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         Egyptology:     more books (100)
  1. Tutankhamen's Egypt (Shire Egyptology) by Frances Welsh, 1994-11
  2. Jerusalem studies in Egyptology (Agypten und Altes Testament)
  3. After Tutankhamun (Studies in Egyptology) by REEVES, 1992-01-06
  4. Chapters on the Higher Criticism versus Egyptology and Archïÿýology by Francis Joshua Kirby, 1906-01-01
  5. Current Research in Egyptology 2006: Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Symposium, University of Oxford, April 2006 by Christina Adams, 2007-07-31
  6. Science in Egyptology
  7. Tutankhamen and Egyptology, (Biblical and oriental series) by Samuel A. B Mercer, 1923
  8. Current Research In Egyptology 2003: Proceedings Of The Fourth Annual Symposium, Which took Place At The Institute of Archaeology, University College London, 18-19 January 2003 by Kathryn Piquette, Current Research in Egyptology Symposium, et all 2005-04-15
  9. Papers of the Pottery Workshop 3rd Congress Egyptology 1982 (Essays in International Economics) by Allyn L. Kelley, 1983-01-01
  10. Egyptian Stelae, III, Late Period (Egyptology) (Pt. 3) by H. M. Stewart, 1983-03-01
  11. Jar Sealings and Amphorae of the 18th Dynasty (Egyptology) (v. 5) by Colin A. Hope, 1978-01-01
  12. Canopic Equipment Of The Kings O (Studies in Egyptology) by DODSON, 1994-01-03
  13. Current Research in Egyptology II (bar s) by Ashley Cooke, Richard Simpson, 2005-12-31
  14. A Manual for the Use of Students in Egyptology by Edward Yorke McCauley, 2010-04-22

101. Crackpot Index
Orcutt s Crackpot Index. A simple method for rating potentially revolutionary contributions to the field of egyptology. 5 points starting credit.
http://www.catchpenny.org/crackpot.html
Orcutt's Crackpot Index
A simple method for rating potentially revolutionary contributions to the field of Egyptology.
  • 5 points starting credit.
  • 1 point for every statement that is in conflict with generally accepted theories.
  • 2 points for every statement that is clearly vacuous.
  • 3 points for each internal inconsistency.
  • 5 points for every supposition that is maintained despite prodigious archaeological evidence to the contrary.
  • 5 points for each instance of specious data expressed as fact.
  • 5 points for each authoritative reference to Edgar Cayce, Immanuel Velikovsky, Erich von Daniken, Thor Heyerdahl, Zecharia Sitchin, John Anthony West, Graham Hancock, or Robert Bauval.
  • 7 points for each authoritative reference to Martin Bernal, Cheikh Anta Diop, Molefi Kete Asante, Chancellor Williams, or Yosef A.A. ben-jochannan.
  • 10 points for each authoritative reference to R.A. Schwaller de Lubicz.
  • 10 points for each baseless claim that widely accepted theories are fundamentally erroneous.
  • 10 points for boasting of academic degrees unrelated to the topic at hand.
  • 15 points for boasting of a lack of academic degrees, insisting that formal education is not only unnecessary but also an impediment to creative thought.
  • 102. GIANTS OF EGYPTOLOGY
    Profile of this University of Geneva professor who was the vicepresident of the Egypt Exploration Society and a Foreign Associate of the Institute of France.
    http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/summer95/giants.html
    Giants of Egyptology
    Sixth of a Series
    Henri Edouard Naville
    KMT 6:2, Summer 1995 coprright 1995 KMT Communications One of the brainiest and certainly the best educated of the early Egyptologists was Swiss scholar Henri Edouard Naville, born in Geneva on June 14, 1844, the son of Adrien and Sophia Naville. No other Egyptologist of his generation (or later ones?) could claim such a thorough preparation for participation in the discipline. A Swiss Protestant, he was schooled at the University of Geneva; at Kings College, London; and at the universities of Bonn, Paris and Berlin, with a special emphasis in philology. At Berlin he devotedly studied under Karl Richard Lepsius and later would serve as the latter s literary executor, editing five volumes of notes to Lepsius's (with the assistance of Ludwig Borchardt, Kurt Sethe and others), which were published between 1897 and 1913. Naville first visited Egypt at the age of twenty-one in 1865, and while there copied religious texts in the Temple of Horus at Edfu, which he published as Mythe d Horus in 1870, as his first contribution to the literature of Egyptology. During the Franco-Prussian War of 1870-1871, Naville served as a captain in the Swiss army, helping to escort prisoners of Bourbaki s army into Switzerland following their defeat near Dijon. After the war he returned to his philological studies, particularly working on solar texts in the royal tombs of the Valley of the Kings, which he published in 1875 as Litanie du soleil; inscriptions recueillies dans les tombeaux des rois Th bes. He then turned his attention to translating the Book of the Dead, and by 1882 his name was already prominent in Egyptology as a major scholar in the field.

    103. Current Research In Egyptology
    Current Research in egyptology. This site is under construction return soon so that you will be able to keep in touch with Current Research in egyptology.
    http://www.currentresearchegypt.fsworld.co.uk/
    Current Research in Egyptology This site is under construction - return soon so that you will be able to keep in touch with Current Research in Egyptology CRE is an annual symposium which aims to provide a forum for the discussion of Egyptological research currently being conducted by students at the graduate level, including archaeology, art, language, religion, science, culture, society, as well as theoretical and methodological approaches to the study of ancient Egypt.

    104. Uruguayan Society Of Egyptology
    Aims to spread knowledge in Uruguay of the ancient Egyptian Pharaonic civilization. Lectures, Egyptian Museum, and specialized library.
    http://www.geocities.com/CollegePark/Field/6730/
    A I M S The Uruguayan Society of Egyptology was founded in 1980 with the purpose of achieving the maximum possible popularization in Uruguay of the facts concerning the ancient Egyptian Pharaonic civilization. In order to carry out this task, the Society organizes public lectures, both for the general public and for educational institutions, opened to the public an Egyptian Museum, organizes regular Egyptology Contests with prizes consisting of books, other educational materials and a trophy to the best papers, organizes regular study trips to Egypt for members and students escorted by instructors and professors of the Uruguayan Institute of Egyptology, organizes special exhibitions of Egyptian antiquities and brings whenever possible, foreign scholars to lecture on the subject. All these activities are free of charge, as it corresponds to a non-profit institution that wishes to involve as many people as possible in a better appreciation of that ancient civilization to which the nations of the Western Hemisphere, and the world at large, owe so much. The Society also maintains a Uruguayan Institute of Egyptology where Uruguayans and others can study to become Egyptologists at a minimum charge of U$S 100 per year. Further details are given in the Institute’s page which can be accessed at

    105. General Info
    Museums and the Making of egyptology. A Conference Open To All Organised by Egypt Centre. and. University of Wales Institute Of Classics and Ancient History.
    http://www.swan.ac.uk/egypt/infosheetgen/Conference2004.htm
    Museums and the Making of Egyptology A Conference Open To All Organised by: Egypt Centre and University of Wales Institute Of Classics and Ancient History 19th-20th November 2004 It sometimes appears that Egyptologists see museums as largely irrelevant to the 'real' business of Egyptology, merely end products, popular display or store rooms of raw data. This conference is intended as a discourse between the various professionals working with Egyptian material: archaeologists, university teachers, researchers and museum curators who together will explore the more proactive role of the museum within Egyptology. click here for more information on the conference topic click here for abstracts Speakers (provisional list): Sally Macdonald, Petrie Museum Christina Riggs, Manchester Museum Francesca Monti, Institutute of Archaeology, University College London Stephanie Moser, Department of Archaeology, University of Southampton Richard Parkinson, British Museum Stephen Quirke, Petrie Museum Kasia Szpakowska, University Of Wales Swansea David Gill, University of Wales Swansea

    106. NOVA Online/Pyramids/Interview With Zahi Hawass
    By Nova Online, concerning the recent discovery of tombs of pyramid workers, and egyptology in general.
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/pyramid/excavation/hawass.html
    Dr. Zahi Hawass before the Khafre Pyramid. Interview with Dr. Zahi Hawass, Director of the Pyramids
    NOVA:
    Recently your crews unearthed one of the only intact tombs found since the discovery of King Tut's tomb in the 1920s. What was that like?
    Hawass: Very exciting. When I attended the opening of the tomb, it was like looking at the past and the future. There was a big, six-ton sarcophagus. I had to ask myself, Is it empty? Is there something? In archaeology, you have to be a lucky person. If you are unlucky, you can excavate your entire life and discover nothing. Therefore, when we took off the lid of this sarcophagus and found inside another five-ton anthropoid sarcophagus, beautifully inscribed, and underneath that a mummy, it was a moment that no one could really describe.
    Relief from the tomb of Kai, showing traces of 4,600-year-old paint.
    NOVA: You've been excavating the tombs of the Pyramid builders. What have you found?
    Hawass: We've uncovered titles of the craftsmen, draftsmen, tombmakers, the overseer of the east side of the Pyramid, the overseer of the west side of the Pyramid, and so on. We found that the average age at death of the workmen was very early, 30 to 35, while officials died at 50 to 60. We've also studied the bones in these tombs, which have provided much information. All the skeletons of men and women show signs of stress in their backs, because people were involved in moving heavy stuff. We determined through x-rays that someone had syphilis, and we found evidence of brain surgery on a workman, who lived for two years afterwards. The ancients even had emergency treatment for workers on site, because we discovered that they were fixing broken bones and even amputating legs that had been crushed by a falling stone.

    107. Egyptology And The University Of Wales Swansea
    egyptology. Today, the University of Wales Swansea is one of the few institutions in the UK where a student can study egyptology at an undergraduate level.
    http://www.swan.ac.uk/classics/egypt/
    Egyptology
    Today, the University of Wales Swansea is one of the few institutions in the UK where a student can study Egyptology at an undergraduate level. The Egyptology program is led by Professor Alan B. Lloyd , a distinguished scholar in both Egyptology and Classics. An author of numerous publications, his specialty is Late Period Egypt and Herodotus. Modules taught by Professor Lloyd include ancient Egyptian language, history, and literature. Dr. Ellen Morris joined the department in January 2004 from the University of Michigan. Her research interests include Egyptian imperialism, interconnections between Egyptology and Anthropology, state formation, intermediate periods, and all that comes between. Dr. Kasia Szpakowska , whose research includes the study of ritual objects and religious expression in the daily life of ancient Egypt, has joined the department from UCLA. Her modules include those focusing on material culture, everyday life, gender, and religious beliefs. Dr. David Gill

    108. Egyptology Society Of Miami
    Meets each month at the Miami Museum of Science in order to present illustrated lectures on Ancient Egypt and the origins of civilization. Page includes meetings and related links.
    http://www.geocities.com/egyptmiami/

    109. UCLA Egyptology Website

    http://www.egyptology.ucla.edu/

    110. Guardian Unlimited | Life | The King Of The Pharaohs
    From Guardian Unlimited, Tim Radford meets the man who put the Egypt back into egyptology.
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/life/interview/story/0,12982,1093638,00.html
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    The king of the pharaohs

    Tim Radford meets the man who put the Egypt back into Egyptology
    Thursday November 27, 2003
    The Guardian

    Zahi Hawass is overlord of the underworld. At 56, he is the secretary general of Egypt's Supreme Council of Antiquities. The Sphinx, the great pyramids at Giza and the step pyramids of Saqqara all lie within his dominion. So too does all the buried treasure of Egypt, be it 100,000 years old or 100. The pharaohs of 30 dynasties are his, and all their coffins and grave goods, and in his care are the ruins left behind by the armies of Alexander, Marc Antony and Napoleon. Hawass's sway matches that of any pharaoh, and his influence does not stop at Egypt's borders. He says things that can rattle teeth and raise dust in Berlin, New York and London, especially when he starts asking for his mummy back - the royal corpse of Rameses I was returned from Atlanta last month - or the bust of Queen Nefertiti from Germany, or the Rosetta Stone, key to the mystery of the hieroglyphs, now in the British Museum.

    111. Egyptology For The Gamer
    egyptology for Gamers. Introduction Once again, I ve found a way to turn a personal interest into something useful for RPGs. What Is egyptology?
    http://www.skaro.com/larpegypt.html
    Egyptology for Gamers Introduction
    Once again, I've found a way to turn a personal interest into something useful for RPGs. Below is a relatively short list - given the thousands of Egyptology sites on the web - of nifty links I have found that might be of use to a player or Game Master looking to run a game - live or tabletop - with an ancient Egyptian motif. With the context of RPGs in mind, I have focused upon the less academic sites. You're probably here because you want some cool details about the mummification process, or a quick excerpt from the Carter Diaries for your game. If you're a serious Egyptology student, this portal might be a good launching point, but you're not going to find the really meaty academic stuff linked from this page. This whole escapade was inspired by reading White Wolf's Mummy: The Resurrection which is, by far, the most interesting sourcebook they've released in years I'm always accepting suggestions!
    These links were last verified on 2/22/02 and they were all valid at that time.
    Contents

    112. Jean-Francois Champollion
    A biography by Elizabeth JordanPrince for Minnesota University's Emuseum of the Frenchman acknowledged as the father of modern egyptology. Includes references and links.
    http://emuseum.mnsu.edu/information/biography/abcde/champollion_jean-francois.ht
    Jean-Francois Champollion
    Champollion was a French Egyptologist, who is acknowledged as the father of modern Egyptology. He achieved many things during his short career, but he is best known for his work on the Rosetta Stone . It was his deciphering of the hieroglyphics contained on the Stone that laid the foundations for Egyptian archaeology. He was born in 1790. His oldest brother educated him until he turned 10, at which time he was enrolled in the Lyceum in Grenoble. His brother was also an archaeologist, and it is probably from his influence that he developed a passion for languages in general and for Egypt in particular. While he was at the Lyceum, he presented a paper in which he argued that the language of the Copts in contemporary Egypt was in essence the same as that used by the Egyptians of antiquity. His education continued at the College de France, where he specialized in languages of the Orient. He knew bits and pieces of many languages, and was fluent in several others. A partial listing of the languages he was familiar with is astounding: Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, Chaldean, Chinese, Coptic, Ethiopic, Sanskrit, Pahlevi, and Persian. When he finished his education, he was invited to teach Royal College of Grenoble, where he taught history and politics. By the age of 19, he had earned his Doctor of Letters and his career began really taking off. He continued to teach at Grenoble until 1816. In 1818, he was appointed to a chair in history and geography at the Royal College of Grenoble, and taught there until 1821.

    113. Ägyptologie Im WWW
    Kommentar). WEITERE LINKS Sekhmet and Isis; Elins Homepage (in dänischer Sprache); Jack egyptology Page (in dänischer Sprache); ArchNet
    http://www.uni-hohenheim.de/~schuckis/egypt/egypt.html
    (seit dem 07.08.97)
    Institutionen

    Museen

    On-line-Publikationen

    Fotos, Bilder und Bauwerke
    ...
    Weitere Links

    I NSTITUTIONEN M USEEN GYPTISCHES

    114. GIANTS OF EGYPTOLOGY
    An illustrated biography from Kmt of the Frenchman who pioneered decipherment of the previously unreadable ancient scripts of Egypt.
    http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/winter95_96/giants.html
    Giants of Egyptology
    Seventh of a Series
    CHAMPOLLION
    In 1818 Champollion was appointed to a chair in history and geography at the Royal College of Grenoble, a post he held until 1821. This position allowed him to concentrate on his first love, the ancient Egyptian language and the archaeology of the Land of the Pharaohs. Even though he had republican sympathies, he gained the patronage of Restoration French kings Louis XVIII and Charles X, and consequently was able to visit various mus-eum collections outside of France, being sent on a royally sponsored mission to those of Turin, Leghorn, Rome, Naples and Florence. Following his return from this extended trip abroad, Champollion was appointed, in 1826, conservator of the Louvre Museum s Egyptian collection, which opened to the public in December of 1827. The next year he made his only visit to Egypt, accompanied by the future founder of Egyptology in Italy, his prize pupil Ippolito Rosellini (1800-1843), a Pisan whom Champollion had befriended when he was touring Egyptian collections in Italy four years earlier. Portrait of an atypically bearded Champollion
    dressed in oriental attire, painted during his

    115. The Virtual Temple's Egyptology Links & Resources
    General egyptology. Absolute egyptologyCheck out the Absolute egyptology site with its online chronology. Nigel Strudwick s egyptology
    http://showcase.netins.net/web/ankh/elinks1.html
    The Virtual Temple's Links To Ancient Egypt
    Ancient Egyptian Religon and Mythology
  • The House of Netjer - A Kemetic Orthodox Temple that is practicing the Religion of the Ancients.
  • The Name of Bast Page - Stephanie, "MeryBast" has the story of the REAL Bast. She has quite simply the best page online on the subject.
  • Tjeti's Dictionary of Ancient Egyptian Religion - An excellent website with a searchable index on the various Names of Netjer.
    Ancient Egyptian Society
  • Ancient Egyptian Life, food,etc
  • Labyrinth of Human Development
  • BREWER: Dictionary of Phrase and Fable, 409-410
  • Lecture 3: Egyptian Civilization ...
  • Nefertari Light of Egypt - Several years ago, the Getty Foundation made efforts to preserve the most beautiful tomb in all Egypt.
  • - University of Memphis' collection. A must-see site.
    Ancient Egyptian History
    Amarna Period
  • Akhenaton: Ancient Revolutionary Excellent site from Western New England Colege.
  • Akhet-Aten Home Page Another Page on Akhenaten and the Amarna Period.
    General Egyptology
  • Absolute Egyptology Check out the Absolute Egyptology site with its online chronology.
  • Nigel Strudwick's Egyptology Resouces Page A definite must see for all Egyptophiles and Experts alike!
  • 116. The Society For The Study Of Egyptian Antiquities (SSEA)
    A Torontobased non-profit organization founded to stimulate interest in egyptology. Details of public lectures, symposia, publications, travel grant and scholarship.
    http://www.geocities.com/ssea.geo/
    The Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities / Socipour L'Etude de l'Egypte Ancienne
    (SSEA / SEEA)
    What is the SSEA? Calgary Chapter Montreal Chapter History of the SSEA ... Links
    News and Announcements
    PHARAOH'S ARTISTS
    On May 22 Dr. Guillemette Andreu, curator of the Louvre Museum Egyptian collection will be speaking in the Lecture Theatre of the Royal Ontario Museum on Pharaohs' Artists: Deir el Medina and the Valley of the Kings
    Situated in Upper Egypt facing Luxor, the site of Deir el Medina shelters the remains of the village and graves of the artists who dug and decorated the royal tombs in the Valley of the Kings and Valley of the Queens. The ruins and objects found on this site help us to understand the religious, intellectual, artistic and spiritual lives of these people. In February 2004, a new archaeological expedition to Deir el Medina was conducted by the IFAO and the Louvre, and supervised by Guillemette Andreu. Speaker Guillemette Andreu is a curator in the Department of Egyptian Antiquities at the Louvre, curator-in-charge of the exhibit Pharaohs' Artists (Paris, Brussels and Turin, 2002 to 2003) and former member of L'Institut Français D'archeologie Orientale (IFAO) in Cairo.
    NICHOLAS B. MILLET

    117. Www.ankhonline.com
    egyptology, Africa History and Sciences. Astrophysique l Univers et la gravitation.
    http://www.ankhonline.com/

    Revue ANKH

    Civilisations africaines

    Nubie/Egypte

    Colloques
    ...
    Sciences exactes
    Bienvenue sur le site Web ANKH Page d'accueil du site www.ankhonline.com Contact e-mail : info-ankhonl@ankhonline.com Egyptologie histoire de l'Afrique et sciences exactes Egyptology, Africa History and Sciences Astrophysique : l'Univers et la gravitation Le nouveau numéro de la revue ANKH est disponible Les 10 ans de ANKH - Acquis récents de la recherche et histoire ancienne de l'Afrique L'oeuvre de Cheikh Anta Diop : contexte historique et idéologique - Egypte Enseignement - Conférences Hieroglyphics Hiéroglyphes Télécharger Police de hiéroglyphes AmonFont True Type pour PC hommes femmes et divinités parties du corps humain mammifères ... pains-écritures-jeux-musique-figures géométriques-signes incertains Download AmonFont Hieroglyphics True Type font for PC men women and divinities parts of body mammals ... Police de caractères AmonFont 700 caractères hiéroglyphiques : correspondance signes hiéroglyphiques / touches du clavier de l'ordinateur (fichier word95 ; avant d'ouvrir ce fichier charger les polices AmonFont dans le dossier Polices) AmonFont Hieroglyphics Font - 700 signs : correspondance between Hieroglyphic signs and computer keyboard keys (word95 file ; before download this file download fonts AmonFont in the Font folder)

    118. Griffith Institute
    For the advancement of egyptology, at the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford.
    http://www.ashmol.ox.ac.uk/Griffith.html
    If you cannot view Tables with your Web Browser then select the Alternative Home Page
    The Griffith Institute
    http://www.ashmol.ox.ac.uk/Griffith.html
    Webmaster:
    Jonathan Moffett
    Web site content: Jaromir Malek
    Sackler Library
    1 St. John Street, Oxford OX1 2LG, United Kingdom
    Telephone and voice-mail:
    +44-(0)1865-278099 (office) or
    278097 (Archive and Topographical Bibliography
    Fax:
    Email:
    griffox@herald.ox.ac.uk Latest update: Tuesday, May 4, 2004. The Griffith Institute is a part of The University of Oxford. General Information The Latest at a Glance Topographical Bibliography ... Egyptian and Levantine Mirage 19th-century photographs of Egypt and the Levant For Young People: includes Chariot to Heaven and The Sphinx Nose Visitor Statistics

    119. «SESHAT-L» International Forum Of Scientific Egyptology In Spanish
    The International Forum of Scientific egyptology in Spanish accepts any academic student of the disciplines linked with egyptology willing to take active part and interested in sharing and reasoning about scientific egyptology.
    http://www.egiptologia.net/seshat/ing-sesh.html
    E C D
    «EGIPTOLOGÍA CIENTÍFICA Y DIVULGATIVA»
    E C D
    «SESHAT-L» Foro Internacional de Egiptología Científica en Español.
    «SESHAT-L»
    International Forum of Scientific Egyptology in Spanish
    Season IV
    «SESHAT-L» PARA COMPARTIR y RAZONAR SOBRE EGIPTOLOGIA CIENTIFICA En español In English «SESHAT-L: THE EGYPTOLOGICAL LABORATORY If you want be a member of SESHAT-L Forum, please, fill in the form to request it The International Forum of Scientific Egyptology in Spanish SESHAT-L is been working without a break since 1997 and it has some of the most outstanding figures of Spanish-speaking Scientific Egyptology amongst its members. In the beginning SESHAT-L was exclusively thought for all those researchers having published scientific work in Egyptology, but in subsequent and successive seasons the possibility of membership was widening. Starting the 3rd Season, we officially opened SESHAT-L to any academic student of the disciplines linked with Egyptology willing to take active part and interested in sharing and reasoning about scientific Egyptology , our motto. Finally, in this

    120. Egypt : Art And Culture : Egyptology
    Tutankhamen (5). Akhet egyptology Info and pictures concerning all aspects of the Ancient Egyptian culture, mythology and government.
    http://www.lexicorient.com/egy_art_egy.htm

    Front Page
    Egypt Art and Culture : Egyptology
    Links Algeria Egypt Libya Mauritania Morocco Tunisia Sudan Reader Ads Art
    Hieroglyphs

    Mummies

    Papyrus
    ...

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