How did this mystery start? Well, I believe that Ankesenamen and Tey murdered Tuthankhamun. How? you ask, well, let me tell you… Tey and Ankesenamen murder Tuthankhanum. Tey starts to have an affair with Tuthankhanun, but only to deceive him. Ankesenamen “finds out” and tells Tuthankahmun to leave Tey, but he refuses (no surprise) Ankesenamen tricks Tut into meeting him on top of a tall buiding. She pushes him off and runs down to the ground. She sees his leg is broken and he is almost dead. Blood is spilling from his nose, mouth, and head. Tey comes and cuts his heart out, killing him most certainly. Why though? Ankesenamen wanted to marry another man from the Hittite kingdom, but Tut refused at this. Tey hated him for his fathers actions.
They then after killing him, hand him off to a man who takes to body far and where it will be discovered. Aye found out, but Tey kills him soon after. Aye sees all this happen but the women didn’t know. He blackmails Ankesenamen into marrying him. Tey is also Ayes wife. Aye finally had the chance to get revenge on his beloved king. He kills Ankesenamen. A friend of Tey’s saw and told her. Tey was mad at her husband for killing her newfound friend. Four years after he became Pharaoh, she stabbed him in the night. Horemheb finds out and blackmails Tey. Horemheb has a servant spy and found out about every murder. He blackmails Tey and marries her. Horemheb erases all the bad history and starts over. He starts to grow feelings for Tey. He destroys Ayes tomb for killing Ankesenamen . Tey is grateful and starts to love him too. Yes, I know that this whole thing could have started with Tuthankhanumn in a chairot crash, and the rest was a series of bad accidents. But, then, why was his left ribcage and heart missing? Why was Ankesenamen not painted on Tuthankhamuns tomb walls? Because Tey and Ankesenamen murdered Tuthankhamun.
Horemheb assassinated King Tut. As the writer of Mysteries of Egypt observed, Horemheb was a man of low birth, and was later on appointed to General under Tut’s father, Akhenaten. When Akhenaten died Tut became pharaoh, and promoted Horemheb to commander-in-chief of the army and the deputy of the king. An ex-ray of Tut’s skull showed a blood clot at it’s base. So he was probably hit over the head. After Tut's death Ay became pharaoh. But Horemheb's plan was to become pharaoh after he killed Tut. But Ay beat him to it.
Interestingly, X-rays reveal that the mummy case of Paankhenamun does in fact contain a mummy inside dating back to the years of c. 945 – 715 B.C. The practice of mummification was the Egyptian people’s way of preserving the spirits of the Gods/Goddesses and royalty. The idea was that when these beings came back to life, they would be preserved and well prepared for their next lives. By the time of the New Kingdom, the Egyptians already had developed techniques of mummification, which were done under a priest’s supervision (Stokstad 114), and since Paankhenamun was the priest of Amun, he was most likely was in charge of these procedures.
...oyal couple changed their names to Tutankhamen, demonstrating their renewed allegiance to Amen-Re. The king restored the old temples of the many gods, and reinstated the priesthoods" (David 158). The reforms, which Akhenaten brought to return the power once held by the Pharaoh in the Old Kingdom, were unable to be understood. The people who Akhenaten had to ensure comprehension of his reasoning did not, for they no longer were connected to the old order which he was trying to reestablish.
Ca. 1323 BCE. Both artworks are from the same location, Thebes, but there are some differences when both works are compared. The Coffin of Tutankhamen belonged to a very young unimportant king who died at the young age of 18, and was closely related to Akhenaton. The works is much more rich in value when compared to the coffin of Tentkhonsu, it was found with rich gold jewelry and semiprecious stones. The vast differences could hint different social class rankings and also how men were superior than women during this
King Tut was a fascinating pharaoh at most. There isn’t much on who king Tut was or when he was born or how he died. But some people have dedicated there lives to find out who he was. He was born during the Golden Age. He became king a surprisingly young age. He achieved many things and had an important job. His death was and still is a mystery to most. It was said he wasn’t in his original tomb. But he was eventually found. King Tut became a Pharaoh at a really young age and he had many achievements but died at a relatively young age. (Hawass 29-56)
You can clearly tell that all those damages could have been caused by someone. All this evidence points out that it was Queen Ankhesenamun who murdered the Pharaoh Tutankhamen. Queen Ankhesenamun is practically responsible for this massacre. What happened is that she knew that Tutankhamun was the last of the family bloodline and was very valuable to pass on the glory to future family, but Ankhesenamun didn’t want that. Ankhesenamun wanted the glory all for herself and wanted to start a new family bloodline of greatness for Egypt.
He also finds something he least expected: his father alive and well. Telemachus is overjoyed to see Odysseus, the man who could not be there to help him grow into a man. Even though he did not have a father, though. Telemachus has grown up in a very short amount of time due to his faith in the gods and the help of Athena. Together, Odysseus and Telemachus come up with a plan to take revenge on the suitors by killing them. One part of this plan was to make sure that the suitors did not get any weapons by closing the door to the room in Odysseus’ house where weapons were stored. Telemachus, however, accidentally leaves the door open. He shows his maturity in this situation by telling his father that he had left the door open, rather than keeping quiet about it. A real man will always confess his mistakes. Then, Odysseus set to work on taking vengeance against the suitors, and Telemachus, with his new-found courage, helped
He is ripped apart by his own mother. Poor Pentheus is toyed and tinkered with until his very last breath by none other than his own cousin, Dionysus. His choice, as king of Thebes, to repress the all-powerful god not only lost him his kingdom but ultimately his life. The Bacchae of Euripides is a battle between the strength of a king and the power of a god, but it also reveals the great lengths that family rivalries can go to. Dionysus sought revenge, and revenge he obtained.
After he reaches back to Ithaca, he disguises as a beggar with the help of Athene, and tries to get revenge on the suitors. Penelope, the wife of Odysseus, announces that the first person to string and shoot the bow of Odysseus through 12 axe heads will become her wife. All the suitors try and fail, then Odysseus comes up, “so without effort did Odysseus string the mighty bow… Then laying the arrow on the arch, he drew the string and the arrow notches… with careful aim, and did not miss an ae’s ring from first to last, but clean through all sped” (Homer 270). This is when Odysseus shows who he really is, by showing the true power that only the real Odysseus would have. This surprises the suitors, and puts them into shock. He then “aimed the pointed arrow at Antinous...But Odysseus aimed an arrow and hit him in the throat; right through his tender neck the sharp point passed” (Homer 271). Antinous was one of the leaders of the suitors and killing him right in front of the others showed an act of power. In Edith Hamilton 's Mythology, Odysseus says, “‘At last, at last,’ he cried in a great voice and he shot an arrow. It found its mark; one of the suitors fell dying to the floor” (Hamilton 305). Here, it only says that one of the suitors falls and dies, while in The Odyssey, Antinous does. When Antinous dies, who is the
Romeo is angry and in need of revenge, which creates an intense fight between Tybalt and Romeo. Romeo wins this battle, killing Tybalt. He leaves in a hurry, only to discover that he would be banished from Verona. The death of Tybalt is absolutely devastating for Juliet. Her cousin was murdered by her husband.
King Tut or Tutankhamun (reigned 1343-1325 BC), Egyptian pharaoh of the 18th dynasty, the son-in-law of Akhenaton, whom he succeeded. He became Pharaoh about the age of 9 and ruled until his death; which was about the age of 18. Peace was brought to Egypt during his reign as the worship of Amon, abandoned under Akhenaton, was restored and Thebes, the city sacred to Amon, was again made Egypt's capitol.
Pylades arrives bearing the sad news of Orestes death. He tells Clytemnestra that Orestes was killed in a chariot race at the Delphian games; his body was cremated and his ashes were sent to. Mycenae. Concealing his identity, Orestes arrives with the help of Electra and Pylades, plots the murder of his mother and his mother's. lover. Orestes enters the palace, kills his mother and returns to Electra. When Aegisthus arrives, Orestes kills him as well. his destiny.
Before he could meet the Pharaoh he had to provide evidence that he really saw them robbing the tomb to the guards and everyone else who questioned him. When he met the Pharaoh he had to provide evidence about what was the object was on the north wall. After informed the Pharaoh that the object on the north wall was the Pharaohs fathers oaken staff. Afterwards the Pharaoh sent guards to the tomb, and they found them and trapped them in the tomb and had gotten them in trouble.
Early in the novel, Taita is to set up a pageant for the Pharaoh, and casts Lostris and Tanus in the play. The Pharaoh is so taken aback by Lostris’s beauty he decides to marry her, in which Taita did not plan to do. Tanus made a speech at the end of the play that spoke about all the troubles in Egypt in which angered the Pharaoh and sentenced him to death if he cannot eliminate the problems of the bandits, mainly the ones called the Shrikes, in two years. When Lostris marries the Pharaoh, she asks for Taita as her wedding gift from her father. Lord Intef, being unable to refuse the wife of the pharaoh, has to give up Taita, whom knows every one of his secrets. Intef makes several attempts to kill Taita without success. Taita then goes off to help Tanus defeat the Shrikes.
Long ago, on this same planet, but not that long ago, a civilization as powerful as the Romans, but just a bit after the grand pyramids were constructed, is what we now call Ancient Egypt. Before 1922 nobody knew who Tutankhamun was, nobody knew he even existed. Now centuries later, he is one of the most recognized pharaohs of ancient Egypt. In 1922 Howard Carter and George Herbert discovered King Tuts tomb in the grand Valley of the Kings, and the discovery of this unknown pharaoh’s tomb took the world by storm. The fact that not only was the tomb intact and showed no signs of looting, only raised the question of how this tomb, being located in the Valley of the Kings which has been victim to heavy looting, was not found by others before?