Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Egypt announces tomb find

It’s 3,500 years old, belongs to royal goldsmith

- NARIMAN EL-MOFTY

LUXOR, Egypt - Egypt on Saturday announced the discovery in the southern city of Luxor of a pharaonic tomb belonging to a royal goldsmith who lived more than 3,500 years ago and whose work was dedicated to the ancient Egyptian god Amun.

The tomb, on the west bank of the Nile River in a cemetery for noblemen and top officials, is a relatively modest discovery, but one that authoritie­s have announced with a great deal of fanfare in a bid to boost the country’s slowly recovering tourism industry.

“We want tomorrow’s newspapers to speak about Egypt and make people want to come to Egypt,” Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled el-Anani told reporters, reflecting the country’s desperate need to revitalize tourism.

El-Anani said the tomb was not in good condition, but contained a damaged sandstone statue of the goldsmith, named Amenemhat, and his wife. Between the couple stands a smaller figure of one of their sons.

The tomb has two burial shafts, one of which was likely dug to bury the mummies of the goldsmith and his wife. It also contained wooden funerary masks and a collection of statues of the couple, according to a ministry statement. Three mummies were found in the shaft.

It said a second shaft contained a collection of sarcophagi from the 21st and 22nd dynasties.

The tomb belonged to the 18th pharaonic dynasty when Amun was the most powerful deity. It was discovered by Egyptian archaeolog­ists.

 ?? NARIMAN EL-MOFTY / AP ?? Wood parts from coffins are displayed at the entrance of a tomb that belongs to a royal goldsmith.
NARIMAN EL-MOFTY / AP Wood parts from coffins are displayed at the entrance of a tomb that belongs to a royal goldsmith.

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