Three coffins, mummies uncovered in ancient tomb
JAMIE TARABAY
The Australian team was exploring a much older tomb — dating back 4,200 years and belonging to a man believed to have been a tutor to the 6th Dynasty King Pepi II — when they moved a pair of statues and discovered the door, said Zahi Hawass, Egypt's top antiquities official.
Inside, they found a 26th Dynasty tomb with "three beautiful coffins," each with a mummy, and "inside one coffin was maybe one of the best mummies ever preserved," Hawass told reporters at the excavation site in the cemetery of Saqqara, 25 kilometres south of Cairo.
"The chest of the mummy is covered with beads. Most of the mummies of this period — about 500 BC — the beads are completely gone, but this mummy has them all," he said, standing over one of the mummies, swathed in turquoise blue beads and bound in strips of black linen.
The names of the mummies have not been determined, but the tomb is thought to be that of a middle-class official.
Hawass said the wooden coffins, called anthropoids because they were in the shape of human beings, bore inscriptions dating to the 26th Dynasty, together with a statue of a god called Petah Sakar. Petah was the god of artisans, Hawass said, while Sakar was the god of the cemetery.
The door was hidden behind 4,200-year-old statues of a man believed to have been Meri, the tutor of Pepi II, and Meri's wife, whose name was not known.
Meri was also believed to oversee four sacred boats found in the pyramids, which were buried with Egypt's kings to help them in the afterlife, Hawass said.
"I believe this discovery can enrich us about two important periods in our history, the Old Kingdom, which dates back 4,200 years, and the 26th Dynasty, that was 2,500 years ago," Hawass said.
According to tradition, Pepi II — the last king of the 6th Dynasty — ruled from 2278-2184 BC, one of the longest in ancient Egyptian history.
Naguib Kanawati, the head of the Australian team from Sydney's Macquarie University, said the site had been under excavation for ten years. It fell into neglect after Pepi II's rule and was covered by 15 metres of sand, until it was used again as a cemetery 2,600 years later.
"By that time the art of mummification was perfected to the extreme," Kanawati said.
Archeologists would begin tests on the mummies to learn more about their medical conditions, including using CT scans, as they are currently doing with King Tutankhamen, Hawass said.
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