Tutankhamen Fathered Twins, Mummified Fetuses Suggest

Two
fetuses found in the tomb of Tutankhamen may have been twins and were
very likely to have been the children of the teenage Pharaoh, according
to the anatomist who first studied the mummified remains of the young
King in the 1960s.
Robert Connolly, who is working with the Egyptian authorities to
analyse the mummified remains of Tutankhamen and the two stillborn
children, will discuss the new findings at the Pharmacy and Medicine in
Ancient Egypt Conference at The University of Manchester on September
1, 2008.
Mr
Connolly says: "The work carried out by Catherine Hellier in Norway and
I suggests that the two fetuses in the tomb of Tutankhamen could be
twins despite their very different size and thus fit better as a single
pregnancy for his young wife. This increases the likelihood of them
being Tutankhamen's children.
"I
studied one of the mummies, the larger one, back in 1979, determined
the blood group data from this baby mummy and compared it with my 1969
blood grouping of Tutankhamen. The results confirmed that this larger
fetus could indeed be the daughter of Tutankhamen.
"Now we
believe that they are twins and they were both his children. The
forthcoming DNA study on them by Dr Zahi Hawass's group in Egypt will
contribute another key piece to this question."
Mr Connolly, Senior
Lecturer in Physical Anthropology at the University of Liverpool's
Department of Human Anatomy and Cell Biology, adds: "It is a very
exciting finding which will not only paint a more detailed picture of
this famous young King's life and death, it will also tell us more
about his lineage."
More than 100 delegates
from 10 countries, including the Director of the Cultural Bureau of the
Egyptian Embassy in the UK and researchers from Egypt's Conservation of
Medicinal Plants project in Sinai and the British Museum, are attending
the conference, hosted by the KNH Centre for Biomedical Egyptology at
The University of Manchester, in conjunction with the National Research
Centre in Cairo, Egypt, and sponsored by The Leverhulme Trust.
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