Many people make the mistake of thinking that dreams cannot come true, but they can. You have to believe, and know that they are more than just imagination.

— Zahi Hawass

Press Release - New Finds at Naqlun Monastery

A mission from the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology of Warsaw University unearthed a decorated clay vessel from a room in a monastic building at the Deir Malak Gubrail monastery in Naqlun, a site in the Fayum.

The vessel is of Aswan production and contained a hoard of coins, Farouk Hosni, Egypt’s Minister of Culture, announced today.

Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), said that the hoard consists of 18 gold coins and 62 fragments of coins, all of them provisionally dated to the Abbasid period (AD 750-1258). Under the charred remains of a collapsed wall, archaeologists also uncovered a chandelier and a well-preserved oil lamp, both made of bronze.

Wlodzimierz Godlewski, the head of the Polish mission, said that the monastic complex of Naqlun was built in the early 6th century AD. The area excavated this season dated to the 7th century AD, and was destroyed by a massive fire around the end of the 8th or the beginning of the 9th century AD.

 

Location

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Dr. Hawass and Vin Diesel
The Temple of Ras el-Souda, Alexandria
Decorated carttonage from the new excavations at Saqqara
The Step Pyramid Conservation Team Clearing Debris from the Sarcophagus of Djoser
Detail of a Still-Wrapped Mummy Found near the Temple of Taposiris Magna
Dr. Hawass Inside the Osiris Shaft
Relief from the Newly Discovered Temple in the Sinai Showing Ramesses II Making Offerings
Reassembling Pottery Vessels in the Valley of the Kings