KV62B: The Search for the Resting Place of Queen Ankh-kheperura (Ankhesenamon) by Michael J. Costa, Copyright 2017 MC, All rights
reserved.
In 2015 Egyptologists discovered that KV62 may have an
extension hidden by a false wall that was plastered over and painted,
like the burial room in Horemhab's tomb which was plundered already.
Letters written by an Egyptian Queen led to the sending of a Hittite
Prince to Egypt; the letters were intercepted by Pharaoh Tutankhamon and
investigated. Tut sent his heir, the Crown Prince (General) Horemhab
to the North Border to find the Hittite Prince. Tut pretended to be
dead as the letters already stated this was the case; the letters were
found in Vizier Ay's possession. So Tut either arrested or killed Ay,
and became "King Ay" for 3 to 4 years while Horemhab was away. He
remained married to Queen Ankhesenamon. Ankhesenamon was a Pharaoh
co-regent with her father Akhenaton (Ankh-kheperura mery
Nefer-kheperura), after he divorced Queen Nefertiti (for not producing a
male heir), so she inherited her mother's titles of Nefer-neferuaton
(etc). There were 2 people named Smenkhkara - one was the male ruler
married to Queen Meritaton (Djoser-kheperu) and the other was
Ankhesenamon's Pharaoh name (Ankh-kheperura Smenkhkara). Evidence for
this theory exists in KV62A: the golden Canopic Shrines with statues of
Ankhesenamon, the Canopic Jar lids with Ankhesenamon's face, the yellow
Quartzite Sarcophagus with female engravings, Tut's broken red granite
sarcophagus lid (KV62A) with the red granite sarcophagus in KV23 (King
Ay tomb), etc. After "King Ay" died he was moved to KV62A to block
access to KV62B, once Ankhesenamon died and was buried there (if so).
The fake mural of "King Ay performing last rites to Tut" covers this
entrance; King Ay has "Tut's facial features" which is evidence because
Tut liked to preserve his image on statues of Gods and other people.
The real Ay would want his image on his portrayal, like any Ancient
Egyptian. Tut would not send his heir to intercept the Hittites unless
Tut was already Pharaoh. KV62 was last opened during Horemhab's reign,
when he moved Tut back into it. No one would think another tomb was
there because Tut's burial was in the tomb. The Last Rites was the
"Opening of the Mouth Ceremony" performed by the eldest male heir, as
Horus to Osiris. In this regard, Tut performs it for himself or his
alter ego. KV63 - a nearby tomb - had termite-infested coffins weighted
with pillows (a fake mummy); was this a fake burial (decoy) for
Ankhesenamon? Is Ankhesenamon really in KV62B? Perhaps in the near
future we will know, as indicated by a renewed scan of the burial
chamber later this month (February 2017).
On the Curse of Tutankhamon:
Mostly
this is electrical. April 5, 1923: Cairo electrical blackout after
Lord Carnarvon's death. 1988: Mysteries of the Pyramids Live: Cameras
breaking, lights refusing to turn on. 2008 Dr. Zahi Hawass reported a
storm after an interview with Japanese television, and the failure of
his CT Scan Machine inside the tomb, for 1 hour. 2009 in the De Young
Museum in San Francisco, CA, the author (M7) reported that the main
radio tower in SF failed for 1 hour, and the Museum Gift Shop emergency
doors activated, trapping the author inside for 1 hour, prior to the
exhibit. 2016 the second Scan of KV62 failed, though the first one was
said to have worked. Other people reported untimely deaths, storms,
solar flares, related to Tutankhamon's name. Storms are connected to
electricity as are heart attacks. My computer(s) malfunctioned while
writing about Tutankhamon when he was "awake." So be careful.
Hopefully new scans will work and reveal new information.
M7 2017. The first evidence for a hidden chamber came from reading Eye of the Pharaoh chapter 15, 19, 20 - Which I let Dr. Zahi Hawass read in 2012. He had a "theory" based on my book about the sarcophagus in Khufu's Pyramid from 2013.
So my ideas were probably stolen by Dr. Reeves when he "discovered" the idea that the hidden chambers were in KV62 because I wrote the word "Nefertiti" in that chapter; the complete sentence was "Nefertiti's daughter, Ankhesenamon." Egyptologists like to plagiarize ideas from authors without fame or compensation.
MC
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