Lost Treasures of Egypt (2019) s02e07 Episode Script
Death of the Pyramids
1
NARRATOR: Egypt,
the richest source
of archaeological treasures
on the planet.
MAN: Oh, wow. Look at that!
NARRATOR: Hidden beneath
this desert landscape
lie the secrets of this
ancient civilization.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen): I've
never seen something like this.
NARRATOR: Now, for
a full season of excavations,
our cameras have been
given unprecedented access
to follow teams on the
front line of archaeology
MYRIAM: This is
the most critical moment.
(men grunting)
NARRATOR: Revealing
buried treasures
SALIMA: Oh!
AHMED: Very lucky today.
NOZOMU: Wow, lots of mummies.
KATHLEEN: The smell is horrible.
NARRATOR: And making discoveries
that could rewrite ancient history.
JOHN: We've never had
the proof until now.
COLLEEN: This is
where it all started.
ALEJANDRO: My goodness.
I never expected this.
(applause)
NARRATOR: This time,
archaeologists hunt
for evidence of the death of the pyramids.
MAN: My god,
these pieces are huge.
NARRATOR: Claire follows
the tracks of the craftsmen
tasked with building the giant monuments.
CLAIRE: You can see very clearly
that this site was abandoned here.
NARRATOR: Myriam
uncovers the mysteries
of the pharaoh's temples.
MYRIAM: This is from Tomb
22, the mummy deposit.
NARRATOR: And Alejandro
comes face-to-face
with the afterlife
ALEJANDRO: It's incredible.
NARRATOR: In the
long forgotten tombs
of Egypt's far south.
ALEJANDRO: I have no words.
(theme music plays).
NARRATOR: The west bank
of the River Nile,
home to the world's most iconic monuments,
the mighty Pyramids of Giza.
The pyramids once housed
the bodies of the pharaohs.
But though ancient Egyptian civilization
lasted for nearly 3,000 years,
its kings only built huge tombs
like these for a few centuries.
Egyptologists are still
trying to piece together
why the pharaohs stopped
constructing giant pyramids.
For Egyptologist Chris Naunton,
the majesty of the ancient
structures makes the fact
that Egyptians gave up building
them all the more incredible.
Ten miles south of
the legendary Pyramids of Giza
is Saqqara.
CHRIS: When we think about pyramids,
we tend to think of Giza, I think,
and the Great Pyramid of Khufu,
in particular,
but actually this is where it all began.
NARRATOR: Chris has come to the
birthplace of pyramid building
to search for clues to why Egyptians built
giant pyramids for less than 500 years.
Constructed a century before
the iconic pyramids at Giza,
Egypt's first pyramid is
a 200-foot-tall mausoleum
of six huge limestone platforms,
carefully engineered
to spread the weight of rock
and prevent collapse.
Deep inside is a giant shaft,
26 feet wide and 82 feet deep.
At the bottom, the intended
final resting place
of the pharaoh Djoser.
CHRIS (off-screen): Ultimately,
that's what it's all about.
It's where the body of the king
is going to rest in eternity.
And to have gone to all
this trouble to create
this incredible monument
around the body of that person
is pretty amazing.
NARRATOR: To house his mummy,
huge chunks of granite
were slid down a passage
into the shaft and stacked,
creating a giant sarcophagus
19 feet long and 11 feet high.
CHRIS: My god,
these pieces are huge.
Wow, it's amazing.
Pfff.
NARRATOR: But this wasn't
just a tomb designed
to secure the pharaoh's
physical body for eternity.
Crucially, for success in the afterlife,
the pyramid ensured the king
was remembered by the living.
Completed around 2650 B.C.,
it sparked an architectural revolution.
Djoser's six-tier giant wasn't
just the first pyramid.
It was the world's
first monumental structure
built in stone.
Over the next century, Egypt's
kings developed the concept,
building monumental tombs
all along the Nile's west bank,
including the first
geometrically true pyramid,
the Red Pyramid,
and a misshapen experiment,
the Bent Pyramid.
Then a dynasty of pharaohs
built the most iconic monuments in Egypt,
the Pyramids of Giza.
But just a few short centuries
after the Great Pyramid
of Khufu rose from the desert,
a new era was on the horizon.
400 miles south of the pyramids
in modern-day Aswan
is the heart of ancient Egypt's
southernmost province.
Professor Alejandro Jiménez-Serrano
has spent 11 seasons here,
unearthing the burials of
the region's wealthy governors.
He believes they played a part
in the pyramids' demise.
The pyramids were symbols of power,
separating the kings
from the rest of society,
offering them privileged
access to the afterlife.
But as the pharaohs erected
their pyramids in the north,
southern elites were becoming richer
and making their own plans for eternity,
digging increasingly elaborate
tombs deep into the cliffs.
Today Alejandro's excavating a new area
of their ancient necropolis.
ALEJANDRO: Ancient Egyptian
society is reflected in the cemeteries
so we can see how the life
was just excavating the tombs
NARRATOR: It's 8:00 A.M.,
and his team has already called in a find.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We will see if we are lucky
with this discovery.
Not every day you discover a tomb,
so finger crossed.
NARRATOR: A smooth area
of rock excites the crew.
ALEJANDRO: In this area,
you can see the ancient carving
trying to make a plane
that was going to be
the facade of the tomb.
NARRATOR: The naturally
jagged rock face
has been smoothed with ancient chisels.
If this is an elite tomb,
it could have inscriptions
which shed light on the role
the governors played
in the pyramids' decline.
ALEJANDRO: This is
the typical tomb of members
of the elite here in Qubbet el-Hawa.
So, what we are looking for is the door.
NARRATOR: 400 miles downriver
on the Nile's west bank,
Chris has come to Giza
to explore the peak of pyramid building.
He wants to understand
how these monuments evolved
from the early pyramids at Saqqara
and to search for clues
to explain why they were abandoned.
These stone giants included new designs
to protect the body
of the pharaoh from robbers
after his death.
On the outside of Khufu's Great Pyramid,
a seamless cover of gleaming
limestone slabs and blocks
conceal the only way into the pyramid,
a narrow tunnel 60 feet above the ground.
But this passage, too, was sealed.
Intruders would have to break through
huge, six-foot-deep granite blocks
to reach a steep shaft leading
to the center of the pyramid.
At the top, they would face
three more massive granite slabs
before they finally
reached the tomb chamber,
where the king and his riches lay buried.
Alongside the Great Pyramid,
Khufu's son, Khafre,
built his own pyramid,
and below it, a complex
of monuments and temples
designed to aid
his successful resurrection.
Priests would come here to make offerings
in the shadow of the pyramid,
ensuring the pharaoh's
name was kept alive.
One of these monuments
carefully positioned
is the ancient world's
most enigmatic sculpture,
the Great Sphinx.
CHRIS: The Egyptians were
very interested in alignment,
and one of the great achievements here
at Giza Plateau is in their ability
to lay out monuments like
this on a vast scale.
The Sphinx and the temple in front of it
and the pyramid behind
are actually all very carefully
aligned with one another.
NARRATOR: Chris
searches for evidence
of when the pharaohs
abandoned their monuments.
Between the creature's paws,
he finds a slab of a different stone
added 1,000 years later,
the Dream Stele.
CHRIS: It's called
the Dream Stele
because the text
describes a story in which,
before he was king,
Thutmosis IV had a dream
in which the Sphinx spoke
to him, and the Sphinx says,
"I am not in terribly good condition.
I've fallen into disrepair."
NARRATOR: The hieroglyphs
claim the Sphinx
had been allowed to
drown in the desert sands
but that Thutmosis would be rewarded
for restoring the sculpture
to its former glory.
CHRIS: If Thutmosis IV to-be
could make the repairs
that are necessary
and clear the sand away,
then in exchange, the Sphinx itself
will bestow the kingship
upon the young prince,
so in other words, the deal is
if Thutmosis IV does what the
Sphinx wants, he'll become king.
NARRATOR: Thutmosis believed
that to become pharaoh,
he had to please his glorious ancestors
and make sure the ancient
pharaohs' monuments
were remembered and respected.
When he became pharaoh,
Thutmosis did renovate the Sphinx
during a period known as the New Kingdom,
the pinnacle of Egyptian power
in a history stretching back
thousands of years.
The first small settlements
sprang up on the Nile
around 5000 B.C.,
farming the fertile land
and eventually growing
into the state of Egypt.
Around 2700 B.C.,
the Old Kingdom began,
the time of the great pyramid builders.
But in 2175 B.C.,
their civilization came crashing down
as rule disintegrated and
Egypt descended into chaos.
500 years later, the New Kingdom was born,
the golden age of Tutankhamun,
Queen Nefertiti,
and Ramses the Great.
But these pharaohs
built no pyramids at all.
By the time Thutmosis IV
had rescued the Sphinx from the sands,
the pharaoh's construction of
Egypt's most iconic monuments
had been totally abandoned.
But why?
75 miles to the east of the pyramids
is Ain Sokhna on Egypt's Red Sea coast.
French archaeologist Claire Somaglino
has been digging up ancient
structures here for nine years.
She believes this remote outpost
holds secrets that explain
the pyramids' boom and bust.
Many of the structures she has found
date to the peak of pyramid construction.
CLAIRE: We have multiple
layers of the Old Kingdom here
from the very beginning
of the use of the site
during the reign of Khafre
NARRATOR: But of all
the buildings she unearths,
none shows any sign
of long-term occupation.
Ain Sokhna appears to be an encampment.
CLAIRE: There are dwellings and
workshops and cooking areas
everything they would need
during an expedition
so they just occupied the site
for two or three months
NARRATOR: Claire
searches for clues
to what this camp could reveal
about Egypt's age of the pyramid builders.
Graffiti carved into a nearby rock face
could provide evidence.
NARRATOR: In the cliffs
above Ain Sokhna,
the dry environment has
preserved etchings in the rock
made by people who passed through.
Some of the carvings date
back only half a century,
but others are thousands of years old.
CLAIRE: The most ancient one
preserved are these inscriptions
of the king Mentuhotep IV and
it says that in the first year
of the reign of this
king he sent an expedition
to retrieve copper
and just after Mentuhotep IV,
Amenemhat the first
sent an expedition of 4000 men this time
such huge expeditions at that time
NARRATOR: The graffiti suggests
the camp of Ain Sokhna
was a staging post in a supply chain,
one providing the resource
that the pharaohs needed
more than any other
for their pyramid building,
the must-have metal
for ancient stone carving,
copper.
Claire believes it came
from the mines of Sinai
across the Red Sea.
When the pharaoh needed more copper,
he sent an army of workers
east across the desert.
Some of them carried flat packed boats,
which were assembled at the coast
and sailed across the Red Sea.
The men spent two months
laboring in the mines of the Sinai,
digging out hundreds of pounds
of copper ore.
And once they'd filled up the ships,
they returned with the ore
to the mainland,
ready to haul back to the Nile
and to the pyramids.
The discoveries reveal
the Port of Ain Sokhna
was critical to building
the largest structures
the world had ever seen.
CLAIRE: Copper was a
strategic resource for them
because they used
copper to make some tools
and that was very important
to the construction sites
for pyramids, the Sphinx and
big monuments at that time
NARRATOR: If Claire's
to find evidence here
of the pyramids' downfall,
she needs to dig.
On the west bank of the Nile,
Egypt's ancient Land of the Dead,
hieroglyphics expert Christelle Alvarez
is at the pyramid archaeologists consider
to be the last built
in the great age of pyramids.
The tomb of Pharaoh Pepi II
was built 400 years
after the original
step pyramid at Saqqara.
CHRISTELLE: Oh wow
It's beautiful
And all the colours - the
green colour is still so vivid
NARRATOR: She hunts for clues
to why the obsession
with pyramid building began to end here.
Hieroglyphs cover almost every surface,
including the royal sign
bearing the pharaoh's name.
CHRISTELLE: So this is the
cartouche of the king, and it says that
"he will live, he will not die"
and it's just the same section
of text that is repeated
and repeated over and over again
NARRATOR: The walls
of Khufu's tomb
in the Great Pyramid at
Giza were left blank.
But here in Pepi's tomb,
they're filled with incantations
designed to help the pharaoh
enter the underworld safely.
CHRISTELLE: What we can see
from this one pyramid to another is this
desire to include as
many texts as possible
and to use all the available
space to inscribe the text
NARRATOR: As the age
of the pyramids progressed,
the pharaohs filled their tombs
with more and more magical protection
for their bodies and souls.
The texts kept their faith
in the power of the pyramids alive,
just as their power
over the kingdom of Egypt
was about to collapse.
Pepi II's rule was marred
by droughts, famine, and civil unrest.
(arguing and shouting)
Worried about his afterlife,
he covered his tomb
in magical inscriptions
to guarantee his spirit's security.
When Pepi died without an heir,
a power struggle ensued,
resulting in a century
of weak, short-lived kings.
Lacking wealth and resources,
their pyramids were tiny
compared to the mighty structures
of the great pyramid age.
CHRISTELLE: During the end of
the Old Kingdom we do have many
kings that ruled for short periods of time
and for most of them we haven't
found any of their burial tombs
NARRATOR: The pyramid,
a tradition that defined a civilization,
was effectively extinct.
At Qubbet el-Hawa,
near the southern Egyptian city of Aswan,
Alejandro hopes the burials
of ancient Egypt's most powerful elite
could help explain
the death of the pyramids.
If this chiseled flat rock wall is a tomb,
their secrets could
be just below his feet.
He spots another clue
that a door is nearby.
ALEJANDRO: We have here
remains of termites.
They used to eat the
fresh wood of the coffins.
We are following
the pathway of the insects.
NARRATOR: With delicate
artifacts potentially close,
the team needs Alejandro's
experienced hand.
ALEJANDRO:
Here we have the, the entrance.
Amazing.
Ah-ha! The end of the door.
(exhales)
It's amazing.
Yeah.
I have no words.
Probably we are the first
that see this door
in more than 4,000 years.
NARRATOR:
The neatly cut opening
matches the style for elites
in southern Egypt at the end
of the pyramid age.
It's a huge moment for the entire team.
(speaking Arabic)
NARRATOR: The race is on
to open up the doorway
before the site closes for the
day in just a few hours' time.
NARRATOR:
It's already mid-morning
on Alejandro's dig at Qubbet el-Hawa,
and the workers' shift
ends at 1:00 P.M.
Termites may have led him
to an elite burial,
but to expose the doorway,
the team must excavate
not just the opening,
but the entire area in front of the tomb.
If they don't, the sand
will just flow right back in.
It allows Alejandro a moment
to remind himself what he's looking for,
evidence of powerful Egyptian nobles
whose rise spelled the end
of the age of the pyramids.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen): In the
period that we are excavating,
the head of the state was the king,
and under him was the vizier,
and below the vizier, we have
the provincial governors.
So these people, we might say
that they were the
number three in the state.
NARRATOR: Over 11 seasons
working here,
Alejandro has found evidence
that in this era of Egyptian history,
the pharaohs were
losing their grip on power.
While the kings got weaker,
the governors of Egypt's
provinces got richer.
Alejandro discovers that
just as Pharaoh Pepi II
was building what would prove
to be the last great pyramid,
the tombs of the governors
at Qubbet el-Hawa
were expanding.
Over the course of Pepi's reign,
they increased in size fivefold.
The afterlife wasn't just for pharaohs,
and pyramids weren't the only kind of tomb
that could get you there.
ALEJANDRO: This is
what we hope to find
in the tomb that we have just discovered.
It is a false door,
and it was the magic door
that the dead used
to receive their offerings.
NARRATOR: Egyptians believed
the spirit of the deceased
would reveal itself to visitors,
taking offerings of food
to sustain it in the afterlife.
If the new tomb has a false door,
it could hold a wealth
of hieroglyphic information
about how powerful
the governors had become
at the end of the pyramid age.
ALEJANDRO: What we are
hoping to find in the new tomb
is inscriptions showing us
not only the name,
but also his position in the society.
NARRATOR: With the site
ready to close
for the day at 1:00 P.M.,
they've excavated just far
enough for one person to enter.
Alejandro gives in to temptation.
MAN: In?
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We have a lot of sand.
And there is no trace of plundering.
NARRATOR: Looting was
rife in ancient Egypt.
(grunts)
Even the giant Pyramids at Giza
were ransacked and cleared of valuables.
With no evidence of robbery,
there's good reason for
Alejandro to be optimistic
about the treasures that may
lie beneath the tons of sand.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
Archaeology is patience.
It's patient work that
sometimes has lucky strikes.
NARRATOR: At Ain Sokhna
on Egypt's Red Sea coast,
Claire's team opens a new trench
at the ancient encampment.
(speaking French)
Her colleague, archaeologist Adeline Bats,
is piecing together the history
of the pharaoh's copper expeditions.
CLAIRE: Adeline is drawing the
stratigraphy that we have here
this is a very interesting one because
you can see all the different
layers of occupation of this
part of the site
ADELINE: Are you
coming to help me?
CLAIRE: No, I'm coming
to see what you're doing!
We have some ceramics
NARRATOR: She notices
a gap in the record.
CLAIRE: So you can see very
clearly the occupation layers
because you have ashes
mixed with clay and sand
and so we have these
Old Kingdom layers here
It's very clear in the stratigraphy
that this site was abandoned here
NARRATOR: A thick layer of mud,
laid down over decades
by winds and flooding,
covers the ashes of
the workers' cooking fires
from the age of the pyramids.
The discovery shows no one came here
for a century or more.
It's critical evidence
of the death of the pyramids,
revealing that the pharaohs gave up
their copper expeditions.
The decline in their wealth
meant they could no longer
afford to build giant pyramids.
As quickly as it had begun,
the pyramid age was over.
But the pharaohs' belief in the afterlife
was stronger than ever,
so how did later kings
protect their bodies
and secure their passage to eternity?
NARRATOR: 700 years
after the pharaoh Pepi II
built the last great pyramid,
the pharaohs of the New Kingdom
had re-established
their supreme power in Egypt
and moved their capital south
to Thebes, modern-day Luxor.
Chris crosses the Nile River
here to investigate
how the New Kingdom rulers
sought to guarantee their afterlife.
These wealthy pharaohs
could have afforded tombs
as grand as Khufu's Great Pyramid,
but during the chaos following
the end of the old pharaoh's reign,
the ancient pyramids were ransacked.
Ancient texts describe the turmoil
as bodies were cast out from tombs
and funerary goods disappeared.
The pharaohs' mummies
were stolen or destroyed,
along with their dreams of eternal life.
Desperate to avoid that fate,
the pioneering New Kingdom
pharaoh, Thutmosis I,
embarked on a revolution
in royal tomb building.
Echoing the governors in the south,
he decided to cut his tomb into the rock.
His plan to protect his mummy was to hide.
In a valley west of Thebes,
the king picked a spot and dug a shaft
over 600 feet deep into the mountain.
It had subterranean chambers
for the riches he'd take
into the afterlife.
And in a lavish tomb
at the bottom of the tunnel,
a sarcophagus would keep his body safe.
Following his example,
nearly every pharaoh
for the next 500 years
dug tombs into the mountain here
to provide underworld palaces,
creating a subterranean
city of dead royals
that became known as
the Valley of the Kings.
One of the best preserved
tombs in the valley
belonged to one of Egypt's
greatest pharaohs, Ramses III.
CHRIS: As soon as you enter
this tomb, you're really struck
by the sort of monumental scale.
All the surfaces are decorated.
Hieroglyphic inscriptions everywhere.
Large images of the king.
Really, really impressive.
NARRATOR: Just as Pepi II
covered the last great pyramid
with hieroglyphic spells,
Ramses hoped magical art would secure
his dangerous passage to resurrection.
CHRIS: It's a very
perilous journey,
it's a very hazardous journey,
and he encounters all kinds
of demons along his way.
But with the help of the gods,
who accompany him throughout the tomb,
he's able to make
that journey successfully.
NARRATOR:
The New Kingdom pharaohs
believed their rock-cut tombs
would protect their mummies
where the pyramids had failed.
But Ramses' architects
left nothing to chance,
designing precipitous shafts
as they tunneled into the rock.
CHRIS: This is a pretty
important part of the tomb.
It's a well shaft, which is
a characteristic feature
of tombs in the Valley of the Kings
designed to deter robbers,
beautifully decorated with images of gods.
NARRATOR: Even buried
hundreds of feet
down in the heart of the mountain,
Ramses feared his tomb would be pillaged.
CHRIS (off-screen): Even though
the tomb would have been sealed
and the idea would have been, of course,
that nobody would ever,
ever come in here again,
it's still incredibly
beautifully decorated.
For the eyes of the gods only perhaps.
NARRATOR: There was
just one problem.
To live on in eternity,
a king needed not just
to preserve his body,
he had to be remembered by the living.
The pyramids had monuments
and temples attached
where priests celebrated
the memory of the dead pharaoh.
Ramses did not want
to advertise the location
of his body and his riches with a pyramid,
but he still needed a monument
to keep his name alive.
On the west bank of the Nile, near Thebes,
Ramses erected a gigantic 80-foot gate
on which he carved huge images
of himself smiting his foes.
Behind it, his mortuary temple,
two courtyards lined with his statues
led to a series of chapels
and a false door,
where priests would make
offerings and repeat his name.
Surrounding the temple,
he built mud brick walls 30 foot thick,
stretching more than half a mile
to turn his temple
into a fortress of worship.
Just a mile from Ramses' temple
lies another great monument
to a New Kingdom pharaoh,
Thutmosis III's
Temple of Millions of Years.
The temple has crumbled
since ancient times,
but Dr. Myriam Seco Alvarez
is leading a project
to resurrect the site.
MYRIAM: When we started
the project in 2008,
all this was a mountain of sand.
Nothing was visible.
NARRATOR: She wants to discover
exactly how these new monuments
were intended to secure
the pharaoh's afterlife
without a pyramid.
Archaeologist Manuel Abelleira
searches outside the walls
for clues to how the temple was used.
He meticulously records
every find workers unearth
around the temple walls.
MANUEL: Nice.
Shukraan.
NARRATOR: Ancient Egyptians
made offerings of food,
like dates, to the memory of the pharaoh,
but among the 3,500-year-old fruit,
he finds more valuable objects.
MANUEL: We have jars
that had beer inside
It was one of the most
important offerings in the past
We have found thousands of jars here
NARRATOR: The beer jar
offerings mean
archaeologist Javier Martinez-Babón
can track the temple's history.
Some bear the signature
hieroglyphs of later pharaohs.
JAVIER: Here for example we
have the name of Thutmosis IV
here we have the name of Tutankhamun
Other kings and other queens gave these
offerings for the memory of the king
NARRATOR: The jars prove
that for centuries,
Egypt's rulers made
offerings at this temple
to keep Thutmosis III's name alive,
while his mummy lay safely hidden
in the Valley of the Kings.
But Myriam is discovering that
Egyptians didn't just leave
offerings of beer and food at the temple.
With just minutes before
the site closes for the day,
Myriam's team unearths a burial.
(speaking foreign language)
The site has strict time curfews,
and a skeleton can't be
left exposed overnight.
MYRIAM: If we find a body, we
have to remove in the same day.
If we find something special,
we have to remove to be secure.
NARRATOR: The team scrambles
to move the ancient skeleton
before the site shuts down.
MYRIAM: In 20 minutes,
we will finish,
so that's why we are a little in a hurry.
MYRIAM: Over there in the shade.
NARRATOR: With minutes to go
before the gates slam shut,
the skeleton is safe
and ready for analysis.
It could hold clues to how well the temple
safeguarded the pharaohs' afterlife
in the era after the death
of the pyramids.
NARRATOR: The skeleton unearthed
outside Thutmosis III's temple
is not the first
Myriam's team has discovered.
It's one of more than 125 ancient bodies
they've unearthed around the site,
many from a single tomb.
Why they are here is a mystery,
but some are preserved
in almost pristine condition.
The bodies could shed light
on how Thutmosis' temple
was supposed to function after his death.
Myriam has made it her mission
to search every ancient body for clues.
Next in line is a fully wrapped mummy.
She can't risk removing
the linen bandages,
so dental expert
Dr. Roger Seiler uses x-rays
to scan for information.
MYRIAM (off-screen): We want to
see who was this individual,
if it's a male or female.
We want to see their age,
what they eat,
as much as possible about this person.
We have a head.
WOMAN (off-screen): Mm-hmm.
NARRATOR: Roger examines
the skull to determine
the skeleton's sex and age at death.
ROGER: So, the individual
was about 18, 20, 25 years old.
The teeth are in good health.
So it's a young individual.
MYRIAM: Ah, okay.
ROGER: But that's
important for
MYRIAM: We know
if it's male or female?
ROGER: The angle here
could say that it's female.
MYRIAM: Female. Maybe female?
ROGER: Maybe female,
together with the form of the chin.
NARRATOR: The x-ray suggests
the body is of a young woman.
MYRIAM: This is from Tomb 22,
from the late period,
where we found the mummy deposit?
ROGER: Yes.
NARRATOR: The tomb
she was buried in
dates to a time nearly 1,000 years
after the temple was built.
It's a hint that the temple
was considered sacred
long after Thutmosis III had died.
If he was still remembered,
then his afterlife was secure.
MYRIAM (off-screen): Now we have
to go deeper to get more information.
NARRATOR: Myriam needs to
discover who these people were
to shed light
on why they were buried here.
They work through the dozens
of mummies found at the site.
ROGER (off-screen):
The head is missing.
But this is a,
I think it's an organ package,
so they took out the inner organs,
they mummified them separately,
and put them back.
Good mummification technique.
MYRIAM: So, some of the mummies
in this mummy deposit
were high quality.
ROGER: High quality
mummification.
MYRIAM: Mummification, yes.
NARRATOR: The mummies suggest
that high-status ancient Egyptians
were burying their dead here
almost to the end of
ancient Egyptian civilization.
They believed this site held a power
that would help propel
their souls to the afterlife.
The team will need to keep examining
and comparing the finds,
but with this analysis complete,
Myriam can return the body
to its eternal rest.
They carefully lower the precious remains
15 feet down the vertical shaft.
MYRIAM: This is
the most critical moment,
and always we are worried.
(speaking foreign language)
NARRATOR: The mummy is safely
in the burial chamber.
MYRIAM: Well done.
NARRATOR: The team
lays it to rest.
MYRIAM: We have one more
individual in peace.
NARRATOR: Myriam's discoveries
suggest the temple
remained sacred for nearly 1,000 years
after Thutmosis III's death,
preserving his memory and his eternal life
just as long as his body lay safe
in the Valley of the Kings.
The New Kingdom pharaohs' afterlife plan
appeared to be working.
On the hillside of Qubbet el-Hawa,
near modern-day Aswan,
Alejandro and his team have removed
more than 1,000 cubic feet of sand
from the newly discovered tomb.
ALEJANDRO: We have been working
outside and inside,
and we have the possibility to have access
to check if we have some remains
of the original burials.
NARRATOR: If the tomb contains
hieroglyphic inscriptions
or grave goods, it could
help him identify the owner
and uncover the burial
practices of the nobles
challenging the pyramid
building pharaohs' power.
ALEJANDRO: I can see
several fragments of bones.
NARRATOR: The bones survive,
but whose are they?
NARRATOR: Alejandro's
discovery of human remains
proves beyond doubt
that he's found a new tomb
at Qubbet el-Hawa.
But what he needs is hieroglyphs
to identify the tomb owner
and their status.
If a mummy once lay in this chamber,
perhaps the valuable funerary artifacts
remain in an adjacent cavity.
ALEJANDRO: It's incredible.
We have just the same material
as we found in the other chamber.
NARRATOR: The tomb's
second chamber is empty.
It has almost certainly
been entered by thieves,
but Alejandro finds that it
hasn't just been robbed.
Telltale tracks on the walls
show it has been ravaged
by an even more destructive force.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We can guess that here there were coffins.
There were perhaps boxes.
And everything was eaten by the termites.
I've never seen something like this.
(sighs)
It's wherever you look.
Look at that.
This is termites.
I hate termites.
Quite disappointing.
The deception.
But it's part of the game.
Let's go.
NARRATOR: Like the pyramids,
the tombs cut into the rock here
couldn't always save
the owners from destruction.
Their carefully laid plans
to secure their afterlife
were thwarted.
But the rich necropolis at Qubbet el-Hawa
may one day reveal yet more
about the path the governors
of the south played
in the pyramids' decline.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We have been very lucky
during all the seasons
that we have been working
in Qubbet el-Hawa.
We have discovered three new tombs,
nine intact burial chambers,
but we have discovered also that,
that sometimes the story
has not the same ending.
NARRATOR: He may not have
found hieroglyphic treasures this time,
but next time, Alejandro could be luckier.
In the Valley of the Kings,
the New Kingdom pharaohs
dug their tombs deep into the mountains
to protect them from robbers.
Chris has come
to the most iconic tomb of all
to find out how well they succeeded,
the tomb of Tutankhamun,
discovered deep beneath layers of rubble
by archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922.
CHRIS: So, this is the exact
spot where Carter would,
for the first time,
have made a little hole
in this blocking here
and been able to see through
into the antechamber.
So this is the moment
where famously he's asked,
"Can you see anything?"
And he says, "Wonderful things."
That's because he's looking into
this chamber, the antechamber,
which is absolutely
stuffed full of objects,
as the whole of the tomb was.
NARRATOR: Carter had uncovered
the richest collection
of artifacts ever discovered
from Egypt's golden age,
including the pharaoh's famous mask.
But for Chris, the modern mythology
of the riches of Tutankhamun's tomb
is not the full story.
It did contain wonderful things,
but the tomb was not undisturbed.
Tutankhamun's funerary furniture
was piled up chaotically
as if ready to be removed.
CHRIS: The tomb was robbed,
perhaps just a few days after the funeral,
when Tutankhamun's body
was introduced to the tomb
for the first time.
NARRATOR: Small valuables
seem to have been taken
by opportunistic looters.
They had left the larger items,
perhaps intending to come back,
but something stopped them.
CHRIS (off-screen): We now know
there was a flash flood in the valley,
which deposited a mass of material
on top of the entranceway to the tomb,
and once it dried out,
it solidified to
the consistency of cement.
It was impenetrable, and the
location of the tomb was lost
until Howard Carter
excavated the tomb in 1922.
That was the first time
anybody had seen it
since the late 18th dynasty.
NARRATOR: Tutankhamun's tomb
wasn't the only tomb
in the Valley of the Kings
plundered by ancient thieves.
All the tombs discovered so far
were robbed of their treasures long ago.
They offered no better protection
than the mighty monuments they replaced.
The pyramids, too, had been no match
for determined grave robbers.
And after years of drought and conflict,
the pharaohs could no longer
afford to build them.
But the pharaohs achieved a
different kind of immortality.
Their astonishing pyramids
remain as an iconic reminder
of the greatest civilization
of the ancient world.
Captioned by Cotter Captioning Services.
NARRATOR: Egypt,
the richest source
of archaeological treasures
on the planet.
MAN: Oh, wow. Look at that!
NARRATOR: Hidden beneath
this desert landscape
lie the secrets of this
ancient civilization.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen): I've
never seen something like this.
NARRATOR: Now, for
a full season of excavations,
our cameras have been
given unprecedented access
to follow teams on the
front line of archaeology
MYRIAM: This is
the most critical moment.
(men grunting)
NARRATOR: Revealing
buried treasures
SALIMA: Oh!
AHMED: Very lucky today.
NOZOMU: Wow, lots of mummies.
KATHLEEN: The smell is horrible.
NARRATOR: And making discoveries
that could rewrite ancient history.
JOHN: We've never had
the proof until now.
COLLEEN: This is
where it all started.
ALEJANDRO: My goodness.
I never expected this.
(applause)
NARRATOR: This time,
archaeologists hunt
for evidence of the death of the pyramids.
MAN: My god,
these pieces are huge.
NARRATOR: Claire follows
the tracks of the craftsmen
tasked with building the giant monuments.
CLAIRE: You can see very clearly
that this site was abandoned here.
NARRATOR: Myriam
uncovers the mysteries
of the pharaoh's temples.
MYRIAM: This is from Tomb
22, the mummy deposit.
NARRATOR: And Alejandro
comes face-to-face
with the afterlife
ALEJANDRO: It's incredible.
NARRATOR: In the
long forgotten tombs
of Egypt's far south.
ALEJANDRO: I have no words.
(theme music plays).
NARRATOR: The west bank
of the River Nile,
home to the world's most iconic monuments,
the mighty Pyramids of Giza.
The pyramids once housed
the bodies of the pharaohs.
But though ancient Egyptian civilization
lasted for nearly 3,000 years,
its kings only built huge tombs
like these for a few centuries.
Egyptologists are still
trying to piece together
why the pharaohs stopped
constructing giant pyramids.
For Egyptologist Chris Naunton,
the majesty of the ancient
structures makes the fact
that Egyptians gave up building
them all the more incredible.
Ten miles south of
the legendary Pyramids of Giza
is Saqqara.
CHRIS: When we think about pyramids,
we tend to think of Giza, I think,
and the Great Pyramid of Khufu,
in particular,
but actually this is where it all began.
NARRATOR: Chris has come to the
birthplace of pyramid building
to search for clues to why Egyptians built
giant pyramids for less than 500 years.
Constructed a century before
the iconic pyramids at Giza,
Egypt's first pyramid is
a 200-foot-tall mausoleum
of six huge limestone platforms,
carefully engineered
to spread the weight of rock
and prevent collapse.
Deep inside is a giant shaft,
26 feet wide and 82 feet deep.
At the bottom, the intended
final resting place
of the pharaoh Djoser.
CHRIS (off-screen): Ultimately,
that's what it's all about.
It's where the body of the king
is going to rest in eternity.
And to have gone to all
this trouble to create
this incredible monument
around the body of that person
is pretty amazing.
NARRATOR: To house his mummy,
huge chunks of granite
were slid down a passage
into the shaft and stacked,
creating a giant sarcophagus
19 feet long and 11 feet high.
CHRIS: My god,
these pieces are huge.
Wow, it's amazing.
Pfff.
NARRATOR: But this wasn't
just a tomb designed
to secure the pharaoh's
physical body for eternity.
Crucially, for success in the afterlife,
the pyramid ensured the king
was remembered by the living.
Completed around 2650 B.C.,
it sparked an architectural revolution.
Djoser's six-tier giant wasn't
just the first pyramid.
It was the world's
first monumental structure
built in stone.
Over the next century, Egypt's
kings developed the concept,
building monumental tombs
all along the Nile's west bank,
including the first
geometrically true pyramid,
the Red Pyramid,
and a misshapen experiment,
the Bent Pyramid.
Then a dynasty of pharaohs
built the most iconic monuments in Egypt,
the Pyramids of Giza.
But just a few short centuries
after the Great Pyramid
of Khufu rose from the desert,
a new era was on the horizon.
400 miles south of the pyramids
in modern-day Aswan
is the heart of ancient Egypt's
southernmost province.
Professor Alejandro Jiménez-Serrano
has spent 11 seasons here,
unearthing the burials of
the region's wealthy governors.
He believes they played a part
in the pyramids' demise.
The pyramids were symbols of power,
separating the kings
from the rest of society,
offering them privileged
access to the afterlife.
But as the pharaohs erected
their pyramids in the north,
southern elites were becoming richer
and making their own plans for eternity,
digging increasingly elaborate
tombs deep into the cliffs.
Today Alejandro's excavating a new area
of their ancient necropolis.
ALEJANDRO: Ancient Egyptian
society is reflected in the cemeteries
so we can see how the life
was just excavating the tombs
NARRATOR: It's 8:00 A.M.,
and his team has already called in a find.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We will see if we are lucky
with this discovery.
Not every day you discover a tomb,
so finger crossed.
NARRATOR: A smooth area
of rock excites the crew.
ALEJANDRO: In this area,
you can see the ancient carving
trying to make a plane
that was going to be
the facade of the tomb.
NARRATOR: The naturally
jagged rock face
has been smoothed with ancient chisels.
If this is an elite tomb,
it could have inscriptions
which shed light on the role
the governors played
in the pyramids' decline.
ALEJANDRO: This is
the typical tomb of members
of the elite here in Qubbet el-Hawa.
So, what we are looking for is the door.
NARRATOR: 400 miles downriver
on the Nile's west bank,
Chris has come to Giza
to explore the peak of pyramid building.
He wants to understand
how these monuments evolved
from the early pyramids at Saqqara
and to search for clues
to explain why they were abandoned.
These stone giants included new designs
to protect the body
of the pharaoh from robbers
after his death.
On the outside of Khufu's Great Pyramid,
a seamless cover of gleaming
limestone slabs and blocks
conceal the only way into the pyramid,
a narrow tunnel 60 feet above the ground.
But this passage, too, was sealed.
Intruders would have to break through
huge, six-foot-deep granite blocks
to reach a steep shaft leading
to the center of the pyramid.
At the top, they would face
three more massive granite slabs
before they finally
reached the tomb chamber,
where the king and his riches lay buried.
Alongside the Great Pyramid,
Khufu's son, Khafre,
built his own pyramid,
and below it, a complex
of monuments and temples
designed to aid
his successful resurrection.
Priests would come here to make offerings
in the shadow of the pyramid,
ensuring the pharaoh's
name was kept alive.
One of these monuments
carefully positioned
is the ancient world's
most enigmatic sculpture,
the Great Sphinx.
CHRIS: The Egyptians were
very interested in alignment,
and one of the great achievements here
at Giza Plateau is in their ability
to lay out monuments like
this on a vast scale.
The Sphinx and the temple in front of it
and the pyramid behind
are actually all very carefully
aligned with one another.
NARRATOR: Chris
searches for evidence
of when the pharaohs
abandoned their monuments.
Between the creature's paws,
he finds a slab of a different stone
added 1,000 years later,
the Dream Stele.
CHRIS: It's called
the Dream Stele
because the text
describes a story in which,
before he was king,
Thutmosis IV had a dream
in which the Sphinx spoke
to him, and the Sphinx says,
"I am not in terribly good condition.
I've fallen into disrepair."
NARRATOR: The hieroglyphs
claim the Sphinx
had been allowed to
drown in the desert sands
but that Thutmosis would be rewarded
for restoring the sculpture
to its former glory.
CHRIS: If Thutmosis IV to-be
could make the repairs
that are necessary
and clear the sand away,
then in exchange, the Sphinx itself
will bestow the kingship
upon the young prince,
so in other words, the deal is
if Thutmosis IV does what the
Sphinx wants, he'll become king.
NARRATOR: Thutmosis believed
that to become pharaoh,
he had to please his glorious ancestors
and make sure the ancient
pharaohs' monuments
were remembered and respected.
When he became pharaoh,
Thutmosis did renovate the Sphinx
during a period known as the New Kingdom,
the pinnacle of Egyptian power
in a history stretching back
thousands of years.
The first small settlements
sprang up on the Nile
around 5000 B.C.,
farming the fertile land
and eventually growing
into the state of Egypt.
Around 2700 B.C.,
the Old Kingdom began,
the time of the great pyramid builders.
But in 2175 B.C.,
their civilization came crashing down
as rule disintegrated and
Egypt descended into chaos.
500 years later, the New Kingdom was born,
the golden age of Tutankhamun,
Queen Nefertiti,
and Ramses the Great.
But these pharaohs
built no pyramids at all.
By the time Thutmosis IV
had rescued the Sphinx from the sands,
the pharaoh's construction of
Egypt's most iconic monuments
had been totally abandoned.
But why?
75 miles to the east of the pyramids
is Ain Sokhna on Egypt's Red Sea coast.
French archaeologist Claire Somaglino
has been digging up ancient
structures here for nine years.
She believes this remote outpost
holds secrets that explain
the pyramids' boom and bust.
Many of the structures she has found
date to the peak of pyramid construction.
CLAIRE: We have multiple
layers of the Old Kingdom here
from the very beginning
of the use of the site
during the reign of Khafre
NARRATOR: But of all
the buildings she unearths,
none shows any sign
of long-term occupation.
Ain Sokhna appears to be an encampment.
CLAIRE: There are dwellings and
workshops and cooking areas
everything they would need
during an expedition
so they just occupied the site
for two or three months
NARRATOR: Claire
searches for clues
to what this camp could reveal
about Egypt's age of the pyramid builders.
Graffiti carved into a nearby rock face
could provide evidence.
NARRATOR: In the cliffs
above Ain Sokhna,
the dry environment has
preserved etchings in the rock
made by people who passed through.
Some of the carvings date
back only half a century,
but others are thousands of years old.
CLAIRE: The most ancient one
preserved are these inscriptions
of the king Mentuhotep IV and
it says that in the first year
of the reign of this
king he sent an expedition
to retrieve copper
and just after Mentuhotep IV,
Amenemhat the first
sent an expedition of 4000 men this time
such huge expeditions at that time
NARRATOR: The graffiti suggests
the camp of Ain Sokhna
was a staging post in a supply chain,
one providing the resource
that the pharaohs needed
more than any other
for their pyramid building,
the must-have metal
for ancient stone carving,
copper.
Claire believes it came
from the mines of Sinai
across the Red Sea.
When the pharaoh needed more copper,
he sent an army of workers
east across the desert.
Some of them carried flat packed boats,
which were assembled at the coast
and sailed across the Red Sea.
The men spent two months
laboring in the mines of the Sinai,
digging out hundreds of pounds
of copper ore.
And once they'd filled up the ships,
they returned with the ore
to the mainland,
ready to haul back to the Nile
and to the pyramids.
The discoveries reveal
the Port of Ain Sokhna
was critical to building
the largest structures
the world had ever seen.
CLAIRE: Copper was a
strategic resource for them
because they used
copper to make some tools
and that was very important
to the construction sites
for pyramids, the Sphinx and
big monuments at that time
NARRATOR: If Claire's
to find evidence here
of the pyramids' downfall,
she needs to dig.
On the west bank of the Nile,
Egypt's ancient Land of the Dead,
hieroglyphics expert Christelle Alvarez
is at the pyramid archaeologists consider
to be the last built
in the great age of pyramids.
The tomb of Pharaoh Pepi II
was built 400 years
after the original
step pyramid at Saqqara.
CHRISTELLE: Oh wow
It's beautiful
And all the colours - the
green colour is still so vivid
NARRATOR: She hunts for clues
to why the obsession
with pyramid building began to end here.
Hieroglyphs cover almost every surface,
including the royal sign
bearing the pharaoh's name.
CHRISTELLE: So this is the
cartouche of the king, and it says that
"he will live, he will not die"
and it's just the same section
of text that is repeated
and repeated over and over again
NARRATOR: The walls
of Khufu's tomb
in the Great Pyramid at
Giza were left blank.
But here in Pepi's tomb,
they're filled with incantations
designed to help the pharaoh
enter the underworld safely.
CHRISTELLE: What we can see
from this one pyramid to another is this
desire to include as
many texts as possible
and to use all the available
space to inscribe the text
NARRATOR: As the age
of the pyramids progressed,
the pharaohs filled their tombs
with more and more magical protection
for their bodies and souls.
The texts kept their faith
in the power of the pyramids alive,
just as their power
over the kingdom of Egypt
was about to collapse.
Pepi II's rule was marred
by droughts, famine, and civil unrest.
(arguing and shouting)
Worried about his afterlife,
he covered his tomb
in magical inscriptions
to guarantee his spirit's security.
When Pepi died without an heir,
a power struggle ensued,
resulting in a century
of weak, short-lived kings.
Lacking wealth and resources,
their pyramids were tiny
compared to the mighty structures
of the great pyramid age.
CHRISTELLE: During the end of
the Old Kingdom we do have many
kings that ruled for short periods of time
and for most of them we haven't
found any of their burial tombs
NARRATOR: The pyramid,
a tradition that defined a civilization,
was effectively extinct.
At Qubbet el-Hawa,
near the southern Egyptian city of Aswan,
Alejandro hopes the burials
of ancient Egypt's most powerful elite
could help explain
the death of the pyramids.
If this chiseled flat rock wall is a tomb,
their secrets could
be just below his feet.
He spots another clue
that a door is nearby.
ALEJANDRO: We have here
remains of termites.
They used to eat the
fresh wood of the coffins.
We are following
the pathway of the insects.
NARRATOR: With delicate
artifacts potentially close,
the team needs Alejandro's
experienced hand.
ALEJANDRO:
Here we have the, the entrance.
Amazing.
Ah-ha! The end of the door.
(exhales)
It's amazing.
Yeah.
I have no words.
Probably we are the first
that see this door
in more than 4,000 years.
NARRATOR:
The neatly cut opening
matches the style for elites
in southern Egypt at the end
of the pyramid age.
It's a huge moment for the entire team.
(speaking Arabic)
NARRATOR: The race is on
to open up the doorway
before the site closes for the
day in just a few hours' time.
NARRATOR:
It's already mid-morning
on Alejandro's dig at Qubbet el-Hawa,
and the workers' shift
ends at 1:00 P.M.
Termites may have led him
to an elite burial,
but to expose the doorway,
the team must excavate
not just the opening,
but the entire area in front of the tomb.
If they don't, the sand
will just flow right back in.
It allows Alejandro a moment
to remind himself what he's looking for,
evidence of powerful Egyptian nobles
whose rise spelled the end
of the age of the pyramids.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen): In the
period that we are excavating,
the head of the state was the king,
and under him was the vizier,
and below the vizier, we have
the provincial governors.
So these people, we might say
that they were the
number three in the state.
NARRATOR: Over 11 seasons
working here,
Alejandro has found evidence
that in this era of Egyptian history,
the pharaohs were
losing their grip on power.
While the kings got weaker,
the governors of Egypt's
provinces got richer.
Alejandro discovers that
just as Pharaoh Pepi II
was building what would prove
to be the last great pyramid,
the tombs of the governors
at Qubbet el-Hawa
were expanding.
Over the course of Pepi's reign,
they increased in size fivefold.
The afterlife wasn't just for pharaohs,
and pyramids weren't the only kind of tomb
that could get you there.
ALEJANDRO: This is
what we hope to find
in the tomb that we have just discovered.
It is a false door,
and it was the magic door
that the dead used
to receive their offerings.
NARRATOR: Egyptians believed
the spirit of the deceased
would reveal itself to visitors,
taking offerings of food
to sustain it in the afterlife.
If the new tomb has a false door,
it could hold a wealth
of hieroglyphic information
about how powerful
the governors had become
at the end of the pyramid age.
ALEJANDRO: What we are
hoping to find in the new tomb
is inscriptions showing us
not only the name,
but also his position in the society.
NARRATOR: With the site
ready to close
for the day at 1:00 P.M.,
they've excavated just far
enough for one person to enter.
Alejandro gives in to temptation.
MAN: In?
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We have a lot of sand.
And there is no trace of plundering.
NARRATOR: Looting was
rife in ancient Egypt.
(grunts)
Even the giant Pyramids at Giza
were ransacked and cleared of valuables.
With no evidence of robbery,
there's good reason for
Alejandro to be optimistic
about the treasures that may
lie beneath the tons of sand.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
Archaeology is patience.
It's patient work that
sometimes has lucky strikes.
NARRATOR: At Ain Sokhna
on Egypt's Red Sea coast,
Claire's team opens a new trench
at the ancient encampment.
(speaking French)
Her colleague, archaeologist Adeline Bats,
is piecing together the history
of the pharaoh's copper expeditions.
CLAIRE: Adeline is drawing the
stratigraphy that we have here
this is a very interesting one because
you can see all the different
layers of occupation of this
part of the site
ADELINE: Are you
coming to help me?
CLAIRE: No, I'm coming
to see what you're doing!
We have some ceramics
NARRATOR: She notices
a gap in the record.
CLAIRE: So you can see very
clearly the occupation layers
because you have ashes
mixed with clay and sand
and so we have these
Old Kingdom layers here
It's very clear in the stratigraphy
that this site was abandoned here
NARRATOR: A thick layer of mud,
laid down over decades
by winds and flooding,
covers the ashes of
the workers' cooking fires
from the age of the pyramids.
The discovery shows no one came here
for a century or more.
It's critical evidence
of the death of the pyramids,
revealing that the pharaohs gave up
their copper expeditions.
The decline in their wealth
meant they could no longer
afford to build giant pyramids.
As quickly as it had begun,
the pyramid age was over.
But the pharaohs' belief in the afterlife
was stronger than ever,
so how did later kings
protect their bodies
and secure their passage to eternity?
NARRATOR: 700 years
after the pharaoh Pepi II
built the last great pyramid,
the pharaohs of the New Kingdom
had re-established
their supreme power in Egypt
and moved their capital south
to Thebes, modern-day Luxor.
Chris crosses the Nile River
here to investigate
how the New Kingdom rulers
sought to guarantee their afterlife.
These wealthy pharaohs
could have afforded tombs
as grand as Khufu's Great Pyramid,
but during the chaos following
the end of the old pharaoh's reign,
the ancient pyramids were ransacked.
Ancient texts describe the turmoil
as bodies were cast out from tombs
and funerary goods disappeared.
The pharaohs' mummies
were stolen or destroyed,
along with their dreams of eternal life.
Desperate to avoid that fate,
the pioneering New Kingdom
pharaoh, Thutmosis I,
embarked on a revolution
in royal tomb building.
Echoing the governors in the south,
he decided to cut his tomb into the rock.
His plan to protect his mummy was to hide.
In a valley west of Thebes,
the king picked a spot and dug a shaft
over 600 feet deep into the mountain.
It had subterranean chambers
for the riches he'd take
into the afterlife.
And in a lavish tomb
at the bottom of the tunnel,
a sarcophagus would keep his body safe.
Following his example,
nearly every pharaoh
for the next 500 years
dug tombs into the mountain here
to provide underworld palaces,
creating a subterranean
city of dead royals
that became known as
the Valley of the Kings.
One of the best preserved
tombs in the valley
belonged to one of Egypt's
greatest pharaohs, Ramses III.
CHRIS: As soon as you enter
this tomb, you're really struck
by the sort of monumental scale.
All the surfaces are decorated.
Hieroglyphic inscriptions everywhere.
Large images of the king.
Really, really impressive.
NARRATOR: Just as Pepi II
covered the last great pyramid
with hieroglyphic spells,
Ramses hoped magical art would secure
his dangerous passage to resurrection.
CHRIS: It's a very
perilous journey,
it's a very hazardous journey,
and he encounters all kinds
of demons along his way.
But with the help of the gods,
who accompany him throughout the tomb,
he's able to make
that journey successfully.
NARRATOR:
The New Kingdom pharaohs
believed their rock-cut tombs
would protect their mummies
where the pyramids had failed.
But Ramses' architects
left nothing to chance,
designing precipitous shafts
as they tunneled into the rock.
CHRIS: This is a pretty
important part of the tomb.
It's a well shaft, which is
a characteristic feature
of tombs in the Valley of the Kings
designed to deter robbers,
beautifully decorated with images of gods.
NARRATOR: Even buried
hundreds of feet
down in the heart of the mountain,
Ramses feared his tomb would be pillaged.
CHRIS (off-screen): Even though
the tomb would have been sealed
and the idea would have been, of course,
that nobody would ever,
ever come in here again,
it's still incredibly
beautifully decorated.
For the eyes of the gods only perhaps.
NARRATOR: There was
just one problem.
To live on in eternity,
a king needed not just
to preserve his body,
he had to be remembered by the living.
The pyramids had monuments
and temples attached
where priests celebrated
the memory of the dead pharaoh.
Ramses did not want
to advertise the location
of his body and his riches with a pyramid,
but he still needed a monument
to keep his name alive.
On the west bank of the Nile, near Thebes,
Ramses erected a gigantic 80-foot gate
on which he carved huge images
of himself smiting his foes.
Behind it, his mortuary temple,
two courtyards lined with his statues
led to a series of chapels
and a false door,
where priests would make
offerings and repeat his name.
Surrounding the temple,
he built mud brick walls 30 foot thick,
stretching more than half a mile
to turn his temple
into a fortress of worship.
Just a mile from Ramses' temple
lies another great monument
to a New Kingdom pharaoh,
Thutmosis III's
Temple of Millions of Years.
The temple has crumbled
since ancient times,
but Dr. Myriam Seco Alvarez
is leading a project
to resurrect the site.
MYRIAM: When we started
the project in 2008,
all this was a mountain of sand.
Nothing was visible.
NARRATOR: She wants to discover
exactly how these new monuments
were intended to secure
the pharaoh's afterlife
without a pyramid.
Archaeologist Manuel Abelleira
searches outside the walls
for clues to how the temple was used.
He meticulously records
every find workers unearth
around the temple walls.
MANUEL: Nice.
Shukraan.
NARRATOR: Ancient Egyptians
made offerings of food,
like dates, to the memory of the pharaoh,
but among the 3,500-year-old fruit,
he finds more valuable objects.
MANUEL: We have jars
that had beer inside
It was one of the most
important offerings in the past
We have found thousands of jars here
NARRATOR: The beer jar
offerings mean
archaeologist Javier Martinez-Babón
can track the temple's history.
Some bear the signature
hieroglyphs of later pharaohs.
JAVIER: Here for example we
have the name of Thutmosis IV
here we have the name of Tutankhamun
Other kings and other queens gave these
offerings for the memory of the king
NARRATOR: The jars prove
that for centuries,
Egypt's rulers made
offerings at this temple
to keep Thutmosis III's name alive,
while his mummy lay safely hidden
in the Valley of the Kings.
But Myriam is discovering that
Egyptians didn't just leave
offerings of beer and food at the temple.
With just minutes before
the site closes for the day,
Myriam's team unearths a burial.
(speaking foreign language)
The site has strict time curfews,
and a skeleton can't be
left exposed overnight.
MYRIAM: If we find a body, we
have to remove in the same day.
If we find something special,
we have to remove to be secure.
NARRATOR: The team scrambles
to move the ancient skeleton
before the site shuts down.
MYRIAM: In 20 minutes,
we will finish,
so that's why we are a little in a hurry.
MYRIAM: Over there in the shade.
NARRATOR: With minutes to go
before the gates slam shut,
the skeleton is safe
and ready for analysis.
It could hold clues to how well the temple
safeguarded the pharaohs' afterlife
in the era after the death
of the pyramids.
NARRATOR: The skeleton unearthed
outside Thutmosis III's temple
is not the first
Myriam's team has discovered.
It's one of more than 125 ancient bodies
they've unearthed around the site,
many from a single tomb.
Why they are here is a mystery,
but some are preserved
in almost pristine condition.
The bodies could shed light
on how Thutmosis' temple
was supposed to function after his death.
Myriam has made it her mission
to search every ancient body for clues.
Next in line is a fully wrapped mummy.
She can't risk removing
the linen bandages,
so dental expert
Dr. Roger Seiler uses x-rays
to scan for information.
MYRIAM (off-screen): We want to
see who was this individual,
if it's a male or female.
We want to see their age,
what they eat,
as much as possible about this person.
We have a head.
WOMAN (off-screen): Mm-hmm.
NARRATOR: Roger examines
the skull to determine
the skeleton's sex and age at death.
ROGER: So, the individual
was about 18, 20, 25 years old.
The teeth are in good health.
So it's a young individual.
MYRIAM: Ah, okay.
ROGER: But that's
important for
MYRIAM: We know
if it's male or female?
ROGER: The angle here
could say that it's female.
MYRIAM: Female. Maybe female?
ROGER: Maybe female,
together with the form of the chin.
NARRATOR: The x-ray suggests
the body is of a young woman.
MYRIAM: This is from Tomb 22,
from the late period,
where we found the mummy deposit?
ROGER: Yes.
NARRATOR: The tomb
she was buried in
dates to a time nearly 1,000 years
after the temple was built.
It's a hint that the temple
was considered sacred
long after Thutmosis III had died.
If he was still remembered,
then his afterlife was secure.
MYRIAM (off-screen): Now we have
to go deeper to get more information.
NARRATOR: Myriam needs to
discover who these people were
to shed light
on why they were buried here.
They work through the dozens
of mummies found at the site.
ROGER (off-screen):
The head is missing.
But this is a,
I think it's an organ package,
so they took out the inner organs,
they mummified them separately,
and put them back.
Good mummification technique.
MYRIAM: So, some of the mummies
in this mummy deposit
were high quality.
ROGER: High quality
mummification.
MYRIAM: Mummification, yes.
NARRATOR: The mummies suggest
that high-status ancient Egyptians
were burying their dead here
almost to the end of
ancient Egyptian civilization.
They believed this site held a power
that would help propel
their souls to the afterlife.
The team will need to keep examining
and comparing the finds,
but with this analysis complete,
Myriam can return the body
to its eternal rest.
They carefully lower the precious remains
15 feet down the vertical shaft.
MYRIAM: This is
the most critical moment,
and always we are worried.
(speaking foreign language)
NARRATOR: The mummy is safely
in the burial chamber.
MYRIAM: Well done.
NARRATOR: The team
lays it to rest.
MYRIAM: We have one more
individual in peace.
NARRATOR: Myriam's discoveries
suggest the temple
remained sacred for nearly 1,000 years
after Thutmosis III's death,
preserving his memory and his eternal life
just as long as his body lay safe
in the Valley of the Kings.
The New Kingdom pharaohs' afterlife plan
appeared to be working.
On the hillside of Qubbet el-Hawa,
near modern-day Aswan,
Alejandro and his team have removed
more than 1,000 cubic feet of sand
from the newly discovered tomb.
ALEJANDRO: We have been working
outside and inside,
and we have the possibility to have access
to check if we have some remains
of the original burials.
NARRATOR: If the tomb contains
hieroglyphic inscriptions
or grave goods, it could
help him identify the owner
and uncover the burial
practices of the nobles
challenging the pyramid
building pharaohs' power.
ALEJANDRO: I can see
several fragments of bones.
NARRATOR: The bones survive,
but whose are they?
NARRATOR: Alejandro's
discovery of human remains
proves beyond doubt
that he's found a new tomb
at Qubbet el-Hawa.
But what he needs is hieroglyphs
to identify the tomb owner
and their status.
If a mummy once lay in this chamber,
perhaps the valuable funerary artifacts
remain in an adjacent cavity.
ALEJANDRO: It's incredible.
We have just the same material
as we found in the other chamber.
NARRATOR: The tomb's
second chamber is empty.
It has almost certainly
been entered by thieves,
but Alejandro finds that it
hasn't just been robbed.
Telltale tracks on the walls
show it has been ravaged
by an even more destructive force.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We can guess that here there were coffins.
There were perhaps boxes.
And everything was eaten by the termites.
I've never seen something like this.
(sighs)
It's wherever you look.
Look at that.
This is termites.
I hate termites.
Quite disappointing.
The deception.
But it's part of the game.
Let's go.
NARRATOR: Like the pyramids,
the tombs cut into the rock here
couldn't always save
the owners from destruction.
Their carefully laid plans
to secure their afterlife
were thwarted.
But the rich necropolis at Qubbet el-Hawa
may one day reveal yet more
about the path the governors
of the south played
in the pyramids' decline.
ALEJANDRO (off-screen):
We have been very lucky
during all the seasons
that we have been working
in Qubbet el-Hawa.
We have discovered three new tombs,
nine intact burial chambers,
but we have discovered also that,
that sometimes the story
has not the same ending.
NARRATOR: He may not have
found hieroglyphic treasures this time,
but next time, Alejandro could be luckier.
In the Valley of the Kings,
the New Kingdom pharaohs
dug their tombs deep into the mountains
to protect them from robbers.
Chris has come
to the most iconic tomb of all
to find out how well they succeeded,
the tomb of Tutankhamun,
discovered deep beneath layers of rubble
by archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922.
CHRIS: So, this is the exact
spot where Carter would,
for the first time,
have made a little hole
in this blocking here
and been able to see through
into the antechamber.
So this is the moment
where famously he's asked,
"Can you see anything?"
And he says, "Wonderful things."
That's because he's looking into
this chamber, the antechamber,
which is absolutely
stuffed full of objects,
as the whole of the tomb was.
NARRATOR: Carter had uncovered
the richest collection
of artifacts ever discovered
from Egypt's golden age,
including the pharaoh's famous mask.
But for Chris, the modern mythology
of the riches of Tutankhamun's tomb
is not the full story.
It did contain wonderful things,
but the tomb was not undisturbed.
Tutankhamun's funerary furniture
was piled up chaotically
as if ready to be removed.
CHRIS: The tomb was robbed,
perhaps just a few days after the funeral,
when Tutankhamun's body
was introduced to the tomb
for the first time.
NARRATOR: Small valuables
seem to have been taken
by opportunistic looters.
They had left the larger items,
perhaps intending to come back,
but something stopped them.
CHRIS (off-screen): We now know
there was a flash flood in the valley,
which deposited a mass of material
on top of the entranceway to the tomb,
and once it dried out,
it solidified to
the consistency of cement.
It was impenetrable, and the
location of the tomb was lost
until Howard Carter
excavated the tomb in 1922.
That was the first time
anybody had seen it
since the late 18th dynasty.
NARRATOR: Tutankhamun's tomb
wasn't the only tomb
in the Valley of the Kings
plundered by ancient thieves.
All the tombs discovered so far
were robbed of their treasures long ago.
They offered no better protection
than the mighty monuments they replaced.
The pyramids, too, had been no match
for determined grave robbers.
And after years of drought and conflict,
the pharaohs could no longer
afford to build them.
But the pharaohs achieved a
different kind of immortality.
Their astonishing pyramids
remain as an iconic reminder
of the greatest civilization
of the ancient world.
Captioned by Cotter Captioning Services.