Scientists solve 3,000-year-old pharaonic whodunit
FRANCE: An assassin slit the throat of Egypt's last great pharaoh at
the climax of a bitter succession battle, scientists said Monday in a
report on a 3,000-year-old royal murder.
Forensic technology suggests Ramses III, a king revered as a god, met
his death at the hand of a killer, or killers, sent by his conniving
wife and ambitious son, they said.
And a cadaver known as the "Screaming Mummy" could be that of the son
himself, possibly forced to commit suicide after the plot, they added.
Computed tomography (CT) imaging of the mummy of Ramses III shows
that the pharaoh's windpipe and major arteries were slashed, inflicting
a wound 70 millimetres (2.75 inches) wide and reaching almost to the
spine, the investigators said.
The cut severed all the soft tissue on the front of the neck.
"I have almost no doubt about the fact that Ramses III was killed by
this cut in his throat," palaeopathologist Albert Zink of the EURAC
Institute for Mummies and the Iceman in Italy told AFP.
"The cut is so very deep and quite large, it really goes down almost
down to the bone (spine) -- it must have been a lethal injury." Ramses
III, who ruled from about 1188 to 1155 BC, is described in ancient
documents as the "Great God" and a military leader who defended Egypt,
then the richest prize in the Mediterranean, from repeated invasion.
He was about 65 when he died, but the cause of his death has never
been clear.
Sketchy evidence lies in the Judicial Papyrus of Turin, which
recorded four trials held for alleged conspirators in the king's death,
among them one of his junior wives, Tiy, and her son Prince Pentawere.
In a year-long appraisal of the mummy, Zink and experts from Egypt,
Italy and Germany found that the wound on Ramses III's neck had been
hidden by mummified bandages.
"This was a big mystery that remained, what really happened to the
king," said Zink of the study, published by the British Medical Journal
(BMJ).
"We were very surprised and happy because we did not really expect to
find something. Other people had inspected the mummy, at least from
outside, and it was always described (as) 'there are no signs of any
trauma or any injuries.'" It is possible that Ramses's throat was cut
after death, but this is highly unlikely as such a practice was never
recorded as an ancient Egyptian embalming technique, the researchers
said.
In addition, an amulet believed to contain magical healing powers was
found in the cut.
"For me it is quite obvious that they inserted the amulet to let him
heal for the after-life," said Zink.
"For the ancient Egyptians it was very important to have an almost
complete body for the after-life," and embalmers often replaced body
parts with sticks and other materials, he said.
AFP
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