4,700-year-old Egyptian tomb reopened to tourists

4,700-year-old Egyptian tomb reopened to tourists

Egypt is keen to revive tourism following the pandemic through a series of new discoveries and a new museum.

A view of sarcophaguses that are around 2,500 years old, from a newly discovered burial site near Egypt’s Saqqara necropolis. (Reuters pic)
CAIRO:
Egypt yesterday reopened to tourists the 4,700-year-old southern tomb of King Djoser at the pyramid of Saqqara after a 15-year renovation.

The tomb, south of Cairo, lies near the Third Dynasty pharoah’s famous Step Pyramid, Egypt’s earliest large-scale stone structure, which itself was closed for restoration until March last year.

The southern tomb, built between 2667 and 2648 BC, is thought to have been built for symbolic reasons, or perhaps to hold Djoser’s internal organs, according to Mostafa Waziri, secretary-general of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities.

Egypt is keen to reinvigorate tourism following the pandemic and has unveiled a series of new discoveries and a new museum in recent months.

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