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The Fever and King Tut |
| From Chips
Vol. 13, #2 Copyright 2001
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Recently
I was watching a special on King Tut, and it got me to thinking. What
came to mind was the FEVER that attacked me in those early days when I
was introduced into knapping. Now
the fever we’re talking about can’t be cured with antibiotics. It
hits without warning -like being run over with a truck; it will really
blindside you. It has been known to bring on heart palpitations,
shortness of breath, stammering, hot flashes, eye twitching, palsy, dry
mouth, ingrown toenails, hives and other maladies. I know a fellow who
swore that when the FEVER hit him, his left leg grew longer than his
right. I discounted this story because he always put all his rocks in
the right side pocket of his pants, and it made him walk lopsided. But
on the other hand, I was present when the FEVER overcame D.C. Waldorf,
and I watched him loading his pants, shirt and pockets with the
world’s best hammerstones until he lost his pants in the middle of the
Snoqualmie River, -damned near drowned! He’s still a bit touchy about
it, if you JUST HAVE TO ask him, you best stand at arm’s length. Some catch it the instant they find that first perfect arrowhead in a plowed field on Grandpa’s farm. Others catch the FEVER by watching skilled knappers at work, still others from looking at points in a museum or relic show, and some from just reading about it. When it strikes you, it’s all-powerful and hits you like a pint of Ozark Mountain “White Lightning.” Those
many years ago, a friend came by the house with a handful of freshly
made obsidian points, At first I wasn’t much impressed, but then I had
a couple of shinning jewels in my hands and like a bolt from the blue,
things changed. I had visions of determined men with spears in
their hands, standing in front of a campfire while women and children
were huddled and crying in the background. In front of the men, from the
darkness, came a charging and bellowing, huge beast. Firelight was
gleaming and dancing from the obsidian points on the spears, I was
hooked! The
next A.M. I had a billet fashioned out of a piece of copper water pipe
poured full of lead, and a cap on the end! With the fever burning, I
hunted up the closest rock shop, and paid $10.00 for a coffee can full
of small chunks of obsidian. An hour later, it had all been reduced to
fine driveway rubble. The
fever burned bright, even at night I couldn’t think of anything else.
Two weeks later, I stood like a conquering hero on the top of the Green
Hill at Glass Buttes, Oregon, gazing across at Midnight point with
thousands of pieces of broken obsidian gleaming in the sun. With a pick
in one hand and a shovel in the other, the only thing capable of
removing the wild-eyed stare from my face would be a thousand pounds of
obsidian in the back of my old yellow truck. I had made the first
Pilgrimage. That
night I faced THE MOMENT of truth, and learned the first of many Earth
shattering concepts about knapping, and other things. I sat at the camp
table with both a Coleman lantern and the fever burning in my eyes. I
had a great rock in my hand and was fondling it, gazing into its rainbow
of color. My wife leaned
over, rubbed against my arm and cooed into my ear, “Wish you would
look at ME that way.” Now
the Fever told me that I would never live to be happy unless I could
hunt for rocks and beat them into submission; it was time to act! I told her, “I can’t appreciate what I can’t see, do
something about it!” She did, I did, we did, and I have the best
rock-hunting buddy in the world. Of course, the FEVER is unrelenting for the first two or three years, until you can make a point that would at least do the job. Then it starts to let up a little, you look up from the knapping chair, and your children are half grown. It’s strange how that happens. Somewhere along the line, the car disappeared and I was driving a three quarter ton 4X4 pickup, and the bed was always seemed full of rock. Never have been able to get a washer and dryer in the back of that truck! Somehow,
a twenty-four inch rock saw appeared at our old shed, and my memory of
how we got it and where it came from is foggy and a little blurred. The
FEVER left little doubt; it was the right thing to do. Now
the good news, as the FEVER diminishes a little with time and a good
supply of rock; we have never
lost anyone, that we know of. I have a couple of Doctor friends who have
suffered through medical school and the FEVER, and both said the FEVER
was the worst! Several experts in the field have now told me that Flint Knapping FEVER is in fact, a deep-rooted instinct and not an illness at all, but you could have fooled me. They tell us that it’s right alongside of protecting your wife and family, the urge to go out and kill something to feed your family or to put a roof over their heads. After several thousand generations, it’s still there and doing well! The best we can do is try to keep it under control in public, and work your way through it in private! Modern medicine can’t help! I’m
sure that about all knappers have horror stories of some type to tell
about how the FEVER hit them! On the other hand, some folks who had
nothing to do with Flint Knapping, have gotten caught in the crossfire
and paid dearly; here is one such case. During
the reign of King Tutankhamen, ancient Egypt was on a roll; gold flowed
like the Nile, and a thriving flintknapping industry was present up and
down the mighty river. This industry was made possible because of the
huge quantity and high quality of their flint.
The major flint source being used in the Thebes area was across
the river, in dry streambeds and old channels of the river. This is very
near the Valley of the Kings. Most
of the tools being made were the type to be used in excavating tombs
into the soft limestone of the area.
(Seton-Karr:1905, Mackay:1921, pp.155-6). A side benefit were the
nodules of flint that were imbedded in the limestone, and removed while
the tombs were chiseled into the mountain side. These were stacked
outside the tomb and saved for later use, and with this being a
frost-free area, the flint would last nearly forever. Suddenly
things changed for King Tut, the reigning Pharaoh of Egypt in the New
Kingdom. He was very young (about 19) and died suddenly, or was more
likely murdered. It took 70 days to properly prepare him, and to gather
up the wealth of Egypt to bury with him; then he was put to rest in a
tomb that was made for someone else, but hurriedly reworked to
accommodate the young King. He lay in all the splendor of ancient Egypt,
encased in a 1800-pound, pure gold coffin. Gathered around him were all
the things that he had treasured, and felt he would need in the
afterlife, safely buried 100 feet into the mountain, under tremendous
security. Time would prove that these elaborate measures protected him
for 3,300 years. But it only took a short amount of the FEVER to undo it
all. Immediately
after his death, Tut’s tomb was put under heavy guard. These guards
worked specifically for the new reigning pharaoh.
Their job kept them camped and on-duty at the site of the tomb,
in the Valley of the Kings. They were well paid, for the time, on the
same scale as the ancient, master stone engravers, the ancient tablets
reported. One of the
“perks” was an endless supply of both beer and grain. These guards
had the honor of being some of the very first bureaucratic
“double-dippers.” For
some 1000 years, the guards placed on his tomb spent their spare time
knapping. We have to speculate at this point, on whether the FEVER bit
them, or they were just plain greedy. But irregardless, knap they did.
The products they turned out included small arrowheads to trade to
nomadic tribesmen for tabular flint. Knife blades for general use, as
well as picks and mauls were produced, which were used for cutting
tombs. The money flowed in, both in the form of gold and premium flint
that was delivered to the site. You have to remember that flint was
indeed a form of currency; Even though the Egyptians made and used
bronze, for the working man this was still the Stone Age. All
good things have to come to an end. As Egypt declined with time, all the
guards were pulled off of the tombs in the Valley of the Kings. At this
point, Tut’s luck was still holding. 1000 years of knapping had
covered the entire entrance to his tomb with debitage (flint chips).
Also, still neatly stacked around the entrance were tons of tabular
flint. After
the passage of another 2000 years, Howard Carter showed up in the Valley
of the Kings. In his pocket was a fat contract with Lord Canarvan of
England, and a permit to dig in the Valley of Kings, from the Department
of Antiquities of Egypt. Mr. Carter soon found that the money he
received each year was enough to maintain a massive dig with several
hundred employees, and for himself, to live as he had only dreamed
about. It
was discovered many years later in his own notes, that some 6 or 7 years
before he proclaimed finding King Tut’s tomb, that he had in fact,
deciphered the secret of the flint chips and flint boulders around the
entrance to the tombs (Carter:1972 pp. 29-30). But, not wanting to give
up the money that he received each year (known as a stipend) he managed
to prolong his exploration and high living, and lead Lord Canarvan down
the proverbial garden path. After
many years of disappointment and huge amounts of money, Canarvan wrote a
scathing letter to Carter informing him to produce very quickly, or the
money would stop. Within days, Carter cabled Canarvan that he had
located King Tut’s tomb. It was clear that he had known of its
location for some period of time. The rest of the story has been well
documented, by many others. The
moral of the story is, that if the FEVER hadn’t severely attacked a
number of flint knappers, King Tut would probably still own that
1800-pound, solid gold coffin. It’s amazing what a few flint chips can
do to you!
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