Archaeology always fascinates me, and finding something as large as 250 rock-cut tombs is pretty amazing. You'd think with all of the explorations, planes and satellites in operation around the world that big things wouldn't stay hidden for long, but this finding did until recently. About 250 tombs, some with fancy layouts and hieroglyphics, have been discovered cut into a hill at Al-Hamidiyah cemetery to the east of Sohag, in Egypt's Eastern Desert, about 240 miles (386 kilometers) southeast of Cairo. Here's the story>>
(Caption: (COMBO) This combination of handout pictures provided by Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities on May 11, 2021 shows a view of newly discovered tombs in the southern province of Sohag, dating back about 4,200 years. – The graves “include some with a well or several burial wells and other cemeteries with a sloping corridor that ends with a burial room,” the ministry said in a statement. They range in age “from the end of the Old Kingdom to the end of the Ptolemaic period,” it added. (Photos by – / Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities / AFP)Huge cemetery with at least 250 rock-cut tombs discovered in Egypt
The latest of the tombs found in the cemetery date to almost 2,100 years ago, the end of what modern-day scholars call the "Ptolemaic Period." At this time, pharaohs descended from Ptolemy I, who was one of Alexander the Great's generals, ruled Egypt. Roman power in the region was growing around 2,100 years ago, and in 30 B.C., after Cleopatra VII died by suicide, Egypt became a Roman province.
The team discovered numerous artifacts inside the tombs, including cups, jars and plates — some of which were full-sized examples that may have been used in daily life, and others that were miniature vessels possibly used as symbolic offerings for the deceased, the ministry said in the statement. The tombs also contained painted spherical vessels that could have been used to store liquids. What was left of a round metal mirror was found in one tomb, and many of the tombs held both animal and human remains.
Research at the site is ongoing and more tombs may be found in the future, Waziri said.
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