Working at the southern Egyptian site of Abydos, archaeologists discovered the tomb of pharaoh Woseribre Senebkay and the first material proof of a forgotten Abydos Dynasty.
A team from the Penn Museum, University of Pennsylvania, found king Senebkay's tomb close to a larger royal tomb, recently identified as belonging to king Sobekhotep of the 13th Dynasty.
The newly discovered tomb of pharaoh Senebkay, which dates to 1650 BC during Egypt's Second Intermediate Period, consists of four chambers with a decorated limestone burial chamber.
Other texts name the sons of Horus and record the king's titulary and identify him as the "king of Upper and Lower Egypt, Woseribre, the son of Re, Senebkay," researchers said.
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Senebkay's tomb was badly plundered by ancient tomb robbers who had ripped apart the king's mummy as well as stripped the pharaoh's tomb equipment of its gilded surfaces.
Preliminary work on the king's skeleton of Senebkay indicates he was a man of moderate height and died in his mid to late 40s.
The sarcophagus chamber, of red quartzite quarried and transported to Abydos from Gebel Ahmar (near modern Cairo), could be dated to the late Middle Kingdom, but its owner remained unidentified.
Mysteriously, the sarcophagus had been extracted from its original tomb and reused in a later tomb.
Archaeologists now know that the giant quartzite sarcophagus chamber derives from a royal tomb built originally for pharaoh Sobekhotep - probably Sobekhotep I, the first king of Egypt's 13th Dynasty.