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Pyramid of Senusret II at Lahun Located in the Faiyum, Egypt, El-Lahun or Kahun (Arabic: كاهون) is the workers village of the pyramid of Senusret II. It is located in the modern village of el-Lahun (Arabic: لاهون), and is often referred to by that name. The workers there both constructed, and were then part of, the funerary cult of the king to sustain the king in the afterlife. It is located about 800m from the pyramid, on the edge of cultivation. Not much of the structure remains, as it was constructed of mud-brick, and is now covered by drifting sand. Some buildings were removed when a railway was built through the area. It was excavated by Petrie (in 1888-90 and again in 1914). His excavations found many household objects (and tools), and these are thought to be a good indication of daily life in C12 BCE. Also found in the town are the Kahun papyri, made up of about 1000 fragments, covering legal and medical matters. Re-excavation of the area in 2009 by Egyptian archaeologists revealed a cache of pharaonic-era mummies in brightly painted wooden coffins in the sand-covered desert rock surrounding the pyramid.[1] The site was occupied into the late Thirteenth Dynasty, then again in the New Kingdom, where there were large land reclamation schemes in the area.
[edit] Town LayoutThe town was laid out in a regular plan, with mudbrick town walls on 3 sides (no evidence of a 4th wall), and the town might have been open to the Nile. It was rectangular in shape, with about 1/3 of the town walled off by an internal wall. The houses in this section are larger, and this may indicate a wealthier quarter. In the rest of the town, the houses are smaller and rougher. A major feature of the town was the so-called ‘acropolis’ building. This was an important building, as indicated by the presence of column bases. Petrie suggested that this may have been the King’s residence whilst he was visiting construction work. The building seems to have been out of use and derelict before the end of occupation. [edit] Bibliography
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