Saturday, March 13, 2010

The Forgotten Boy

In the recent two year study of eighteenth dynasty royal mummies it seems that this boy from a side chamber in valley of kings tomb KV 35 was not included.

There are artifacts from the tomb Kv 35 which belong to a son of Amenhotep II named Webensenu as a result of the mummies found in the tomb there are four candidates to be that prince including this boy or another mummy found attached to a funerary boat belonging to Amenhotep II or either of two skeletons.

Some have speculated that the mummy on the boat was the founder of the twentieth dynasty Sethnakht because of a reused coffin once manufactured for that king was present in the tomb at the time of discovery. Unfortunately the mummy was destroyed more than a hundred years ago when the boat was stolen.

Reports on that badly damaged mummy says that it was glued to the boat by resin used in the mummies mummification that would mean that the mummy was fairly fresh when unwrapped and thrown on Amenhotep's boat in ancient times.

The founder of the twentieth dynasty the pharaoh Sethnakht has been suggested as a candidate dying in approximately 1186 bc would have lain in his tomb or at least a tomb for one hundred years before the recycling of the valley of kings by Herihor and Pinudgem I and others. Is this enough time for the resins on Sethnakht's mummy to have set?

Tutankhamen's mummy was covered in buckets of resin if the same had been true for Sethnakht would a century be enough time to set? I suspect in the dry climate of the valley of kings that this may well be enough time.

Whatever happened the mummy was still gooey enough that when torn open in the tomb of Amenhotep II the mummy stuck to the boat. This seems unlikely scenario to me and I would prefer this mummy to be another person perhaps prince Webensenu already buried in Amenhotep II's tomb before the reburial committee of the twenty first dynasty priests arrived.

However that to me would mean that Kv 35 had probably been robbed by the end of the eighteenth dynasty perhaps during the Amarna period with the princes badly damaged mummy thrown on the boat then.

This may remove Sethnakht from ever having been in Kv 35 but he may be represented by one of the unidentified skeletons though I would expect that if Sethnakht was in the tomb that his mummy would have been found in the side chamber with the other new kingdom pharaohs.

So who's the boy found lying between two Amarna period mummies now identified as queen Tiye and the other woman being Tutankhamen's mother? The naked boy may have done some moving around in Kv 35 as one of his toes was found in another side chamber of the tomb.

The thing that comes to mind is the most important Amarna mummies including Queen Tiye, Tut's mother and the boy may have been moved directly into the tomb of Amenhotep II at the return from Amarna to the valley of kings minus their burial goods.

The unwanted storeroom Kv 55 used to hold Amenhotep III and queen Tiye's burial equipment during the building of Wv 22 and now basically empty was used to dispose of the unwanted mummy of Akhenaten(?) and queen Tiye's offending shrine. Queen Tiye, the younger women and the boy being placed reverently in the tomb of their great ancestor during the reign of Tutankhamen and robbed shortly after perhaps at the same time the mummy was thrown on the boat.

If the mummy on the boat is Webensenu than the priests who opened the tomb at the beginning of the twenty first dynasty probably found a tomb already plundered and merely gathered up the three naked mummies placing them next to each other in the side chamber and adding the kingly mummies.

In the tomb of Tutankhamen we find a number of objects made for some other king and potentially re inscribed for Tutankhamen with the titles on the canopic coffinettes hinting that the king may have been the ephemeral Smenkhara.

I am tempted to wonder if the boy found in the tomb of Amenhotep II laid to rest with Tutankhamen's mother and grandmother could be Tutankhamen's older brother, the pharaoh Smenkhara?

Is there anything to support this idea? In G. Elliot Smith's sensational 1912 book "The Royal Mummies" Sir Smith says the following of the mummy "is a small boy (1 m. 242 mill.) whose general appearance is suggestive of an age of about nine or ten years: but as permanent canine teeth are present and fully grown he cannot be less than eleven years of age".

This would mean that if the boy was Smenkhara he probably ascended the throne at about the same age as his successor Tutankhamen suggesting the idea that there were back to back boy kings after Akhenaten.

Ironically Sir Smith goes on to say "This boy presents an extraordinary likeness to a beautiful statue of the God Khonsu found at Karnak". A statue believed to represent Tutankhamen as the moon god but which may have been created for the boy in Kv 35.

Certainly the next question must be the position of the boys arms not being crossed over his chest as might be expected of a kings mummy at this period. The reports on the investigation (in the tomb) of theKv 55 mummy are vague sadly but do indicate that the mummy found there had at least one of its arms at its side.

J. Lindon Smith and Edward Aryton described the position of the Kv 55 mummies arms as the right arm fully extended along side of the body with the left arm bent and the hand resting on the chest. However Theodore Davis saw the hands as clasped.*

The traditional Osirine pose appears to have been abandoned for the Kv 55 mummy if it is actually a king in favor of a more feminine pose which would perhaps be appropriate for Akhenaten but not for the boy in Kv 35 who may have been simply denied the burial pose of a king at the embalmers around or slightly after the death of Akhenaten himself.

With all these scenarios the truth is science in the future will more than likely be able to show the familial relations of the boy to the other royal mummies but doubtful that a name can ever be attached to this boy much less the name Smenkhara.


*The Theban Royal Mummy Project: http://anubis4_2000.tripod.com/mummypages1/Mummyposition.htm

4 comments:

Parag said...

The Valley also had tombs for the favourite nobles and the wives and children of both the nobles and pharaohs.
Valley of The Kings

Scrabcake said...

Interesting speculation. Usually, one imagines Smenkhare to be an adult man. I've always wondered whether the boy could be Amenhetep III's son, Thutmose. I am also not sure that the "feminine" hand position could not be explained by the boy being considered a child. Do we have a good enough sample of mummies of royal children to say what their hand positions would rightly have been? I would guess no. It seems like the data is too limited to conclude anything from the hand position here.
The same is true about the body in the boat. Because it was destroyed, we only have one eyewitness account of what the body was like. Eyewitness accounts can be wrong or coloured by previous ideas. For example, we have Weigall and Aryton and Davis each presenting conflicting accounts of the interior of KV55, when all of them had been there and seen it firsthand! There's also the possibility that the resin could have melted, cementing the body to the boat after it had been removed from its original coffin.
As for Setnakhte, we have nothing to say he was buried in the tomb at all. Remember that the 21st dynasty workshops were pretty indiscriminate about who they buried in whose coffin, and they were apparently ok with shuffling around this funerary equipment given that Pinedjem I was buried in a coffin re purposed from Thutmose I.
I'm not trying to tear down your post here. I think there is a decent probability that the boy could be Smenkhare. I'm just helping you hone your arguments :)

tim said...

Hi Scrabcake

I love your thought that the resins may have remelted cementing the body to the boat. Thutmose is a top candidate indeed I only chose the name Smenkahra to put it out there as a possibility, it may also be someone else with no surviving monuments.

Thanks for your interesting comment!

John B said...

The mummy on the boat had the arms broken off. The legs too appeared to be truncated. The guardian at the Ptolemaic temple of Deir el Medineh had just such a mummy hidden under a paving slab. He used to try to sell it to tourists back in the 1980s.It might be worth checking this. The paving slab was in the corner of the temenos diagonally opposite the temple and covered what might have been a tomb shaft.