(Editor) Histories of Egyptology: Interdisciplinary Measures (original) (raw)
Related papers
2014
The conference brought together speakers and attendees from six continents and hosted more than 50 presentations covering multiple aspects of Egyptology and its related fields. The aim of the conference was to cross cultural and disciplinary boundaries. The papers presented in these proceedings reflect this aim by presenting current research that draws on insights derived from anthropology, archaeology, archaeobotany, ethnography, organic chemistry, geography, linguistics, and law, amongst others. Table of Contents An Excavation and Geophysical Survey in the Central Valley of the Valley of the Kings (Afifi Rohim Afifi and Glen Dash) An Egyptian Perspective: Demotic Ostraca from Deir el-Bahari (Amy Bahé) Two-for-one: Looking at Imperial Egyptian Statues with Roman Features in Egypt (Elizabeth Brophy) Marshlands, Drought, and the Great Famine: On the Significance of the Marshlands to Egypt at the End of the Old Kingdom (John Burn) Barley Revisited: Production of Barley Bread in Umm Mawagir (Kharga Oasis, Egypt) (René Cappers, Frits Heinrich, Simone Kaaijk, Federica Fantone, John Darnell, and Colleen Manassa) The Organization of Seasonal Labour during the Middle Kingdom (Micòl Di Teodoro) Sinuhe's Life Abroad: Ethnoarchaeological and Philological Reconsiderations (Benjamin Hinson) Crossing Boundaries in Ceramic Studies: Applying Chemical Residue-analysis to Predynastic Sherds from Hierakonpolis (Eman Khalifa) Did Werethekau 'Great of Magic' have a Cult? A Disjunction between Scholarly Opinions and Sources (Ahmed Mekawy Ouda) Pseudo Script in Gebel el Silsila: Preliminary Results of the 2012 Epigraphic Survey (Maria Nilsson) From Sacred to Law, a Game of Back and Forth: The Expressions a.wy n Hrr and s(y)HH in Demotic (Amaury Pétigny) From the Realm of the Dead to the House of the God: The New Kingdom Appeals to the Living in Context at Thebes (Chiara Salvador) Foreign Deities, Frontier Deities: Evidence from the Old Kingdom (Valeria Turriziani) The Block Yard Project at Tell Edfu: Outline of Methodology and Preliminary Results (Janelle Wade and Jonathan Winnerman) The High Life: Courtly Etiquette in the Late Bronze Age Eastern Mediterranean (Carl Walsh)
In 2015 the Seventh Central European Conference of Egyptologists. Egypt 2015: Perspectives of Research (CECE7) was held at the University of Zagreb in Croatia. It was co-organised by two scholarly institutions: the Department of History at the Center for Croatian Studies of the University of Zagreb, Croatia (Assistant Professor dr. Mladen Tomorad), and the Department of Ancient Cultures of the Pułtusk Academy of Humanities in Pułtusk, Poland (Assistant Professor dr. Joanna Popielska-Grzybowska). This book present selection of paper which were presented at the CECE7 conference in Zagreb. The volume is divided into six sections in which thirty-two scholars from the fourteen different European countries cover various fields of the modern Egyptological research. The first group of five papers is devoted to language, literature and religious texts; in the second section three authors describe various themes related to art, iconography and architectural studies; the third group of papers contains four contributions on current funerary and burial studies; in the fourth (largest) section, ten authors present various articles about their recent studies on material culture and museum studies; the fifth is concerned with the history of Ancient Egypt; and in the last (sixth), two authors publish their papers about modern Egyptomania and the 19th century travellers to Egypt.
Current Research in Egyptology 2022 (Book of Abstracts)
2022
Dear colleagues, we are very pleased to announce that the Book of Abstracts for the International Congress “Current Research in Egyptology 2022” hosted by the Université Montpellier III – Paul Valéry (France) is available! The aim of this congress is to present current research and perspectives covering all spheres of interest in present-day Egyptology.
AEC Egyptology Newsletter No 19 (9th of September 2011)
Edito : WHY EGYPTOLOGY? Page 1. CALL FOR FINANCIAL HELP TO REBUILD KHONSU-MS’ SARCOPHAGUS! Page 2. Excavations to resume in Egypt despite revolution. Page 2. Staying on top of research concerning prehistoric human migrations. Page 3. Spontaneous answer to the reading of this issue’s Edito sent on 03 September 2011 21:17 by Ingeborg Waanders (Holland) Senior Researcher in AEC. Sent: To: Vartavan. Subject: Re: Text for proofing pleasssssseeee!!!! Page 3 Rectification over a recent discovery relevant to the center's specializations. Page 4.
On behalf of the Organizing Committee, we would like to invite all scholars with interest in Ancient Egyptian archaeology, culture, history and language to participate in the CECE8 - VIIIth European Conference of Egyptologists. Egypt 2017: Perspectives of Research. The conference will be held in the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (26th and 27th June), at the Faculdade de Ciências Sociais e Humanas at the Universidade Nova de Lisboa (29th June) and in the National Archaeology Museum (30th June). It is co-organised by the group Antiquity and Its Reception of CHAM (FCSH/NOVA-UAc, Professor Maria Helena Trindade Lopes) and the Department of Ancient Cultures of the Pułtusk Academy of Humanities in Pułtusk, Poland (Professor Joanna Popielska-Grzybowska).