It was both hermetically and Khemetically sealed...
The priests blessed the tomb and placed a seal on the door warning those who would try to steal that there were penalties.
(and no, I do not mean that in the sensationalistic "King Tut's Curse" way, but in a religious sense)
2007-10-11 14:10:47
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answer #1
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answered by Anne Hatzakis 6
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I believe the term you are looking for is Hermetically sealed. The term comes from Hermes Trismegistus who wrote the Hermetica - a series of tablets which the Greeks translated from Egyptian to Greek and which discuss medicine, religion and other esoteric arts.
King Tuts' tomb was sealed, but had been vandalized. It was probably never air tight - which is what the term Hermetically sealed means. The term had nothing to do with Hermes. It just meant sealed or secret.
2007-10-11 21:17:12
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answer #2
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answered by some_mystery_for_u 2
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Yes, and if you look very closely you can still see the lick marks from the Kemetic Priests as they licked the glue on the seals. LOL
BB,
Raji the Green Witch
2007-10-11 21:49:48
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answer #3
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answered by Raji the Green Witch 7
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Hermetically and Kemetically I believe.
2007-10-11 21:50:04
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answer #4
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answered by ♆Şрhĩņxy - Lost In Time. 7
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King Tut is living the only after life possible... Is that what we are taught that after life means?
2007-10-11 21:09:56
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answer #5
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answered by NO Labels 3
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