King Tutankhamun (AKA King Tut) & Golden Age of Pharaoh's Tickets are in Hot Demand.

December 17, 2005 (PRLEAP.COM) Entertainment News
To buy tickets to the King Tut Exhibit you will have to purchase early because they are selling quickly. The exhibit ended its premiere U.S. run in Los Angeles on November 20, 2005, with more than 937,000 visitors. After its stay at the Museum of Art/Fort Lauderdale (Dec. 15, 2005, to April 23, 2006), it will head to The Field Museum, Chicago (May 26, 2006, to Jan. 1, 2007) and The Franklin Institute, Philadelphia (Feb. 3 to Sept. 30, 2007).

Tutankhamun was one of the last kings of Egypt's 18th Dynasty and ruled during a crucial, turmoil-filled period of Egyptian history. The boy king died under mysterious circumstances in 1323 B.C., in the ninth year of his reign. He was probably only about 18 or 19 when he died.
The exhibition includes 50 of Tutankhamun's burial objects, including his royal diadem — the gold crown discovered encircling the head of Tut's mummified body that he likely wore as king — and one of the gold- and precious-stone-inlaid canopic coffinettes that contained his mummified internal organs.
The exhibition also will include more than 70 objects from tombs of other 18th Dynasty royals as well as several non-royal individuals. These stone, faience and wooden pieces from burials before Tut's reign will give visitors a sense of what the lost burials of other royalty and commoners may have been like.
Tickets to the exhibit are sold in advance for a specific date and time, and more than 300,000 already have been accounted for. Egyptologists and museum curators, who are counting on selling 100,000 more before the exhibit ends its run in Fort Lauderdale in April, say the key to Tut's allure is more about mystery than science.

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