Howard Carter

Tutankhamun

Tutankhamun was an Eighteenth Dynasty pharaoh of Egypt who ruled after Akhenaten, changed his name from Tutankhaten, restored traditional religion, died around age nineteen, and became famous after the discovery of his tomb in 1922.

Born
1341 BCE
Died
1323 BCE
Role
Ancient Egyptian pharaoh

Ancient Egyptian pharaoh (c. 1341-1323 BC)

Portrait of Tutankhamun in ancient Egyptian royal attire
Quick facts

Profile details

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Also known as
Tutankhamen, King Tut
Facts

Tutankhamun timeline facts

Selected specifics from this profile's life story.

c. 1341 BC
Born into Amarna

Tutankhamun was born near the end of the Amarna period, when Akhenaten had disrupted Egypt's traditional religion by elevating the Aten.

c. 1330s BC
Restoring the old order

Tutankhamun's reign restored temples, priesthoods, festivals, and traditional cults disrupted during Akhenaten's rule.

c. 1323 BC
Death and succession

Tutankhamun died around age nineteen, leaving no living heir and opening the way for Ay and then Horemheb to reshape Egypt after Amarna.

after 1922
Enduring legacy

Tutankhamun's legacy combines two stories: a short reign that helped reverse Amarna, and a tomb that changed how the modern world sees ancient Egypt.

Life Journey

Restoration, early death and modern rediscovery

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c. 1341 BC

Born into Amarna

Tutankhamun was born near the end of the Amarna period, when Akhenaten had disrupted Egypt's traditional religion by elevating the Aten.

c. 1332 BC

Child pharaoh

Tutankhamun became pharaoh while still a child, probably around age eight or nine, after a confused succession following Akhenaten's death.

early reign

Changing the name

The young king changed his name from Tutankhaten to Tutankhamun, signaling the restoration of Amun and the retreat from Akhenaten's Aten revolution.

c. 1330s BC

Restoring the old order

Tutankhamun's reign restored temples, priesthoods, festivals, and traditional cults disrupted during Akhenaten's rule.

c. 1332-1323 BC

Court and family

Tutankhamun married Ankhesenamun, likely a daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti, tying his reign closely to the surviving Amarna royal line.

late reign

Health and kingship

Modern study of Tutankhamun's remains suggests a young king with health problems, though the exact cause of his death remains debated.

c. 1323 BC

Death and succession

Tutankhamun died around age nineteen, leaving no living heir and opening the way for Ay and then Horemheb to reshape Egypt after Amarna.

after 1323 BC

A hidden tomb

Tutankhamun was buried in the Valley of the Kings in a comparatively small tomb, which helped it survive more intact than most royal burials.

1922

Discovery in 1922

Howard Carter's discovery of Tutankhamun's tomb in 1922 made the young pharaoh one of the most famous figures in world history.

after 1922

Enduring legacy

Tutankhamun's legacy combines two stories: a short reign that helped reverse Amarna, and a tomb that changed how the modern world sees ancient Egypt.

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Content note

This profile is written for educational use and connects to related Stories of History pages. Illustrations are original artistic interpretations.

References

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Further reading

  1. Encyclopaedia Britannica, Search results for Tutankhamun,” accessed June 2026.Open source
  2. WorldCat, Books and library holdings for Tutankhamun,” accessed June 2026.Open source

Primary sources

  1. Library of Congress, Search results for Tutankhamun,” accessed June 2026.Open source

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