Ancient Egypt

Couverture
Oxford University Press, 2003 - 256 pages
The ancient Egyptians created some of the world's most beautiful art and architecture. To this day, this ancient civilization--which produced the great pyramids, the riddle of the Sphinx, and the riches of Tutankhamun--exerts a strong hold on our imaginations.

Now, in Ancient Egypt, eminent Egyptologist David P. Silverman and a team of leading scholars explore the cultural wealth of this civilization in a series of intriguing and authoritative essays based on the latest theories and discoveries. Illustrated with more than 200 superb color photographs, maps, and charts, this book illuminates the vivid and powerful symbolic images of this fascinating culture--from pyramids and temples to priests and rituals; from hieroglyphic writing to daily life by the Nile; and from temple carvings to the cult of the dead. Correcting the popular misconception of the Egyptians as a death-obsessed people, the book uses the most recent historical research and archaeological finds to illuminate the routines of daily life in royal, elite, priestly circles, as well as at lower levels of society. We learn, for example, that despite the monochromatic appearance of most temple ruins today, in ancient times they would have been colorful, even gleaming structures; that the title "Pharaoh" derives from the Egyptian phrase per aa, which means "great house" and was originally a reference to the royal palace; that temples employed all manner of part-time and full-time personnel, from farmers and carpenters to scribes, jewelers, and keepers of livestock; and that Egyptian law viewed women as equal to men, and they could, in some cases, wield considerable influence.
 

Table des matières

Oxford University Press CONTENTS
6
Oxford University Press
12
Oxford is a registered trademark of Oxford University Press A Landscape of the Mind
18
Conceived created and designed by The Zenith of the Unitary State
24
019521952X A Second Unravelling
30
Peter Bently Disunity and Foreign Rule
36
Neil Packer
44
NOTE The Grip of Empire
50
Mummification
138
Ghosts and Exorcism
144
The Daily Offering
150
Ritual Gestures
156
Piety and Priesthood
162
THE PYRAMIDS
168
Building the Pyramids
174
the Great Pyramid
180

AA
52
THE WEALTH
58
Egypts Mineral Wealth
64
Towns and Houses
70
Royal Palaces
76
Roles and Images
82
Royal Women
88
Mathematics
94
Magic
100
TWO LANDS
106
Human or Divine?
112
THE CULT
132
TOMBS
192
Cities of the Dead
200
Houses of the Gods
206
EGYPTIAN ART
212
Regional Styles and Art of
218
Art of the Ptolemaic and Roman
224
SIGNS SYMBOLS
230
The Evolution of the Language
236
GLOSSARY
242
PICTURE CREDITS
256
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À propos de l'auteur (2003)

David P. Silverman is currently Curator-in-Charge of the Egyptian Section of the University of Pennsylvania Museum and Chairman of the university's Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies. His many previous books include Language and Writing in Ancient Egypt, Religion in Ancient Egypt, Ancient Egyptian Kingship, and Masterpieces of Tutankhamun. His fieldwork includes the co-directorship of the University of Pennsylvania/Boston Museum of Fine Arts expedition to record the tombs of the Old and Middle Kingdoms (ca. 2625-1530 BCE).

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