Jabaline Mummies .
"These are six mummies that are naturally embalmed, dating back to about 3400 BC from the end of the pre-dynastic era in Egypt, and are considered the first complete bodies discovered from the pre-dynastic era."
“The Wallace Budge, a professor of Egyptology at the British Museum, was able to uncover it at the end of the nineteenth century and it was in small sand graves near the city of Jabalin (its current location is the city of Nagra Al-Ghuraira near Qena) in the Western Desert.”
"Badge" extracted all the bodies from the same cemetery. It was possible to distinguish the gender of two bodies, one of them male and the other female. As for the others, the sexes were not identified. The British Museum took the bodies in the year 1900 AD and the documents recorded the presence of some relics in the cemetery at the time of the discovery of pottery and granite stone works. However, it was not transferred to the British Museum, nor to anyone
He knows her fate, where did she go?
"Three of the bodies were covered with different types of blankets, such as a mat of woven, palm fibers, or animal skins. They are still lingering with the bodies, and the bodies were taking the fetus in his mother's womb lying on her left side at the time of its finding."
“The first body that was uncovered in 1901 was displayed in the British Museum under the name“ Ginger, ”which is brown, due to its reddish hair. This name is no longer used officially according to new ethical policies towards human remains.
Detection process
“The ruins of the cities of Abydos, Tukh, Jabalin and Herakonpolis were revealed in 1895 and 1896AD. In 1892AD, the Egyptian antiquities director Jacques de Morgan proved that the pottery found in Abydos and in Naqada dates back to the pre-dynastic era, which aroused the interest of many European archaeologists, and after End of each detection The locals were trying to complete the detection of remains in those locations.
"In 1895 AD, Wallis Badge brought carved coffins and funerary furniture from tombs belonging to the Twelfth Dynasty in the Al Barsha area for the benefit of the British Museum and helped him do this work in the Egyptian Antiquities Authority, and Badge began buying the finds from the pre-family era of the local population, including pots, spears, arrows and heads. , Carved flint, bones, and sporadic human parts, mainly composed of bone without flesh or skin covering them.
“A resident of Jabalin contacted Badge in 1896 CE and claimed to have found more mummies, and Badge moved to the place of the bodies and immediately realized that they were from the pre-dynastic era and that they were the first complete bodies to be identified from this era.”
"The discovery that resulted in six mummified bodies was extracted from the shallow sand in the Bahr without water area on the eastern slopes of the northern hill in two mountains."
“The tomb's belongings included only pottery vessels found with the adult female’s body, along with some remains of branches, fur, and linen, along with the other bodies.”
"The bodies were usually buried in the pre-dynastic era, naked and sometimes wrapped without tightening. In this way, the body is covered with hot sand, so most of the body's water evaporates quickly or is carried out in such environmental conditions. This means that the body was dried and preserved naturally, and this method was used on a scale It is widespread in the pre-dynastic era before the development of artificial embalming, and the process of natural embalming may have led to burial in dry sand in this way to start believing in resurrection after death and the age of the habit of leaving food and tools for other life.
"All the dead bodies were in similar, flexible positions, sleeping on their left side, with their knees raised to the top of their chin."
"These are six mummies that are naturally embalmed, dating back to about 3400 BC from the end of the pre-dynastic era in Egypt, and are considered the first complete bodies discovered from the pre-dynastic era."
“The Wallace Budge, a professor of Egyptology at the British Museum, was able to uncover it at the end of the nineteenth century and it was in small sand graves near the city of Jabalin (its current location is the city of Nagra Al-Ghuraira near Qena) in the Western Desert.”
"Badge" extracted all the bodies from the same cemetery. It was possible to distinguish the gender of two bodies, one of them male and the other female. As for the others, the sexes were not identified. The British Museum took the bodies in the year 1900 AD and the documents recorded the presence of some relics in the cemetery at the time of the discovery of pottery and granite stone works. However, it was not transferred to the British Museum, nor to anyone
He knows her fate, where did she go?
"Three of the bodies were covered with different types of blankets, such as a mat of woven, palm fibers, or animal skins. They are still lingering with the bodies, and the bodies were taking the fetus in his mother's womb lying on her left side at the time of its finding."
“The first body that was uncovered in 1901 was displayed in the British Museum under the name“ Ginger, ”which is brown, due to its reddish hair. This name is no longer used officially according to new ethical policies towards human remains.
Detection process
“The ruins of the cities of Abydos, Tukh, Jabalin and Herakonpolis were revealed in 1895 and 1896AD. In 1892AD, the Egyptian antiquities director Jacques de Morgan proved that the pottery found in Abydos and in Naqada dates back to the pre-dynastic era, which aroused the interest of many European archaeologists, and after End of each detection The locals were trying to complete the detection of remains in those locations.
"In 1895 AD, Wallis Badge brought carved coffins and funerary furniture from tombs belonging to the Twelfth Dynasty in the Al Barsha area for the benefit of the British Museum and helped him do this work in the Egyptian Antiquities Authority, and Badge began buying the finds from the pre-family era of the local population, including pots, spears, arrows and heads. , Carved flint, bones, and sporadic human parts, mainly composed of bone without flesh or skin covering them.
“A resident of Jabalin contacted Badge in 1896 CE and claimed to have found more mummies, and Badge moved to the place of the bodies and immediately realized that they were from the pre-dynastic era and that they were the first complete bodies to be identified from this era.”
"The discovery that resulted in six mummified bodies was extracted from the shallow sand in the Bahr without water area on the eastern slopes of the northern hill in two mountains."
“The tomb's belongings included only pottery vessels found with the adult female’s body, along with some remains of branches, fur, and linen, along with the other bodies.”
"The bodies were usually buried in the pre-dynastic era, naked and sometimes wrapped without tightening. In this way, the body is covered with hot sand, so most of the body's water evaporates quickly or is carried out in such environmental conditions. This means that the body was dried and preserved naturally, and this method was used on a scale It is widespread in the pre-dynastic era before the development of artificial embalming, and the process of natural embalming may have led to burial in dry sand in this way to start believing in resurrection after death and the age of the habit of leaving food and tools for other life.
"All the dead bodies were in similar, flexible positions, sleeping on their left side, with their knees raised to the top of their chin."
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