A BESTIARY OF ANCIENT NUBIA A Bestiary of Ancient Nubia reveals the animal world of ancient Nubia from the A-Group culture to the medieval period, including lions, crocodiles, birds, cattle, and insects
Where is this? If you know, email the Editor peter@ancientegyptmagazine.com before 30 June with your answer, giving your full name, address, and a contact phone number. One lucky reader’s name will be
The face of the sphinx could possibly represent the Roman emperor Claudius
Geoffrey Lenox-Smith explores the innovative Middle Kingdom monument that inspired Hatshepsut’s famous Deir el-Bahri temple.
Some of the ingredients, such as elemi and dammar resins, are thought to have been imported from the tropical forests of south-east Asia
Review by Anna Garnett The past two decades have seen greater recognition that the cultures of Nubia represent the earliest complex societies in inner Africa in their own right: scholars of ancient
Review by Hilary Forrest Oh no – not another book about Tutankhamun! This one, however, is rather different. The first sections of the book cover the history of the Valley of the
Other tasks carried out by the team this season included conservation work on the murals of the basilica on site
Kim Masters traces the development of the chariot wheel from its humble origin as a tree log under a stone block.
A scientific approach to the study of ancient Egyptian mummies.
Katherine Slinger searches for patterns in the locations of private tombs on the slopes above the royal mortuary temples of Luxor.
In this issue, Dr Campbell Price describes an intriguing Predynastic artefact in the Brooklyn Museum.
Review by Campbell Price This book is the result of the very recent PhD research of Liverpool University student Katherine Slinger – so recent, in fact, that Dr Slinger graduated after the
Measuring more than 16 metres long, the papyrus was discovered in May 2022 at Saqqara
PHARAOH: KING OF EGYPT An international touring exhibition of more than 120 objects from the British Museum, exploring the ideals, symbolism, and ideology of Egyptian kingship, and the realities of life in
Review by Sarah Griffiths There are so very few books on female Ptolemaic rulers (with the exception of Cleopatra VII) that I was excited to see a new volume dedicated to two
Finds included canopic jar stoppers, cartonnage fragments, and several woven baskets.
Many of the amulets are made of gold, including a golden tongue inside the mouth
Finds of religious pottery vessels and fragments of reliefs suggest the hall dates to the Saite Period.
PhD research by Taneash Sidpura refutes a well-established theory.
John Coleman and Colleen Darnell present new interpretations of the imagery from the fascinating reign of Akhenaten and Nefertiti.
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