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Museum Entrance Welcome to the Lobby Room One Room Two Room Four Room Three The museum of King Tut (with facts founded by the amazing Isabella E.) Visit.

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Presentation on theme: "Museum Entrance Welcome to the Lobby Room One Room Two Room Four Room Three The museum of King Tut (with facts founded by the amazing Isabella E.) Visit."— Presentation transcript:

1 Museum Entrance Welcome to the Lobby Room One Room Two Room Four Room Three The museum of King Tut (with facts founded by the amazing Isabella E.) Visit the Curator

2 Name of Museum Curator Information Isabella Emami has a mom, dad, older brother, and a French Bulldog named Gabby. She is a fun, outgoing person, with an incredible personality. Her hobbies are bugging her brother or playing her favorite poker game Texas Holden. Her favorite history topic is learning about King Tut. Back to Lobby

3 Name of Museum Room 1 Title Introduction

4 Name of Museum Room 2 Title Body Paragraph

5 Name of Museum Room 3 Title Image 1 Image 2 Image 3

6 Name of Museum Room 4 Title Bibliography

7 Name of Museum King Tut’s tomb had 4 rooms and contained 5,000 objects. King Tut’s tomb is a burial chamber containing a sarcophagus with King Tut inside, but in the actual tomb, all of King Tut’s valuables pile after pile are with him in the tomb, such as rings, earrings, and so much more. King Tut’s reign was very short, his reign lasted from 1332-1322 B.C. E.but discovered in 1922 by the work of Howard Carter. King Tut’s tomb is placed in Valley of the Kings Egypt in Thebes. In addition King Tut’s tomb had over 5,000 objects in his tomb. The Ancient Egyptians were an important and advanced civilization because their religious system helped keep King Tut be successful in the afterlife. Introduction Back to Room 1

8 Name of Museum The Ancient Egyptians used at least three parts of the religious system to show Ancient Egypt was an important civilization. One part of the religious system was embalming King Tut’s body, when embalming King Tut the Ancient Egyptians took out specific organs to preserve King Tut’s body, after the Ancient Egyptians took out some of the organs they layed the King Tut’s body in a type of salt called natron to dry out the body for the afterlife, King Tut’s tomb is placed in a sarcophagus in King Tut’s tomb. Another part of the religious system was to add lucy charms and to say special prayers, usually priests would say these special prayers to help the King Tut make it to the afterlife safely, and the mask on King Tut’s mummy has a magical text so the gods and goddess made sure the king got to the afterlife safely. Some of the special charms on King Tut is the Beetle charm and the Eye of Ra charm. The last part of the religious system is placing objects in the tomb, the Ancient Egyptians stuck objects in the tomb so the king can be prepared for the afterlife. In King Tut’s small tomb the king’s mummy lay with a chest of three coffins made of solid gold. King Tut’s tomb had four rooms, such as the annex, the antechamber, the burial chamber, and the treasury room. Therefore the Ancient Egyptians used three parts of the religious system to show Egypt was an important civilization. Body Paragraph Back to Room 2

9 Name of Museum Archaeologists examining King Tut’s chariot. Archaeologists Inspect Tut's Chariot. Photographer. Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. Web. 22 May 2015. http://quest.eb.com/search/115_891300/1/115_891300/cite http://quest.eb.com/search/115_891300/1/115_891300/cite Image 1 Back to Room 3

10 Name of Museum This is a picture of King Tut’s sarcophagus Archaeologists Inspect Tut's Chariot. Photographer. Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. Web. 22 May 2015. http://quest.eb.com/search/115_891300/1/115_891300/cite http://quest.eb.com/search/115_891300/1/115_891300/cite Image 2 Back to Room 3

11 Name of Museum Image 3 Back to Room 3 Paintings and writing in King Tut’s tomb King Tutankhamun's Tomb. Photograph. Encyclopædia Britannica ImageQuest. Web. 22 May 2015. http://quest.eb.com/search/139_1893299/1/139_1893299/cite http://quest.eb.com/search/139_1893299/1/139_1893299/cite The citations provided are computer-generated. Because of differences in the data available from each collection, citations may not match style rules or include all com

12 Name of Museum Bibliography Back to Room 4 Hawass, Zahi. Tutankhaumun the Mystery of the Boy King. Washington D.C.: National Geographic, 2005. Print. Lesko, Leonard. World Book. Vol. 19. Chicago: World Book, 2013. Print. Morley, Jacqueline. You Wouldn’t Want to Be Cursed by King Tut. Great Britain: Franklin Watts, 2012. Print. Wegner, Josef. “tomb of Tutankhamen.” World History: Ancient and Medieval Eras. ABC- CLIO, 2015. Web. 13 May 2015.


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