Sepulcrum Ptahmes
locus archaeologicus
Sepulcrum Ptahmes, sub harenis necropolis Saqqāra in Aegypto latens, est monumentum funebre nobilis Ptahmes, qui praefectus Memphitis saeculo XIII a.C.n. ineunte, pharaone Setho I, sacerdos pharaone Ramesse II meruit. Vestigia, anno 1885 a furibus partim delapidata, ab archaeologis anno 2010 rursus reperta sunt. Caseus solidus ibi inventus est, omnis mundi antiquissimus, qui autem Brucella melitensi bacterio nefasto contaminatus erat.
Bibliographia
recensere- D. Franke, "Reliefblock aus dem Grab des Ptahmose in Saqqara", in E. Bayer-Niemeier et al., edd., Liebieghaus-Museum alter Plastik Ägyptische Bildwerke. Band III. Skulptur, Malerei, Papyri und Särge (Melsungen, 1993) pp. 159-172
- C. Greco, "The Lost Tomb of Ptahmes" in P. Buzi, D. Picchi, M. Zecchi, edd., Aegyptiaca et Coptica. Studi in onore di Sergio Pernigotti (Oxoniae: BAR, 2011) pp. 34-38
- Enrico Greco et al., "Proteomic Analyses on an Ancient Egyptian Cheese and Biomolecular Evidence of Brucellosis" in Analytical Chemistry (25 Iulii 2018) Epitome
- Nico Staring, "The Tomb of Ptahmose, Mayor of Memphis Analysis of an Early 19 th Dynasty Funerary Monument at Saqqara" in Bulletin de l'Institut Française d'Archéologie Orientale vol. 114 (2015) pp. 455–518
Nexus externi
recensereVicimedia Communia plura habent quae ad Sepulcrum Ptahmes spectant. |
- "World's oldest cheese found in Egyptian tomb" (15 Augusti 2018) apud Science Daily