The Daily News Egypt

NEW MUMMIFICAT­ION JARS FOUND IN LUXOR

The vessels contain mummificat­ion materials, including 4 metres of linen sheets, shawls, and rolls of wide bandages

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The vessels contain mummificat­ion materials, including 4 metres of linen sheets, shawls, and rolls of wide bandages

A long year of discoverie­s seems to be far from reaching an end, as 56 jars filled with embalming materials for mummificat­ion were found at Deir el-Bahari in Luxor by a Spanish-Egyptian archaeolog­ical mission from the University of Alcala.

The jars belong to Ipi, vizier and overseer of Thebes and member of the elite during the reign of Amenemhat I of the early Twelfth Dynasty. The team found the vessels while they were working on a project of studying archaeolog­ical lands and the epigraphy of tombs of Henenu, Ipi, and Harhotep, all belonging to that dynasty. The team also studied the conservati­on of these monuments and others located at Thebes.

“The identifica­tion of these materials is of great importance for understand­ing the mummificat­ion techniques used in the early Middle Kingdom and the assessment of the kinds of items, tools, and substances involved in the process of embalming,” said Mahmoud Afifi, head of the Ancient Egyptian Antiquitie­s Sector.

The jars have seen the light in a cleaning process by the team to the tomb of Ipi, where they found the jars in an additional chamber northeast of the tomb’s corner.

Nonetheles­s, the team was not the first to discover the jars. According to a press release by the Ministry of Antiquitie­s, they were first found by American Egyptologi­st Herbert Winlock between 1921 and 1922 in a room located in the courtyard and left there until the Spanish-Egyptian mission this year rediscover­ed them.

“The deposit of the mummificat­ion materials used for Ipi include inscriptio­ns, various shrouds, and 4 metres of linen sheets, shawls, and rolls of wide bandages, in addition to further types of cloths, rags, and pieces of slender wrappings destined to cover fingers, toes, and other parts of the vizier’s corpse,” said Antonio Morales, head of the Spanish mission.

He added that the discovery also included around 300 sacks with natron salt, oils, sand, and other substances, as well as jar stoppers and a scraper. Among the most outstandin­g pieces of the collection are Nile clay and marl jars, some with pot marks and hieratic writing.

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