Results 181 to 190 of about 5,979 (232)
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Journal of Egyptian Archaeology
Kom el-Khamaseen is a small necropolis located in South Saqqara, 3 km west of the pyramid of Djedkare-Izezi, dating from the end of the Old Kingdom to the First Intermediate Period.
Daniel González León +1 more
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Kom el-Khamaseen is a small necropolis located in South Saqqara, 3 km west of the pyramid of Djedkare-Izezi, dating from the end of the Old Kingdom to the First Intermediate Period.
Daniel González León +1 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Transmission of the Book of the Dead in New Kingdom Tombs at Saqqara
Texts and images from theBook of the Deadwere widely used to decorate the walls of tombs during Egypt’s New Kingdom (c. 1550-1077 BCE).Prior research has tended to focus on either individual tombs, or on the contents of papyrus copies of theBook of the ...
Helen P. Davies
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Zeitschrift für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde, 2018
Summary The case of Wahibreemakhet, son of Alexikles and Zenodote, is the most prominent example for the high status that Greeks – as mercenaries or advisors – could attain in Egypt under the Saite pharaohs. The present article argues that his final resting place should be identified in a tomb at Saqqara that was probably discovered by ...
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Summary The case of Wahibreemakhet, son of Alexikles and Zenodote, is the most prominent example for the high status that Greeks – as mercenaries or advisors – could attain in Egypt under the Saite pharaohs. The present article argues that his final resting place should be identified in a tomb at Saqqara that was probably discovered by ...
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Making Fire or Woodworking? Bone Artefacts from Djedkare’s Necropolis, South Saqqara (Egypt)
Interdisciplinaria ArchaeologicaThe paper discusses animal bone artefacts from the archaeological excavation in the area between the pyramid complexes of Pharaoh Djedkare’s and Queen Setibhor (5th dynasty, mid-3rd millennium BCE) at Djedkare’s Necropolis in South Saqqara, Egypt.
Hana Vymazalová +2 more
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Uncharted Saqqara: A Postscript
The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology, 1998W. B. Emery's 1964–71 excavations at the Sacred Animal Necropolis, North Saqqara, uncovered large quantities of bovid material, thought at the time to derive from the Mother of Apis Catacomb. This article suggests instead that the material may have come from other (now lost) bovid galleries in the vicinity, the existence of which is attested by the ...
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