SCRIBE : The Magazine of The American Research Center in Egypt : FALL 2020 | ISSUE 6
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Ancient Spaces and Lives -- Key Places in this Issue -- ARCE’s Digital Leap -- Weni Rediscovered (An International Team Comes Together to Offer a Fresh Look at an Ancient Life) -- Egypt Updates -- U.S. Updates -- Antiquities Endowment Fund -- Institutional Members -- Brooke Elizabeth Norton and Margaret Taylor Dean -- Donor Support -- Did You Know? Before There Was Scribe.
Christian women in the Greek papyri of Egypt to 400 CE /
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The documentary papyri are an unparalleled source for the study of women in antiquity. Among them are numbers of female-authored texts which allow women's voices to be heard. In the period to 400 CE twenty-six of these texts provide information on Christian women's religious lives. This book analyses these papyri. They give insight into Christian women's knowledge and use of biblical texts, their practice of prayer, their theological understanding of God, their lives and relationships. This book also examines texts written to Christian women or referring to Christian women among which are a valuable group referring to ascetic women. The perspectives of the papyri nuance what is known about women from other sources.
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"Ancient Cultures Research Centre, Macquarie University, NSW, Australia."
"This book arose from a doctoral thesis entitled The Perspectives of the Greek papyri of Egypt on the beliefs, practices and experiences of Jewish and Christian women from 100 CE to 400 CE" -- Pref. :
xii, 311 pages ; 24 cm. :
Includes bibliographical references (pages 282-307) and indexes. :
2503552412
9782503552415
SCRIBE : The Magazine of The American Research Center in Egypt : FALL 2018 | ISSUE 2
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Looking to the Future -- Key Places in this Issue -- Fieldwork Season: New & Returning Expeditions -- Updates from the Current Season -- In Memoriam / William Kelly Simpson -- celebrating the Conservation Field School Graduates in Luxor -- Recap: April 2018 Annual Meeting -- Experiencing 3,000 Years of Ancient Egypt in Los Angeles -- International Archaeology Day Events -- Caroline Williams and Jen Thum -- A Road Trip Along the Nile.
SCRIBE : The Magazine of The American Research Center in Egypt : SPRING 2018 | ISSUE 1
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Then & Now: 70 Years of the American Research Center in Egypt -- Greetings from the Director for Egypt -- Capturing Ancient Egypt in Three Dimensions -- The Founding of an American Research Center in Egypt -- Reviews of Publications in Egyptology -- The Hidden Treasures: Hearst Museum Egyptian Collection -- U.S. Congressional Delegation Visits Luxor -- Celebration of ARCE at the U.S. Embassy -- Donor Support -- Board & Staff -- Research Supporting Members -- Financial Statements -- The ARCE Houseboat Fostat.
The Red Monastery Church : Beauty and asceticism in Upper Egypt /
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"The Red Monastery church is the most important extant early Christian monument in Egypt's Nile Valley, and one of the most significant of its period in the Mediterranean region. A decade-long conservation project has revealed some of the best surviving and most remarkable early Byzantine paintings known to date. The church was painted four times during the 5th and 6th centuries, and significant portions of each iconographic program are preserved. Extensive painted ornament also covers the church's elaborate architectural sculpture, echoing the aesthetics found at San Vitale in Ravenna and the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul. Distinguished contributors from a wide range of disciplines, including art and architectural history, ancient religion, history, and conservation, discuss the church's importance. Topics include late antique aesthetics, early monastic concepts of beauty and ascetic identity, and connections between the center and the periphery in the early Byzantine world. Beautifully illustrated with more than 300 images, this landmark publication introduces the remarkable history and magnificence of the church and its art to the public for the first time"--Publisher's website.
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xxxix, 390 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), maps (some color), plans ; 32 cm. :
Includes bibliographical references (pages 350-376) and index. :
9780300212303
The politics of trad e Egypt and lower Nubia in the 4th millennium BC /
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Until recently much of the discussion regarding the A-Group has emphasised the influence of Egypt in the region. Egyptian material found in A-Group contexts has pointed to some type of exchange system between the two regions but the lack of A-Group manufactured objects in Egyptian contexts has led to the argument that the relationship was somewhat one-sided. Yet was it and how different were Egyptians and Lower Nubians during the 4th millennium BC? Re-examining the material evidence from three major archaeological salvage campaigns, and using anthropological and economic theories this book takes a fresh look at exchange patterns between Egypt and Lower Nubia. The changes and developments in these relationships potentially impacted the development towards the Egyptian state and the fate of the A-Group.
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1 online resource. :
Includes bibliographical references (p. [317]-350) and index. :
9789004196117 :
Available to subscribing member institutions only.
The reliefs of the chapel of Nebhepetre Mentuhotep at Gebelein (CGT 7003/1-277) /
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In 1910 Ernesto Schiaparelli, along with the Italian Archaeological Mission on behalf of the Regio Museo di Antichità Egizie, excavated the area where, during the Eleventh Dynasty, King Nebhepetre Mentuhotep erected a chapel to the goddess Hathor at the site of Gebelein. Some of the blocks belonging to this chapel had already been moved to the Cairo Museum during the nineteenth century, and finds during Schiaparelli's campaign were taken to the Egyptian Museum at Turin. In this work, Elisa Fiore Marochetti presents documents from these two museums and gives an architectonic and decorative reconstitution of an unknown monument. The mostly unpublished blocks and fragments, presented here as the General Catalogue of the Turin Museum, follow a general introduction to the geographical, religious, and historical setting of Gebelein and of the chapel before Mentuhotep's reunification of the land. The dating of the chapel is formulated on the basis of the iconographical style of the reliefs and of the titulary borne by Mentuhotep. \'The publication therefore not only presents a valuable reference to the Egyptian antiquities housed in Turin's Egyptian Museum. It also presents a valuable addition to literature on Egyptian temple decoration and development, royal iconography,kingship and the course of events on the verge of the Middle Kingdom.\' Nico Staring, Macquarie University
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1 online resource. :
Includes bibliographical references. :
9789047443940 :
1566-2055 ; :
Available to subscribing member institutions only.
The Bankes late Ramesside papyri /
: "This occasional paper publishes a group of papyri that supplement those included in J.J Janssen's comprehensive Late Ramesside letters and communications (Hieratic papyri in the British Museum VI, 1991)"--P. v. : v, 66 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 30 cm. : Includes bibliographical references. : 0142-4815 ;
Moving across borders : foreign relations, religion, and cultural interactions in the ancient Mediterranean /
: Based on the International Conference "Foreign Relations and Diplomacy in the Ancient World : Egypt, Greece, Near East", organized by the University of the Aegean, Dept. of Mediterranean Studies, Dec. 3-5, 2004, Rhodes, Greece. : xxii, 369 pages : Illustrations, maps ; 25 cm. : Includes bibliographical references and indexes. : 9789042918719 : Nabil