Conny Waters – MessageToEagle.com – A huge statue of the god Horus, was recently unearthed during Egyptian-German archaeological excavations carried out at the Funerary Temple of king Amenhotep
Jan Bartek – MessageToEagle.com – Scientists have made a quite remarkable find in an Egyptian sarcophagus. They have retrieved what may be the world’s oldest illustrated book. It’s
Jan Bartek – MessageToEagle.com – Ancient Egyptians believed that a person’s soul had many parts. One of these parts was called the ka, and the Egyptian symbol was sometimes
Conny Waters – MessageToEagle.com – A number of fragments of royal colossi and a huge mud-brick wall from the New Kingdom have been unearthed at Heliopolis Temple in Matariya,
Jan Bartek – MessageToEagle.com – Three wooden coffins have been uncovered in the courtyard of Padiaménopé tomb (TT 33), by an archaeological team led by from the Institut
Ellen Lloyd – AncientPages.com – In part 1 we discussed why ancient Egyptian knowledge can offers clues to many Biblical mysteries. We talked about similarities between ancient Egyptian
Conny Waters – AncientPages.com – Egypt Today reports the discovery of an archaeological cemetery in Saqqara. It is the first cemetery from the Roman era in this region, unearthed
Richard Cassaro – MessageToEagle.com – The Egyptian ankh cross…in Mexico? That’s right. The ruins of a mysterious Aztec temple bears a strange and striking resemblance to Egypt’s ankh
MessageToEagle.com – Most probably no other site in Egypt is more impressive and fascinating than Karnak. Karnak represents one of the greatest temple complexes in the world. It is
MessageToEagle.com – The vessel, which is believed to be the ceremonial boat of Pharaoh Cheops, known for building the largest of Egypt’s pyramids, will be restored by the largest
MessageToEagle.com – Dedicated to one of the most famous deities of ancient Egypt, the magnificent temple of Goddess Hathor is the largest and most impressive building in the Denderah
MessageToEagle.com – Two decade-long archaeological excavations conducted by Polish researchers in the Egyptian necropolis at Saqqara helped to shed light on social status and physical health of the people
MessageToEagle.com – The ancient city of Pi-Ramesses (“the House of Ramses”) was once the capital of Egypt during the reign of Ramesses II, the third pharaoh of the 19th dynasty.
MessageToEagle.com – A private tomb in the Theban necropolis in Luxor, has been unearthed by Japanese researchers from Waseda University. Based on its style, the beautifully decorated tomb
MessageToEagle.com – More than 12 rock-hewn tombs have been unearthed in Gebel el-Silsila, located on the northern side of Gebel Al-Silsila in Aswan, Egypt. The Egyptian-Swedish archaeologists led
MessageToEagle.com – The tomb of Amenrenef (‘Amn eir nef’), the servant of King Thutmose III’s house was unearthed during the Spanish-Egyptian excavations at the Temple of Millions of
MessageToEagle.com – A causeway leading to the tomb of Sarenput I, an ancient Egyptian official during the reign of pharaoh Senusret I of the 12th Dynasty, was unearthed
MessageToEagle.com – Have you ever wondered what it really looks like inside ancient Egyptian tombs? To take photos of ancient tombs in Egypt requires special permission that is very
MessageToEagle.com – On August 2, 1798, Nelson won one of the greatest victories of the British admiral Horatio Nelson. It was fought between the British and French fleets
MessageToEagle.com – On 3 June 1853, Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie was born at Charlton, near Greenwich, London, England. Sir Petrie was a British archaeologist and Egyptologist who
MessageToEagle.com – Many ancient monuments have been rescued from rising waters of powerful Nile river. One of them is rock cut ‘Tomb of Pennut’, which is located in Aniba,
MessageToEagle.com – Two headless Old Kingdom statues and a New Kingdom offering stele have been unearthed in Elephantine Island in Aswan during excavations conducted by Swiss team of
MessageToEagle.com – The Nubian woman, whose middle-class tomb was discovered in Tombos, Sudan is now researched as an example of how two civilizations met, according to Stuart Tyson Smith, a
MessageToEagle.com – The Tarkhan Dress, a V-neck linen shirt has been confirmed as the world’s oldest woven garment with radiocarbon testing dating the garment to the late fourth-millennium BC.