BEIJING,
Nov. 28 (Xinhuanet) -- Egypt's young King Tutankhamun was laid to rest more than
3,300 years ago and now scientist believe they have laid to rest the popular and
sensational theory his enemies bludgeoned him to death.
CT scans reveal it was a festering leg wound
that could have led to the boy-king's death at age 19.
Dr. David Mininberg, a New York City physician with a
degree in Middle Eastern Art is also an expert in ancient Etyptian medicine. He
said the scans are proof Tutahkhamun was not the victim of a murder
conspiracy.
"They finally lay to rest this rather loosely based
conjecture about a murder plot," he explained. "I don't think that anyone who
reads the findings as they are written can believe that any longer."
Mininberg was not directly involved in the study but
reviewed the paper prior to its presentation Monday at the annual meeting of the
Radiological Society of North America, in Chicago.
Tutankhamun remains the most famous of the hundreds
of royal mummies buried throughout Egypt because of the spectacular array of
objects found in his intact tomb in 1922. Until now, perhaps, the reasons
for his early death remained mysterious.
The fact his skull appeared to contain loose
bone fragments led to the notion the young leader was bludgeoned to death
by his enemies, then quickly entombed to hide the evidence.
A team led by radiologist Dr. Ashraf Selim of Cairo
University's Kasr El Aini Teaching Hospital used high-tech CT scans to examine
Tutankhamun's corpse in minute detail. The corpse had been cut into several
pieces and was in a "critical stage of preservation," they wrote.
According to the researchers, Tutankhamun died at
between 18 and 20 years of age and measured about 5-feet, 11-inches in height.
They also concluded that the bone fragments found inside the pharaoh's skull
came from the first vertebrae in his neck, not his cranium.
Some mishap, perhaps during a modern X-ray
examination, probably explains the dislocated fragments, Selim's team concluded.
The upper vertebrae may even have made their way into the skull 84 years ago,
when a team led by British Egyptologist and Tut discoverer Howard Carter pried
off the mummy's golden mask.
"I think this lays to rest the notion that the bone
fragments in the head were caused pre-mortem, before his death," said Dr. Joseph
Tashjian, a St. Paul, Minn., radiologist and member of the RSNA's public
information committee. "It's pretty clear, looking at the images from this
study, that they almost certainly came from the removal of the mask from the
head. It definitely didn't occur either pre-mortem or even during the embalming
period."
"The old theory, which was believed by very few
people, has now been completely laid to rest by good scientific work rather than
conjecture," Mininberg said.
If he was not bludgeoned to death, how did
Tutankhamun die?
The CT scans show evidence of a major fracture to the
thigh bone that could have occurred prior to the king's death. According to
Selim's team, this wound may have led to a fatal infection.
The wound was still unhealed at the time of the
pharaoh's death because "embalming fluid went into the fracture," noted
Tashjian, who was not involved in the Tut research but has had prior experience
scanning a long-dead mummy.
"I think the femur fracture probably is significant,"
Tashjian said. "Number one, it's not healed. Number two, femur fractures -- any
long-bone fracture -- can have a number of complications, any of which can lead
to death, either from infection or an embolism. It's an unusual way to die, from
a fracture, but it does happen, even now."
However, a final answer on that score may never
emerge, Mininberg said.
"The problem is that the soft tissue is changed by
the mummification process, and there is no clear evidence of infection in the
bone," he explained. "However, with a fracture as extensive as that was, it
wouldn't be unheard of for it to become infected. That's a reasonable
conjecture."
Although the why of Tutankhamun's death may have
been answered, there's still the question of the curse upon anyone who disturbs
his remains.
"While performing the CT scan of King Tut, we had
several strange occurrences," Selim noted in a prepared statement. "The
electricity suddenly went out, the CT scanner could not be started, and a team
member became ill. If we weren't scientists, we might have become believers in
the curse of the Pharoahs."
(Agencies)
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