Archaeologists tie ancient bones to a revolt chronicled on the Rosetta Stone
The skeleton provides a rare glimpse into an uprising around 2,200 years ago
By Bruce Bower
NOVEMBER 27, 2019 AT 6:00 AM
SAN DIEGO Excavated remains of a warrior slain around 2,200 years ago provide rare, physical evidence of an uprising thats described on the Rosetta Stone, scientists say.
Most likely, the warrior we found was a casualty of the ancient Egyptian revolt, said archaeologist Robert Littman on November 22 at the annual meeting of the American Schools of Oriental Research.
A team led by Littman, of the University of Hawaii at Manoa, and anthropological archaeologist Jay Silverstein of the University of Tyumen in Russia unearthed the mans skeleton at the ancient city of Thmouis. That city is now buried beneath a mound of earth and debris called Tell Timai in the Nile Delta.
The Rosetta Stone, carved in 196 B.C., is famous for bearing an official message in three scripts, including one in ancient Greek that enabled scholars to decipher another written in ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. That message describes a military victory of Ptolemy V, a pharaoh from a powerful Greek dynasty, against a faction of a native Egyptian revolt known from written sources to have lasted from 206 B.C. to 186 B.C. Thmouis was located in a region where battles in that revolt occurred.
More:
https://www.sciencenews.org/article/archaeologists-tie-ancient-bones-egypt-warrior-revolt-rosetta-stone-chronicle