edición general
56 meneos
 

Egiptólogos descubren la tumba de la famosa Hatshepsut

"Egiptólogos creen haber identificado con certeza la momia de Hatshepsut, la faraona más famosa del antiguo Egipto. Al parecer la encontraron en el Valle de los Reyes. El líder del grupo de arqueólogos, Zahi Hawass, dará una conferencia de prensa el miercoles para anunciar los detalles." Vía en Castellano: resumidor.blogspot.com/2007/06/arquelogos-creen-haber-descubierto-la.h

| etiquetas: egipto , arqueología
56 0 0 K 422 mnm
56 0 0 K 422 mnm
  1. - ¡¡Hatshepsut !!.
    - Jesus
    - Gracias
  2. ¡Que coincidencia! Hace un rato estaba leyendo esto:

    "The main focus of my work in the Valley has been in the examination of several undecorated tombs (Tomb No.'s 21, 27, 28, 44, 45 and 60) found in this royal cemetery of Egypt's New Kingdom (c. 1550 - 1070 B.C.). Lying amongst the large and often elaborately decorated tombs of the pharaohs, many of these typically smaller tombs remained virtually unstudied by their early discoverers who generally found them uninteresting. The work of the Pacific Lutheran University Valley of the Kings Expedition, however, proved that these long ignored monuments were very worthy of investigation. Tomb 60 was particularly provocative. Robbed in antiquity, it was discovered at the turn of the century, found to be of limited interest, reburied, and its location subsequently lost. We managed to rediscover this long lost tomb on our very first day of work! The damaged contents of this crudely carved tomb were splendidly preserved and included funerary food provisions, broken bits of burial equipment, the remains of a shattered gilded coffin and a female mummy. This mummy, that of an older individual, was embalmed in what is believed to the pose of a royal female: the left arm bent at the elbow, forearm diagonally across the chest, left hand clenched and the right arm straight alongside the body. Although there has been much, often inappropriate, speculation, the specific identity of this mummy has not been determined."

    www.plu.edu/~ryandp/egypt.html

    Al final era la de Hatshepsut
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