3,500-year-old ‘lost city’ unearthed in Egypt

Image: Xinhua Rex

A massive 3,500-year-old settlement founded by Tutankhamun’s grandfather has been unearthed in the most significant discovery since the boy king’s tomb.

The ancient pharaonic city, known as Aten, was constructed by King Amenhotep III, who ruled around 1390 BC, and was later used by King Tutankhamun.

The settlement, discovered in Luxor, is the largest ancient city to be discovered in Egypt, and is complete with neighborhoods, streets and a security system.

Excavations uncovered bakeries, workshops and burials of animals and humans, along with jewelry, pots and mud bricks bearing seals of Amenhotep III.

The team initially set out to discover Tutankhamun’s Mortuary Temple, where the young king was mummified and received status rites, but they stumbled upon something far greater.

Within just weeks of digging, they uncovered mud brick formations in every direction, Egyptian mission director Zahi Hawass said in a statement. ‘Many foreign missions searched for this city and never found it,’ Hawass continued.

Image: EPA

Image: EPA

Archaeologists unearthed the well-preserved city that had nearly complete walls and rooms filled with tools used in daily life along with rings, scarabs, colored pottery vessels and mud bricks bearing seals of Amenhotep’s cartouche, Luxor Times shared on Facebook.

The city’s streets are flanked by houses … some of their walls are up to three meters high,’ Hawass said.

Luxor is famously known for its oldest and most ancient Egyptian sites, along with being home to the Valley of Kings.

This area was once called the ‘Great Necropolis of Millions of Years of Pharaoh,’ as a number of mummies and massive structures have been discovered in Luxor since the 1800s.

Image: Reuters

Betsy Brian, Professor of Egyptology at John Hopkins University in Baltimore USA, said ‘The discovery of this lost city is the second most important archeological discovery since the tomb of Tutankhamun’.

The discovery of the Lost City, not only will give us a rare glimpse into the life of the Ancient Egyptians at the time where the Empire was at his wealthiest but will help us shed light on one of history’s greatest mystery: why did Akhenaten & Nefertiti decide to move to Amarna.’

The city sits between Rameses III’s temple at Medinet Habu and Amenhotep III’s temple at Memnon.

Excavations began September in 2020 and within weeks, archaeologists uncovered formations made of mud bricks.

After more digging, archaeologists unearthed the site of the large, well-preserved city with almost complete walls, and rooms filled with tools once used by the city’s inhabitants.

Image: Reuters

The first goal of the mission was to date the settlement, which was done using hieroglyphic inscriptions found on clay caps of wine vessels. ‘Historical references tell us the settlement consisted of three royal palaces of King Amenhotep III, as well as the Empire’s administrative and industrial center,’ archaeologists shared in a statement.

They unearthed the well-preserved city that had almost complete walls and rooms filled with tools of daily life along with rings, scarabs, colored pottery vessels and mud bricks bearing seals of Amenhotep’s cartouche.

Most of the sandy landscape was cleared from the area in just seven months, which showed neighborhoods with different facilities.

There was a bakery in the southern part of the city, with a kitchen complete with ovens and storage pottery.

From its size, we can state the kitchen was catering a very large number of workers and employees,’ archaeologists explained.

The team is still working on a second part of Aten and although partially covered, they believe it is the administrative and residential district, with larger and well-arranged units.

This area is surrounded by a zigzag wall and has only a single access point that leads to internal corridors and residential areas.

The single entrance makes us think it was some sort of security, with the ability to control entry and exit to enclosed areas, researchers shared.

Image: Xinhua Rex

Zigzag walls are one of the rare architectural elements in ancient Egyptian architecture, mainly used towards the end of the 18th Dynasty.

Image: Today

The third area appears to be workshops were located that constructed the mud bricks used to build the massive city.

A number of bricks still litter the landscape that bear seals of King Amenhotep III and others  with inscriptions that can be read: ‘gm pa Aton’ that can be translated as ‘The domain of the dazzling Aten’, this is the name of a temple built by King Akhenaten at Karnak, who was King Tutankhamun’s father.

In this part of the site, experts also uncovered large casting molds for making amulets and delicate, decorative objects.

This is further evidence of the extensive activity in the city to produce decorations for both temples and tombs,’ archaeologists said. ‘All over the excavated areas, the mission has found many tools used in some sort of industrial activity like spinning and weaving.”

Metal and glass-making slag has also been unearthed, but the main area of such activity has yet to be discovered.’

Along with structural elements, there are also burials found inside the city’s walls.

Two animal burials were unearthed of either a cow or bull, along with remains of a person found with their arms stretched to the side and tattered rope wrapped around their knees.

As history goes, one year after this pot was made, the city was abandoned and the capital relocated to Amarna. But was it? And why? And was the city repopulated again when Tutankhamun returned to Thebes,‘ said the team in a statement. ‘Only further excavations of the area will reveal what truly happened 3500 years ago. To the north of the settlement a large cemetery was uncovered, the extent of which has yet to be determined.

Tutankhamun’s successor, King Ay, built his temple on a site which was later adjoined on its southern side by Rameses III’s temple at Medinet Habu.

Egyptologists believe Ay’s temple may formerly have belonged to Tutankhamun as two colossal statues of the young king were found there. The northern part of the temple is still under the sands.

Amenhotep III inherited an empire that stretched from the Euphrates to Sudan, archaeologists say, and died around 1354 BC.

He ruled for nearly four decades, a reign known for its opulence and the grandeur of its monuments, including the Colossi of Memnon — two massive stone statues near Luxor that represent him and his wife.

The archaeological layers have laid untouched for thousands of years, left by the ancient residents as if it were yesterday,’ the team’s statement said.

Bryan said the city ‘will give us a rare glimpse into the life of the Ancient Egyptians at the time where the Empire was at his wealthiest‘.

The team said they were optimistic that further important finds would be revealed, noting they had discovered groups of tombs reached through ‘stairs carved into the rock’, a similar construction to those found in the Valley of the Kings.

The mission expects to uncover untouched tombs filled with treasures,’ the statement added.

See more here: dailymail.co.uk

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Comments (4)

  • Avatar

    Andy

    |

    Fascinating and potentially very important discovery.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Andrew Pilkington

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    Maybe “Covid” made them up and run, leaving their belongings behind?
    Maybe not Covid, of course, but some other “Real” major threat to their Safety?
    Fascinating article though. It would be great to see the place brought back to life using cgi, or whatever?

    Certainly a welcome change from Covid, for the viewers and members of “Worldwide Awakening” on FB.
    Thank you 🙂

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Tom O

    |

    And here is a completely birdbrain statement –

    “said the team in a statement. ‘Only further excavations of the area will reveal what truly happened 3500 years ago. ”

    Reveal what truly happened 3500 years ago? Got a time machine?

    Reply

    • Avatar

      Jerry Krause

      |

      Hi Tom O and hopefully PSI Readers,

      “Reveal what truly happened 3500 years ago? Got a time machine?”

      So glad to see Tom recognize the fact that without actually observed data we cannot know what truly happened yesterday. For we know from experience that one day can be quite different from the previous day. So what happens today cannot be used to predict tomorrow unless we have studied actually observed data for many consecutive days during many days at a given location to actually see the actual factors that could be used to predict the weather tomorrow and if we have not identified what might be the critical factors we are obviously lost. But even recognizing the critical factors does not produce absolutely correct predictions because at times a combination of little factors might make a difference. Can we say that weather is somewhat random???

      Very good comment Tom O!!!

      Have a good day, Jerry

      Have

      Reply

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