logo
#

Latest news with #Aten

Archaeologists Dug Under an Ancient Greek City—and Found a 3,500-Year-Old Egyptian Settlement
Archaeologists Dug Under an Ancient Greek City—and Found a 3,500-Year-Old Egyptian Settlement

Yahoo

time15-04-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

Archaeologists Dug Under an Ancient Greek City—and Found a 3,500-Year-Old Egyptian Settlement

An entire ancient Egyptian settlement from the New Kingdom, also known as the Golden Age of Egypt, surfaced from beneath Greek ruins at the site of Kom el-Nugus near Alexandria Among the artifacts found were the remains of a temple and pottery including an amphora and a grape crusher that indicate the settlement had something to do with the production of wine. Continuing excavations in the upcoming months may reveal more about the settlement, whose name is still unknown. On an Egyptian desert rock ridge west of Alexandria and between the Mediterranean sea and Lake Mariout is Kom el-Nugus, an archaeological site named for a mound roughly in the shape of a horseshoe, or kom, in the midst of ancient ruins surrounded by fig orchards. The kom appeared unassuming. Most relics found there until now were from a long-abandoned Greek necropolis and lakeside town from the time of Alexander the Great. What emerged when archaeologists dug deeper was a whole other city, one that was already ancient when Alexander arrived in Egypt. It turned out that a 3,500-year-old settlement from Egypt's New Kingdom had been lying beneath the Hellenistic ruins for thousands of years. The New Kingdom was the height of Egypt's splendor in antiquity. It gave birth to legendary 18th and 19th Dynasty pharaohs such as Tutankhamun (nobody wanted to speak of his heretic father Akhenaten), Seti I and Rameses II. It is thought to have been built over around 332 B.C., when the Egyptians willingly allowed Alexander's forces in to liberate them from oppressive Persian rule, and was occupied by Greeks for several hundred years. 'Towards the interior, the curious shape of the kom has long puzzled visitors, and the steep inward slope from the top of the hill to the centre has defied easy explanation,' Sylvain Dhennin of the University of Lyon in France, who led the team of archeologists in unearthing the lost settlement, said in a study recently published in Antiquity. In the middle of the Kom are the remains of a Hellenistic monument that is probably a temple, carved out of calcarenite, a type of limestone. Hardly anything is left except its crumbling foundations. Dhennin thinks the proportions of the building, along with some telltale inscriptions, set it apart as a temple. Parts of it were eventually plundered. Some New Kingdom artifacts that have surfaced at the kom hint at the splendor of what was also known as Egypt's Golden Age. An amphora stamped with the name Meritaten dated back to the 18th Dynasty, from 1550 to 1292 B.C., since Meritaten Tasherit or Meritaten the Younger is known to be the eldest daughter of Akhenaten and Nefertiti. Wine was often stored in amphoras, and a grape crusher discovered at the site suggests that the ancient settlement had something to do with the production of wine. Dhennin thinks the stamp with Meritaten's name means that the wine belonged to a royal estate. The name Meritaten translates to 'she who is beloved of the Aten.' The Aten was the sun disk that Akhenaten demanded all of Egypt worship when he ascended the throne. Ushering in an era of monotheism, he did away with the Egyptian pantheon, fueling political and religious upheaval. After Akhenaten's death, his subjects tried to erase every possible statue, carving, and other vestige of him that remained, and his mummified body has never been found. Tutankhamun (named Tutankhaten at birth) then took the throne and restored the pantheon. There were also some fragments of what were once stone monuments scattered on the Hellenistic levels, including blocks from one of the many temples dedicated by Rameses II, with one of them depicting Ra-Horakhty, 'Horus of the two horizons.' Ra-Horakhty is one of the many forms of the sun god Ra. In this iteration, he has the falcon head of Horus, another god of the sun who crossed the vast expanse of sky every day. This carving must have been intended to show him during the daytime since his right eye was believed to be the sun, while left eye was the moon. More artifacts found at Kom el-Nugus include pieces of chapels from the 19th and 20th dynasties, otherwise known as the Ramesside period. There was also piece of a stele carved with the cartouches of Seti II and a pit containing five miniature ceramic bowls. The buildings of the settlement were made of mud bricks, with two groups of them lined up on either side of a street that headed slightly southward and featured a water-collecting system to keep the buildings dry so they wouldn't collapse. This road was found to have been rebuilt at some point. 'The restructuring of the buildings—in stages that appear to have taken place in quick succession—raises the possibility that this was a seasonal or intermittent settlement, as in the case of temporary military garrisons,' Dhennin said in the same study. More excavations will be carried out during the coming months. The artifacts and remnants of buildings that emerge may not be a glittering golden hoard like the scene that greeted Howard Carter when he broke the seal to Tutankhamun's tomb, but they will still be treasures. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

Mysterious artifacts from King Tut's tomb might have been used in 'awakening Osiris' ritual
Mysterious artifacts from King Tut's tomb might have been used in 'awakening Osiris' ritual

Yahoo

time30-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Mysterious artifacts from King Tut's tomb might have been used in 'awakening Osiris' ritual

When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. An Egyptologist believes he has identified evidence that a rite known as the "Awakening of Osiris" was performed in Tutankhamun's burial chamber. According to Nicholas Brown, a postdoctoral associate in Egyptology at Yale University, this is the earliest evidence for the use of the rite on a pharaoh. "The whole burial chamber seems to be set up to recreate a funerary rite known from later times called 'the Awakening of Osiris,'" Brown, who described the findings in a paper published Feb. 22 in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, told Live Science in an email. Osiris was an ancient Egyptian god of the underworld, who, according to mythology, was brought back to life after he was murdered by his brother Seth. At one point in the story, his son Horus waves a staff at Osiris and commands him to awaken. The rite recreates this story in some ways. While reexamining excavation records of Tutankhamun's tomb, Brown noticed that four clay troughs and four staffs were found in Tutankhamun's burial chamber. These four troughs would have held libations, likely of water, that could have been poured on or near Tutankhamun's mummy, while the four staffs would have represented the staff used by Horus. The water libations hold great symbolic value. In the Pyramid Texts, a series of funerary texts written onto the walls of some Egyptian pyramids, "liquid libations are said to be fluid derived from the corpse of the deceased, or from the corpse of Osiris," Brown wrote in the journal article. "These fluids are necessary in order to rejuvenate the decaying corpse and restore its life-giving fluid to the body." He also noted that water used for libations, retrieved from the Nile River, was known as the "Eye of Horus" and was "a powerful symbol of regeneration and overcoming evil, including death," Brown wrote in the article. The four troughs and four staffs would have represented the cardinal directions and would "symbolically surround the deceased for protection," Brown said in the email. Tutankhamun's father, the pharaoh Akhenaten, brought about a revolution that tried to focus Egyptian religion around the worship of the Aten, the sun disk. He even ordered an iconoclasm that saw the destruction of the names and images of other deities. "Akhenaten shifted the country's religious beliefs to the monotheistic religion focused on the sun-disk, the Aten; this also affected the official afterlife beliefs focused on resurrection through Osiris, which was no longer permitted," Brown said in the email. RELATED STORIES —Ancient Egyptian pyramids, thought to contain only the elite, may also hold low-class laborers —Mummy with a gold tongue found in Egypt —30 incredible treasures discovered in King Tut's tomb When Tutankhamun came to power, he undid this revolution, thus returning Egypt to its polytheistic religion. "Tutankhamun and the officials acting on his behalf had the opportunity to adapt, alter, and change royal funerary practice and bring back Osiris into the picture," Brown said. The Awakening of Osiris ritual was one way to show that Osiris was back. Paula Veiga, a doctoral student and researcher at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich who wasn't involved with Brown's paper but has studied and written extensively about Osiris, generally supported the findings. In addition to water, the troughs may have held other substances, such as ointments, she said.

The Secrets of an Ancient Death Ritual May Be Hidden in the Tomb of King Tut
The Secrets of an Ancient Death Ritual May Be Hidden in the Tomb of King Tut

Yahoo

time25-03-2025

  • General
  • Yahoo

The Secrets of an Ancient Death Ritual May Be Hidden in the Tomb of King Tut

The discovery of wooden staffs and clay trays near the sarcophagus of King Tut might be the oldest known evidence of a ritual known as the Awakening of Osiris. As its name suggests, this ritual is based on the death and resurrection of Osiris, the ancient Egyptian god of the underworld. It is also possible that the staffs and vessels were used for a different ritual, in which torch-bearers guided the pharaoh to the afterlife. In 1922, when Howard Carter ventured to the Valley of the Kings and broke the seal of a tomb that had been buried in the sands of Egypt for over 2,300 years, he was taken aback by the gilded splendor that had managed to elude tomb robbers for so long. He also opened a literal door to more mysteries than he could have ever imagined. Tutankhamun—more commonly known today as King Tut—ascended the throne at nine years old, ruled until his death (the cause of which is still being debated) at eighteen, and was the last pharaoh of the New Kingdom's illustrious 18th dynasty. Decades later, the wealth of grave goods that were supposed to accompany him to the afterlife continue to reveal his secrets. While the crudely shaped clay trays and wooden staffs found among his trove of riches may not be made of gold, Egyptologist Nicholas Brown of Yale University now thinks they are possible evidence of a ritual that may have started with the Boy King. 'Originally, these clay troughs were believed to be stands for the emblems found nearby and in close association to them,' Brown said in a study recently published in The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 'However, closer examination of the religious and archaeological context of the artifacts enables another interpretation of their function.' After the death of his father Akhenaten—thought by many to be a heretic because of his abandonment of the Egyptian pantheon for the worship of the sun disk, or Aten—Tutankhamun and his advisers worked to restore traditional Egyptian religion as fast as possible. The pharaoh even changed his name (he was actually born Tutankhaten). With the religious shift came an opportunity to create new rituals and revive ones that were already ancient at the time. The trays and staffs are thought to have been used for a funerary rite known as the Awakening of Osiris. Ancient Egyptians believed that Osiris was once a living king whose jealous brother Set murdered him, dismembered him, and scattered the parts of his body throughout Egypt. With the help of Set's wife Nepthys, Osiris's wife Isis reassembled her husband's body and breathed life into it long enough for them to conceive their son, Horus. Osiris was then mummified by the jackal-headed god Anubis and went to rule the underworld. The resurrected king of the dead was thought to give life to everything from below, especially through the yearly flooding of the Nile. Later artwork in other tombs reveals that the ritual inspired by this myth involves commanding the dead to wake with staffs behind their heads. However, the staffs at the head of Tutankhamen's mummy—along with trays that are thought to have held libations to once again imbue him with life—are thought to be the oldest evidence of the Awakening of Osiris being performed. The staffs and trays were also placed on reed mats because the ground was seen as impure. Mud from the Nile was apparently used to make the vessels, which may have held water from the river, whose fertility is symbolized by Osiris. There might be an alternative explanation, however. Brown acknowledges fellow Egyptologist Jacobus van Dijk's theory that the ritual carried out could have been the 'spell of the four torches' from the infamous Book of the Dead. During this ritual, four guides (each bearing a torch) stand by the sarcophagus to accompany the pharaoh through the treacherous journey to the afterlife until he reached Osiris and the Hall of Final Judgement. They would then extinguish those torches in clay trays filled with milk from a white cow—possibly symbolizing the goddess Hathor, who is often seen in the form of a cow. Which ritual these artifacts were actually used for remains unknown. Both would have been a part of the pharaoh's resurrection into a deity in the afterlife, so long as he passed the test of weighing his heart and wasn't thrown to the jaws of a ravenous beast. He could kick back and luxuriate in eternal life after that. You Might Also Like The Do's and Don'ts of Using Painter's Tape The Best Portable BBQ Grills for Cooking Anywhere Can a Smart Watch Prolong Your Life?

Can Resilience Breed Faith?
Can Resilience Breed Faith?

Fox News

time03-03-2025

  • General
  • Fox News

Can Resilience Breed Faith?

Can faith breed resilience, or vice versa? And how does resilience differ across various communities, cultures, and continents? From battling stage IV colon cancer to surviving Hurricane Katrina, Jamie Aten, Ph.D., has both experienced and witnessed intense suffering. And though this seems like it would have hardened Dr. Aten's outlook on the world, it instead made him curious — ultimately leading him to become a disaster psychologist and ministry expert. Dr. Aten dives into complex questions surrounding faith, tragedy, and resilience — and explains how his experiences and extensive research have allowed him to merge his understanding of the three. Follow Benjamin on X: @BenjaminHallFNC Learn more about your ad choices. Visit

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