Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean (Dec 2021)

Gebelein Archaeological Project in 2019: Northern necropolis and the temple complex

  • Wojciech Ejsmond,
  • Olivier Pierre Rochecouste,
  • Taichi Kuronuma,
  • Piotr Witkowski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.31338/uw.2083-537X.pam30.2.14
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 30, no. 2
pp. 13 – 28

Abstract

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Continued archaeological surveys at two sites in the Gebelein area, the Northern Necropolis and the temple complex, have contributed new data for a better understanding of the ancient remains. Geophysical anomalies detected in 2015 in the western part of the Northern necropolis should now be interpreted most probably as tombs with mud-brick walls. Mounds of earth in the central part of the necropolis yielded numerous artifacts dating from between the Naqada I and the early Old Kingdom periods; they are likely to have been dumped from a nearby settlement site, probably the ancient town of Sumenu. Work in the temple complex was aimed at protecting the structure made of inscribed mud-bricks dating from the Twenty-first Dynasty.

Keywords