Archaeologists discover an artifact ancient Egyptian guards used to warn of grave robbers
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Reported by the Independent:
Archaeologists found a bone whistle used by ancient Egyptian guards to warn of grave robbers, shedding light on how royal tombs were protected.
The whistle made from a cow’s toe bone was recovered from an archaeological site of the 18th Dynasty city of Akhenaten in Middle Egypt, dating from 1350-1330BC.
Although excavations at the site have been underway since the 1970s, recent digs have uncovered two isolated settlements of the dynasty.
The settlements likely housed the stonecutters and labourers who built the rock-cut tombs of the nearby royal cemetery.
These areas and their connecting roadway circuits appear to have been policed heavily.
In one of these roadways, archaeologists found what might once have been a storage building or a place for the guards to sleep.
Here, they recovered an ancient perforated cow toe bone.
“This object fits with ideas that this community was heavily policed because of their proximity to the royal cemetery and likely connection to work on the royal tombs,” researchers said.
While ancient cultures across the world made use of cow bones to create ornaments and dice for different board games, the one found at the guard building didn’t seem to fit into any of these categories.
An experimental recreation of the artefact revealed the bone might serve as a whistle, capable of producing a loud screeching tone that could be heard a long distance away.
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Very interesting indeed.
This is very interesting, a good article.