CAIRO, Oct 5 (NNN-MENA) – Egyptian Tourism and Antiquities Ministry, unveiled 59 newly-discovered well-preserved ancient coffins in Giza Province near the capital, Cairo.
“It is a big discovery in the Saqqara necropolis, which is a world heritage site … there are still tens of coffins in the site’s burial shafts,” Egyptian Tourism and Antiquities Minister, Khaled al-Anany, said.
He added that the discovery is important because the coloured coffins are all sealed and in a very good state of preservation.
“We have just opened two coffins now, and found two intact mummies inside them,” the minister said. “The coffins belong to priests and officials, and I can say that the site is very promising.”
Meanwhile, Secretary General of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, Mostafa Waziri, who headed the Egyptian mission that made the discovery, said, the mission unveiled three burial shafts at different depths ranging from 10 to 12 metres, with 59 coloured wooden coffins inside.
“The coffins were found stacked in two layers,” Waziri said, adding that, the coffins date back to the 26th Dynasty of the sixth century B.C. Dozens of statues, including a bronze statue of ancient Egyptian god, Nefertum, were also found at the burial sites,” Waziri said.
A number of archaeological discoveries have been made in the Saqqara necropolis, in addition to the reopening of the Step Pyramid of Djoser, which is the oldest stone construction in history.
The recent discovery marks the largest number of coffins found in one burial place, since the discovery of the Asasif Cachette, where 30 ancient coffins were discovered in Oct, 2019, at the Asasif necropolis in Upper Egypt’s Luxor Province.– NNN-MENA