A necropolis holding at least 17 non-royal mummies has been unearthed near Egypt’s Nile Valley city of Minya.
The discovery was made in the village of Touna al-Gabal, a vast archaeological site on the edge of the western desert. The area hosts a large necropolis for thousands of mummified ibis and baboon birds as well as other animals. It also includes tombs and a funerary building.
“It’s the first human necropolis to be found here in Touna al-Gabal,” Antiquities Minister Khaled al-Anani told Associated Press reporters at the site, some 220 kilometers (135 miles) south of Cairo. The mummies were elaborately preserved therefore likely belong to officials and priests, he said.
The new discovery also includes six sarcophagi, two clay coffins, two papyri written in demotic script as well as a number of vessels, he said.
The necropolis, which is eight metres below ground level, dates back to the Late Period of Ancient Egypt and the Greco-Roman period, the minister noted.
Pointing to the edges of the necropolis where legs and feet of other mummies could be seen, the minister said that the find “will be much bigger,” as work is currently in only a preliminary stage.
The discovery comes as Egypt struggles to revive its tourism sector, partially driven by antiquities sightseeing, which was hit hard by political turmoil since the 2011 uprising.