jewels, gold, rings, necklaces
he was placed in 4 coffins
Natron, which is a kind of salt. Linen to wrap the mummy. Canopic jars to put organs in. A sarcophagus to put the mummy in. A hook to get the brain out, and knife to cut a slit in the side. And decorations for the mummy and to put in the linen..
the one with power (greatest to least)
A mummy's 'coffin' is called a sarcophagus.
Greco-Roman mummy cases were more like regular coffins with a portrait of the dead person painted on the outside.
In King Tutankhamun's tomb, there were a total of four nested coffins. The innermost coffin housed the mummy, while the other three coffins were made of different materials, with the outermost being a large sarcophagus. The elaborate arrangement of these coffins reflects the importance of the burial practices in ancient Egyptian culture.
money
King Tutankhaten had 4 coffins. They were all made of wood, which was then heavily decorated on the outside with both paint and gold leaf. One of Tut's coffins was made partly of gold. That was the coffin that they put Tut in when he died. The head of that coffin was made of pure gold decorated with stones and colored glass.
mummy marble (coffins and burial masks decorated with this)
The Mummy.
When were granite seals placed in the grand corridor
The mummifed corpse of an Ancient Egyptian royal or noble would usually be placed inside a sarcophagus, along with several other smaller coffins which protect the mummy.