manuel cohen

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Abandoned sarcophagus, Serapeum, Saqqara, Egypt

Abandoned sarcophagus in the northern corridor of the Serapeum of Saqqara, a burial place of the sacred bulls of the Apis cult, built 18th - 30th dynasties, at Saqqara, Egypt. The bulls were believed to be incarnations of the god Ptah, becoming Osiris-Apis after death. They were buried in canopic jars and sarcophagi in underground chambers. The burial site at Saqqara, containing pyramids, mastabas and tombs from 1st dynasty to the Greco Roman period, was the royal necropolis for Memphis. Saqqara is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen

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Filename
LC22_EGYPT_MC_0214.jpg
Copyright
© Manuel Cohen
Image Size
8268x5869 / 15.0MB
www.manuelcohen.com
abandoned Africa African ancient Ancient Egypt Ancient Egyptian animal apis Apis cult archaeological archaeology archeological archeology bull burial burial site chamber civilisation civilization color image colour image corridor death desert Egypt Egyptian funerary funerary complex Giza heritage history horizontal indoors inside interior Lower Egypt Memphis necropolis New Kingdom niche North Africa North African Ptah royal Saccara Sakkara Saqqara sarcophagus serapeum site tomb tourist attraction underground UNESCO UNESCO World Heritage site visitor attraction
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Abandoned sarcophagus in the northern corridor of the Serapeum of Saqqara, a burial place of the sacred bulls of the Apis cult, built 18th - 30th dynasties, at Saqqara, Egypt. The bulls were believed to be incarnations of the god Ptah, becoming Osiris-Apis after death. They were buried in canopic jars and sarcophagi in underground chambers. The burial site at Saqqara, containing pyramids, mastabas and tombs from 1st dynasty to the Greco Roman period, was the royal necropolis for Memphis. Saqqara is listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Picture by Manuel Cohen