Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)

One of the most significant areas of inquiry into ancient Egypt, and until fairly recently one of the most neglected, is the nature of settlement in the Nile Valley and Delta. Although a tremendous amount of information has been acquired about ancient Egyptian society from the study of texts, monume...

Full description

Saved in:

Format: Journal

Language: English

Published: American Research Center in Egypt 2021

Online Access: Login to view Source

Tags: Add Tag

No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!

Call Number:

id oai:localhost:123456789-235
record_format dspace
spelling oai:localhost:123456789-2352022-03-28T21:50:39Z Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992) One of the most significant areas of inquiry into ancient Egypt, and until fairly recently one of the most neglected, is the nature of settlement in the Nile Valley and Delta. Although a tremendous amount of information has been acquired about ancient Egyptian society from the study of texts, monumental architecture, and cemeteries, the detailed study of Egyptian cities, towns, and villages has, for much of the history of Egyptian archaeology, not been a major part of scholarly research, with a few exceptions (e.g. Kahun, el-Amarna). Thus a major set of data with which to inform debate on the nature of ancient Egyptian society has remained virtually untapped. 2021-12-31T16:08:05Z 2021-12-31T16:08:05Z 1992 Journal https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/235 en application/pdf American Research Center in Egypt
institution My University
collection DSpace
language English
description One of the most significant areas of inquiry into ancient Egypt, and until fairly recently one of the most neglected, is the nature of settlement in the Nile Valley and Delta. Although a tremendous amount of information has been acquired about ancient Egyptian society from the study of texts, monumental architecture, and cemeteries, the detailed study of Egyptian cities, towns, and villages has, for much of the history of Egyptian archaeology, not been a major part of scholarly research, with a few exceptions (e.g. Kahun, el-Amarna). Thus a major set of data with which to inform debate on the nature of ancient Egyptian society has remained virtually untapped.
format Journal
title Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
spellingShingle Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
title_short Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
title_full Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
title_fullStr Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
title_full_unstemmed Newsletter, Number 158-159 (SUMMER/FALL 1992)
title_sort newsletter, number 158-159 (summer/fall 1992)
publisher American Research Center in Egypt
publishDate 2021
url https://library.arce.org/handle/123456789/235
_version_ 1728601652830666752