Mystery pharaoh and his tomb identified in Egypt

Started by jimmy olsen, January 15, 2014, 06:24:15 PM

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jimmy olsen

Awesome!  :cool:
http://www.nbcnews.com/science/mystery-pharaoh-his-tomb-identified-egypt-2D11934339
QuoteMystery pharaoh and his tomb identified in Egypt
Charlene Gubash

37 minutes ago

CAIRO — A previously unknown pharaoh and his burial place have been unearthed amid the tombs of other Egyptian kings, and archaeologists say the find could lead to still more royal discoveries in the area.

The pharaoh's name, Senebkay, was found inscribed on the wall of a burial chamber that's part of the Abydos archaeological site, near the southern city of Sohag. Fragments of the name appeared on one list of Egyptian kings and queens, but no other trace of Senebkay had been found until now, said Ali Asfar, head of antiquities for the Egyptian government.

"This was the first time in history to discover the king," Asfar told NBC News on Wednesday.

He and other archaeologists say Senebkay lived roughly 3,650 years ago, during the second intermediate period of ancient Egyptian history. That was an era when several rulers vied for power — setting the stage for the rise of Egypt's New Kingdom around 1550 B.C.

'Lost dynasty'
Senebkay's tomb was found earlier this month by a team of archaeologists led by the University of Pennsylvania's Josef Wegner. They came upon the structure while excavating the adjacent tomb of an earlier pharaoh, King Sobekhotep I.

The newfound tomb contains what appear to be the plundered remains of a royal burial, including the pharaoh's pulled-apart skeleton. Senebkay was apparently 5-foot-10 and died in his mid- to late 40s, archaeologists said.

Wegner told NBC News that the find could point the way to a previously unknown pharaonic dynasty.

"We discovered an unknown king plus a lost dynasty," he said. "It looks likely that all of the 16 kings are all buried there. ... We now have the tomb for first or second king of this dynasty. There should be a whole series of the others."

Shades of King Tut
He described his team's entry into the tomb's decorated burial chamber as an experience similar to what archaeologist Howard Carter might have felt when he found Tutankhamen's tomb in 1922.

"It unfolded over a couple of days," Wegner said. "It was a little bit like King Tut, in that we found the entrance first and it led us down to a burial chamber. We reached a painted limestone chamber with cartouches and the titular of a pharaoh. ... In Abydos there is lots of sand, and everything is deeply buried. You can dig day after day, and then this....We were standing there looking dumbfounded at the colorful wall decoration."

The discovery of a reused burial chest helped him date the discovery.

"Tomb robbers had stripped it, but it still had the prescription of Sobekhotep on the wood," Wegner said. "The fact that they were reusing wood would suggest that it was relatively soon after the earlier tomb of Sobekhotep."

The reuse of materials from previous reigns and the relatively rustic artistry suggest a lack of stability and wealth, Wegner said. "It suggests that the king had economic challenges, which has to do with the period of struggle and fragmentation of kingdom."

Wegner believes he will find much more when he returns to excavate in the spring.

"Where there are king's tombs, there are also queen's tombs, and tombs of high officials of the royal court," he told NBC News. "The discovery has given an interesting look at a period of fragmentation and political conflict, struggling with rival kingdoms of the north and south."

Charlene Gubash is an NBC News producer in Cairo.
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Siege

So, all those stories in the Arabian Nights, or the One Thousand and One Nights, as it was translated into Hebrew, in which the main characters find caves full of gold artifacts, were referring to ancient Egyptian royal tombs?

Now it makes sense.

But I thought all those stories were based on earlier Hindu literature....


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"Those who beat their swords into plowshares will plow for those who don't."

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Savonarola

Quote from: Siege on January 16, 2014, 08:16:17 AM
So, all those stories in the Arabian Nights, or the One Thousand and One Nights, as it was translated into Hebrew, in which the main characters find caves full of gold artifacts, were referring to ancient Egyptian royal tombs?

Now it makes sense.

But I thought all those stories were based on earlier Hindu literature....

In the Rig Veda all the treasure caves are filled with cows.   Butter is the real treasure.   :)
In Italy, for thirty years under the Borgias, they had warfare, terror, murder and bloodshed, but they produced Michelangelo, Leonardo da Vinci and the Renaissance. In Switzerland, they had brotherly love, they had five hundred years of democracy and peace—and what did that produce? The cuckoo clock

Tonitrus

So the legend is true?  Butter Jesus did travel to India?

Ed Anger

Quote from: Tonitrus on January 16, 2014, 10:52:47 PM
So the legend is true?  Butter Jesus did travel to India?

Big butter Jesus died for your sins.
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