A team of French diggers has restored three Sudanese artefacts, including a 3,500-year-old wall relief, and handed them to the African country's national museum on Thursday, a French archaeologist said.
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A visitor looks at a wall relief inscription, discovered at the temple of Soleb, on display at the Sudan National Museum [Credit: Ebrahim Hamid/AFP] |
The items are a wall painting of an ancient Kandaka Nubian queen, a Meroite stela and a wall relief inscription believed to be almost 3,500 years old.
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Marc Maillot, director of the French archaeological unit in Sudan, stands next to an ancient wall painting displayed at the National Museum of Sudan in Khartoum [Credit: Ebrahim Hamid/AFP] |
The wall painting was found at El-Hassa site, the stela discovered at Sedeinga and the relief at the temple of Soleb, where French diggers along with Sudanese counterparts have conducted extensive archaeological work for several years.
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A stela, discovered at Sedeinga pyramids, is displayed at the National Museum of Sudan in Khartoum [Credit: Ebrahim Hamid/AFP] |
For decades international archaeologists have worked extensively in Sudan, proving that the northeast African nation has its own extensive wealth of ancient relics and was not merely a satellite of neighbouring Egypt.
Archaeologists are convinced that many kingdoms still lie buried, waiting to be discovered.
Source: AFP [September 19, 2019]
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