KV27

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Coordinates25°44′23.1″N 32°36′11.2″E / 25.739750°N 32.603111°E / 25.739750; 32.603111
Discoveredbefore 1832
ExcavatedbyDonald P. Ryan (1993, 2006)
KV27
Burial site of Unknown
Schematic of KV27
KV27 is located in Egypt
KV27
KV27
Coordinates25°44′23.1″N 32°36′11.2″E / 25.739750°N 32.603111°E / 25.739750; 32.603111
LocationEast Valley of the Kings
Discoveredbefore 1832
Excavated byDonald P. Ryan (1993, 2006)
LayoutShaft and chamber(s)
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KV26
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KV28

Tomb KV27 is located in the Valley of the Kings in Egypt. This tomb was visited by John Wilkinson, but was not fully explored until the 1990s, by Donald P. Ryan of Pacific Lutheran University. The tomb consists of four rooms and is undecorated; nothing is known about its occupant.

KV27 is located between tombs KV21 and KV28 in a side wadi that branches off the main valley. The tomb has a simple layout, consisting of a shaft and four rooms.[1] It is most similar to KV30 and appears to be an expanded version of a shaft tomb with a single room, or it may represent an architectural halfway between a single-roomed shaft tomb and those which have multiple rooms opening from one or more corridors.[2] An unusual feature of the tomb is the plastered ramp (initially thought to be a sealed burial shaft) leading from the main chamber (B) to a side chamber (C). Pottery excavated from the tomb dates to the mid-Eighteenth Dynasty.[1]

The original excavator for this tomb is unknown, and no records exist of its discovery.[3] Richard Pococke perhaps observed its location during his tour of Egypt.[4] It was certainly known to Wilkinson, and described briefly by Eugène Lefébure as containing pieces of a mummy.[5][6] The tomb was probably investigated by Auguste Mariette in 1859.[1]

Re-investigation and contents

References

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