The Discovery of the Valley of the Mummies (2)
by
Dr. Zahi Hawass, Director of the
Giza Pyramids and Saqqara,
Undersecretary of the State for the Giza Monuments
A Festival of Mummies was discovered recently
by an Egyptian team at Bahariya Oasis, located about 380 km west of the
pyramids. Four tombs were excavated, and found inside them were 105 mummies,
many of them beautifully gilded. These mummies, many sumptuously decorated
with religious scenes, represent the very best of Roman-Period mummies
ever found in Egypt. These ancient remains are around 2000 years old,
but they have withstood the test of time remarkably well.
The story of the discovery began about three years ago, as I was excavating
in the site of the tombs of the pyramid builders. I was cleaning the skeleton
of a workman who once was working in constructing the great pyramid

My assistant Mansour Bouriak told me that
there was a very important discovery at Bahariya. I stopped cleaning the
skeleton. I said Mansour: is this one of your latest jokes? Mansour
said: Ashry Shaker Chief Inspector of Bahariya is here and wants to tell
you about the discovery.
Ashry said, "We have found beautiful mummies. You have to leave these
skeletons because lots of mummies have been found." He added, "Yesterday
the Antiquities guard Aiad was riding his donkey along the side of the
road that leads to Farafra Oasis, some six Kilometers south of the town
of El-Bawitty, the Capital of Bahariya. The donkey tripped, hitting its
leg on the edge of tomb." I told Ashry to start excavate this tomb,
and I would visit the site the following week.
 When I went in May 1996 to see
them, I could not believe that such beautiful mummies could exist. Their
eyes were looking at me as if they were real people.
Another mummy discovered reminded me of the mummy used by Hollywood in
the movie Curse of the Mummy. The tombs with the mummies were a stunning
cache. In 1996, the Bahariya Inspectorate of Antiquities did not have
sufficient funding nor enough qualified excavators and conservators to
properly preserve the mummies. Therefore, we kept this discovery secret;
we did not announce it because we were afraid that thieves could smell
the taste of resin that was put inside the mummies.
I felt that this site should be excavated to preserve the mummies and
also to know the size of the cemetery.
I led a team of archaeologist, architects, restorers, conservators, draftsmen,
an electrician, and an artist. We camped in the desert and stayed in a
very nice motel near the site. It was a nice change to leave the pyramids
and excavate mummies.
Mummies conjure up so many images in people's mind. Most people know about
mummies through scary movies. They inevitably evoke horror movies. But
the significance of this find is that it is the first exciting thing that
has brought Egyptomania to the modern world. To me this is personally
very exciting, but I am not overawed by the scary reputation of mummies.
To me it is a science and this remarkable find gives me the chance to
find more out about people from
another place and time.
- The story of our discovery begins back
in 1996 when an Antiquities guard of the Temple of Alexander the Great
was crossing the desert on his donkey. Suddenly the leg of the donkey
buckled and it fell. There was a small hole in the desert floor where
the donkey had fallen. The guard left his donkey in the area and ran
to Mr. Ashry Shaker to report the incident.
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