Excavation work in Minya has uncovered an ancient settlement that might be a monks’ complex, the antiquities ministry have said.
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Gamal El-Semestawi, director-general of Antiquities of Middle Egypt, explains that the rock-hewn tombs are composed of a collection of burial chambers that are 50x70 metres in total.
The residential area is 100x130 metres in size and include the remains of houses, among them the remains of a mud-brick house of a monk.
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He added that the antiquities' ministry archaeological mission has also found a collection of monks' cells and a water well.
Excavations started in the area in 2008 when the mission uncovered the remains of a fifth-century church built of mud-brick, as well as a shrine; a prayer hall and a number of chambers with walls covered with plaster and decorated with coloured decorative elements and hymns written in the Coptic language.
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Gamal Mohamed, director of Maghagha antiquities, said that in 2013 the excavation work resumed and the mission discovered the remains of a monk’s chamber, a prayer hall, a kitchen and a grain store with walls decorated with red crosses.
The lower part of a monk's tomb stone was unearthed as well as a collection of metal coins and clay pots. The coins and pots are now under restoration and study.
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During the Hellenistic era Al-Bahnasa was called "Oxirenkhos" and in the Islamic period it was known as Al-Bahnasa referring to the daughter of the town's ruler at that time.
Author: Nevine El-Aref | Source: Ahram Online [August 18, 2017]









