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WARSAW: Polish scientists have claimed to have discovered the world’s first pregnant Egyptian mummy while carrying out scans on the 2,000-year-old remains kept at the National Museum in Warsaw.
An anthropologist and archaeologist at the University of Warsaw Marzena, Ozark-Szilke talking to the media said, “My husband Stanislaw and I looked at the X-ray images and noticed a proverbial sight for parents of three children in the belly of the dead woman”.
Further analysis revealed the whole foetus and scientists working on the Warsaw Mummy Project believe the woman was between 20 and 30 years old and was 26-30 weeks pregnant.
“We do not identify why the foetus was not taken out of the abdomen of the deceased woman during mummification,” said Wojciech Ejsmond from the Polish Academy of Sciences, another project participant.
He said, “That is why this mummy is truly unique. We have not been able to find any similar cases. This means that ‘our’ mummy is the only known in the world with a foetus,” he added.
There may have been an effort to “camouflage the pregnancy… or, perhaps, it had some significance related to beliefs and re-birth in the afterlife,” Ozarek-Szilke speculated.
Based on an analysis of the hieroglyphs on the sarcophagus, the mummy was originally thought to be of a male priest who lived between the first century BC and the first century AD.
Scientists now believe it could be even older than that and are looking into the possible causes of death. The mummy has not been opened but one scan showed the woman had long curly hair down to her shoulders.
The research has been published in the latest issue of the peer-reviewed Journal of Archaeological Science. The mummy was brought to Poland in the 19th century and became part of the antiquities collection at the University of Warsaw.
It has been kept at the National Museum since 1917, where it is on a show to the public alongside the sarcophagus.