logo
Archaeologists may have found second tomb of mysterious Egyptian pharaoh

Archaeologists may have found second tomb of mysterious Egyptian pharaoh

Yahoo23-02-2025

A British archaeologist and his team who uncovered the long-lost tomb of an Egyptian pharaoh believe they are close to finding a second buried 23 metres beneath a man-made mountain.
Last week Piers Litherland revealed he had found the tomb of Thutmose II, the last undiscovered king of the 18th dynasty, in the Western Valleys of the Theban Necropolis.
It was the first time in over a century that archaeologists have discovered the final resting place of another Egyptian pharaoh, since the unearthing of Tutankhamun's tomb in 1922.
However, Mr Litherland has now revealed they are trying to unearth a second site which they believe holds the pharaoh's mummified body and grave goods.
Archaeologists believe the first tomb was emptied six years after burial, due to a flood, and relocated to a second.
The experts believe this second tomb has been hiding in plain sight for 3,500 years, secretly buried beneath 23 metres of limestone flakes, rubble, ash and mud plaster and made to look like part of the mountain.
'There are 23 metres of a pile of man-made layers sitting above a point in the landscape where we believe – and we have other confirmatory evidence – there is a monument concealed beneath,' he told The Observer.
'The best candidate for what is hidden underneath this enormously expensive, in terms of effort, pile is the second tomb of Thutmose II.'
On the idea of finding his remains, he added: 'You dream about such things. But like winning the lottery, you never believe it will happen to you.'
When Egyptologists were searching for the initial tomb, they found a posthumous inscription that indicated contents may have been moved to a second location nearby by the pharaoh's wife and half-sister Hatshepsut.
Mr Litherland and his team think they are about a month away from accessing the second tomb, after struggling to tunnel to it by hand.
'We've tried to tunnel into it, we've tried to shave away the sides, but there are overhanging rocks, so it's too dangerous,' he said.
'We should be able to take the whole thing down in about another month.'
When they found the first tomb, located near a waterfall, archaeologists believed they had found the tomb of a royal wife. However, the wide staircase and illustrated burial chamber indicated it was likely to be the resting place of a king.
The reign of Thutmose II is thought to date from approximately 1493 to 1479 BCE. He is best known for being the husband of Queen Hatshepsut, regarded as one of Egypt's greatest pharaohs and one of the few female pharaohs who ruled in her own right.
The discovery was made by a joint mission formed by the New Kingdom Research Foundation (NKRF), a British independent academic foundation, and the Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities, Egypt, a project affiliated to the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research at the University of Cambridge.
Mr Litherland, leader and field director, said of the find: 'This discovery solves a great mystery of ancient Egypt: the location of the tombs of the early 18th dynasty kings.
'The tomb of this ancestor of Tutankhamun had never been found because it was always thought to be at the other end of the mountain near the Valley of the Kings.
'Initially we thought we might have found the tomb of a royal wife, but the wide staircase and the large doorway suggested something more important.
'The discovery that the burial chamber had been decorated with scenes from the Amduat, a religious text which is reserved for kings, was immensely exciting and was the first indication that this was a king's tomb.'
Artefacts discovered in the tomb, including fragments of alabaster jars bearing inscriptions with the names of Thutmose II and his wife are the only artefacts connected with his burial ever found.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

UK PM Starmer says situation in Gaza 'getting worse by the day'
UK PM Starmer says situation in Gaza 'getting worse by the day'

Yahoo

time37 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

UK PM Starmer says situation in Gaza 'getting worse by the day'

LONDON (Reuters) -British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said on Monday that the situation in Gaza was getting "worse by the day" and that it was important to ensure the Palestinian enclave receives more humanitarian aid urgently. "The situation is intolerable in Gaza, and getting worse by the day," Starmer told reporters in Scotland, when asked whether the UK would take any action over the issue. "Which is why we are working with allies ... to be absolutely clear that humanitarian aid needs to get in at speed and at volumes that it is not getting in at the moment, causing absolute devastation," he added.

Fairer elections and the threat of Reform UK
Fairer elections and the threat of Reform UK

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Fairer elections and the threat of Reform UK

George Monbiot captures the betrayal and despair felt by millions of Labour voters who thought they were voting for change at the last general election (How we can smash Britain's two-party system for good at the next election, 27 May).Less than a year later they have found themselves with a government pursuing much the same cruel austerity policies as the Conservative one it replaced. And he's right that Keir Starmer's cynical descent into inflammatory Powellite rhetoric is a gift to Nigel Farage. Most voters want nothing to do with the politics of fear and division, but the UK's antiquated and unrepresentative electoral system fails to reflect the wishes of the progressive left and centre-left majority. A hung parliament is now a very real possibility after the next election. This would indeed be a huge opportunity to scrap the first-past-the-post system that has blighted British politics for so long. As two Green MPs who overturned massive majorities to win our seats, we know it's possible for progressives to win against all the odds – and to change the electoral system, we will have to. The Green party has long championed electoral reform. As candidates for the party's leadership, our aim is to be heading a much larger group of Green MPs in parliament, giving us the leverage and negotiating power to actually achieve such transformational Chowns MPGreen party, North HerefordshireAdrian Ramsay MPGreen party, Waveney Valley • George Monbiot is right to challenge the shortcomings of our electoral system. However, all electoral systems are flawed and in a democracy no individual decides what sort of government gets elected afterwards. Across Europe, where proportional representation prevails, the traditional parties of power are being replaced – not by a rainbow coalition of progressives, but by the seemingly inexorable rise of the hard right. In Scotland, the SNP-Green coalition broke down. In the UK, when the Liberal Democrats held the balance of power, they sided with the Conservatives in inflicting ideological austerity. When we had a referendum between engagement with Europe or isolation, the majority voted for the latter. The failure of our mainstream parties is that they have lost the ability to engage with ordinary people. Politics is the difficult task of leading the agenda while responding to the hopes and fears of wider society and all the ambiguities and compromises that are needed to do so. The government's shift in language from restraint to support for those most in need might be the beginning of something better – we can but BrownIlkley, West Yorkshire • George Monbiot is spot-on in his analysis of the dysfunctions of our electoral system. One glaring danger he doesn't mention, however, can be seen in the steep rise of the Reform UK vote. We used to hear as one of the justifications of the current system that it prevented extreme parties from gaining a significant representation. Never mind that this revealed an arrogantly undemocratic mindset, the evidence now is that the distortions of the system may precipitate precisely the opposite outcome. Given the fragmentation of votes, it is entirely possible that, with fewer than 30% of the ballot, Reform could achieve an absolute majority in parliament at the next general election. That undemocratic disaster, quite apart from the other democratic imperatives George identifies, should be ringing alarm bells for urgent SmithGlasgow

Colorado attack: Man yelled ‘Free Palestine' as he threw Molotov cocktails at pro-Israel march, FBI say
Colorado attack: Man yelled ‘Free Palestine' as he threw Molotov cocktails at pro-Israel march, FBI say

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Colorado attack: Man yelled ‘Free Palestine' as he threw Molotov cocktails at pro-Israel march, FBI say

A flamethrower-wielding suspect yelled 'Free Palestine' while throwing Molotov cocktails at a demonstration in support of Israeli hostages in a 'targeted terror attack' in Boulder, Colorado, says the FBI. , 45, was arrested after victims were attacked near Pearl Street in Boulder around 2 p.m. local time on Sunday, police said. The FBI considers the incident a "targeted act of violence' and is investigating the attack as an act of terrorism. He allegedly used a 'makeshift flamethrower and threw an incendiary device' into the crowd as he shouted 'Free Palestine,' FBI Denver Special Agent in Charge Mark Michalek told reporters. Six people, ranging from 67 to 88 years old, were injured. One of the victims is a Holocaust survivor. Their conditions range from minor to critical, police said. Some of the wounds were consistent with burns. Witnesses told CBS News that they witnessed someone attacking the peaceful demonstrators with Molotov cocktails. 'Every, every one of the victims I could tell that I saw had skin basically melted or hanging from their, from their legs,' a witness told Fox Denver. Former FBI agent Bobby Chacon told CNN that because Molotov cocktails can be made from essentially household items, it's unlikely that buying the components would have put the suspect on law enforcement radar. The suspect is an Egyptian national whose visa expired in March 2025, Trump administration sources told Fox News. He arrived in the US in August 2022 at Los Angeles International Airport. His last visa was approved for renewal in March 2023. A senior White House official told The Independent that the president has been briefed on the situation. 'A terror attack was committed in Boulder, Colorado by an illegal alien. He was granted a tourist visa by the Biden Administration and then he illegally overstayed that visa. In response, the Biden Administration gave him a work permit. Suicidal migration must be fully reversed,' White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller said in a post on X. Ed Victor, who was one of about 30 people participating in the march on Sunday, told CBS News that the group was peacefully walking down Pearl Street when the attack occurred. "So we stood up, lined up in front of the old Boulder courthouse, and I was actually on the far west side. And there was somebody there that I didn't even notice, although he was making a lot of noise, but I'm just focused on my job of being quiet and getting lined up. And, from my point of view, all of a sudden, I felt the heat. It was a Molotov cocktail equivalent, a gas bomb in a glass jar, thrown,' Victor told the outlet. Another marcher 'saw it, a big flame as high as a tree, and all I saw was someone on fire.' A host of officials and organizations swiftly condemned Sunday's attack. Colorado Democratic Rep. Joe Neguse said he's 'praying hard' for the victims. 'We are closely monitoring, and are in contact with local law enforcement regarding the horrific attack on Pearl Street Mall. Praying hard for the victims,' he wrote on X. The state's Democratic Governor Jared Polis condemned the attack. 'My thoughts go out to the people who have been injured and impacted by this heinous act of terror. Hate-filled acts of any kind are unacceptable. While details emerge, the state works with local and federal law enforcement to support this investigation,' he wrote in a statement. Colorado Senators John Hickenlooper and Michael Bennett both denounced the attack, each saying there was no place for hate in their home state. The Boulder Jewish Community issued a joint statement in the wake of the attack. "We are saddened and heartbroken to learn that an incendiary device was thrown at walkers at the Run for Their Lives walk on Pearl Street as they were raising awareness for the hostages still held in Gaza. We don't have all the details of what is unfolding, and we promise to keep our community informed,' the statement read. "Our hearts go out to those who witnessed this horrible attack, and prayers for a speedy recovery to those who were injured.' The statement continued: 'When events like this enter our own community, we are shaken. Our hope is that we come together for one another. Strength to you all.' The Anti-Defamation League also issued a statement, saying it's aware of the reports of the attack at Boulder Run for Their Lives event, which the nonprofit described as 'a weekly meeting of Jewish community members to run/walk in support of the hostages kidnapped on 10/7.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store