Exclusive to Egypt Today: A cemetery housing 40 mummies uncovered in Tuna el Gebel

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Sun, 27 Jan 2019 - 02:44 GMT

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Sun, 27 Jan 2019 - 02:44 GMT

Minister of Antiquities Khaled Anany previously announced on Saturday February 24, 2018 the discovery of eight tombs that contain about 40 coffins of Pharaonic priests and more than 1000 Ushabti statues in Tuna el-Gebel area in Minya Egyptian governorate.

Minister of Antiquities Khaled Anany previously announced on Saturday February 24, 2018 the discovery of eight tombs that contain about 40 coffins of Pharaonic priests and more than 1000 Ushabti statues in Tuna el-Gebel area in Minya Egyptian governorate.

CAIRO – 27 January 2019: Tuna el Gebel area in Minya governorate is among the archaeological sites that contain plenty of ancient Egyptian treasures that are not yet revealed.

Egypt Today exclusively reveals the discovery of an ancient cemetery in Tuna el Gebel housing 40 mummies, before being officially announced on February 1 and 2.The cemetery houses mummies of men and children as well as wells, all in a very good condition.

Minister of Antiquities Khaled Anany previously announced on Saturday February 24, 2018 the discovery of eight tombs that contain about 40 coffins of Pharaonic priests and more than 1000 Ushabti statues in Tuna el-Gebel area in Minya Egyptian governorate. The tombs were full of jewellery, potteries and Pharaonic jars.

Anany described this discovery as one of the largest and most important archaeological discoveries in recent times because it documents significant issues related to the live of ancient Egyptians in Minya tens of centuries ago.

The most prominent finds in these tombs were a gold mask, coffins, mummies and statues. The Egyptian minister of antiquities added that it will take a lot of hard work to uncover all Tuna el Gebel's treasures, pointing out that the main advantage of this discovery is that it was made by Egyptians.

Furthermore, archaeologists at Cairo University have discovered catacombs including 18 non-royal mummies in Tuna el-Gebel on Saturday May 13, 2017. The burial shafts were found in the area and the shafts led to a number of corridors containing a cachet of mummies. This discovery was the first human necropolis found in central Egypt with so many mummies.

Tuna el-Gebel in the city of Mallawi was the necropolis of Khmun. It contains monuments from the Greek and Roman eras, as well as the Late Middle Ages. The area hosts the Boundary Stelae of Akhenaton, catacombs of falcons, baboons and ibises, and the tombs of Petosiris and Isadora.

Tuna el-Gebel village is famous for having many archaeological tombs, which contributed greatly to the revival of archaeological and touristic life and helped drive Arab and foreign tourists to the region once again. It is an archaeological village located in Al Minya Governorate. It has a population of more than 20,000 people.

Tuna el-Gebel was originally named “Towns" in the Pharaonic era and "Tahnet" in the Roman era. The meaning of both names is the blessing or flood.

Tuna el-Gebel was considered a cemetery in the Pharaonic, Greek and Roman periods that contains many important monuments, including the tomb and the chapel of Isadora, the martyr of love, which dates back to the Greco-Roman period.

Tuna el-Gebel houses the tomb of the priest Petosiris dating back to the Greek era, and the villa of Dean of Arabic literature Taha Hussein, in addition to the existence of many archaeological sites that have not been discovered yet.

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