Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Egyptology

The Oxford Handbook of Egyptology

359,99 €

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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

10.01.2021

Abbildungen

134 black-and-white illustrations

Herausgeber

Shaw Ian + weitere

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

1312

Maße (L/B/H)

24,9/17,8/6,7 cm

Gewicht

1876 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-927187-0

Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Einband

Gebundene Ausgabe

Erscheinungsdatum

10.01.2021

Abbildungen

134 black-and-white illustrations

Herausgeber

Verlag

Oxford University Press

Seitenzahl

1312

Maße (L/B/H)

24,9/17,8/6,7 cm

Gewicht

1876 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-19-927187-0

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: gpsr@libri.de

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  • Produktbild: The Oxford Handbook of Egyptology
    • Frontmatter

    • List of Figures

    • List of Tables

    • List of Contributors

    • 0: Elizabeth Bloxam and Ian Shaw: Introduction: Egyptology in the twenty-first century: an historical curiosity or setting new agendas in multidisciplinary research?

    • I. Egyptology: perspectives on a discipline

    • 1: Andrew Bednarski: The nature and history of Egyptology

    • 2: David Wengrow: Egyptology and cognate disciplines

    • 3: Li Xiaodong: Egyptology in China

    • 4: Florian Ebeling: Reception of ancient Egypt

    • II. The natural environment: studying the macro and micro-level

    • 5: Karl W. Butzer: Landscapes and environmental history of the Nile valley: a critical review and prospectus

    • 6: Claire Malleson: Flora of ancient Egypt

    • 7: Salima Ikram: Ancient Egyptian fauna

    • 8: Elizabeth Bloxam: The mineral world: studying landscapes of procurement

    • III. Archaeological landscapes: surveying, characterizing, and managing

    • 9: David Jeffreys: Mapping and topography

    • 10: Adel Kelany: Recording rock inscriptions: methods and challenges from an Egyptian perspective

    • 11: Elizabeth Bloxam and Adel Kelany: Cultural Heritage Management in Egypt: community-based strategies, problems, and possibilities

    • 12: Ana Tavares: Methods of site survey and excavation in Egypt

    • IV. Material culture

    • 13: Paul T. Nicholson: Introduction: studying materials and technology

    • 14: Ian Shaw: Settlement archaeology and the contextualization of domestic artefacts

    • 15: Bettina Bader: Ancient Egyptian pottery

    • 16: Jan Picton, Janet Johnstone, and Ivor Pridden: Textiles

    • 17: Aidan Dodson: Funerary equipment

    • 18: Regine Schulz: Seals and scarabs

    • 19: Salima Ikram: Mummies and physical anthropology

    • 20: Corinna Rossi: Ancient Egyptian architecture

    • 21: Campbell Price: Statuary

    • 22: J. Brett McClain: Relief sculpture

    • V. Egypt and its neighbours: revisiting cross-border relationships

    • 23: Robert Morkot: Africa south of Egypt

    • 24: Linda Hulin: The Libyans

    • 25: Carolyn Routledge: Western Asia

    • 26: Jacke Phillips: The Aegean

    • VI. Egyptian history: exploring sources and interpretative frameworks

    • 27: Stan Hendrickx: The Predynastic period

    • 28: Ludwig D. Morenz: The Early Dynastic Period

    • 29: Nigel Strudwick: The Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period

    • 30: Wolfram Grajetzki: The Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period

    • 31: Colleen Manassa Darnell: The New Kingdom

    • 32: David A. Aston: The Third Intermediate Period

    • 33: Tony Leahy: Egypt in the Late Period

    • 34: Khaled Essam Ismail: The Ptolemaic and Roman periods

    • VII. Society and culture: textual and iconographic approaches

    • 35: Wolfram Grajetzki: National administration

    • 36: Christopher J. Eyre: Local administration

    • 37: Sandra Lippert: Law

    • 38: Morris L. Bierbrier: Genealogies

    • 39: Susanne Bickel: Gods, mythology, and cosmology

    • 40: Richard Wilkinson: Symbolism and religious iconography

    • 41: Alexandra von Lieven: Theology

    • 42: Eltayeb Abbas: Funerary beliefs and practices

    • VIII. Scripts and philology

    • 43: AndrÃ(c)as Stauder: Scripts

    • 44: Julie Stauder-Porchet: Lexicography

    • 45: Sami Uljas: Grammar

    • 46: AndrÃ(c)as Stauder: History of the Egyptian language

    • IX. Textual genres: current positions and future directions

    • 47: Jacqueline E. Jay: Orality and literacy in ancient Egypt

    • 48: Ronald J. Leprohon: Historical texts

    • 49: Denise Doxey: Autobiographical' texts

    • 50: Bill Manley: Literary texts

    • 51: John Gee: Socio-economic texts

    • 52: Annette Imhausen: Mathematical texts

    • 53: Rune Nyord: Texts for healing and protection

    • 54: Deborah Sweeney: Letters

    • 55: Richard Jasnow: Demotic texts

    • 56: Terry Wilfong: Coptic texts

    • 57: John Coleman Darnell: Rock art, rock inscriptions, and graffiti

    • 58: Olaf E. Kaper: Ptolemaic and Roman temple texts

    • 59: Ian S. Moyer: Greek and Latin sources

    • X. Museology and conservation

    • 60: Campbell Price: Museum collections

    • 61: Maher A. Eissa and Ashraf el-Senussi: Egyptian museums and storehouses

    • 62: Deborah Schorsch: Conservation in Egyptological museum collections

    • Endmatter

    • Index