Tutankhamun’s tomb, discovered nearly intact in 1922 by Howard Carter in the Valley of the Kings, contained more than 5,000 artifacts preserved for over 3,300 years. Among the treasures were gold chariots, alabaster vessels, jewelry, ornate furniture, and the iconic solid-gold funerary mask. Carter’s team spent ten years documenting all 5,398 objects, transforming modern archaeology and offering unparalleled insight into royal burial practices. The discovery captivated global media and brought worldwide fame to Carter and Lord Carnarvon.
On November 4, 1922, Howard Carter’s team uncovered the first step of what would become the most important archaeological discovery of the 20th century. For years, Carter had been searching the Valley of the Kings with little success, funded by the English aristocrat Lord Carnarvon. Many believed the valley had nothing left to offer, as most tombs had already been robbed in antiquity.
But that morning changed everything.
A water boy stumbled upon a stone step while clearing debris, revealing the top of a staircase descending into the bedrock. Carter immediately halted all activity to protect the site. Over the next few hours, sixteen steps leading to a sealed doorway emerged. The doorway bore the seal of the necropolis guards—and beneath it, a faint impression of the royal cartouche of Tutankhamun. Carter knew he had found something extraordinary.
He cabled Lord Carnarvon in England with a simple, now-famous message:
“At last have made wonderful discovery in Valley. A magnificent tomb with seals intact.”
Carnarvon and his daughter, Lady Evelyn Herbert, rushed to Egypt, arriving on November 23. When they resumed excavation, the sealed doorway was cleared completely, confirming that the tomb had been breached in ancient times but resealed afterward. Still, the seals were mostly intact—an extremely rare and hopeful sign.
On November 26, 1922, Carter, Carnarvon, Lady Evelyn and Arthur Callender gathered to open the sealed doorway that led from the stairway to the first chamber. Carter made a small breach in the plaster, inserted a candle, and peered through the gap as hot air rushed from the sealed room.
For a moment, he said nothing.
When Carnarvon impatiently asked, “Can you see anything?”
Carter whispered his immortal reply:
“Yes… wonderful things.”
As his eyes adjusted, he saw golden beds shaped like animals, painted chests, statues covered with gold leaf, overturned baskets, and the gleam of treasure filling the chamber from floor to ceiling.
Carter later described that moment with reverence, noting that the team stood silently, aware they were in the presence of a long-dead king whose burial had remained untouched through centuries of turmoil.
The antechamber was astonishing—a large room packed with nearly 700 objects arranged in a chaotic but largely undisturbed manner. Unlike other royal tombs, which had been emptied by ancient robbers, Tutankhamun’s antechamber showed only minor signs of intrusion.
Carter recorded an extraordinary variety of objects:
Two sealed doorways hinted at further wonders: one leading to the annex and the other to the burial chamber. The latter still bore the seal of the royal necropolis—evidence it had remained untouched since antiquity.
Clearing the antechamber and documenting its contents would take months; fully recording the entire tomb required ten years.
Though modest in size compared to other royal tombs, the content preservation in Tutankhamun’s burial made it unparalleled in archaeological history. Its architecture is surprisingly simple: a short stairway, a sloping corridor, and four chambers.
Measuring roughly 7.9 × 3.6 meters, the antechamber was the tomb’s largest room and the first Carter entered. It held:
The throne alone revealed much about the young king’s life: its delicate scene of Ankhesenamun anointing the king reflects the intimate artistic style of the Amarna period.
The burial chamber, though small, was the spiritual heart of the tomb. Its walls were painted with scenes of the king’s funeral and his acceptance into the company of the gods. Four golden shrines filled almost the entire space, leaving little room to maneuver.
Inside these shrines rested:
1. A stone sarcophagus with four protective goddesses carved on each corner
2. Three nested coffins:
3. The mummy of Tutankhamun, wrapped in linen and adorned with amulets
4. The iconic golden mask, weighing 10.23 kg and inlaid with lapis lazuli, quartz, and obsidian
The burial chamber contained four niches, each holding a “magic brick” inscribed with protective spells from the Book of the Dead to guard the king’s journey into the afterlife.
Behind the burial chamber lay the treasury, the most sacred room after the burial itself. Roughly 4 × 3.6 meters, this room held objects related to ritual protection and funerary rites.
Its centerpiece was:
Carter described the treasury as feeling “alive with presence,” as though the objects still performed their ancient protective roles.
The annex, though the smallest room, contained nearly half of the tomb’s total contents—more than 2,000 pieces. It held:
The annex was extremely cluttered, with objects piled atop one another. Archaeologists had to be suspended from ropes to reach all items safely.
One of the most remarkable objects recovered was an iron dagger with a gold handle. Scientific testing confirmed the blade was made from meteoritic iron—a material more precious than gold in Bronze Age Egypt. Its extraterrestrial origin symbolized divine power, linking the king with the heavens.
In the treasury’s northeastern corner lay two tiny coffins containing stillborn daughters of Tutankhamun and likely Ankhesenamun. Carefully mummified and wrapped with royal care, one fetus even wore a small gilded mask. CT scans later revealed they suffered no congenital deformities, correcting earlier assumptions.
During mummification, priests coated the king’s body with a heavy amount of hot resin, which hardened like glue. Carter’s team could not separate the mummy from the golden coffin and ultimately dismembered the body to remove it. The mummy was reassembled later, though the damage remained irreversible.
Tutankhamun’s tomb is unusually small for a pharaoh. Evidence suggests his death at around age 19 was unexpected, leaving little time to prepare a grand burial. Painters completed only three of the four walls with the same finishing layer; the fourth wall appears rushed.
Many objects—including shrines, coffins, and even the sarcophagus—show signs of having been repurposed from earlier burials. Names were chiseled out and replaced with Tutankhamun’s. This suggests the burial was assembled quickly, drawing on prepared objects from other tombs or workshops.
Black cumin seeds, found throughout the tomb, were valued for spiritual and medicinal properties. Associated with healing and protection, they were believed to support the king’s health in the afterlife.
The discovery unfolded just as modern mass media was gaining power. Carnarvon sold exclusive reporting rights to The Times, angering other journalists. Soon, newspapers everywhere were filled with images and stories of the treasure-filled tomb.
This sparked a global cultural phenomenon:
The young king, forgotten for millennia, became the symbol of ancient Egypt.
When Lord Carnarvon died unexpectedly in April 1923 from an infected mosquito bite, sensationalist newspapers claimed it was the result of a “pharaoh’s curse.” Rumors spread quickly:
Howard Carter dismissed all of this as nonsense, but the idea of a supernatural curse became a permanent part of popular culture.
The discovery intensified debates over cultural heritage and colonial control. Egyptians criticized the exclusion of local journalists and the Western monopoly on excavation rights. Today, Egypt continues to advocate for the repatriation of artifacts believed to have been removed unlawfully. The 2020 controversy over a Tutankhamun bust sold at Christie’s reignited the debate, with Egypt asserting the piece was stolen from Karnak.