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This looks like one to watch: THE EGYPTIAN JOB on Sunday at 8pm. on National Geographic.
Back in the late 19th century, one of the most mysterious and audacious crimes ever committed was discovered.
After years of excavation, an archaeologist broke into an ancient Egyptian Pharaoh’s tomb – only to discover it was empty.
In 1888, English Egyptologist Flinders Petrie made the breakthrough he had spent years of his career working towards.
After years of research, meticulous planning and careful digging, he finally broke into the burial chamber of Pharaoh Amenemhat III. But instead of finding the hordes of untold treasures he had been expecting, the chamber was empty.
There was nothing of value to be found, but also no trace of the people who had ransacked the tomb. And Petrie soon realised that for hundreds of years no-one had even known the pyramid had been robbed.
Amenemhat III was one of the middle kingdom’s wealthiest rulers, and his pyramid was one of the most complex vaults ever designed, made to protect the riches he took to the after-life.
So, in an adventure worthy of Indiana Jones, his grave robbers must have bypassed a sealed and hidden entrance, conquered a maze of blind passages and entered by moving enormous paving slabs. But how on earth did they do it?
Using modern technology and expertise, mechanical genius and criminal psychology, four detectives re-open the case of this ancient crime to try and uncover how the robbers pulled off one of the greatest heists of the millennium.
The tomb at Hawara was the Fort Knox of pyramids, so how did this band of villains pull off the crime – and how did they escape and spent their loot?
One of the days I was in Mexico I went to Isla Mujieres which means (Island of Women). Small tourist village and this dolphin training enclosure. I have to admit I'm really of a mixed mind about...
There is a new BBC documentary, Pompeii: Life Before Death , which airs on 3 March and hosted by the historian Mary Beard. Not sure what time, so you need to look it up, but I do like her...
Early in the year we had six foxes, 3 pairs, then they dispersed leaving just one pair that had two cubs but we didn't see them until they were nearly full grown.
We now seem to have a pair that...
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Those foxes are in really good condition Grandad, it must be all those jam butties they get :lol:
As for that moggie, well you can see who is the boss ;)