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Universal
Studios' The Mummy (1999)
bases its overall plot on a curse inscribed on the Canopic chest of Anck-su-Namun. The curse, read aloud by one of the ill-fated plunderers, is
based on one associated with King Tut's tomb. Here's the true story of
that curse, as I wrote it in my book How to Make a Mummy
Talk. |
Although people are
often frightened of mummies, it is untrue that finding a mummy can lead to a
curse on the discoverer. Author Christine El Mahdy believes that those who first
expressed fear of mummies were the Arabs, who conquered Egypt in A.D. 641. Arab
writers warned people not to tamper with mummies or their tombs; they knew that
Egyptians practiced magic during funerals. And the paintings on the walls of
Egyptian tombs seemed to suggest that mummies could return to life and seek
revenge.
The idea that
mummies had magic power eventually appealed to the imaginations of authors.
After the first ghost story about a mummy's curse was published in 1699, many
more followed. But the longest lasting episode involving a mummy's curse was the
discovery and opening of King Tutankhamen's tomb in 1923.
This story has been
told many times, but fact and fiction are usually blended. Two recent authors
who have separated the facts from the myths are Christopher Frayling and
Nicholas Reeves.
First, the facts:
Lord Carnarvon, who had funded the search for King Tut's tomb, and archaeologist
Howard Carter entered the king's burial chamber on February 17, 1923. On or
about March 6, Lord Carnarvon was bitten by a mosquito on his cheek and became
ill. Reported in the media, this event caused many people to jump to the
conclusion that King Tut's tomb was cursed.
Many famous people
volunteered their theories to the press. For example, Marie Corelli, a popular
novelist at the time, expressed her thoughts in a letter published in
New York and London newspapers. In part, her letter read:
I cannot
but think some risks are run by breaking into the last rest of a king in Egypt
whose tomb is specially and solemnly guarded, and robbing him of his
possessions. According to a rare book I possess . . . entitled The Egyptian
History of the Pyramids [an ancient Arabic text], the most dire
punishment follows any rash intruder into a sealed tomb. The book . . . names
'secret poisons enclosed in boxes in such wise that those who touch them shall
not know how they come to suffer'. That is why I ask, Was it a mosquito bite
that has so seriously infected Lord Carnarvon?
Corelli reported
that the Egyptian author also warned: "Death comes on wings to he who
enters the tomb of a pharaoh."
Her concerns seemed
to be on target when Lord Carnarvon's condition worsened. The mosquito bite
became infected, he contracted pneumonia, and on April 5, he died. The legend of
the curse became fact and was enhanced by many rumors. Here are five of the most
famous rumors - and the real truth behind them:
Rumor 1:
On the day of the tomb opening, Carnarvon's pet canary was eaten by a cobra (a
symbol of the ancient
pharaohs). The truth is that,
although Carter had a pet canary, he gave it to a friend named Minnie Burton
to watch, and she gave it (alive and well) to a bank manager.
Rumor 2: At the
moment that Carnarvon died in Cairo Hospital, the lights across Cairo went out
for five minutes. Actually,
around the time that Carnarvon died, the hospital lights did go out for
a few moments. Within a few weeks' time, this fact was twisted into the more
interesting rumor. As Christine El Mahdy points out, the lights in Cairo are
notorious for going out without warning - even today.
Rumor 3:
Carnarvon's dog Susie, back in England, howled and dropped dead at exactly two
o'clock in the morning, the time that Carnarvon died.
No one knows whether this story is true or not, but it seems suspicious,
especially since Egypt and England do not share the same time zone. The story
might be a bit more believable if Susie had died at two o'clock Egyptian time.
Rumor 4: Over
the door to King Tut's tomb was an inscription that read "Death shall
come on swift wings to him that toucheth the tomb of the Pharaoh."
Notice that this inscription closely matches the quotation Marie Corelli cited
from the ancient Arabic text. Even today, it is easy to find books that report
this inscription as fact. For example, in his recent book about mummies,
author John Vornholt writes, "In an outer chamber, they [Carter and
Carnarvon] found a clay tablet that read: 'Death will slay with his wings
whoever disturbs the peace of the Pharaoh.'" This is simply not true.
Rumor 5: Most
of the people present at the opening of the tomb met untimely deaths.
Again, Vornholt writes that "13 of 20 people who were present at the
opening of King Tut's burial chamber died within a few years." Vornholt
does not give his source for this information, but it is clearly incorrect.
The truth is that the newspapers at the time had a field day with the curse.
Whenever anyone related to Carnarvon or the discovery of the tomb died, the
death was taken as proof that the curse was in effect.
However,
Egyptologist Herbert E. Winlock examined the evidence some 12 years after the
tomb's opening. Of the 26 people present at the opening of the burial chamber,
only 6 had died within the next 10 years. When King Tut's sarcophagus was
opened, 22 of the 26 people were present, but only 2 of them had died within 10
years afterward. Finally, only 10 of the 26 people had watched the unwrapping of
the mummy. And none of them had died within the next decade! In fact,
many of the people who had the most contact with the king's mummy lived long and
productive lives.
|
EVENT |
NUMBER
OF PEOPLE THERE |
NUMBER
OF DEATHS AFTER 10 YEARS |
|
Burial
chamber opening |
26 |
6 |
|
Sarcophagus
opening |
22 |
2 |
|
Mummy
unwrapping |
10 |
0 |
Perhaps the last
word about the Carnarvon curse should belong to Sir Henry Rider Haggard, who
wrote at the time that the idea of the curse was simply nonsense and
"dangerous because it goes to swell the rising tide of superstition which
at present seems to be overflowing the world."
ŠJames M. Deem.
Originally published in How to Make a Mummy Talk
(Houghton Mifflin, 1995). All rights reserved.