King Tut breakthrough after DNA results reveal likely cause of death

King Tutankhamun’s cause of death has been a debate for more than a century, but a DNA analysis has brought experts closer to understanding what killed the boy king.

After analyzing King Tut’s remains, researchers found genetic evidence to suggest he met his untimely end in part due to repeated bouts of malaria.

This mosquito-borne illness is treatable today, but often turned fatal when King Tut more than 3,300 years ago.

Tim Batty, general manager of the Tutankhamun Exhibition, said in January: ‘The tests show that Tutankhamun was infected with malaria that may have killed him.’

The analysis also identified King Tut’s grandparents as the pharaoh AmenH๏τep III and his queen Tiye, both of whom also died with malaria.

‘It’s another piece of the great jigsaw surrounding the life and death of Tutankhamun,’ said Batty.

A separate DNA analysis concluded that the boy king was a product of inbreeding, which caused him to develop several health conditions that may have contributed to his short lifespan as well.

King Tut ruled Egypt for only nine years before he died at just 18 years old. Though his reign was short-lived, he remains one of the most renowned pharaohs in history mainly due to the sensational discovery of his tomb in 1922.

For more than a century, Egyptologists have debated King Tut's cause of death. But a DNA analysis has brought them closer to understanding what killed the boy king

For more than a century, Egyptologists have debated King Tut’s cause of death. But a DNA analysis has brought them closer to understanding what killed the boy king

A separate DNA analysis concluded that the boy king was a product of inbreeding , which caused him to develop several health conditions that may have contributed to his short lifespan as well. Pictured is a recreation of what King Tut may have looked like

A separate DNA analysis concluded that the boy king was a product of inbreeding , which caused him to develop several health conditions that may have contributed to his short lifespan as well. Pictured is a recreation of what King Tut may have looked like

Related Posts

THE GOLDEN THRONE OF TUTANKHAMUN – A MASTERPIECE OF ROYAL POWER AND RITUAL

The golden throne of Pharaoh Tutankhamun is one of the most iconic artifacts of Ancient Egypt, dating to the late 18th Dynasty of the New Kingdom, around…

The Subglacial Sentinel: Reclassifying the Aethelgard Discovery

On the fourteenth of February, 2024, deep within the Queen Maud Land sector of Antarctica, a seismic shift revealed what mainstream archaeology has long suppressed: a craft…

THE DESCENT OF THE GANGES (ARJUNA’S PENANCE): A STONE EPIC CARVED IN TIME

The monumental rock relief shown in the image is known as The Descent of the Ganges, also widely referred to as Arjuna’s Penance. It is located at…

Chand Baori: A Stairway to the World’s Heart

In the sun-scorched village of Abhaneri, Rajasthan, the earth does not rise in a monument, but descends in a sacred geometry. Chand Baori, built in the 9th…

Arkaim: The Echo in the Earth

In the vast, wind-swept steppe of the Southern Urals, a circle persists. From the ground, it is a subtle contour, a gentle swell in the wheat and…

The Shield’s Song: A Map of Deep Earth Thought

On the surface of a northern continental shield, the planet has opened its journal to the sky. This is not merely rock, but a volume of deep-time…