Joann Fletcher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dr. JoAnn Fletcher is an Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Archaeology at the University of York and Consultant Egyptologist for Harrogate Museums and Arts. She has undertaken excavation work in Egypt, Yemen, and the UK, and has examined mummies both on-site and in collections around the world. Dr. Fletcher writes for The Guardian newspaper and the BBC's History Online Web site, and has made numerous appearances on television and radio.

In 2003 Dr. Fletcher took part in a controversial expedition to the Valley of the Kings in Egypt, where she claimed to have found the mummy of the most famous Ancient Egyptian of all, Queen Nefertiti, among the cache in tomb KV35. Her expedition was funded by the Discovery Channel, which also produced a widely-criticized documentary on her findings. Dr. Fletcher's conclusions have been dismissed by some Egyptologists, who claim that the mummy in question was a male as young as 16 years old, and that evidence used to support Dr. Fletcher's theories is insufficient, circumstantial and inconclusive. However, it is debatable that DNA sexing, one of the lines of evidence used, is either (i) reliable in the case of material which has been extensively handled or (ii) that DNA sexing is reliable in material of this age/temperature history.

Dr. Zahi Hawass, head of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, subsequently banned her from working in Egypt because "Dr Fletcher has broken the rules".

  • Fletcher, JoAnn (2004), The Search for Nefertiti: The True Story of an Amazing Discovery. ISBN 0-06-058556-0
  • Delia Pemberton, Joann Fletcher (2004), Treasures of the Pharaohs. ISBN 0-8118-4424-2
  • Fletcher, JoAnn (2002), The Egyptian Book of Living and Dying. ISBN 0-00-765375-1
  • Joann Fletcher, George Hart (2000), Chronicle of a Pharaoh : The Intimate Life of Amenhotep III. ISBN 0-19-521660-1

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