2,000-year-old temple dedicated to cat goddess found in Egypt

Discovery sheds light on the worship of the cat-goddess in Egypt

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AP/Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities
AP/Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities

Cairo: Egypt said its archaeologists have unearthed a Ptolemaic temple dating back more than 2,000 years, which may have been dedicated to the ancient cat-goddess Bastet.

The Supreme Council of Antiquities said Tuesday the temple's ruins were discovered in the Kom el-Dekkah area, in the Mediterranean port city of Alexandria.

It said the temple was thought to belong to Queen Berenice, wife of King Ptolemy III who ruled Egypt in the 3rd century B.C.

The archaeologist who led the excavation team, Mohammad Abdel Maqsood, said the ruins indicate this may be the first Ptolemaic temple discovered in Alexandria to be dedicated to Bastet and indicates that the worship of the cat-goddess continued in Egypt after the end of the ancient Egyptian era.

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