The
Late Period burial site was discovered at the Tuna Al-Gabal archaeological site
by a team from Cairo University. Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
Tuna
Al-Gabal archaeological site, near Upper Egypt's El-Minya, buzzed Saturday with
journalists who flocked in to catch a glimpse of a newly discovered cachette of
mummies, dating from the Late Period.
During
excavation work in the area, which neighbours the birds and animals necropolis,
a mission from Cairo University stumbled this week upon the cachette -- a term
that describes an unmarked burial site used to house multiple mummies and
protect them from looting.
Mission
head Salah El-Kholi told Ahram Online that the cachette includes 17 non-royal
mummies wrapped in linen and very well preserved. It was found by chance
through a radar survey carried out in collaboration with experts from the
university's faculty of science in early 2016 that revealed hollow ground.
A mummy inside the newly discovered burial
site in Minya, Egypt May 13, 2017. (Reuters)
|
Minister
of Antiquities Khaled El-Enany described the discovery as important because it
is the first made in the area since the discovery of the birds and animals
necropolis by Egyptologist Sami Gabra between 1931 to 1954.
The
discovery adds to a spate of recent finds at sites across Egypt. Most recently,
a mission from the antiquities ministry stumbled upon the almost intact
funerary collection of Userhat, the chancellor of Thebes during the 18th
dynasty, in the Draa Abul Naga necropolis on Luxor's west bank.
A number of mummies inside the newly discovered burial site in Minya, Egypt May 13, 2017. (Reuters) |
El-Kholi
said that both clay sarcophagi are anthropoid coffins, one of which is in good
condition while the other is partly damaged. Two papyri written in Demotic and
a gold decoration with the shape of a feather were also found.
"This
feather could be decoration on the hair dress of one of the deceased," El-
Kholi said. He
said the papyri would be transferred to the Grand Egyptian Museum for
restoration.
At
a neighbouring site, the mission has also uncovered a number of Roman funerary
houses made of clay. Inside they found a collection of different coins, lamps
and other domestic items.
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