
Presented by
Wm. Max Miller,
M. A.
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About Our Project
Project Updates
See what's new at the T. R. M. P.
Quickly Access Specific Mummies With Our
Mummy Locator
Or
View mummies in the
following Galleries:
XVII'th
Dynasty
Gallery I
XVIII'th
Dynasty
Gallery I
Gallery II
Including the mummy identified as Queen Hatshepsut.
Gallery III Including the mummy identified as Queen Tiye.
Gallery
IV
Featuring the controversial KV 55
mummy. Now with a revised reconstruction of ancient events in this perplexing
tomb.
Gallery V
Featuring the mummies of Tutankhamen and his children.
Still in preparation.
XIX'th
Dynasty
Gallery I
Now including the
mummy identified as
Ramesses I.
XX'th
Dynasty
Gallery I
XXI'st
Dynasty
Gallery I
Gallery II
21'st Dynasty Coffins from DB320
Examine the coffins of 21'st Dynasty Theban Rulers.
Unidentified Mummies
Gallery I
Including the mummy identified as Tutankhamen's mother.
About the Dockets
Inhapi's Tomb
Using this website for research papers
Acknowledgements
Links to Egyptology websites
Biographical Data about William Max Miller
Special Exhibits
The Treasures of Yuya and Tuyu
View
the funerary equipment of Queen Tiye's parents.
Tomb
Raiders of KV 46
How thorough were the robbers who plundered the tomb of
Yuya and Tuyu? How many times was the tomb robbed, and what were the thieves
after? This study of post interment activity in KV 46 provides some answers.
Special KV 55 Section
========
Follow the trail of the missing treasures from mysterious KV 55.
KV
55's Lost Objects: Where Are They Today?
The KV 55 Coffin Basin
and Gold Foil Sheets
KV 55
Gold Foil at the Metropolitan
Mystery of the Missing Mummy Bands
KV
35 Revisited
See rare photographic plates of a great
discovery from Daressy's Fouilles de la Vallee des Rois.
Unknown Man E
Was he really
buried alive?
The
Tomb of Maihirpre
Learn about Victor Loret's
important discovery of this nearly intact tomb in the Valley of the Kings.
Special Section:
Tomb Robbers!
Who were the real tomb raiders?
What beliefs motivated their actions? A new perspective on the ancient practice
of tomb robbing.
Special Section:
Spend a Night
with the Royal Mummies
Read Pierre Loti's eerie account of
his nocturnal visit to the Egyptian Museum's Hall of Mummies.
Special Section:
An
Audience With Amenophis II Journey
once more with Pierre Loti as he explores the shadowy chambers of KV 35 in the
early 1900's.

Most of the images on this website have been
scanned from books, all of which are given explicit credit and, wherever
possible, a link to a dealer where they may be purchased. Some images derive
from other websites. These websites are also acknowledged in writing and by
being given a link, either to the page or file where the images appear, or to
the main page of the source website. Images forwarded to me by individuals who
do not supply the original image source are credited to the sender. All written
material deriving from other sources is explicitly credited to its author.
Feel free to use material from the Theban Royal Mummy Project website.
No prior written permission is required. Just please follow the same guidelines
which I employ when using the works of other researchers, and give the Theban
Royal Mummy Project proper credit on your own papers, articles, or
web pages.
--Thank You
This website is constantly developing and contributions
of data from other researchers are welcomed.
Contact The Theban Royal Mummy Project at:
anubis4_2000@yahoo.com
Background Image: Wall scene from the tomb of Ramesses II (KV 7.) From Karl
Richard Lepsius, Denkmäler (Berlin: 1849-1859.)

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Acknowledgements
Many different works were used in the
construction of The Theban Royal Mummy Project site. In order to make
this site a useful online research tool, I have extensively documented my
sources by providing bibliographies for every entry. All written data deriving
from the work of other researchers receives explicit acknowledgement, either in
the body of the text, or in the Source Bibliography which appears at the
end of the text.
My primary sources for images are the classic works of
Maspero, Daressy and Smith, which (I believe) are now in the public domain.
However, several impediments stood in my way when using these works: (i.) I
obtained most them via interlibrary loan, and only had a very limited
time to use them; (ii.) one of the books had water damage, and some of the
prints were badly stained and faded; and (iii.) all of the books were in a
fragile condition and would have been damaged had I attempted to scan all of the
plates. Therefore, I have also used some ancillary images from other works, and have clearly noted
this on the pages which use such images. In way of compensation, I provide links
below to book sources where some of the books used by this site may be purchased.
The Theban Royal Mummy Project is a completely
non-profit enterprise (I'm doing this research as a labor of love) which
collates and presents data on Theban royal mummies for free educational and research
purposes only. It is in no way intended to provide a substitute for the written
work of any professional Egyptologist, living or otherwise. I do sincerely hope
that it will encourage an enthusiasm for Egyptology, and, toward this end, I
highly recommend the following books:
The
Mummy in Ancient Egypt
Hardcover, 352 Pages, Thames & Hudson, June 1998
ISBN: 0500050880
Authors: Salima Ikram and Aidan Dodson
Valley
of the Kings: The Decline
of a Royal Necropolis
by C. N. Reeves
Routledge; ISBN: 0710303688
Chronicle
of the Pharaohs
Hardcover, 224 Pages, Thames & Hudson, October 1994 ISBN: 0500050740
Author: Peter A. Clayton
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The
Complete Valley of the Kings: Tombs and Treasures of Egypt's Greatest Pharaohs
Hardcover, 224 Pages, Thames & Hudson, October 1996 ISBN: 0500050805
Authors: Nicholas Reeves and Richard H.
Wilkinson
Valley
of the Kings : Exploring the Tombs of the Pharaohs
by John Romer
Paperback Reprint edition
(February 1994)
Owlet; ISBN: 0805030271
The
Valley of the Kings : Horizon of Eternity
by Erik Hornung
ASIN: 0943221072
X-Raying
the Pharaohs
Harris, James E. & Kent R. Weeks
Publisher: Scribners 1973 2nd pb prntg
The
Royal Mummies
by G. Elliot Smith
Egyptian
Mummies
by G. Elliot Smith
KMT:
A Modern Journal of Ancient Egypt
New books will be added to this page whenever
they are used as image sources for this site.
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