10,000-Year-Old Tomb Recently Discovered In Turkey Is Related To Queen Nefertiti

Finding ancient tombs is always a treat, but finding them in places that they shouldn’t be in is shocking, to say the least. That was the reaction that the team had when they uncovered an ancient 12,000-year-old tomb that appears to be related to Queen Nefertiti in Turkey of all places. We know that it’s related to her because her name is plastered everywhere around the burial site.

The tomb also tells a story about Queen Nefertiti that nobody knew before.

It tells the story of her husband who was working under the Corruption Priesthood Amun and how her loyal followers knew that she was in danger so they had him assassinated for her own good.

The Amarna Imperial family has always been a mystery for archaeologists all around the globe, but this discovery makes it a hundred times more interesting, to say the least. Layout-wise the tomb is identical to King Tutankhamun’s tomb, but it is filled to the brim with statues of the Pharaoh Akhenaten and artifacts made specifically for Queen Nefertiti herself.

This is probably on par with the discovery of King Tut’s own tomb, it sheds a lot of light on the matters of Queen Nefertiti but it also brings out more questions regarding the ramifications of the royal family.

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