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(now in the Pennsylvania Museum, Philadelphia, USA); 2825 BC Egypt tomb murals depicting female harp players, flute players and leaders
Portraits; reliefs of singers, musicians and dancers carved on the tomb wall of Saqqara in 2700 BC
Statues of singers and dancers (both in the Cairo Museum, Egypt); priests in 2400 BC
Drumming figures engraved on the frozen stone pots of the Sumerians during the period of King Gudiya, and also on the limestone reliefs of the Sumerian king's palace in Telo during the same period
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The scene of playing the 11-string harp (hidden in the Louvre Museum, Paris, France), etc.
There are even more cultural relics from the ancient Greek and Roman eras.
The ancient music scores discovered include fragments of odes by the ancient Greek artist Pindarus (522 BC ~ 443 BC) [A. Kircher (1601 ~ 1680) Found in the library of the monastery of San Salvador near Messina]; V. Galilei
Discovered in 1581 three hymns from Messomaises in the early 2nd century (Dedicated to the Muses, the god of art, Helios, the sun god, and Nemesis, the goddess of revenge); in addition, such as the discovery of music archaeologists in Asia Minor in 1883 Discovered in Tralos
A cylinder inscribed with the only ancient notation in B key, the epitaph of Seikilus
The inscription "Elegy"; in the Temple of Delphi, Greece Two hymns to Apollo from the 2nd century BC were found in wall stone carvings; the Greek tragedy writer Eurippi's "Orestes" at the beginning of "Orestes" was found in Egypt. "Li Ge" fragments, etc., are all extremely precious musical cultural relics.