
Six mysterious deaths famously attributed to the 'Curse of Tutankhamun' were actually murders by a notorious satanist, a new book claims. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, London was gripped by the mythical curse of the Egyptian boy-king, whose tomb was uncovered by British archaeologist Howard Carter.
More than 20 people linked to the opening of the pharaoh's burial chamber in Luxor in 1923 bizarrely died over the following years - six of them in the capital. But the new book claims satanist Aleister Crowley was responsible for six of them - and encouraged a seventh murder.
The book, researched by historian Mark Benyon, also draws parallels between Crowley and Jack the Ripper.
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