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A newly unearthed settlement in Egypt’s north-western Nile Delta dates back around 3,400 years to the New Kingdom era and features a temple believed to have been dedicated to Pharaoh Ramesses II.
A wine jar stamped with the name of Merytaton—daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti, and sister of the famous boy king Tutankhamun—was among the finds, Live Science reported. The discovery ...
An amphora fragment sealed with the name of Tutankhamun's sister suggests the site was a center for royal wine production.
What has particularly excited experts is the evidence suggesting that the town was founded under Pharaoh Akhenaten — Tutankhamun’s father — and expanded during the reign of Ramesses II.
While studying a Greek settlement from 332BC in northern Egypt, archaeologists made a stunning discovery — a hidden mud brick ...
On an Egyptian desert rock ridge west of Alexandria and between the Mediterranean sea and Lake Mariout is Kom el-Nugus, an archaeological site named for a mound roughly in the shape of a horseshoe, or ...
What has particularly excited boffins is the evidence suggesting that the town was founded under Pharaoh Akhenaten - Tutankhamun’s father - and expanded during the reign of Ramesses II.
Archaeologists have discovered an Egyptian settlement likely built by Tutankhamun's father around 3,400 years ago in a huge breakthrough.