A boat belonging to an Egyptian pharaoh is being assembled in full view at the Grand Egyptian Museum’s exhibition hall.
Traces of opium found inside an ancient alabaster vase suggest drug use was common in ancient Egypt, not rare or accidental.
CAIRO (AP) — A boat belonging to an Egyptian pharaoh is being assembled in full view at the Grand Egyptian Museum’s exhibition hall. Staff began piecing together the cedarwood boat, one of two that ...
Yale University researchers have found trace amounts of opium jars in an ancient Egyptian vessel, proving that opium use was widespread in the land of the pharaoh — including during the time of King ...
Made In Ancient Egypt, running until 12 April, is the first-ever exhibition to focus on the identities, skills and working ...
A boat belonging to an Egyptian pharaoh was put on display Tuesday in the Grand Egyptian Museum's exhibition hall while being ...
In 1922, when Howard Carter discovered King Tutankhamun’s tomb, the world was captivated by treasures untouched for over 3,000 years. But alongside fascination came whispers of sudden illnesses and ...
For more than a century, a cluster of alabaster jars from the burial of Tutankhamun sat in museum cases as some of the most puzzling objects from the boy king’s tomb. Now a new wave of scientific ...
A cedarwood boat belonging to Egyptian Pharaoh King Khufu is being assembled at the Grand Egyptian Museum. The project, ...
An ancient boat belonging to Egyptian Pharaoh King Khufu is being reassembled at the Grand Egyptian Museum. The cedarwood ...