Egypt uncovers chamber of mummies, sees
life for tourism
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[May 16, 2017]
By Arwa Gaballa
MINYA, Egypt (Reuters) - Egypt has
unearthed an ancient burial site replete with at least 17 mummies, most
fully intact, the latest in a string of discoveries that the country's
antiquities minister described as a helping hand from the crypt for its
struggling tourism sector.
The funerary site, uncovered eight meters below ground in Minya, a
province about 250 km (150 miles) south of Cairo, contained limestone
and clay sarcophagi, animal coffins, and papyrus inscribed with Demotic
script.
The burial chamber was first detected last year by a team of Cairo
University students using radar.
The mummies have not yet been dated but are believed to date to Egypt's
Greco-Roman period, a roughly 600-year span that followed the country's
conquest by Alexander the Great in 332 BC, according to Mohamed Hamza, a
Cairo University archaeology dean in charge of the excavations.
Egypt is hoping recent discoveries will brighten its image abroad and
revive interest among travelers that once flocked to its iconic
pharaonic temples and pyramids but which have shunned the country since
its 2011 political uprising.
"2017 has been a historic year for archaeological discoveries. It's as
if it's a message from our ancestors who are lending us a hand to help
bring tourists back," Antiquities Minister Khaled Al-Anani told a news
conference announcing the find on Saturday.
Salah Al-Kholi, a Cairo University Egyptology professor who led the
mission, said as many as 32 mummies may be in the chamber, including
mummies of women, children and infants.
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A number of mummies inside the newly discovered burial site in
Minya, Egypt May 13, 2017. REUTERS/Mohamed Abd El Ghany
Archaeologists have excavated a slew of relics in recent months that
include a nobleman's tomb from more than 3,000 years ago, 12
cemeteries that date back about 3,500 years, and a giant colossus
believed to depict King Psammetich I, who ruled from 664 to 610 BC.
Tourism Minister Yehia Rashed said last month the new finds could
boost tourist arrivals this year to about 10 million, an improvement
from the 9.3 million visitors that came in 2015 but still far below
the 14.7 million from 2010. No 2016 figure is yet available.
The tourism sector, a crucial source of hard currency, has struggled
to regain ground amid a growing number of militant attacks,
including two Islamic State church bombings last month.
(Reporting by Arwa Gaballa; Writing by Eric Knecht; Editing by Ros
Russell)
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