Stories of "the mummy's curse" or "King Tut's curse" excited the world after the discovery in 1922 of the ancient pharaoh's tomb in Egypt. Lord Carnarvon, a British sponsor of archaeology in Egypt, died shortly after attending the tomb's opening, inspiring speculation that supernatural forces were at work ... National Geographic News
Object of Art deciphered by Andrew Earl Singer as found in the Tomb of KING TUTANKHAMEN, "each lover searches the world they live, the world they know, the world they learn, the world they grow. Each lover searches to find...each other. Love is exchange. King Tutankhamen+Queen Ankhesenamen are the two young lover's and they are united in happiness, having secured the perfect feeling, having simultaneously found that each needs each other...they leave in love."
Posted by: Andrew Earl Singer | 21.01.2006 at 03:38
There was no curse. See:
Mark R Nelson
The mummy's curse: historical cohort study.
British Journal of Medicine 325:21-28 December 2002
Posted by: Aydin | 11.05.2005 at 13:57