For
the first time, an almost 4000 year-old funerary garden is uncovered in Draa
Abul Naga necropolis on Luxor’s west bank. Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
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Mahmoud
Afifi, head of the Ancient Egyptian Antiquities sector at the Ministry of
Antiquities told Ahram Online that the garden was found in the open courtyard
of a Middle Kingdom rock-cut tomb and the layout of the garden measures 3m x 2m
and is divided into squares of about 30cm.
These
squares, he pointed out, seem to have contained different kinds of plants and
flowers. In the middle of the garden the mission has located two elevated spots
that was once used for the cultivation of a small tree or bush.
At
one of the corners, Afifi continued, the roots and the trunk of a 4,000
year-old small tree have been preserved to a height of 30cm. Next to it, a bowl
containing dried dates and other fruits, which could have been presented as
offerings, were found.
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He
explained that similar funerary gardens were only found on the walls of a number
of New Kingdom tombs where a small and squared garden is represented at the
entrance of the funerary monument, with a couple of trees next to it. It
probably had a symbolic meaning and must have played a role in the funerary
rites. However, Galan asserted, these gardens have never been found in ancient
Thebes and the recent discovery offers archaeological confirmation of an aspect
of ancient Egyptian culture and religion that was hitherto only known through
iconography.
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He
explained that early studies reveal that the owner of one of them was called
Renef‐Seneb, and
the owner of the second was “the citizen Khemenit, son of the lady of the
house, Idenu.” The latter mentions the gods Montu, Ptah, Sokar and Osiris.
“These
discoveries underscore the relevance of the central area of Dra Abul Naga as a
sacred place for the performance of a variety of cultic activities during the
Middle Kingdom,” asserted Galan. The
Spanish mission has been working for 16 years in Dra Abul Naga, on the West
Bank of Luxor, around the early 18th Dynasty rock-cut tombs of Djehuty and
Hery.
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