For centuries, ancient Egyptian society, with its advanced technology, fascinating culture and unique traditions and practices, has enchanted amateurs and Egyptologists alike. While the pyramids, tombs, hieroglyphics and names of some pharaohs are recognized around the world, perhaps the best-known of the ancient god-kings is Tutankhamun - popularly referred to as "King Tut" - who was said to have died around the age of 18. His tomb, prepared with a treasure trove of afterlife necessities, was discovered, nearly intact, in 1922 by the British self-taught Egyptologist Sir Howard Carter.
Tutankhamun was born as Tutankhaten to Akhenaten and his sister and wife around 1341 BC. Their only male child, he is said to have changed his name around 1333 BC and to have married his half-sister, Ankhesenpaaten, with whom he had two stillborn daughters. In 1922, Carter discovered the mummies of these two children, along with approximately 1,000 other objects, inside Tutankhamun's tomb. Carter's discovery of the tomb, the first known contact with the former pharaoh since his death, is a vital part of the "Tutankhamun: His Tomb and Treasures" exhibition currently on display at Výstaviště in Prague 7 until the end of June.