A
granite pyramid peak, probably belonging to Queen Ankhnespepy II, was unearthed
in Sakkara. Written By/ Nevine El-Aref.
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The Uncovered Pyramidion
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A
Swiss-French archaeological mission directed by Professor Philippe Collombert
from the University of Geneva has unearthed a large granite pyramidion, or
pyramid peak, probably belonging Queen Ankhnespepy II, in the Sakkara
necropolis.
This
is the second discovery in a week by the Swiss-French mission, according to the
secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, Mostafa Waziri.
The
team previously unearthed the largest obelisk fragment ever discovered from the
Old Kingdom, measuring 2.5 meters tall. This
week's discovery measures 1.3 metres high and 1.1 metres wide on its sides. Its
upper part is partly destroyed, but shows that it had been covered by metal
foil, either gold or copper.
“The
surface of the pyramidion’s lower part is not clean, as if it had been reused,
or better, as if it had been left unfinished,” Collombert pointed out, adding
that the area under the pyramidion is clearly smooth, and also shows the usual
carved recesses that permit its fixation of top of the pyramid.
“We
think that it is the pyramidion of the satellite pyramid of Queen Ankhnespepy
II, as it was found near the place where we should expect the satellite pyramid
to have been located,” Collombert told Ahram Online. He
asserted that this fragment comrpised the only part of this secondary pyramid
yet to be found. The queen's main burial pyramid was discovered in Saqqara in
1998.
The
Head of the Ancient Egyptian Sector at Egypt's Ministry of Antiquities, Ayman
Ashmawy, said that the mission is progressing well this archaeological season,
and that the new discovery suggests the team will soon locate the queen's
complete funerary complex. Queen
Ankhnespepy II (ca. 2288-2224 BC) was a 6th Dynasty consort of King Pepy I and
the mother of King Pepy II.