Reconstruct the face of the mummy of a young prince belonging to the family. King Akhenaten, father of Tutankhamun Follow History Of Egyptology

Head of King Tutankhamun as a child that reveals his black descent [1334 – 1325 B.C] - The African History

Tutankhamun was an ancient Egyptian pharaoh who, in the New Kingdom of Egyptian history, was the last of his royal family to rule at the end of the 18th dynasty. His father was Pharaoh Akhenaten, who was thought to be the mummy found in the KV55 tomb.

This wooden sculpted head of Tutankhamun also known as theĀ Head of Nefertem was found in the tomb ofĀ TutankhamunĀ (KV62) in theĀ Valley of the KingsĀ in WestĀ Thebes.

It depicts the King as a child and dates from theĀ 18th Dynasty. The sculpture depicts the Pharaoh in the guise ofĀ Nefertem, the god of the dawning sun.

The child-godĀ NefertemĀ springs from aĀ blue lotus, which was associated with the revival of the Sun in the morning because its buds close at night and reopen at dawn.

The blue base of the bust symbolises the primordial waters from which the sun rose at the beginning of creation.Head of King Tutankhamun as a child that reveals his black descent [1334 – 1325 B.C] - The African History

The Pharaoh was closely associated with the Sun, but the depiction of him in the guise of this particular solar deity was meant to magically guarantee that the Pharaoh would be reborn once more, just as the Sun isĀ is reborn at dawn.

Credit: Truth Monger