CAIRO: Egyptian authorities announced on Saturday the discovery of an ancient tomb in Luxor dating back around 3,500 years that archaeologists believe holds the remains of an 18th dynasty royal.
The tomb was unearthed by Egyptian and British researchers on the west bank of the River Nile, where the famous Valley of the Queens and Valley of the Kings lie, said Mostafa Waziri, head of Egypt´s Supreme Council of Antiquities.
“The first elements discovered so far inside the tomb seem to indicate that it dates back to the 18th dynasty” of pharaohs Akhenaton and Tutankhamun, Waziri said in a statement.
The 18th dynasty, part of the period of Egyptian history known as the New Kingdom, ended in 1292 BC and is considered among the most prosperous years of Ancient Egypt.
Piers Litherland of the University of Cambridge, head of the British research mission, said the tomb could be of a royal wife or princess of Thutmosid lineage.
Egyptian archaeologist Mohsen Kamel said the tomb´s interior was “in poor condition”.
Parts of it including inscriptions were “destroyed in ancient floods which filled the burial chambers with sand and limestone sediment”, Kamel added, according to the antiquities board´s statement.
Egypt has unveiled several major archaeological discoveries in recent years, most notably in the Saqqara necropolis south of the capital Cairo.
Orban’s Fidesz remains the most popular party in Hungary
Azerbaijan has been demanding the villages’ return as a precondition for a peace deal after more than three decades...
The Republican Party and the Trump campaign said in a statement that they plan to recruit an army of poll watchers
All three suffered some frostbite to their cheeks, despite wearing heated masks
Sunak sought to appeal to core Conservative voters by warning the current welfare bill was fiscally unsustainable
The inquiry published its report in 2010, finding that some soldiers had knowingly put forward false accounts