These Objects Reveal Intimate Details of Tutankhamun's Life

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 5. 09. 2024
  • Renowned Egyptologist Professor Joanne Fletcher explores the life of the most famous pharaoh - Tutankhamun. Jo has curated a very special exhibition in her hometown, Barnsley, not only to celebrate the world of Tutankhamun, but also the people from northern England who played an important role in his rediscovery.
    The film showcases some of the 12,000 Ancient Egyptian objects that are usually kept by Bolton Museum, but are now on special display in Barnsley.
    Jo has curated a collection that exemplifies the world of Tutankhamun, focusing on the years before his spectacular burial. These objects represent the life he enjoyed growing up in Amarna as the son of Akhenaten, as well as the early years of his own reign. She handles the precious objects that reveal this world, including luxurious wine goblets and ultra-fine linen clothing. And with a display of tiny household figures of multiple deities, Jo shows how the accepted story of Akhenaten sweeping away all the traditional gods of Egypt is far more complex on a domestic level. A tiny figure of Amun is evidence that some of the old gods were very much still around and were still being privately worshipped within the new city.
    Around the age of 19 Tutankhamun died, and that is how history remembers him. But in the centenary year of the rediscovery of his tomb, Jo Fletcher feels it’s only right that we not only remember his death, but start to celebrate his life.
    Sign up to History Hit TV now and get 14 days free: access.historyh...
    And remember, as CZcams subscribers, you can sign up to History Hit TV today with code CZcams and enjoy 50% off your first 3 months!
    For more history content, subscribe to our History Hit newsletters: www.historyhit....
    #historyhit #tutankamun #ancientegypt

Komentáře • 147

  • @mikki3961
    @mikki3961 Před rokem +9

    Professor Joanne Fletcher never disappoints! Passionate, factual and interesting. Brava.

    • @ledacedar6253
      @ledacedar6253 Před 7 měsíci

      i love Joann, her interactions with the local Egyptians & raises up our awareness of the Egyptian archaeologists; then her market trip to purchase a huge EMERALD GEM! A woman of grace, poise and truth telling right into the stories the bones and remains tell us. Big hugs to Joann.

  • @kathyjohnson2043
    @kathyjohnson2043 Před rokem +13

    I got to see the Tutankhamun exhibit in the 70s. Being passionate about all branches of Anthropology, it was one of the highlights of my life.

    • @KingOsirismindprogramming8888
      @KingOsirismindprogramming8888 Před rokem +1

      I'm the re-berth of King TuT 👑🌍

    • @OldMusicFan83
      @OldMusicFan83 Před rokem +2

      My Mom took me and my little brother to see the King Tut exhibit at the Smithsonian Museum of Art in 76 or 77. I forget which year exactly.

    • @comando7635
      @comando7635 Před rokem

      Tutankhamun ! Is was not!! His really ! Tomb!! He ! Was placed there!! As an Emergency tomb!! Because ! He was killed by a woman ! Who wanted his power in the Trown.
      The Mask face wasn't his!! It was his Father's. Which he hated the most..
      He basically! Was Buried!! On a where house or storage room.
      His really ! Tomb was in progress of controction but he died to young.
      And was Buried! In that little room where he was found. Today...Rest in peace Tutankhamun..✌️

  • @carolefreeman2544
    @carolefreeman2544 Před rokem +22

    I had the great pleasure of visiting Egypt in 2010. It was the Top of my ‘Bucket List’ and it didn’t fail. I was amazed at how comfortable I felt in Egypt. The people were so kind and welcoming. The historical cities in Egypt were enchanting and I had the feeling of falling back in time to the Era of the great Pharaohs. I have always been in love with history and especially in Egypt. I have always enjoyed watching Professor Joann Fletcher, she never fails to deliver very exciting and interesting programs. I would love to be able to go back to Egypt to visit again. Egypt has a fabulous museum that is a must to visit. It contains so many objects that envelope the Egypt people, their customs and religious believes. Also there are exquisite Coptic Churches and Mosques which are kindly open to all visitors. I loved hearing the call to prayer every day. We cruised down the Nile, visited Temples, and Pyramids and explored the Valley of the Kings, which was amazing! We bought beautiful Papyrus Art, Oils and Linens. There is nothing like Egyptian Linens the quality is outstanding! The linens still look like new 12 years later.

    • @BigLeggedEmma
      @BigLeggedEmma Před rokem +1

      Aren't they redoing the museum right now? If I have my story straight you have to go back because there will be so many "new" things!

    • @cindchan
      @cindchan Před rokem +1

      I was there in 2007. It was a truly amazing experience! Something I always think fondly about!

    • @linda10989
      @linda10989 Před rokem +1

      I was there in 2017 and like the OP, I knocked many, many things off my BL. I really wanted to go back this year at the centenary of the discovery of Tut's tomb but I couldn't. I'd go back in a second if I had the $$. Notice to first time visitors: treat your guides well and they'll take you to the good restaurants that only the locals know about. Be rude to them and they'll take you to McDonald's or Pizza Hut.

  • @williamrobinson7435
    @williamrobinson7435 Před rokem +13

    Thanks to Prof Fletcher and all the team for this. Its great to see the Northern contribution to Egyptology being shown in this way. Some of the artefacts are truly stunning: I love the image of Tut having a drink. The expression on his face is priceless, like a lecturer at 6pm on a Friday.. 🍷🤣🌟👍

  • @kathyjohnson2043
    @kathyjohnson2043 Před rokem +3

    Joanne Fletcher is one of my favorite presenters. Being in the USA but having watched her documentaries for many years, I noticed that her accent is more pronounced in this video from her home city; it was lovely to hear.

  • @bexxy629
    @bexxy629 Před rokem +6

    As someone from Barnsley so lovely to see this.

  • @nicoleshepherdson6662
    @nicoleshepherdson6662 Před rokem +2

    Ahhh, I need more. I LOVE these videos especially done by Joann Fletcher

  • @gandolph999
    @gandolph999 Před rokem +1

    Thank you for having made and posted this video. There is so much more to learn about ... ancient Egypt. Egyptology is still in the introductory phase.

  • @RowanWatersStudios
    @RowanWatersStudios Před rokem +13

    I have always dreamed of becoming an Archaeologist or an Egyptologist since I was a little girl. My love for ancient Egypt started with King Tut. I have studied as much as I can since I was a kid about ancient Egypt and Archeaology.

  • @juliewilson3237
    @juliewilson3237 Před rokem +1

    I’ve always been interested in Egyptology from a very young age . Also Joanne Fletcher is a big of a hero to me , I’m from Barnsley and to hear someone , who is a joy to listen to, with my accent is superb!! 😂 I wasn’t aware of this exhibition in Barnsley , glad I’ve found out and hope to visit very soon .

  • @leonaheraty3760
    @leonaheraty3760 Před rokem

    Excellent! Thank you Joann! 😊

  • @thatflightsimguy
    @thatflightsimguy Před rokem +12

    Queen Tiy definitely killed Tutankhamen. 4:48 - That's the face my wife makes when I don't load the dishwasher correctly. RIP brother.

  • @anyawillowfan
    @anyawillowfan Před rokem +8

    Amazing that you managed to do a whole video about the life of Tutankhamun and not even mention his disabilities, it's almost like you think erasing that fact makes him more acceptable to you.

    • @allysonpfortmiller4884
      @allysonpfortmiller4884 Před rokem

      What disabilities?

    • @anyawillowfan
      @anyawillowfan Před rokem

      @@allysonpfortmiller4884 Tutankhamun had a deformed left 'club' foot so used a cane (many were found in his tomb). Originally they thought the injuries were caused by his death, but it's now been determined he had severe scoliosis, most likely due to generations of inbreeding. Just search Tutankhamen and disability to get a better idea, as well as seeing the evidence that led to these discoveries.

  • @mosheedy9862
    @mosheedy9862 Před rokem +1

    I returned from a trip to Egypt a few weeks ago. This presentation is helping to make even more connections with all I saw. Thankyou!

  • @beedee4427
    @beedee4427 Před rokem

    Wow, Akhenaten was the forerunner to Henry the VIII! Abolishing a religion and then stripping it of it's wealth. Also, I love the fact that Joanne is from Barnsley. I grew up in Hull, a hop, skip and a jump away and I think it's brilliant that not only did the north play such a pivotal role in Tutankhamun's rediscovery but also that Dr Fletcher has made Egyptology in the modern day so accessible. Fabulous video. Many thanks x

  • @barbarajustice9499
    @barbarajustice9499 Před rokem +2

    Very good video I enjoyed it

  • @kev3d
    @kev3d Před rokem +5

    I imagine the Royal Women looked almost nude in their sheer gowns and tunics, and how beautiful at least some of them appeared when silhouetted against the sun.

    • @cyankirkpatrick5194
      @cyankirkpatrick5194 Před rokem

      They dressed like that due to the rank and heat of Egypt.

    • @netyr4554
      @netyr4554 Před rokem +1

      Most definitely, some of the statues give you an idea, say Princess Takushit or Queen Karomama. Would love to see accurate reproduction of ancient Egyptian dress and jewellery.

  • @GORO911
    @GORO911 Před rokem +1

    Joan Fletcher ?!
    That deserves a like and sub. 👏

  • @syednizamuddin1461
    @syednizamuddin1461 Před rokem +1

    Dr fletcher is a treasure

  • @54mgtf22
    @54mgtf22 Před rokem

    Barnsley. Home of Michael Parkinson, Geoffrey Boycott and Joann Fletcher.
    Love your work 👍 Cheers from Australia.

  • @MissStatement
    @MissStatement Před rokem +1

    Hope to visit Egypt one day!

  • @bullzdawguk
    @bullzdawguk Před rokem +1

    If you look at a map of Egypt, one fascinating feature stands out. In the North, the Nile splits into what is called, the Nile Delta. It looks just like a lotus flower in bloom. Even the topography of Egypt has poignancy to its ancient culture.

  • @murkyseb
    @murkyseb Před rokem +1

    That was very interesting great work

  • @johnzeszut3170
    @johnzeszut3170 Před rokem +1

    When the Tut craze was at its height in our city we had "King Tut Liquors" and if you drank anything from that joint you would be mummified the next day!!!!!!!!

  • @Jynxxxycat
    @Jynxxxycat Před rokem +4

    I'll bet that the beads on the end of the tunic fringe, are skhab paste beads. They are still made, in North Africa.

  • @abennett7767
    @abennett7767 Před rokem

    Prof. Joann fletcher ❤ yay!

  • @linda10989
    @linda10989 Před rokem +1

    I've seen a lot of documentaries but until now I've never seen an archeologist handling artifacts with latex gloves as opposed to white cotton ones.

  • @vincentblack7467
    @vincentblack7467 Před rokem +6

    I love this Yorkshire lass

  • @colsc55
    @colsc55 Před rokem +1

    i was just there last week.

  • @MegaDustinjames
    @MegaDustinjames Před rokem +1

    When do they artefacts go back to Egypt?

  • @Daniel-lt4vo
    @Daniel-lt4vo Před rokem

    Tutankhamun’s soul is reborn in beirut lebanon - A guy named Dan haddad he has all the truth - reincarnation does exist ! Thanks for sharing

  • @Russia-bullies
    @Russia-bullies Před rokem

    The piece of cloth at 12:20 proves our ancestors aren’t the same as us,mentally.

  • @cleverfitz779
    @cleverfitz779 Před rokem

    Good morning everyone

  • @lorenam4067
    @lorenam4067 Před rokem

    Thankyou ms fletcher from your contributions to the world of all we who love Egypt 18 dynasty family i wish England could have take tuts and ankh two little children they will be care not decaying in a basement like it happened uts sad how other countries treat the item from tumbs with more care and respect that the egipt antiquities how they left those 2 fetuses to decay knowing the importance of them my heart breaks thanks a. Million all your fans from all pver the world

  • @glennmaillard5972
    @glennmaillard5972 Před rokem +1

    Has Joann Fletcher changed her theory about KV35YL being Nefertiti? She calls Nefertiti Tut’s step mother and Kiya his mother.
    KV35EL is thought to be Tiye. The KV55 mummy is very likely to be Akhenaten. I thought Joann Fletcher thinks KV35YL was Nefertiti, or once thought so? KV35YL and KV55 are mother and father of Tut. Thus they are Nefertiti (KV35YL) and Akhenaten (KV55 mummy).
    In this doc, to repeat myself, Joann Fletcher says Kiya is Tut’s mother! If KV35YL is Nefertiti, it makes her Tut’s mother, not his step mother! I’m confused.

  • @gandolph999
    @gandolph999 Před rokem

    Akhenaten did not eradicate or eliminate Amun.
    The presence and prominence of the Aten in the reign of Akhenaten should be considered in conceptual terms.
    Amun is known as "The Hidden One" and the Aten represents the solar disk.
    The presence of the Aten conceptually eclipses Amun and others in the
    Aten's brightness.
    The Aten in such a manner renders Amun more perfectly hidden. Amun is rendered perfectly invisible in the conceptual light of the Aten.
    This does not mean that Amun was erased or excluded.. The hidden nature of Amun was perfected.
    The blinding Aten passed on with the death of Ankhenaten which conceptually implied that the blinding Aten no longer was present to hide Amun and others.
    It seems strange that Amun was at all visible at any instance.
    The other gods were all present in the Amarna period although the Aten's presence temporarily eclipsed them.
    If the gods that preceded The Aten were restored, the restoration was not a repudiation of the Aten.
    It was instead a conceptual reflection of the Aten (Akhenaten) having died.
    The idea that Tutankhamun "restored" the old order of gods is certainly a misunderstanding of the text of the Restoration Stela.
    Finding a reference to Amun at Amarna is therefore not a surprise or in conflict with The Aten.

  • @gandolph999
    @gandolph999 Před rokem

    A seemingly off-topic question on hieroglyphic plurality.
    If nb means "lord" and nbt is a female lord, how was a mixed group of both males and females referenced in hieroglyphic writing?

  • @vernboraw3306
    @vernboraw3306 Před rokem

    The AD volume is horrible.

  • @KA-dx2kz
    @KA-dx2kz Před rokem

    Does the blue cup have anything to do with actually drinking blue lotus as a hallucinogenic?

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 Před rokem

    You're right she was his mother she died giving birth to him 😓😢 Poor Kiya

  • @KingOsirismindprogramming8888

    IM ALIVE AGAIN FROM KING TUT 👑🌍

  • @HarambaeXelonmuskfans

    Is this ambatukams brother?

  • @robert-brydson-1
    @robert-brydson-1 Před rokem +4

    Blacks depicted in ancient Egyptian art are Nubians. They adopted / copied many aspects of ancient Egyptian life and culture. They invaded around 730 BC and ruled Egypt for LESS than 100 years. Many Afrocentrics mistakenly claim images of Nubians are images of ancient Egyptians. Seems less than 100 years out of thousands is enough for blacks to claim all of the Egyptians history and culture as their own.

  • @pepollli
    @pepollli Před rokem +7

    Is it me or are the bust statues of Tutankamun and Nefertiti have the exact same face features? Long nose and neck, high cheek bones, high eyebrows and very pointy chin. Hmm

    • @bmxerqf882
      @bmxerqf882 Před rokem +3

      One of the modern theories is that the tomb and objects may not have been intended for Tutankhamun, due to his sudden death at a young age they had to use a funeral arrangements originally intended for Nefertiti.
      His famous gold mask has signs of having been altered at some stage and the gold in the face is slightly different from the gold used on the headdress. The mask also has pierced ears which further suggest it was originally made for a woman

    • @pepollli
      @pepollli Před rokem +1

      @@bmxerqf882 I’m aware of this theory, it’s quite well known among Egyptologists and it’s been around for a while now.
      I was actually wondering how likely is for Nefertiti to be Tut’s biological mother.

    • @bmxerqf882
      @bmxerqf882 Před rokem +3

      @@pepollli I don't think so, Tutankhamuns mother was found to have been somewhere between 25-35 when she died which most likely makes her slightly too young to be Nefertiti. The latest evidence suggests she would have been closer to 40 when she disappears from the records.
      The busts found in Tuts tomb resemble Nefertiti but they look nothing like his modern facial reconstructions.

    • @pepollli
      @pepollli Před rokem +1

      @@bmxerqf882 it is all so fascinating. Thank you!

    • @bmxerqf882
      @bmxerqf882 Před rokem +1

      @@pepollli some people suspect the KV21B mummy could be Nefertiti. However I'd take it with a pinch of salt as it is one of Zahi Hawass' theories and the DNA results were inconclusive due to the poor condition the mummy was found in.
      The other mummy found in tomb KV21 is the mother of the two mummified fetuses found in Tuts tomb (he is the father). This would suggest KV21A is Tuts wife & half sister Ankhesenamun (Nefertiti was her mother).
      The interesting thing here is that the mummy of Tutankhamuns mother was found in a tomb with her own mother suggesting that there may have been a late 18th Dynasty tradition where mothers and daughters were buried together.

  • @zainzain8679
    @zainzain8679 Před rokem +79

    “The surprising connection he has with northern England” …. Is ….. NOTHING BESIDES BEING LOOTED FROM EGYPT BY THE COLONIALISM. Return their artifacts and the set of the worlds too.

    • @dougbreeze9393
      @dougbreeze9393 Před rokem +17

      The Egyptians were great colonizers. All powerful empires with any worth are in order to bring civilization to the barbarians.

    • @Seawolfaka
      @Seawolfaka Před rokem +2

      do you know why Native Americans don’t like to give their DNA because it proves they’re not Native Americans.

    • @gumpy4960
      @gumpy4960 Před rokem +38

      Calm down, if it wasn’t for those ‘looters’ as you call them, most of the treasures would have been lost or destroyed for money by real looters. The world owes people like those western egyptologists and the like a great deal because they are the reason the treasures still exist in amazing condition.

    • @bmxerqf882
      @bmxerqf882 Před rokem +10

      @@dougbreeze9393 I would even go as far as saying the majority of these artifacts wouldn't even exist if ancient Egyptians hadn't done the same thing.
      They only had the resources to produce these objects through colonising and expanding their empire

    • @EMNstar
      @EMNstar Před rokem +3

      That's what I thought as well
      So surprisingly bold in bad taste

  • @LouLouTwoToo
    @LouLouTwoToo Před rokem +1

    These artifacts need to go back to where they belong.

  • @AG-io5wr
    @AG-io5wr Před rokem +2

    How would you feel if you went to your Grammys grave to find it had been robbed and her final resting place accoutrements displayed for all the stranger public eyes to see, then have the person that robbed her grave called a hero? It's a perfect example of how what appears to be intelligent people having absolutely cognitive dissonance towards defiling a person's final rating place.

    • @iamblackthorne
      @iamblackthorne Před rokem

      My granny would not be forgotten, then. They would write articles about her, put her on television shows, analyze what she ate, how she lived. She would become immortal. A cute, little lady who chased after hobos with an iron skillet, made excellent cornbread, and had a warped sense of humor. In my family, we believe once our body has died, it does not matter what happens to it. So we cremate, for efficiency. But to imagine scholars fascinated with my granny's remains would be amusing to me, and grandma. 💛

    • @gandolph999
      @gandolph999 Před rokem

      Your concern is reasonable but the royal ancient Egyptian burials were made (planned and prepared) to be found at a later time.
      They are violated only if vandalized or not documented.
      They were designed to teach (the living).

  • @twistedninjafishz2683
    @twistedninjafishz2683 Před rokem +2

    Is it just me or is it wrong that there's Egyptian artifacts outside of egypt?

  • @ChillVanille
    @ChillVanille Před rokem +11

    All of these artifacts need to be sent straight back to Egypt immediately. These people have no right to them, it’s thievery. I love this Egyptologist so much, I have spent years following her work, but this is unsettling.

    • @segapc1994
      @segapc1994 Před rokem +7

      why? where all these artifacts exported illegally?

  • @markedis5902
    @markedis5902 Před rokem +9

    Don’t Egypt want their stuff back?

    • @gumpy4960
      @gumpy4960 Před rokem +10

      Yeah, but let’s be honest, we wouldn’t have any of these treasures around today if it was left to the Egyptians, they would have been looted and melted down for money as is what happened to most of the tombs in the valley of the kings. Say what you want but the western Egyptologists saved a lot of these treasures and they are the only reason we can look at them today.

    • @Harib_Al-Saq
      @Harib_Al-Saq Před rokem +3

      So they can sell them on the black market?

    • @Coinz8
      @Coinz8 Před rokem

      @@gumpy4960 There are a few pictures from the early 1900s showing street vendors selling mummies on the streets of Cairo that were looted. Hell, they were even stealing the limestone blocks from the pyramids when the Ottomans took over.

  • @ledacedar6253
    @ledacedar6253 Před 7 měsíci

    Why don’t she ever examine the huge natural shaped skulls with different skull sutures & obvious strange body of his family’s lineage? Joann you play safe to keep the institution of no truth mythologies happy yet blocking & replacing what’s MOST CURIOUS!

  • @Aaron71304
    @Aaron71304 Před rokem

    10th plague.

  • @cyankirkpatrick5194
    @cyankirkpatrick5194 Před rokem

    His name means the light of Amum, a channel re created his face and he looked so young and handsome and not so much inbred as most have given him such and awful face. Quite a real surprise.

  • @dreg1031
    @dreg1031 Před rokem +5

    So why don't you bring that stuff back to Egypt.

    • @dreg1031
      @dreg1031 Před rokem +3

      @Real Aiglon who me? I’m racist for wanting artifacts requested by Egypt to be brought back. To be brought back. Britains the racists here. They think they can take from all these countries and not think those countries won’t want it back?

    • @dreg1031
      @dreg1031 Před rokem +3

      @Real Aiglon I’ve done my university, I know Egyptian history, and I know that Britain has refused to return items which are rightfully egypts

    • @Harib_Al-Saq
      @Harib_Al-Saq Před rokem +6

      Because the locals have a track record of melting artifacts down or selling them on the black market.

    • @dreg1031
      @dreg1031 Před rokem +1

      @@Harib_Al-Saq not anymore

    • @inigomulaisho2809
      @inigomulaisho2809 Před rokem

      @@Harib_Al-Saq The locals and their western conspirators are known to smash noses off statues, that don't conform with their racist revision of Ancient Egypt. As for returning statues; most of them are 18th century forgeries, the German and Egyptian govts are aware of this..

  • @voulathomacos-lagonas8445

    Looted artifacts.....

    • @Coinz8
      @Coinz8 Před rokem +1

      First go learnt the definition of the word looting and then come back.

  • @EpicFatLip
    @EpicFatLip Před rokem +1

    I love Egyptian history, but can Prof. Fletcher please do something about her blazer?? It's 2 sizes too big and it looks very sloppily! Sorry about this little rant

  • @alexandergroppe448
    @alexandergroppe448 Před 11 měsíci

    Tutankhamun was also buried with a tooth from the very same grandmother, Queen Ty!