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Those inscriptions invoke the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, but the name of the king entombed there could not be read, Wegner says. Excavations will continue through 2025 at the Abydos royal ...
On either side of the tomb entrance, yellow bands once showed the pharaoh's name and images of the goddesses Isis and Nephthys. You can still make out the sister deities, but the name has vanished.
While any markings that might help pinpoint the freshly unearthed burial chamber’s former occupant didn’t survive, the tomb does still have two painted images of the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, who ...
the tomb does still have two painted images of the goddesses Isis and Nephthys, who were commonly depicted in funerary rites as if they were mourning the deceased. The researchers plan to ...
It might belong to King Senaiib or King Paentjeni, or maybe someone completely unknown. The tomb still has paintings of two goddesses, Isis and Nephthys, who were often shown in tombs mourning the ...
The name of the king once buried inside was originally recorded in hieroglyphic texts on plastered brickwork at the chamber's entrance alongside painted scenes showing the sister goddesses Isis ...
The entrance to the site is painted with scenes showing the goddess Isis and her sister Nephthys - commonly associated with funerary rituals. Archaeologists also found the remnants of hieroglyphic ...
The name of the king once buried inside was originally recorded in hieroglyphic texts on plastered brickwork at the chamber's entrance alongside painted scenes showing the sister goddesses Isis and ...
Archaeologists have discovered the large limestone burial chamber of an unidentified ancient Egyptian pharaoh near the city of Abydos dating to about 3,600 years ago during a chaotic period in ...