Egyptian mummy 3,000 years of eternal rest by the people of today
According to Daily Mail, researchers at the University of London (UCL) use a new scanning technique to identify Egyptian mummies, which are on display at Chiddington Castle in Kent.
Scientists have recently deciphered the mysterious mantra around 3,000 years old, helping this person rest permanently.
According to Daily Mail, researchers at the University of London (UCL) use a new scanning technique to identify Egyptian mummies, which are on display at Chiddington Castle in Kent.
The real name is the key to the mummy's eternal rest.
"The Egyptian mummy displayed here was examined by researchers at the University of London, to determine the mummy's true name, which existed 3,000 years ago," said castle staff Maria Esain.
'Egyptian legend says, if you read the name of the dead mummy correctly, we can bring him to eternal life . That is exactly what researchers want to identify, through the words written next to the coffin '.
Researchers from the University of London use multifocal imaging techniques to photograph mummies, through the electromagnetic spectrum.
3,000-year-old Egyptian mummy kept at Chiddington Castle in England.
Dr. Kathryn Piquette, a UCL expert, uses infrared filters to search for carefully hidden hieroglyphs.
The results are very positive. The hieroglyphs immediately appeared. After a few days of consulting with American and Egyptian experts, Dr. Piquette said another team is sure the name of the mummy is Irethorru or Irethoreru.
This is a fairly common name for a man who lived in Egypt in the period of 664 BC - 30 AD.
British scientists also hope this technology will help read ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs on many artifacts without necessarily destroying artifacts.
'It's hard to accept when we witness ancient objects that are not intact just to try to read the printed words on it,' said Dr. Piquette.
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