Legend has it that the mummies and coffins of Egypt are associated with a very ancient curse, which can cause bad luck, illness, or even death. Tutankhamun was the most famous king of Egypt, who led a very luxurious and royal life. People worshiped him like a god, but he died at a very young age. The news of the curse of the mummy first became famous across the world when the tomb of Tutankhamun was discovered for the very first time in 1922. The tomb was found in the Valley of the Kings near Luxor in Egypt during an expedition.
The burial chamber contained a valuable treasure, the news of which reached the world very quickly, and along with this, the news of many sudden tragic deaths also started coming in front of the world. As Lord Carnarvon, the sponsor of this expedition died suddenly of blood poisoning. Not only this, at the time of tomb discovery, six people present there also died within a few years. It can still be considered a coincidence, but not Tutankhamun's trumpets. On the night of 16 April 1939, the lights of Cairo of Egypt were turned off, because five minutes later the ancient trumpets of Tutankhamun were to be played after thousands of years. These trumpets of the ancient king were sounded on the radio for the international BBC broadcast before a live audience, whose tune was heard by about 150 million people.
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It is believed that an inauspicious sign was always hidden behind the playing of these Egyptian Trumpets. But this time the sign was creepy. Because a few months later after this radio broadcast such a fierce war started which probably never happened before in history. As Britain entered World War II and waged war against Germany. In 1967, the same trumpets were played again just before the Six-Day War between Egypt and Israel.
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Then in 1990, a student researching Tutankhamun's artifacts also played this trumpet, which immediately resulted in the beginning of the Gulf War. And the most recent incident occurred before the breakout of the Egypt Revolution in 2011 when it was played by the museum staff while documenting and photographing the trumpets. From these incidents, a legend was born that Tutankhamun must have played these trumpets while starting a war. Now after so many similar incidents, it will not be easy to call it a coincidence. Hala Hassan, the Egyptologist, claimed that these trumpets had some "magical powers" as whenever someone played them a war occurs.
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