It's not called a coffin it's called a sarcophagus, and actually hieroglyphics were found carved anywhere on the sarcophagus.
Inside an Egyptian coffin is a mummy and occasionally a bag of dead butterflies
Hieroglyphics. Or as known as ancient egyptian.
Hieroglyphics was the system of picture writing used by the ancient Egyptians. An example of this word used in a sentence would be, "The ancient Egyptians kept excellent records of their society via the use of scribes who used hieroglyphics."
Early people often used a writing system that uses pictures to indicate words. This system is called hieroglyphics. Sketches are found in stone and inside cave walls.
The stone container of a wooden coffin was called a sarcophagus.
The inside of his coffin.
inside the chapel or under his castle
Dead kings or queens wrapped in paper, wraps, etc. are found in most mummy-or I should say-tombs.
It was called a sarcophagus (Latin- "flesh eater"), hence the wooden coffin fit inside the stone receptacle.
For her funeral she was in a lead coffin (covered in purple velvet and a life-like effigy). But she must have had a double coffin (a coffin inside a coffin) because in the 1800's when her tomb was opened it was reported she had a wooden coffin so her wooden coffin must have been inside the lead one, although I cannot confirm this, its only an assumption. its also possible that she had a lead coffin for the funeral and her body was then moved to a wood one later. point being, she had one lead one, and one wood one.
All of the writing inside a Pharaoh's tomb would be in hieroglyphics because that was the standard way of writing in Egypt at the time.
Princess Diana is said to have had one of the coffins typically used for British Royals: an oak coffin in the shape of a hexagon; inside a coffin liner made of lead.