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The mummy’s cause of death remains unknown. The “Screaming Woman” was discovered between 1935 and 1936 near the tomb of Senmut in Luxor and later stored at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.
She was discovered in the tomb of Senmut, an 18th Dynasty architect and overseer of royal works for queen Hatschepsut (1479-1458 BC), in Deir Elbahari near Luxor, Egypt. Archeologists excavating ...
In Deir Elbahari near Luxor, the site of ancient Thebes, they excavated the tomb of Senmut, the architect and overseer of royal works—and reputedly, lover—of the famed queen Hatschepsut (1479 ...
The “screaming woman” had been buried beneath the tomb of Senmut, an architect of the temple of Egyptian queen Hatschepsut (1479–1458 BC) who held important positions during her reign.
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Famed Egyptian mummy's 'screaming' expression may hint at agonising death, study suggestsIn 1935, archaeologists from the Metropolitan Museum of New York made a haunting discovery while excavating the tomb of Senmut, the architect and overseer of royal works for Queen Hatshepsut ...
It was then that archeologists first uncovered the tomb of Senmut, the royal architect and rumored lover of Queen Hatshepsut (1479-1458 BCE). But beneath Senmut’s resting place lay another ...
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‘Screaming’ mummy suffered an agonising death, say scientiststhe body of a mysterious woman was discovered underneath a tomb at Deir Elbahari near Luxor, the site of ancient Thebes. She was found in a burial chamber beneath the burial site of Senmut ...
Photo the tomb of Senmut at Deir Elbahari where the mummy was foundCredit: Credit: Edal Anton Lefterov via Pen News While internal organs are usually removed during mummification, hers were left ...
The mummy was first discovered in 1935, when an archaeological expedition unearthed a wooden coffin located beneath the tomb of the architect Senmut, who died in 1464BCE. The coffin held the ...
She was mummified in the family tomb of Senmut, a royal architect who was thought to be a lover of a great Pharaoh. Dr Saleem said: "Senmut was a very powerful stateman at the time of Hatshepsut ...
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