+

Cookies on the Business Insider India website

Business Insider India has updated its Privacy and Cookie policy. We use cookies to ensure that we give you the better experience on our website. If you continue without changing your settings, we\'ll assume that you are happy to receive all cookies on the Business Insider India website. However, you can change your cookie setting at any time by clicking on our Cookie Policy at any time. You can also see our Privacy Policy.

Close
HomeQuizzoneWhatsappShare Flash Reads
 

2,300-year-old 'golden boy' mummy was found with 49 amulets, including a gold tongue to let him speak with the gods

Jan 24, 2023, 18:48 IST
Business Insider
A CT scan allowed scientists to digitally dissect this mummy while keeping it intact.Sahar Saleem
  • Photos show the inside of a young teen's mummy from 2,300 years ago.
  • The child, nicknamed the "golden boy," was mummified with 49 protective amulets.
Advertisement

A teen boy whose mummy had been stored in a museum since 1916 was covered in precious amulets, a study published Tuesday found.

A team of scientists has digitally unwrapped the 2,300-year-old mummy using a CT scanner to uncover its secrets.

The team found that the so-called "golden boy" was lavishly mummified with gold and semi-precious stones. Forty-nine protective amulets were precisely placed in three columns on his body, suggesting he was rich and of high status.

The mummy's cartonage is colorful.Sahar Saleem

The finding is "definitely extraordinary" as high-ranking mummies were often pillaged for their precious ornaments, Sahar Saleem, study author and a professor of radiology at the faculty of medicine at Cairo University, told Insider in an email.

Because this mummy has not been disturbed, it provides a unique insight into how embalmers would carefully place the amulets on the body to protect the dead, she said.

Advertisement

Amulets to protect the dead

An image from the CT scan shows a 3D rendering of the mummy. Amulets of varying shapes and sizes, represented by white shapes, are placed on the boy's partially skelotonized body.Sahar Saleem

"Ancient Egyptians believed in the power of amulets, which depended on its material, color, and shape," said Saleem.

"During mummification, the embalmers said prayers and recited verses from the 'Book of the Dead' while placing amulets inside the mummy or in between the wrappings," she said.

Each amulet had a specific meaning to protect the boy, who was about 14 or 15 years old when he died.

A scarab amulet for the heart, and a gold tongue for speech

A scarab-shaped amulet near the boy's heart, engraved with verses from the Book of the Dead, would have helped him be judged kindly in the afterlife, Saleem said.

A scarab amulet is spotted inside the boy's chest.Sahar Saleem

"The heart scarab was mentioned in Chapter 30 of the Book of the Dead; it was very important in the afterlife during judging the deceased and weighing of the heart against the feather of Maat," the goddess of truth, justice, balance, and most order, Saleem said.

Advertisement

"The heart scarab silenced the heart in the Judgement day so not to bear witness against the deceased," she added.

A golden tongue-shaped leaf was also placed in the boy's mouth. This ensured the boy could speak with the gods after death.

A curved arrow shows the location of a dense golden amulet placed in the boy's mouth. The straight arrow shows the boy's eye sockets were packet with linen.Sahar Saleem

Another notable amulet was placed near the boy's penis. The "Two-finger" amulet is meant to bring protection to the incision they made on the torso, Saleem said.

The other amulets had other varied protective roles. A "flask" amulet represented carrying holy water in the afterlife. A "Djed" amulet, representing the backbone of god Osiris, ensured the safe revival of the deceased. A "right angle" amulet brought balance and leveling to the deceased.

A picture shows the mummy is wearing a guilded gold mask and wrapped tightly. Ferns were placed on his chest.Sahar Saleem

These findings are "exciting," Wojciech Ejsmond, an Egyptologist from the Warsaw Mummy Project who was not involved in the study, told Insider in an email.

Advertisement

"This study is providing valuable information on how ancient Egyptians lived, died, and what they thought will happen next," he said.

Sandals made for walking

The mummy was wearing sandals.Sahar Saleem

The boy was also found to be wearing white sandals in his grave. Per the Book of the Dead, the deceased had to wear white sandals and be pious and clean before reciting its verses.

"The sandals were probably meant to enable the boy to walk out of the coffin," Saleem said in a press release.

"Golden sandals were also found in the royal tombs; e.g. Thutmose III," Saleem told Insider.

This may indicate that while the boy was high-ranking, he may not have been royal.

Advertisement

An insight into ancient Egyptian circumcision

Another unexpected finding is to do with the boy's penis. Saleem said the scan suggests the boy was not circumcised. That's unlike another high-ranking figure, King Amenhotep I, whom Saleem studied as well.

This may indicate that ancient Egyptians were only circumcised in adulthood, Saleem said.

But Salima Ikram, head of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo, has another theory.

"The lack of circumcision is interesting as it might tell us something about his ethnicity – Egyptians tended to be circumcised generally before the age of 13," she told The Guardian.

"It might suggest that foreigners adopted Egyptian burial practices – and we know the Persians did," she said.

Advertisement

She cautioned, however: "I wouldn't hang all of this on one fragile foreskin."

Who was this boy?

The mummy inside its sarcophagus.Sahar Saleem

The boy may yield more secrets still.

According to the Cairo Egyptian Museum records, he was first uncovered in 1916 in a cemetery used from BC 332 to BC 30 in Nag el-Hassay, Southern Egypt.

The boy would have been "the eyewitness of the dusk of the ancient Egyptian civilization, possibly the turmoils during the time of the last Ptolemaic kings, and perhaps even a short revival of Egypt's greatness during Cleopatra's reign," Ejsmond said.

His name is, as of now, unknown. But scientists are studying his sarcophagus closely to find more clues as to who he was, Saleem said.

Advertisement

The results were published in the peer-reviewed journal Frontiers in Medicine on Tuesday.

You are subscribed to notifications!
Looks like you've blocked notifications!
Next Article