Sarcophagi, clay fragments unearthed

Egypt archaeologists have discovered three ancient tombs containing sarcophagi in the south of the country in a cemetery dating back about 2,000 years, the Antiquities Ministry said on Tuesday.

The tombs excavated in the Al-Kamin al-Sahrawi area in Minya province south of Cairo were in burial grounds constructed some time between the 27th Dynasty and the Greco-Roman period, the Ministry said in a statement.

The team found “a collection of sarcophagi of different shapes and sizes, as well as clay fragments,” the statement quoted Ayman Ashmawy, head of the Ministry’s Ancient Egyptian Antiquities Sector, as saying.

One of the tombs contained four sarcophagi each sculpted to depict a human face. Another tomb held the remains of two sarcophagi and six burial holes, including one for “the burial of a small child.”

Clay fragments found at the site “date the tombs between the 27th Dynasty (founded in 525 BC) and the Greco-Roman era (between 332 BC and the fourth century),” the statement said.

The discovery “suggests that the area was a great cemetery for a long span of time,” it quoted Mr. Ashmawy as saying. In one of the three tombs, excavators found bones believed to be the remains of “men, women and children of different ages,” Ali al-Bakry, head of the mission, was quoted as saying in the statement.