Archaeology by period / region Books
Oxford University School of Archaeology The First Mediterranean Islanders Initial
Book SynopsisThe present volume provides a much needed contribution to island archaeology by examining the characteristics of the initial occupation of the Mediterranean islands. It enhances our understanding of the mechanisms, strategies, cultural contingencies and social alliances that enabled the consolidation of a permanent human presence in these settings. Particular attention is given to small islands, which can present increased demands on people to adapt and survive due to their more marginal environments, and on islands where recent research has led to a reassessment of the date and character of initial occupation. The research presented draws on examples from Cyprus, the Cyclades, the Adriatic, the Aeolian islands, and Malta, together with overviews of the Mediterranean and in comparison to Oceania.The volume throws into relief the multi-layered and multi-dimensional theatre provided by the Mediterranean, drawing attention to the complexities of island occupation. The notion
£59.50
Oxford University School of Archaeology Histories in the Making: Excavations at Alfred's
Book SynopsisAlfred’s Castle is a small enclosed site south of the Ridgeway on the Berkshire Downs, excavated between 1998 and 2000 by a team from Oxford University. This was the third site excavated by the Hillforts of the Ridgeway project (after White Horse Hill and Segsbury). Although small, Alfred’s Castle displayed a long and complex history, starting with early Bronze Age round barrows on which later Bronze Age linear ditches were aligned, these in turn were used to form enclosures in the Iron Age. In the early Roman period a small villa house was built inside the smaller enclosure, which then shows some use in the early medieval period. The long use of the site raises questions of memory, history and continuity, leading us to wonder how earlier phases of use affected later ones. This volume contains the results of excavations at Alfred’s Castle and an account of an art project by Simon Callery. This is the third volume dedicated to our hillfort excavations on the Berkshire Downs and it ends with an account of the area more broadly, which sees complicated developments from the Bronze Age into the medieval period through the constructions of barrows, field systems, linear ditches and sites of various forms and sizes. How these combined into communities of the living and of the dead are considered using all the evidence currently available.
£56.02
Oxford University School of Archaeology Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 19
Book SynopsisAnglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History is a series concerned with the archaeology and history of England and its neighbours during the Anglo-Saxon period.ASSAH offers researchers an opportunity to publish new work in an inter- and multi-disciplinary forum that allows for a diversity of approaches and subject matter. Contributions placing Anglo-Saxon England in its international context are as warmly welcomed as those that focus on England itself.
£61.62
Oxford University School of Archaeology Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History
Book SynopsisAnglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 20. Early Medieval Monasticism in the North Sea Zone: Recent Research and New Perspectives edited by Gabor Thomas and Alexandra Knox. ASSAH 20 is based upon the proceedings of an international conference held to celebrate the results of excavations targeting the Anglo-Saxon royal centre and monastery of Lyminge, Kent, 2008-15. Drawing upon the contributions of leading historians and archaeologists, the volume provides a fresh examination of monasticism in Anglo-Saxon Kent framed within its wider north-west European context, together with a range of complementary perspectives on the interlinked themes of Christianisation, kingdom formation and monastic expansion vividly illuminated through the archaeology of Lyminge.
£36.81
Oxford University School of Archaeology Theological Defences of the Canopic Gate in the
Book SynopsisThis work explores the theological defences conceived by the Egyptians at Thonis-Heracleion to guard the Canopic gate, which in the Saïte period was the main entrance to the port of Thonis-Heracleion, the entry-point to Egypt for foreign vessels. The divine forces, including Khonsu-Thoth and Neith, were deployed alongside military forces that were also located at the Canopic gate. The temple to Khonsu-Thoth, Lord of the Gezirah, was dedicated by Amasis, and also served to legitimate the power of the Saïte kings. This study brings together a range of material evidence for these theological defences.
£68.34
Oxford University School of Archaeology Anglo-Saxon Studies in Archaeology and History 21
Book SynopsisA selection of papers on the Anglo-Saxon period, including papers on non-ferrous dress-accessories from early medieval Lincoln; The Anglo-Saxon settlement at Catholme, Staffordshire; transformation and use of insular mounts from Viking-Age burials in TrØndelag central Norway, and evidence from two rural Anglo-Saxon sites in Suffolk.Table of Contents1. Ethnic identity or something else? The production and use of non-ferrous dress-accessories and related items from early medieval Lincoln Letty Ten Harkel 2. What was the basis for Bede’s list of overlords in Historia Ecclesiastica 2.5? Richard Shaw 3. The Anglo-Saxon settlement at Catholme, Staffordshire: a re-assessment of the chronological evidence and possible re-interpretation John Hines 4. Objects from a distant place: transformation and use of insular mounts from Viking-Age burials in TrØndelag central Norway Aina Heen Pettersen 5. Two rural Anglo-Saxon sites in Suffolk: archaeological excavations at Church Road, Snape and Lime Avenue, Oulton Antony Mustchin
£36.19
Oxford University School of Archaeology Sark: A Sacred Island
Book SynopsisSark came briefly to prominence in 1719 when the Sark hoard was found – a pot containing Gaulish coins and embossed silver plaques. It was brought to England and disappeared. The Archaeological Survey of Sark began in 2004 with a view to studying the island in the context of Atlantic maritime networks to explore the themes of remoteness and connectivity. Fieldwork organized through the School of Archaeology, University of Oxford has been carried out annually and continues. A complete gazetteer of nearly 100 sites has been compiled together with a full listing of all the artefacts recovered. Notable are the large number of Neolithic stone axes, many made from the local dolerite, and the widespread use of local serpentine to make amulets Sark: a sacred island contains full reports on eight archaeological excavations including details of an early Neolithic settlement, a middle Neolithic ritual site, a Beaker cist burial a Mid–Late Bronze Age settlement, a Gallo-Roman ritual site (from which the Sark hoard came) and an early Medieval farm. Results of surveys of a Dark Age monastery and 16th century French fortifications are also given.Table of ContentsList of Figures List of Tables Part 1 Sark through time 1.1 Introduction 1.2 The Island 1.3 The Island Story in Outline 1.4 The Discovery of the Island’s Archaeological Heritage 1.5 The Archaeology of Sark: the Sites 1.6 The Archaeology of Sark: Material Culture 1.7 Sark in the Wider World: Remoteness and Connectivity Part 2 The Excavations 2.1 Tanquerel Field (Site GS22): 2005–8 and 2011–14 2.2 Gaudinerie Field (Site GS21): 2009–11 2.3 The Seigneurie (Site GS67): 2013–16 2.4 Little Sark Standing Stone (Site LS3): 2015–17 2.5 The Mill Mound (Site GS2.3): 2015 2.6 Clos de La Tour (Site GS27): 2015 2.7 Eperquerie Quarry (Site GS11.1): 2007 2.8 The Plaisance (Site GS63): 2016 . Part 3 Supporting Data 3.1 Gazetteer of Sites and Finds by Barry Cunliffe and Andrew Prevel 3.2 Geophysical Surveys: 2005 and 2009 by Andy Payne 3.3 Radiocarbon Dates by Mike Dee 3.4 Petrographical Sampling of Artefacts and in situ Rocks from Sark by R.A. Ixer 3.5 Analysis of an Early Bronze Age axe from Little Sark by Peter Bray and Brian Gilmour 3.6 Chemical analysis of Late Bronze Age Metalwork from Tanquerel Field by Peter Northover 3.7 The Discovery of the Sark Hoard by Richard Axton Bibliography Part 4 Online data prepared by Wendy Morrison
£51.44
Golden House Publications Change and Innovation in Middle Kingdom Art
Book SynopsisThe creativity of artistic production during the Middle Kingdom is vast and highly appreciated, but still far from fully understood. The studies presented in this volume aim to present this extraordinary output of two and three-dimensional artworks in a critical reevaluation of old ideas and convictions while advancing new methods and exchanging ideas. The core of “Change and Innovation” is looking at traditions, seeking answers to changes, and hoping to provide a better understanding of the concept of the salient characteristics of Middle Kingdom art.
£68.56
Golden House Publications From Workshop to Sanctuary the Production of Late
Book SynopsisThis study is the evaluation of more than 1000 stelae dating to the late Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period (1800 to 1550 BC). The stelae are grouped into workshops. The place of production for these workshops is discussed.
£111.17
Golden House Publications Stelae of the Middle Kingdom and the Second
Book SynopsisA catalogue of the Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period Egyptian stelae in the Egyptian Museum in Berlin. Many of them are lost in WWII. The publication uses old archive photographs. Includes full translations. Presented as 153 loose pages and a 28-page booklet, all elegantly held in a fine paper wrapping.Trade ReviewMasterful work… another welcome addition to the Corpus Antiquitatum Aegyptiacarum […] series, from two scholars whose incontestable expertise in presenting objects in museum collections is well known. * Journal of Egyptian Archaeology *
£111.84
Golden House Publications New Horizons: The pan grave ceramic tradition in
Book SynopsisThis volume serves as a catalog and handbook for the description for Pan-Grave ceramics, and that considers the Pan-Grave tradition and its ceramic production within the broader socio-cultural framework of Ancient Egypt and Nubia during the mid-Second Millennium BC.
£90.19
Golden House Publications Être et paraître, Statues royales et privées de
Book SynopsisThis volume presents an evaluation of late Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period (c. 1850 to 1550 BC) sculpture. Style, material and dating are discussed in length. The book is well illustrated (more than 100 b/w plates) and includes a catalogue of all statues of the period.
£116.64
Golden House Publications The Many Histories of Naqada: Archaeology and
Book SynopsisThis edited volume presents a series of reviews, overviews and unpublished archives from several historic expeditions in the Naqada region of Upper Egypt. This includes nineteenth-century fieldwork led by Gaston Maspero, Jacques de Morgan and Flinders Petrie through to surveys conducted in the twentieth century and new initiatives in the region in the 2010s. It encompasses not just the better-known Predynastic finds, but also later Pharaonic era material as well as Coptic heritage. Together the volume argues that the Naqada region in worthy of renewed critical attention and is a more dynamic and complex landscape than has generally been acknowledged.
£88.84
Golden House Publications Akhet Neheh: Studies in Honour of Willem
Book SynopsisThis Festschrift contains current research about the symbolism of hieroglyphs, religious texts, depictions and graffiti from the royal tomb KV 11 and museum objects from Leyden, Chicago, Cambridge, Paris and Berlin. It covers i.a. the virtual reunion of the sarcophagus of Ramesses III and of a statue of Ramesses VI.This Festschrift in honour of Willem Hovestreydt contains 13 articles on current research, mainly focusing on the Egyptian New Kingdom. The honoured one and several contributors work on a project recording the tomb of Ramses III. Therefore several articles focus on the symbolism of hieroglyphs, religious texts, depictions and graffiti from the royal tomb KV 11 (the burial place of king Ramses III in the Valley of the Kings) . Further contributions include discussions on museum objects from Leiden, Chicago, Cambridge, Paris and Berlin. There is a virtual reunion of the sarcophagus of Ramesses III and of a statue of Ramesses VI. Other studies focus in the sun sign in hieroglyphic script, a discussion of the word 'fox' in ancient Egyptian, as well as as new look at the relief of Merymery now in Leiden.
£87.81
Council for British Archaeology Historic Wigtown: Archaeology and Development
Book SynopsisSituated in what now seems a remote corner of south-west Scotland, Wigtown was once an important county town. With its harbour and location at the lowest fording point of the River Cree, Wigtown was at one time part of a major network of land and sea routes, including a pilgrim route to Whithorn. The layout of the town is notable for its large market square, a reflection of its importance in the cattle trade in the medieval period. The town achieved burgh status in the thirteenth century, by which time it was an important trading centre, and the present arrangement of streets and burgage plots dates to this time. Today the principal access route is from the north, rather than through the East and West Ports which controlled access to the great market place. The burgh arms depict a three-masted sailing ship, demonstrating the importance placed on its maritime trade. This book examines both the town’s political history, as it passed between the earldoms of Wigtown and Douglas, and its economic history, as it competed with Whithorn, before its eventual decline in the later nineteenth century. The authors use the surviving buildings to examine the development of the town from the medieval to the modern period. This book is part of the Scottish Burgh Survey – a series funded by Historic Scotland designed to identify the archaeological potential of Scotland’s historic towns.
£18.47
Wessex Archaeology An AngloSaxon Cemetery at Collingbourne Ducis
Book SynopsisExcavations at Collingbourne Ducis revealed almost the full extent of a late 5th7th century cemetery first recorded in 1974, providing one of the largest samples of burial remains from Anglo-Saxon Wiltshire. The cemetery lies 200 m to the north-east of a broadly contemporaneous settlement on lower lying ground next to the River Bourne.
£30.91
Wessex Archaeology A RomanoBritishRoadside Settlement near Beanacre
Book SynopsisArchaeological excavation during the construction of a new supply line for the electrification of the Great Western Railway Main Line, uncovered part of a large, previously unknown, Romano-British settlement along the main road between the Roman towns of Aquae Sulis and Cunetio. The full extent of the settlement is unknown but evidence from metal detector finds and field names suggests that it may have extended for at least 0.9 km along the Roman road.
£15.00
The Liffey Press Island of the Setting Sun: In Search of Ireland's
Book SynopsisIreland is home to some of the world’s oldest astronomically-aligned structures, giant stone monuments erected over 5,000 years ago. Despite their apparent simplicity, these megalithic edifices were crafted by a scientifically knowledgeable community of farmers who endeavoured to enshrine their beliefs in a stellar afterlife within the very fabric of their cleverly-designed stone temples.Finally back in print, this reissued edition presents evidence suggesting the builders of monuments such as Newgrange and its Boyne Valley counterparts were adept astronomers, cunning engineers and capable surveyors. Their huge monuments are memorials in stone and earth, commemorating their creators’ perceived unity with the cosmos and enshrining a belief system which resulted from a crossover between science and spirituality.As investigation of this awe-inspiring civilisation of people continues on many levels, evidence is emerging that significant archaeological sites dating from deep in prehistory are linked – not just through mythology, archaeology and cosmology – but through an arrangement of complex, and in some cases astonishing, alignments. Some of these alignments of ancient sites stretch from one side of Ireland to another.While the accounts of the lives of some prominent Irish saints appear to be steeped in folklore and mystery, it seems from new interpretations of the literature that the cosmic world view which existed in Neolithic Ireland experienced a continuity right into the Early Christian period.Join us on this fascinating exploration of stones, stars and stories."The sheer amount of information contained within the book is mind-boggling. It is well thought out and structured… The more you read the evidence the more convinced you become." – Astronomy& Space magazine"Refreshing and fascinating . . . a wonderful magical book, sumptuously illustrated and a must for anyone who loves to delve deep into our past." – Kenny’s Irish Bookshop"A fascinating insight into Ireland’s ancient burial sites" – Irish Independent"A monument" – Drogheda Independent“It is a beautiful book and very well written. The information that you collected is outstanding.” – Barbara Carter, co-author, The Myth of the Year and The Goddess and the Bull“The authors… reach interesting and challenging conclusions about the significance of ancient astronomical knowledge. The book is jammed with colour illustrations, maps and photographs. A thoroughly interesting read!” – Archaeology Ireland"An essential book that demonstrates just how much the beliefs and practices of our ancestors were influenced by the movement of the stars, in particular those of the constellation Cygnus - the celestial swan and Northern Cross - once seen as a source of life and the destination of the soul in death. A must have tome for all those passionate about what remains of our fast disappearing ritual monuments of the prehistoric age." - Andrew Collins, author of The Cygnus MysteryTrade Review"A fascinating insight into Ireland's ancient burial sites" - Irish Independent; "A monument" - Drogheda Independent; "The sheer amount of information contained within the book is mind-boggling. It is well thought out and structured . . . The more you read the evidence the more convinced you become." - Astronomy & Space magazine; "It is a beautiful book and very well written. The information that you collected is outstanding." - Barbara Carter, co-author, The Myth of the Year and The Goddess and the Bull; "The authors . . . reach interesting and challenging conclusions about the significance of ancient astronomical knowledge. The book is jammed with colour illustrations, maps and photographs. A thoroughly interesting read!" - Archaeology Ireland; "An essential book that demonstrates just how much the beliefs and practices of our ancestors were influenced by the movement of the stars, in particular those of the constellation Cygnus - the celestial swan and Northern Cross - once seen as a source of life and the destination of the soul in death. A must have tome for all those passionate about what remains of our fast disappearing ritual monuments of the prehistoric age." - Andrew Collins, author of The Cygnus Mystery; "Refreshing and fascinating . . . a wonderful magical book, sumptuously illustrated and a must for anyone who loves to delve deep into our past." - Kenny's Irish Bookshop; "What an amazing adventure it is to read this precious book!" - A reviewer on www.amazon.co.uk, one of a number who gave it five stars.
£28.45
Wordwell Books The Town in Medieval Ireland: In the Light of
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£31.50
Truman State University Press Bethsaida: A City by the North Shore of the Sea
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£14.40
INSTAP Academic Press Studies in Aegean Art and Culture: A New York
Book SynopsisThe papers published here are dedicated to the memory of Ellen N. Davis, one of the most valued and beloved Aegean scholars of her generation. All of the articles are in some way inspired or influenced by Davis' own contributions to the field. In the area of metalwork, several papers investigate interconnections within and around the Aegean during the Early, Middle, and Late Bronze Ages (Betancourt, Ferrence, and Muhly, Weingarten, Kopcke), while others examine metal ware in its social context (Wiener). Papers on wall painting range from studies of pigments and optical illusions (Vlachopoulos), to representations of water (Shank). Anthropomorphic representations, or their absence, of goddesses or priestesses (Jones), rulers (Palaima), or initiates (Koehl) are also studied here with new eyes and fresh insights.
£32.50
University of Pennsylvania Press The Artifacts of Tikal--Utilitarian Artifacts and
Book SynopsisOccupied continuously for 1,500 years, Tikal was the most important demographic, economic, administrative, and ritual center of its region. The collection of materials recovered at Tikal is the largest and most diverse known from the Lowlands. This book provides a major body of primary data. The artifacts, represented by such raw materials as chert and shell are classified by type, number, condition, possible ancient use, form, material, size, and such secondary modifications as decoration and reworking, as well as by spatial distribution, occurrence in the various types of structure groups, recovery context, and date. The same format, with the exception of typology, is used for unworked materials such as mineral pigments and vertebrate remains. While few artifact reports go beyond a catalog of objects organized by type or raw material, this report puts the materials into their past cultural contexts and thus is of interest to a wide range of scholars. Content of this book's CD-ROM may be found online at this location: http://core.tdar.org/document/376593. University Museum Monograph, 118Table of ContentsIllustrations Acknowledgments Abbreviations 1. Introduction 2. Flaked Chert Artifacts 3. Flaked Obsidian Artifacts 4. Ground, Pecked, and Polished Stone Artifacts and Unworked Stones and Minerals 5. Bone Artifacts and Unworked Vertebrate Remains 6. Pottery Sherd Artifacts 7. Formed Pottery Artifacts 8. Artifacts of Mud, Plaster, and Unfired Clay 9. Textiles and Textile Impressions 10. Wooden Artifacts and Artifact Impressions 11. Plant Remains and Impressions and Other Non-Artifactual Materials Appendices A-G. (located on the CD-ROM) H. Report on the Tektites Found at Tikal, Alan R. Hildebrand I. Analysis of Textile Impressions and Cloth Fragments from Tikal J. The Atlatl from Operation 96D, Structure 5D-51, Group 5D-11, Tikal References Figures Index
£59.70
Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA Advances in Titicaca Basin Archaeology-1
Book SynopsisAdvances in Titicaca Basin Archaeology-I is the first in a series of edited volumes that reports on recent research in the south central Andes. Volume I contains 18 chapters that cover the entire range of human settlement in the region, from the Early Archaic to the early Colonial Period. This book contains both short research reports as well as longer synthetic essays on work conducted over the last decade. It will be a critical resource for scholars working in the central Andes and adjacent areas.
£19.79
Cotsen Institute of Archaeology at UCLA Excavations at Cerro Azul, Peru: The Architecture
Book SynopsisRecipient of the Jo Anne Stolaroff Cotsen Prize During the Late Intermediate period (AD 1100-1470), the lower Canete Valley of Peru was controlled by the walled Kingdom of Huarco. While inland sites produced irrigated crops, the seaside community of Cerro Azul, 130 km south of Lima, produced fish for the rest of the kingdom. Cerro Azul's noble families lived in large, multipurpose compounds with tapia walls. Their pottery had its strongest ties with valleys to the south, such as Chincha and Ica. During the course of excavation, the University of Michigan Project excavated two tapia buildings in their entirety, saving every sherd from every room, walled work area, feature, and midden. This remarkable volume is the final site report on the architecture and pottery of Late Intermediate Cerro Azul.
£26.50
University of Pennsylvania Press Miscellaneous Investigations in Central
Book SynopsisThe Great Maya center of Tikal, in Guatemala, is famous for its well-preserved architecture. This book presents descriptions of six structures that belong to the Tikal Project category "standing architecture," that is, though partially collapsed, some features of these buildings remain in place and accessible without excavation. These structures were surveyed with little or no excavation as part of the Tikal Project Standing Architecture Survey. This report is the primary record of these structures in Tikal's urban landscape, and it provides clear, precise, and usable architectural analyses for Mayanists, archaeologists, art historians, architectural historians, urbanists, and those interested in construction techniques and in the uses of Maya buildings. Universtiy Museum Monograph, 148Table of ContentsList of Tables List of Illustrations Editors' Note Abbreviations Selected Architectural Terms 1 Introduction 2 Structure 5C-49 3 Structure 5D-77 4 Structure 5D-84 5 Structure 5D-86 6 Structure 5D-87 7 Structure 6D-1 8 Conclusions References Illustrations
£53.22
Lockwood Press Palamedes Volume 5: A Journal of Ancient History
Book SynopsisPalamedes: A Journal of Ancient History is published on behalf of the University of Warsaw. It seeks to provide a forum where, within the frames of cultural history broadly defined, ancient historians, classical philologists, archaeologists, jurists, and epigraphists--in a word all those who study Greek and Roman antiquity in its material, linguistic, or intellectual manifestations--can meet with their Orientalist and Egyptological counterparts. Trade Review Table of ContentsWitold Tyborowski, Samas-Hasir and the Babylonian Rule in Southern Mesopotamia under Hammurabi Anna K. Prostko-Prostynska, Twelve Horses for Sargon II. Some Remarks on the Assyrian Campaign to the Southwest of Palestine in 716 B.C. Sergei G. Karpyuk, Thucydides on Islands and Islanders Adam Paluchowski, La Propriete Fonciere Privee et la Main-D'Oeuvre Servile en Crete aux Epoques Hellenistique et Romaine Emanuele Santamato, Deversorium, Meritorium, Cellae: Pratiche Affituarie Nella Roma Antica e Gestione Amministrativa Dell'Habitare Tra Cesare e Augusto Sabina Crippa, Magic and Rationality in Pliny. Transmission of Knowledge: The Medical-Magical Pharmacopoeia Bartosz Wojciechowski, Athletic Games in the Roman Levant Kostas Buraselis, Insolence and Servility. Aelius Aristides as Critic of Greek Civic Policies in the Pronvicia Asia Varia Piotr Jaworski, Countermarks on the Coins Struck in Cyrenaica Under Tiberius Adam Lajtar, Two Honorific Monuments for Governors of Syria Palaestinae in Hippos Pawel Nowakowski, A Supposed Honorific Inscription for Iulia Mammaea in Cyprus Adam Lukaszewicz, Sardines in an Ancient Menu Reviews
£46.08
Lockwood Press Palamedes Volume 7: A Journal of Ancient History
Book SynopsisPalamedes: A Journal of Ancient History is published on behalf of the University of Warsaw. It seeks to provide a forum where, within the frames of cultural history broadly defined, ancient historians, classical philologists, archaeologists, jurists, and epigraphists--in a word all those who study Greek and Roman antiquity in its material, linguistic, or intellectual manifestations--can meet with their Orientalist and Egyptological counterparts. Trade Review Table of Contents
£48.50
Lockwood Press Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt:
Book SynopsisThe Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt (JARCE) was established in 1962 to foster research into the history, languages, social systems, and archaeology of the Egyptian people. The journal welcomes article submissions on all periods and aspects of Egyptian civilization. JARCE publishes articles in English, French, or German. Trade Review Table of ContentsTable of Contents Helen Jacquet-Gordon, 1918-2013 W. Raymond Johnson The Tale of the Shipwrecked Sailor and the Rite of Passage Eltayeb Abbas The Treasure of Harageh Robert Steven Bianchi Two Late New Kingdom or Early Third Intermediate Period Hieratic Graffiti in the Temple of Khonsu at Karnak Richard Jasnow and Christina Di Cerbo Pedesi, a Chamberlain of the Divine Adoratress (Cairo CG 670 and JE 37031) Dina Metawi Between a Tomb and a Hard Place: Tomb Inscriptions as a Source of Historical Information Violaine Chauvet An Eighteenth Dynasty Writing Board (Ashmolean 1948.91) and The Hymn to the Nile Fredrik Hagen The Writing Hand and the Seated Baboon: Tension and Balance in Statue MMA 29.2.16 Niv Allon New Kingdom Graffiti in Dahshur, Pyramid Complex of Senwosret III: Preliminary Report. Graffiti Uncovered in Seasons 1992-2010 Hana Navrátilová Two Names, One Compound: The rwd 'nhw itn and the Sunshade of Re at Kom el-Nana Jacquelyn Williamson Un cas de fabrication collective à Saqqâra ? La table d'offrandes de Setjou Rémi Legros The Stela of Hdrwt and Her Two Late Husbands from the Middle Kingdom: Cairo CG 20105 Rasha Metawi A Fragment from the Reign of Tausret Reused at Medinet Habu J. Brett McClain and W. Raymond Johnson Die Gans mit dem scharfen Blick Zusätzliche Bemerkungen zum Hintergrund des Schulervergleichs in pLansing 3, 58 Stefan Bojowald An Unusual Group of Ptah-Sokar-Osiris Figures Some Reflections on Typology and Provenance Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo The Gendered Individual in Funerary Papyri of the Ptolemaic and Roman Periods Emily Cole Book Reviews Julie Patenaude and Garry J. Shaw A Catalogue of Egyptian Cosmetic Palettes in the Manchester University Museum Collection reviewed by Jane A. Hill Franck Monnier Les forteresses égyptiennes. Du Prédynastique au Nouvel Empire reviewed by Beth Ann Judas Peter F. Dorman and Betsy M. Bryan, eds. Perspectives on Ptolemaic Thebes: Papers from the Theban Workshop 2006 reviewed by David Klotz P. Vernus Affairs and Scandals in Ancient Egypt reviewed by Antonio J. Morales Bernard Mathieu, Minitri Meeks, and Myriam Wissa, eds. L'apport de l'Égypte à l'histoire des techniques reviewed by Patricia Podzorski
£52.50
Lockwood Press Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic
Book SynopsisThe Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies is published annually on behalf of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies by Lockwood Press. The Canadian Society for Coptic Studies is a Toronto-based nonprofit organization whose purpose is to bring together individuals interested in Coptic studies and to promote the dissemination of scholarly information on Coptic Studies through the organization of meetings and conferences and through the preparation of scholarly works for publication. Trade Review Table of Contents
£44.00
Lockwood Press Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic
Book SynopsisThe Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies(JCSCS) is published annually on behalf of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies by Lockwood Press. The Canadian Society for Coptic Studies is a Toronto-based nonprofit organization whose purpose is to bring together individuals interested in Coptic studies and to promote the dissemination of scholarly information on Coptic Studies through the organization of meetings and conferences and through the preparation of scholarly works for publication. Trade Review Table of ContentsEditor's Note Tonio Sebastian Richter - "Whatever in the Coptic Language Is Not Greek, Can Wholly Be Considered Ancient Egyptian": Recent Approaches towards an Integrated View of the Egyptian-Coptic Lexicon Ariel Shisha-Halevy - Reflections on the Historical Study of Egyptian Helmut Satzinger - Dialectical Variation of the Egyptian-Coptic Language in the Course of Its Four Millennia of Attested History Wolf-Peter Funk - Some Lesser Known Prospective and Causative Conjugation Forms in Coptic Dialects and the Problem of Their Ancestry Lincoln H. Blumell - Some Unpublished Coptic Inscriptions in the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology Rachad Mounir Shoucri - The Egyptian Roots of Egyptian Monasticism and Its Impact on Christian Monasticism
£44.00
Lockwood Press Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic
Book SynopsisThe Journal of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies(JCSCS) is published annually on behalf of the Canadian Society for Coptic Studies by Lockwood Press. The Canadian Society for Coptic Studies is a Toronto-based nonprofit organization whose purpose is to bring together individuals interested in Coptic studies and to promote the dissemination of scholarly information on Coptic Studies through the organization of meetings and conferences and through the preparation of scholarly works for publication. Trade Review Table of Contents
£44.00
Lockwood Press Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt,
Book SynopsisThe Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt (JARCE) was established in 1962 to foster research into the history, languages, social systems, and archaeology of the Egyptian people. It aims to foster a broader knowledge about Egypt among the general public. The journal welcomes article submissions on all periods and aspects of Egyptian civilization. JARCE publishes articles in English, French, or German.
£68.39
U of M Museum Anthro Archaeology The Wolf and Furton Sites: Macomb County,
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£10.59
Etudes Alexandrines Antiquités égyptiennes de la Préhistoire à la
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£52.78
Etudes Alexandrines Hellenistic Painted Goblets in Alexandria
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£51.30
Etudes Alexandrines Alexandrina 5
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£53.97
Etudes Alexandrines Excavations in the Basileia of Alexandria:
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£49.72
Etudes Alexandrines Citerne el-Nabih (Alexandrie): Le mobilier
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£51.07
Etudes Alexandrines Les amphores Lamboglia 2 de production adriatique
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£51.27
Peeters Alexandria the Cosmopolis
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£66.02
Centre d'etudes alexandrines La crémation antique à Alexandrie
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£54.56
Brepols N.V. Late Antique Metalware. the Production of
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£101.65
Brepols N.V. Funerary Portraiture in Greater Roman Syria
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£131.10
Brepols N.V. Middle Islamic Jerash (9th Century - 15th
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£87.47
Brepols N.V. The Archaeology and History of Jerash: 110 Years
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£165.62
Brepols N.V. El-Qitar: A Bronze Age Fortress on the Euphrates
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£178.60
Brepols N.V. Byzantine and Umayyad Jerash Reconsidered:
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£103.38
Brepols N.V. The Mercurio: Archaeology of a Brig of the Regno
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£107.35