In Egypt, In The Valley Of The Kings, They Found The Grave Of Tutankhamun's Wife - Alternative View

In Egypt, In The Valley Of The Kings, They Found The Grave Of Tutankhamun's Wife - Alternative View
In Egypt, In The Valley Of The Kings, They Found The Grave Of Tutankhamun's Wife - Alternative View

Video: In Egypt, In The Valley Of The Kings, They Found The Grave Of Tutankhamun's Wife - Alternative View

Video: In Egypt, In The Valley Of The Kings, They Found The Grave Of Tutankhamun's Wife - Alternative View
Video: Walking Inside The Tomb Of The King Of Ancient Egypt Tutankhamun With Howard Carter in 1922 2024, May
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The authoritative Egyptian archaeologist and former Minister of Antiquities of Egypt Zahi Hawass announced a find in the Valley of the Kings, which is the possible grave of Tutankhamun's wife. This information was confirmed by the current minister Khaled el-Anani.

According to the current Minister of Antiquities of Egypt, the world is waiting for an "epoch-making" discovery, which should cause "shock to the whole world." Khaled el-Anani did not say anything specific about the archaeological find, but confirmed that it concerns a specific tomb from the era of the pharaohs. More detailed information, presumably, the minister will report at a meeting with foreign ambassadors, which is to take place in the near future in Cairo.

The fact that the case may concern the alleged tomb of the wife of Tutankhamun, the young Ankhesenamun, is also confirmed by the world's leading archaeologists. In particular, Aaiko Ima, a Dutch Egyptologist, confirms the possibility of such a find, since it is reliably known about the discovery of four commemorative pits in which the Egyptians put dishes, tools, household utensils, food and everything that was supposed to be useful to the pharaohs in their afterlife. In addition, the radars recorded some cavities that could be the entrance to the tomb.

On the other hand, says Ima, this find may turn out to be a "dummy", since archeology knows cases of finding such pits near unfinished tombs, and the voids discovered by the radar may turn out to be natural anomalies. The Egyptologist proposes to wait until the tomb is discovered, and only then find out who is buried there and what effect this will have on the world community.

Roman Romanov

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