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Pharaohs of The Sun by Guy de la Bedoyere (Omnibus)

How Egypt's despots and dreamers drove the rise and fall of Tutankhamun's dynasty. Read by Deborah Findlay.

3,500 years ago, Egypt entered the 18th Dynasty with a succession of kings and queens who were obsessed with wealth and power. They spent Egypt’s money on grandiose temple building projects at Karnak and Luxor on the River Nile, and extravagant tombs designed to bear witness to their magnificence.

The wealth of the kings came at a huge cost to the people of Egypt whose needs were not uppermost in the rulers' concerns. Neighbouring countries were held to ransom by the power of the Egyptian army and the wealth gained in response was used solely for the kings’ purposes.

The dynasty included the female ruler, Hatshepsut, the religious reformer Akhenaten and his queen Nefertiti, and the most famous yet short lived of them all, the boy king Tutankhamun. Although his reign was insignificant the splendour of his tomb has been in the spotlight ever since it was discovered by Howard Carter in November 1922.

Omnibus of a five-part abridgment by Libby Spurrier

Read by Deborah Findlay.

Producer: Celia de Wolff

A Pier production for ÃÛÑ¿´«Ã½ Radio 4, first broadcast in July 2022.

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1 hour, 15 minutes

Last on

Sun 5 Oct 2025 02:35

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  • Sat 4 Oct 2025 18:30
  • Sun 5 Oct 2025 02:35