News

If the new investigations into King Tut's tomb reveal hidden rooms, could those chambers hold the burial of Nefertiti, the long-lost queen who is doubly connected to the teenage pharaoh?
Alexie Brooks channels Queen Nefertiti ahead of Miss Eco International pageant By: Armin P. Adina INQUIRER.net / 08:23 PM April 08, 2025 Share: ...
Nefertiti’s style continued to influence fashion decades after the bust’s discovery. In Dior’s Spring 2004 show, John Galliano showcased looks that included tall Nefertiti hats.
But the story of how the bust of Nefertiti found its way to Berlin in the first place is mired in controversy. After being transported to Europe in 1913, one year after its discovery in Egypt, the ...
In the bust, Nefertiti is seen wearing a wide collar and a flat-topped crown with a golden band and uraeus (a headdress featuring a sacred serpent), decorated in greens, yellows, browns and blues.
An Egyptian archaeologist has demanded the repatriation of the iconic bust of Queen Nefertiti that was shipped to Berlin over a century ago. German officials insist the sculpture will stay put ...
A petition launched early last month calling for the repatriation of a bust depicting the Ancient Egyptian queen Nefertiti from Berlin’s Neues Museum has reached nearly 10,000 signatures. Penned ...
On behalf of the Zahi Hawass Foundation for Heritage and Antiquities, and at the invitation of the ladies presiding over the Nefertiti Salon, we are pleased to announce the publication of a document ...
A prominent Egyptian archeologist has launched a campaign to pressure Germany to return one of the world's most famous antiquities, the Bust of Queen Nefertiti, to Egypt. Germany says it acquired ...
Prominent Egyptian archaeologist and former antiquities Minister Zahi Hawass has launched a petition for the return of the pharaonic bust of queen Nefertiti from the Neues museum in Berlin to Egypt.
Former Egyptian antiquities minister Zahi Hawass has launched a petition urging Germany to return the bust of Queen Nefertiti, housed in Berlin's Neues Museum. Discovered by a German team in 1912 ...
Nefertiti's famous painted limestone bust was uncovered at Tell el-Amarna, around 300 km (185 miles) south of Cairo, in 1912 by a German archaeological mission, which shipped it to Berlin the ...