[CPProt.net] 'Pharaoh's curse' punished two families that owned a once stolen amulet

MSN and CPProt list (Ton Cremers) museum-security at museum-security.org
Sun Feb 27 10:00:10 CET 2005


'Pharaoh's curse' punished two families that owned a once stolen amulet

02/25/2005 16:20
A group of Egyptian scientists made more than a thousand pictures of the
pharaoh's mummy

A South African has decided to return to Egypt an amulet stolen in
Tutankhamun's tomb to get rid of "pharaoh's curse". In a letter to the
Egyptian Minister of Culture she gives a long list of misfortunes which
happened to owners of the scarab-like amulet that was stolen from the
pharaoh's burial place by an Egyptian labourer who worked on archeological
dig in 1922. The tomb in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor was discovered
by British archeologist Howard Carter. The first unfortunate owner, a
British seaman who bought the amulet in Cairo, drowned in a shipwreck. His
daughter died of leukaemia at the age of 21. The widow decided to get rid of
the figurine and presented it to the father of the current proprietress,
whose daughter also died of leukaemia at age 21 and whose husband suddenly
died before the amulet was sold. As a result, according to what the Deputy
Minister of Culture Sheriff ash-Shobashi told reporters in Cairo, the
proprietress decided to give the amulet back to Egypt to let be be placed in
King Tut' tomb again - the pharaoh of the 18-th dynasty (ruled in 1361-1352
B.C.) who died at an early age. This January a group of Egyptian scientists
made more than a thousand pictures of the pharaoh's mummy by means of a
computer tomograph to determine circumstances of Tutankhamun's death. The
expert report will be promulgated in March, RIA Novosti reports.


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