Thursday, April 11, 2013

FOX News: Egyptian archaeologists find oldest port, oldest parchment in country

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Egyptian archaeologists find oldest port, oldest parchment in country
Apr 11th 2013, 17:33

Published April 11, 2013

Associated Press

  • ancient parchment egypt 1.JPG

    April 11, 2013: A hieroglyphic papyrus discovered at Wadi el-Jarf, nearly 111 miles south the coastal city of Suez, Egypt. Egypts state of antiquities affairs minister has declared the discovery of a historic coastal port dating back to King Khufu of the fourth dynasty of the old pharaonic kingdom, as well as this hieroglyphic papyri and stone anchors. Most of the discovered papyri date back to the 27th year of the reign of King Khufu. The papyri included information about number of the port workers and details about their daily lives. They were transferred to the Suez museum for study and registration.Egypt's Supreme Council Of Antiquities

  • ancient parchment egypt.JPG

    April 11, 2013: A hieroglyphic papyrus discovered at Wadi el-Jarf, nearly 111 miles south the coastal city of Suez, Egypt. Egypts state of antiquities affairs minister has declared the discovery of a historic coastal port dating back to King Khufu of the fourth dynasty of the old pharaonic kingdom, as well as this hieroglyphic papyri and stone anchors. Most of the discovered papyri date back to the 27th year of the reign of King Khufu. The papyri included information about number of the port workers and details about their daily lives. They were transferred to the Suez museum for study and registration.Egypt's Supreme Council Of Antiquities

CAIRO –  Egypt's state minister of antiquities says a Franco-Egyptian exploration team has discovered a Red Sea port dating back about 4,500 years to Great Pyramid builder King Cheops of the Fourth Dynasty of the Old Kingdom.

Mohammed Ibrahim said Thursday the port was discovered at Wadi el-Jarf, nearly 180 kilometers south the coastal city of Suez.

In a statement, Ibrahim said the port was used to transfer copper from Sinai to the Nile valley.

The team working in the Suez archaeological area also discovered hieroglyphic papyri, considered the oldest found in Egypt.

Ibrahim said the papyri reveal details about port workers and their daily lives. Most date back to the 27th year of the reign of Cheops, also known as Khufu.

The documents were transferred to the Suez museum.

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1 comments:

Unknown said...

There are some things that need to be asked on the port site of Wadi Jarf.
1) They acknowledge that it was Sir Wilkinson who found this site in 1823 (Royal Geographical Society, 1832, pp 33-34), and Sir Wilkinson said the jars found in the 30 galleries were used for the ashes of cremated remains! And he called the galleries “catacombs”, why did they not mention this? (Wilkinson thought the Greeks, who sometimes cremated, did this but there were no ancient Greek or Roman town within 60 miles of this site.)
2) Sir Wilkinson was a respected British archeologist and he certainly would have known what “ashes” were which he said were inside the jars. However they said the jars were for "water and food" for the port, but did they find any water or food in these jars, why did they not gave evidence for this? And why store this "5 kilometers" away from the port?
3) There was no explanation for why "large blocks" were used to seal the entrances to these caves when they were supposed to be for "temporary" storage? The stone blocks were said to be inscribed with King Khufu’s cartouche written in red ink, this is a great find! But they showed no picture of a cartouche.
4) They said the date from the jars was from the 4th Dynasty, but again they gave no evidence for this, why?
5) They gave no date for the wood and cloth found at the site, why not? They could have used Carbon 14 for these, this should have been the easiest and most accurate.
Those who have done this work at Wadi Jarf may be right about some of their findings, but it leaves some question marks as to why they do not address the findings of Sir Wilkinson, or do what is normal (C14 testing) of such discoveries.
Respectfully,
Garry Matheny

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