True romance…

 

Pyramid Age love story comes to life in Egyptian tomb’s vivid color

by Owen Jarus LiveScience

 

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Photo by Ms. Effy Alexakis, (c) Macquarie University Ancient Cultures Research Center

 

“Inside a tomb dating back to the age of the Pyramids in Egypt was this image, an embrace between a priestess and her husband, a singer in the pharaoh’s palace. The image has been recorded by researchers in full color.

 

She was a priestess named Meretites, and he was a singer named Kahai, who performed at the pharaoh’s palace. They lived about 4,400 years ago in an age when pyramids were being built in Egypt, and their love is reflected in a highly unusual scene in their tomb — an image that has now been published in all its surviving color.

 

The tomb at Saqqara — which held this couple, their children and possibly their grandchildren — has now been studied and described by researchers at Macquarie University’s Australian Center for Egyptology. Among the scenes depicted is a relief painting showing the couple gazing into each other’s eyes, with Meretites placing her right hand over Kahai’s right shoulder…”

 

Read the rest, here. See Photos of the Pyramid Age Tomb & Artwork here.

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