The tomb belonged to Teti Neb Fu, a celebrated healer well-known within the community and surrounding environs. Fu worked as ...
Archaeologists have unveiled a 4,100-year-old tomb belonging to a physician who treated the Egyptian Pharaohs. The tomb was found in the southern part of Saqqara, Egypt, belonging to Teti Neb Fu ...
Teti Neb Fu's burial place was found in the southern part of Saqqara, a vast burial ground often described as a "city of the dead". The stunning burial chamber is believed to date back over 4,000 ...
During Pepi II’s reign, Teti Neb Fu held several prestigious titles, including the chief palace physician, chief dentist, and director of medicinal plants. He also was a priest and a “magician ...
It comes just days after the Zahi Hawass Foundation for Antiquities and Heritage, a foundation established by Egyptian ...
Archaeologists have unearthed a 4,000-year-old tomb in Saqqara, Egypt that belonged to Teti Neb Fu, a royal witch doctor. Sitting 40km south of Cairo near Giza, Saqqara is an ancient burial ground ...
From the carvings on the tomb, archaeologists concluded that it belonged to the physician “Teti Neb Fu” who lived during the reign of King Pepe II of the sixth dynasty, between about 2305BC ...
Teti Neb Fu, a high-ranking physician during Pharaoh Pepi II's reign, held titles like Chief Dentist, Priest of Serket, and Director of Medicinal Plants. Archaeologists discover 4,000-year-old ...
The well-preserved burial site belonged to Teti Neb Fu, believed to have been a doctor to the royal family. Inscriptions on his tomb suggest that Teti Neb Fu was famous in ancient Egypt and had a ...