Magzoid

The discovery of 60 mummies near Luxor,

Egypt, indicates an elaborate burial site

- - news@magzoid.com

According to Spanish press sources, a group of Spanish archaeolog­ists has found tombs in the ancient Egyptian city of Luxor that contain some 60 mummies. The Vizier Amenhotep Huy Project, a Spanish archaeolog­ical mission, found the tombs late last year in the southern Egyptian city, according to a video released on YouTube by the Spanish news agency Efe.

Francisco Martin-Valentin, director of the Madrid-based Institute of Ancient Egyptian Studies, and Teresa Bedman, the institute’s co-director, served as the mission’s leaders. An associated piece from Efe was also shared on Twitter by the Institute of Ancient Egyptian Studies.

According to Martin-Valentin, Amenhotep-Huy, who served as the vizier (a high-ranking official) under pharaoh Amenhotep III, is connected to the two tombs, which were constructe­d after the 18th dynasty (1550-1292 BC). The vizier’s tomb, a chapel with 30 columns, is connected to the recently found tombs by two rooms.

According to Martin-Valentin, “In the excavation­s of two secondary tombs existing in the courtyard of the main tomb of the Vizier Amen-Hotep Huy (Asasif no -28), stripped mummies—more or less complete—and parts of mummies have been found, which after the examinatio­n of our anthropolo­gists testify to belong to about 60 individual­s, originally buried in these tombs.”

The latest discoverie­s, according to MartinVale­ntin, “suggest that the vizier’s tomb at some time became a necropolis.” From the archaeolog­ical context, he explains, “We can affirm that the individual­s recovered belong to familial units of, or are connected to, the medium-high clergy of Amun of Karnak.”

A sarcophagu­s adorned with the Pharaoh Amun is among the items from the vizier’s tomb that are now on show in a Luxor Museum exhibition. According to Martin-Valentin, the archaeolog­ical mission will pick back up at the end of September when six columns from the vizier’s chapel have been rebuilt.

We can affirm that the individual­s recovered belong to familial units of, or are connected to, the medium-high clergy of Amun of Karnak.

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