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Massive statue of Egyptian ruler Taharqa found deep inside Sudan E-mail
January, 02 2010
 

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Heritage Key

A massive one ton granite statue of the pharaoh Taharqa has been found in Dangeil, deep inside Sudan. Taharqa was a pharaoh of the 25th dynasty of Egypt. This was a period of Kushite rule, which means that Taharqa and his fellow rulers were from Nubia and drew their powerbase from there.

Dangeil is near the fifth cataract, deep in Sudan.

The site is located approximately 350 km northeast of the modern Sudanese capital of Khartoum  in the general vicinity of the fifth Nile cataract.

In addition to Taharqa, archaeologists have found statues of two other Napatan kings at the site - Senkamanisken and Aspelta. Neither of these rulers controlled Egypt.

The announcement was made on the blog of Dr. Caroline Rocheleau of the Royal Ontario Museum North Carolina Museum of Art. A scholarly article was also published recently in the journal Nubia & Sudan.

The statues were found in 2008 but their discovery has not been made public until now.

I contacted Dr. Rocheleau for an interview. She told me that dig director Dr. Julie Anderson, of the British Museum, will be handling media inquiries about the find  however Anderson will not be returning until January 6.

So we will have to wait a bit to get an interview and (hopefully) some pictures of the discovery.

In her blog Dr. Rocheleau describes the Taharqa statue as, "more than life-size and weighs over one ton." The Taharqa and Senkamanisken statues have "great muscular bodies with an inscribed back pillar... and lovely feet on the statue base, but we are missing their heads and their lower legs."

She continues, "as for Aspelta, it completely the opposite: we have his beautiful head, lower legs and his feet, but not his body."

The find was a surprise to Rocheleau's team. There are no granite sources near the site  and the finds at Dangeil, prior to this discovery, date to the time of the kingdom of Meroe (3rd century BC  3rd century AD).



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