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The Sabu disk is an ancient Egyptian artifact from the First Dynasty, c. 3000 to 2800 BC. It was found by Walter Emery in 1936 in the north of the Saqqara necropolis in mastaba S3111, the grave of the ancient Egyptian official Sabu after whom it is named. The function and meaning of the carefully crafted natural stone vessel are unclear.
It can be found in places such as the United States, Egypt, and Tunisia. The common name comes from Bodega Bay in California which is where the species was first studied; [ 2 ] however, it was first found and scientifically named as Holoconops kerteszi in Cairo, Egypt , in 1908.
The Fifth Settlement (Arabic: التجمع الخامس, literally means "the Fifth Gathering"; commonly shortened to: التجمع et-Tagammoʿ pronounced [et.tæˈɡæm.moʕ]) forms a qism (also known as Al-Qahira al-Gadida Awwal, New Cairo 1 police ward) in the New Cairo satellite city, in the Eastern Area of Cairo Governorate, Egypt.
Cairo (/ ˈ k ɛər oʊ / KAIR-oh) [4] is a village in Hall County, Nebraska, United States. The population was 785 at the 2010 census . It is part of the Grand Island, Nebraska Micropolitan Statistical Area .
New York City, New York, United States The Brooklyn Papyrus ( 47.218.48 and 47.218.85 , also known as the Brooklyn Medical Papyrus ) is a medical papyrus dating from ancient Egypt and is one of the oldest preserved writings about medicine and ophiology .
[7] [8] King Farouk of Egypt with Queen Farida of Egypt, on a one Egyptian Pound Stamp. Farida of Egypt, Queen of Egypt [9] children: Princess Farial of Egypt [10] Princess Fawzia Farouk of Egypt [11] Princess Fadia of Egypt [12] Nazli Sabri, first Queen of Egypt [1] children: Faika of Egypt [13] Farouk of Egypt, King of Egypt and the Sudan [14]
Owner Ashlyn Sholar introduced Bad Manners as a pop-up coffee business, and this will be its first brick-and-mortar. The regular hours will be 7 a.m.-2 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday and 8 a.m ...
According to Plutarch, the Egyptian queen Cleopatra, in preparing for her own suicide, tested various deadly poisons on condemned people and concluded that the bite of the asp (from the Greek word aspis, usually meaning an Egyptian cobra in Ptolemaic Egypt, and not the European asp) was the least terrible way to die; the venom brought ...