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Mummies discovered in ancient Egyptian burial chambers

  • February 02, 2019

Egyptian archaeologists uncovered a tomb containing 40 mummies dating back to the Ptolemaic era from 323 BC to 30 BC, the Ministry of Antiquities said on Saturday.

The embalmed remains were discovered inside four, nine-meter deep burial chambers at the Tuna Al-Gabel archaeological site in Minya, 260 kilometers (160 miles) south of Cairo.

The mummies included 12 children and six animals, while the rest were adult men and women, archaeologist Rami Rasmi told the Agence France-Press news agency.

“All are in a good conservation condition, and some are wrapped in linen, or decorated with Demotic handwriting [an ancient Egyptian script],” a ministry statement said. Others were placed in clay coffins or wooden sarcophagi.

Read more: Archaeologists discover two ancient tombs in Egypt

An archaeologists sits next to a mummy inside a tomb (Reuters/A. Abdallah Dalsh)

The mummies are in good condition and at least 10 are children

Identities not known

Mostafa Waziri, the ministry’s secretary-general, said the identities of the mummies were unclear.

“We have not found names written in hieroglyphics,” he said, adding that the mummification method indicated that those discovered had held relatively important or prestigious positions.

Waziri said shards of pottery and pieces of ancient writing paper found at the site helped researchers to determine its date.

Read more: Large ‘void’ discovered in Egypt’s Great Pyramid of Giza

The Minya graves, discovered during an excavation that started in February last year, are in a communal tomb “probably belonging to a petty bourgeois family,” the ministry added.

The discovery was the first of 2019 and was unearthed through a joint mission with the Research Center for Archaeological Studies of Minya University. 

Egypt has in recent months announced a series of ancient discoveries, in the hope of reviving its battered tourism industry, a primary source of national income.

Read more: Mummies of cats, scarabs found in newly discovered Egyptian tombs

The ancient burial site in Minya (Reuters/A. Abdallah Dalsh)

Egypt’s latest discovery was made at the Tuna Al-Gabel archaeological site in Minya, south of Cairo

The industry has been hard hit over the past decade by the ongoing instability that followed the 2011 uprising against long-time dictator Hosni Mubarak, and an Islamist insurgency that has left almost 800 people dead.

While mummification is mostly associated with ancient Egypt, the practice continued under the kingdom founded by Ptolemy, a successor to Alexander the Great.

Ancient Greek rulers reached the height of their power between the conquests of Alexander the Great and the rise of the Roman empire. 

mm/ng (AFP, dpa, Reuters)

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Article source: https://www.dw.com/en/mummies-discovered-in-ancient-egyptian-burial-chambers/a-47337162

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