Three false doors that served as portals for communicating with the dead are among ancient burial remains recently unearthed in a vast Egyptian necropolis, an archaeological team announced.
The discoveries date back to Egypt's turbulent First Intermediate Period, which ran roughly between 2160 and 2055 B.C.
The period is traditionally thought to have been a chaotic era of bloodshed and power struggles, but little is known based on archaeological evidence.
In addition to the false doors, the Spanish team found two funerary offering tables and a new tomb in the former ancient capital of Herakleopolis—today referred to by its Arabic name Ihnasya el-Medina—about 60 miles (96 kilometers) south of Cairo.
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
False Doors for the Dead Among New Egypt Tomb Finds