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Africa North
Archaeologists Unearth Ancient City Near Luxor
2021-04-09
[ENGLISH.AAWSAT] Archaeologists said on Thursday they had uncovered a large ancient pharaonic city that had lain unseen for centuries near some of Egypt's best known monuments.

The city was built more than 3,400 years ago during the opulent reign of Amenhotep III, one of Egypt's most powerful pharaohs, the Egyptian archaeologist overseeing the excavations, Zahi Hawass, said.

The team began searching for a mortuary temple near Luxor in September, but within weeks found mud brick formations in every direction, Rooters quoted Zahi Hawass as saying in a statement.

They unearthed the well-preserved city that had almost complete walls and rooms filled with tools of daily life along with rings, scarabs, colored pottery vessels and mud bricks bearing seals of Amenhotep's cartouche.

"The city's streets are flanked by houses ... some of their walls are up to three meters high," Hawass said.

The excavations lie on the West Bank of Luxor near the Colossi of Memnon, Medinet Habu and the Ramesseum, or mortuary temple of King Ramses II, not far from the Valley of the Kings.

"This is a very important discovery," Peter Lacovara, director of the US-based Ancient Egyptian Heritage and Archaeology Fund, told Rooters.

The state of preservation and the amount of items from everyday life brought to mind another famous excavation, he added.

"It is a sort of ancient Egyptian Pompeii and shows the critical need to preserve this area as an archaeological park," said Lacovara, who has worked at the Malqata palace area for more than 20 years but was not involved in the excavations.

The site contains a large number of ovens and kilns for making glass and faience, along with the debris of thousands of statues, said Betsy Bryan, a specialist of Amenhotep III's reign.
faience = glazed ceramic ware. I had to look it up
"Just to locate the manufacturing centers opens up the detail of how the Egyptians under a great and wealthy ruler such as Amenhotep III did what they did. This will furnish knowledge for many years to come," she added.

The city extends west to the ancient workmen's village of Deir el-Medina, Hawass said.

According to historical references it included three of Amenhotep III's palaces and the empire's administrative and industrial center, Hawass's statement added.
Posted by:Fred

#8  Why would all this be left?

Boeing has the same problem with aircraft delivered to the Air Force.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2021-04-09 15:28  

#7  Shards from another planet. The Nameless City. Luminescent semi-real flying objects outside our understanding of mobility. No news of a discovery of a derelict yacht. Yet.
Posted by: swksvolFF   2021-04-09 12:16  

#6  1550–1400 BCE: Jerusalem becomes a vassal to Egypt as the Egyptian New Kingdom reunites Egypt and expands into the Levant under Ahmose I and Thutmose I.
Posted by: b   2021-04-09 09:43  

#5  What happened to cause a "drop everything and run" exodus?

Posted by: Skidmark   2021-04-09 08:20  

#4  What happened to cause a "drop everything and run" exodus?
Covid negative 3400.
Posted by: Glenmore   2021-04-09 08:16  

#3  Archaeologists have speculated for some time now it was there.
Posted by: Deacon Blues   2021-04-09 07:54  

#2  ...rooms filled with tools of daily life along with rings, scarabs,...

Why would all this be left? What happened to cause a "drop everything and run" exodus? Nile flooding?
Posted by: Mercutio   2021-04-09 07:49  

#1  Egypt's 'lost golden city' is FOUND: Massive 3,500-year-old settlement founded by Tutankhamun's grandfather is unearthed in most significant discovery since the boy king's tomb
Posted by: Skidmark   2021-04-09 01:09  

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