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Tutankhamun’s Secrets review: Lively TV documentary spills more beans

A pacy documentary reveals the latest about Tutankhamun and Howard Carter, who discovered his tomb. It also revives vivid childhood memories of my first encounter with the pharaoh, says Bethan Ackerley
Tutankhamun?s Secrets: Raiders of the Lost Past with Janina Ramirez,30/10/2022,Janina in the Valley of the Kings,Alleycats TV,Alleycats TV
Presenter Janina Ramirez near Tutankhamun’s tomb, Valley of the Kings
BBC/Alleycats TV

BBC iPlayer

I AM one of those unlucky people who recall little of their childhood. But I do remember, at the age of 11, seeing the Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs exhibition. It was the first time I felt wonder at the sheer age of the history in front of me, connecting me with the millions who have shared this emotion since Howard Carter and his team discovered Tutankhamun’s tomb.

Since then, many falsehoods have sprung up around the pharaoh, his treasures and the man who uncovered them. Tutankhamun’s Secrets, an episode in the BBC 2 documentary series Raiders of the Lost Past With Janina Ramirez, joins a long list of attempts to unravel the myths.

Some are well known, such as the curse that supposedly killed the Earl of Carnarvon, Carter’s backer, shortly after the tomb was opened. This, as many viewers will know, was the invention of a rapacious global press. But there are newer revelations.

Like Tutankhamun, Carter has been mythologised, coming to symbolise the wonders of archaeology without giving any sense of who he really was. While the boy king remains unknowable, his health and reign subject to endless academic contention, unravelling Carter’s life is easier.

The son of an artist, he was a sickly child and lived in “genteel poverty”, says the show’s presenter Janina Ramirez, a historian at the University of Oxford. He shared his father’s talent for illustration, which secured him a position as an excavation artist at just 17.

There is plenty to admire about Carter, and plenty to condemn, particularly when it comes to the role of Egyptians in his work. Ramirez explains that Carter took a different approach from his contemporaries: rather than distrusting the people of Cairo and Luxor, he spent his days among them, soaking up their expertise in coffee houses. He was ultimately fired from his job as Luxor’s chief inspector for antiquities after siding with Egyptian workers who were accosted by drunken tourists.

But Carter was far from enlightened. He benefited immeasurably from local people’s knowledge as he tracked down tombs, yet he called them “natives”. Like many Egyptologists then, Carter sold some of the treasures he uncovered. He spent a decade meticulously documenting the items in Tutankhamun’s tomb, yet there is evidence he gave several artefacts to friends, including a golden collar adorning the king’s sarcophagus. Egyptian authorities had stipulated his findings were to remain in Cairo. No amount of affection for Egypt and its history makes up for such a crime.

These are weighty matters, of course. But as its title signals, this documentary series doesn’t take itself altogether seriously. We whip through at a merry pace – one minute following Carter as a young inspector, unpicking his detective work as he identifies a prolific tomb raider, and the next, “meeting” Tutankhamun’s family via their enduring statues.

Not everyone will enjoy this frenetic style, but there is still a rough chronology to keep viewers’ feet on the ground. Crucially, Tutankhamun’s Secrets doesn’t feel overstuffed, though I found myself lamenting that Egyptology isn’t the series’ sole focus. Overall, the programme did a terrific job not only in revealing more about Tutankhamun and Carter, but in transporting me back in time: to 1330 BC, to 1922, and to the 11-year-old, who was so overwhelmed by a vivid connection to the past.

Bethan Ackerley is a subeditor at 鶹ý. She loves sci-fi, sitcoms and anything spooky. She is still upset aboutthe ending of GameofThrones. Follow heronTwitter @inkerley

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This slick documentary takes us into the tomb of Wahtye, a high-ranking official in the 5th dynasty of Egypt. Proof there is more to Egyptology than pharaoh-bothering.

Topics: Ancient humans / Archaeology / tv