The Borneo Post

Once overlooked, 2,500-year old coffin may offer clues into ancient Egypt

-

SYDNEY: Australian academics could help unlock mysteries around ancient Egypt af ter discoverin­g that a 2,500-year old coffin might contain the remains of a prestigiou­s mummy.

The University of Sydney acquired the coffin 150 years ago and a series of academics incorrect ly classi f ied it as empty.

Their error was only discovered by chance late last year when more recent academics removed the lid to the coffin and discovered the tattered remains of a mummy.

The discovery offers scientists an almost unique opportunit­y to test the cadaver.

“We can start asking some intimate questions that those bones will hold around pathology, about diet, about diseases, about the li festyle of that person - how they lived and died,” said Jamie Fraser, senior curator at the Nicholson Museum at the University of Sydney.

Whole mummies are typically lef t i nt act , l imit ing t hei r scientific benefits.

Adding to the potential rewards is the possibilit­y that the remains are those of a distinguis­hed woman of an age where little is known, Fraser said.

Hieroglyph­s show the original occupant of the cof fin was a female called Mer- Neith- it- es, who academics believe was a high priestess in 600 BC, the last time Egypt was ruled by native Egyptians.

“We know from the hieroglyph­s that Mer- Neith-it- es worked in the Temple of Sekhmet, the lionheaded goddess,” Fraser said.

“There are some clues in hieroglyph­s and the way the mummificat­ion has been done and the style of the coffin that tell us about how this Temple of Sekhmet may have worked.” — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A 2,500-year old coffin that may contain a mummy lies at the University of Sydney in Sydney.
— Reuters photo A 2,500-year old coffin that may contain a mummy lies at the University of Sydney in Sydney.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? A 2,500-year old coffin that may contain a mummy lies at the University of Sydney.
— Reuters photo A 2,500-year old coffin that may contain a mummy lies at the University of Sydney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia