NEWBURY, ENGLAND—The PBS hit "Downton Abbey" has an unlikely but dramatic connection to the greatest Egyptological discovery of all time. The soapy Edwardian drama is filmed at Highclere Castle, seat of the Fifth Earl of Carnarvon, who sponsored the excavations that unearthed the tomb of King Tutankhamun. To mark the 90th anniversary of the discovery, a replica of the tomb has opened in the cellars of the nineteenth-century mansion, along with recreations of the pharaoh's coffin and death mask that complement original artifacts from the site that are also on display. "This is the defining thing for Highclere. Downton is lovely, but it will come and go," said Lady Fiona Carnarvon, the current Countess of Carnarvon. "In 100 years' time, people are still going to be wondering and admiring the discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb." Fans of the boy king will soon have added incentive to visit Highclere Castle. Next year the original tomb in the Valley of the Kings is slated to be closed to tourists for good.
King Tut's Tomb Unveiled At "Downton Abbey"
News February 19, 2013
Recommended Articles
Off the Grid September/October 2012
Aquincum, Hungary
Off the Grid July/August 2012
Pucará de Tilcara, Argentina
-
Features January/February 2013
Neolithic Europe's Remote Heart
One thousand years of spirituality, innovation, and social development emerge from a ceremonial center on the Scottish archipelago of Orkney
Adam Stanford/Aerial Cam -
Features January/February 2013
The Water Temple of Inca-Caranqui
Hydraulic engineering was the key to winning the hearts and minds of a conquered people
(Courtesy Tamara L. Bray) -
Letter from France January/February 2013
Structural Integrity
Nearly 20 years of investigation at two rock shelters in southwestern France reveal the well-organized domestic spaces of Europe's earliest modern humans
-
Artifacts January/February 2013
Pacific Islands Trident
A mid-nineteenth-century trident illustrates a changing marine ecosystem in the South Pacific
(Catalog Number 99071 © The Field Museum, [CL000_99071_Overall], Photographer Christopher J. Philipp)