Two ancient Egyptian pieces carved in glass were handed over to Egypt’s
embassy in London.
Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
one of the recovered objects/ photo courtesy of
the ministry of antiquities
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The first one was stolen from the storehouses of Al-Qantara East city,
after being damaged and looted amid the security vacuum following the January
2011 Revolution.
The second, he said, was stolen from the El-Sheikh Ebada site in the
Upper Egyptian city of Minya. With the return of these two objects, Abdel Gawad told Ahram Online,
Egypt has in total recently recovered four items.
He continued to explain that the first was a limestone relief that was
stolen from Queen Hatshepsut’s temple in El-Deir El-Bahari in Luxor. It was
chopped off a wall and illegally smuggled out of the country.
The relief was stolen from the temple in 1975 and resurfaced earlier
this month at a small auction hall in Spain, where it was bought by a British
antiquities dealer. Two months ago the relief was recovered. The second was an ushabti figurine from Qubet Al-Hawa necropolis store
gallery in Aswan and was handed over to the Egyptian embassy in London two days
ago.
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