Polish archaeologists working in Egypt have discovered several dozen mummies from around 2000 years ago. The mummies were discovered during excavations near the world’s oldest pyramid in the Saqqara ancient burial ground that served as the necropolis for the Ancient Egyptian capital of Memphis.
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| Mummies discovered within the 'Dry Moat' [Credit: J. Dąbrowski/PCMA] |
Its discoveries include showing that there were two necropolises to the to the west of the mortuary complex of the Pyramid of Djoser, which with its characteristic step form, built in the 27th Century BC, is the world’s oldest pyramid.
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| Most of the burials were poorly preserved and the coffins decayed [Credit: J. Dąbrowski/PCMA] |
In contrast to the ornate sarcophagi and burial chambers associated with the Pharaohs, the majority of the mummies they discovered were laid to rest with only modest arrangements.
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| Blue Anubis painted on the base of one of the coffins [Credit: A. Kowalska/PCMA] |
Most of the burials were poorly preserved – the wood of the coffins of those in the “dry moat” decayed.
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| Blue Anubis, believed to be a protector of graves, was found on the base of the coffins [Credit: J. Dąbrowski/PCMA] |
“The artisan who painted it apparently could not read and perhaps tried to reproduce something that he had seen before. In any case, some of the painted characters are not hieroglyphic signs of the hieroglyphic writing and the whole does not create an intelligible text,” he explained.
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| The trench surrounding the Pyramid of Djoser could have been ‘a path to the afterlife’ [Credit: K. Kuraszkiewicz/PCMA] |
“The dry moat could have been a model of a path, which the pharaoh had to cross to reach eternal life, a path with obstacles such as walls with passages located near the top, perhaps guarded by dangerous creatures,” he said.
Author: Anne Chatham | Source: The First News [June 28, 2019]











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