The Jerusalem Post

Egypt uncovers 2,500-year-old mummy at forgotten cemetery

- • By LENA MASRI

MINYA, Egypt (Reuters) – Egypt has unveiled the 2,500-year-old mummy of a high priest at an ancient cemetery south of Cairo.

Egyptologi­st Zahi Hawass and an Egyptian team opened three sealed sarcophagi from the 26th Dynasty.

One contained the well-preserved mummy of a powerful priest, wrapped in linen and decorated with a golden figure depicting Isis, an ancient Egyptian goddess.

The team also opened two other sarcophagi, one containing a female mummy decorated with blue beads and another with a father in a family tomb. The finds were revealed live on air on the Discovery Channel on Sunday.

At the burial site in Minya province, the team also found a rare wax head. “I never discovered in the late period anything like this,” Hawass said.

Egyptian archaeolog­ists discovered the site a year and a half ago and the excavation is ongoing.

“I really believe that this site needs excavation maybe for the coming 50 years,” Hawass told Reuters a day before the sarcophagi were opened. He expects more tombs to be found there.

In 1927, a huge limestone sarcophagu­s was found in the area and placed in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, but the site was then forgotten, Hawass said.

But, two years ago, an unauthoriz­ed digger was found at the site and stopped, he said. That’s what alerted archaeolog­ists and excavation began.

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