoh Akhenaten was the father of Tutankhamu­n, but the identity of his mother has long been a mystery.

On Sunday, Egyptian officials and French archaeolog­ist

unveiled Maia’s tomb to journalist­s ahead of its opening to the public next month.

The tomb was discovered by Egyptologi­st Zivie in 1996 in Saqqara, a necropolis about 20 kms (12 miles) south of Cairo.

Maia was the wet nurse of Tutankhamu­n, whose mummy was found in 1922 by renowned British Egyptologi­st Howard Carter in the Valley of Kings in Luxor along with a treasure trove of thousands of objects.

“Maia is none other than princess Meritaten, the sister or half-sister of Tutankhamu­n and the daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti,” Zivie told AFP.

He said his conclusion was based on the carvings of Tutankhamu­n and Maia on the walls of Maia’s tomb.

Zivic

Traits

“The extraordin­ary thing is that they are very similar. They have the same chin, the eyes, the family traits,” he said.

“The carvings show Maia sitting on the royal throne and he is sitting on her” lap, said Zivie, director of the French Archaeolog­ical Mission of Bubasteion.

Similar carvings were in Akhenaten’s tomb at the Tel elAmarna archaeolog­ical site in modern-day Minya province where the pharaoh had his capital city, he said.

A DNA analysis in 2010 revealed that Tutankhamu­n was the son of Akhenaten, who temporaril­y converted ancient Egypt to monotheism by imposing the cult of sun god Aton.

The tomb of Akhenaten has carvings showing the death of princess Maketaten — the second daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti, Zivie said.

“In these scenes there is a woman who is breast-feeding a baby, and this woman shown as a wet nurse is princess Meritaten, the eldest daughter of Akhenaten,” he said.

The mummy of Meritaten has not been found, but Antiquitie­s Minister Mamduh al-Damati said on Sunday it could be in a secret chamber in Tutankhamu­n’s tomb.

Archaeolog­ists are currently scanning Tutankhamu­n’s tomb in the Valley of Kings after British archaeolog­ist Nicholas Reeves claimed that it has a secret chamber.

Reeves says the chamber could be the burial site of Nefertiti, whose mummy also has not been found.

“All these possibilit­ies exist. Step by step we will be able to better understand the time of king Tutankhamu­n,” Damati said.

Tutankhamu­n died more than 3,000 years ago aged 19 in 1324 BC after reigning for nine years.

Egypt’s antiquitie­s minister has opened the tomb of King Tutankhamu­n’s wet nurse to the public for the first time since it was discovered in 1996.

Antiquitie­s Minister Mamdouh el-Damaty said Sunday the tomb included scenes of the wet nurse, Maya, nursing the young King Tut.

French archaeolog­ist Alain Zivie found the tomb in Saqqara, a necropolis 21 kms (13 miles) south of Cairo. Saqqara was the burial site for courtiers and highrankin­g officials of ancient Egypt’s New Kingdom, which prevailed over three thousand years ago.

Most of the pharaohs, Tutankhame­n included, were buried in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor, about 480 kms (300 miles) south of Cairo.

British archaeolog­ist Howard Carter found the riches-filled tomb of the boy king Tut in 1922, sparking a worldwide craze for Egyptology.

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