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00:02the Valley of the Kings an ancient burial ground for Egypt's greatest pharaohs it never
00:13gets old it's truly a really special place and the most famous archaeological site in the world
00:25now for the first time in over a hundred years an elite team of archaeologists will excavate the tomb
00:34of one of the most powerful kings to have ever lived Ramses the third the story of Ramses the third
00:42is sensational even the tiniest clues about Ramses the third's tomb would be an incredible find
00:51with unprecedented access the team will dig for three months to unearth clues I'm very excited
01:01and find lost treasures this definitely belongs together unraveling a 3,000 year old murder mystery
01:11this is a mortal wound that exposes one of the most treacherous conspiracies of the ancient world
01:19the idea that the pharaoh was assassinated is extraordinary in the burial chamber of Ramses
01:27the third new evidence will be revealed and 3,000 year old secrets discovered
01:37only in ancient Egypt can you actually do this sort of thing
02:00the valley of the kings is some place of promise of excitement it is silent
02:12it is mysterious it's like you're in another world
02:18the valley of the kings lies in the very heart of Egypt hundreds of kilometers south from the great
02:26pyramids of Giza three and a half thousand years ago the pharaohs stopped building giant pyramids
02:33to transport their mummies into the afterlife instead they moved to the valley
02:41to build incredible underground tombs
02:46the tombs are absolutely stunning and they served as this kind of resurrection machine
02:53to help the king enter the afterlife in their tombs the king's mummies were buried in nested coffins
03:02with everything they would need in the netherworld food furniture clothing little magical artifacts that are
03:10supposed to you know help you and lots and lots of gold the wealth of ancient Egyptian kings was the
03:18stuff of legend
03:19it's the reason that archaeologists have scoured this unique and exclusive location for centuries
03:26and its secrets continue to be revealed
03:30it's an extremely challenging place but the idea that archaeology of the valley of the kings is finished is not
03:38correct
03:42now an elite team of archaeologists are beginning an excavation they hope will change history
03:50in charge of the mission is dr anchor viva
03:59for more than 10 years i always imagined what could be below my feet
04:06this is the history of humankind it's an honor to become part of this
04:14anchor has negotiated exclusive access to dig for three months in one of the most prestigious tombs in the valley
04:36beneath the valley floor lie over 60 tombs cut into the rocky landscape in the center
04:45the final resting place of the legendary boy pharaoh tutankhamun
04:52but just 30 meters away is the site of anchor's mission tomb kv-11
05:01inside decorated corridors plunge deep into the rock leading to a secret dig site piled high with debris
05:12this is the unexcavated burial chamber of king ramses the third
05:21ramses the third is one of the towering figures from ancient egyptian history
05:27he defended egypt at a crucial pivotal time of not just egyptian history but in fact the entire
05:36mediterranean world ramses the third is considered egypt's last great warrior king hieroglyphics reveal
05:48he ruled for 31 years building vast temples and battling marauding armies that threatened to destroy
05:57egypt's empire incredibly ramses mummy exists today kept in a museum in cairo
06:09he was found almost 150 years ago almost a kilometer from his tomb high in the mountains above
06:17the valley of the kings it was really one of the most earth-shattering finds
06:23you get to actually look at ramses the third not just a statue but at him
06:31the story of ramses the third is sensational any sort of information no matter how little
06:37we can glean from all of this that would be very exciting
06:44now for the very first time anchor's elite archaeological team will fully excavate inside
06:52the great king's tomb
06:57its entrance has already been beautifully restored filled with hieroglyphic text designed to transport
07:04the king into the afterlife
07:11but deeper down lies the tomb's secret an ancient scene of destruction off limits for over a century
07:21and never fully excavated before ramses burial chamber
07:28it's absolutely incredible to be inside his burial chamber where ramses the third and the
07:35sarcophagus once rested to revive him for the afterlife anchor's mission is to clear away the debris
07:44to unearth the tombs lost artifacts and finally unravel the mysteries of this great pharaoh's life and death
07:55this is our task now bringing back the magic of the burial chamber
08:01the more we reveal and uncover from the sand the more we will know about the person himself
08:08and find something that was last seen by our ancestors
08:18first the team must haul out the surface debris and search for any ancient artifacts that lie beneath
08:26today we are very excited and this is the day we were waiting for i hope that we are lucky
08:33the team works quickly but excavating here is not without risk massive chunks of rock have tumbled six meters from
08:42the ceiling above
08:44leaving the tomb incredibly fragile
08:47anchor believes it's a result of violent flash floods around 100 years ago
08:53we are looking to get more information about the flooding events but the area is very unstable
09:04to avoid further damage the workers must wrestle the huge boulders by hand
09:12as they clear away the debris something begins to appear
09:17it seems as if this would be a piece of metal
09:23it's actually it's very unusual to find metal say we try our best to get it out in one piece
09:30in order to see what it actually was but as the team clears away the sand there's a surprise
09:37this is not metal it's a piece of wood going into this direction and what we have here are
10:00a piece of mummified human spine is an intriguing clue and a mystery
10:10because anchor believes it shouldn't be here in tomb kv11 at all the mystery is actually why do we have
10:20uh any kind of uh remains inside kv11 we would never expect it here because we know that the mummy
10:28of
10:29the third is the third is not placed in kv11 anymore who does this mummified spine belong to
10:36and why is somebody else buried inside ramsey's tomb
10:49clues could lie less than three kilometers away at ramsey's temple egyptologist
10:56meredith brand investigates the site to decode the mysteries of the king's reign
11:05it's one of the most famous monuments in egypt medinet habu
11:15i love medinet habu temple it's really stunning because it's so complete inside there's amazing
11:25colors it's so well preserved this is one of my favorite temples from ancient egypt
11:34this temple was built for rameses the third so that people could give him offerings and celebrate
11:39him during his life and after his death so what was celebrated about rameses the third's reign
11:47on almost every facade is a scene of terror
11:53spilt blood
11:56severed hands
11:59and captured victims glorify the battles of the pharaoh
12:05looking at these walls it's clear that rameses the third wanted to show himself fighting enemies
12:11smiting everyone this temple says i'm rameses the third and i'm a warrior king
12:17so who was rameses fighting against
12:21on the side of the temple meredith finds a fierce conflict at sea
12:28it's quite faint but i can make out this massive image of rameses the third shooting a bow and arrow
12:34at this melee of a battle we have ships and soldiers and everyone's falling over into the water it's pure
12:40fighting and chaos the chaos reveals a group of marauding tribes known as the sea peoples
12:49and they aren't the only adversaries threatening the borders of egypt there's battles of him
12:56fighting the nubians there's two separate battles fighting the libyans rameses the third was enmeshed
13:03in warfare rameses temple records his astonishing victories over the enemies of the egyptian empire
13:13rameses the third was not a warrior pharaoh necessarily by choice this was thrust upon him
13:22he truly truly lived at one of the most difficult times in which a king could reign and the fact
13:29that
13:30he managed to make out of it what he did is a true testament to how great a king he
13:36was
13:38rameses was a celebrated and successful warrior king so how did he die and why are the mummified
13:47remains of someone else buried inside his tomb
14:02130 meters deep into the bedrock of the valley of the kings ancaviba and her team
14:11delicately free the ancient spine from the floor of rameses the third's burial chamber around her
14:18even more human remains are beginning to emerge including what looks like a mummified limb we found
14:26here a large part of a mummy very clearly we can see the layers of linen that was soaked with
14:37resin in order to preserve this body for eternity so for now we can't tell exactly which part of the
14:47mummy this is um however it's very exciting um because it's uh somehow like coming closer to all these
14:58people who once were part of the history of kv-11 ramses the third's mummy is no longer inside his
15:07tomb
15:08it's preserved in the museum so who do these body parts belong to and why are they here
15:17anchor spots a new clue nearby
15:21what we have here are parts of an ancient egyptian coffin
15:26there are remains of a plaster on top of the surface you can see this dowels inside dowel holes
15:34an expensive plaster covered coffin suggests the mummies were once members of the elite
15:41anchor believes they were probably buried here hundreds of years after ramses death when egypt was
15:48weak and fractured they won't be able to precisely date the burials until a lab analysis but anchor has a
15:56theory on why they were here everybody wants to be something special everybody wants to become part of
16:04the history of something so it is most likely that the people uh high-ranking officials decided oh yeah
16:12why not uh being buried inside the tomb of one of egypt's most interesting and greatest pharaohs of all time
16:22ancient elites chose to be buried in the valley's magnificent tombs to pay homage to the kings that
16:29came before them and ramses iii was one of the greatest kings of them all so what was it that
16:39killed him
16:52it's such a unique and special aspect of ancient egyptian culture
16:58that they preserve the dead and that now for us we can look into the face of some of the
17:04greatest
17:05kings and queens of ancient egypt the pharaoh queen hatchepsut ramses the second and none other than
17:16ramses the third himself
17:21it's so remarkable to to stand here and see this very important and and very powerful king
17:30this mummy is beautifully preserved you can see his facial features even his teeth and his hair
17:38the ancient egyptians mummified the dead to preserve their bodies they believed it would allow their body
17:46and soul to reunite in the afterlife and they strived for perfection
17:54a mummy like ramses the third was done with such care and attention the embalmers would have removed
18:01his internal organs washed him with oils and perfumes packed his body with salt and then
18:10wrapped his entire body up in linens if something was wrong the embalmers could fix it so that when the
18:18disease got to the afterlife not only would their body be there but it would be more perfect
18:25on the surface ramses mummy looks completely intact
18:31but x-ray scans reveal a different and shocking story
18:39beneath the bandages six healing amulets are packed around ramses foot
18:46that conceal a missing toe cut off with a heavy blade
18:55on ramses neck embalming resin fills a deep gash that splits the throat right down to the bone
19:07the cut on ramses the third's neck this severed the trachea and the esophagus and even nicked
19:15the bone in his vertebrae this is a mortal wound
19:21this kind of gash makes it clear that his death wasn't some kind of accident or a result of old
19:28age
19:29he met a violent end and all the evidence points to murder
19:37the idea that the pharaoh was assassinated and by something as violent as that is extraordinary
19:43it is an extraordinary and terrifying thought
19:48it would have been almost unthinkable in ancient egypt to try to assassinate the pharaoh
19:55can you imagine how difficult kind of an undertaking that would be first of all it's not a one-man
20:03job
20:03you need allies in this sort of thing you also need a motive why are you killing the king surely
20:11you
20:11must have a really good reason to actually undertake something so incredibly risky
20:19who killed ramses the third and why did they want him dead
20:33deep inside ramses burial chamber anchor and the team search for clues
20:43but the surface of the tomb is the chaotic jumbled mess of fines making this mystery difficult to unravel
20:52we have pieces of pottery that belong to a larger vessel all these finds are mixed
20:59both ancient robbers and colonial era explorers have rummaged through the debris like a crime scene
21:06that has been revisited for centuries we know that this area is disturbed it's always puzzling for us
21:14to say what actually happened but step by step we will investigate what happened here in kv 11
21:23but hidden within the debris anchor spots something that may have belonged to ramses iii himself
21:31we have here the lower part of a wooden ushapti it's rather destroyed however you can still see here
21:39this is the beginning of the lower part of the feet it could be over 3 000 years old
21:46across the chamber the team finds the missing head this definitely belongs together they must have been
21:52disconnected somehow that's amazing
21:58ushaptis are ancient figurines often around a foot tall that were buried with the deceased
22:06a king like ramses would have had hundreds
22:12they acted as servants inscribed with magic spells
22:19so that if the dead was made to work in the afterlife
22:24the ushapti will say here i am and do the work for him
22:32the team analyzes the statue pieces searching for inscriptions that could reveal a name we have
22:40the hope that they belonged to the pharaoh rams is the third but hard evidence of its original owner
22:47has been lost eroded away from the ushaptis delicate surface
22:54the team will need to keep searching the mass of dried out mud and rubble covering the chamber's floor
23:03any scrap of ancient material could reveal brand new details about the death and burial of one of
23:11egypt's egypt's greatest kings
23:21the
23:22shim
23:34at the monumental temple of medinet habu built to honor pharaoh ramses the third
23:44Egyptologist Meredith Brand investigates the king's brutal murder.
23:51She wants to establish a motive for his royal assassination.
23:56And believes the sheer number of battle scenes on his temple walls reveal a deeper story than just Ramsay's military
24:04prowess.
24:06These scenes show Ramsay III as this victorious ruler who was indestructible.
24:11In some ways it is true.
24:14But there was a larger issue.
24:17Ramsay III was surrounded by war.
24:21And this war took a toll on Egypt and its economy.
24:26Ramsay's never-ending battles begin to drain the resources of the country.
24:32And inflation spirals out of control.
24:37Strikes, civil unrest, and even famine strangle the heart of Egypt.
24:46Was Ramsay's killed because of the crumbling economy?
24:49Or were there other motives at play?
24:52Nobody ever blamed the pharaoh for anything.
24:56He was theoretically perfect, a divine ruler.
25:00What we do know is that he had a number of wives and a large number of children.
25:07And we don't think that he designated an heir during his lifetime.
25:16In ancient Egypt, the firstborn son would normally inherit the throne.
25:22But with no designated heir, the stage is set for a coup.
25:30Let's say you do have a motive.
25:32Okay.
25:33How do you do it?
25:34How do you find the allies?
25:36How do you know where people's loyalties stand?
25:40So you have to sort of start, you know, checking the pulse, as it were.
25:45See who might have grievances, perhaps.
25:48Once you have that in place, you need an entire network of people.
25:53But also, they need to be close to the person of the king.
26:04Meredith investigates a copy of an ancient papyrus originally discovered near the site.
26:12This is an image of an amazing papyrus from the time of Ramses III.
26:18It tells us about a conspiracy to kill the king.
26:23It reveals the proceedings of a murder trial.
26:28It's shocking the number of people involved in this conspiracy.
26:32It has everyone in the palace.
26:34It has people involved with food.
26:36It has security, army.
26:38And it has women of the harem, including Queen Tia, the wife of Ramses III.
26:45This is a courtroom drama playing out in front of our eyes that tells us when and how Ramses III
26:52was killed.
26:53One of Ramses' secondary wives, Queen Tia, leads the conspiracy to place her son, a younger, more minor prince, on
27:03the throne.
27:05Some believe that after a great festival at Medinet Habu, Ramses is steered into the apparent safety of his harem.
27:16Here the attackers pounce and slice off Ramses' toe in the struggle before dealing the mortal wound.
27:30Here's the critical thing.
27:32The assassination attempt, that plot certainly succeeded.
27:38We know Ramses III died as a result.
27:42But ultimately, the coup was not successful.
27:48Over 30 perpetrators were caught, tried, and sentenced.
27:54The punishments outlined in this papyrus are quite severe.
27:59Some people had their nose and ears cut off.
28:02But those actually in the center of the conspiracy, they were executed.
28:06And Ramses' treacherous younger son never made it to the throne.
28:13He was examined. The judges found him guilty.
28:17They left him where he was and he killed himself.
28:20Ramses' murder was a shocking family feud.
28:24But his death makes Ramses even more important.
28:30A vast funeral procession leads his mummy into the Valley of the Kings.
28:36On a new journey to become a god.
28:44How cool is it that we can talk about so much detail around this historical event that took place around
28:533,000 years ago?
28:55Only in ancient Egypt can you actually do this sort of thing.
29:07Inside Ramses' tomb, Anka and the team want to investigate what happened after the king's death.
29:15How did his tomb transform Ramses into an immortal god?
29:24Hidden below the debris, they have unearthed incredibly fragile pieces of 3,000-year-old tomb decoration.
29:33So beautiful.
29:35What we found here is a piece of the war decoration.
29:40And it's the food of this god here in the middle and he's standing right on top of a snake.
29:49It's very amazing and very touching because it's the first time that we have such a complete piece.
29:55It's a very lucky find.
29:57Very happy about it.
30:02The snake is a crucial clue that connects with the decoration in the rest of the tomb.
30:08This is so impressive.
30:11The paintings tell the story of an elaborate mythological journey Ramses must go on to achieve eternal life.
30:21As night falls, Ramses follows the path of the sun god as he voyages through the dangerous waters of the
30:30netherworld.
30:32To prove he is righteous, he must navigate the flames of a lake of fire and appease Apophis, the chaos
30:41serpent, who threatens to plunge the world into darkness.
30:46If he succeeds, the pharaoh rises as the sun god Ra, bringing order and safety to the universe.
30:59The king in ancient Egypt served an important cosmological role.
31:04He was, during his lifetime and after his death, the embodiment of the sun god.
31:11The tomb itself, it was really a machine to make you go from this world to the next, to ensure
31:18the king's safety, to ensure that day followed night and the entire cosmos would continue to exist.
31:28In the burial chamber, the team carefully glues the fragile painted plasterwork.
31:35It's so delicate, they must lift it out with a stabilizing block of sand below.
31:55But hiding among the rubble is something even more tantalizing.
32:13More than 3,000 years after its construction, the crumbling burial chamber of Pharaoh Ramses III could still hold secrets.
32:26A month into her mission, deep beneath the Egyptian desert, Dr Anka Weber and her team unearth a mysterious stone.
32:37Clues concealed beneath the debris could help unravel how the king was buried after his brutal assassination.
32:45This is amazing. We have found here a piece of rose granite.
32:49I didn't expect that here. So we are going to lift this object out now, very carefully.
32:59Rose granite is an expensive, high quality stone, far more precious than the surrounding limestone of the chamber.
33:08Reis Mahmud.
33:09Inside the valley of the kings, it would have been brought in from over a hundred kilometres away to create
33:16one thing, the pharaoh's sarcophagus.
33:19Reis Mahmud, go ahead and set here before the
33:20Car amiss sylida.
33:21I'm a layman.
33:32Oh my gosh, that's amazing, please dry clean it, make all your notes, I want pictures from
33:39before the cleaning and after the cleaning and we will see, that's amazing.
33:45The team keeps digging and reveals even more of the precious granite pieces.
34:11We have a very clear corner here, I'm quite speechless, there are many possibilities
34:18what this can actually be, that it is most probably part of a foot, but one thing is clear, it
34:27is amazing.
34:29If this is the foot of Ramses III's sarcophagus, it's a huge discovery.
34:35These pieces would be an incredibly rare clue about how the king was buried.
34:42But something doesn't add up, because a sarcophagus belonging to Ramses III already exists.
35:00In Paris, at the Musée de Louvre, Egyptologist Christophe Barbutin explores the museum's collection of ancient burial equipment.
35:29Deep in the crypt lies one of the most prized ancient objects in the museum's entire collection.
35:36A giant rose granite sarcophagus, beautifully inscribed on every surface with hieroglyphic evidence.
35:47To know who belonged to this sarcophagus, you have to look at these two ovales, here,
35:51which we call Uncartouche.
35:53We read here,
35:56Uzer, Maat, Re, Meri, Amon.
36:01Si on traduisait littéralement,
36:02Puissante la justice de Re, l'aimé d'Amon.
36:05Et ici, Re, Meses, c'est-à-dire Ramses, qui veut dire l'enfant du soleil.
36:11Heka Yunou, le souverain de la ville d'Héliopolis.
36:15Ces deux cartouches sont Ramses III, donc on n'y a aucun doute sur l'identification du monument.
36:25Removed from tomb KV11 around two hundred years ago,
36:30the complete sarcophagus is an eighteen tonne behemoth, topped with a colossal matching lid.
36:38It's self, now stored in a museum in England.
36:42Both parts are covered with religious texts bearing the name of the King.
36:47And the top is carved with Ramses as Osiris, the god of death.
37:40Christophe examines the granite, searching for evidence of damage.
37:44The sarcophagus that you see is almost intact, like many sarcophages at this time.
37:50In fact, it's a monolith, that is, it's in one single block of granite,
37:55which can resist everything unless we decide to break it.
37:59The body of the sarcophagus shows barely a chip of damage.
38:04The chunk of broken granite anchors found in KV-11 can't possibly have come from this.
38:11But the lid is a different story. It still bears the scars of some ancient heist.
38:21The cover of the Fitzwilliam Waysom of Cambridge is a little bit endommaged
38:24because the prisoners have descended it when they are going to get to the mummy.
38:28So it's fallen brutally on the ground and it's fragmented, especially on the feet.
38:33Ramsey's sarcophagus is now housed thousands of miles from his tomb in England and France.
38:42And there are pieces missing from them.
38:46Is it possible that they never left the burial chamber?
38:51Has Anka's team found one of them, buried in the ancient rubble?
38:58Anka inspects a digital model of the lid for clues.
39:02She finds the granite at the bottom around the pharaoh's feet is missing
39:07and has been reconstructed for display.
39:11This is the exciting thing. The feet are missing.
39:15It is most likely that this object here is a part of this sarcophagus lid.
39:22Anka has a missing piece of Ramsey III's 3,000-year-old sarcophagus lid.
39:31That's so incredible and it would be my dream to virtually reunite these pieces.
39:38If they can unearth more pieces...
39:43The team might decode the most critical part of Ramsey's burial chamber.
39:49The sarcophagus is the focal point of the burial,
39:54containing the king's instructions for navigating the afterlife.
39:59The king didn't make it to the afterlife.
40:01The sun might not rise. The world might end.
40:04It was so important to have a sarcophagus to protect his body.
40:08So his afterlife maintained the cosmic balance of ancient Egypt.
40:12So the stakes were pretty high.
40:20Inside Ramsey III's tomb, the granite pieces keep coming.
40:26And now, crucially, with inscriptions.
40:31We keep finding pieces of rose granite actually almost daily.
40:38We can see that here on top, the surface is sculpted with a snake.
40:44And here on the sides, we have hieroglyphs that tell us more about the deceased person
40:50and that he was actually here, he's called a god.
40:54Named as a god, it is almost certain to belong to Ramsey's sarcophagus.
40:59And the pieces even fit together.
41:03Oh, wow. Wow.
41:05That works very well.
41:07It fits exactly. That's perfect.
41:10It's absolutely amazing.
41:12But something is strange.
41:15Great. Can you check this piece, please?
41:17These newest pieces of granite don't match with any part of the lid that is already known.
41:24For Anka, it can only mean one thing.
41:28I guess that we have something that is even more exciting.
41:32So it might be that we have here one or even two other lids that probably belong to Ramses III.
41:41It would mean that Ramses didn't just have one sarcophagus,
41:47but two or even three nested inside each other.
41:51Why would the ancient Egyptians build such a difficult and complicated construction?
42:04Outside in the Valley of the Kings, Anka investigates.
42:10She explores a nearby tomb.
42:15Its long corridors extend deep into the rock and open to reveal the burial chamber of one of Ramses' predecessors,
42:27a king named Meremptar.
42:30His tombs actually worked like a template.
42:34It's basically a clue of how the tomb of Ramses III once looked like.
42:41In the centre of the burial chamber, assembled from granite fragments, is a gigantic box.
42:50Four metres long and over two metres high,
42:54it's the largest sarcophagus in the Valley of the Kings.
43:01Next to it, Anka finds a seven-ton granite lid,
43:06covered in beautiful religious carvings.
43:11The pieces are part of a set of four colossal stone sarcophagi
43:16that all once nested inside each other.
43:20It's unbelievable that they were able to lift these tons and tons of massive material inside the burial chamber.
43:28And Anka has a theory why the ancient Egyptians went to such lengths.
43:35It was of religious significance to protect the deceased pharaoh.
43:42So, nesting and nesting and nesting until you come to the centrepiece,
43:46wrapped in his royal linen for the mummy.
43:50Protecting the mummy of the pharaoh was critical.
43:53But very few kings in history had nested sarcophagi this large and elaborate.
44:01Was this how Ramses III's mummy was buried too?
44:06Oh, it would be spectacular if maybe, just maybe,
44:10Ramses III was in fact buried in more than one sarcophagus.
44:15It's such a rare find.
44:17These tombs have been robbed in antiquity.
44:20So, to find extra evidence, anything that lets us piece together how these incredible figures from history were buried,
44:29we'd all be all the richer for it.
44:33More than 3,000 years after his death at the hands of his own family,
44:40Ramses III's tomb is still giving up secrets.
44:45But Anka's campaign, deep beneath the pharaoh's sacred valley, is far from complete.
44:53If we imagine what we have here, this hill in front of us, there must be more below.
45:05Next time, Anka and the team dive down into the limestone rubble.
45:12In search of clues left on the chamber's original floor.
45:23Could a surprise discovery implicate a legendary archaeologist in the theft of another pharaoh's riches?
45:32This is the first hard proof that objects had been taken out of the tomb of Tutankhamun.
45:42What can ancient graffiti reveal about why Ramses' body was snatched?
45:47Everyone thought that these mummies had been lost.
45:52Oh, this is incredible. Wow.
45:55The mummies were here for a reason.
45:57And can Anka be the first archaeologist to uncover original grave goods from the Valley of the Kings in more
46:04than a century?
46:05The sign Heka means ruler. It's amazing.
46:09With weeks of digging still to come, the full story of Egypt's last great pharaoh could be just below the
46:17surface.
46:20We never know what we will find. Still, there are mysteries to solve.
46:28And we'll be heading back to the Valley of the Kings next Saturday from half seven.
46:33Murder, war and Jeremy Irons in a never-ending quest for power.
46:38A brilliant historical drama for us. The Borgias is streaming now.
46:42But feeling the G's next tonight, turning on the Tom Cruise control in Top Gun, Maverick.
46:47Theamedtim forvape is new.
46:54A brilliant story.
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