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or was that just something the movie "The Mummy" made up?

2006-12-26 09:49:18 · 4 answers · asked by RAW DIVA™ 5 in Arts & Humanities History

4 answers

I wasn't sure about the facts in the movie, so I googled "Hamunaptra":
"Hamunaptra is a fictional ancient Egyptian city hidden deep in the desert some distance from Thebes and is the primary setting for the story in the horror/action movie 'The Mummy' starring Brendan Fraser and Rachel Weisz. Thebes is identified in the film as the "City of the Living" while Hamunaptra is the "City of the Dead, ancient burial site for the sons of pharaohs." This coincides only loosely with the actual Wadi el-Muluk, the Valley of the Kings on the opposite side of the Nile from ancient Thebes. Being to the west, where the sun set, this valley was considered the realm of the dead. King Seti I, who is depicted in the film, was entombed there." [1]

I was pretty sure that I'd heard about people living in cemeteries in the greater Cairo area, so I googled "Cairo" and got:
"Cairo is facing a housing problem. The lack of satisfactory and affordable housing for the rapidly growing population has forced many poor Egyptians to make cemeteries in the City of the Dead as their permanent homes. Among these cemeteries live a community of Egypt’s urban poor, forming an illegal but tolerated, separate society. More than five million Egyptians live in these cemeteries, and have formed their own enterprises. The population of the City of the Dead is growing rapidly because of rural migration and it’s complicated housing crisis is getting worse." [2]

And while reading the article about Cairo, I found a link to another ancient (and real) City of the Dead:
"Saqqara (Arabic: سقارة) is a vast, ancient burial ground in Egypt... It is located some 30 km south of modern-day Cairo and covers an area of around 7 km by 1.5 km. While Memphis was the capital of Ancient Egypt, Saqqara served as its necropolis. Although it was eclipsed as the burial ground of royalty by Giza and, later, by the Valley of the Kings in Thebes, it remained an important complex for minor burials and cult ceremonies for more than 3,000 years, well into Ptolemaic and Roman times." [3]

So the idea in the movie is based on reality, but the name and location have been fictionalized.

2006-12-26 19:30:26 · answer #1 · answered by peter_lobell 5 · 2 2

It's very disappointing to see educated people making such false & awful comments when they don't have any knowledge on the specific matter. I tell you. This is nothing but true. I went that place 5 years ago with my 3 friends situated around 90 kms south to Khufu.
Locals told us not to stay till dark but we were looking for some adventure & what we saw during night was unforgettable. We spent whole night terrified behind a huge stone in the city of dead. we saw the dead men walking on the streets. We never talk about that to anyone but couldn't stop my self when I saw these false & idiotic comments.

2016-08-11 23:19:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

This Site Might Help You.

RE:
Is Hamunaptra(the city of the dead) in Egpyt a real place?
or was that just something the movie "The Mummy" made up?

2015-02-03 04:21:52 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Cairo is one of many world's great megacities. As wonderful since it is crazy, and as full of historical finery as it is half dilapidated, Cairo is commonly a town that tourists enjoy and hate in identical procedures so learn where group you will be with the aid of this place hotelbye . In Cairo you will discover, beyond the current hubbub, a history that spans centuries. Full of vigour, Cairo is wherever you truly get a feel for Egyptian block living and no trip to Egypt is complete with out a stay static in the city Arabs call Umm al-Dunya (The Mother of the World). The definitely unbelievable number of antiquities exhibited in Cairo's Egyptian Museum causes it to be among the world's good museums and certainly a place for everybody's to visit.

2016-12-18 03:55:30 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Hamunaptra

2016-11-04 04:59:49 · answer #5 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

There was a buried city found by archeologists in the 1850s in India that was called Hamunaptra. It was larger than Pakistan and they seemed to trade with the Mesopotamia area based on what they found. It ended between 1700-1600 BC for yet unknown reasons, and seems to be a source of inspiration for the city in the movie.

2017-04-12 05:35:30 · answer #6 · answered by jimbart1@yahoo.com 3 · 0 0

It's completely fictional.

2006-12-26 09:54:39 · answer #7 · answered by numbnuts 3 · 3 0

No it is entirely fictional, just like most of the information in the film.

2006-12-26 10:01:22 · answer #8 · answered by F 5 · 2 0

it is so real!!

2016-04-13 11:14:05 · answer #9 · answered by Jessica 1 · 0 1

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