On Saturday my family and I went to the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia to see the King Tut Exhibit. I Saw it at the Smithsonian in 7th grade (1976 or 1977) but I appreciated it more as an adult.
The detail of many items is unbelievable when you considered what they had to work with 3200 years ago. Some of the items were things that King Tut actually used when he was alive and some were made specifically for the burial in the tomb. Some of things were scale models or non-functional likeness of real items.
The exhibit will be there until Sept 30th, so if you're planning to be in the Phila area, you may want to see the exhibit. It could be a once in a lifetime opportunity because you never know if Egypt will allow the items to go on tour again.
As far as taking your children, it would depend on their age and interest. You can buy tickets in advance and they are for a specific date and time to control the number of guests in at one time. You have to buy a museum admission also to get in so allow ample time to tour the other exhibits too.
The exhibit website is: http://www.kingtut.org/about_the_exhibition
The Franklin Institute site is: http://www2.fi.edu/
The detail of many items is unbelievable when you considered what they had to work with 3200 years ago. Some of the items were things that King Tut actually used when he was alive and some were made specifically for the burial in the tomb. Some of things were scale models or non-functional likeness of real items.
The exhibit will be there until Sept 30th, so if you're planning to be in the Phila area, you may want to see the exhibit. It could be a once in a lifetime opportunity because you never know if Egypt will allow the items to go on tour again.
As far as taking your children, it would depend on their age and interest. You can buy tickets in advance and they are for a specific date and time to control the number of guests in at one time. You have to buy a museum admission also to get in so allow ample time to tour the other exhibits too.
The exhibit website is: http://www.kingtut.org/about_the_exhibition
The Franklin Institute site is: http://www2.fi.edu/