Sunday Express

Is there a secret tomb hidden in Tutankhamu­n’s great pyramid?

- By Rob Crossan

HE WAS a boy king who only reigned for nine years. But a full three millennia on from the death of Tutankhamu­n, new theories and evidence suggest that his burial tomb maybe hasn’t yet given up all of its secrets. In February 1922, British archaeolog­ist Howard Carter broke through to the inner chamber of King Tut’s resting place in Giza after years of excavation work.

The treasures within, which Howard described simply as “wonderful things”, included the mummy itself, which caused a sensation when it was exhibited at the British Museum in a show that attracted record crowds in 1972.

Now, British Egyptologi­st Nicholas Reeves, a former curator at the British Museum, argues in a book published this month that there are still many more treasures contained within the tomb behind secret walls, with Tutankhamu­n’s burial chamber perhaps being nothing more than the entrance hall to a resting place for another Pharaoh.

“I can understand the scepticism with which my proposals have been greeted in some quarters,” Reeves said in a recent public statement. “And I initially shared it. I’d spent a year testing and retesting my conclusion­s before feeling comfortabl­e enough to publish.

“To deny the evidence is not going to make it go away.”

Reeves’s theory is based upon years of research of King Tut’s tomb and originated a decade ago when a replica was built so the impact caused by millions of visitors to the original chamber could be minimised.

To create the replica a vast array of 3D images were taken. After much scrutiny Reeves noticed outlines of what he interprete­d as a sealed doorway and faint traces of another partition wall.

He claims that not only are there chambers still unseen, but one could contain the mummy of an Ancient Egyptian Queen, who, after her husband’s death, may have ascended to become a rare female Pharaoh, under the new name of Nefernefer­uaten.

“If this ‘secret’ tomb were to have ever existed, it may have been a pretty simple

one,” says Professor Aidan Dodson, BA, an Honorary Professor of Egyptology at the University of Bristol.

“Many of the key items of funerary equipment of the female pharaoh Nefernefer­uaten, who Nicholas, myself and many other Egyptologi­sts think was Queen Nefertiti, were re-purposed for Tutankhamu­n’s burial.

“So she was certainly not buried as a pharaoh. But finding such a famous figure as Nefertiti would be interestin­g.

“Genetic data would help resolve some outstandin­g issues, as might some objects.”

But the problems facing Reeves and his theory of the “secret” tomb of the ancient Queen and Pharaoh are myriad.

Not only are there practical issues about how to dig through to a secret chamber without destroying ancient walls, Reeves

also faces opposition from Cairo and Luxorbased Egyptologi­sts who completely dismiss his theory. One expert even declared “we should not pursue hallucinat­ions”.

Further radar searches by the Egyptian Antiquitie­s Ministry have reached the conclusion there is nothing beyond the walls of

King Tut’s chamber. Yet, strangely, these results have yet to be publicly released for further expert scrutiny.

What history we do know about the Ancient Egyptians throws up more than a few oddities about Tutankhamu­n’s 3,300year-old tomb, which Egyptologi­sts call

simply KV62. After dying at the age of 19, Egyptologi­sts believed King Tut was buried in a tomb that was actually intended for his successor.

It appears Tut’s legacy was all but erased from memory after his attempt to abandon worshippin­g multiple gods in favour of just one, the sun-disk called Aten, a practice set in place by his father Akhenaten.

It is possible that, being tainted with such an unpopular move, he was shifted to a smaller tomb by King Ay, his successor as ruler, who wanted the larger tomb intended for Tut, for himself.

“The storage chamber to the west of the burial chamber might have been adapted into a funerary suite for other missing members of the Amarna royal family,” says Reeves, a further twist on his theory that has gotten the world of Egyptology arguing.

But Professor Dodson is still far from

‘Denying the evidence won’t make it go away’

convinced that what would be one of the greatest archaeolog­ical finds in decades is imminent: “For me, the obvious conclusion is that if the undiscover­ed tombs were real, they would be for further storage rooms for more of Tutankhamu­n’s funerary equipment.”

PROF Dodson continued: “Nick’s Nefertiti-proposal seems to come out of thin air, as a massive leap of faith. He mentions that Nefernefer­uaten’s equipment was re-used for Tutankhamu­n – but this is surely an argument against an ‘intact’ burial of Nefertitin­eferneferu­aten being in the tomb. The non-use of her kingly material surely implies an ignominiou­s posthumous fate?”

If Prof Dodson is right, it seems possible Nefertiti didn’t get buried in a tomb at all, having possibly fallen into disgrace and denied any kind of traditiona­l chamber.

This belief has been supported by National Geographic, which is no longer financiall­y supporting Reeves’s efforts to find a hidden chamber.

Other Egyptologi­sts have stated the 3D radar scans are so sensitive they could mistakenly identify a layer of paint as something more solid. The potential hidden treasures could, in other words, be little more than a lining of wall plaster.

Although the Egyptian Ministry investigat­ion was not publicly released and other researcher­s and archaeolog­ists have found nothing, Reeves has not stopped his own ongoing treasure hunt.

In 2019 he assessed a date compiled by the company Geotechnic­s, which he believed showed there was a passage, filled with rubble, lying behind the north wall of

Tut’s tomb. Again, however, Reeve’s opponents have claimed that, far from this being a collapsed passage, beyond which a new chamber containing Nefertiti might lie, it is simply nothing more than a dead end.

What is beyond doubt is that, if Reeves can prove his many doubters wrong then

‘The tomb was actually a disappoint­ment’

the discovery of a possible tomb for the Queen-turned-pharaoh would be the most sensationa­l Ancient Egyptian archaeolog­ical find since Howard Carter dug through to find King Tut a century ago.

Amid the inevitable excitement among lovers of Ancient Egypt, Professor Dodson concludes it is important to continue to keep injecting high doses of caution, not only into the existence of the tomb, but how much we might be able to learn from it.

“If Reeves is right it would resolve certain issues – but in the bigger scheme of things it wouldn’t change the price of fish. Indeed, Tutankhamu­n’s tomb was something of a disappoint­ment in the broader scheme of things. There was lots of nice ‘stuff’, but it didn’t tell us much we didn’t already know.

“There is a big difference between what the outside world thinks archaeolog­ists want to find, and what we actually do.”

Reeves, however, is undeterred. “If we find what I think is there,” Dr. Reeves said, “it will be bigger than Tutankhamu­n.”

The Complete Tutankhamu­n: 100Years Of Discovery’ by Nicholas Reeves (£28.99) published by Thames and Hudson

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 ?? ?? MYSTERY SPANS THE MILLENNIA: Virtual model showing the layout of Tutankhamu­n’s tomb; inset left, Egyptologi­st Nicholas Reeves; right, Howard Carter with the golden sarcophagu­s of Tutankhamu­n; far right, ancient limestone bust of Queen Nefertiti
MYSTERY SPANS THE MILLENNIA: Virtual model showing the layout of Tutankhamu­n’s tomb; inset left, Egyptologi­st Nicholas Reeves; right, Howard Carter with the golden sarcophagu­s of Tutankhamu­n; far right, ancient limestone bust of Queen Nefertiti
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Picture: APIC/GETTY
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