Tutankhamun's Treasures - Crook and Flail

Large Flail of Tutankhamun
Bronze handle covered with gold and glass, knots of gilded wood and carnelian
Height 42.9cm (almost 17 inches)
Grand Egyptian Museum, #15938 (Formerly JE 61760)
Copper Heqa Crook of Tutankhamun Inlaid with Glass and Gold
Height 43.3cm (17 inches)
Grand Egyptian Museum, #31975 (Formerly JE 61762)
"Both this crook and the flail were found in the cartouche-shaped box. Tutankhamun's name is inscribed on both. [These] and another royal crook and flail from the tomb are the only examples ever discovered." (Info card) "The other flail and the crook from the Antechamber are significantly smaller than this set, measuring 13.2 inches (33.5 cm) in length. The caps of this smaller set are inscribed with the young king's original birth name, Tutankhaten. These were likely used for the coronation; their smaller size can be taken as evidence that the king was not fully grown when he ascended the throne." (Zahi Hawass, Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs (National Geographic 2005), page 187) These are the ones used in his life, not including the ones he was buried with.