Egyptology Blog

Permalink  27 April 2007

Temples, tombs and more
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The 6,000-pound red granite lion symbolizes the power of the Egyptian Pharaoh. But Mary Ellen Soles, curator of ancient art at the North Carolina Museum of Art, said the sculpture reminds her of “a big kitty cat.”

It’s the first thing people will encounter when visiting “Temples and Tombs: Treasures of Egyptian Art from the British Museum.”

Soles pointed out the big cat’s casual pose. One front paw is crossed over another and his tail curls around the front of his body. There’s a benign expression on his face.

Soles noted the “acutely observed naturalism,” such as the animal’s ribs and a pouch of sagging skin incorporated into the sculpture...

The exhibition catalogue can be found here: , Edna R. Russmann, Nigel Strudwick, T.G.H. James, University of Washington Press, 2006, pp. 136.

Temples, tombs and more, Mike Wilder, The Times News, North Carolina, USA, ...


#2758 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 6:00:14 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Bob Brier gets wrapped up in talk on mummies
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A love for mummies is not uncommon, but a love for figuring out the mysteries that surround their deaths is not an easy task.

Just ask , a man whose love for mummies has taken him halfway around the world to discover the mystery of a mummy known as Unknown Man E.

Brier recently spoke as part of a series held at Camden County College's Dennis Flyer Theatre. The lectures dealt entirely with the mysteries and history of Ancient Egypt and brought to the college experts on the subject from all around the world.

Not originally scheduled to speak that night, Brier, whose wife was unable to speak due to an illness, filled in and provided a glimpse into the mysteries surrounding an ancient mummy that had been labelled only by the name Unknown Man E...

Speaker gets wrapped up in talk on mummies, Drew Ciccotelli, The Philadelphia Record Breeze, Pennsylvania, USA, April 26, 2007.

Previously:

The Mystery of Unknown Man E, February 16, 2006.


#2757 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 5:41:44 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Italy to Return Ancient Statue to Libya
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Italy will return to Libya an ancient Roman statue taken from its former North African colony, a gesture Rome hopes will help its own campaign to retrieve allegedly looted antiquities from museums worldwide.

The 2nd century statue of the goddess Venus was found in 1913 by Italian troops near the ruins of the Greek and Roman settlement of Cyrene, on the Libyan coast, the Culture Ministry said Tuesday. It is now housed in Rome's National Roman Museum...

Libyan authorities requested the statue in 1989, but a protracted judicial battle ensued with a group that considered the work part of Italy's cultural heritage. Last week, a court ruled in favour of returning the statue to Tripoli, the ministry said in a statement. No date has been set for the return.

The ruling sets "a useful precedent to promote the return, in favour of Italy, of antiquities that were looted by other states," the ministry said.

Italy is aggressively campaigning to recover antiquities it says were smuggled out of the country and sold to museums worldwide...

Three Associated Press photographs can be found here on Yahoo! News' Archaeology & Anthropology slideshow.

Italy to Return Ancient Statue to Libya, Ariel David, AP via The Guardian, UK, April 24, 2007.


#2756 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 5:24:14 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Met's art theft squad has to go cap in hand
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The dramatic scaling down of Scotland Yard's once renowned arts and antique squad has left organised criminals free to plunder the nation's heritage, according to a leading fine art insurer.

Police have sought private money to finance the squad after its annual budget of some £300,000 was halved earlier this year. But the Guardian has learned that Scotland Yard has failed to secure a penny from insurers or auction houses, after months of discussions.

Britain's art market is second only to the US and experts claim up to £200m worth of stolen art and antiques are sold in the UK each year. Interpol estimates that art theft is the fourth largest organised crime after drugs, people trafficking and arms...

[S]uccesses include the uncovering of a multimillion pound British smuggling operation in which precious antiquities and archaeological artefacts were stolen from Egypt, some of which were sold at Sotheby's...

Met's art theft squad has to go cap in hand, Sandra Laville, The Guardian, UK, April 21, 2007.


#2755 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 5:18:24 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

The gates of history
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Seven years after being given the go-ahead, the Al-Arish National Museum is ready to open...

North Sinai's National Day celebration had a different flavour this year. Apart from the inauguration of new urban development projects that usually mark the event, the city's long-awaited LE50 million National Museum is at last finished.

The two-storey Al-Arish National Museum (ANM) will make a huge visual difference to North Sinai's capital city. The temple- shaped, honey-coloured edifice has finally been revealed after being hidden for almost a decade under ugly iron scaffolding, wooden panels and plastic sheets.

Although plans for the museum were drawn up in 1994 — shortly after the return of Sinai's archaeological collection taken by Israel during their occupation — the foundation stone was laid only in 1998. Lack of funds subsequently placed the project on hold for nearly four years. However in 2002 the Ministry of Culture put Egypt's museums at the top of its priority list in an attempt to preserve the country's priceless treasures, both stored and newly-discovered. The plan was to create the optimum environment to display the treasures, and thus release the pressure on overstuffed major museums. In line with the ministry's plan, steps were taken towards the museum's completion...

The gates of history, Nevine El-Aref, Al-Ahram, Issue No. 842, April 26 - May 02, 2007.


#2754 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 5:14:44 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

The Gist: Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs
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I can’t wait for that touring King Tut exhibit I keep hearing about to come to New York.

Yes, but the closest that “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs” will get to us is Philadelphia — it’s there through September 30 [2007].

Why’s that?

Well, Egypt’s antiquities director, Zahi Hawass, pitched it to a number of New York museums, and they all turned it down.

I get the sense it’s kind of a hypefest.

Perhaps. It’s atypical in that most blockbuster exhibits make at least gestures toward an intellectual conceit. Here, the wall labels are pretty basic, and the idea is mostly Look at all this awesome gold stuff. The museum’s shop even sells knockoffs of Hawass’s hat.

Is it not worth the trip, then?

No, it is — you just have to be willing to do a little reading on your own beforehand. If you do, you can take a lot away from the show. And of course it’ll interest kids...

The Gist: “Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs”, Christopher Bonanos, New York Magazine, New York, USA, April 30, 2007.


#2753 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 5:12:24 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Travel: A bit of envy for the simple life
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I find it hard to imagine anyone visiting Egypt for the first time, no matter how well read on the subject, and not being impressed. It is amazing so many people spent decades building pyramids or digging, carving and painting elaborate underground vaults, long before some civilisations had cottoned on as to the potential of the wheel.

The legacy of buildings they have left is remarkable and we stare and wonder at it all. Yet the republican pulse still beats deep inside and I just feel all that ability, knowledge of higher mathematics, craftsmanship, energy and grotesque amounts of labour could have been used for the general good.

Instead thousands of workers were directed at the behest of a succession of deluded leaders who actually believed they were to become one of the gods, and despite this ethereal elevation, needed their worldly goods in the hereafter.

Not everyone swallowed this, however, for it is believed the tombs were cleaned out by robbers within 70 years of them being sealed...

A bit of envy for the simple life, Oliver Phillips, This is London, UK, April 20, 2007.


#2752 posted by Mark Morgan on 27 April 2007, 3:09:14 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []


Permalink  26 April 2007

Book Review: Silent Images: Women in Pharaonic Egypt
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Our endless fascination with ancient Egypt owes much to the beauty of the tomb paintings, statuary, temple reliefs, and other magnificent artworks that are the legacy of this remarkable culture. But despite the multitude of objects and texts that have survived, questions abound, particularly about the true role of women in Egyptian society. This wonderfully illustrated, brilliantly researched book draws on unpublished material from author Zahi Hawass' own excavations as well as new analyses of older evidence to penetrate the silent images and paint an astonishing picture of women's lives. Hawass contrasts the stereotype-inspired by such symbols of femininity as the queens Nefertiti and Nefertari-with a more realistic view of the common woman's everyday involvement in matters ranging from family life to dress and adornment to the workplace and the legal system. Lavish photographs of places and objects, many made especially for this book, round out an enthralling, richly textured work. Zahi Hawass is a world-renowned archaeologist. He is director of the Giza Pyramids and field director of the Bahariya Oasis excavation, as well as a frequent lecturer around the world. He has written books on the pyramids and on kingship in ancient Egypt, and his articles have been published widely. He teaches archaeology at Cairo University and the University of California at Los Angeles. 150 illustrations in full colour, 9 3/4 x 11 3/4"

, Zahi Hawass, Harry N. Abrams, Inc, 1995 (2000), pp. 207.

Book Review: Silent Images : Women in Pharaonic Egypt, Science Daily, USA, April 25, 2007.


#2751 posted by Mark Morgan on 26 April 2007, 5:56:19 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Exhibition highlights vintage travel photographs
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Image by an unknown photographer of visitors to temples at Abu  Simbel, Egypt, that were built as a monument to the pharaoh  Rameses II in the 13th century B.C.: Princeton University Department of Art and Archaeology

An exhibition mounted by the Department of Art and Archaeology offers a look at vintage photographs from the second half of the 19th century, during the concurrent development of photography and tourism. The exhibition, "Global Views: 19th-century Travel Photographs," runs through Friday, Sept. 28 [2007], in the first floor lounge of McCormick Hall.

In the second half of the 19th century, professional photographic firms arose in the major cities of Western Europe, as well as in more remote travel destinations such as Greece, Egypt, India, Asia and the Middle East. Catering to an influx of European and American tourists, a growing number of travel photographers documented historical monuments, archaeological sites and scenes of daily life from the Middle East and Asia.

The exhibition features some of these unique images, which have historical value in terms of the development of photography and the study of the architectural and social history of the regions in which they were produced...

Princeton University Department of Art and Archaeology.

Exhibition highlights vintage travel photographs, News @ Princeton, Princeton University, New Jersey, USA, April 24, 2007.


#2750 posted by Mark Morgan on 26 April 2007, 5:44:38 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Family in court over fake statue
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An 83-year-old man and his family have appeared in court charged in connection with the sale of a fake Egyptian statue which was thought to be worth £1m.

Bolton Council paid £440,000 for the Amarna Princess in 2003 believing it was 3,300-years-old — but in 2006 experts found it was counterfeit.

George Greenhalgh, his wife Olive, 82, and sons, George, 52, and Shaun, 46, appeared at Bolton Magistrates' Court.

They were bailed to appear at Bolton Crown Court on 24 July [2007]...

Family in court over fake statue, BBC News, UK, April 26, 2007.

cf. Family in court over sale of fake statue to council, Jon Land, 24dash.com, UK, April 26, 2007.

Previously:

Two men charged over fake statue, April 23, 2007.

Fake £1m statue: Bail extended for trio, March 01, 2007.

The ancient Egypt statue from Bolton (circa 2003), March 28, 2006.

More on £500,000 statue in police 'fake' probe, March 21, 2006.

Two held as '£1m Egyptian statue' is found to be a fake, March 21, 2006.

Egyptian statue in forgery claim, March 20, 2006.

Archive:

cf. Museum secures rare Egyptian sculpture, BBC News, UK, September 30, 2003.


#2749 posted by Mark Morgan on 26 April 2007, 5:29:19 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

'Cursed' Tut ring found on beach could be part of treasure lost in early 20th century shipwreck
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Picture of Markas Dove, of Kintbury, holding the alleged cursed ring of King Tut

Could this mysterious, 3,000-year-old ring be part of the lost — and cursed — treasure of Tutankhamun?

It's owner, Markas Dove of Kintbury, certainly believes so.

Since the ring was unearthed by a huge storm in 1987, Mr Dove has been offered a fortune for the ring, although bad luck has followed in its wake.

Mr Dove said: "My dad found the band with a metal detector after the hurricane of 1987 removed about 10 feet off the beach at the Isle of Wight...

Elisabeth O'Connell, the research curator at the British Museum's Egyptology department, said: "The inscription suggests it belonged to either Tutankhamun or one of his inner court.

"I would not like to try and put a figure on its value."

She added that an early-20th-century shipwreck of a vessel carrying Egyptian antiquities was the most likely explanation for the find...

King Tut's treasure, John Garvey, Newbury Today, UK, April 26, 2007.


#2748 posted by Mark Morgan on 26 April 2007, 5:14:18 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Museums at war over a flying visit home for Queen Nefertiti
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The 3,400-year-old bust of the wife of the Sun King Akhenaten has been in German hands since it was dug out of the desert by the archaeologist Ludwig Borchardt in 1912. It was smuggled out of Egypt and became a central part of Berlin’s museum collection.

Now the Egyptians want it back, if not for keeps, then at least on loan to mark the opening in 2012 of a new Grand Egyptian Museum, near the Pyramid at Giza. If the Egyptian Museum in Berlin does not agree, says Zahi Hawass, there will be trouble. “We will make the lives of these museums miserable,” the secretary-general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities in Egypt said. “It will be a scientific war.”

German officials say that the bust is too fragile to travel. “Nefertiti is not a pop star that can simply go on tour,” a senior official said. Dietrich Wildung, head of the Egyptian Museum, says there is no doubt that Nefertiti is German property. “She was donated to the state museum in 1920 by James Simon [who sponsored the Borchardt dig].”

The bust, he says, has become globally famous in a way that it would not have had it stayed in Egypt. “Nefertiti has become an outstanding example of how the foreign can be integrated into society,” Dr Wildung says. “She is accepted, not assimilated. She keeps her separateness and her uniqueness, yet she belongs here.”

Nefertiti, in other words, is not budging. Mr Hawass has sent the Germans an ultimatum: “We will never again organise antiquities exhibitions in Germany if it refuses the request...”

Museums at war over a flying visit home for Queen Nefertiti, Roger Boyes, The Times, UK, April 26, 2007.

Previously:

Egypt officially requests Nefertiti bust, April 23, 2007.

Nefertiti: Face to face, April 20, 2007.

Egypt Vows 'Scientific War' If Germany Doesn't Loan Nefertiti, April 19, 2007.

Berlin museum rebuffs threat over Nefertiti, April 17, 2007.

Egypt threatens German ban in Nefertiti row, April 16, 2007.

Nefertiti Is Too Fragile to Visit Egypt, German Minister Says, April 13, 2007.


#2747 posted by Mark Morgan on 26 April 2007, 4:58:38 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []


Permalink  25 April 2007

Travel: Cabbing To Cairo For 2 Cents A Mile
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Everything is very cheap in Egypt. I had two rooms, with four beds, and a private bath, with a hot-water shower, for $60 a month. I recall that each day I would go out and get a plate of macaroni with meat, two mini-hamburgers on French-style bread, four small candy bars, a cola and a newspaper, all for $1.14. Seven pounds of Egyptian flat bread, like thick tortillas, or 20 small loaves, cost 45¢. A barbecued chicken was about $1.75. Egyptian teabags were 30¢ a hundred. Grapes and dates were 14¢ a pound. Buses and the surface-level trains charged 3¢ a ride. You could get a flat bicycle tire patched for 15¢.

This was in 1990 and 1991, at a time when the Egyptian pound was fluctuating between 30¢ and 35¢. Today, with the pound (junaih in Arabic) going for about 18¢, the figures would look even better, unless inflation has outrun the depreciation of the pound, which I doubt seriously, given the government controls in Egypt...

I was contemplating cycling the entire 113 miles, which would have taken me 2 days, but I was afraid that I wouldn’t find enough places to get water in the scorching semi-desert of the Nile Delta...

Cabbing To Cairo For 2 Cents A Mile, Thomas Keyes, Useless-Knowledge.com. April 24, 2007.

Previously:

A Quick Tour Of The Pyramids, The Sphinx And The Egyptian Museum, August 30, 2005.

Egypt Is A Safe, Safe Place, July 07, 2005.


#2746 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:35 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Profile of Steve Goodman
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[He] enrolled at the University of Michigan, where he and a roommate, who was studying Egyptology, decided to look at how bird representations in Egyptian art had changed through time. For months they spent evenings poring over books at the university's superb Egyptian collection, tracking changes in styles over 2,000 years. On a whim, they sent their finished study to , a famed Egyptologist at Yale University.

He called, immediately bought them tickets to the East Coast and helped them submit their monograph to the world's premiere Egyptology journal, which published it in 1979. "Who are you, anyway?" he asked the pair. Soon, at his urging, they'd found grant money to go to Egypt and study birds and historic records there.

"At that point, my life changed," Goodman remembers. "From then to now I've been on the same trajectory.

That has led him to wander with Bedouins on the remote Egyptian-Sudanese border... Along the way he helped create an transnational park on the Egypt-Sudan border..

Wild man, Laurie Goering, The Chicago Tribune, Illinois, USA, April 22, 2007.


#2745 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:35 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Tut's treasures
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The last North American tour of Tutankhamun-related relics, 29 years ago, was billed as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to see them outside Egypt. So perhaps their return proves we've all now entered the afterlife in which the ancient Egyptians fervently believed, and which inspired the creation and preservation of many of the glittering objects on display.

But those who remember queuing for hours in their youth and who think they've seen it, done it and bought the catalogue should note that there are twice as many artefacts this time, only 11 of which visited before. And with online booking of timed-entry tickets, a clear view of the objects is guaranteed and long line-ups are now ancient history.

If the earlier exhibition was a portrait of Tutankhamun, who took the throne at age eight or nine and who died less than 10 years later, the new show is a family album also covering preceding generations of ancestors and monarchs, and setting the scene for the youngster's reign.

Containing items ranging from the monumental to the utterly domestic, the exhibition opens with a powerful grey granite statue of Tutankhamun himself, elegant and lithe, and pronounced by an inscription as being favoured by the gods...

Tutankhamun and the Golden Age of the Pharaohs on display until September 30, 2007 at Philadelphia's Franklin Institute.

The exhibition catalogue is available from Amazon: , Zahi Hawass, National Geographic Books, 2005, pp. 287.

Tut's treasures, Peter Neville-Hadley, The North Shore News, British Columbia, USA, April 24, 2007.


#2744 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:34 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Big Five First Among Select Tour Operators to Offer Newest Oberoi Luxury Ship in Egypt
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Big Five Tours & Expeditions is pleased to announce that it is among the first tour operators selected to market Oberoi's new luxury ship, the Oberoi Zahra. Set for launch in the fall of 2007, this stylish cruiser will ply Egypt's Nile River. The ship is beautifully appointed in contemporary decor with large windows offering panoramic views of this timeless waterway.

Big Five has created a Nile River tour program to match this outstanding new Oberoi Nile cruise ship. Extraordinary Egypt is a 13-day program that provides guests with an unparalleled experience. They explore the frenetic lanes of old Cairo and the magnificent pyramids of Giza, bargain for treasures in Khan El Khalili Bazaar, discover ancient Alexandria and the temples of Luxor, and spend time in the Valley of Kings. They enjoy a special, private tour and reception at the temple of Hathor at Denderah, and travel to Abu Simbel to discover the remarkable temples of Rameses II and Queen Nefertari...

Big Five First Among Select Tour Operators to Offer Newest Oberoi Luxury Ship in Egypt, PR Web, USA, April 25, 2007.


#2743 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:33 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Ancient Egypt Magazine April / May 2007
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The latest issue of Ancient Egypt Magazine is out now. Below is a summary of its contents.

Ancient Egypt Magazine April / May 2007
  • Through a Glass, Clearly
    Alan L. Jeffreys looks at an unusual and impressive display in the National Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh.
  • Egypt in Dubai
    Cathie Bryan looks at some of the many new Egyptian-style buildings that have been built in Wafi City in Dubai.
  • The Dakhleh Oasis Project
    In the second in a series of articles, Dr. Peter Sheldrick looks at the physical remains of the ancient inhabitants of the Oasis.
  • The Temple of Khonsu at Karnak
    Charlotte Booth takes us on a tour of the well-preserved small temple, showing how it demonstrates a power-shift from the Pharaoh to the Priests of Amun.
  • An unwrapped mummified head in the Hancock Museum
    Gill Scott tells how a male mummified head has recently been conserved.
  • From our Egypt Correspondent
    Ayman Wahby Taher with the latest news from around Egypt, including exciting discoveries in the major new excavation of the Avenue of Sphinxes between the temples of Luxor and Karnak.
  • Technology Innovators of Ancient Egypt
    In the second of his series of articles, Denys Stocks looks at the technology of the great pyramid-building age of ancient Egypt, the Old Kingdom.
  • A Pilgrimage to Abydos
    Blair Wilkins visits Abydos and a special grave there.
  • Per Mesut: For younger readers
    This issue Hilary Wilson looks at grain.

Ancient Egypt Magazine, Empire Publications, Manchester, UK, Volume 7, No. 5, Issue 41, April / May 2007.

Subscribe to Ancient Egypt Magazine via Amazon.com.


#2742 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:32 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Experts bone up on ancient riddle
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A riddle of ancient Egyptian bones has been solved by two experts at Bolton Museum.

But they intend to keep people guessing — for the moment.

Two unique linen-wrapped bundles containing remains which could be up to 2m years old were unearthed in the early 1920s by celebrated archaeologist Sir Flinders Petrie, who excavated many of the most important sites in Egypt.

The bulk of his finds went to University College in London [to the Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology], but for a long time it seemed the bundles had disappeared off the scientific map — until they turned up in Bolton.

Intrigued by the discovery, Tom Hardwick, keeper of Egyptology at the museum, and archaeology expert David Craven turned detective to reopen an investigation, hoping to find exactly what they had...

Experts bone up on ancient riddle, Don Frame, The Manchester Evening News, UK, April 25, 2007.


#2741 posted by Mark Morgan on 25 April 2007, 6:19:29 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []


Permalink  24 April 2007

Travel: Fit for the Gods... Ancient and modern Egypt will change your Life
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Legendary land of the Pharaohs and home of the goddess Isis and her husband Osiris, god of fertility and ruler of the afterlife — Egypt is a magical place for a holiday.

This fabled north-east African country — with its face to the Mediterranean, its back to the desert and flanked by the Red Sea — exudes a serious sense of the exotic.

Tutankhamen, the great Pyramids and the Sphinx at Giza, the Valleys of the Kings and Queens, Abu Simbel — these are all names which cause a frisson of excitement.

And to such wonders of the ancient world, Egypt has added the modern Aswan Dam...

Travel: Fit for the Gods... Ancient and modern Egypt will change your Life, Aine Hegarty, Red Nova, USA, April 21, 2007.


#2740 posted by Mark Morgan on 24 April 2007, 5:23:38 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Egyptologists keep ancient world fresh
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[I]f it weren't for Terry Wilfong, of the University of Michigan, [a] part of Tamesia's burial papyrus would not come true.

Mr. Wilfong's painstaking interpretation of the papyrus, owned by the Toledo Museum of Art, is helping her name live forever — or at least through today — just like the papyrus promised.

Mr. Wilfong is among 100 presenters keeping ancient Egypt alive during the 58th Annual Meeting of the American Research Centre in Egypt. The meeting continues through [Sunday] at the Toledo Riverfront Hotel...

Picture of The Toledo Museum of Art's papyrus funerary book of Tamesia

The papyrus of Tamesia is a window into a world where people continued to cling to the ancient practices of Egyptian religion, even as their world changed. Already, many spoke Greek in daily life, and saw the growing influence of that culture...

Tamesia's burial papyrus is nearly 12 feet long and 10 inches high, it is abbreviated compared to the book of the dead that would have accompanied her to the afterlife in earlier times...

Egyptologists keep ancient world fresh, Jenni Laidman, The Toledo Blade, Ohio, USA, April 21, 2007.


#2739 posted by Mark Morgan on 24 April 2007, 5:20:19 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []


Permalink  23 April 2007

Temples and Tombs
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The mystery and splendour of ancient Egypt has come to the North Carolina Museum of Art.

"Temples and Tombs: Treasures of Egyptian Art from the British Museum" opens today and continues through July 8 [2007].

Members of the media, along with the show's corporate sponsors, attended a preview on Thursday...

The 85 objects in the show represent ancient Egypt on a grand scale, but also showcase antiquities in unbelievably exquisite detail.

"Many of these objects haven't looked this good in the last 5,000 to 6,000 years," Maree said, complementing the show's lighting and dark-blue walls. "Every piece looks absolutely fabulous..."

Exhibition catalogue: , Edna R. Russmann, T. G. H. James, and Nigel Strudwick, American Federation of Arts, 2006, pp. 136.

Temples and Tombs, Susan Shinn, Salisbury Post, North Carolina, USA, April 15, 2007.


#2738 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 5:38:07 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Dig this: profile of Caroline Rocheleau
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[A] University of Toronto doctoral candidate named Caroline Rocheleau spent two summer months at Madaba, as the Jordanian city is now known. Dressed in an old cotton T-shirt, cotton pants, wool socks and steel-toed boots, she would walk two miles with hoes, buckets and rubber baskets for a day of digging.

In the diary she kept there, she describes the careful measurements and record-keeping, and the removal of pottery shards that she would glue back together later. Piecing together the past is an exacting business.

Growing up in Kenya and visiting Egypt, Rocheleau knew early that she wanted to be an archaeologist. By the time she returned home to Canada to begin her college studies, the subject was far more tangible than just something she had read in textbooks...

I was initially confused when I found this story as I actually found the second one linked below first &8212; which is just a list of famous archaeologists — that I presume was a box-out in the printed edition.

Dig this, Craig Jarvis, The Raleigh News & Observer, North Carolina, USA, April 15, 2007.

You might have heard of these archaeologists, Craig Jarvis, The Raleigh News & Observer, North Carolina, USA, April 15, 2007.


#2737 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 5:10:07 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Mummy's the word for museum meeting
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There are still mysteries, but Bonnie M. Sampsell has been a super sleuth, helping the Wayne County Historical Museum answer many questions about its mummy and its Egyptian collection.

Richmond native Sampsell, who now lives in Chapel Hill, [North Carolina], started putting her passion for Egyptology to work for the museum last summer. She began cataloguing the artefacts, researching the collection and updating the mummy's display.

On Sunday, during the museum's annual meeting, Sampsell [discussed] what she learned.

"It just ties everything together well and gives us a lot more information that we did not know," said Jim Harlan, executive director of the Wayne County Historical Museum. "Everybody thinks it's a very professional job."

Many of the questions cantered on the mummy — a favourite of visiting school children for years. Museum founder Julia Meek Gaar bought the mummy during a 1929 visit to Cairo, Egypt. She was told the mummy had been on exhibition in a curio store there for 40 years before the shop owner decided to sell it to her.

Sampsell used X-rays taken of the mummy in 1974 and 2000, a CAT scan done in 2000, along with other photographs and information to seek answers during her own recent trip to Cairo...

Bonnie M. Sampsell is the author of (How the Land Made Egypt What It Is), The American University in Cairo Press, 2003, pp. 272.

Mummy's the word for museum meeting, Rachel E. Sheeley, Palladium-Item, Indiana USA, April 14, 2007, via EEF News.


#2736 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 4:46:47 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Two men charged over fake statue
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A father aged 84 and his son have been charged over the £440,000 sale of an allegedly fake Egyptian statue.

The Amarna Princess was bought in 2003 by Bolton Council, which believed it was a 3,300-year-old antiquity.

Experts determined the 20in (51cm) sculpture was not genuine, after special tests last year.

George Greenhalgh, 84, and his son Shaun Greenhalgh from Bolton, have been charged with laundering the proceeds of sale of the statue...

Two men charged over fake statue, BBC News, UK, April 21, 2007.

cf. £1m fake statue: family charged, Amanda Smith, The Bolton News, UK, April 21, 2007.

cf. Four on fake statue charge, Manchester Evening News, UK, April 23, 2007.

cf. Egyptian statue that cost council £440,000 is a forgery, This is London, UK, April 23, 2007.

Previously:

Fake £1m statue: Bail extended for trio, March 01, 2007.

The ancient Egypt statue from Bolton (circa 2003), March 28, 2006.

More on £500,000 statue in police 'fake' probe, March 21, 2006.

Two held as '£1m Egyptian statue' is found to be a fake, March 21, 2006.

Egyptian statue in forgery claim, March 20, 2006.

Archive:

cf. Museum secures rare Egyptian sculpture, BBC News, UK, September 30, 2003.


#2735 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 4:30:27 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Egypt officially requests Nefertiti bust
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Secretary of the Supreme Council for Antiquities Zahi Hawass confirmed on April 20 that he will send an official letter to the director of Berlin's Altes Museum, requesting the approval of officials of the museum on loaning Nefertiti bust to Egypt for a three-month period, on the occasion of inaugurating the largest world museum of antiquities in mid June 2011 and which is currently set up by Ministry of Cultural on 117-fedden area on Alexandria Desert Road.

Hawass said the request shows keenness of Cultural Ministry officials to provide the chance for Egyptian and foreign visitors of the grand museum to witness their beautiful queen Nefertiti amid her counterparts of Egypt's ancient Pharaonic history.

Hawass rejected statements made lately by the German culture minister and museum director on the disapproval of German officials to Egypt's request of their loaning Nefertiti bust as they claimed danger of its damage during freight and transport.

Egypt officially requests Nefertiti bust, Egypt State Information Service, Egypt, April 21, 2007.

Previously:

Nefertiti: Face to face, April 20, 2007.

Egypt Vows 'Scientific War' If Germany Doesn't Loan Nefertiti, April 19, 2007.

Berlin museum rebuffs threat over Nefertiti, April 17, 2007.

Egypt threatens German ban in Nefertiti row, April 16, 2007.

Nefertiti Is Too Fragile to Visit Egypt, German Minister Says, April 13, 2007.


#2734 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 3:16:58 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

775,000 tourists visited Egypt last February
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Some 775,000 tourists from different world's countries visited Egypt last February, up by 16% compared to February 2006, said chairman of the Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS) Abu Bakr Al-Gendi.

Tourist nights spent by those tourists accounted for 6.4 million nights, with 15.3% increase versus February 2006, he added.

European tourists topped the list of tourists that visited Egypt last February followed by tourists from the Middle East countries, East Asia, North America and Africa.

Arab tourists totalled 124,600 up by 1.1% compared to February 2006.

775,000 tourists visited Egypt last February, Egypt State Information Service, Egypt, April 20, 2007.


#2733 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 3:13:27 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Egypt officially protests against the farce of new contest on world wonders
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Egypt officially protested against a contest sponsored by a Swiss Tourist Company to choose the new wonders of the world.

The Giza Pyramids in Egypt were ruled out from the contest.

Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities said that he sent an official address to the UNESCO Director General, the Chairman of the World Heritage Committee, and the UNESCO Culture Director General asking them to intervene and immediately stop this farce.

This is rather bizarre as on the same day we have “Egypt’s pyramids out of seven wonders contest”.

Egypt officially protests against the farce of new contest on world wonders, Egypt State Information Service, Egypt, April 20, 2007.

Previously:

Egypt's pyramids out of seven wonders contest, April 20, 2007.


#2732 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 3:11:07 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

A Karnak discovery shows how ancient builders shielded temples from Nile water
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Remains of an ancient Egyptian wall used to prevent the leakage of the Nile flood waters from spreading over the Karnak temple in Luxor were discovered on Thursday at the temple’s eastern side, culture minister Farouk Hosni announced on Sunday.

Hosni revealed that the wall was accidentally found by Egyptian excavators during an archaeological inspection of the site undertaken as part of a development project aimed at removing encroachments accumulated over the years on the temple’s different sides.

Zahi Hawass, secretary general of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), explained that the newly-discovered wall is only 400 km long and 7m in height.

More excavations will reveal more relevant structures, said Hawass...

A Karnak discovery shows how ancient builders shielded temples from Nile water, Ahmed Maged, The Egypt Daily Star, Egypt, April 22, 2007.


#2731 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 2:59:35 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []

Chief archaeologist announces fresh discoveries
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Some of the new mummies that have been unearthed of late are likely to be those of ancient Egypt’s most controversial royals, announced Zahi Hawass, head of the Supreme Council of Antiquities.

Egypt’s chief archaeologist, who spoke on Wednesday to a packed hall at the American University in Cairo, noted that the mummies that are awaiting confirmation of scanning tests are among some of the new discoveries in the field of archaeology. This is in addition to a number of new findings from excavations which were carried out in Heliopolis and the Valley of the Kings, Luxor.

Hawass also said that four doors that have been pinpointed inside the big pyramid could also reveal some of the secrets of that ancient wonder.

He pointed out that the controversial mummies are thought to be those of Queen Hatshepsut, the only female ruler in ancient Egypt, whose mummy was found in Al Deir El Bahari along with that of her father Thutmose I.

Hawass continued: “But the result of scanning will be announced on July 15 [2007] when tests are completed, along with a thorough examination of the mummies of her brother and husband Thutmose II and Thutmose III that will also be tested for purposes of comparison.”

Hawass also said that a tomb tucking away at a Ptolemaic site near Alexandria could be sheltering the mummies of Antony and Cleopatra...

As for discoveries within the big pyramid, Hawass said that the council is waiting for the arrival of the robot required to infiltrate the edifice and provide data.

Hawass also announced that a temple belonging to King Rameses II, as well as a number of other tombs, were unearthed in Heliopolis...

Chief archaeologist announces fresh discoveries, Ahmed Maged, The Egypt Daily Star, Egypt, April 19, 2007.


#2730 posted by Mark Morgan on 23 April 2007, 2:57:37 PM  Permalink     comment [] trackback []