A cerca de 25 quilómetros a sul do Cairo, a capital do Egipto, foi encontrada uma tumba com mais de 4000 anos que mantém bem vivas as cores das pinturas e dos hieróglifos gravados na pedra.
Egyptian archaeologists unveiled a newly-unearthed double tomb with vivid wall paintings in the ancient necropolis of Saqqara near Cairo.
The tomb includes two false doors with colourful paintings depicting the two people buried there, a father and a son who served as heads of the royal scribes.
The inscription dates the double tomb to the 6th dynasty (2374-2191BC), which marked the beginning of the decline of the Old Kingdom, also known as the age of pyramids.
BBC News
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