logo
Lost tomb of Egyptian 'wizard doctor' reveals amazing evidence of ancient knowledge

Lost tomb of Egyptian 'wizard doctor' reveals amazing evidence of ancient knowledge

Daily Mirror18-07-2025
The remains of a talented healer and 'priest and magician' who was thought to have treated pharaohs have been found in Egypt, archaeologists have announced
Archaeologists have unearthed the remains of what they believe to be a 4,000 year old wizard/ doctor in Egypt. The Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities announced the find earlier this year, with the tomb located in the ancient burial ground of Saqqara.

The tomb, which features a false door and is adorned with vibrant engravings and drawings, was identified as belonging to Teti Neb Fu, a physician from the era of King Pepi II, who ruled from 2305BC to 2118BC during the sixth dynasty.

"The tomb is adorned with stunning carvings and vibrant artwork, including a beautifully painted false door and scenes of funerary offerings," the ministry stated. This revelation follows their release of images showcasing the discovery of a 4,000 year old tomb that has illuminated aspects of a ruler's life from four millennia past.

Teti Neb Fu's final resting place is a mastaba, characterised by its flat roof and sloping sides, which was common for that historical period. According to the ministry, this discovery provides fresh perspectives on the daily lives and medical practices of the ancient Egyptians.
From the evidence unearthed, it appears Teti Neb Fu was no ordinary healer. The inscriptions within his remarkably well-preserved tomb have shed light on the physician's life, revealing that he held a 'complete set of titles', reports the Mirror US.

Among these accolades were 'chief doctor of the palace' and 'priest and magician' of the goddess Serket.
The tomb was discovered in an area often referred to as the City of the Dead, a site brimming with ancient structures and burial grounds. Like many other ancient Egyptian tombs, this location had already been plundered of its treasures, but the remaining decorations provided the French-Swiss archaeological team enough clues to piece together information about its enigmatic occupant.
Researchers speculate that he was likely a specialist in treating snake or scorpion bites, given that Serket was revered as a protector against venomous bites and stings.
The Independent reported that this esteemed healer also served as a Royal dentist and as 'director of plant medicine.' His high standing is evident from the numerous significant roles and positions he would have held at the pharaoh's court.
The most recent findings from the site are a result of an ongoing dig in Saqqara that began in 2022, with researchers positing that the ancient Egyptian kingdom held both medicine and magic in high esteem. This theory is partly based on Teti Neb Fu's intricate burial and the notion that this civilisation was constantly in pursuit of knowledge.
Past discoveries suggest that the ancient Egyptians were striving to comprehend and combat cancer. They also endeavoured to concoct lotions and herbal cures for a variety of ailments.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Disturbing Ancient Egyptian graves reveal brutal treatment of corpses 5,000 years ago including shock teen girl's burial
Disturbing Ancient Egyptian graves reveal brutal treatment of corpses 5,000 years ago including shock teen girl's burial

Scottish Sun

timea day ago

  • Scottish Sun

Disturbing Ancient Egyptian graves reveal brutal treatment of corpses 5,000 years ago including shock teen girl's burial

The girl's body was carefully aligned with the setting sun on the winter solstice, while her coffin also pointed towards the rising of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window) Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) ARCHAEOLOGISTS have uncovered a disturbing Ancient Egyptian burial practice that saw people dismembered before being put to rest. The discovery offers a rare insight into the spiritual life of villagers more than 5,000 years ago - and may even mark the beginning of religion for the ancient pharaohs. Sign up for Scottish Sun newsletter Sign up 3 Using artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, researchers analysed patterns among more than 900 tombs across the 74-acre Adaiima site Credit: Alcouffe, A., Duchesne, S., Tupikova, I. et al./ Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory Researchers found the remains of a teenage girl whose arm had been deliberately severed after her death and positioned to match her left arm. The girl's left arm was bent unnaturally in a more than 90degree angle and tucked in very tightly. The limb was removed near the lower part of the upper arm and forearm, possibly done using an axe. The muscles were most likely sliced with a flint blade, according to researchers. Her severed arm was carefully arranged to appear almost intact, with the hand placed beside the forearm. Buried in the Adaiima cemetery on the west bank of the Nile river, the remains date back to between 3300 to 2700 BC. The girl's body was carefully aligned with the setting sun on the winter solstice, while her coffin also pointed towards the rising of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky. Celestial alignments, and other symbolic gestures, likely influenced the religious traditions later embraced by Egypt's first pharaohs who emerged between 100 and 400 years later. 3 Buried in the Adaiima cemetery on the west bank of the Nile river, the remains date back to between 3300 to 2700 BC Credit: Getty Her burial may also be the earliest sign of the Osiris and Isis myth - where the goddess Isis reassembles the dismembered body of Osiris beneath the rising Sirius. The tale is thought to symbolise death, rebirth, and cosmic order. Ancient Egyptian Tombs: Over a Thousand Mummies Unveiled The cemetery her remains were found in is one of Egypt's oldest and most thoroughly studied, and paints a detailed picture about how funerary practices changed over time. Using artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning, researchers analysed patterns among more than 900 tombs across the 74-acre Adaiima site. Another coffin that was positioned to catch the winter sun contained a woman buried with ornate jewelry and pottery. A third grave, also belonging to a woman, faced the summer sunset and contained a ceremonial staff and plant-fiber wig. The study suggests these early burials shaped the mythology later adopted by Egypt's ruling elite - from their sky-based alignments to their ritual gestures, such as dismemberment. Older graves were placed around earlier, astronomically-aligned tombs, suggesting those burials held continued to hold religious or ancestral significance over the years. Ivory boat models and fine coffins were found with remains researchers believed once belonged to individuals of higher status or spiritual importance. Similar to the dismemberment, a singular bone belonging to a child was found placed on the chest of an adult in a later tomb. In the myth of Osiris, Isis gathers the scattered body parts of her murdered husband after he is slain by his jealous brother, Set. "Sepdet, which we know as Sirius, was believed to be the appearance of Isis in the sky," the study said. "When the state emerged, it did not create religion from scratch. "It absorbed long-standing practices and reworked them into royal narratives."

Food dyes: Tech firms look for natural food colours
Food dyes: Tech firms look for natural food colours

BBC News

time2 days ago

  • BBC News

Food dyes: Tech firms look for natural food colours

French firm Fermentalg has been all over the planet in its search for useful microalgae."One of our lucky scientists got to go and climb the volcanoes in the Caribbean for example, and I have to restrain myself from collecting more every time I go home to New Zealand," says Hywel Griffiths, chief scientific officer at are hundreds of thousands of species of microalgae - microscopic organisms, which mostly live in water. They are essential to the aquatic food chain and also produce half the oxygen we are already used commercially, to make food, animal feed and fertiliser. But for Fermantalg one particular type, Galdieria sulphuraria, has a very useful trait. It can be used to produce a pigment, suitable for use in food, called Galdieria blue."We grow the algae and make a lot of it under conditions which make a lot of this particular molecule - the blue," says Mr pigment can be used for any food and drinks and Mr Griffiths expects the first products using Galdieiria blue will be on shop shelves early next blue was approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in May, along with Butterfly pea flower extract (also a blue colour) and calcium phosphate (white).The FDA also approved Gardenia blue earlier this month. New sources of colour for food are needed as artificial food dyes are on their way January, the FDA announced the banning of Red Dye No. 3 in food addition, the FDA is looking to phase out petroleum-based synthetic dyes such as Yellow Dye 5 and 6 by the end of next year as part of the government's mission to "Make America Healthy Again"."For the last 50 years, American children have increasingly been living in a toxic soup of synthetic chemicals," FDA commissioner Marty Makary said at a press conference in food colouring bad for you?Though not an outright ban, the FDA is hoping the food industry voluntarily complies to eliminate artificial food dyes by comes after years of pressure from parents and campaigners for the FDA to revoke approval for dyes or educate consumers more about the recent times, many US states have made their own moves to pass laws to remove artificial food colouring differ on the restrictions they have in place. Historically, the UK and the European Union have been stricter than the EU has been phasing out artificial colourings over the last 20 years and also introducing warnings on foods with other colours. So, these are good times for firms developing natural alternatives. US-based Sensient creates natural colours by sourcing raw materials that are grown specifically for their colour content. For example, some red and purple colours are derived from carrots and potatoes."These crops are harvested, washed, processed into a juice, and the colour is extracted with water or other solvents," says Paul Manning, chief executive officer at Sensient."The resulting colour is further processed to stabilise the concentrate and refine it to the specific shade desired by the customer."But the hard work will be trying to match the synthetic colour. "It must be equally vivid," says Mr Manning."There are plenty of examples of brands converting to natural colours with less vivid and vibrant shades where the product does poorly in the market and customers complain about both the colour and the flavour."Getting a stable, bright colour also involved much work for Fermantalg."To our surprise we found that the process of growing the algae and the process of extracting the colour can actually have a fairly significant impact on the stability of the product at the end, even though it's fairly heavily purified," says Griffiths."But something that we've done upstream is having an impact on how stable it is at the end."Will these new colours cost more?"They are more expensive, but in actual contribution to the end product, they're not actually that big an impact because these things are used at a fraction of a percentage in the final product," says Mr Griffiths."If you had a nosebleed and stood over the sink… you know that a little bit of colour goes a long way." For the brands that have long relied on artificial colourings, it's an upheaval."We are reformulating our cereals served in schools to not include FD&C colours by the 2026-27 school year," says a spokesperson for WK Kellogg, the company behind Kellogg' refers to certain certified synthetic colour additives regulated by the FDA, and approved by the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic year protesters gathered outside the company headquarters in Michigan, calling on it to remove artificial dyes from cereals such as Froot Loops."We will not be launching any new products with FD&C colours, beginning in January 2026," the spokesperson year food giants including Nestle, Kraft Heinz, General Mills and Conagra have all pledged to phase out artificial food of the challenges for food brands reliant on artificial colouring is that many natural food dyes don't necessarily have a long shelf life, says Institute of Food Technologists food scientist Renee Leber. "Whereas synthetic dyes will outlive the shelf life of pretty much any product."She also says that as many brands rush to make the switch it's going to lead to a "bottleneck" in production."We don't necessarily have all these colours available. But we have 10 months to get that right."Given this isn't an outright ban, is it still expected to lead to sweeping change in the US food industry?"If you are a cereal company and you have a brightly coloured cereal and all of your competitors switch from synthetics to natural colours, then you don't necessarily want to be the last one," says Ms Leber."It's a tight timeframe but companies are doing their best to comply."

Shocking Ancient Egypt burial reveals unthinkable acts carried out on corpses after death
Shocking Ancient Egypt burial reveals unthinkable acts carried out on corpses after death

Daily Mail​

time2 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shocking Ancient Egypt burial reveals unthinkable acts carried out on corpses after death

Archaeologists have uncovered disturbing burial practices of ancient Egyptians, offering rare insight into the spiritual life of villagers more than 5,000 years ago. Among the most striking discoveries was the body of a teenage girl buried in the Adaiima cemetery near the Nile River, dating back to 3300 to 2700BC. Her arm had been deliberately severed post-mortem near the lower part of the upper arm and forearm, possibly done using an axe, and the muscles were likely sliced with a flint blade. Those who prepared her body carefully arranged the severed pieces to appear almost intact, placing the hand beside the forearm. Archaeologists said that it seemed the goal was to make the cut-off right arm match the unusual position of her left arm, which was bent sharply, more than a right angle, and tucked in very tightly. The girl's body was also carefully aligned with the setting sun on the winter solstice, and her coffin pointed toward the rising of Sirius, the brightest star in the sky. Experts suggest her burial may be the earliest sign of the Osiris and Isis myth, in which the goddess Isis reassembles the dismembered body of Osiris beneath the rising Sirius, symbolizing death, rebirth, and cosmic order. According to the study, these early star-based alignments and symbolic gestures likely influenced the religious traditions later embraced by Egypt's first pharaohs, who emerged roughly 100 to 400 years later. Researchers used AI and machine learning to analyze patterns among more than 900 tombs in the 74-acre Adaïma site, one of Egypt's oldest and most thoroughly studied cemeteries. Their findings revealed long-term cultural shifts in funerary customs, including the gradual emergence of social hierarchies and spiritual symbolism. Another woman was found buried nearby with ornate jewelry and pottery, her coffin positioned to capture the winter sun. A third grave held a woman with a ceremonial staff and plant-fiber wig, facing the summer sunset. These early sky-based alignments and ritual gestures appear to have shaped the mythology later adopted by Egypt's ruling elite, according to the study. Later graves were often clustered around earlier, astronomically-aligned tombs, suggesting those burials held enduring religious or ancestral significance. Some included ivory boat models and fine coffins, likely marking individuals of higher status or spiritual importance. One child's bone was found placed on an adult's chest, while a woman was buried with a bracelet fragment in her hand, actions interpreted as deliberate expressions of spiritual beliefs and afterlife connections. In the myth of Osiris, Isis gathers the scattered body parts of her murdered husband after he is slain by his jealous brother, Set. Using magic, she brings him back to life briefly to conceive their son Horus. The tale, symbolizing resurrection, was closely tied to the annual Nile flood and cycles of renewal. According to another study on ancient Egyptian astronomy, 'The Nile flood was caused by the tears that Isis shed, after his brother Seth murdered her husband Osiris.' 'Sepdet, which we know as Sirius, was believed to be the appearance of Isis in the sky,' the study stated. These early rural burial practices, including cut limbs and celestial alignment, appear to have laid the foundation for Egypt's later religious and mythological traditions. 'When the state emerged, it did not create religion from scratch,' the researchers wrote. 'It absorbed long-standing practices and reworked them into royal narratives.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store