AMAZING DISCOVERY AT THE LOUVRE MUSEUM IN PARIS

shocking discovery louvre museum

The famous blue canopic jars, located for over a century at the Louvre Museum in Paris, bearing the cartouche of Rameses II, still arouse the curiosity of scientists and everyone who sees them in the Egyptology section of the Louvre Museum.

These jars were long believed to contain the embalmed entrails of the great Egyptian Pharaoh Remeses II.

Recently, the famous Professor Jacques Connan from the Louis Pasteur University in Strasbourg, leading a team of chemists, carried out a series of chromatographic and spectrometric analyzes on the blue jars, the results of which left the researchers speechless.

C14 measurements, which establish with great accuracy the age of the studied pieces, showed that, surprisingly, one of the two jars dates from around 1035 BC Ramses died in 1213 BC, 128-228 years before. The other jar, in which there are only ordinary cosmetics, is dated long after the death of Pharaoh Rameses II, approximately 275 BC, so they were not used for his embalming.

The jars, covered with hieroglyphs and bearing the name of Rameses II on them, were brought to the Louvre museum in 1905, where they caused great excitement, believing it to be Canopic jars of Rameses II, containing the embalmed innards of the great pharaoh, what’s more, in one of them is the heart of the Egyptian king.

Controversy and question marks began to appear as early as 1985 when, at the museum in Cairo, where the mummy was at that time, a startling discovery was made, namely that the heart of the pharaoh was not removed, so the heart in the canopic jar did not belong this one.

Most likely this preserved heart belonged to a high official from the Ptolemaic period.

After all these discoveries, Connan declared: “There are many objects like this in museums that have been attributed, but never verified”.

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