The Saqqara necropolis
southwest of Cairo has yielded yet a new discovery of 14 intact and sealed
sarcophagi estimated to be 2,500 years old. The sarcophagi, or ornate coffins,
are made of wood and still retain some of their original colour.
This discovery brings the total number of newly unearthed coffins to 27, after 13 were discovered in similar condition earlier this month in a neighboring burial shaft.
The total number of coffins and artefacts buried in this site are as yet unknown according to Waziri, but El-Enany said that it “includes the largest number of coffins in one burial since the discovery of the Al-Asasif cachette.”
This discovery brings the total number of newly unearthed coffins to 27, after 13 were discovered in similar condition earlier this month in a neighboring burial shaft.
The total number of coffins and artefacts buried in this site are as yet unknown according to Waziri, but El-Enany said that it “includes the largest number of coffins in one burial since the discovery of the Al-Asasif cachette.”
The Ministry of Tourism and
Antiquities has published a series of videos teasing at footage of the
discoveries, in the most recent of which Minister Khaled El-Enany declares that
this is only the beginning. In a video published earlier this month, Waziri and
world-renowned Egyptologist Zahi Hawass show a few shots of the colourful,
newly unearthed discoveries.
Source:egyptianstreets
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