CAIRO: American and Italian Egyptologists have unearthed what they say is the oldest description of an Egyptian Pharaoh in Egypt's Aswan, Egyptian Antiquities Minister Zahi Hawass said on Monday. The engravings “traces back to when the Egyptian language firstly recorded in hieroglyphs and tells about a unique complete royal ceremony which was known in the ancient Egyptian era,” said Hawass in a statement. “The pharaoh appears to be wearing the Upper Egypt crown accompanied by (Horus apostles) at the royal court,” Hawass added. Horus is one of the oldest and most significant deities in the ancient Egyptian religion and was worshiped from at least the late Predynastic period through to Greco-Roman times. “This discovery is considered a supplementary one at the site unearthed near in el-Hamdulab site in northern Aswan, archaeologists said. This is one of the latest discoveries in Egypt as the surrounding wall of Betah temple (1550 BC-1070 BC) and a gate traces back to Shabaka king era were unearthed on Saturday in Luxor. BM