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Current Research In Egyptology Iii December 2001 Rachel Ives Editor

  • SKU: BELL-49990028
Current Research In Egyptology Iii December 2001 Rachel Ives Editor
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Current Research In Egyptology Iii December 2001 Rachel Ives Editor instant download after payment.

Publisher: British Archaeological Reports Oxford Ltd
File Extension: PDF
File size: 4.94 MB
Pages: 86
Author: Rachel Ives (editor), Daniel Lines (editor), Christopher Naunton (editor)
ISBN: 9781841715582, 1841715581
Language: English
Year: 2003

Product desciption

Current Research In Egyptology Iii December 2001 Rachel Ives Editor by Rachel Ives (editor), Daniel Lines (editor), Christopher Naunton (editor) 9781841715582, 1841715581 instant download after payment.

Edited by Rachel Ives, Daniel Lines, Christopher Naunton and Nina Wahlberg

Following a successful inaugural event at the University of Oxford and an expanded second at the University of Liverpool, the Third Symposium for Current Research in Egyptology was held in December 2001, at the University of Birmingham. The symposium was again successful in bringing together UK-based graduate students of Egyptology to provide an opportunity to disseminate the results of their research. It also served to encourage communication between an otherwise disparate group of students spread across the various Egyptological institutions throughout the country. Indeed, speakers came from nine different institutions and the papers presented illustrated well the broad range of topics currently being studied throughout the United Kingdom. The topics of the 9 featured papers include: The Lotus Reborn: the creation and distribution of the Description de L'Égypte; The arrival of the horse in Egypt: new approaches and a hypothesis; Aspects of the Hyksos' role in Egyptian society from the artistic evidence; Some thoughts on the social organisation of dockyards during the new kingdom; Egyptian blue: where, when, how?; The specialness of science: it's all in the mind; Crossing the night: the depiction of mythological landscapes in the Am Duat of the New Kingdom Royal Necropolis; Trends in burial evidence: evaluating expectations for the regional and temporal distribution of mortuary behaviour in Predynastic Egypt; Representations of Hathor and Mut in the Hibis temple.

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