King Tut Killed by a Knee Infection? 152
adminsr writes to tell us the Discovery Channel is reporting that an Egyptian-led research team claims to have found compelling new evidence relating to the cause of death of King Tutankhamen From the article: "According to the Italian doctors, it was likely that King Tut suffered a violent blow, most likely by a sword. The blow would have lodged gold fragments from the decorations of the Pharaoh's armour or dress into the knee."
Obvious... (Score:4, Funny)
So... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:So... (Score:2)
BACTINE (Score:1)
Re:So... (Score:1)
Easy Discovery (Score:3, Funny)
Throckmorton's Sign? (Score:4, Funny)
Is that sort of like "Throckmorton's Sign"? [whonamedit.com]
No. Hands crossed pointing at W & S on compas (Score:2)
Re:How about the 130 walking sticks??? (Score:3, Insightful)
How that got modded informative is beyond me.
Re:How about the 130 walking sticks??? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:How about the 130 walking sticks??? (Score:5, Funny)
Perhaps the mummy was regenerating ?!!???!!!
AAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHH! Run !! Must get away!
Head injury debunked?? (Score:1)
Did you read the article (Score:2)
Come on be honest. I know you didn't. If you can't find the refrence to the arrow well your can't read. http://ww [spokesmanreview.com]
form vs. function (Score:4, Funny)
Re:form vs. function (Score:3)
Re:form vs. function (Score:4, Funny)
Better yet, wear perfectly ordinary steel armor. That way every enemy archer won't be able to aim at you from the other end of the battlefield. Wearing an armor that screams "target me !" just to appease your vanity is a really stupid thing to do.
Re:form vs. function (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:form vs. function (Score:1)
Re:form vs. function (Score:5, Funny)
Modern day parallel: iPod headphones.
Re:form vs. function (Score:2)
Acutally, the best thing to do would be to paint a target on your shield. Very hard for them to aim anywhere else, and that's what you want them to hit.
--unapologetic old SCA'er
Re:form vs. function (Score:2)
They didn't just make this up for Medieval: Total War...
Re:form vs. function (Score:1)
Obligatory Bangels reference (Score:4, Funny)
Right, I'll get my coat.
Re:Obligatory Bangels reference (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory SNL reference (Score:1)
Re:Obligatory SNL reference (Score:1)
Could it be.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Could it be.... (Score:2)
The Ni File [moviewavs.com]
Re:Could it be.... (Score:2)
We are now the Knights Who Say Ecky- ecky- ecky- ecky- pikang- zoop- boing- goodem- zoo- owli- ziv.
Re:Could it be.... (Score:4, Funny)
All that golden splendor, but killed for want of a shrubbery. Tragic, really.
Re:Could it be.... (Score:2)
...with a herring?
Interesting (Score:4, Funny)
We're privileged (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We're privileged (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, I think that every time I'm in a sword fight!
Re:We're privileged (Score:2)
Actually, you should think about that every time you're not in a swordfight.
Re:We're privileged (Score:2)
Re:We're privileged (Score:2, Informative)
More information about this:
I saw a documentary a few weeks ago on the death of Tutankhamun, and they were coming to this conclusion as well. The first hypothesis were that he had been killed, as a piece of bone was missing at the back of his skull; blood was also present around this hole. It turned out that it might have been made during embalming.
They were also speculating on the many fractures the mummy presented. They were annoyed by the really bad general state of the body, mainly because
Another way to look at it ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Well, perhaps he was just too rich to eat mouldy bread. Perhaps a peasent stone-mason would have survived the same wound.
No and Yes (Score:1)
I mean it's true that medicine at average wasn't really advanced.
But let's however look what was the best level one could get. The level pharaosh and kings had.
Egyptians mummified their dead, and propably had knowledge of many illnesses. After all they did build pyramids and had allkinds of knowledge of astronomy, so it's not far fetched to think they could known the problems Tutankhamon had with his knee. Certainly he couldn't have been first Eqyptian to be harmed by sword and sufferin
I think.. (Score:5, Funny)
Worlds first Bling death (Score:5, Funny)
And the writing was litterally on the wall.
Kids dont do bling.
How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:3, Funny)
The whole thing seems rather like fools gold to me.
Yeah, kind of like a pyramid scheme.
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:5, Informative)
Is there a reason that they didn't publish their findings in a regular journal like Nature or Science or whatever journal Egyptologists use?
Er, they did. Slashdot just doesn't cover those. Thing is, we *do* cover physics journals, and the method they used to detect the gold in the first place is of interest to physicists. This also got into medical journals and traveller's journals (national geographic being the only traveller's journal most people recognize.)
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:1)
I don't know that much about physiology or medicine, but based on what I know about King Tut I'd say that what killed him was shoveling his guts into clay pots, wrapping him in bandages, and burying his ass in the middle of the desert.
Based on observation of current-day politicians I cannot say for certain whether sucking his brains out through his nose was a contributing factor.
Bemopolis
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2)
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2)
I feel a fourth Discovery Channel documentary coming on: King Tut - Human, or Cyberman?
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2)
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2)
Re:How many ways can the guy die? (Score:2)
Actually, it was National Geographic. I saw it, and it was pretty compelling. Of course, with no antibiotics and little knowledge how to deal with infections, a large knee injury will usually kill people in the course of a few days. Completely sensible. A swordfight training accident sounds like a plausible cause.
The head injury/sneak attack theory was debunked - that damage happened long after death.
Armor? (Score:1)
Also, I thought Egyptians were advanced enough to have dealt with infections from wounds. Poison? Maybe an accidental and embarrasing wound that he wouldn't let someone attend?
Re:Armor? (Score:1)
We've only had them as a class of drug for the past ~
Re:Armor? (Score:1)
No luck yet on the poison angle - looks like it was most commonly administered by drink, and often by members of the religious sects. Gee,
Re:Armor? (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, it was 1322. By the New Kingdom, Egypt had complex armor making capabilities. They were in fact distributing chariot armies all over the Senet area on a standardized-width rut road system, something typically attributed to Rome. Egypt had some fairly complex metallurgy practices, and even had rudimentary pit steel-making capabilities, though there were no surface iron deposits nearby for them to really use in the way that the Assyrians did.
The reason you don't see armor on depictions of Egyptian warfare isn't a technological one in the sense that they didn't know how to make armor, but rather that the climate generally didn't allow for it - Egypt is fucking hot, and people would cook. Tutankhamen and other pharoahs wore armor as a ceremonial and last ditch protective thing (fat lot of good it did him,) and could get away with it because they were being moved in covered, shaded transportation vessels. Even then, several pharoahs are never depicted wearing armor - Seti I and Setnahke being good examples, shown wearing only normal clothes and the lapis crown.
Re:Armor? (Score:2)
Perhaps my memory serves me wrong, but I thought that the Egyptians only acquired the ability to work iron after the 18th dynasty. Wasn't the lack of iron technology a major reason for the difficulty the Egyptians had in fighting the Hittites under the Ramessides, in the 19th dynasty?
Re:Armor? (Score:3, Insightful)
People didn't wait for the late middle ages (which is where you would have found the classical plated steel armor one usually associates with the term) to seek protection from physical harm.
Re:Armor? (Score:2)
Yes, but I was referring specifically to OP's mention of iron-based technology. I know that the Egyptians had bronze at the time.
Re:Armor? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Armor? (Score:2)
Ah, interesting. My memory was half-wrong, right about the lack of iron swords etc., but wrong about the reason being technology as opposed to raw material. It must have been rather disconcerting to have your bronze sword broken by your opponent's iron sword.
Re:Armor? (Score:2)
Re:Armor? (Score:2)
Actually, lack of iron wasn't really important, either. Contrary to popular belief, cold-worked tin bronze is actually SUPERIOR to wrought iron in both hardness and holding an edge. Only when iron making developed carburization, essentia
what else can one say.. (Score:1)
The only thing we don't know... (Score:2)
Is what he had to breakfast on the third full moon after the winter solstice. How many thousand years has this guy been dead? That's some pretty good detective work.
19? (Score:4, Informative)
Wouldn't he have been 17 or 18?
Re:19? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:19? (Score:1)
Not without TV and the Internet, etc. (Score:2)
Without a PSP or Gamecube to wile away the hours, it probably felt like a lifetime!
Nuts (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nuts (Score:1)
Why he didn't get it taken care of. (Score:1)
Re:Why he didn't get it taken care of. (Score:1)
Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:1)
Re:Hmm... (Score:4, Informative)
teeth, electrical contacts, etc. Of course it's possible the body
could still simply recognize it as being foreign and try to fight
it but it'd just make a lot of puss I think. Undoubtedly something
else could've entered at the same time.
Re:Hmm... (Score:3, Interesting)
A bit suprising to me... (Score:1)
Re:A bit suprising to me... (Score:1)
Due to the extraodinarily high sugar content, no bacteria can grow in honey, and it is, at least in theory, possible to preserve things in honey indefinately. (Obviously air exposure is limited as well.) People have even been mumified in honey.
Question (Score:2)
Answer (Score:5, Informative)
If Mr. Tut had wandered into a modern ER after some serious sword play he would have had the wound irrigated thoroughly, perhaps in the operating room where it could be opened up and inspected. He then would have been given IV antibiotics. And a large bill.
So it's not too surprising that a little bit of honey or whatever didn't work out too well for him.
Re:Answer (Score:2)
Funky Tut (Score:4, Funny)
Missing history (Score:5, Interesting)
Just think of all the history that is gone forever - the Alexandrian library containing most of the world's knowledge up to that point, the slaughter of the Druids, who thanks to not having a system of writing took their people's knowledge rites and history with them to the grave, the Indus civilization which 5,300 years ago developed cities that were more sophisticated than many that Pakistan's and India's people currently live in, where the hell the Basque people came from and why their culture is so distinct from the rest of Europe, the origins of the Sphynx, and heck a lot more. All gone forever.
Re:Missing history (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Missing history (Score:1)
Not that minor (Score:3, Informative)
There's many things we don't know, starting with the or
Re:Not that minor (Score:2)
Exactly who Tut's father was is uncertain. It is unlikely that Akhnaten (the Heretic pharoah) was his father.
A bit of background (Score:3, Informative)
This fame is due largely to the discovery of his tomb in the early 20th century by Howard Carter. What was unique is that it was about the only tomb of a pharoah to be found intact, i.e. unplundered.
Tut's era was the New Kingdom last 4 centuries of the second millenium BC), one of three "peaks" in Egypt's ancient history. This same era saw more famous kings such as Ahmose (uniter of Egypt, expelling the foreign Hyksos), Hatshepsut (the
Re:One question (Score:2)
The kingdom of Napata eventually took over Egypt, and their kings became pharoahs. Their center was at Meroe, where there are pyramids today. The most famous "black pharoah" was Taharqa.
Read more here http://touregypt.net/historicalessays/nubia.htm [touregypt.net], http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nubi [wikipedia.org]
Too Much of a Good Thing (Score:1)
Re:Too Much of a Good Thing (Score:1)
Killed by gold? (Score:2)
Or are they saying King Tut was a Cyberman?
Nothing to see here. (Score:2)
I'm a tad skeptical about this article (Score:2)
ScuttleMonkey should have gone with cheaper cable. (Score:2)
CSI- Egypt (Score:1)
Who could have knee capped this young King and will Grishom catch the culprit?
Re:That should teach him! (Score:2, Flamebait)
Re:That should teach him! (Score:2)
Re:I am not surprised (Score:2)
Re:what has king tut got to do with slashdot? (Score:2)
Re:what has king tut got to do with slashdot? (Score:1)