Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - The Mummy’s Curse
Episode Date: October 29, 2021Disturbing the remains of the Egyptian pharaohs is known to incur a deadly curse, so why did a team of archeologists still risk inciting the wrath of King Tutankhamun by entering his burial chamber? A...nd how many of them met a premature end for their impudence? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Pushkin
Three and a half thousand years ago, in ancient Egypt, the Princess of Armanra passed away. She was laid to rest in an exquisite wooden coffin and buried in a deep
vault at Luxor on the banks of the mighty Nile. More than 30 centuries later in the late
1800s, four young English tourists, Rich Gentlemen Hall, were offered the chance to purchase
a delightfully painted mummy case.
They drew lots to decide who had the right to buy the prize.
The man who won paid a small fortune and had the coffin taken to his hotel.
A few hours later, he was seen walking out onto the lone and level sands.
He was never to return.
The second fellow was wounded in a hunting accident.
He lost his arm.
The third man lost everything in a bank run.
The fourth was struck with a severe illness, lost his job,
and ended his days selling matches on street corners.
The coffin case was purchased by another gentleman. His house court fire, and he quickly donated
the unlucky item to the British Museum. The removal did not go smoothly. The removal
wagon lost control and hit a passerby. One workman fell and broke his leg while carrying the casket.
His colleague simply died inexplicably two days later.
Knight Watchman at the museum frequently heard sobbing and hammering from inside the coffin.
One died on duty. The others refused to go near the Egyptian room where
the item was stored. A visitor who treated the exhibition with
scorn soon paid the price. His child died of measles. A photographer took a picture of
the case, but when he developed the picture, he saw only
a tormented human face.
The photographer went home, locked his door, and shot himself.
The British museum sold the cursed object to a private collector who soon regretted the purchase, eventually
he found a buyer bold or foolish enough to take it off his hands.
An American archaeologist who simply did not believe in unlucky mummies.
He paid top dollar for the coffin case and arranged to have it shipped across the Atlantic
to New York.
For safekeeping, the lid of the coffin of the princess of Armonra
traveled on the bridge of the finest ocean liner in the world,
the pride of the white star line.
The ship's name was the Titanic.
I'm Tim Harford and you're listening to cautionary tales. In 1922, a decade after the Titanic could slip beneath the icy waters of the North Atlantic,
another archaeologist.
The Englishman Howard Carter was at the head of the Valley of the Kings in the heart of
ancient Egypt.
He was patiently encamped outside what he described as a magnificent tomb with seals intact.
It had been a long wait.
Not just the three weeks for Carter's patron and financier, Lord Canavan to arrive.
Not just the 15 years of excavating different sites around the valley with limited success.
No, someone, or something, had been waiting still longer for more than 3,000 years.
Deep inside that tomb, behind a sealed door, a corridor filled with rubble, another sealed
door, a chamber full of treasures, and yet another sealed door was something that nobody had dared
to disturb for millennia.
And perhaps with good reason, everyone knew the story of the unlucky mummy in the Titanic.
Such tales were popular in late Victorian and Edwardian society. A famous psychic, Count Hamon, sent a telegram
with a warning, Lord Kanavan not to enter tomb disobey at peril, if ignored will suffer
sickness, not recover, death will claim him in Egypt. And yet, Lord Kanavan had come.
After weeks of further digging, he now stood at the shoulder of Howard Carter,
who, after patiently working on a small hole into the burial chamber,
put a candle to the hole and peered in.
At first, I could see nothing, Carter later recalled, but presently as my eyes grew accustomed
to the light, details of the room emerged slowly from the mist, strange animals, statues,
and gold everywhere the glint of gold.
For the moment, I was struck down with amazement, and when Lord Knaven unable to stand the suspense any longer, inquired anxiously,
can you see anything? It was all I could do to get out the words.
Yes. Wonderful things.
Wonderful things. Perhaps. These treasures were there to guard and sustain the mummified body and the golden burial
mask of the young Pharaoh Tutankhaman.
The story was a sensation.
The world's press had gathered in Cairo and were jostling for access to the tomb, autocata
or Kenavan.
The times of London lauded it over the other papers, having paid handsomely for exclusive
access. But every newspaper was there, and every newspaper had an angle.
These rival newspapers reported that Cata and canavan had deliberately destroyed a terrible
warning over the tomb tomb because they were afraid
that the locals would refuse to dig.
That warning read, death shall come on swift wings to whoever toucheth the tomb of the
Pharaoh.
Reports too that Kenavan had received a tiny injury in the tomb.
A stinging or biting insect had pierced the skin on his cheek,
just as he had entered the presence of Tutankhaman.
And Count Hamon was not the only person to have warned about the consequences of Lord Kenarvan's arrogance.
One eyewitness turned to the fellow standing next to him.
I give him six weeks to live.
Nearly six weeks later, Lord Kanaavan's family were rushing to be at his side in Cairo.
He was gravely ill.
A wound on his cheek was infected, and the malady was spreading through his body.
The express newspaper reported that at the moment that Lord Kanaavan breathed his last
feeble breath, the lights in his hotel went out, plunging all into darkness.
Death had claimed him in Egypt. It was another Pharaoh's curse, and it had
claimed its first victim.
Corsinary tales are true stories of disaster, and lessons for us all to learn, lest we make the same mistake ourselves.
But what lesson should we learn from stories
about the unlucky mummy, or the curse of Tudon-Carmen?
First, let's establish what exactly is said to have happened
to Kenavan and Carter's expedition.
The first indication of trouble was a little on the nose, the death
of a canary. Howard Carter's beloved pet canary had been eaten by a cobra the day Carter
began to excavate the tomb. The cobra was well known as a symbol of the power of the
pharaohs. Another symbol was the jackal, representative of Anubis, the Egyptian
god of the dead. In his diary, Howard Carter recorded the unsettling sight of two black jackals,
the very image of Anubis. He noted that it was the first time he'd seen a black jackal, despite 35 years working in Egypt.
Carter's Canary wasn't the only pet to suffer. Lord Canavan's dog,
howled in sorrow, and then expired at the same moment that Canavan himself did.
Which is all the more remarkable since Canavan was in Cairo,
while the dog was in High Clear Castle in southern
England, High Clear is better known these days as the filming location for Downton Abbey.
If it had just been Canavan and a menagerie, that would be one thing, but the Pharaoh's
thirst for revenge was not easily slaked. Soon Howard Carter was showing signs of illness too, and the list of people
struck down by the curse, grew and grew. A railroad baron from pneumonia after visiting the tomb of
Tutankhamon in 1923. The same year, Lord Knaven's half-brother, a year later, a close colleague of Carter suffered a breakdown
and retired. A noted radiologist after performing an X-ray of Tutankham and Sarcofagas died mysteriously
also in 1924. A leading British diplomat was assassinated in Cairo again in 1924. A respected French Egyptologist died in 1926 after
stumbling near Tutankham's tomb.
Canavans' secretary survived a little longer. He died in his sleep in 1929. In circumstances,
also said to be mysterious. And the times of London noted that he is believed
to have been troubled by the legendary curse of the Pharaohs.
The man's father, Lord Westbury, killed himself three months later.
His suicide note included the line, I really can't stand any more horrors.
But the horrors kept coming.
Lord Westbury's curse knocked down a boy of eight
on the way to the cemetery.
The boy had died to satisfy the honor
of a 3,000 year old Egyptian.
The man who'd given Lord Kanaavan six weeks to live
was to die in 1934.
The daily express noted that he had been killed by the curse.
Finally, in 1939, Howard Carter, the leader of the expedition,
the man who was the first to glimpse the mask
of Tutankhaman in more than
3,000 years died. After picking off his pet, his patron, his friends and his colleagues
one by one, the Pharaoh's curse finally came for Carter, a man doomed to watch all around
him die. Even then, the curse was not lifted.
After four decades in a museum in Cairo,
the Egyptian government arranged to have
Tutankhaman's mask and treasures exhibited in Paris
and later in London.
Numerous, untimely deaths followed,
in particular, of two successive directors
of Egyptian antiquities.
A royal Air Force crew took on the job of flying the treasures from Cairo to London and
paid the price. One of them jokingly kicked the box containing the Pharaoh's mask. I've
just kicked the most expensive thing in the world. Later, a ladder broke underneath him, for no apparent reason.
That leg was in plaster for five months. Another crewman lost everything in a house fire.
A third suffered two heart attacks in his thirties, while two others died of heart attacks in their forties, including flight engineer Ken Parkinson.
His wife said that he had had a heart attack every year, at the same time of year, until
the last one killed him.
Let's try to be rational about this.
Could there have been some toxic substance in the tomb that caused death?
Is possible.
One explanation is that some strange virus, mold or bacteria,
evolved in there, ready to burst out and wreak havoc.
A second possibility is that the ancient Egyptians
were masters of poison and primed the tomb
with toxic paints or powders.
Or perhaps the tomb was built out of radioactive material,
delivering a lethal dose to grave
robbers with a temerity to disturb it.
All of these explanations have been attributed to scientists, but there are some obvious
objections.
Radiation is easily detected.
If Tudon-Karman's tomb was packed with plutonium, I think we'd know about it by now.
The epidemiologist F. DeWolf Miller recently told National Geographic that we don't know
of even a single case of either an archaeologist or a tourist experiencing any negative consequences
from either tumult or bacteria.
He added that given the sanitary conditions
of the time in general,
and those within Egypt in particular,
Lord Canavan would likely have been safer
in the tomb than outside.
Anyway, no toxin could explain all the mysterious deaths
of all these different people across the decades,
but something else might. Something
as strange as any ferocious curse will find out more after the break.
Let's move from the realm of ancient curses to the world of cutting-edge science.
Cutting-edge that is from the perspective of 1784.
We're in Paris, the Fibrile decade before the revolution and the Gilletine, a strange
cylinder of polished oak with nautical fittings, ropes, brass wheels and iron rods stands in front of us, in the center of a room with an audience.
Poor souls, wretched invalids seeking healing, are brought in firmly fastened to the cylinder by the ropes, then touch their diseased bodies to the iron rods. They're ready to be healed by the awesome
scientific power of magnetism. To add to the sense of occasion, a glass
are moniker, a strange instrument invented by Benjamin Franklin plays eerie music.
A contemporary account describes how the patients would cough, spit, feel slight pain,
a warmth either localized or all over, and perspire.
Others are agitated by quick involuntary movements.
These effects build over several hours, with crescendos of screams, sobs hysterical
laughter, and of course, the Armonica.
The climax occurs with the appearance of the device's inventor, dressed in gold slippers
and a silk robe, waving a wand and laying on hands, provoking yet more convulsions and
hysterics.
It's Franz Anton Mesmer, the man who gave us the word Mesmerise.
Mesmer was a sensation in pre-revolutionary franz.
A seat at his magnetic device was the hottest ticket in Paris.
The charge was steep, but there was no shortage of eager customers.
Some were desperate for healing.
Others were in it for the thrill and
the ability to describe their experiences later in the salon.
The Queen herself, Mary Antoinette, was a follower of Mesma, so was a hero of the American
revolution, the Marquido Lafayette.
But while Mesma himself claimed to be at the very forefront of scientific thought and practice,
the scientific establishment was at impressed.
Indeed the Society of Medicine refused even to debunk his treatments, ignoring him completely.
But Mesmeromania could not be ignored for long, and soon the King demanded a proper investigation
into this strange, sorcerer scientist and his methods.
That investigation would include France's finest scientists led by a distinguished foreign
authority, none other than Benjamin Franklin himself.
Franklin's team conducted a test in which a patient sat in front of a closed door.
She was told that a noted mesmerist was behind it, performing his magnetic treatments.
The investigators described the results. After three minutes, she stretched both arms behind her back, twisting them strongly and bending her body forward. Her whole body shook. The chatter of her teeth was so loud that it could be heard from outside, she bit her hand hard enough to leave teeth marks.
The mesmerist, of course, wasn't there. the entire effect was in her imagination.
Other tests showed similar results. It seemed clear that mesmerism didn't work, which
it didn't. But Benjamin Franklin was sharp enough to note an equally important fact.
Even a completely phony cure can have powerful effects on the mind. These patients
were having convulsions caused only by their own belief in mesmerism. Franklin also guessed
that if these beliefs were powerful enough to cause such reactions, they might also be
powerful enough to do some good. He wrote, ''If these people can be persuaded to forbear their drugs, in expectation of being cured,
by only the physician's finger or an iron rod pointing at them, they may possibly find
good effects.''
And Franklin was right, as Shankar Vodantum and Bill Mezzler noted in their book, Useful Delusions,
what Franklin had observed, is now called the placebo effect.
It's remarkably powerful.
Researchers have found that not only do fake painkillers relieve pain, but fake expensive
painkillers relieve pain more powerfully than fake cheap painkillers.
Doctors have performed placebo knee surgeries, anesthetic, incisions but no actual surgery,
and found beneficial effects. The placebo effect is potent.
And so too is its evil twin, the no-cebo effect.
Just as the placebo effect makes you feel better because
you think you're being helped, the no-cebo effect makes you feel worse because you think
you're being harmed. When a doctor says this is going to hurt, it is more likely to hurt.
When you're given a drug or a vaccine shot and told about side effects, you're more likely to experience side effects.
In clinical trials, people are often given a placebo.
That is a harmless peel or injection that they think might be an actual drug.
It turns out that 5% of these people then drop out of the trial because they're experiencing
what they think are side effects ranging from pain to depression to heart disease.
It's a no-cebo response, a bad response to a fake pill.
Could the no-cebo effect help to explain some of the heart attacks reported to be caused by the curse of the pharaoh?
It might. I can't help but think of poor Ken Parkinson, the flight engineer
who helped transport Tutankham's mask from Cairo to London in 1972, whose wife reported
that he had a heart attack at the same time of year, year after year. Imagine what he
must have been thinking after three or four years of that. It's
the kind of thing that would cause some serious anxiety, and that serious anxiety about a heart
attack might turn out to be a self-fulfilling prophecy.
So maybe Tomb Toxins killed Lord Kenarven. Maybe the no-cebo effect gave Ken Parkinson repeated anxiety-induced heart attacks.
Maybe.
But there's another explanation for these eerie tales of the curse of the pharaohs.
Unlike tomb toxins, this explanation is everywhere.
It's all around us.
We can't possibly escape it.
And to understand it, I want to tell you a very different kind of spooky story.
Once upon a time, a man walked into a branch of target near Minneapolis, furious, and
demanded to see the manager. He was brandishing a mailer that contained
adverts for nursery furniture and maternity clothes, alongside lots of smiling babies.
"'My daughter got this in the mail,' he said. She's still in high school and you're
sending her coupons for baby clothes and cribs. Are you trying to encourage her to get pregnant?
The manager was rather confused and apologised.
A few days later he called to apologise again.
Ah, about that.
Said that no longer angry dad.
I had a talk with my daughter, turns out there's been some activities in my house I haven't
been completely aware of.
She's due in August.
I owe you an apology.
This story, related by Charles Doohig in the New York Times magazine in 2012, is the modern
version of the mummy's curse.
It's no longer an ancient Pharaoh who wields mysterious power over us.
It's an algorithm, analyzing our shopping patterns, predicting what we'll do, where we'll go,
what we'll desire, all powerful and subtly nudging us in the direction of corporate profit.
of corporate profit. Do Hick Story went viral?
Just as tales of the mummies curse had been shared a century earlier.
People were in awe of the way an algorithm could perceive a hidden truth that even this
teenage girl's own family could not.
Well, perhaps.
But while we're supposed to assume that everybody who received one of those mailers was a pregnant
woman, there's no evidence in the story for that assumption.
What if Target sent the same mailer to every woman under the age of 45?
What if Target sent coupons to absolutely everyone?
Maybe they did.
From the perspective of the angry dad and the pregnant daughter, the algorithm would seem
just as eerily good.
What's going on here is what a statistician would call selection bias.
It's ubiquitous, and while it's easy to understand, it's often hard to solve.
I can name far more rich actors than poor ones, and far more professional footballers than
amateur ones, but that doesn't mean most actors are rich and most footballers are professional.
So how many non-pregnant people received coupons?
I have no idea. But I do know that if Target sends
you some maternity coupons but you're not pregnant, you're probably not going to bother
mentioning that to anyone. Let alone mentioning it to the New York Times magazine. You see?
Selection bias. It's everywhere. But could selection bias have shaped the way we perceive
the curse of the Pharaoh? We'll find out after the break.
Lord Kanavan died not long after he entered Tutankhaman's tomb.
It's a striking coincidence, if indeed it is a coincidence.
But to understand where the selection bias might be at play,
we need to ask how many others have been involved in such excavations.
And what does it even mean to be involved?
The mysterious logic of mummy's cursed stories casts the net wide.
A British diplomat assassinated 500 miles away from the tomb and two years after it was
opened.
Does that really count?
Or remember the young boy whose connection to Tusson Carmen was that he was unfortunate
enough to be in the path of the hers of the father of the secretary of Lord Knaven, six years after the excavation?
If the Pharaoh's curse can be blamed for such deaths, we could draw plausible lines of
connection to countless thousands of people around the periphery of the original dig.
To analyse this rationally, we need to compare the fates of people associated
with the excavation of the tomb, with those who were not associated. An epidemiologist
named Mark Nelson has published a serious attempt at this analysis. It was published in the
British Medical Journal. Dr Nelson looked at 44 Westerners identified by Howard Carter as being in
Egypt during the dig. 25 of them were potentially exposed to a curse by visiting the tomb.
19 did not visit. He found scant evidence of any curse. On average, people lived for another 20 years after visiting the tomb. Howard
Carter survived 17 years, slightly below the average, so it's not true that he died
quickly, nor is it true that his accursed fate was to live to see all his friends succumb.
The only hint of a curse that Dr Nelson found was that the average age of tomb visitors
at death was a little younger than the average age at death of the companions who didn't
visit.
However, these companions were often the wives of the excavators and women do tend to live
longer than men.
In any case, even the people who visited the tomb lived on average until they were over
70.
It's not exactly the stuff of nightmares.
Lord Canavan did die before his time, but in an age before antibiotics such things happened.
He nicked that mosquito bite while shaving, the cut became infected and he developed pneumonia.
It's an unusual way to die, but not a mysterious one.
Still, there is one final reckoning.
What of the prophetic warnings that Kenarvan would die within six weeks?
What of his dog?
What of the lights going out all over Cairo and what of one final chilling detail that the wound which killed
Kanavan was in the same spot as a mark on the cheek of King Tutankhaman himself?
The rather
underwhelming explanation for some of these stories is that they aren't true.
for some of these stories, is that they aren't true. Remember that long before Howard Carter gazed upon the mask of Tutankhaman,
or Lord Kanaavan succumbed to pneumonia, Edwardians had told each other ghost stories.
A no-goast story was more popular than a tale of the mummy's curse.
Such tales sold newspapers, given that most of the newspapers had been shut out by the London
times his exclusive deal with Kenarvan, what else would they print?
Journalists made up spooky stories, and the best such stories lived on.
The man who claimed he'd given Kenarvan six weeks to live, six weeks before he died,
was writing for a rival newspaper.
He only published the details of his prophecy several months after Kenarvan's death.
The Daily Express reported that the lights went out in the hotel when Lord Kenarvan died.
Perhaps they did, it would hardly be astonishing to have a power cut in Cairo in 1923, but
the timing was probably less uncanny. Otherwise,
other newspapers might also have mentioned it.
The haunting detail about the wound on Tutankham's cheek was published only in the Daily Mail.
Modern examinations of the mummy mentioned no such wound. Lord Knaven's dog?
Howard Carter's canary?
Roger Luckhurst, author of The Mummy's Curse,
points out that all these tales are second hand
or third hand accounts.
Newspapers reporting hearsay about hearsay.
What about the pioneering radiologists,
Sir Archibald Douglas Reed,
said to have x-rayed the sarcophagus and then to have died of a mysterious illness?
His mysterious illness wasn't mysterious at all. He had cancer,
one of the hazards of being a radiologist in those days,
and it seems unlikely that he ever x-rayed the sarcophagus.
He was too ill to be in Egypt. He was convalescing in Switzerland before he died.
The mysterious portent of the Black Jackal of Enubis, seen by Howard Carter. It happened,
but it wasn't a portent. Carter's diary entry records the Black Jackal in May 1926.
Several years after Kenarven's death and many years before Carter's, that rather
spoils the story of its potency, doesn't it? No wonder it was the inaccurate version
that caught on.
And what about Count Hamon, the man who warned Kenarvan that death would claim him in Egypt?
Well, maybe. Count Hamon, who was not account, also claimed
to have warned trophy hunters not to remove the unlucky mummy from Egypt. Since the unlucky
mummy left Egypt when Heyman was about three years old, this seems implausible. Ah yes, the unlucky mummy, or more precisely the coffin case of the princess of Armon
Ra, had almost forgotten that older tale, the one which predates the discovery of the tomb
of Tutankhaman, the one which ends with a coffin case sinking with a Titanic. It is quite the story, but it is just a story, and one which endlessly
mutates. One man who had indeed lost his arm in a shooting accident used to tell it in
the 1890s and early 1900s. He was president of the Ghost Club, at which gentlemen would
meet for dinner and frighten each other out of their wits, but there was no shooting accident in his telling at the tale.
It was only after he died that others retrofitted that detail to the story.
Another brother ghost, one of the members of the Ghost Club,
died on the Titanic. His fate too was woven into the story. And so the tale grew and grew,
despite specific point-by-point rebuttals from the increasingly exasperated curator of the
Egyptian room in the British Museum. But unlike my cautionary tales, the story of the unlucky coffin case just isn't true.
The case wasn't on the Titanic.
We know that, because we have the doomed Liners cargo manifest.
It's exhaustive, and it lists no Egyptian artifacts.
And there is one final reason I'm confident that the coffin case of the unknown pre-stess
of Arman Ra did not sink with the Titanic.
It's that it never left the British Museum.
It's exhibit number EA 22542.
I know because I just went into the museum and had a look.
Despite everything I've argued, I'll admit I was nervous,
but I stood in front of the coffin
and now I'm on my way home safe
from the curse of the mummy. Peace sources for this episode include Roger Luckhurst's book The Mummys Curse, Christopher
Turner's article Mesmeromania, The British Medical Journal and Snopes. For a full list of
our sources, see the show notes at timhalford.com. Corsion Retails is written by me, Tim Halford, with Andrew Wright, it's produced by Ryan
Dilly and Marilyn Rust. The sound design and original music is the work of Pascal Wise.
This show wouldn't have been possible without the work of Mia Label, Jacob Weisberg, Heather Fane, Julia Barton, John Schnarrs, Carla Migliori, Eric Sandler,
Maggie Taylor, Anneela LeCarn, and Maya Canig.
Corsionary Tales is a production of Pushkin Industries.
If you like the show, please remember to rate, share, and review.