Saturday, August 9, 2025

Death & Resurrection among Ancient Egyptians: New Interpretations of King Tut’s Burial Goods

King Tut's burial mask (Source: Getty Images)

 

King Tutankhamun (Tut) is probably one of the most well-known Egyptian pharaohs.  His tomb was discovered in 1922 by Howard Carter.  The opulent tomb had never been disturbed prior to Carter, and a series of unfortunate but explainable tragic events that befell Carter’s team led to a revival of mummy curse lore.  This has overshadowed much of what was learned about Tut and Egyptian life during his rule.  Scholars have revisited this topic over the past century, and new interpretations of the grave goods suggests the creation of a new ritual and a desire to restore religious order after a tumultuous period in Egyptian history.

 

King Tut ascended to the throne after his father, Akhenaton, died.  Akhenaton, popularly referred to as the “Heretic King”, abandoned traditional Egyptian religious order and replaced it with a revolutionary ideological approach: the monotheism wherein Aten was the supreme and only deity to worship.  This disrupted Egyptian ways of life, as well as ripped power away from Egyptian clergyman, who we suspect were desperate to get it back upon Akhenaton’s death.  King Tut was immediately confirmed as Pharaoh, and the powerful elites took to restoring the previous religious order.  When he died shortly thereafter his death was used as further propaganda to reestablish normalcy through the newly reinstated state religion.

 

Scholar Nicholas Brown claims this all took place by having the deceased Tut undergo a ritual known as the Awakening of Osiris.  This ritual was meant to resurrect Tut (through his mummified form) in the afterlife through the transformation from a mere (and very dead) mortal to the immortal god Osiris, the God of the Underworld.  In various illustrations Osiris is depicted as a deceased Pharaoh, whose green and black skin represents fertility (of the Nile River Delta) and new life (as the mythos around Osiris is one of death and resurrection).  

 

This transformation was known as the Awakening of Osiris ritual, which was recorded in the “Books of the Underworld and Sky”, which were written decades after Tut’s passing.  This prevented scholars from making the connection between the ritual and King Tut, but Brown claims that the evidence within King Tut’s tomb is suggestive of a precursor to the recording of the ritual within the aforementioned text. 

 

The first line of evidence is the meticulous care the embalmers took in preserving Tut’s penis in the erect state.  This is interpreted as representing Osiris’s virility as a life bringer among the dead.  Additional evidence comes from the grave goods discovered in the tomb, specifically located in the tomb’s northwest and southwest corners: pedj-aha emblems, or decorated wooden staffs, and clay troughs (or trays).  The pedj-aha emblems are cited in the ritual, while the clay troughs are made of Nile (River) clay.  Each are believed to be representative of either Osiris himself or power of regeneration. 

 

Taken together Brown believes these are evidence of King Tut being the first pharaoh to have the Awakening of Osiris ritual performed on him, or at least the foundations of the one recorded decades after his death.  The purpose of the ritual would have been to reaffirm the power of the gods and the religious order that his leadership (in life) was used to restore. His premature death halted those plans, leading the elites to monopolize his death to promote their agenda further.  Ultimately it worked as no further disruptions to that order occurred until new dynasties and outsiders wrested control of the throne.

 

Bibliography

Brown, N. (2025). These Thy Libations, Osiris! A Reconsideration of the Four Clay Troughs from the Tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62). The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, 1-10.

Gilmour, C. I. (2025, April 8). Tutankhamun: Plain-looking mud trays in pharaoh's tomb may have been key part of complex afterlife rituals. Phys.org.

Taub, B. (2025, March 24). Tutankhamun May Have Invented The “Awakening Of Osiris” Ritual. IFL Science.

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