Ancient shrine, Roman emperor bust discovered in Egypt
A stone head of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius found in the Temple of Kom Ombo, in Aswan.


Egyptian archaeologists have discovered an ancient shrine and a bust of a Roman emperor in southern Egypt, officials said on Sunday. The shrine of god Osiris-Ptah Neb, dating back to the 25th dynasty, was found in the Temples of Karnak in the southern city of Luxor.

The shrine is important because of its location, according to Ayman Ashmawy, head of the government's Ancient Egyptian Antiquities department.

The shrine is located to the south of the Temple of Amun-Re, whereas previous shrines had been found only to the east and north of the temple, in line with ancient Egyptian beliefs, he said in a statement.

Artifacts found at the site included a collection of pottery, the lower part of a sitting statue and part of a stone panel depicting an offering table filled with a ram and a goose.

These were symbols of the ancient god Amun, according to Essam Nagy, the head of the expedition working in the area.

The bust of Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius was, meanwhile, found in the Temple of Kom Ombo in the southern city of Aswan.

The head is "unique" because statues depicting this emperor are rare in Egypt, Ashmawy said.

The finds are the latest in a series announced in Egypt in recent months.