/ 3 January 2001

ANIMAL MUMMIES FOUND IN EGYPT

A LANDFALL in the ancient Egyptian city of Abydos has unearthed a cemetery of animal mummies that archaeologists hope could give clues to new religious cults in the Ptolemaic period, officials said this week. Eight tiny gold-plated limestone coffins containing what are thought to be mummified rats dating back to 300 B.C. have already been removed from the site, the region’s antiquities chief Yahya al-Masri said. A team of Egyptian archaeologists has also found six large pottery jars, each with the preserved bodies of 25 falcons inside, he said. The ancient Egyptians, who mummified a wide range of animals from cats to crocodiles, believed that rats ate the hearts of sinners on judgement day, while falcons represent the god Horus, son of Osiris and Isis. The newly-discovered cemetery was excavated after a landfall in the Wadi region of Abydos, located near the Nile around 550 kilometres (350 miles) south of Cairo, pointed to the possibility of a burial ground, Culture Minister Faruq Hosni said. The holy necropolis of Abydos, site of the tomb of the ancient Egyptian god of the dead, Osiris, was a pilgrimage centre in ancient times and some of its artefacts date back further than 2000 B.C. – AFP