Here’s what you’ll learn when you read this story:An Egyptian-Italian archaeological team working near Egypt’s Aga Khan Mausoleum discovered a buried Greco-Roman tomb at the bottom of a stone staircase.Located on the Nile’s west bank in Aswan, the rock-cut tomb includes well-preserved hieroglyphic inscriptions naming a high-ranking official called Ka-Mesiu.The limestone sarcophagus was the most eye-catching find, but newer project work shows Tomb 38 belongs to a much larger cemetery system that was reused across centuries.Nine steps down a stone staircase near Egypt’s Aga Khan Mausoleum, archaeologists discovered a host of hieroglyphic inscriptions among what they call “one of the most architecturally impressive and well-preserved tombs unearthed to date.”Tucked away more than six feet underground, the tomb includes a roughly six-foot-tall limestone sarcophagus set on a rock-carved platform, the Egyptian Ministry of Tourism and Antiquities said in a statement. Vertical columns of hieroglyphic text run the length of the sarcophagus, and include prayers to local deities alongside a record stating that the tomb’s owner, Ka-Mesiu, was a high-ranking official.A joint Egyptian-Italian archaeological mission—led by the Supreme Council of Antiquities and the University of Milan—uncovered several rock-cut tombs from the Greco-Roman period. Tomb No. 38 was the crown jewel of the discoveries, and included a nine-step staircase surrounded by mudbrick benches that were likely meant to house funerary offerings.Since then, a 2026 University of Milan proceedings chapter described the Aga Khan necropolis as a far larger cemetery than the first discovery could show. One section says more than 400 tombs have been georeferenced across more than 75,000 square meters; the same chapter also says the investigated area is about 25,000 square meters, that more than 500 tombs were initially mapped, and that the full necropolis may stretch across roughly 200,000 square meters. This means Tomb 38 is one chamber in a very big burial landscape.The sarcophagus in the heart of the tomb included an anthropoid lid with a “finely detailed human face adorned with a decorative wig and remarkable painted features.” The tomb also contained several mummies, including children, though it isn’t clear if those bodies were all inside Ka-Mesiu’s sarcophagus.Egypt’s tourism and antiquities minister, Sherif Fathy, said at the time that the find offered “new insights into the social dynamics of the region during the Ptolemaic and Roman periods.” A 2026 University of Milan/Gangemi volume frames the population around Aswan as a multicultural frontier society that included Egyptians, Nubians, Persians, Phoenicians, Greeks, and Romans. That means Tomb 38 is part of a border cemetery used by a mixed community living near Elephantine and Syene, not simply a handsome burial chamber with a famous owner.Mohamed Ismail Khaled, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said the discovery revealed evidence that the necropolis was used by different social classes over a long span of time. The elite were buried in tombs atop the plateau, while middle-class burials were placed along the slopes near the Aga Khan Mausoleum in Aswan. The artifacts and mummies from AGH038 and AGH039, the two tombs excavated in 2025, span from the 3rd century BC to the 2nd century AD.Scientific work is now underway at the broader Italian-Egyptian mission in the West of Aswan (EIMAWA) site level. A European Society of Radiology poster reported CT findings for two superimposed mummies from another Aga Khan tomb, AGH026. The pair had been thought to be a mother and child; CT scans instead classified them as two children, about 4 to 6 and 8 to 9 years old. The scans also revealed wooden support elements used in mummification, post-mortem damage to internal anatomy, and bracelets or cuffs visible through virtual unwrapping.The broader burial picture is messier in the way real cemeteries usually are. The 2026 EIMAWA synthesis reports high minimum individual counts in some larger tombs, warns that commingled remains can make burial counts slippery, and notes skeletal evidence of tuberculosis and arthritis elsewhere in the necropolis. Researchers have also suggested that contagious disease may help explain some dense burial phases involving family groups or clusters of children.Tomb No. 38 was never likely to be the end of the hill’s story. Mohamed Abdel-Badei, head of the Egyptian Antiquities Sector at the Supreme Council of Antiquities, said the plateau hosts a series of large underground tombs dating to the Ptolemaic period that were once meant for elite families before later being reused during the Roman era. Since the Aga Khan necropolis is a broad, repeatedly used cemetery system, the main question now isn’t who else is buried there—it’s who those people were, how the tombs were reused, and how a frontier city buried its dead over centuries.
Original source: us