Archaeologists discover more than 20 sealed coffins just as the ancient Egyptians left them


The Egyptian government is hailing the discovery of more than 20 wooden coffins as “one of the largest and most important” archaeological finds in the past few years.

The coffins were found in Assasif, a necropolis on the west bank of the Nile River.

Egypt’s Ministry of Antiquities tweeted images of the “intact and sealed coffins” Tuesday. The sarcophagi, which were stacked in two layers in a large tomb, still boasted their original carvings of faces and hands and colors of red, green, white and black that have not faded much over time.

The Antiquities Ministry tweeted images of the coffins on Tuesday.

Egyptian officials have not given the time frame from which the coffins date, but the site where they were found was once part of the ancient city of Thebes.

Thebes was the royal capital of the ancient Egypt. Early monuments can be traced as far back as the 11th dynasty, which occurred between 2081 and 1939 B.C.

Authorities said more details about the coffins would be divulged in a news conference Saturday.

Egypt is on a roll with its digging into the past.

Last week, the Antiquities Ministry announced that archaeologists had found 30 workshops for the manufacturing and processing of funeral furniture for the tombs of kings in the Valley of the Kings, which served as the primary burial site for pharaohs from the 18th to the 20th dynasty. Researchers found a kiln for producing pottery and metal, where items such as silver rings and gold foil were also uncovered. The workshops, dated from 1539 B.C. to 1292 B.C., CNN reported.

The discovery of the workshops opened up a new way to understand the tools and techniques used for making royal coffins and tomb furniture, an archaeologist told CNN. The site also gave researchers another way to understand what daily life might have been like for laborers at the workshops.

An archaeological mission has been underway in the Valley of the Kings since December 2017, according to the Antiquities Ministry. There’s a plan to search for the tombs of Queen Nefertiti and her daughter, who was King Tutankhamen’s widow. Researchers are also searching for the burial sites of three major pharaohs — Ramses VIII, King Thutmose II and King Amenhotep — in addition to finding tombs for queens in the Valley of the Queens.

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