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New Kingdom cemetery with complete papyrus found in Minya – The History Blog
Marge Simpson! 4 toes, 5 toes...
On the 4 and 5 toes thing... Its quite the oversight.
21 things you never knew about The Simpsons
Oldest papyrus ever?
On with the franchise! See you next year, Bart! Or Homer! Actually, can we have Homer with a plate of doughnuts?
(Ask and you shall receive.)
Indeed.The inner part of the lid of her sarcophagus is painted with figures representing the 12 hours and a central figure who bears a striking resemblance to Marge Simpson.
On the 4 and 5 toes thing... Its quite the oversight.
21 things you never knew about The Simpsons
So this Marge, is half god/half normal? Her left hand side is godly? What kind of messaging is this?!?1 God and his son Jesus are the only characters on The Simpsons to have a full set of five digits. They also have five toes on each foot. Everyone else has three fingers and a thumb on each hand, and four toes on each foot.
1550 B.C.-1069 B.C. ie 3500 years oldA New Kingdom cemetery with richly furnished burials and a complete papyrus has been discovered in Ghoreifa near the site of Tuna El Gebel in the Minya Governorate of Upper Egypt. Thousands of artifacts were unearthed from the rock-cut tombs. Inscriptions on the funerary objects and sarcophagi identify the deceased as the senior officials and high priests of the 15th nome of Upper Egypt under the pharaohs of the New Kingdom (ca. 1550 B.C.-1069 B.C.).
The site has been excavated every season since 2017 and the Egyptian archaeological mission has been looking for the New Kingdom cemetery of the 15th nome and its capital Ashmunin this whole time. It finally emerged in the most recent excavation that began last August in the northern section of the site.
huge 3500 year old papyrus, not cornflake-sized at all, needs conservation and stabilisation, going on display soon!The papyrus is a Book of the Dead in an excellent state of preservation. It has not been fully unrolled yet, but archaeologists estimate it is between 40 and 50 feet long. It is the first complete papyrus found in the Al-Ghoraifa area. When it has been conserved and stabilized, it will go on display at the Grand Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
On with the franchise! See you next year, Bart! Or Homer! Actually, can we have Homer with a plate of doughnuts?
(Ask and you shall receive.)
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