Ancient Egyptians believed in life after death. So they preserved Tut’s body as a mummy and buried him with items they thought he would need in the afterlife. Those essentials included robes, sandals, jewelry, board games, furniture, musical instruments, and even food.
Carter believed Tut’s tomb was located in the Valley of the Kings, a royal burial ground near the Nile. Dozens of pharaohs had been buried there, but robbers had raided many of their tombs in ancient times. Had Tut’s been spared?
On November 26, 1922, with Carnarvon by his side, Carter was about to find out. His hand trembled in the darkness as he entered the tomb through a narrow passageway. He held up a candle to peer through a hole he chipped in a second door.
“Can you see anything?” Carnarvon asked.
“Yes,” Carter answered. “Wonderful things.”
The room glittered with gold. Piled inside were golden chariots, jeweled chests, and dazzling statues. No one in modern times had seen anything like it. It was the only pharaoh’s tomb to be found intact.
Deep inside the tomb, the biggest find of all awaited. Behind the sealed door of Tut’s burial chamber rested a massive stone coffin called a sarcophagus. Three coffins were nested inside. The last one, made of solid gold, held Tut’s mummy. It wore a magnificent gold mask.
The find was one of the greatest archaeological discoveries ever, says Bob Brier, an expert on ancient Egypt. “For the first time, the world had an idea of the fantastic treasures that the kings of Egypt took with them to the next world,” he explains.