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	<title>Egypt &#8211; English Across the Curriculum</title>
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		<title>Mummies</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Krosmanitz]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 17 Jan 2024 09:12:45 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[History]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Egypt]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[mummies]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://topics.english-online.at/?p=217</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[A mummy is the dead body of a person or an animal that has been preserved by wrapping cloth or other material around it. Mummies have been found all over the world, most of them in Egypt.]]></description>
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<p>   When a person dies their body <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to fall apart, to be destroyed by nature">decays</a>. Skin and <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="soft part of a person, between the skin and the bones">flesh</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="go away">disappear</a> and as time goes on only a skeleton is left. A mummy is the dead body of a person or an animal that has been <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to save something from being destroyed or damaged">preserved</a> by <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="cover something with a certain material">wrapping</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="material used for making clothes">cloth</a> or other material around it. Mummies have been found all over the world, most of them in Egypt. However, other cultures in South America and Asia also <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to make a person into a mummy">mummified</a> their dead. </p>

<p>The oldest mummy ever found <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="existed during a time in the past">dates back</a> to 6,000 years before Christ. The British Museum in London <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="right now">currently</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="show something that everyone can see">displays</a> the oldest Egyptian mummy, dating back to 3400 BC. The British <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="person who studies ancient societies and civilisations and carefully observes what is left of them or their buildings">archaeologist</a> Howard Carter <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="found for the first time">discovered</a> the <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="parts of a dead body">remains</a> of Tutankhamun in 1922, probably the most famous mummy in the world.</p>

<p>Today <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="person who is trained in science and works in a laboratory">scientists</a> study mummies with special <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="machines, tools">equipment</a> and <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="lines of light that can go through objects; used for taking pictures of the inner parts of a person’s body">X-ra</a>y machines. They discover more about the bodies of <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="from a long time ago">ancient</a> people and how they lived. They can also find <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="sign, information">clues</a> to what they ate and what kind of <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="illnesses">diseases</a> they had.</p>

<p><a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="the art of creating mummies">Mummification</a> also <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="happens">occurs</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="because of">due to</a> extreme weather.  Mummies have been found in the cold regions of the world, including the Alps and the Himalaya mountains.  Salt water also helps <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to save something from being destroyed or damaged">preserve</a> bodies.  Mummies have been found in <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="area of dry land">deserts</a> and in <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="area of wet land in which dead bodies of animals and plants fall apart; the black soil that is created can be burned and used as a form energy">peat bogs</a>. The most famous natural mummy is Ötzi, the Iceman, found in a <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="mass of ice that moves down a river valley">glacier</a> on the Austrian-Italian <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="line between two countries">border</a> in 1991.</p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Egyptian Mummies</h2>



<p>Egyptian <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="people in general">society</a> mummified their dead for many <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="a hundred years">centuries</a>. They believed that they had to preserve the body for life after death. The soul of the dead would be <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="bring back together">reunited</a> with its body in the <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="life that some people believe comes after death">afterlife</a>.  At first, they started burying dead people in hot sand; later on, they built special <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="stone structure above or below the ground where a dead person is buried">tombs</a>. Egyptians wanted their relatives to feel comfortable after death.</p>

<p>Later on bodies were <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="cover something with a certain material">wrapped</a> in cloth to stop <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="very small living things that can cause diseases">bacteria</a> and other harmful <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="material">substances</a> from getting to them. <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="person who treats a dead body with chemicals in order to preserve it">Embalmers</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="dry out">dehydrated</a> bodies and <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="took out">removed</a> all <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="watery material">liquids</a> from within. A substance called <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="sodium carbonate; kind of salt">natron</a> was used to cover the bodies. It <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="took out">extracted</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="wetness">moisture</a> from the skin and flesh. Inner organs, including the <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="organ inside your head that controls how you move, feel or think">brain</a>, were removed; the heart was usually left in the body. Mummies often <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="got">received</a> a face mask.</p>

<p>Mummies were then put into <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="long box which a dead body is put into">coffins</a>, made out of wood or stone. Relatives <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to paint figures on something">decorated</a> them and buried them under ground.  The extracted inner organs were put into <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="small container or pot">jars</a> and <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="put">placed</a> next to the mummies. Sometimes animals were also mummified and put next to their <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="a person who something belongs to">owners</a>.</p>

<p>Poor people did not have the money for such <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="difficult">complicated</a> <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="technique, method">procedures</a>. Mummifying <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="king in ancient Egypt">pharaohs</a> and noblemen, on the other hand, <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="shown to be true">proved to be</a> a special and <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="very difficult">demanding</a> job. In ancient Egypt, it took 70 days to finish a complete mummification process.</p>


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<p class="has-text-align-center wp-block-paragraph"><strong>Howard Carter opens the tomb of Tutankhamun</strong><br><em>Image:</em> <a href="https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Tuts_Tomb_Opened.JPG">Exclusive to The Times</a>, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons </p>



<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Other Mummies</h2>



<p>The Inca in Peru mummified dead people by using salt. In other areas, the dry climate helped preserve mummies.</p>

<p>Mummification still occurs today in some societies. Mao Zedong  and Lenin were famous Communist leaders who were <a href="#/" data-toggle="tooltip" title="to be turned into a mummy">embalmed</a>.</p>
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