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King Tut’s treasures come to Paris, record visitors expected

Organisers of an exhibit in Paris of artefacts from the tomb of the ancient Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun are expecting more than a million visitors. The show opens on Saturday in the French capital as the second leg of a grand tour taking in several other stops.

A canopic coffinette of King Tut, one of the 150 objects on display at the exhibit at La Villette in Paris
A canopic coffinette of King Tut, one of the 150 objects on display at the exhibit at La Villette in Paris lavillette.com
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Ticket sales for the exhibition in Paris, called "Tutankhamun: Treasures of the Golden Pharaoh", reached 130,000 last week as curators began installing the objects. Organisers hope this venture will break a record over the next six months.

The objects are part of a travelling exhibit to mark the upcoming centenary of the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb in Egypt by archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922. Curator Tarek El Awady told RFI that it was also “to send the message to the whole world that Egypt is almost ready to open the new home for King Tutankhamun, the Grand Egyptian Museum.”

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Tarel el Azady, curator of 'Tutankhamun: Treasures of the Golden Pharaoh'

Maria Carolina Pina

The collection is being transferred from the Egyptian Museum, in Cairo’s Tahrir Square, to the new museum near the Giza pyramids, which is due to open next year.

“The 5,300 artefacts of Tutankhamun will be on display for the first time since the time of the discovery of the treasure,” says El Awady. “The king will be well, well protected, and his treasures will be in an absolutely secured environment.”

150 of the objects related to the pharaoh, 60 of which have never before left Egypt are on show in this ambitious tour. The Egyptian Ministry for Antiquities said this is the largest number of Tutankhamun artefacts ever to have left Cairo, and that it may never happen again.

19th century French emperor Napoleon I's passion for Egypt furnished the Louvre museum in Paris an important collection which continues to delight Egyptologists. The Louvre in Paris has loaned one of its top Tutankhamun pieces to the show, a statue of Amon, the king of the gods, protecting the pharaoh.

El Awady says the objects were chosen to tell the story of King Tut’s journey to the afterlife.

“The story we want people to experience, is to travel with Tutankhamun through the afterlife and take this dangerous journey with him in the underworld, until the King is resurrected and lives forever,” he said.

King Tut's old records in Paris

Paris is the second stop of a tour of the objects, after Los Angeles. The last time King Tut’s artefacts were displayed in Paris, in 1967, 1.2 million people came to see them, setting an attendance record that still stands today. The exhibition at the Petit Palais iwas called "the show of the century".

One defining piece can however still only be seen in Egypt's Cairo Museum. Egypt is especially careful to preserve Tutankhamun's golden death mask, made of more than 10 kilograms of gold.

Among the objects on display is an alabaster vase that El Awady calls the wishing cup, which he says foreshadows King Tut’s popularity.

“On the rim of this alabaster vase is written a magical text saying 'May you live thousands of years, may your eyes see wonderful things'. And I think the wish on this cup actually came true. King Tut has lived for thousands of years, and is seeing wonderful things around the world.”

The exhibition will next move to London in November. The proceeds will help pay for the new Giza museum.


'Tutankhamun, Treasures of the Golden Pharaoh' at Paris' Grande Halle de la Villette from 23 March - 15 September 2019.

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