The Borneo Post

Egypt unearths tomb of ancient high priest

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CAIRO: Egyptian archaeolog­ists have discovered the tomb of a priest dating back more than 4,400 years in the pyramid complex of Saqqara south of the capital Cairo, authoritie­s said yesterday.

“Today we are announcing the last discovery of the year 2018, it’s a new discovery, it’s a private tomb,” Antiquitie­s Minister Khaled el-Enany told an audience of invited guests including reporters.

“It is exceptiona­lly well preserved, coloured, with sculpture inside.

It belongs to a high official priest (and) is more than 4,400 years old,” he said.

The tomb belongs to ‘Wahtye’, a high priest who served during the fifth dynasty reign of King Neferirkar­e, the antiquitie­s ministry said.

His tomb is decorated with scenes showing the royal priest alongside his mother, wife and other members of his family, the ministry said in a statement.

It also contains more than a dozen niches and 24 colourful statues of the cleric and members of his family, it said.

In November archeology officials announced the discovery in Saqqara of seven sarcophagi, some dating back more than 6,000 years, during excavation work started in April by the same archaeolog­ical mission.

Three of those tombs contained mummified cats and scarabs.

The Saqqara necropolis south of Cairo is home to the famous Djoser pyramid, a more than 4,600-year-old monument which dominates the site and the country’s first.

The tomb, built by the master architect Imhotep for the Pharoah Djoser, stood 62 metres tall originally and is considered the oldest building in the world built entirely of stone.

 ??  ?? A general view of a newly-discovered tomb belonging to the high priest ‘Wahtye’ at the Saqqara necropolis, 30 kilometres south of the Egyptian capital Cairo. — AFP photo
A general view of a newly-discovered tomb belonging to the high priest ‘Wahtye’ at the Saqqara necropolis, 30 kilometres south of the Egyptian capital Cairo. — AFP photo

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