Archaeologists Discover Golden Jewelry in Ancient Egyptian Tomb
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
AP
This undated photo shows ancient gold jewelry found in a pharaonic era tomb thought to belong to a senior official under Egypt's most powerful queen.
CAIRO Egyptian officials says archaeologists have found ancient golden jewelry in a pharaonic-era tomb that belonged to a senior official under Egypt's most powerful queen.
The Supreme Council of Antiquities says five golden earrings and two rings were found in the tomb of Gahouti, the head of the treasury under Queen Hatshepsut, who ruled Egypt 3,500 years ago.
Tuesday's statement says the tomb was located on the west bank of the Nile River in Luxor, a southern Egyptian city famous for its Valley of the Kings and other ruins from pharaonic times.
The tomb had been looted, and its gates were engraved with text from the "Book of the Dead," which Egyptians believed would be needed in the afterlife.
























