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Monday, February 28, 2022

Egypt announces discovery of five ancient water wells in North Sinai

https://www.thenationalnews.com/mena/egypt/2022/03/01/egypt-announces-discovery-of-five-ancient-water-wells-in-north-sinai/

Egypt announces discovery of five ancient water wells in North Sinai

Antiquities officials say the wells were part of the Horus Military Route, an ancient road connecting Egypt to Palestine

One of five                wells discovered by an Egyptian archaeological mission in                North Sinai. Photo: Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities

An Egyptian archaeological mission working in the Tell El Kedwa region of North Sinai has discovered five water wells believed to be from the 13th century BC.

The Egyptian Antiquities Ministry said that wells were built before the reign of Seti I (1292-1190BC), but it did not give an exact date.

They are believed to have been a part of the expansive Horus Military Road, an ancient route that was used by pharaohs, the ministry said.

The wells were found outside the walls of the Tell El Kedwa fortress, one of several massive strongholds found in the area, which were used as military control points to protect Egypt's eastern frontier and guard access to its northern regions.

Three of five wells discovered              by an Egyptian archaeological mission in the Egyptian              province of North Sinai.

The mission's leader, Ramadan Helmy, said that four of the discovered wells were reportedly filled with sand to prevent the Persian army, which invaded Egypt in 525BC, from obtaining water.

The fifth well, which was unfilled, was a little more than three metres deep, the ministry's said.

Inside it, the mission found 13 pottery rings and several clay pots dating back to the 26th dynasty of ancient Egypt (664–525BC), also known as the Saite period.

A clay pot found inside a well              in the Egyptian province of North Sinai. Photo: Ministry of              Tourism & Antiquities

The fifth well was built in a haphazard manner, which was incongruent with the style of that period, Mr Helmy said.

The ministry said the mission's excavations were part of a larger national project to develop the province of North Sinai, which contains prominent pharaonic sites that will soon be open to tourists.

Another archaeological team operating at the nearby Tell El Kedwa fortress discovered a large storage centre dating to the Saite period.

A portion of the ancient Tell El              Kedwa fortress, an ancient military stronghold which formed              an important point on the Horus Military Route, an ancient              road which reportedly connected Egypt to Palestine in              ancient times. The fortress is in the modern day Egyptian              province of North Sinai, close to Egypt's border with the              Palestinian territory of Gaza.

Inside the large chamber, the mission found a pile of clay pots. And within the walls of the fortress, the mission found the remains of kilns, also from the Saite period.

The kilns are were part of a large copper-smelting workshop, the ministry's said. Copper shards were also found near the kilns.

Shards of copper found at the              Tell El Kedwa fortress in Egypt's North Sinai province.

The Horus Military Route was used during the old, middle and new kingdoms of ancient Egypt and was depicted in inscriptions at some of Egypt's other prominent archaeological sites, including Luxor's Karnak Temple.

At its peak, the route measured 220 kilometres and connected Egypt to Palestine.

Updated: February 28th 2022, 8:55 PM
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