The Herald on Sunday

Exciting discovery as ancient lost city found in Egypt

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EGYPTIAN archaeolog­ists have unearthed a 3,000-year-old lost city, complete with mud brick houses, artefacts and tools from pharaonic times.

Noted archaeolog­ist Zahi Hawass said an Egyptian mission had discovered the mortuary city in the southern province of Luxor.

It dates back to what is considered a golden era of ancient Egypt, the period under King Amenhotep III of the 18th dynasty.

“Many foreign missions searched for this city and never found it,” Mr Hawass said in a statement.

The city, built on the western bank of the Nile River, was once the largest administra­tive and industrial settlement of the pharaonic empire, he added.

Last year, archaeolog­ists started excavating in the area searching for the mortuary temple of king Tutankhamu­n.

However, within weeks, the statement said, archaeolog­ists found mud brick formations that eventually turned out to be a well-preserved large city. City walls, and even rooms filled with utensils used in daily life, are said to be present.

“The archaeolog­ical layers have laid untouched for thousands of years, left by the ancient residents as if it were yesterday,” the press release said.

The newly-unearthed city is located between the temple of King Rameses III and the colossi of Amenhotep III on the west bank of the Nile River in Luxor.

The city continued to be used by Amenhotep III’s grandson, Tutankhamu­n, and then subsequent­ly his successor king Ay. Betsy Bryan, professor of Egyptology at Johns Hopkins University, said the discovery of the lost city was the most important archaeolog­ical find since the tomb of Tutankhamu­n.

King Tut became a household name and helped renew interest in ancient Egypt when his tomb in the Valley of the Kings was discovered nearly fully intact in 1922.

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 ??  ?? Archaeolog­ists have also found clay caps of wine vessels, rings, scarabs, coloured pottery, and spinning and weaving tools
Archaeolog­ists have also found clay caps of wine vessels, rings, scarabs, coloured pottery, and spinning and weaving tools

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