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Online Resources
Looking for more information on the Boy King? Here is a selection of some of the most interesting, informative and odd.
| National Geographic's Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs Exhibition | The official website for the current exhibition, with a gallery of photographs illustrating a number of the items on display and some background material. | |
| The Griffith Institute | Located in the Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, the Griffiths hold the complete records of Carter's discovery of the tomb, including his personal diary. | |
| Egypt Exploration Society | Well over 100 years old, its archives are impressive and its activities continue to be outstanding. | |
| Egyptian Museum, Ciaro | The Egyptian Museum's collection of its nation's antiquities is truly supreme. The website features galleries, from period to period, offering thousands of images. | |
| The British Museum | The British Museum in London has one of the greatest ancient Egypt collections in the world, and has turned its website into a highly useful resource. | |
| Metropolitan Museum of Art | This New York Museum is host to the finest Ancient Egyptian collection in the United States. | |
| Digital Egypt | The last word in Egyptological resources, this site was designed for university students on ancient Egyptian courses, and amounts to thousands upon thousands of pages. | |
| BBC Ancient Egypt Website | BBC covers ancient Egypt in all its aspects, with in-depth articles, wonderful illustrations, and specific sections on Tutankhamun and the Amarna period. | |
| Al Ahram Weekly | This is the English-language online weekly version of Egypt's respected daily newspaper, Al Ahram | |
| Old World New World | The American website covers the archaeological aspects of Tutankhamun, as well as his effect on cinema, literature and popular culture. | |
| Gavin's Egyptomania | The eclectic British website is devoted to the archaeology of ancient Egypt, as well as the popular spin-offs in art, architecture, music, design and advertising. | |
| Steve Martin's Tut Song | If Tutankhamun were not dead yet, this would kill him. | |
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