3600yo mummy found in Egypt sarcophagus
Spanish archaeologists have discovered a 3600-year-old Egyptian mummy inside a wooden sarcophagus adorned with rare feather drawings in the ancient city of Luxor.
The two metre-long and 50 centimetre-wide sarcophagus was in good condition and its colours were still bright, Egypt’s antiquities ministry said in a statement on Thursday.
Antiquities minister Mohamed Ibrahim said feather drawings are rarely found on ancient coffins.
“The sarcophagus goes back to the 17th dynasty (1600 years BC),” said Ali El-Asfar, the head of the antiquities ministry’s pharaonic department.
“Its owner could have been an important statesman, according to the sarcophagus’s preliminary examination and its inscriptions.”
The sarcophagus was discovered in an ancient burial site on Luxor’s west bank, near a tomb belonging to the storehouse administrator of Queen Hatshepsut, a member of the 18th dynasty who ruled Egypt from 1502 to 1482 BC.
The Spanish archaeological team, which has been working in Luxor for 13 years, discovered last year the wooden sarcophagus of a five-year-old boy that goes back to the 17th dynasty.
Luxor, a city of around 500,000 residents on the banks of the Nile in southern Egypt, is an open-air museum of intricate temples, tombs of pharaonic rulers and landmarks such as the Winter Palace hotel, where crime novelist Agatha Christie is said to have written Death on the Nile.