
Love Charms in the Forbidden Palace
Let’s start the story with the love charm in the forbidden palace of the Pharaohs. In ancient times, in the Egyptian dynasties, typically in the time of Akhena, it was always said that, when a man fell in love with a woman, it was a sign that the man had mistakenly eaten the “medicine charm”. bewildered”.
Queen Nefertiti – the wife of the great pharaoh Akhnate is the most powerful woman in history. She was the first Egyptian woman to hold supreme power, created a new god worshiping religion, built a second capital of the Egyptian empire. It is said that her secret weapon is a “love spell”.
History records that, Nefertiti was the most beautiful woman in Egypt. Her beauty has a bewitching charm, not only to people but also to the sun god Aten. In the palace, in order to compete for the throne and be favored by the Pharaoh, she cast a love spell on her husband.
The charms are special spices she puts on her body, spells and the help of skilled monks. As a result, Nefertiti achieved almost everything: love, indulgence, ultimate power.
The only thing her love spell didn’t work was in giving birth. The six children Nefertiti gave birth to Pharaoh Akhenaten were all daughters, and this was also the key to the tragic fate of the queen at the end of her life.
Amulets and curses of the century
The world of Egyptian charms is also associated with the curses in the pharaoh’s tomb – the pyramid. They were created by the priests to protect the eternal rest of the Pharaohs and preserve the wealth buried with them.
In most catacombs in the Royal Valley, people find hieroglyphic inscriptions with the content: ” Whoever comes to disturb the peace of the Pharaoh, the door of death will fall on him. “.
Strangely, there are quite a few spells that work. The archaeological and grave searches of the scientific community to find a new pharaoh’s tomb are always accompanied by disappearances, mysterious deaths or strange diseases…
The story of the spell of the young king Tutankhamun (died 1,300 BC) is a very good example. The excavation of this king’s tomb is considered one of the valuable archaeological achievements of the early twentieth century.
However, as soon as Baron Kanaban – who invested capital in the excavation died due to a strange illness, doubts were raised. He died of an insect sting when he entered the crypt.
In particular, the wound on his face completely coincided with the wound on the young king’s face. Not stopping, after that, the members of the archaeological team also encountered many strange and bad things. By the 80s, the number of people who died from Tutankhamun’s spell had reached more than 50.
A common feature of those who died because of Tutankhamun’s spell is that many people, before leaving, say: ” I have heard its breathing, I must go with it”.
Many people believed that the discoveries of the catacombs made the gods angry and poured out the heads of the blasphemers. But there are also many other people who believe in scientific theories rather than seeing them as curses or spells.
They believe that the pyramid explorers were infected with extremely toxic bacteria born from the food and clothing that the Pharaoh buried.
However, one thing they couldn’t explain was what helped the bacteria survive for so long, more than 4,000 years in the desert.
So far, those are just stories, clues and theories. Hopefully one day not far away, that curtain will be fully lifted…