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Narrator:
Pyramids, temples, tombs --
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these ancient wonders promise
even greater secrets
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still to be found
under the sands of egypt.
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Now cutting-edge science
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decodes the mysterious
land of the pharaohs.
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With modern technology,
we are gaining an insight
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into the way
ancient egyptians lived
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00:00:21,522 --> 00:00:24,390
and the manner
in which they died.
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Narrator: This time,
mysteries of villainy and vice
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at the heart of ancient egypt.
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Can cutting-edge science
reveal evidence
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of a 5,000-year-old homicide?
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So like a forensic scientist,
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we were able to reconstruct
a probable weapon.
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Narrator: Does the discovery
of this mass cemetery
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prove ancient egyptians
broke the ultimate taboo?
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People are eating people.
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Cannibalism.
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Narrator:
And can modern pharmacology
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reveal the surprising antics
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involved in ancient egyptian
worship?
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The aim of the game is to get
as drunk as you can.
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Ancient egyptians were
getting high.
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Narrator:
Ancient clues unearthed.
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Long-lost evidence reexamined.
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Precious artifacts brought into
the light of the 21st century.
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These are
"egypt's unexplained files."
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-- captions by vitac --
www.Vitac.Com
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captions paid for by
discovery communications
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♪
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the british museum, london --
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among the star exhibits,
two mysterious mummies.
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They've been on display
for over 100 years,
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but egyptologists know
very little about them.
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What secrets are held by one of
the most famous mummies
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in the world today?
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Narrator:
Modern science, at last,
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reveals some extraordinary
and unexpected clues.
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We started to examine them
like a forensic scientist today,
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like a cold case investigator.
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It's right there in front
of your nose,
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and you had no idea
it was there the whole time.
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Narrator:
Now, five millennia later,
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scientists in the 21st century
make a shocking discovery.
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It is quite astonishing
that he would appear
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to have been
the victim of murder.
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Narrator: Could experts have
uncovered evidence
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of a 5,000-year-old murder?
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♪
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gebelein, in upper egypt,
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25 miles south
of modern-day luxor.
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It's here in 1896
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that a british archaeologist
discovered
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six bodies in the sand.
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They appeared to have been
carefully buried.
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These bodies were found
in the fetal position,
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and the fetal position
is very important
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for the ancient egyptians
because essentially it's
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returning a dead person back to
a rebirth context,
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so they can be reborn again
in the afterlife.
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Narrator: The bodies discovered
at gebelein
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are unlike other mummies found
preserved in egypt.
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They are not embalmed,
nor are they wrapped in linens.
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Instead, they were buried
directly into the sand.
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Antoine: They weren't
intentionally mummified,
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as far as we can determine.
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These were preserved,
if you want, by accident.
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A hot desert environment
has led to
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the natural drying out
of the body.
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Godenho: So when we discover
these bodies,
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they're preserved.
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The sand desiccates the body,
draws the moisture out.
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The male is better preserved
of the pair.
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He still has ginger hair.
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Johnston:
Within the museum community,
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because he has these
little strands of ginger hair,
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he has been known
for many years as "ginger."
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narrator: In 1901,
two of the bodies,
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gebelein man and woman,
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are brought to
the british museum.
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He is better preserved
and put on display.
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But egyptologists at that time
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can decipher very little
about either of them.
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They remain a mystery
for over a century.
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Then, in 2012,
new scientific techniques
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give forensic archaeologists
daniel antoine
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narrator: And renée friedman
the chance to finally unlock
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the story of
the gebelein mummies.
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We did a lot of research
on how old he was,
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so we did carbon dating.
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Probably lived between 3,000
because and 3,300 because.
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Narrator: Incredibly, that makes
gebelein man and woman
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among the oldest mummies
ever found in egypt.
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They died before the invention
of mummification,
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which explains why they were
buried directly into the sand.
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This was a time before
even the earliest pharaohs.
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The period in which this person
lived was right
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before egypt becomes a state.
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It wasn't like
the pharaonic egypt
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that happens a little bit later
in time.
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As we're dealing with some of
the very earliest periods
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of egyptian history,
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we're dealing with a period
where life is fairly savage.
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It was a period we know was
very much filled with violence
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because we have famous
egyptian pieces of art
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that depict violence.
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"this violent world is the first
clue when piecing together
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the gebelein mummies'
ancient story.
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Daniel antoine now hopes science
will reveal even more detail
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and turns first to the man.
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Daniel uses the latest
c.T. Scanning techniques
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to study ginger in detail,
unimaginable in the 19th century
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when the bodies were
first found.
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So what's extraordinary
about this individual
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is that he'd been on this
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[indistinct] on and off
for over 100 years,
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and we knew relatively
nothing about him.
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I was very keen on getting new
insights into him as a person,
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and this is why we took him
to get c.T. Scanned.
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That's really revealed
so much new information.
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So it's wonderful that science
is now stepping in
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to tell us
about these individuals.
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The c.T. Scan produces
a 3-d image
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not just of the surface
of the mummy.
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It captures detail deep inside
to reveal brand new information
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about ginger,
the gebelein man.
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Antoine: We were keen
to find out how old he was,
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and one way to do that is to
actually look at his skeleton.
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So you can see the head
of the humerus
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is in the process
of fusing here,
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suggesting he was a young man
when he died,
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probably between
the ages of 18 and 21.
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Narrator: Egyptologists now know
gebelein man lived during
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a turbulent and violent era
of egyptian history,
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and that he died as a young man.
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But the c.T. Scan reveals
these two facts
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may be more
than just coincidence.
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What puzzled us is that
there was damage
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to his left shoulder blade.
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If we look closely, we can see
there's damage
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when you compare it
to the right over here.
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You can see that the underlying
bone is shattered.
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You can see the fourth rib
is also broken.
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The c.T. Scan has uncovered
startling evidence gebelein man
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suffered a brutal injury.
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Daniel and renée study
the wounds for clues
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to what could have caused them
and arrive
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at a chilling conclusion.
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This appears to be a single,
violent blow
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to his left shoulder blade.
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He may have never
seen it coming.
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So like a forensic
scientist today,
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like a cold case investigator,
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we were able to reconstruct
the probably weapon,
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which was probably a thin,
metal stiletto dagger
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that went all the way
into the hilt.
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Johnston: Gebelein man "a"
had been stabbed in the back,
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and that's almost certainly
the cause of his death.
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Narrator:
It's a remarkable discovery.
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100 years after gebelein man
was first discovered
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and put on public display,
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modern science
has revealed he is,
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in fact, the young victim of
a 5,500-year-old murder.
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Johnston: It is quite
astonishing this individual
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has been on display
in the british museum
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for over 100 years,
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but it's only now that
we discover
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that he was
the victim of murder.
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Narrator: Modern science has
at last illuminated
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one of the darkest eras
of ancient egypt.
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It reveals a violent world
where life was dangerous
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and could be cut brutally short.
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But the gebelein mummies
have even more secrets
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to share
from this ancient time,
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and science is now ready
to unlock them.
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♪
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johnston:
In 2012, it was discovered
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that gebelein man "a"
had been murdered.
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In 2018, something
quite different is discovered.
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We had no idea that there was
some kind of richer evidence
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to their cultural origins.
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Narrator:
Armed with new technology,
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experts uncover another clue
hidden for millennia.
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You're just looking through
the view finder and you go,
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"oh, my goodness."
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godenho: The egyptian couple
have what we can identify
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as pictures on their skin.
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Narrator: Experts ask what this
ancient body art could mean?
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Could these marking be
♪ancient egypt's oldest tattoos?
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♪
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narrator:
Egyptologists daniel antoine
and renée friedman
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have used the latest science
to reveal gebelein man
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was murdered.
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Then, in 2018, they turned
to the woman
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he was found buried beside,
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to ask what secrets
her body could reveal.
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Acting on a hunch,
renée studies gebelein woman
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with a handheld infrared camera.
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Friedman: I got myself a little
pre-converted infrared camera,
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which is generally used
for wildlife photography.
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I hadn't really expected
there to be anything,
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but you're just kind of
looking through the viewfinder
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and you go,
"oh, my goodness!"
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narrator: Renée's infrared
camera revealed clear markings
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on the woman's shoulder,
invisible to the naked eye --
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a series of "s" shapes
and a stick or stave.
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To see that it was an area
that was very well visible,
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but we just -- you just can't
see it without infrared.
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Narrator: The only evidence
of tattooing in ancient egypt
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had come from figurines
and wall paintings.
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This is the first example
of an actual tattoo.
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Friedman: We had known
from figurines
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that there was a likelihood
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that they did tattoo
in predynastic egypt,
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but I really never thought
that I'd actually find a tattoo.
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00:10:00,968 --> 00:10:05,003
Until now, evidence has only
shown that women were tattooed.
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00:10:05,005 --> 00:10:07,205
With the power of infrared
technology,
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00:10:07,207 --> 00:10:10,175
renée is able
to test that theory.
219
00:10:10,177 --> 00:10:13,445
Could gebelein man
have similar markings?
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00:10:13,447 --> 00:10:16,681
Renée examines his body
under infrared light
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00:10:16,683 --> 00:10:21,186
and is astonished
by what she discovers.
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The man's arm appears to be
tattooed with a bull
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and a sheep.
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You've got two horned animals.
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The nuances of the meanings
of these animals
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is something we're still trying
to work out
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from this preliterate age.
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They didn't tell us
exactly what everything meant.
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Narrator:
It's an extraordinary discovery.
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The first actual evidence
of an ancient egyptian tattoo
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and the first proof that both
men and women were tattooed.
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Not only that, gebelein man and
woman are over 5,000 years old.
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The tattoos on these mummies
appear to be the oldest
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00:10:59,926 --> 00:11:03,028
known tattoos
on the african continent.
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00:11:03,030 --> 00:11:07,198
The art on the egyptian male
is the clearest,
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00:11:07,200 --> 00:11:10,001
earliest example
of actual body art
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00:11:10,003 --> 00:11:12,437
on any individual in the world.
238
00:11:14,908 --> 00:11:17,075
Narrator: Renée now explores
what significance
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00:11:17,077 --> 00:11:19,611
these ancient markings
may once have had.
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00:11:19,613 --> 00:11:22,914
She starts by trying to
understand how they were made.
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Friedman: These were definitely
permanent tattoos
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because they're subcutaneous,
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00:11:26,186 --> 00:11:28,653
which is why we can't see it
without infrared.
244
00:11:28,655 --> 00:11:30,221
If they were just topical,
245
00:11:30,223 --> 00:11:32,991
we would have been able to
see them painted onto the skin.
246
00:11:32,993 --> 00:11:35,393
Additional scientific analysis
showed
247
00:11:35,395 --> 00:11:39,631
that the tattoos were applied
to the individuals during life,
248
00:11:39,633 --> 00:11:42,834
probably using soot
directly into the dermis.
249
00:11:42,836 --> 00:11:46,071
These tattoos are carbon
tattoos, so it seems
250
00:11:46,073 --> 00:11:49,541
that people are scraping
soot out of the hearth fire,
251
00:11:49,543 --> 00:11:53,511
collecting that black substance,
making it into a paste,
252
00:11:53,513 --> 00:11:57,949
and then with a needle
applying it into the skin.
253
00:11:57,951 --> 00:12:00,318
For renée, this is a sign
that tattoos
254
00:12:00,320 --> 00:12:03,755
were of enormous significance
to gebelein man and woman,
255
00:12:03,757 --> 00:12:07,192
something they considered
worth risking their lives over.
256
00:12:09,196 --> 00:12:12,263
I don't think the tattooing
was just decorative.
257
00:12:12,265 --> 00:12:16,101
In ancient times, before
antibiotics, cutting the skin,
258
00:12:16,103 --> 00:12:19,037
introducing a foreign
substance into your body,
259
00:12:19,039 --> 00:12:22,307
even into the skin,
could be a death sentence.
260
00:12:22,309 --> 00:12:25,076
Experts now ask why gebelein man
and woman
261
00:12:25,078 --> 00:12:27,312
took the risk
of being tattooed.
262
00:12:27,314 --> 00:12:28,913
They studied the markings
further,
263
00:12:28,915 --> 00:12:31,649
looking for clues
to their cultural significance.
264
00:12:31,651 --> 00:12:36,554
Tattoos are of a wild bull
and a barbary sheep,
265
00:12:36,556 --> 00:12:39,357
both of them important
figures of power
266
00:12:39,359 --> 00:12:41,192
in early egyptian history,
267
00:12:41,194 --> 00:12:46,865
which suggests that this young
man was an important figure.
268
00:12:46,867 --> 00:12:48,199
Altaweel:
He had a fairly good position.
269
00:12:48,201 --> 00:12:51,302
Snot necessarily the highest
upper ranks of society,
270
00:12:51,304 --> 00:12:52,804
but someone who had
some importance,
271
00:12:52,806 --> 00:12:56,941
perhaps as a warrior class
in the society.
272
00:12:56,943 --> 00:12:59,210
With gebelein woman, the "s"
shapes
273
00:12:59,212 --> 00:13:02,013
are known from egyptian pottery
of a similar period
274
00:13:02,015 --> 00:13:06,017
whereas the stave seems to be
some form of a ritual implement.
275
00:13:06,019 --> 00:13:09,487
Again, this marks the woman out
as being a woman of high status
276
00:13:09,489 --> 00:13:11,790
within the society.
277
00:13:11,792 --> 00:13:14,993
Egyptologists conclude
the tattoos offer an insight
278
00:13:14,995 --> 00:13:16,961
into the status
held by gebelein man
279
00:13:16,963 --> 00:13:20,799
and woman within their tribe
in predynastic egypt.
280
00:13:20,801 --> 00:13:22,867
It seems that we have
animal markings on the man,
281
00:13:22,869 --> 00:13:25,036
but on the woman,
it's more linear features.
282
00:13:25,038 --> 00:13:26,805
Perhaps there's a kind of
sexual distinction
283
00:13:26,807 --> 00:13:29,240
between male activities
and power symbols.
284
00:13:29,242 --> 00:13:30,909
Women would have specific
types of tattoos,
285
00:13:30,911 --> 00:13:32,577
men would have
other types of tattoos.
286
00:13:32,579 --> 00:13:35,079
They are a clear indication of
the groups that you belong to.
287
00:13:35,081 --> 00:13:37,949
It's almost like -- I guess
you could say gang symbols.
288
00:13:39,319 --> 00:13:42,987
The gebelein mummies were on
display for 100 years,
289
00:13:42,989 --> 00:13:45,023
yet no one knew their story.
290
00:13:45,025 --> 00:13:48,726
Now modern science has at last
uncovered their secrets
291
00:13:48,728 --> 00:13:52,797
to reveal a murdered warrior
and a woman of high status,
292
00:13:52,799 --> 00:13:55,700
each bearing egypt's
oldest tattoos,
293
00:13:55,702 --> 00:13:58,503
the mark of their ancient tribe.
294
00:13:58,505 --> 00:14:02,207
The science has really allowed
us to unlock these new insights
295
00:14:02,209 --> 00:14:05,276
and get a better understanding
of who gebelein man was,
296
00:14:05,278 --> 00:14:07,812
so that the public
won't see him as a mummy,
297
00:14:07,814 --> 00:14:12,083
but to see him as a person
from the distant past.
298
00:14:12,085 --> 00:14:17,155
♪
299
00:14:17,157 --> 00:14:22,227
♪
300
00:14:22,229 --> 00:14:24,329
narrator:
A dark and distressing discovery
301
00:14:24,331 --> 00:14:28,199
is made during a routine
archaeological excavation.
302
00:14:28,201 --> 00:14:32,270
A tightly packed cemetery
of 9,000 bodies.
303
00:14:35,008 --> 00:14:37,242
There is evidence to suggest
grotesque
304
00:14:37,244 --> 00:14:39,143
and disturbing activity.
305
00:14:39,145 --> 00:14:41,913
People eating people...
306
00:14:41,915 --> 00:14:43,548
Cannibalism.
307
00:14:43,550 --> 00:14:45,650
It's like something out
of a horror movie.
308
00:14:45,652 --> 00:14:46,985
Narrator:
Experts now investigate
309
00:14:46,987 --> 00:14:48,620
if something could have happened
310
00:14:48,622 --> 00:14:53,591
that forced ancient egyptians
to break the ultimate taboo.
311
00:14:53,593 --> 00:14:56,728
♪
312
00:15:03,503 --> 00:15:06,738
narrator:
1999, northern egypt --
313
00:15:06,740 --> 00:15:09,340
excavations at the ancient city
of mendes
314
00:15:09,342 --> 00:15:12,210
reveal thousands of bodies.
315
00:15:12,212 --> 00:15:15,013
One was almost
tripping over corpses.
316
00:15:15,015 --> 00:15:17,815
Narrator: Initial investigations
suggest all these deaths
317
00:15:17,817 --> 00:15:20,885
came from a single moment
in ancient egypt's history
318
00:15:20,887 --> 00:15:24,589
dating from around 2,200 bce.
319
00:15:24,591 --> 00:15:27,992
It seems that everyone died
at the same time,
320
00:15:27,994 --> 00:15:31,629
and that this coincides
with the end of the old kingdom.
321
00:15:34,034 --> 00:15:36,367
Narrator: The old kingdom is
the most illustrious age
322
00:15:36,369 --> 00:15:38,236
in ancient egyptian history,
323
00:15:38,238 --> 00:15:41,472
a time when vast monuments
were built.
324
00:15:41,474 --> 00:15:45,143
The old kingdom is the period
of great building projects
325
00:15:45,145 --> 00:15:47,612
like the pyramids
and the sphinx.
326
00:15:47,614 --> 00:15:49,080
Narrator:
But in the final years,
327
00:15:49,082 --> 00:15:53,318
construction of these
great works abruptly stopped.
328
00:15:53,320 --> 00:15:58,056
What happened that brought
the old kingdom to a sudden end?
329
00:15:58,058 --> 00:16:00,525
Investigators look
for any correlating events
330
00:16:00,527 --> 00:16:02,093
in the ancient texts
331
00:16:02,095 --> 00:16:06,898
and discover a time
of significant social unrest.
332
00:16:06,900 --> 00:16:09,067
Manning: A period of about
150 years or so
333
00:16:09,069 --> 00:16:12,770
of political chaos,
of economic distress.
334
00:16:12,772 --> 00:16:15,840
Hassan: You could not be sure to
be able to come back alive
335
00:16:15,842 --> 00:16:17,375
if you leave your house.
336
00:16:19,412 --> 00:16:21,913
Narrator: Egyptologists
search for more clues
337
00:16:21,915 --> 00:16:26,517
to better understand this
key period in egyptian history.
338
00:16:26,519 --> 00:16:31,055
They reexamine other sites
that date from this time.
339
00:16:31,057 --> 00:16:34,792
In the 1920s,
around 20 miles south of luxor,
340
00:16:34,794 --> 00:16:36,794
laborers in
the village of mo'alla
341
00:16:36,796 --> 00:16:41,632
stumbled across an ancient tomb
dug into the side of a hill.
342
00:16:41,634 --> 00:16:45,136
This tomb belongs to a man
called ankhtifi,
343
00:16:45,138 --> 00:16:49,107
who was an important governor
in his local area.
344
00:16:49,109 --> 00:16:50,975
Narrator: This tomb dates
to the same time
345
00:16:50,977 --> 00:16:54,112
as the graves in mendes.
346
00:16:54,114 --> 00:16:57,849
It bears inscriptions that paint
a vivid picture of the time.
347
00:16:57,851 --> 00:17:00,351
It records for us this period
of distress,
348
00:17:00,353 --> 00:17:02,453
of really bad
agricultural production
349
00:17:02,455 --> 00:17:05,323
where there's probably
very limited food.
350
00:17:05,325 --> 00:17:07,558
Narrator:
The texts hold a dark secret --
351
00:17:07,560 --> 00:17:11,829
a distressing account
of cannibalism.
352
00:17:11,831 --> 00:17:16,167
Price: The text goes on
in rather sinister terms to say
353
00:17:16,169 --> 00:17:19,971
that all of upper egypt was
dying of hunger,
354
00:17:19,973 --> 00:17:24,042
to such a degree that people had
come to eating their children.
355
00:17:25,879 --> 00:17:30,048
These words still send a chill
down your spine today.
356
00:17:30,050 --> 00:17:33,284
Narrator: What could have sent
egypt into such a dire famine,
357
00:17:33,286 --> 00:17:35,053
possibly even driving men
and women
358
00:17:35,055 --> 00:17:39,524
to turn on each other
in such inhuman fashion?
359
00:17:39,526 --> 00:17:43,061
Scientists are looking for
answers from egypt's life blood,
360
00:17:43,063 --> 00:17:44,395
the nile.
361
00:17:44,397 --> 00:17:48,599
♪
362
00:17:48,601 --> 00:17:50,535
narrator:
Professor fekri hassan
363
00:17:50,537 --> 00:17:53,604
of the french university
of egypt is a geoarchaeologist.
364
00:17:53,606 --> 00:17:55,473
For decades, he has studied
365
00:17:55,475 --> 00:17:58,076
the ancient cycles of
the river nile.
366
00:17:58,078 --> 00:17:59,410
Hassan: The nile valley,
of course,
367
00:17:59,412 --> 00:18:02,280
is the lifeline of egypt,
characterized by the nile,
368
00:18:02,282 --> 00:18:05,716
which has annual floods
that come in the summer,
369
00:18:05,718 --> 00:18:09,320
which render the flood plain
as a fertile,
370
00:18:09,322 --> 00:18:11,823
green, lush environment.
371
00:18:11,825 --> 00:18:14,058
Narrator:
The floodwaters would deposit
372
00:18:14,060 --> 00:18:15,393
fertile sit on the fields,
373
00:18:15,395 --> 00:18:17,261
replenishing
the soil's nutrients
374
00:18:17,263 --> 00:18:19,263
to produce a healthy crop.
375
00:18:19,265 --> 00:18:22,066
Manning: Egypt gets lucky
because the flood of the river
376
00:18:22,068 --> 00:18:24,635
that hits egypt hits it
at exactly the right time
377
00:18:24,637 --> 00:18:26,838
for growing barley
and for growing wheat.
378
00:18:26,840 --> 00:18:30,308
Narrator: The nile's annual
floods provided extreme bounty.
379
00:18:30,310 --> 00:18:33,878
If they should stop,
egypt might starve.
380
00:18:33,880 --> 00:18:37,615
♪
381
00:18:37,617 --> 00:18:40,251
we know that grain storage
was sufficient
382
00:18:40,253 --> 00:18:42,253
for a couple of years,
383
00:18:42,255 --> 00:18:45,423
but if you don't have good
flooding for three years,
384
00:18:45,425 --> 00:18:46,591
you're out of food.
385
00:18:46,593 --> 00:18:48,159
Then what do you do?
386
00:18:48,161 --> 00:18:50,895
Any upset to this annual cycle
387
00:18:50,897 --> 00:18:53,598
would spell disaster
for the ancient egyptians.
388
00:18:53,600 --> 00:18:55,099
Narrator:
The disturbing hieroglyphs
389
00:18:55,101 --> 00:18:57,235
at mo'alla in the south
and the condition
390
00:18:57,237 --> 00:19:00,138
of the thousands of bodies
at mendes in the north
391
00:19:00,140 --> 00:19:03,941
all point to a widespread
and deadly famine.
392
00:19:03,943 --> 00:19:08,412
The clues to the cause of this
tragic disaster lie in the nile.
393
00:19:08,414 --> 00:19:13,417
The nile valley and the channel
and different deposits
394
00:19:13,419 --> 00:19:18,656
that come every year have
been changing almost annually.
395
00:19:18,658 --> 00:19:21,192
That is something that
many people realize,
396
00:19:21,194 --> 00:19:23,027
but it's extremely dynamic,
397
00:19:23,029 --> 00:19:26,030
and it's only by understanding
this dynamism
398
00:19:26,032 --> 00:19:29,634
that we begin to understand
egyptian civilization.
399
00:19:29,636 --> 00:19:31,536
Narrator:
Professor hassan has a theory
400
00:19:31,538 --> 00:19:33,671
that the nile stopped flooding,
401
00:19:33,673 --> 00:19:40,044
causing a mass famine, which led
to the end of the old kingdom.
402
00:19:40,046 --> 00:19:41,579
To investigate his theory,
403
00:19:41,581 --> 00:19:46,817
he uses a geological technique
called drill coring.
404
00:19:46,819 --> 00:19:49,320
Naughton: Drill coring
allows archaeologists
405
00:19:49,322 --> 00:19:52,924
essentially to lift
a column out of the ground.
406
00:19:52,926 --> 00:19:55,760
Layers accumulate as
time goes on,
407
00:19:55,762 --> 00:19:57,728
and when the geologists,
408
00:19:57,730 --> 00:20:00,398
archaeologists are looking
at these layers,
409
00:20:00,400 --> 00:20:03,501
it's almost like sort of a diary
of events,
410
00:20:03,503 --> 00:20:07,305
natural and human,
which occurred over this time.
411
00:20:09,642 --> 00:20:11,976
You begin to see the mud layers
412
00:20:11,978 --> 00:20:14,545
and sometimes
you have indications
413
00:20:14,547 --> 00:20:16,847
of very violent floods,
so you get sand,
414
00:20:16,849 --> 00:20:22,253
and when the floods were gentle,
you get finer clay deposits.
415
00:20:22,255 --> 00:20:24,021
Narrator:
As he studies the cores,
416
00:20:24,023 --> 00:20:27,058
once sample catches
his attention.
417
00:20:27,060 --> 00:20:30,161
In the middle
of this sequence of mud
418
00:20:30,163 --> 00:20:34,532
was a layer of carbonated
deposits and iron deposits,
419
00:20:34,534 --> 00:20:35,800
and that was quite exciting
420
00:20:35,802 --> 00:20:38,736
because it meant that water
has stopped flowing,
421
00:20:38,738 --> 00:20:42,607
evidence that for some time
there was no floods.
422
00:20:44,644 --> 00:20:46,777
Narrator: Radiocarbon dating
of the sediments
423
00:20:46,779 --> 00:20:48,946
allows professor hassan
to pinpoint
424
00:20:48,948 --> 00:20:51,582
the exact time
the nile stopped flooding.
425
00:20:51,584 --> 00:20:53,618
Extraordinarily, it correlates
426
00:20:53,620 --> 00:20:56,254
with the date
of the bodies at mendes
427
00:20:56,256 --> 00:20:58,589
and the accounts of cannibalism.
428
00:20:58,591 --> 00:21:01,759
When there is no flood,
the people in the villages
429
00:21:01,761 --> 00:21:04,929
would have famine with pillaging
and violence and et cetera,
430
00:21:04,931 --> 00:21:07,732
and, of course,
enough to destroy the state.
431
00:21:07,734 --> 00:21:10,268
Narrator: This was a time
of extreme hardship.
432
00:21:10,270 --> 00:21:12,737
The widespread famine caused
mass deaths
433
00:21:12,739 --> 00:21:14,572
and possibly even cannibalism,
434
00:21:14,574 --> 00:21:18,476
as ancient egyptian society
fell apart.
435
00:21:18,478 --> 00:21:19,910
A collapse of the old kingdom
436
00:21:19,912 --> 00:21:23,748
was due to low floods that
led to famine.
437
00:21:23,750 --> 00:21:28,986
People are reduced to eating
anything, attacking each other.
438
00:21:28,988 --> 00:21:31,889
Horrific things
happen in famine.
439
00:21:31,891 --> 00:21:34,659
People are driven to extremes.
440
00:21:34,661 --> 00:21:37,261
Narrator: When the floods
failed, egypt starved.
441
00:21:37,263 --> 00:21:39,363
Faced with a choice
between life and death,
442
00:21:39,365 --> 00:21:42,800
some may have broken
humankind's ultimate taboo
443
00:21:42,802 --> 00:21:46,203
as egypt's old kingdom
collapsed around them.
444
00:21:53,046 --> 00:21:56,113
Narrator: An unidentified mummy
and a funerary box
445
00:21:56,115 --> 00:21:58,916
stamped with a royal seal.
446
00:21:58,918 --> 00:22:01,552
Could this be the mortal
remains of hatshepsut,
447
00:22:01,554 --> 00:22:05,923
the female pharaoh they tried
to wipe from history?
448
00:22:05,925 --> 00:22:07,958
There is a campaign
of destruction
449
00:22:07,960 --> 00:22:10,728
against her names and images.
450
00:22:10,730 --> 00:22:13,631
Narrator: Now could
21st century technology
451
00:22:13,633 --> 00:22:18,869
finally solve the case
of egypt's missing monarch?
452
00:22:18,871 --> 00:22:21,706
It's detective work and then,
ultimately,
453
00:22:21,708 --> 00:22:24,575
science helping us solve
this mystery.
454
00:22:24,577 --> 00:22:31,649
♪
455
00:22:38,758 --> 00:22:41,892
narrator:
2007, the museum of cairo.
456
00:22:41,894 --> 00:22:44,395
Scientists use state-of-the-art
dna analysis
457
00:22:44,397 --> 00:22:47,431
on an unidentified mummy.
458
00:22:47,433 --> 00:22:49,567
They believe the body could be
the remains
459
00:22:49,569 --> 00:22:53,104
of the long-lost female pharaoh
hatshepsut.
460
00:22:53,106 --> 00:22:54,438
The female king.
461
00:22:54,440 --> 00:22:56,507
A very capable, very smart,
462
00:22:56,509 --> 00:22:58,509
and a very powerful woman.
463
00:22:58,511 --> 00:23:00,478
She really is one-of-a-kind.
464
00:23:02,849 --> 00:23:05,349
Narrator: 1479 bce.
465
00:23:05,351 --> 00:23:10,421
Hatshepsut's husband,
pharaoh thutmose ii, dies.
466
00:23:10,423 --> 00:23:12,623
She takes on the role
of ruling egypt
467
00:23:12,625 --> 00:23:17,194
until her infant stepson
is old enough to take the phone.
468
00:23:17,196 --> 00:23:21,699
She initially makes
herself regent,
469
00:23:21,701 --> 00:23:25,936
but then gradually decides
to make herself
470
00:23:25,938 --> 00:23:28,672
the queen and ruler
of all of egypt.
471
00:23:28,674 --> 00:23:38,449
♪
472
00:23:38,451 --> 00:23:40,785
narrator: She rules a peaceful
and prosperous egypt
473
00:23:40,787 --> 00:23:45,256
for two decades and builds
some of its finest monuments.
474
00:23:45,258 --> 00:23:47,925
Her crowning accomplishment
was her mortuary temple
475
00:23:47,927 --> 00:23:50,694
at deir el-bahari.
476
00:23:50,696 --> 00:23:52,496
But in a cave high above it,
477
00:23:52,498 --> 00:23:55,433
ancient graffiti
shows this female ruler
478
00:23:55,435 --> 00:23:58,502
was not respected
by all of her subjects.
479
00:24:00,573 --> 00:24:03,641
Ikram: There are graffitos
showing her having sex,
480
00:24:03,643 --> 00:24:06,243
so maybe it was a bit unnerving
481
00:24:06,245 --> 00:24:08,312
that a woman
could be so powerful.
482
00:24:08,314 --> 00:24:12,416
There were people
who wanted her to fail.
483
00:24:12,418 --> 00:24:14,585
Ancient egypt was a man's world
484
00:24:14,587 --> 00:24:18,055
in which hatshepsut
had to appear strong.
485
00:24:18,057 --> 00:24:20,825
That's why her statues
show her face with the body
486
00:24:20,827 --> 00:24:24,128
and beard of a man.
487
00:24:24,130 --> 00:24:28,632
Cooney: She morphs herself into
a masculine-type form --
488
00:24:28,634 --> 00:24:32,369
buff muscles,
biceps, pecs, a strong chest.
489
00:24:32,371 --> 00:24:35,673
Declaring herself a male
gave her a sort of legitimacy
490
00:24:35,675 --> 00:24:37,408
that she wouldn't have
otherwise had.
491
00:24:37,410 --> 00:24:43,380
♪
492
00:24:43,382 --> 00:24:44,815
narrator:
But after her death,
493
00:24:44,817 --> 00:24:48,819
her stepson thutmose iii feared
her rule would be a blight
494
00:24:48,821 --> 00:24:51,121
on the male line of succession
495
00:24:51,123 --> 00:24:54,458
and tried to erase
hatshepsut from history.
496
00:24:56,963 --> 00:24:58,996
There is a campaign
of destruction
497
00:24:58,998 --> 00:25:02,166
against her names and images.
498
00:25:02,168 --> 00:25:03,767
Her memory is suppressed,
499
00:25:03,769 --> 00:25:06,070
and she's written out
of ancient egyptian history.
500
00:25:06,072 --> 00:25:09,273
♪
501
00:25:09,275 --> 00:25:12,176
narrator:
Although the whereabouts
of hatshepsut's tomb is known,
502
00:25:12,178 --> 00:25:14,612
her body
has never been identified,
503
00:25:14,614 --> 00:25:16,680
and the hunt to find
this queen's remains
504
00:25:16,682 --> 00:25:20,618
has been unfolding
for over a century.
505
00:25:20,620 --> 00:25:23,787
1881 -- the valley of the kings.
506
00:25:23,789 --> 00:25:28,459
A tomb is opened, revealing
50 members of egyptian royalty,
507
00:25:28,461 --> 00:25:31,862
but hatshepsut
is not among them.
508
00:25:31,864 --> 00:25:34,865
She hasn't been preserved
with those other kings,
509
00:25:34,867 --> 00:25:36,767
which is puzzling.
510
00:25:36,769 --> 00:25:40,971
But archaeologists do discover
an intriguing piece of evidence.
511
00:25:40,973 --> 00:25:44,675
There's a box with the name
of hatshepsut inscribed on it.
512
00:25:44,677 --> 00:25:47,478
The box is thought to contain
funerary remains,
513
00:25:47,480 --> 00:25:50,881
but over time
has become sealed shut.
514
00:25:50,883 --> 00:25:53,984
19th century archaeologists
are unable to open it,
515
00:25:53,986 --> 00:25:56,587
so can't identify its contents.
516
00:25:56,589 --> 00:26:00,558
The box is stored away in
the vaults of the cairo museum.
517
00:26:00,560 --> 00:26:02,927
20 years later in 1903,
518
00:26:02,929 --> 00:26:06,964
howard carter uncovers another
tomb in the valley of the kings.
519
00:26:09,969 --> 00:26:13,737
He finds it has bits of
bandages, broken pots,
520
00:26:13,739 --> 00:26:16,707
food mummies slightly
ripped apart, lying all over,
521
00:26:16,709 --> 00:26:20,010
and it contains the bodies
of two women.
522
00:26:20,012 --> 00:26:22,313
One body was found
on the ground,
523
00:26:22,315 --> 00:26:25,049
but the other lay in a
sarcophagus with an inscription
524
00:26:25,051 --> 00:26:30,588
that identified the mummy inside
as one of hatshepsut's staff.
525
00:26:30,590 --> 00:26:34,291
The coffin is inscribed
for a woman called sitre-in,
526
00:26:34,293 --> 00:26:37,194
who was the wet nurse of
queen hatshepsut.
527
00:26:37,196 --> 00:26:41,198
Carter could find no clues
to identify the second mummy.
528
00:26:41,200 --> 00:26:42,866
With no exciting treasures,
529
00:26:42,868 --> 00:26:44,902
he deemed the tomb
of little significance
530
00:26:44,904 --> 00:26:46,637
and had it resealed.
531
00:26:46,639 --> 00:26:49,173
The burial chamber
and its unidentified mummy
532
00:26:49,175 --> 00:26:51,942
lay forgotten
for nearly a century,
533
00:26:51,944 --> 00:26:53,510
until 1989.
534
00:26:55,548 --> 00:26:59,450
American archaeologist don ryan
rediscovers the tomb
535
00:26:59,452 --> 00:27:04,254
and reexamines the unidentified
mummy found on the ground.
536
00:27:04,256 --> 00:27:09,493
Don ryan goes to
reinvestigate this tomb, kv60,
537
00:27:09,495 --> 00:27:13,497
and documents and clears
and excavates it very carefully
538
00:27:13,499 --> 00:27:18,836
and speculates that maybe
the body is queen hatshepsut.
539
00:27:18,838 --> 00:27:20,604
Narrator:
He concluded the mystery body
540
00:27:20,606 --> 00:27:23,841
was a female
who had died in her 50s.
541
00:27:23,843 --> 00:27:27,177
Could these be the remains
of the long-lost pharaoh queen?
542
00:27:31,951 --> 00:27:33,250
In 2007,
543
00:27:33,252 --> 00:27:35,719
a team of archaeologists
from the egyptian museum
544
00:27:35,721 --> 00:27:39,723
try to crack the case employing
new advances in technology.
545
00:27:42,795 --> 00:27:45,496
The unidentified mummy is taken
to a hospital in aswan
546
00:27:45,498 --> 00:27:49,099
for c.T. Scanning.
547
00:27:49,101 --> 00:27:52,369
Meanwhile the ancient box
marked with hatshepsut's name
548
00:27:52,371 --> 00:27:56,774
is retrieved from the vaults
of the cairo museum.
549
00:27:56,776 --> 00:27:59,043
It, too, undergoes a c.T. Scan
550
00:27:59,045 --> 00:28:01,845
to finally reveal
its contents --
551
00:28:01,847 --> 00:28:07,518
a human liver and something
archaeologists never suspected.
552
00:28:07,520 --> 00:28:11,722
It contains,
amongst other stuff, a molar.
553
00:28:11,724 --> 00:28:16,226
Experts now analyze the c.T.
Scan of the unidentified mummy.
554
00:28:16,228 --> 00:28:18,195
Incredibly, the imaging shows
555
00:28:18,197 --> 00:28:21,065
that it is missing
a molar tooth.
556
00:28:21,067 --> 00:28:23,667
It seems a remarkable
coincidence.
557
00:28:23,669 --> 00:28:26,770
Using a digital model,
the investigators attempt to fit
558
00:28:26,772 --> 00:28:32,142
the tooth into the mummy's tooth
and are astounded by the result.
559
00:28:32,144 --> 00:28:36,513
The molar found in the box
fit into the mouth of the mummy
560
00:28:36,515 --> 00:28:38,415
within a fraction
of a millimeter.
561
00:28:38,417 --> 00:28:41,051
So she probably is hatshepsut.
562
00:28:41,053 --> 00:28:45,189
♪
563
00:28:45,191 --> 00:28:48,459
narrator: But not everyone is
ready to accept this conclusion.
564
00:28:48,461 --> 00:28:52,396
Further investigation is
required to confirm the theory.
565
00:28:52,398 --> 00:28:54,765
So far, the evidence for
identifying this body
566
00:28:54,767 --> 00:28:57,367
using this tooth
is quite circumstantial.
567
00:28:57,369 --> 00:28:58,869
Mummy's missing a tooth?
568
00:28:58,871 --> 00:29:02,039
Oh, look, here's a tooth in a
box connected to hatshepsut.
569
00:29:02,041 --> 00:29:07,010
I need to see more detailed
forensic evidence.
570
00:29:07,012 --> 00:29:09,413
Narrator: Scientists turn to
the very latest advances
571
00:29:09,415 --> 00:29:12,049
in dna testing and analysis.
572
00:29:12,051 --> 00:29:14,685
They want to compare the dna
of the mystery mummy
573
00:29:14,687 --> 00:29:19,323
with the dna from the known
relatives of queen hatshepsut.
574
00:29:19,325 --> 00:29:21,391
Macca:
Initial dna studies were done
575
00:29:21,393 --> 00:29:24,328
using tissue
from the body of the mummy
576
00:29:24,330 --> 00:29:26,196
and comparing it
to what we believe
577
00:29:26,198 --> 00:29:32,803
was hatshepsut's grandmother,
and the results are intriguing.
578
00:29:32,805 --> 00:29:35,506
The team find a positive match.
579
00:29:35,508 --> 00:29:39,877
The mummy has a genetic link
to the royal line.
580
00:29:39,879 --> 00:29:42,880
The dna evidence,
together with the molar,
581
00:29:42,882 --> 00:29:46,116
does indicate that this body
belongs to hatshepsut.
582
00:29:46,118 --> 00:29:51,588
♪
583
00:29:51,590 --> 00:29:53,590
narrator:
Lost for thousands of years,
584
00:29:53,592 --> 00:29:56,894
overlooked by several
imminent archaeologists,
585
00:29:56,896 --> 00:30:00,531
21st century technology
now finally identifies
586
00:30:00,533 --> 00:30:04,067
the long-lost body
f queen hatshepsut --
587
00:30:04,069 --> 00:30:07,738
a queen whose reputation,
life, and even death
588
00:30:07,740 --> 00:30:10,774
was very nearly erased
from history.
589
00:30:10,776 --> 00:30:18,315
♪
590
00:30:18,317 --> 00:30:20,751
beside the remains of
a king's temple
591
00:30:20,753 --> 00:30:23,187
the discovery of a mass grave.
592
00:30:23,189 --> 00:30:25,455
Who are these people?
593
00:30:25,457 --> 00:30:30,260
Is this a brutal act of genocide
or victims of a plague outbreak?
594
00:30:30,262 --> 00:30:32,396
Were they strangled?
Were they poisoned?
595
00:30:32,398 --> 00:30:34,464
How were they killed?
596
00:30:34,466 --> 00:30:36,900
Or were these people
devoted subjects
597
00:30:36,902 --> 00:30:39,970
ready to serve their king
in the afterlife?
598
00:30:39,972 --> 00:30:42,739
Why are servants being
buried with kings and queens?
599
00:30:42,741 --> 00:30:47,377
♪
600
00:30:54,153 --> 00:30:55,919
narrator: 2003.
601
00:30:55,921 --> 00:30:58,655
Abydos, southern egypt --
602
00:30:58,657 --> 00:31:00,757
a team from the university
of pennsylvania
603
00:31:00,759 --> 00:31:02,426
are excavating a temple complex
604
00:31:02,428 --> 00:31:05,596
within a vast
ancient burial site.
605
00:31:05,598 --> 00:31:07,130
It dates to the time
606
00:31:07,132 --> 00:31:10,100
of the first dynasty
of egyptian kings.
607
00:31:10,102 --> 00:31:14,338
This is the burial ground
of the earliest rulers of egypt.
608
00:31:14,340 --> 00:31:17,040
Narrator: The temple complex was
built to mark the death
609
00:31:17,042 --> 00:31:18,942
of the pharaoh hor-aha.
610
00:31:21,614 --> 00:31:25,182
Bianchi: The pharaoh hor-aha
is generally considered
611
00:31:25,184 --> 00:31:28,886
to be the first pharaoh
of dynasty I,
612
00:31:28,888 --> 00:31:31,855
which marks the beginning
of the history
613
00:31:31,857 --> 00:31:35,559
of the unification of egypt
as a united country.
614
00:31:35,561 --> 00:31:36,827
Narrator: Around the temple,
615
00:31:36,829 --> 00:31:39,963
the archaeologists
make a disturbing discovery --
616
00:31:39,965 --> 00:31:43,567
bodies upon bodies of young men.
617
00:31:43,569 --> 00:31:45,669
All of the individuals are male,
618
00:31:45,671 --> 00:31:49,306
all between the age of 20
and 25 years.
619
00:31:49,308 --> 00:31:52,209
Altaweel: Why would there be
a mass grave in ancient egypt,
620
00:31:52,211 --> 00:31:55,846
a place where mass graves
are not expected to be found?
621
00:31:55,848 --> 00:31:58,982
Narrator:
Experts examine the skeletal
remains of the dead.
622
00:31:58,984 --> 00:32:02,286
Strangely, the bones show
no evidence of wounds
623
00:32:02,288 --> 00:32:03,954
or any signs of disease.
624
00:32:03,956 --> 00:32:06,556
There has been a great deal
of speculation
625
00:32:06,558 --> 00:32:09,092
about the means of death.
626
00:32:09,094 --> 00:32:12,362
Were they strangled?
Were they poisoned?
627
00:32:12,364 --> 00:32:15,499
Narrator: The team search for
clues in the landscape itself
628
00:32:15,501 --> 00:32:18,402
by using
magnetic survey technology.
629
00:32:18,404 --> 00:32:21,405
They find something curious
in the dirt.
630
00:32:21,407 --> 00:32:25,042
There are continuous roofing
areas over their graves,
631
00:32:25,044 --> 00:32:29,746
which indicates that everything
was sealed at the same time.
632
00:32:29,748 --> 00:32:31,648
Narrator:
This leads to one conclusion --
633
00:32:31,650 --> 00:32:34,318
everyone died together.
634
00:32:34,320 --> 00:32:38,221
Excavations have revealed
what at first glance
635
00:32:38,223 --> 00:32:42,059
seems to be
a rather macabre practice,
636
00:32:42,061 --> 00:32:47,464
namely a number of individuals
who seem to have been
637
00:32:47,466 --> 00:32:51,134
purposely, ritually murdered.
638
00:32:51,136 --> 00:32:53,270
The discovery reignites
an argument
639
00:32:53,272 --> 00:32:56,506
that has raged for decades
in the archaeological world.
640
00:32:56,508 --> 00:32:59,443
Is it possible that human beings
were sacrificed
641
00:32:59,445 --> 00:33:02,346
in the very earliest periods
of ancient egypt?
642
00:33:02,348 --> 00:33:05,148
♪
643
00:33:05,150 --> 00:33:08,185
narrator: If this was sacrifice,
who were the victims
644
00:33:08,187 --> 00:33:11,254
and did they willingly
give up their lives?
645
00:33:11,256 --> 00:33:13,824
The careful way the graves
are laid out
646
00:33:13,826 --> 00:33:16,426
and the presence
of grave goods suggests
647
00:33:16,428 --> 00:33:18,795
the people were well known
to the pharaoh.
648
00:33:18,797 --> 00:33:21,365
Piquette: There is a series
of smaller graves
649
00:33:21,367 --> 00:33:23,400
that contain
what we think are individuals
650
00:33:23,402 --> 00:33:26,103
who would have served
the king or queen in life.
651
00:33:26,105 --> 00:33:29,339
Johnston: These young men who
were buried alongside the king
652
00:33:29,341 --> 00:33:32,009
would have continued
to serve him in the afterlife,
653
00:33:32,011 --> 00:33:36,346
fulfilling the roles that
they had fulfilled in this life.
654
00:33:36,348 --> 00:33:37,981
On the death of the pharaoh,
655
00:33:37,983 --> 00:33:40,150
it's possible that his friends
and servants
656
00:33:40,152 --> 00:33:43,420
willingly gave up their lives
to be with him for eternity.
657
00:33:43,422 --> 00:33:45,689
These servants, who would have
spent a lot of their time
658
00:33:45,691 --> 00:33:48,892
with the king, with the pharaoh,
during his life,
659
00:33:48,894 --> 00:33:51,294
their thought process
and their religious beliefs
660
00:33:51,296 --> 00:33:54,131
may have compelled them
to accept sacrifice.
661
00:33:54,133 --> 00:33:58,001
Johnston: One knows that that's
what the luxury of your life
662
00:33:58,003 --> 00:33:59,836
will eventually entail,
663
00:33:59,838 --> 00:34:02,939
then I suppose it goes
with the territory.
664
00:34:02,941 --> 00:34:05,609
Dodson: There is no evidence
that any of these people
665
00:34:05,611 --> 00:34:06,943
were killed by violence.
666
00:34:06,945 --> 00:34:10,313
They all align perfectly
peacefully in their tombs
667
00:34:10,315 --> 00:34:12,649
with no signs
of physical injuries.
668
00:34:12,651 --> 00:34:14,551
Therefore one must assume
669
00:34:14,553 --> 00:34:19,222
that they willingly accompanied
their king to the next world.
670
00:34:21,260 --> 00:34:24,227
Narrator: Such devoted service,
both in life and death,
671
00:34:24,229 --> 00:34:26,863
has been found with
a number of the early kings.
672
00:34:26,865 --> 00:34:30,434
But history reveals that
the practice of human sacrifice
673
00:34:30,436 --> 00:34:32,602
only lasted a short while.
674
00:34:32,604 --> 00:34:35,238
The only evidence of
human sacrifice
675
00:34:35,240 --> 00:34:37,174
is from the first dynasty,
676
00:34:37,176 --> 00:34:41,478
at the beginning
of pharaonic times.
677
00:34:41,480 --> 00:34:46,349
Bianchi: After dynasty I,
the practice seems to cease,
678
00:34:46,351 --> 00:34:52,155
so it is a phenomenon that's
restricted in time and place.
679
00:34:52,157 --> 00:34:55,092
Johnston: So very quickly,
the ancient egyptians think,
680
00:34:55,094 --> 00:34:57,461
"this is lovely
for the deceased king,
681
00:34:57,463 --> 00:34:59,096
but actually, it's not
very good for those of us
682
00:34:59,098 --> 00:35:02,632
who are continuing
to live in this world."
683
00:35:02,634 --> 00:35:05,068
so the ancient egyptians
very quickly decide
684
00:35:05,070 --> 00:35:08,672
that retainer sacrifice
should come to an end.
685
00:35:08,674 --> 00:35:10,474
Narrator:
Instead of sacrificing people
686
00:35:10,476 --> 00:35:12,943
to attend the pharaoh's needs
in the afterlife,
687
00:35:12,945 --> 00:35:15,245
they created avatars.
688
00:35:15,247 --> 00:35:18,515
Bard: There are
small figurines called shawabti,
689
00:35:18,517 --> 00:35:21,251
usually glazed blue,
690
00:35:21,253 --> 00:35:24,821
and shawabti means "answers,"
so these were servant figures.
691
00:35:24,823 --> 00:35:27,524
Anthony:
These are little figurines
that look like a mummy,
692
00:35:27,526 --> 00:35:29,759
and on the front of them,
they have hieroglyphs,
693
00:35:29,761 --> 00:35:32,395
and if you read the hieroglyphs,
it says essentially,
694
00:35:32,397 --> 00:35:35,966
"I am here to work
on behalf of the deceased."
695
00:35:35,968 --> 00:35:37,200
narrator:
Ancient egyptians believed
696
00:35:37,202 --> 00:35:39,236
these figurines would
come to life
697
00:35:39,238 --> 00:35:42,005
and act as the pharaoh's
assistants in the afterlife,
698
00:35:42,007 --> 00:35:44,808
replacing the role
of sacrificial victims.
699
00:35:44,810 --> 00:35:47,711
What we see is different
magical practices --
700
00:35:47,713 --> 00:35:54,484
substitutes, statues, figures --
later become common in tombs.
701
00:35:54,486 --> 00:35:56,286
Narrator:
Egypt's first dynasty rulers
702
00:35:56,288 --> 00:35:58,889
had the power of life
over death,
703
00:35:58,891 --> 00:36:01,158
but as egyptian religion
developed,
704
00:36:01,160 --> 00:36:03,760
the barbaric practice of
human sacrifice
705
00:36:03,762 --> 00:36:05,629
was left to the past.
706
00:36:05,631 --> 00:36:14,070
♪
707
00:36:14,072 --> 00:36:17,007
a new discovery
at a famous temple suggests
708
00:36:17,009 --> 00:36:22,479
ancient egyptians held drunken
celebrations at sacred sites.
709
00:36:22,481 --> 00:36:26,049
The aim of the game is to get
as drunk as you can.
710
00:36:26,051 --> 00:36:27,884
Narrator:
What went on at these festivals?
711
00:36:27,886 --> 00:36:29,819
And why were they held
in temples?
712
00:36:29,821 --> 00:36:33,490
Now, experts seek answers
using modern pharmacology.
713
00:36:33,492 --> 00:36:36,426
Ancient egyptians were partying
on a Friday night.
714
00:36:36,428 --> 00:36:39,196
People were getting high.
715
00:36:39,198 --> 00:36:42,065
♪
716
00:36:48,540 --> 00:36:50,574
narrator: 2004. Luxor.
717
00:36:50,576 --> 00:36:52,742
A team from
johns hopkins university
718
00:36:52,744 --> 00:36:56,146
excavate a section
of the karnak temple complex,
719
00:36:56,148 --> 00:36:59,115
one of egypt's holiest sites.
720
00:36:59,117 --> 00:37:02,852
They're amazed when they uncover
a new set of hieroglyphs,
721
00:37:02,854 --> 00:37:06,022
which describe
a festival of drunkenness,
722
00:37:06,024 --> 00:37:10,860
and find an area of the site
dedicated to getting drunk.
723
00:37:10,862 --> 00:37:14,397
Finding a scene or description
of drunkenness
724
00:37:14,399 --> 00:37:16,800
in what amounts to be
the vatican of ancient egypt
725
00:37:16,802 --> 00:37:18,235
is very unexpected.
726
00:37:20,272 --> 00:37:22,872
Narrator: The team widen
their search for clues.
727
00:37:22,874 --> 00:37:25,642
They study tombs and wall
paintings from the same time
728
00:37:25,644 --> 00:37:29,879
as the hieroglyphs and discover
evidence of heavy drinking.
729
00:37:29,881 --> 00:37:32,282
Johnston: So we have numerous
banqueting scenes,
730
00:37:32,284 --> 00:37:35,885
scenes of people drinking,
heavily in some cases.
731
00:37:35,887 --> 00:37:38,521
We have a painted example
of someone actually being sick
732
00:37:38,523 --> 00:37:41,424
because they are too drunk.
733
00:37:41,426 --> 00:37:44,127
Enmarch:
We see people having banquets
734
00:37:44,129 --> 00:37:48,164
and the servants are bringing
out huge jugs of booze.
735
00:37:48,166 --> 00:37:51,268
And the captions to these scenes
have the butlers
736
00:37:51,270 --> 00:37:54,771
sometimes saying to the ladies,
"drink up, drink up."
737
00:37:54,773 --> 00:37:57,741
mcginn: To put it bluntly,
the depiction looks like
738
00:37:57,743 --> 00:38:00,677
egyptians partying
on a Friday night.
739
00:38:00,679 --> 00:38:05,615
Everyone is having just
an absolute great time.
740
00:38:05,617 --> 00:38:08,752
So what was the drink of choice
at one of these festivals?
741
00:38:08,754 --> 00:38:11,721
Archaeologists find evidence
all the time of breweries
742
00:38:11,723 --> 00:38:13,990
being located in big cities.
743
00:38:13,992 --> 00:38:17,160
Beer was fundamental
to their diet.
744
00:38:17,162 --> 00:38:20,530
Beer was common throughout
ancient egypt for good reason.
745
00:38:20,532 --> 00:38:23,533
Beer is actually cleaner
than nile water.
746
00:38:23,535 --> 00:38:28,338
The fermentation process acts in
a limited way as a disinfectant.
747
00:38:28,340 --> 00:38:29,839
Narrator: Experts
trying to understand
748
00:38:29,841 --> 00:38:31,341
the festival of drunkenness
749
00:38:31,343 --> 00:38:34,377
study evidence
from ancient tombs.
750
00:38:34,379 --> 00:38:39,082
Intriguingly, these reveal beer
also had a spiritual purpose.
751
00:38:39,084 --> 00:38:42,419
Enmarch: We have actual models
made of wood
752
00:38:42,421 --> 00:38:44,187
that were placed in tombs
753
00:38:44,189 --> 00:38:47,157
which show baking
and brewing taking place,
754
00:38:47,159 --> 00:38:50,427
and the point of those models
is presumably to ensure
755
00:38:50,429 --> 00:38:52,028
that in the afterlife
you have servants
756
00:38:52,030 --> 00:38:54,597
doing your baking
and brewing for you.
757
00:38:54,599 --> 00:38:56,399
Narrator: Experts even find
evidence of people
758
00:38:56,401 --> 00:38:58,835
being buried
with flasks of beer.
759
00:38:58,837 --> 00:39:01,805
Ancient egyptians don't want
to just party in this life.
760
00:39:01,807 --> 00:39:04,741
They also want to carry
that over into the next life,
761
00:39:04,743 --> 00:39:07,344
and therefore burying
someone with beer
762
00:39:07,346 --> 00:39:10,780
is a great way
to ensure that.
763
00:39:10,782 --> 00:39:13,283
The role of beer in rituals
begins to explain
764
00:39:13,285 --> 00:39:16,720
the significance of
the festival of drunkenness,
765
00:39:16,722 --> 00:39:18,655
but there was more to
the debauchery
766
00:39:18,657 --> 00:39:19,689
than just alcohol.
767
00:39:21,893 --> 00:39:24,928
We have evidence
that the blue lotus was used
768
00:39:24,930 --> 00:39:28,164
by ancient egyptians.
769
00:39:28,166 --> 00:39:30,333
Narrator: Modern day
pharmacology has revealed
770
00:39:30,335 --> 00:39:31,735
that the flower and seeds
771
00:39:31,737 --> 00:39:35,872
of the blue lotus contains
psychoactive compounds.
772
00:39:35,874 --> 00:39:40,377
Eating the plant can give
people feelings of euphoria.
773
00:39:40,379 --> 00:39:43,213
There are wall paintings
and contemporary references
774
00:39:43,215 --> 00:39:47,350
which tell us that people
did use the blue lotus flower
775
00:39:47,352 --> 00:39:49,519
as a means of getting high.
776
00:39:49,521 --> 00:39:51,388
We see that on the tomb walls.
777
00:39:51,390 --> 00:39:54,691
People wear it as a kind
of garland on their heads.
778
00:39:54,693 --> 00:39:56,993
They're sometimes shown
sniffing it
779
00:39:56,995 --> 00:40:00,063
and sometimes you see
the head of the flower
780
00:40:00,065 --> 00:40:01,731
being held above a cup,
781
00:40:01,733 --> 00:40:04,968
possibly full of wine
or some other alcohol.
782
00:40:04,970 --> 00:40:07,270
Narrator: Today, modern medicine
uses compounds
783
00:40:07,272 --> 00:40:08,972
extracted
from the blue lotus
784
00:40:08,974 --> 00:40:11,975
in anti-anxiety drugs
and sleep aids,
785
00:40:11,977 --> 00:40:14,511
but when, as at the festival
of drunkenness,
786
00:40:14,513 --> 00:40:16,079
it is mixed with alcohol,
787
00:40:16,081 --> 00:40:18,581
the effects
are even more potent.
788
00:40:18,583 --> 00:40:21,985
You can actually steep
this flower in alcohol
789
00:40:21,987 --> 00:40:24,053
and psychoactive chemicals
790
00:40:24,055 --> 00:40:26,089
will then
dissolve into the alcohol,
791
00:40:26,091 --> 00:40:29,125
and then you can take it
through drink.
792
00:40:29,127 --> 00:40:33,630
Mixing a psychoactive drug
and a depressant like alcohol
793
00:40:33,632 --> 00:40:37,801
can cause you to become
even more drunk and inebriated.
794
00:40:37,803 --> 00:40:41,838
These wild celebrations were not
just about personal indulgence.
795
00:40:41,840 --> 00:40:44,541
They were religious ceremonies
in which participants
796
00:40:44,543 --> 00:40:48,344
became intoxicated in order
to commune with their gods.
797
00:40:48,346 --> 00:40:51,714
These weren't simply drunken,
brawling events.
798
00:40:51,716 --> 00:40:55,318
These were highly ordered
ritual events
799
00:40:55,320 --> 00:40:56,853
where the consumption of alcohol
800
00:40:56,855 --> 00:41:02,525
was intended to induce
a sort of transcendent state.
801
00:41:02,527 --> 00:41:05,628
They'd get totally blind drunk,
pass out.
802
00:41:05,630 --> 00:41:07,363
If they were lucky, they'd have
a dream
803
00:41:07,365 --> 00:41:12,435
and they'd see the goddess
they were worshipping.
804
00:41:12,437 --> 00:41:14,337
Narrator:
Experts turn to religious texts
805
00:41:14,339 --> 00:41:18,107
to understand the origins
of this crazed celebration
806
00:41:18,109 --> 00:41:20,543
and discover a myth
about an angry goddess
807
00:41:20,545 --> 00:41:23,580
defeated by the power of beer.
808
00:41:23,582 --> 00:41:24,948
The festival of drunkenness
809
00:41:24,950 --> 00:41:29,552
is almost certainly connected
with the goddess hathor.
810
00:41:29,554 --> 00:41:35,592
She is sent to wipe human beings
out, to massacre them.
811
00:41:35,594 --> 00:41:39,696
They manage to trick the goddess
by mixing beer
812
00:41:39,698 --> 00:41:42,031
with a red pigment called ochre
813
00:41:42,033 --> 00:41:45,869
and making a giant pool
of what looks like blood.
814
00:41:48,373 --> 00:41:51,040
And the goddess drinks up
this beer infused
815
00:41:51,042 --> 00:41:53,610
with red pigment,
gets drunk, passes out,
816
00:41:53,612 --> 00:41:56,880
and the gods are able
to trap her, and, hey, presto.
817
00:41:56,882 --> 00:41:59,949
Humanity is saved.
818
00:41:59,951 --> 00:42:04,420
Narrator: It's the final clue to
explain a hedonistic phenomenon.
819
00:42:04,422 --> 00:42:07,757
At the festival of drunkenness,
the aim of the game
820
00:42:07,759 --> 00:42:11,694
is to get as drunk
as you can as an act of worship.
821
00:42:11,696 --> 00:42:15,098
It was really a way for people
to commune with the gods.
822
00:42:15,100 --> 00:42:18,401
It appears the ancient egyptians
used alcohol and drugs
823
00:42:18,403 --> 00:42:20,169
to get out of their minds,
824
00:42:20,171 --> 00:42:22,539
so they can celebrate
in this world
825
00:42:22,541 --> 00:42:26,175
and ensure eternal happiness
in the next.
75043
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