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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,302 --> 00:00:04,703 Narrator: Pyramids, temples, tombs -- 2 00:00:04,705 --> 00:00:07,539 these ancient wonders promise even greater secrets 3 00:00:07,541 --> 00:00:10,809 still to be found under the sands of egypt. 4 00:00:10,811 --> 00:00:12,478 Now cutting-edge science 5 00:00:12,480 --> 00:00:15,514 decodes the mysterious land of the pharaohs. 6 00:00:15,516 --> 00:00:19,218 With modern technology, we are gaining an insight 7 00:00:19,220 --> 00:00:21,520 into the way ancient egyptians lived 8 00:00:21,522 --> 00:00:24,390 and the manner in which they died. 9 00:00:24,392 --> 00:00:27,326 Narrator: This time, mysteries of villainy and vice 10 00:00:27,328 --> 00:00:29,261 at the heart of ancient egypt. 11 00:00:29,263 --> 00:00:31,563 Can cutting-edge science reveal evidence 12 00:00:31,565 --> 00:00:33,632 of a 5,000-year-old homicide? 13 00:00:33,634 --> 00:00:35,300 So like a forensic scientist, 14 00:00:35,302 --> 00:00:38,370 we were able to reconstruct a probable weapon. 15 00:00:38,372 --> 00:00:40,739 Narrator: Does the discovery of this mass cemetery 16 00:00:40,741 --> 00:00:43,909 prove ancient egyptians broke the ultimate taboo? 17 00:00:43,911 --> 00:00:46,245 People are eating people. 18 00:00:46,247 --> 00:00:48,180 Cannibalism. 19 00:00:48,182 --> 00:00:49,681 Narrator: And can modern pharmacology 20 00:00:49,683 --> 00:00:51,350 reveal the surprising antics 21 00:00:51,352 --> 00:00:53,685 involved in ancient egyptian worship? 22 00:00:53,687 --> 00:00:56,955 The aim of the game is to get as drunk as you can. 23 00:00:56,957 --> 00:00:59,825 Ancient egyptians were getting high. 24 00:00:59,827 --> 00:01:01,960 Narrator: Ancient clues unearthed. 25 00:01:01,962 --> 00:01:04,496 Long-lost evidence reexamined. 26 00:01:04,498 --> 00:01:08,600 Precious artifacts brought into the light of the 21st century. 27 00:01:08,602 --> 00:01:12,404 These are "egypt's unexplained files." 28 00:01:12,406 --> 00:01:15,407 -- captions by vitac -- www.Vitac.Com 29 00:01:15,409 --> 00:01:18,410 captions paid for by discovery communications 30 00:01:18,412 --> 00:01:19,978 ♪ 31 00:01:19,980 --> 00:01:22,448 the british museum, london -- 32 00:01:22,450 --> 00:01:27,052 among the star exhibits, two mysterious mummies. 33 00:01:27,054 --> 00:01:29,788 They've been on display for over 100 years, 34 00:01:29,790 --> 00:01:33,325 but egyptologists know very little about them. 35 00:01:33,327 --> 00:01:36,261 What secrets are held by one of the most famous mummies 36 00:01:36,263 --> 00:01:37,863 in the world today? 37 00:01:37,865 --> 00:01:39,598 Narrator: Modern science, at last, 38 00:01:39,600 --> 00:01:42,601 reveals some extraordinary and unexpected clues. 39 00:01:42,603 --> 00:01:45,671 We started to examine them like a forensic scientist today, 40 00:01:45,673 --> 00:01:47,739 like a cold case investigator. 41 00:01:47,741 --> 00:01:49,575 It's right there in front of your nose, 42 00:01:49,577 --> 00:01:52,678 and you had no idea it was there the whole time. 43 00:01:52,680 --> 00:01:54,746 Narrator: Now, five millennia later, 44 00:01:54,748 --> 00:01:58,550 scientists in the 21st century make a shocking discovery. 45 00:01:58,552 --> 00:02:01,053 It is quite astonishing that he would appear 46 00:02:01,055 --> 00:02:03,589 to have been the victim of murder. 47 00:02:03,591 --> 00:02:05,691 Narrator: Could experts have uncovered evidence 48 00:02:05,693 --> 00:02:08,060 of a 5,000-year-old murder? 49 00:02:08,062 --> 00:02:11,597 ♪ 50 00:02:11,599 --> 00:02:14,099 gebelein, in upper egypt, 51 00:02:14,101 --> 00:02:17,202 25 miles south of modern-day luxor. 52 00:02:17,204 --> 00:02:19,238 It's here in 1896 53 00:02:19,240 --> 00:02:21,006 that a british archaeologist discovered 54 00:02:21,008 --> 00:02:22,941 six bodies in the sand. 55 00:02:22,943 --> 00:02:25,978 They appeared to have been carefully buried. 56 00:02:25,980 --> 00:02:29,548 These bodies were found in the fetal position, 57 00:02:29,550 --> 00:02:31,283 and the fetal position is very important 58 00:02:31,285 --> 00:02:33,752 for the ancient egyptians because essentially it's 59 00:02:33,754 --> 00:02:37,656 returning a dead person back to a rebirth context, 60 00:02:37,658 --> 00:02:42,294 so they can be reborn again in the afterlife. 61 00:02:42,296 --> 00:02:43,695 Narrator: The bodies discovered at gebelein 62 00:02:43,697 --> 00:02:47,299 are unlike other mummies found preserved in egypt. 63 00:02:47,301 --> 00:02:50,936 They are not embalmed, nor are they wrapped in linens. 64 00:02:50,938 --> 00:02:55,774 Instead, they were buried directly into the sand. 65 00:02:55,776 --> 00:02:57,509 Antoine: They weren't intentionally mummified, 66 00:02:57,511 --> 00:02:59,111 as far as we can determine. 67 00:02:59,113 --> 00:03:02,181 These were preserved, if you want, by accident. 68 00:03:02,183 --> 00:03:04,917 A hot desert environment has led to 69 00:03:04,919 --> 00:03:07,686 the natural drying out of the body. 70 00:03:07,688 --> 00:03:09,521 Godenho: So when we discover these bodies, 71 00:03:09,523 --> 00:03:10,856 they're preserved. 72 00:03:10,858 --> 00:03:14,159 The sand desiccates the body, draws the moisture out. 73 00:03:14,161 --> 00:03:16,195 The male is better preserved of the pair. 74 00:03:16,197 --> 00:03:17,863 He still has ginger hair. 75 00:03:17,865 --> 00:03:19,464 Johnston: Within the museum community, 76 00:03:19,466 --> 00:03:22,701 because he has these little strands of ginger hair, 77 00:03:22,703 --> 00:03:26,905 he has been known for many years as "ginger." 78 00:03:26,907 --> 00:03:29,374 narrator: In 1901, two of the bodies, 79 00:03:29,376 --> 00:03:30,709 gebelein man and woman, 80 00:03:30,711 --> 00:03:32,811 are brought to the british museum. 81 00:03:32,813 --> 00:03:35,814 He is better preserved and put on display. 82 00:03:35,816 --> 00:03:37,449 But egyptologists at that time 83 00:03:37,451 --> 00:03:40,385 can decipher very little about either of them. 84 00:03:40,387 --> 00:03:44,389 They remain a mystery for over a century. 85 00:03:44,391 --> 00:03:47,626 Then, in 2012, new scientific techniques 86 00:03:47,628 --> 00:03:50,262 give forensic archaeologists daniel antoine 87 00:03:50,264 --> 00:03:52,764 narrator: And renée friedman the chance to finally unlock 88 00:03:52,766 --> 00:03:54,866 the story of the gebelein mummies. 89 00:03:54,868 --> 00:03:57,102 We did a lot of research on how old he was, 90 00:03:57,104 --> 00:03:58,737 so we did carbon dating. 91 00:03:58,739 --> 00:04:04,309 Probably lived between 3,000 because and 3,300 because. 92 00:04:04,311 --> 00:04:07,379 Narrator: Incredibly, that makes gebelein man and woman 93 00:04:07,381 --> 00:04:10,716 among the oldest mummies ever found in egypt. 94 00:04:10,718 --> 00:04:13,485 They died before the invention of mummification, 95 00:04:13,487 --> 00:04:17,456 which explains why they were buried directly into the sand. 96 00:04:17,458 --> 00:04:21,126 This was a time before even the earliest pharaohs. 97 00:04:21,128 --> 00:04:23,495 The period in which this person lived was right 98 00:04:23,497 --> 00:04:25,297 before egypt becomes a state. 99 00:04:25,299 --> 00:04:27,232 It wasn't like the pharaonic egypt 100 00:04:27,234 --> 00:04:28,934 that happens a little bit later in time. 101 00:04:28,936 --> 00:04:31,603 As we're dealing with some of the very earliest periods 102 00:04:31,605 --> 00:04:33,071 of egyptian history, 103 00:04:33,073 --> 00:04:38,176 we're dealing with a period where life is fairly savage. 104 00:04:38,178 --> 00:04:40,846 It was a period we know was very much filled with violence 105 00:04:40,848 --> 00:04:42,981 because we have famous egyptian pieces of art 106 00:04:42,983 --> 00:04:45,350 that depict violence. 107 00:04:45,352 --> 00:04:48,754 "this violent world is the first clue when piecing together 108 00:04:48,756 --> 00:04:51,189 the gebelein mummies' ancient story. 109 00:04:53,560 --> 00:04:57,896 Daniel antoine now hopes science will reveal even more detail 110 00:04:57,898 --> 00:05:00,032 and turns first to the man. 111 00:05:00,034 --> 00:05:02,701 Daniel uses the latest c.T. Scanning techniques 112 00:05:02,703 --> 00:05:07,105 to study ginger in detail, unimaginable in the 19th century 113 00:05:07,107 --> 00:05:08,840 when the bodies were first found. 114 00:05:08,842 --> 00:05:10,509 So what's extraordinary about this individual 115 00:05:10,511 --> 00:05:11,710 is that he'd been on this 116 00:05:11,712 --> 00:05:13,011 [indistinct] on and off for over 100 years, 117 00:05:13,013 --> 00:05:15,580 and we knew relatively nothing about him. 118 00:05:15,582 --> 00:05:19,251 I was very keen on getting new insights into him as a person, 119 00:05:19,253 --> 00:05:21,353 and this is why we took him to get c.T. Scanned. 120 00:05:21,355 --> 00:05:23,689 That's really revealed so much new information. 121 00:05:23,691 --> 00:05:26,758 So it's wonderful that science is now stepping in 122 00:05:26,760 --> 00:05:29,628 to tell us about these individuals. 123 00:05:29,630 --> 00:05:32,097 The c.T. Scan produces a 3-d image 124 00:05:32,099 --> 00:05:34,066 not just of the surface of the mummy. 125 00:05:34,068 --> 00:05:38,270 It captures detail deep inside to reveal brand new information 126 00:05:38,272 --> 00:05:40,872 about ginger, the gebelein man. 127 00:05:40,874 --> 00:05:42,808 Antoine: We were keen to find out how old he was, 128 00:05:42,810 --> 00:05:45,077 and one way to do that is to actually look at his skeleton. 129 00:05:45,079 --> 00:05:46,812 So you can see the head of the humerus 130 00:05:46,814 --> 00:05:48,547 is in the process of fusing here, 131 00:05:48,549 --> 00:05:50,148 suggesting he was a young man when he died, 132 00:05:50,150 --> 00:05:53,318 probably between the ages of 18 and 21. 133 00:05:53,320 --> 00:05:55,987 Narrator: Egyptologists now know gebelein man lived during 134 00:05:55,989 --> 00:05:59,024 a turbulent and violent era of egyptian history, 135 00:05:59,026 --> 00:06:01,226 and that he died as a young man. 136 00:06:01,228 --> 00:06:04,029 But the c.T. Scan reveals these two facts 137 00:06:04,031 --> 00:06:06,431 may be more than just coincidence. 138 00:06:06,433 --> 00:06:08,200 What puzzled us is that there was damage 139 00:06:08,202 --> 00:06:09,468 to his left shoulder blade. 140 00:06:09,470 --> 00:06:11,970 If we look closely, we can see there's damage 141 00:06:11,972 --> 00:06:13,538 when you compare it to the right over here. 142 00:06:13,540 --> 00:06:17,275 You can see that the underlying bone is shattered. 143 00:06:17,277 --> 00:06:21,413 You can see the fourth rib is also broken. 144 00:06:21,415 --> 00:06:24,750 The c.T. Scan has uncovered startling evidence gebelein man 145 00:06:24,752 --> 00:06:26,718 suffered a brutal injury. 146 00:06:26,720 --> 00:06:29,821 Daniel and renée study the wounds for clues 147 00:06:29,823 --> 00:06:32,257 to what could have caused them and arrive 148 00:06:32,259 --> 00:06:34,126 at a chilling conclusion. 149 00:06:34,128 --> 00:06:36,895 This appears to be a single, violent blow 150 00:06:36,897 --> 00:06:39,164 to his left shoulder blade. 151 00:06:39,166 --> 00:06:42,701 He may have never seen it coming. 152 00:06:42,703 --> 00:06:44,503 So like a forensic scientist today, 153 00:06:44,505 --> 00:06:46,505 like a cold case investigator, 154 00:06:46,507 --> 00:06:49,841 we were able to reconstruct the probably weapon, 155 00:06:49,843 --> 00:06:53,712 which was probably a thin, metal stiletto dagger 156 00:06:53,714 --> 00:06:57,783 that went all the way into the hilt. 157 00:06:57,785 --> 00:07:00,819 Johnston: Gebelein man "a" had been stabbed in the back, 158 00:07:00,821 --> 00:07:04,423 and that's almost certainly the cause of his death. 159 00:07:04,425 --> 00:07:06,591 Narrator: It's a remarkable discovery. 160 00:07:06,593 --> 00:07:09,394 100 years after gebelein man was first discovered 161 00:07:09,396 --> 00:07:11,663 and put on public display, 162 00:07:11,665 --> 00:07:13,665 modern science has revealed he is, 163 00:07:13,667 --> 00:07:18,870 in fact, the young victim of a 5,500-year-old murder. 164 00:07:18,872 --> 00:07:21,373 Johnston: It is quite astonishing this individual 165 00:07:21,375 --> 00:07:24,042 has been on display in the british museum 166 00:07:24,044 --> 00:07:25,710 for over 100 years, 167 00:07:25,712 --> 00:07:28,013 but it's only now that we discover 168 00:07:28,015 --> 00:07:30,582 that he was the victim of murder. 169 00:07:30,584 --> 00:07:32,517 Narrator: Modern science has at last illuminated 170 00:07:32,519 --> 00:07:35,353 one of the darkest eras of ancient egypt. 171 00:07:35,355 --> 00:07:38,557 It reveals a violent world where life was dangerous 172 00:07:38,559 --> 00:07:40,959 and could be cut brutally short. 173 00:07:40,961 --> 00:07:43,295 But the gebelein mummies have even more secrets 174 00:07:43,297 --> 00:07:45,063 to share from this ancient time, 175 00:07:45,065 --> 00:07:48,333 and science is now ready to unlock them. 176 00:07:48,335 --> 00:07:55,607 ♪ 177 00:07:55,609 --> 00:07:57,742 johnston: In 2012, it was discovered 178 00:07:57,744 --> 00:08:00,479 that gebelein man "a" had been murdered. 179 00:08:00,481 --> 00:08:03,782 In 2018, something quite different is discovered. 180 00:08:03,784 --> 00:08:07,018 We had no idea that there was some kind of richer evidence 181 00:08:07,020 --> 00:08:09,054 to their cultural origins. 182 00:08:09,056 --> 00:08:10,922 Narrator: Armed with new technology, 183 00:08:10,924 --> 00:08:14,626 experts uncover another clue hidden for millennia. 184 00:08:14,628 --> 00:08:17,062 You're just looking through the view finder and you go, 185 00:08:17,064 --> 00:08:18,897 "oh, my goodness." 186 00:08:18,899 --> 00:08:21,500 godenho: The egyptian couple have what we can identify 187 00:08:21,502 --> 00:08:24,202 as pictures on their skin. 188 00:08:24,204 --> 00:08:28,106 Narrator: Experts ask what this ancient body art could mean? 189 00:08:28,108 --> 00:08:32,010 Could these marking be ♪ancient egypt's oldest tattoos? 190 00:08:32,012 --> 00:08:37,849 ♪ 191 00:08:45,025 --> 00:08:47,626 narrator: Egyptologists daniel antoine and renée friedman 192 00:08:47,628 --> 00:08:50,295 have used the latest science to reveal gebelein man 193 00:08:50,297 --> 00:08:51,897 was murdered. 194 00:08:51,899 --> 00:08:54,432 Then, in 2018, they turned to the woman 195 00:08:54,434 --> 00:08:56,434 he was found buried beside, 196 00:08:56,436 --> 00:09:00,105 to ask what secrets her body could reveal. 197 00:09:00,107 --> 00:09:03,375 Acting on a hunch, renée studies gebelein woman 198 00:09:03,377 --> 00:09:05,777 with a handheld infrared camera. 199 00:09:05,779 --> 00:09:08,947 Friedman: I got myself a little pre-converted infrared camera, 200 00:09:08,949 --> 00:09:11,550 which is generally used for wildlife photography. 201 00:09:11,552 --> 00:09:14,119 I hadn't really expected there to be anything, 202 00:09:14,121 --> 00:09:17,122 but you're just kind of looking through the viewfinder 203 00:09:17,124 --> 00:09:20,659 and you go, "oh, my goodness!" 204 00:09:20,661 --> 00:09:23,295 narrator: Renée's infrared camera revealed clear markings 205 00:09:23,297 --> 00:09:26,932 on the woman's shoulder, invisible to the naked eye -- 206 00:09:26,934 --> 00:09:30,769 a series of "s" shapes and a stick or stave. 207 00:09:30,771 --> 00:09:34,839 To see that it was an area that was very well visible, 208 00:09:34,841 --> 00:09:38,043 but we just -- you just can't see it without infrared. 209 00:09:38,045 --> 00:09:40,545 Narrator: The only evidence of tattooing in ancient egypt 210 00:09:40,547 --> 00:09:43,882 had come from figurines and wall paintings. 211 00:09:43,884 --> 00:09:48,954 This is the first example of an actual tattoo. 212 00:09:48,956 --> 00:09:50,855 Friedman: We had known from figurines 213 00:09:50,857 --> 00:09:52,190 that there was a likelihood 214 00:09:52,192 --> 00:09:55,460 that they did tattoo in predynastic egypt, 215 00:09:55,462 --> 00:10:00,966 but I really never thought that I'd actually find a tattoo. 216 00:10:00,968 --> 00:10:05,003 Until now, evidence has only shown that women were tattooed. 217 00:10:05,005 --> 00:10:07,205 With the power of infrared technology, 218 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? 220 00:10:13,447 --> 00:10:16,681 Renée examines his body under infrared light 221 00:10:16,683 --> 00:10:21,186 and is astonished by what she discovers. 222 00:10:21,188 --> 00:10:25,056 The man's arm appears to be tattooed with a bull 223 00:10:25,058 --> 00:10:27,926 and a sheep. 224 00:10:27,928 --> 00:10:30,762 You've got two horned animals. 225 00:10:30,764 --> 00:10:33,331 The nuances of the meanings of these animals 226 00:10:33,333 --> 00:10:35,000 is something we're still trying to work out 227 00:10:35,002 --> 00:10:36,635 from this preliterate age. 228 00:10:36,637 --> 00:10:41,439 They didn't tell us exactly what everything meant. 229 00:10:41,441 --> 00:10:43,608 Narrator: It's an extraordinary discovery. 230 00:10:43,610 --> 00:10:46,978 The first actual evidence of an ancient egyptian tattoo 231 00:10:46,980 --> 00:10:51,049 and the first proof that both men and women were tattooed. 232 00:10:51,051 --> 00:10:57,188 Not only that, gebelein man and woman are over 5,000 years old. 233 00:10:57,190 --> 00:10:59,924 The tattoos on these mummies appear to be the oldest 234 00:10:59,926 --> 00:11:03,028 known tattoos on the african continent. 235 00:11:03,030 --> 00:11:07,198 The art on the egyptian male is the clearest, 236 00:11:07,200 --> 00:11:10,001 earliest example of actual body art 237 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 239 00:11:17,077 --> 00:11:19,611 these ancient markings may once have had. 240 00:11:19,613 --> 00:11:22,914 She starts by trying to understand how they were made. 241 00:11:22,916 --> 00:11:24,516 Friedman: These were definitely permanent tattoos 242 00:11:24,518 --> 00:11:26,184 because they're subcutaneous, 243 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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