Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- LIST OF PLATES
- INTRODUCTION. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE LATE LORD CARNARVON
- CHAPTER 1 THE KING AND THE QUEEN
- CHAPTER 2 THE VALLEY AND THE TOMB
- CHAPTER 3 THE VALLEY IN MODERN TIMES
- CHAPTER 4 OUR PREFATORY WORK AT THEBES
- CHAPTER 5 THE FINDING OF THE TOMB
- CHAPTER 6 A PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
- CHAPTER 7 A SURVEY OF THE ANTECAMBER
- CHAPTER 8 CLEARING THE ANTECHAMBER
- CHAPTER 9 VISITORS AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER 10 WORK IN THE LABORATORY
- CHAPTER 11 THE OPENING OF THE SEALED DOOR
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
- Plate section
CHAPTER 3 - THE VALLEY IN MODERN TIMES
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 October 2011
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- LIST OF PLATES
- INTRODUCTION. BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF THE LATE LORD CARNARVON
- CHAPTER 1 THE KING AND THE QUEEN
- CHAPTER 2 THE VALLEY AND THE TOMB
- CHAPTER 3 THE VALLEY IN MODERN TIMES
- CHAPTER 4 OUR PREFATORY WORK AT THEBES
- CHAPTER 5 THE FINDING OF THE TOMB
- CHAPTER 6 A PRELIMINARY INVESTIGATION
- CHAPTER 7 A SURVEY OF THE ANTECAMBER
- CHAPTER 8 CLEARING THE ANTECHAMBER
- CHAPTER 9 VISITORS AND THE PRESS
- CHAPTER 10 WORK IN THE LABORATORY
- CHAPTER 11 THE OPENING OF THE SEALED DOOR
- APPENDIX
- INDEX
- Plate section
- Plate section
Summary
For our first real description of The Valley in modern times we must turn to the pages of Richard Pococke, an English traveller who in 1743 published “A Description of the East” in several volumes. His account is extremely interesting, and, considering the hurried nature of his visit, extraordinarily accurate. Here is his description of the approach to The Valley:—
“The Sheik furnished me with horses, and we set out to go to Biban-el-Meluke, and went about a mile to the north, in a sort of street, on each side of which the rocky ground about ten feet high has rooms cut into it, some of them being supported with pillars; and, as there is not the least sign in the plain of private buildings, I thought that these in the very earliest times might serve as houses, and be the first invention after tents, and contrived as better shelter from wind, and cold of the nights. It is a sort of gravelly stone, and the doors are cut regularly to the street. We then turned to the north west, enter'd in between the high rocky hills, and went in a very narrow valley. We after turn'd towards the south, and then to the north west, going in all between the mountains about a mile or a mile and a half…. […]
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- The Tomb of Tut-Ankh-AmenDiscovered by the Late Earl of Carnarvon and Howard Carter, pp. 63 - 74Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1923