Slavery and servitude in Late Period Egypt, c. 900-330 BC
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This historical study sets out to define the nature and extent of slavery in Late Period Egypt, i.e. from the end of the Third Intermediate Period (664 BC) to the beginning of the Ptolemaic Period (330 BC). To that end, the work revolves around four broad aims: (1) delineating the scope of usage of terminology used in Egyptian and Aramaic documentation to refer to enslaved persons; (2) contextualizing enslavement within Late Period labour and sale practices; (3) exploring the lived experience of enslaved persons, including the social alienation of enslavement; and (4) discussing the connections between enslavement and other social systems of patronage and protection in Late Period Egypt, including familial relationships. Achieving the first goal is a matter of examining the Egyptian and Aramaic terms which appear with reference to enslavement and servitude within the context of the documents in which they appear, and the implications of that context. This focus on the semantics of subordinate labour also leads to a discussion on whether the English term 'slave' or 'enslaved person' is taxonomically appropriate for the subordinate labour relationships of Late Period Egypt, which necessarily requires an examination of secondary literature regarding the definition of slavery. Contextualizing enslavement within Late Period labour and sale practices requires an understanding of pricing of both commodities and labour, to provide a basis for determining comparative pricing of labour. Lastly, this monograph discusses the connections between enslavement and other social systems of patronage and protection in Late Period Egypt through an analysis of the obligations a subordinate had to his superior, as well as the reverse, that is, the obligations a superior had to his subordinate, whether or not the superior actually performed these obligations. The latter is investigated specifically with regard to protection: from debt, starvation, or abuse. - The chief takeaways from this study are split into four: first, that a practice which can be described as slavery in modern legal taxonomy took place in Late Period Egypt; second, that this practice took the form of small-scale, personal transactions which often overlapped with familial obligations and other systems of patronage and protection; third, that the value of enslaved persons lay in their dual purpose as labourers and economic tools; and finally, that the majority of enslaved persons in Egypt originated from Egypt, in contrast with earlier and later periods.
Ägyptens wirtschaftliche Grundlagen in der Mittleren Bronzezeit /
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Economic issues are seemingly neglected topics within Egyptology. This study attempts to highlight selected economic aspects of the first half of the second millennium BC.
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Includes index. :
1 online resource. :
Specialized. :
9781784910310 (PDF ebook) :
The scale and nature of the Late Bronze Age economies of Egypt and Cyprus /
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Revised version of the author's doctoral thesis.
"40 years of BAR"--Back cover. :
xiii, 182 pages : illustrations (black and white), one map (black and white) ; 30 cm. :
Includes Bibliographical references (145-182). :
9781407312224
The Heqanakht papyri /
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Includes CD-ROM in pocket in back of book.
"Discovered by the Egyptian Expedition of the Metropolitan Museum of Art during its 1922-23 season of excavations in Thebes, they [the papyri] are now part of the Museum's permanent collection." -- Page [v]. :
xvii, 318 pages, 57 pages of plates (some folded) : illustrations ; 36 cm. :
Includes bibliographical references (pages 261-270) and indexes. :
1588390705
Die Datierung der Ostraka und Papyri aus Deir el-Medineh und ihre ökonomische Interpretation : Teil I, die 20. Dynastie /
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Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral)--Freie Universität Berlin. :
2 v. (xx, 627 p.) ; 24 cm. :
Includes bibliographical references and index. :
3806780757 (set)
3806780765 (Bd. 1)
3806780773 (Bd. 2)
Ägyptens wirtschaftliche Grundlagen in der mittleren Bronzezeit /
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"Economic issues are seemingly neglected topics within Egyptology. This study attempts to highlight selected economic aspects of the first half of the second millennium BC. Economy is embedded in society, but the societal community itself is embedded in its environments: on the one hand the physical-organic locality, including those ecologic restrictions enforced on it, and the relative cultural system on the other. In this work the so-called 'Heqanakht Papyri' are presented as case-studies to combine a more general economic picture with concrete information concerning Heqanakht's household, in an attempt to develop an overall picture of his activities, even if it must remain fragmentary. By doing so, one or more missing tesserae may perhaps be suggested for the fragmentary mosaic that is Egypt in the Middle Bronze Age." -- Publisher's website.
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x, 177 pages : illustrations ; 30 cm. :
Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-173) and indexes. :
1784910309
9781784910303 :
Noura
