“Golden Boy” in Egypt: 2,300-year-old mummy x-rayed

Status: 01/24/2023 12:48 p.m

In Egypt, researchers have X-rayed a millennia-old mummy with a CT scan. They discovered 49 amulets with which the corpse was decorated. The “Golden Boy” is to be given a special place in the new Egyptian Museum in Cairo.

A boy was sent on his last journey in ancient Egypt with 49 valuable amulets. A research team explains in the specialist magazineFrontiers in Medicine“. X-raying with a computer tomograph (CT) has now revealed the magnificent additions. Among other things, a golden tongue amulet was placed in the mouth of the deceased to enable him to speak in the afterlife.

15 year old boy

The mummy discovered in Upper Egypt in 1916 dates from the Ptolemaic period around 330 BC. Since it was found, it has been kept in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. The CT scans led the researchers to conclude that it was the mummy of a boy around 15 years old and 1.30 meters tall. Computed tomography is a 3D X-ray examination that can be used to create cross-sectional images of a body or other objects.

“The body of this mummy was extensively adorned with 49 amulets, beautifully stylized in a unique arrangement in three rows between the bandal folds and in the body cavity,” said Sahar Salim, professor of medicine at Cairo University and leader of the study. The amulets are made of gold, semi-precious stones, fired clay and ceramics. “Its purpose was to protect the body and give it strength in the afterlife,” said Salim.

The digital image shows the amulets (white) placed in three columns inside the mummy.

Image: dpa

High social status

The ancient Egyptians believed that the spirit lives on in an afterlife after death. According to belief, however, access was only gained after a dangerous path through the underworld and after the verdict of a final judgement. Relatives and embalmers therefore endeavored to make it possible for the deceased to arrive in the afterlife and to protect his body.

The “Golden Boy”, who probably had a high social status at the time of his death, also received shoes for it. “The sandals should probably allow him to walk out of the coffin,” Salim said. It is similar in the Book of the Dead of ancient Egyptians.

The “Golden Boy” is in good condition despite his old age. The scans allow a look inside the mummy without having to open it.

Image: dpa

Brain and organs removed

The boy also wore a gilded mask and breastplate. According to the research team, the brain was removed through the nose and the skull filled with resin. Except for the heart, the internal organs were also removed.

The Great Egyptian Museum is currently under construction in Cairo and is scheduled to open this year. However, many artefacts are still located in the ancient Egyptian Museum in central Tahrir Square. The “Golden Boy” is to be exhibited there in the main hall – together with some of the CT scans.

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