Luxor, as you saw from my earlier blog on Luxor Temple, has many important sites. The Valley of the Kings is huge. Here for nearly 500 years, 16th – 11th C BC, tombs were built for Pharaohs and important nobles of the 18th – 20th Dynasty of ancient Egypt. This valley is on the west bank of the Nile, opp modern Luxor.
The official name for the site in ancient times was The Great and Majestic Necropolis of the Millions of Years of the Pharaoh, Life, Strength, Health in The West of Thebes, or more usually, Ta-sekhet-ma'at (the Great Field). At the start of 18th Dynasty, only the kings were buried within the valley in large tombs.
The valley is known to contain 63 tombs and chambers (ranging in size from a simple pit to a complex tomb with nearly 120 chambers or rooms and was the principal burial place of the major royal figures. The royal tombs are decorated with scenes from Egyptian mythology and give clues to the beliefs and funerary rituals of the period. All of the tombs seem to have been opened and robbed in antiquity. But you still get the grandeur of the opulence and power of the rulers of this time.
The valley has become famous for the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb. It is one of the most famous archaeological sites in the world. In 1979, it became a World Heritage Site.
Some tombs were quarried out of existing limestone clefts, others behind slopes of scree or were at the edge of rock spurs created by ancient flood channels.
As we enter the main building which leads to the Valley, there is a huge model of the Valley with the tombs. Its graphic as it shows you, not only through photos on the walls, but also the model, that the longer you reigned as king, you had the time to make the length of your burial chamber longer. This was important as you devoted more time whilst living to plan your afterlife being remembered! Hence, as Tutankhamen lived a short life, his tomb’s length is very short. Rameses II ruled a long time, hence his chamber is deep and long.
To get to the tombs, you can walk the 800 m uphill or take a toy train. we are by the tombs area by 9.15 am. There are many tourists so you have to be nimble. The Govt has built a shed like structure for respite from the heat. Whilst you see the crowds, movement into the tombs is fast as people quickly decide to avoid queues so they move elsewhere. As someone who appreciates good write-ups on displays, we must compliment the Antiquities Dept on their many detailed notice boards charting out dynasties, burial procedures and details of each king's life.
The tomb of Rameses II returned to an early style, with a bent axis, probably due to the quality of the rock being excavated. Between 1998 and 2002 the Amarna Royal Tombs Project investigated the valley floor using ground-penetrating radar and found that, below the modern surface, the Valley's cliffs descend beneath the scree in a series of abrupt natural "shelves", arranged one below the other, descending several metres down to the bedrock in the valley floor.
The tomb of the king was associated with a mortuary temple located close to the pyramid. These mortuary temples became places visited during the various festivals held in the Theban necropolis. The tombs were constructed and decorated by the workers of the village of Deir el-Medina, located in a small wadi between this valley and the Valley of Queens facing Luxor. The workers journeyed to the tombs via routes over the Theban hills. The daily lives of these workers are quite well known, recorded in tombs and official documents. Amongst the events documented is perhaps the first recorded worker's strike, detailed in the Turin strike papyrus.
In each tomb, as we entered, and we saw quite a few, there is the long path and then the chamber. Most of them had etchings or bas reliefs on them of human activity, boats and daily life, animals of various types. The majority of the royal tombs were decorated with religious texts and images.
There was intense competition between the Italians, French, British and Americans in the excavation of the tombs. In 1799, an expedition sent by Napoleon drew maps and plans of the known tombs. Belzoni, working for Henry Salt, who discovered several tombs, including those of Ay in the West Valley (WV23) in 1816 and Seti I (KV17) in 1817. Working at the same time (and a great rival of Belzoni and Salt) was Bernardino Drovetti, the French Consul-General. Gaston Maspero was reappointed to head the Egyptian Antiquities Service, appointed Howard Carter as the Chief Inspector of Upper Egypt and he discovered several new tombs and explored many more.
Beginning of the 20th C, Theodore Davis, an American had the excavation permit in the valley. After Davis's death early in 1915, Lord Caernarvon acquired the concession to excavate the valley and he employed Carter to explore it. After a systematic search they discovered the actual tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62) in November 1922. In 2001 the Theban Mapping Project designed new signs for the tombs, providing information and plans of the open tombs. You have to pay extra to get into King Tut’s tomb. More important, as at Saqqara, the steps down are steep and for a tall person like me, impossible to go down.
"The usual tomb plan consisted of a long inclined rock-cut corridor, descending through one or more halls (possibly mirroring the descending path of the sun-god into the underworld), to the burial chamber. In the earlier tombs the corridors turn through 90 degrees at least once (eg KV43, the tomb of Thutmose IV), and the earliest had cartouche-shaped burial chambers (for example, KV43, the tomb of Thutmose IV). This layout is known as 'Bent Axis', and after the burial the upper corridors were meant to be filled with rubble, and the entrance to the tomb hidden".
“After the Amarna Period, the layout gradually straightened, with an intermediate 'Jogged Axis' (the tomb of Horemheb, KV57 is typical of this) to the generally 'Straight Axis' of the late Nineteenth and Twentieth Dynasty tombs (Ramesses III's and Ramesses IX's tombs, KV11 and KV6 respectively). As the tomb's axes straightened, the slope also lessened, and almost disappeared in the late Twentieth Dynasty. Another feature that is common to most tombs is the 'well', which may have originated as an actual barrier intended to stop flood waters entering the lower parts of the tombs. It later seems to have developed a 'magical' purpose as a symbolic shaft. In the later Twentieth Dynasty, the well itself was sometimes not excavated, but the well room was still present”.
Most of the tombs are not open to the public – only 18 of the tombs can be opened, but they are rarely open at the same time. Often officials occasionally close those that are open for restoration work. The tour guides are no longer allowed to lecture inside the tombs and visitors are expected to proceed quietly and in single file through the tombs. This is to minimize time in the tombs and prevent the crowds from damaging the surfaces of the decoration. Photography is no longer allowed in the tombs. In 1997, 58 tourists and 4 Egyptians were killed by Islamist militants. This led to an overall drop in tourism in the area. On most days of the week an average of 15,000 tourists visit the main valley. On the days that the Cruise ships arrive the number can rise to 25,000 but it all depends upon the political stability.
Anubis is the jackal shape - the God of Mummification shown near a corpse. Many alabaster jars are there where they preserved various human organs.
The 3 headed snake shown below is well known - aim was to make Rameses II more powerful.
"By the end of the New Kingdom, Egypt had entered a long period of political and economic decline. The priests at Thebes grew in power and effectively administered Upper Egypt, while kings ruling from Tanis controlled Lower Egypt. Some attempt at using the open tombs was made at the start of the 21st Dynasty, with the High Priest of Amun, Pinedjem I, adding his cartouche to KV4. The Valley began to be heavily plundered, so during the 21st Dynasty the priests of Amun opened most of the tombs and moved the mummies into three tombs in order to better protect them, even removing most of their treasure in order to further protect the bodies from robbers. Most of these were later moved to a single cache near Deir el-Bari (known as TT320); located in the cliffs overlooking Hatshepsut's famous temple, this mass reburial contained a large number of royal mummies. They were found in a great state of disorder, many placed in other's coffins, and several are still unidentified. Other mummies were moved to the tomb of Amenhotep II, where over a dozen mummies, many of them royal, were later relocated".
After a few hours here, we moved onto the other side to see the Valley of the Queens. Actually, it’s a great let down. The pictorial history in the entrance building shows the incredible restoration work done by a team of Polish archaeologists over 60 years. As you leave yet another toy train near the gate, you see that there is only one large building. This is where wives of Pharaohs were buried in ancient times. In ancient times, it was known as Ta-Set-Neferu, meaning ‘the place of the Children of the Pharaoh’, because along with the Queens of the 18th, 19th and 20th Dynasties (1550–1070 BCE) many princes and princesses were buried with various members of the nobility. The tombs of these individuals were maintained by mortuary priests who performed daily rituals and provided offerings and prayers for the deceased nobility. This necropolis is said to hold more than seventy tombs, many of which are stylish and lavishly decorated. An example of this is the resting place carved out of the rock for Queen Nefertari (1290–1224 BCE) of the 19th Dynasty. The reliefs in her tomb are still intact.
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Text and photographs are copyright of the author. No part of any article or photographs maybe transmitted or reproduced by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying or otherwise, without written permission. Do contact the author on email -- helpthesun@gmail.com