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What Killed King Tut?

By: Aubrey Moulton

King Tutankhamun universally referred to as the "boy king" has been a mystery since the discovery of his mummy in 1922. He is the most well-known Egyptian pharaoh although he was a young man when he died. The 3300-year-old mummy was the recent focus of DNA testing and CT scans and it was {proved that he died of infections from a broken leg that were made worse by malaria. And it looks as though the pharaoh’s parents were actually brother and sister.

This Egyptian grave was originally found in 1922 and since this time many legends have enchanted the earth. In the tomb were prized jewels, relics, and a gold funeral mask. The tomb was phenomenal because it was overflowing with sumptuous finds that are amazingly rare and gave Egyptologists a glance into ancient history because grave robbers had not looted its contents.

Tutankhamun became the pharaoh when he was only nine years old. And it has long been established that he passed away at the age of 19. Specialists were able to work out that Tut had a cleft palate and a club foot. Prior to this crucial testing, experts thought he had been murdered because of the gaping hole in his skull however tests have exposed that to be false. The hole was most likely from the mummification process.
The findings on King Tut will be clarified in the Journal of the American Medical Association. These conclusions verify a family tree that is very close. The examination indicates that Pharaoh Akhenaten, who tried to alter Egypt from believing in several gods (polytheism) to one god (monotheism) was none other than King Tut's father. The tests also calculate that his mother was one of Akhenaten's sisters.

Scans conjointly confirmed that he had a leg fracture and indicators of malaria were present within the mummy. Therefore when Tut fractured his leg experts judge that it became a terminal condition because of the malaria contamination. The report asserts that "Tutankhamun had multiple disorders...He may be viewed as a youthful and infirm leader who needed canes to walk anywhere." And this seems plausible since a large variety of walking sticks were located in his tomb.

It's suggested the boy king died prematurely because of the genetic disorders he suffered from. Since his mother and father were so closely related, he was predisposed to any number of genetic problems. But Tut wasn't the only child during that time whose parents were sister and brother. Members of the 18th dynasty were closely related so these genetic issues were imminent and several became even worse as a lot of generations married members of their own gene pool. Tut, like his father, had a cleft palate and, resembling his grandfather Amenhotep III, a club foot and Kohler's disease. In Egypt brother-sister nuptials were rampant among the pharaohs.

Although DNA testing has been conducted on a variety of mummies, the tests didn’t abide by scientific research standards and weren't revealed in peer reviewed journals. And a second freelance lab didn’t substantiate the data. But now the Supreme Council of Antiquities DNA lab has been set up at Cairo University. Previously, DNA tests were conducted but they weren’t ratified because such tests required the mummies and precious antiquties to be carried out of the country, and understandably, and Egyptian leaders would not permit it.

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