Another archaeological find updates our understanding of the ancient past

From Atlas Obscura.com:

THE MOST LAVISH MESOPOTAMIAN TOMB EVER FOUND BELONGS TO A WOMAN

And her clothing tells an important story, says archeologist Rita Wright

The first hurdle in Past Life Journeying is trusting the first image and then following the information received when we connect to a Past life personality wearing the costume of their era. Things are very different in the 3rd decade of the 21st century, but previously it might have been easier to dismiss a Journeyer, male or female, who connected to their past life as a female ruler.

So I love it when information that challenges the historical record finds its way to my inbox. In this article from Atlas Obscura, writer Sarah Durn speaks to archeologist and textile expert Rita Wright, professor emerita of anthropology at New York University, "who is the first to ever study (Queen) Pu-abi’s garments based on the only surviving image of her. Her findings have just been published in the new book Art/ifacts and ArtWorks in the Ancient World."

Rita Wright:
"...if I hadn’t studied Ur’s ancient women, I would have thought that the entire country was ruled by men and that all of the things that occurred in civilization, the beginning of civilization, was about what men did. And now I know that’s just one part of how civilizations develop."