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Tutankhamun Archive English
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Souvenir model of "wishing cup"

  • Decorative souvenir ornament of the so-called "wishing cup", [Carter 14].
  • White glazed porcelain with transfer print decoration.
  • English heraldic souvenir ware; crested china; English crested ware.
  • Coat of arm for Hinckley (Somerset) on front.
  • Text on foot of cup, at front: "Model of king's wishing cup found in king Tut-Ankh-Amen's tomb at Luxor".
  • Manufacturer stamp on base: "Arcadian – Stoke-on-Trent – Registered Number 678582".
  • Date uncertain, produced in the 1920s or 1930s.

Pendant: guardian statue

  • Tutankhamun-related jewellery.
  • Pendant, a guardian statue [Carter 22] flanked by tall lotus flowers on either side, with "TUTANKHAMEN" at bottom, ring fitting for chain at top.
  • Goldtone metal (perhaps gold-plated(?) metal/silver base), enamelled (black, light and dark blue, red, and white).
  • Stamped "300" on verso.
  • Manufacturer, not known.
  • Perhaps manufactured in the 1920s.

Cabochon: guardian statue

  • Tutankhamun-related jewellery element.
  • Oval cabochon for jewellery making, with a guardian statue [Carter 22] design.
  • Opaque light blue-coloured pressed glass, design highlighted in brown.
  • Manufacturer, not known. Perhaps produced by the Neiger Brothers
  • Date uncertain, perhaps manufactured in the 1920s or 1930s.

Necklace: Tutankhamun seated, green glass

  • Tutankhamun-related jewellery.
  • Necklace, pendant depicting Tutankhamun seated on recto and verso, with a mix of scarab-shaped, cylindrical and round beads.
  • Opaque green pressed glass with original(?) knotted string cord.
  • Not indicated, but almost certainly produced by the Neiger Brothers.

Pendant: lion head (44q)

  • Tutankhamun-related jewellery.
  • Pendant in the shape of a leopard’s head with Tutankhamun’s cartouche on the forehead [Carter 44q].
  • Silver-tone metal, or perhaps silver plated although not hallmarked.
  • Probably early to mid-1970s, or perhaps slightly later.
  • Manufacturer, not known.

Collector's album, stamps only: Tutankhamun-related

A complete set of 12 Tutankhamun-related stamps, issued by Nestlé and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk (Export) Co. Ltd., in 1933.

  • "Tutankhamen’s Tomb"
  • Issued by Nestlé and Anglo-Swiss Condensed Milk (Export) Co. Ltd., Vevey, Switzerland.
  • Printed by F. Stannard, London, United Kingdom.
  • 12 numbered Tutankhamun stamps, artist's impressions, most based on Harry Burton's photographs:
    • No. 1. The Valley of the Kings.
    • No. 2. The Ante-Chamber.
    • No. 3. The back of the Royal Throne.
    • No. 4. Entrance to the Tomb.
    • No. 5. In the Treasure Chamber.
    • No. 6. The Royal Ship.
    • No. 7. Statue of Pharaoh on the Leopard.
    • No. 8. Golden Falcon with Sun Disc.
    • No. 9. The Golden Coffin.
    • No. 10. The Golden Mask of the Mummy.
    • No. 11. The Head of the Mummy.
    • No. 12. Plan of the Tomb.

Crate label: "King Tut Lemons"

  • Reproduction of a fruit crate label.
  • "King Tut Brand Lemons, packed by Johnston Fruit Co., Santa Barbara, CAL".
  • Reproduction produced c. 2015, after c. 1920s original.

Liebig Company trade cards: "Ensevelissement d'un roi d'Égypte" [The Burial of King Tutankhamen]

  • Complete set of six "Cube Oxo" marketing trade cards referencing the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun.
  • 6 cards + 1 duplicate card
  • "VÉRITABLE EXTRAIT DE VIANDE DE LA CIE LIEBIG."
  • "CUBES OXO"
  • Liebig Company
  • "Ensevelissement d'un roi d'Égypte" [The Burial of King Tutankhamen]
      1. — Mort du Roi Toutankhamon.
      1. — Embaumement.
      1. — Traverée du Nil.
      1. — En route vers l'Ouest.
      1. — Le dernier adieu.
      1. — Tombeau de Roi Toutankhamon. [2 copies]

"The Murder of King Tut"

  • A complete set of 5 comic books, including two copies of #1 featuring alternative cover illustrations
  • James Patterson, The Murder of King Tut.
    • Adaptation of the novel The Murder of King Tut by James Patterson and Martin Dugard, set in the time of Tutankhamun and follows Howard Carter's search for the King's tomb.
  • IDW Publishing, San Diego.

Trésor de Toutankhamon

  • Trésor de Toutankhamon
  • Paris: Laboratoires Dausse, [1965].
  • Photographs by F. L. Kenett – © George Rainbird Ltd 1963, Vie et mort d’un pharaon, Christiane Desroches-Noblecourt, Hachette.
  • Set of colour plates featuring objects from the tomb.
  • From an original set of 20, full set except for nos. 1, 2, and 20. There are two copies of no. 9.

Prestige Stamp Book, Royal Mail: "Tutankhamun"

Two copies of the Prestige Stamp Book, 'Tutankhamun: Finding a Pharaoh', issued on 12 December 2022 as part of the Special Stamp Issue 'Tutankhamun', produced by Royal Mail in collaboration with the Griffith Institute, to mark the centenary of the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb.

Burton, Harry

Coin Cover, Royal Mail and Royal Mint: "Tutankhamun"

Two copies (identical) of the coin cover, 'The Burial of a King: Tutankhamun', produced by Royal Mail in partnership with the Royal Mint, marking the 100th anniversary of the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb.
Special Stamp Issue 'Tutankhamun', produced by Royal Mail in collaboration with the Griffith Institute, to mark the centenary of the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb. Royal Mail Group Ltd commissioned the Griffith Institute to act as consultants supplying all the text and required images for all the Special Stamp products.

  • Issued 24-11-2022.
  • See https://shop.royalmail.com/special-stamp-issues/tutankhamun/tutankhamun-coin-cover (accessed 19-06-2023).
  • The coin cover comprises:
    • An envelope with the main set of eight colour stamps, each featuring an object from Tutankhamun's tomb. Araldo De Luca supplied these images.
    • All of the stamps are hand-stamped with a design based on one of the Horus-falcon collars found in the tomb.
    • The envelope contains a carrier card with a five-pound (£5.00) coin affixed. The text describes Tutankhamun's coffins, sarcophagus and burial shrines.
  • Coin cover limited to 10,000 individually numbered covers.
  • The two coin covers are limited series numbers '05135' and '05137'.

Burton, Harry

Royal Mail Yearbook 2022: "Tutankhamun"

  • Royal Mail Yearbook 2022
  • Anonymous (ed.) 2022. A postcard from..: Royal Mail special stamps 2022. Royal Mail Yearbook 39. London: Royal Mail Group Ltd. ISBN: 9780946165773. 24.4 x 25.7 cm; 64 p., [117] figs [ills (mostly colour)] (OEB 307243).
  • The publication contains every stamp and miniature sheet issued by Royal Mail in 2022, with a chapter devoted to every Special Stamp issue. An expert in their field has written each dedicated chapter for each stamp issue. The subjects include The Rolling Stones, Her Majesty The Queen’s Platinum Jubilee and the discovery of Tutankhamun’s Tomb.
  • Contains the chapter 'Tutankhamun' and discusses the extraordinary period during which Tutankhamun lived, the significance of his burial and its site in the Valley of the Kings.
  • Also contains the Special Stamp Issue 'Tutankhamun', produced by Royal Mail in collaboration with the Griffith Institute, to mark the centenary of the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb.
  • The main set of eight colour stamps, each featuring an object from Tutankhamun's tomb, images supplied by Araldo De Luca.
  • Mini stamp sheet of four stamps featuring black and white photographs, including three Harry Burton photographs supplied by the Griffith Institute.

Burton, Harry

Transporting two boxes to the laboratory, postcard

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • Photograph taken in early 1923, date of postcard not known.
  • Captioned 'Exploitation of Tout-Ankh-Amon's Tomb'.
  • Howard Carter (right) and Arthur Callender (left) carrying a tray of objects from the Antechamber of Tutankhamun's tomb. Objects include two footstools (78) and (84) and a rounded box of ebony and redwood veneer (79).

Enclosure wall and backfilled entrance of tomb: view 1, photograph

  • Photograph, taken by James Deardon Holmes.
  • Taken in 1925.
  • Annotation on mount: '262.'
  • Part of a set of six photographs all taken by James Deardon Holmes (1873-1937), showing the backfilled entrance to Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1925. Each of these photographs represents one-half of a miniature stereoscopic image.

Enclosure wall and backfilled entrance of tomb: view 3, photograph

  • Photograph, taken by James Deardon Holmes.
  • Taken in 1925.
  • Annotation on mount: '264.'
  • Part of a set of six photographs all taken by James Deardon Holmes (1873-1937), showing the backfilled entrance to Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1925. Each of these photographs represents one-half of a miniature stereoscopic image.

Catalogue for James Deardon Holmes's Egypt photographs, PDF

  • PDF with scans of four typewritten pages from the Holmes Stereoscopic Catalogue typescript with the section listing photographs taken by Deardon Holmes in Egypt including the Tutankhamun photographs.
  • Complement to a set of six photographs all taken by James Deardon Holmes (1873-1937), showing the backfilled entrance to Tutankhamun’s tomb in 1925, see TAA ii.6.65-70. Each of these photographs represents one-half of a miniature stereoscopic image.

Holmes, James Deardon

Egyptian team transporting chests

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • The photograph was probably taken in early 1923; the production date of the postcard is not known, but it was almost certainly in the 1920s.
  • Members of the Egyptian team manoeuvring a large carrying tray out through the entrance to the modern enclosure wall constructed shortly after Tutankhamun's tomb was discovered. The team are carrying two black shrine-like boxes (Carter 37) and (Carter 38) and a gabled-roofed box (Carter 32), transporting them from the tomb's Antechamber to the Laboratory.

Carrying a chest up the tomb's rockcut staircase

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • The photograph was probably taken in early 1923; the postcard's production date is unknown, but it was almost certainly in the 1920s.
  • Two Egyptian team members carrying a white chest (Carter 50) up the rock-cup steps leading out of Tutankhamun's tomb, with Howard Carter assisting (head visible behind the left shoulder of the man at the front). This chest contained many items of Tutankhamun's wardrobe.

Escorting Tutankhamun's "mannequin"

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • The photograph was probably taken in early 1923; the postcard's production date is unknown, but it was almost certainly in the 1920s.
  • (Carter 116)
  • Howard Carter (second from right, striding, wearing a hat with a black band) accompanying the wooden portrait figure of Tutankhamun (the so-called "mannequin"; Carter 116), which is carried by an Egyptian member of the team transporting the object to the "Laboratory" tomb (KV 15, of Sethos II) for cleaning and conservation.
  • Also present in the photograph is Lord Carnarvon (sitting on the wall at the far left), who watches as the group passes by. The man walking to the left of the Earl is Arthur Weigall (dark hat with a darker headband), a former Egyptian Antiquities Service Inspector now engaged as a journalist reporting on the excavation. The other Europeans present here are also journalists or tourists.
  • The portrait bust of Tutankhamun [Carter 116] was found in the tomb's Antechamber. The King is portrayed wearing a yellow flat-topped crown featuring the centrally positioned uraeus on the crown's temple band. The King also wears a close-fitting white garment.
  • The bust's purpose is unclear, but it probably displayed part of the King's regalia. A recent proposal is that it may have been originally used for supporting and storing the King's gold corset (Carter 54k) in the tomb. When thieves ransacked the tomb in antiquity, these robbers likely removed the corset from the bust before breaking the heavy regalia into smaller, portable pieces.

Transporting Tutankhamun's "mannequin" [1]

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • The photograph was probably taken in early 1923; the postcard's production date is unknown, but it was almost certainly in the 1920s.
  • (Carter 116)
  • An Egyptian team member carrying the wooden portrait figure of Tutankhamun, the so-called "mannequin", from the King's tomb to the nearby "Laboratory" tomb (KV 15, of Sethos II) for cleaning and conservation.
  • The portrait bust of Tutankhamun [Carter 116] was found in the tomb's Antechamber. The King is portrayed wearing a yellow flat-topped crown featuring the centrally positioned uraeus on the crown's temple band. The King also wears a close-fitting white garment.
  • The bust's purpose is unclear, but it probably displayed part of the King's regalia. A recent proposal is that it may have been originally used for supporting and storing the King's gold corset (Carter 54k) in the tomb. When thieves ransacked the tomb in antiquity, these robbers likely removed the corset from the bust before breaking the heavy regalia into smaller, portable pieces.

Transporting objects from the Antechamber including a chariot wheel

  • Postcard
  • Photograph, photographer not known.
  • The photograph was probably taken in early 1923; the postcard's production date is unknown, but it was almost certainly in the 1920s.
  • Four Egyptian members of the excavation team carrying trays of objects from Tutankhamun's tomb, escorted by Arthur Callendar (on left, wearing a pith helmet) and armed guards. The men at the front transport a wheel from one of the King's chariots, followed by two men, each carrying a tray containing smaller items, including a reed basket or tray (Carter 119) with partitions.
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