Discovered the statue of Queen Cleopatra
A statue of Cleopatra's head made of alabaster and a mask believed to be of her lover - Mark Antony was found near the ancient city of Alexandria in Egypt.
A statue of Cleopatra's head made of alabaster and a mask believed to be of her lover - Mark Antony - was found near the ancient city of Alexandria in Egypt.
(Photo: papyrusmuseum.com)
In addition, two other treasures, a bronze statue of the goddess Aphrodite and a headless statue of a royal character from the Ptolemaic dynasty, ruled Egypt from 323 to 30 BC, a group of Egyptian and Dominica archaeologists discovered at the temple of Tapsiris Magna.
The group also found about 20 coins engraved with Cleopatra's face in a 50-meter-deep underground cellar.
The group's goal was to find the tomb of Cleopatra's famous queen, but there was no sign of her being her grave. If true, this will be the greatest discovery in Egypt since the discovery of the tomb of young King Tutankhamen in 1922.
Cleopatra and Mark Anthony are among the most famous couples in Egyptian history. They committed suicide after their defeat in the battle of Acitum.
- Little is known about Cleopatra's queens
- Cleopatra scientist
- Cleopatra - the most powerful woman of the ancient world
- Excavation of Cleopatra's property under the ocean
- Discover the story of Cleopatra's queen
- Discovered the remains of Queen Cleopatra
- Recreating the perfume of Queen Cleopatra 2,000 years ago
- Doubt about the death of the beautiful Egyptian queen
- Cleopatra - The first woman to
- Discovering the statue of Queen Ti of Egypt
Before trees ruled, the Earth was covered with giant fungi. Wreckage of mysterious missing bomber found after 80 years 600 bird species extinct due to humans, countless ecosystems damaged Digging the ground to make a fence, the man found a box full of gold Never-before-seen monster revealed after 138 million years of hiding 40,000-year-old fossil forest discovered after storm What was the fate of the city destroyed for opposing the Roman Empire? Mysterious stone circle may be world's oldest observatory