Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


WV23

WV23
Burial site of Ay
Restored sarcophagus with lid in the burial chamber
WV23 is located in Egypt
WV23
WV23
Coordinates25°44′29″N 32°35′31″E / 25.74139°N 32.59194°E / 25.74139; 32.59194
LocationWest Valley of the Kings
Discovered1816
Excavated byGiovanni Battista Belzoni (1816)
Otto Schaden (1972)
DecorationFour sons of Horus; Ay hunting
LayoutStraight
← Previous
WV22
Next →
WV24

Tomb WV23, also known as KV23, was the burial place of Ay, a pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty, in the Western Valley of the Kings near modern-day Luxor. The tomb was discovered in 1816 by Giovanni Belzoni. Its architecture is similar to the royal tomb of Akhenaten at Amarna, with a straight descending corridor leading to a "well chamber" that has no shaft. This leads to the burial chamber, which contains the reconstructed sarcophagus, which was smashed in antiquity. The tomb was anciently desecrated, with many instances of Ay's image or name erased from the wall paintings. Its decoration is similar in content and colour to that of the tomb of Tutankhamun (KV62), with a few differences. On the eastern wall there is a depiction of a fishing and fowling scene, which is not shown in other royal tombs, normally appearing in burials of nobility.


Previous Page Next Page






WV23 AF مقبرة 23 Arabic مقبره 23 ARZ KV23 Catalan WV23 German WV23 Spanish WV23 EU KV23 Finnish WV23 French KV23 Italian

Responsive image

Responsive image