AP
Researchers concentrated on the techniques used on Tutankhamun, whose body was mummified during Egypt's 18th Dynasty.
London - A man who died from a terminal illness has been mummified like an Egyptian pharaoh for a Channel 4 show in the UK.
The broadcaster looks set to find itself at the centre of another taste row after agreeing to air the macabre documentary, Mummifying Alan.
Sources say the dead man, from the West Country, had a keen interest in preservation techniques used at the time of Tutankhamun.
He is not expected to be identified until next week when his family will explain why he agreed to be part of the show.
The programme will make television history when it airs on Monday, October 24, as a scientific embalming experiment is unprecedented.
A team of pioneering scientists were brought together to perform the little-known technique used by the ancient embalmers at one of the UK’s leading pathology laboratories.
It is understood the man’s body remained in excellent condition when it was examined months after the experiment.
Researchers concentrated on the techniques used on Tutankhamun, whose body was mummified during Egypt’s 18th Dynasty.
The Pharoah’s body was remarkably preserved more than 3,000 years later when his tomb was found in 1922.
Egyptian embalmers left few clues about their ingredients, but it is known embalming took 70 days, with 15 days spent cleansing and purifying the body, 40 days for drying and 15 days for wrapping, bandaging and art work.
The Egyptians were able to “mummify” bodies for longer than any other civilisation, and are believed to have used resins found only in Burma - more than 4,000 miles from Egypt.
In recent years, chemical analysis of a shrine from the 18th Dynasty by German scientists found that the body had been preserved with cedar wood extract.
Ancient Egyptians believed the preservation of the body after death was essential because it would be needed for the journey to the afterlife.
A Channel 4 spokesman said: “Using a secret and complex blend of ingredients and processes, embalmers managed to stop decomposition almost entirely.”
In 2010, Channel 4 stoked controversy after advertising for a terminally-ill volunteer to take part in the project. The advert read: “We are currently keen to talk to someone who, faced with the knowledge of their own terminal illness and all that it entails, would nonetheless consider undergoing the process of an ancient Egyptian embalming.”
It was said payment would not be made, but that costs would be covered. - Daily Mail
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Anonymous, wrote
What is the purpose of this odd project? I think the money spent could have been better used in a really useful thing. That is pure nonsense.
Anonymous, wrote
he bathong!, wrote
Anonymous, wrote
@me - It's not as if the guy will need his body again. Dead bodies are dead organic matter that should be sensibly recycled (cremated). Mummifying in this case is just a pure archeologicalchemical experiment. Surely no-one still believe one need one's body after one die anymore? Anyone?
stuart, wrote
Art, wrote
Wow I guess this show will be on just as I sit down to eat a nice bowl of spaghetti bolognaise.
soul, wrote
sick! are they gonna air how they take the brains out by the nose too? i def will NOT watch it... *pukes*
me, wrote
wow, that is fing macabre. shudder. I assume most of the readers here do not know that it involves removing the internal organs, liquidising the brain, and sucking it out. siffy man.
purple, wrote
RAD! I'd watch it!!! but the SABC doesnt have the cash for awesome shows :( so i'll just pretend that the cast of isidingo are being embalmed in my head...
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