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         Nubia Ancient History:     more books (46)
  1. The Kingdom of Kush: Handbook of the Napatan-Meriotic Civilization (Handbook of Oriental Studies/Handbuch Der Orientalistik) by Laszlo Torok, 1998-01
  2. Wretched Kush: Ethnic Identy in Egypt's Nubian Empire by Stu Tyson Smith, 2003-09-29
  3. The Kingdom of Kush: The Napatan and Meroitic Empires by Derek A. Welsby, 1998-03
  4. Egypt Pocket Guide: Abu Simel and the Nubian Temples (Egypt Guides) by Alberto Siliotti, 2000-11-01

61. Kids Online Resources - History Pg 4
Life in ancient Egypt Carnegie Museum of Natural history. Mysteries of the NileExplore ancient Egypt (QTVR nubia - nubia is located in today s southern Egypt
http://www.kidsolr.com/history/page4.html
Search KidsOLR Home Internet Safety Art/Music Geography ... Site Map
History and Social Science Pg4
American/Government/Women Explorers World/Ancient/Castles Human Origins/Ancient ... War Human Origins

62. Ancient History - Egypt (US Pub. Before 1999)
Africa in Antiquity The Arts of ancient nubia the Sudan The Exhibition Temples,Tombs Hieroglyphs A Popular history of ancient Egypt / Barbara Mertz
http://www.find-out-of-print-books-online.info/ancient-history-egypt_b499.htm
Ancient History - Egypt (US pub. before 1999 LISTING OF OUT-OF-PRINT BOOKS Searching for out of print books? Here is how to do it! A book-search tool in the form of an online wizard appears below so you can locate and buy them through a reputable international bookseller. Just click on this link here to the Online Book Search or use the search form below Find millions of out-of-print books using this international book search wizard TIP! Use only one or two keywords from the book title to ensure the best search results! Search By: Title Author Keyword
Info About Finding Out of Print Books Online or Biography Book Search and Used Books In the Tomb of Nefertari : The Conservation of the Wall Paintings / Robert Bianchi / John McDonald 1992 /Getty, J. Paul Trust Publications PP. 88 The Louvre : Egyptian Antiquities / Christine Ziegler / Marie-Helene Rutshowscaya / Christophe Barbotin 1991 /Scala Books PP. 96 Want to find a book? This is a subject listing of out of print books related to the topic heading above. It is a resource you can use to search and find those books through secondhand and used book sellers or dealers in the antique and antiquarian. A booksearch tool in the form of an online wizard is also provided so you can locate and acquire these books more easily from a reputable international firm. Just click on this link here to the Online Book Search or use the search form below Find millions of out-of-print books using this international book search wizard TIP!

63. African American Self-Help Foundation - History Of Nubia
ancient nubia was located in what is now the country of Sudan, Africa’s largestcountry. They are proud of their black African heritage and rich history.
http://www.aashf.org/pages/sudan/nubArtHxNubia.htm
History of Ancient Nubia: Ancient Nubia was a state of northeastern Africa. At the pinnacle of its political power, Nubia stretched from north to south, from the first cataract of the Nile (near Aswan, Egypt) to Khartoum in Sudan. Ancient Nubia originally was under the influence of the Egyptian pharaohs. By the 20th century B.C., the Egyptian occupation of the area was complete. In the 8th and 7th centuries B.C., ancient Nubia of the Cush kingdom conquered Egypt and ruled over it. The Assyrians invaded the ancient Nubian area in the middle of the 7th century B.C. The Ethiopians then invaded in the middle of the 4th century B.C. After this, the region was controlled by the Nobatae, an ethnic group that mixed with the indigenous peoples of that area, and formed a powerful kingdom with its capital at Dongola. This kingdom existed for many centuries and converted to Christianity in the 6th Century A.D. It joined with the Christian kingdom of Ethiopia to resist Muslim encroachment, but finally fell to Muslim invasion in the 14th century, A.D. Nubia was then broken up into many small, independent states.

64. National Core Knowledge Coordinator Of Colorado - Resources In World History
Nile (nubia) http//www.pbs.org/wonders/fr_e1.htm; ancient nubia http//library Fiction(resources available on the Web about the history, culture, literature
http://www.ckcolorado.org/resources/res_worldhistory.htm
Web Sites to Support Core Knowledge
Return to Resources
World History
General

65. About Synchronized Ancient History
near the Cushites (Ethiopians). In conventional history, Egypt was by the men ofthe land of nubia in my so far unknown period of time, ancient Arabian people
http://www.specialtyinterests.net/arabs.html
Highlighting the Background to the History of the Time of Jehoram, King of Jerusalem (853-841 BC).
by Damien Mackey
The Amazing Story of Arabs in Jerusalem Old Arabic Phrases of the Islamic Period
The Story of Job

The Story of the Death of Holofernes"

"Moreover the Lord stirred up against Jehoram the spirit of the Philistines and the Arabians , that were near the Ethiopians; and they came up into Judah, and brake into it, and carried away all the substance that was found in the king's house, and his sons also, and his wives; so that there was never a son left to him save Jehoahaz, the youngest of his sons. 2.Chronicles 21:16-17
There is no question that we find Judah here in a dangerous state. As Peter James wrote, that the situation for Judah was so dangerous and on the verge of collapse is
"amply reflected in the desperate letters of Abdi-Hiba, full of pleas to his Egyptian overlord [Akhnaton] for the troops needed to defend his fiefdom"
`Let the king ... my lord, send troops of archers, for the king has no hands left.' El Amarna Letter #286
EA 288 is most useful for the geographical information it supplies. James wrote:

66. Ancient Nubia
Huge ancient Egyptian Photo Gallery }}}}} More Resources Below seeing Rome edgeinto lower nubia, attacked and have left few clues and no written history.
http://www.returntoglory.org/Gallery/nubia.htm
Ancient Nubia Huge Ancient Egyptian Photo Gallery
THE 1st NUBIAN AGE: 3100 -1000 BC
1550 - 590 BC NAPATAN PERIOD: 590-300 BC In 591 BC, Egypt invaded Kush and Napata was captured and the Kushite king transferred the capital to Meroe, near the sixth cataract creating greater distance between Kush and Egypt. When Persia invaded Egypt at about 525 BC, they stopped at Kush's northern border. Owing to the distance of Meroe to the Northern border, and that Kush posed little threat to the Persians, Kush remained relatively peaceful during this time. However, Napata remained the religious center and royal cemetery of Kush until about 300 when the royal burial site was moved to Meroe, as well, bringing an end to the Napatan Period. TRANSITIONAL PERIOD: 300 - 270 BC While the rulers of Kush were no longer buried at Napata, they still kept allegiance to the Temple of Amon, gradually making the transition to Meroe and the worship of the Kushite god Apedemak. EARLY MEROITIC PERIOD: 270 - 90 BC The move to Meroe weakened the Egyptian influence and enlivened the Sudanese character of Kush. Trade with Egypt (Now under the rule of the Ptolomies) and with Asia (India especially) was growing, and Kush even entered into joint building projects with Egypt at their common border.

67. Ancient History Web Links
Cyrus the Great Assyrian, Babylonian and Persian Empires The Parthian Empire Historyof ancient nubia Music of the ancient Near East A CanaanitePhoenician
http://www.uwgb.edu/history/ancient.htm
http://www.phoenicia.org/punicwar.html "We will either find a way, or make one." -Hannibal
History Web Links Ancient History
Ancient History Sourcebook
Ancient History Links from the University of Michigan

Ancient World Web

Gender in the Classical World
...
URL: http://www.uwgb.edu/history/

Last Updated: July 2003
University of Wisconsin - Green Bay
History
2420 Nicolet Dr., Suite MAC B310 Green Bay, WI 54311

68. EGYPT, PREHISTORY, AND THE "OTHER ANCIENTS" - PART I Of The Amazing Ancient Worl
Egypt The Nile geography and agriculture, nubia and Egypt ancient Recipes, FoodLife in ancient Egypt Carnegie Museum of Natural history Exhibitions
http://www.omnibusol.com/anegypt.html
Core Page
PartI- Egypt
Part II - Greece
Part III - Rome
Part IV - Bridges
THE AMAZING ANCIENT WORLD OF WESTERN CIVILIZATION:
ACT I: PART I
EGYPT,PREHISTORY,
AND THE "OTHER ANCIENTS"
This Internet Book visited
14, 804, 122 times since April 1997 (as of 2/2003)
The PREMIER JOURNEY to The Ancient World, weaving together the Peoples of those lands and civilizations and the way they lived and - their thoughts, their hopes, their dreams, their lives.
What is the Ancient World? Greece, Rome, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Babylon, Sumer, Nubia, Persia, Byzantium, Turkey? Or is it Assyrians, Chaldeans, Hebrews, Hittites, Akkadians, Etruscans, Minoans? Is it Alexander, Plato, Virgil, Socrates, Hammurabi, Aristotle, Nefertiti, the Pharaohs, Emperors, Caesar, Cleopatra, Sargon, Akhenaton, the Black Athena, Homer? Or is it the dinosaurs, Stonehenge, hunters, slaves, women, rulers, soldiers, or the Iliad, the Aeneid, the Odyssey, the Olympics? Is it found in the ruins, temples, forums, pyramids or in the remnants of ordinary life? Explore through this Web Book and the Online College Course. Ancient Civilization did not begin in what we think of as the West. It did not start in Paris or Berlin or London or Prague or Brussels or Stockholm. It grew out of the Mediterranean breezes, the sun and desert of Northern Africa, the Persian and West Asian lands. To study Ancient Civilization is to travel - across parts of Africa, southern Europe, the Middle East, and Asia to India. It is a linking voyage, not a reducing trip. It CONNECTS peoples, ideas, patterns, developments, organizations, wars, religions, art, architecture, food and drink. It is a human endeavor about a human story.

69. Ancient History Internet Subject Guide - Newark Public Library
by its more famous neighbor to the north, ancient Egypt, ancient nubia is itself andconcise, the site offers information on nubian history, culture, geography
http://www.npl.org/Pages/InternetResources/SubjectGuides/ancient.html
Ancient History Abzu (Ancient Near East)
http://www.etana.org/abzu

Assyrian for the "mythical place where life-influencing powers reside," the name Abzu belongs by right only to things of great importance. The Abzu site deserves its lofty label: A project of the highly regarded Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago, this site is a comprehensive, well-organized guide to Internet resources on the Ancient Near East. The resources span an enormous array of topics and are the product of scholarly research and expertise.
Ancient Celts Page

http://www.ares.u-net.com/celthome.htm

English archaeologist Simon James's site on the Celts stands out for its originality. James provides not only a conventional history of the Ancient Celts, but an alternative one too, challenging many well-entrenched ideas regarding these ancient peoples. Links to other Celtic sites and a brief bibliography of pertinent books enhance the value of this engaging and thought-provoking web page.
Ancient Mesoamerican Civilizations

http://www.angelfire.com/ca/humanorigins

70. Dialog On Origin Of Name Nubia
Is the name modern or date back to ancient history? Does the name apply tosome parts of nubia or was it more extensively applied in former times?
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/32/004.html
Dialog on the origin of name "Nubia"
From the Nubia list, January, 1996
Date: Tue, 30 Jan 1996 01:58:35 SLT
[Text slighly edited. HB] All netters (maskag jelo) There is no consensus among historians about the origin of the word "Nubia" and how the area that is known today as Nubia has come to acquire its name. Is the name "modern" or date back to ancient history? Does the name apply to some parts of Nubia or was it more extensively applied in former times? Has it any relation to Kush or Meroites? The word Nubia conjures up all these and more nostalgia in the mind of many, particularly, Nubians. To them it means identity, past glories, present dilemma, and a hopefull and glorious future. How did the area come to be known as Nubia, and why did it persist until now? This is important because some historians claim that there is no such name as Nubia, and that "Kush" is the only name that was known to ancient people. Then where did it come from? Certainly, it has't come out of the blue. It must have an origin, especialy since it applies to an area with a distinctive culure and language and a civilisation that dates back to the dawn of history, a civilization of its own, not isolated, but influencing and getting influenced by others. To give a tentative answer to these questions, here is a rundown of opinions about the name Nubia, it's origins and meaning:-

71. Ancient Nile Valley
February 1996. The history of ancient feudal nubia. Dialog on theorigin of name nubia From the nubia list, January 1996. Were
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/32/index-i.html
The history of the Ancient Nile Valley
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives The history in general of Northern Africa
The history in general of modern Egypt
The history of modern Nubians is under the history of modern Sudan
The history of the Ancient Kemet
Review of George G. M. James, Stolen Legacy
By Femi Akomolafe, n.d.
Dialog on the selection of pharaohs
From H-World list, January 1995. Was the monarchy matriarchal?
Mediterranean dating and the chronology of Kemet
By Bill Schell, Murray State University, 16 April 1995. Kemet a perhaps flawed basis for ancient Mediterranean chronology.
Chickens in Ancient Kemet
From Ira Plotinsky, 1 February 1996.
Ahmose and Kamose and their familial relationship
From Sara E. Orel, 4 February 1996. From Ancient Near East list.
Mummy with an artificial leg
From Michael Rhodes, on ANE List, 15 February 1996.
Dialog on the origin of name Nubia
From the Nubia list, January 1996.

72. »»Reviews For Ancient History««
religious beliefs, society, culture and history from the work for those needingto learn more about nubia. ancient Records of Egypt The Eighteenth Dynasty.
http://www.booksunderreview.com/Kids_and_Teens/School_Time/Social_Studies/Histor
Ancient History Reviews
Related Subjects: Americas,_The China Egypt Greece ... Rome
More Pages: Ancient History Page 1 Book reviews for "Ancient History" sorted by average review score: Ancient Judaism: Biblical Criticism from Max Weber to the Present Published in Paperback by Polity Pr (August, 1986) Author: Irving M. Zeitlin Amazon base price: Average review score: Conservative Agenda Zeitlin could be a champion for a conservative approach to ancient Jewish studies. I actually came across this book in a college class I was in, and was immediately struck with the thoroughness of the book. He tends to rely heavily on a literary critical methodology, but he uses it in ways I have never seen before. His discussion of the conquest and Monarchical religion are particularly enlightening. I will say that he made me think about issues in ways I had never tried before. Additionally, he actually changed my opinion about the way Paganism and religious syncretism worked in Ancient Israel. I won't give his views away because have the fun will be reading them for the first time for yourself. Nevertheless, I will say that the discussion on the history of Documentary Hypostasis in the Appendix is worth the price of admission. Ancient Maya Women (Gender and Archaeology) Author: Traci Ardren Amazon base price: Average review score: Amazing discoveries and extrapolations of a long-ago culture Deftly edited by Traci Arden (Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Miami, Florida), Ancient Maya Women is a fascinating compilation of writings forming a unique archaeological anthology focused on what the latest discoveries and theories have to say about our knowledge of gender in Maya society. Essays by a variety of learned and scholarly authors cover a wide range of germane topics from a Maya warfare goddess to women in classic Maya hieroglyphic texts. Sparsely illustrated with black-and-white figures, Ancient Maya Women is a very highly recommended compilation of amazing discoveries and extrapolations of a long-ago culture and an essential, seminal, core addition to Mayan Studies academic reference collections.

73. Ancient History Curriculum Links
Guide Created by the Mining Company, this site offers an extensive listing of ancienthistory web resources ancient Africa. nubia Its glory and its people .
http://www.mcps.k12.md.us/curriculum/socialstd/Ancient_Bookmarks.html
Social Studies Curriculum Links
Ancient History Resources
General Resources
The Atrium A general interest site for fans of Ancient Greece and Rome.
The Ancient History Guide Created by the Mining Company, this site offers an extensive listing of ancient history web resources including a weekly update of what's new on the web in the study of the old.
The Ancient World Web
Archaeology-ArchNet-WWW Virtual Library
Byzantium Online A collection of links, documents and grapics devoted to the study of the Byzantine Empire.
Exploring Ancient World Cultures An online text that covers Near East, India, Egypt, China, Greece, Rome, Islam, and Europe. Uses famous documents. Reading level is high school and up.
Historical and Cultural Atlas Resource from Oregon State System of Higher Education
Maps and photographs of ancient Europe and North Africa
The Seven Wonders of the World This site gives a full description of each of the Ancient Wonders. Bet you can't name 'em all.
Ancient Africa
Nubia - "Its glory and its people"
Ancient Americas
Andes Adventure National Geographic's adventurous autopsy of 500 year old Incan Mummy, piece by piece.

74. Ancient History
of history, Classics, Comparative Literature, history of Art strong Egyptian influence(eg nubia, Sudan) (2 Assyria, Babylonia etc.) (4) ancient Iran, including
http://www.library.cornell.edu/colldev/cdancienthistory.html
Ancient History
Clientele: Primary clientele are faculty in the Department of Near Eastern Studies, but there are additional users in the departments of History, Classics, Comparative Literature, History of Art and English. Existing collection: ECS 3+ LANG: W Holdings of the core scholarly literature of the field are reasonably solid from the mid-19th century to the late 1970's, including standard reference works and full runs of all major journals and of many major archaeological reports series. Much of this material has not been superseded and is still being used actively today. Coverage declines abruptly after ca. 1980, with major gaps in monographs, journals and report series. Many important monographic series started after 1980 are absent, as are reports of major excavations and catalogs of major museum collections. This is the case with publications from all major European countries. Publications from present day Middle Eastern countries, especially in the respective vernacular languages, are hardly represented at all. Current collecting: CCI 3 LANG: F Subjects covered: LC classes; BL 1500-1700, DS 41-66, DT 57-93, PJ 1001-2199, PJ 3101-40.

75. Help With Your Homework: Ancient History
ancient history Egypt. ancient nubia is another excellent site from ThinkQuest.You can translate everything into several other languages, too.
http://www.schoolwork.org/ancient.html
Back to History Index Back to Schoolwork main page Helpful links: Student Loans Student Loan Consolidation
Ancient History
Exploring Ancient World Cultures The Forvm Romanvm LacusCurtius: into the Roman World (also available in French, Spanish, Italian) The Perseus Project is a digital library of information on the ancient world, including translated texts, maps, and information about art. The Seven Wonders of the Ancient World includes illustrations, history, and statistics. Til Death Do Us Part: Marriage and Funeral Rites in Classical Athens by Jana Shopkorn
Ancient History Egypt Ancient Nubia is another excellent site from ThinkQuest. You can translate everything into several other languages, too. At the Tomb of Tutankhamen contains the actual text and photos from the 1923 expedition. Lots of related links as well. The Mysteries of Egypt Theban Mapping Project is an expedition into the largest tomb ever found in Egypt. It includes information on monuments and artifacts.
Schoolwork financial pages: Student Loans Credit Education Student Loan Consolidation Back to History Index Back to Schoolwork main page This page last updated February 20, 2003

76. Untitled Document
The inclusion of nubia in the field of ancient history can help usboth broaden and deepen our understanding of the ancient world.
http://www.nubianet.org/home/home_neh.html
Narrative Description of the Project I. 1. Rationale and Significance
    A. Mission and Goals
    The civilization of Nubia, which dates back to 4000 BC, provides a rich subject for humanities scholarship. The humanities disciplines of history, archaeology, classics, literature, philology, and linguistics, as well as social science fields such as cultural anthropology are all critical to the interpretation of Nubian history. Ancient Nubia is a dynamic field of study, currently being fueled by ongoing archeological excavations, that can be incorporated into many areas of K-12 curricula in ways that can help strengthen humanities education.
    This project is based on long-standing efforts to develop opportunities for teachers and students to explore the history and significance of Nubia. Two institutes were funded by NEH in 1993 (ES-22447-92) and in 1994 (ES-22644-94). The goal of these institutes was to improve humanities education in a set of school systems in Massachusetts and Rhode Island by providing almost 70 elementary and secondary school teachers with opportunities to learn in depth about ancient Nubia and to develop their own curriculum units about Nubia. Both institutes were highly successful (see Appendix F).
The intellectual rationale for this project builds upon the same four elements that were at the core of our NEH-funded summer institutes:

77. Nubia Museum
The nubia Museum harbors the history of the Land of Gold as the word nubia in theHieroglyphic, language of ancient Egypt in which pictorial symbols are used
http://www.us.sis.gov.eg/egyptinf/culture/html/nubia000.htm
Home Search Contact Us
Nubia Museum tells the story of the
"Land of Gold"
T he Nubia Museum harbors the history of the "Land of Gold" as the word Nubia in the Hieroglyphic, language of ancient Egypt in which pictorial symbols are used to represent meaning and sounds, means the "Land of Gold"...Hence, this land, over times, was abounding in monumental treasures. The Nubia Museum, in Aswan, as a matter of fact, is deemed to be one of the most important Egyptian museums. A number of factors have combined together, yielding the magnificence of such museum, as it is the only unique open museum of its kind. Preparing this museum lasted for ten years, all dedicated for hard work to come up with such lovely museum. Let alone, it stands as a wonderful model of international cultural cooperation representing in United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO). In April 6 th, 1959, the Egyptian government appealed to the United Nations Educational, Cultural, and Scientific Organization (UNESCO), seeking help to salvage the monumental sites in Nubia, hence, the area between Aswan and the Sudan was inundated by the Nile waters especially after completing the Aswan Dam. The response of the (UNESCO), in fact, came fast, as it called upon the international community to contribute to this project.

78. Ancient Nubia: What Can You Dig Up About Ancient Nubia?
nubia; Collect and record a variety of facts regarding ancient nubia; Create acollage of archaeological findings and facts. Standards List World history
http://www.africana.com/blackboard/bb_his_000076.htm
Ancient Nubia: What Can You Dig Up about Ancient Nubia? Subject Area: World History Related Subject Areas: Geography, Visual Arts, Technology, Historical Understanding, Social Studies Grade Level: Estimated Time Requirement: 3-4 Class Periods (Includes research, creation of collages, and presentations). Lesson Objectives: Students will have the opportunity to:
  • Research the ancient kingdom of Nubia Examine the geographical regions of Ancient Nubia Create a map of ancient Nubia Investigate several WWW sites that relate to ancient Nubia Research a variety of archaeological findings from ancient Nubia Collect and record a variety of facts regarding ancient Nubia Create a collage of archaeological findings and facts
Standards List: World History:
  • Understands the major characteristics of civilizations and the development of civilizations in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and the Indus Valley Understands how agrarian societies spread and new states emerged in the third and second millennia BCE Understands major trends in Eurasia and Africa from 4000 to 1000 BCE
Geography:
  • Understands the characteristics and uses of maps, globes, and other geographical tools and technologies

79. Baobab Project
A Prospectus for Exploring the Historical Essence of ancient nubia. In WV Davies(Ed.) . Egypt and Africa nubia from prehistory to Islam. ( pp. 75-84).
http://baobab.harvard.edu/narratives/Nubia/BIBLIO.HTML
Shawabtis and Nubia
References
Aubert, J. (1974). Statuettes egyptiennes: chaouabtis, ouchebtis. Paris: Libraire d'Amerique et d'Orient. Brooklyn Museum. (1978). Africa in Antiquity: The Arts of Ancient Nubia and the Sudan: Vol. I-II. Brooklyn: Author. Dunham, D. (1951). Royal Shawabti Figures from Napata. Bullentin of the Museum of Fine Arts, 49, pp. 40-48. Dunham, D. (1955). The Royal Cemeteries of Kush: Nuri. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Dunham, D. (1958). The Egyptian Department and Its Excavations. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts. Geus, F. ( 1991). Burial Customs in the Upper Main Nile, An Overview. In W.V. Davies (Ed.) . Egypt and Africa: Nubia from pre-history to Islam . (pp. 57-73). London: British Museum Press. Haynes, J. (1992). Nubia: Ancient Kingdoms of Africa. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts. Journal of the Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities, 17, Kendall, T. (1982). Kush, Lost Kingdom of the Nile. Brockton: Fuller Museum/Brockton Memorial. The Image of the Black in Western Art: From the Pharoahs to the Fall of the Roman Empire: Vol. I. (pp. 89-132). Cambridge: Harvard Univeristy Press.

80. School Of Archaeology & Ancient History, University Of Leicester
project working in Sudanese nubia with the University of Khartoum, email - dne1@le.ac.uk.mail School of Archaeology ancient history, University of Leicester
http://www.le.ac.uk/ar/staff_de.htm
Dr David Edwards
Dr David N. Edwards BA PhD
Honorary Visiting Fellow
Specialisms:
Landscape Archaeology, North African and Sudanese/Nubian archaeology, social archaeology Personal home page David Edwards studied History at York University, then took an M.Litt in Archaeology at Newcastle University and a Ph.D at Cambridge University, while working for several years as a professional field archaeologist in Britain. His research interests centre on social archaeology while a particular interest in the archaeology of Nubia/Sudan and Sudanic Africa, while also having worked extensively in Britain as well as in Egypt, Jordan and Libya. Current research is primarily focussed on material culture and social identities in the Middle Nile. Hs has recently been working on the publication of the C. M. Daniels archive relating to the Garamantes of Fezzan (Libya) as part of a Leverhulme-funded project; he is principal investigator in a major interdisciplinary project working in Sudanese Nubia with the University of Khartoum e-mail: - dne1@le.ac.uk

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