The Guardian (USA)

'Sensationa­l' Egypt find offers clues in hunt for Cleopatra’s tomb

- Dalya Alberge

She was the fabled queen of ancient Egypt, immortalis­ed over thousands of years as a beautiful seductress. But, despite her fame, Cleopatra’s tomb is one of the great unsolved mysteries.

Some believe she was buried in Alexandria, where she was born and ruled from her royal palace, a city decimated by the tsunami of 365AD. Others suggest her final resting place could be about 30 miles away, in the ancient temple of Taposiris Magna, built by her Ptolemaic ancestors on the Nile Delta.

Now two mummies of high-status individual­s who lived at the time of Cleopatra have been uncovered at Taposiris Magna, a discovery that it is being described as “sensationa­l” because it shows the importance of a necropolis that is being linked to her by the latest finds.

Although the burial chamber had been undisturbe­d for 2,000 years, the mummies are in a poor state of preservati­on because water had seeped through. But crucial evidence reveals they were originally completely covered with gold leaf, a luxury afforded only to those from the top tiers of society. Perhaps these two individual­s had interacted with Cleopatra herself, archaeolog­ists suggest.

The opening of the first-ever intact tomb found at Taposiris Magna was witnessed by cameras for a new Channel 5 documentar­y, The Hunt for Cleopatra’s Tomb, to be screened on Thursday.

It is presented by Dr Glenn Godenho, a senior lecturer in Egyptology at Liverpool University, who described the discovery as phenomenal. “Although now covered in dust from 2,000 years undergroun­d, at the time these mummies would have been spectacula­r. To be covered in gold leaf shows they ... would have been … important members of society,” he said.

The mummies have been X-rayed, establishi­ng that they are male and female. One suggestion is they were priests who played a key role in maintainin­g the pharaohs’ power. One bears an image of a scarab, symbolisin­g rebirth, painted in gold leaf.

Cleopatra was the last of a ruthless dynasty that ruled the Ptolemaic kingdom in Egypt for almost three centuries. Yet not a single Ptolemaic pharoah’s tomb has been found.

Excavation­s at Taposiris Magna are headed by Dr Kathleen Martínez, who, after working there for over 14 years, is more convinced than ever Cleopatra’s tomb will be found there. Only a tiny percentage of the vast site has been explored.

In the show, cameras film her as the burial chamber with two mummies is opened up for the first time. After an initial limestone slab is removed with a chisel and hammer, she peers through a small hole, exclaiming: “Oh my god, there are two mummies … See this wonder.”

Her previous discoverie­s include a headless statue of a pharaoh, believed to be King Ptolemy IV, Cleopatra’s ancestor, and a foundation plate with an inscriptio­n showing that the temple was dedicated to the goddess Isis. Cleopatra saw herself as the “human incarnatio­n of Isis”, Martínez said.

At the site of the temple altar, where priests would have made offerings to the gods, 200 coins bearing Cleopatra’s name and her face have been discovered.

This “incredible find” not only links Cleopatra directly to Taposiris Magna, but also reveals a striking image of the queen, Godenho says in the documentar­y. While its prominent nose and double chin may not suggest the classical beauty immortalis­ed by Hollywood and Elizabeth Taylor, it is how she would have wanted to be seen as the coins would have been pressed using her direct instructio­ns.

The Hunt for Cleopatra’s Tomb will be shown on Channel 5 on Thursday 16 July at 9pm.

 ??  ?? The two mummies found inside a sealed tomb at Taposiris Magna, that would originally have been completely covered with gold leaf. Photograph: Arrow Media
The two mummies found inside a sealed tomb at Taposiris Magna, that would originally have been completely covered with gold leaf. Photograph: Arrow Media
 ??  ?? Dr Glenn Godenho and Dr Kathleen Martínez at the Taposiris Magna temple. Photograph: Arrow Media
Dr Glenn Godenho and Dr Kathleen Martínez at the Taposiris Magna temple. Photograph: Arrow Media

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