Monday, May 26, 2008

Hawass on the hunt for Cleopatra

Times Online (Sarah Hashash)

A flamboyant archeologist known worldwide for his trademark Indiana Jones hat believes he has identified the site where Cleopatra is buried.

Now, with a team of 12 archeologists and 70 excavators, Zahi Hawass, 60, the head of Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities, has started searching for the entrance to her tomb.

And after a breakthrough two weeks ago he hopes to find her lover, the Roman general Mark Antony, sharing her last resting place at the site of a temple, the Taposiris Magna, 28 miles west of Alexandria.

Hawass has discovered a 400ft tunnel beneath the temple containing clues that the supposedly beautiful queen may lie beneath. “We’ve found tunnels with statues of Cleopatra and many coins bearing her face, things you wouldn’t expect in a typical temple,” he said. . . .

The archeologist, best known in Britain for demanding the return of the Rosetta Stone from the British Museum and for promoting the Tutankhamun exhibition at the O2 dome in London, believes the temple’s location would have made it a perfect place for Cleopatra to hide from Octavian’s army.

Work on the site has been suspended until the summer heat abates and is due to resume in November, when Hawass will use radar to search for hidden chambers.

See the above page for the full story.

3 comments:

fred said...
This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
fred said...

Hawass is in control of who has access to Egypt's ruins. He has always been an egomaniac who has forced archaeologists to 'allow' him to share discoveries and punished them when they haven't credited him.

I suspect just about anything this man says.


fred sierevogel

fred said...

Hawass {not his real naem}has only punished archaeological missions and individuals who have released excavation information without clearing it through the Supreme Council of Antiquities, not because he wanted to share in someone elses discoveries.