
The discovery of Tutankhamun's treasure-filled tomb is one of the greatest events in modern archeology. It is also a story so filled with intrigues, accusations, international imbroglios, and lasting scandals that it forever altered the way archaeological expeditions were organized and conducted. Hoving's Tutankhamun focuses on Howard Carter, the archaeologist who persisted for six years in his search in the Valley of the Kings for Tutankhamun's tomb. Other major figures in the discovery include: Carter's patron Lord Carnarvon, who died shortly after entering the tomb, thus kindling rumors of a curse; Carter's rival Pierre Lacau, a French Jesuit who headed the Antiquities Service in Cairo and did everything he could to ruin Carter and deny his claim; the Egyptian authorities determined to keep the artifacts of their national heritage in their country; and Arthur Weigall and other Egyptologists who felt slighted by Carter's refusal to admit experts anywhere near his discovery.
This work investigates the complex political, personal, and professional conflicts surrounding the 1922 discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb. Thomas Hoving, a former director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, utilizes his expertise in art history and museum administration to analyze the archival records and personal correspondences of the excavation team. He argues that the discovery was defined as much by international power struggles and bureaucratic sabotage as it was by the archaeological significance of the artifacts themselves.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Historians and archaeologists frequently cite this text for its candid portrayal of the internal politics that plagued the early twentieth-century excavation efforts. Readers often note the narrative density of the prose, which effectively balances historical documentation with the dramatic tension of the era's professional rivalries.
Page Count:
384
Publication Date:
1980-01-01
Publisher:
Penguin Books Ltd
ISBN-10:
0140053379
ISBN-13:
9780140053371
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