Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt: The Palermo Stone and Its Associated FragmentsKegan Paul International, 2000 - 287 pagine First published in 2000. The kings of ancient Egypt's first five dynasties were responsible for the creation of a unique and enduring civilisation, epitomised by its most impressive monuments, the pyramids. Yet what do we know about the reigns of these kings? Excavations have revealed much, but Egyptology has always been blessed with another rich source of information - the written texts and inscriptions composed by the ancient Egyptians themselves. For the history of the first five dynasties, one particular series of inscriptions has always been of prime importance. This is the collection of inscribed stone fragments known as the Royal An- nals. Now divided between museums in Palermo, Cairo and London, these documents from ancient Egypt have been the focus of countless studies in the century or so since they first came to light, for they seem to record the reigns of Egypt's early kings on a reign-by-reign, year-by-year basis. The information they contain has been translated, interpreted and re-interpreted by generations of Egyptologists, in the hope of achieving a better understanding of the first great period of ancient Egyptian history. And yet amazingly for such crucial documents -- no complete edition of all seven surviving fragments has ever been published. Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt fills this gap. The text is accompanied by specially commissioned, detailed line-drawings of all the fragments. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 23
Pagina 49
... remains pertinent : ' does a detailed year - by - year reconstruction which in the present state of our knowledge must be almost pure guesswork , serve any useful purpose ? ' Edgerton ( 1937 : 197 n . 23 ) went further , describing ...
... remains pertinent : ' does a detailed year - by - year reconstruction which in the present state of our knowledge must be almost pure guesswork , serve any useful purpose ? ' Edgerton ( 1937 : 197 n . 23 ) went further , describing ...
Pagina 162
... remains unclear ( Roccati ( 1982 : 47 ) offers ( Horus ) the harpooner ' ) . The identity of the god Sem is likewise obscure . The standard of the ninth Lower Egyptian nome ( the area around Busiris ) shows a figure of the god Osiris ...
... remains unclear ( Roccati ( 1982 : 47 ) offers ( Horus ) the harpooner ' ) . The identity of the god Sem is likewise obscure . The standard of the ninth Lower Egyptian nome ( the area around Busiris ) shows a figure of the god Osiris ...
Pagina 164
... remains obscure . It seems rather odd that a cult of Hathor should have been located in such an institution . Perhaps , as Malek ( 1986 : 79 ) suggested , r - š ( also ) signified ' the valley part of the pyramid - complex ' which might ...
... remains obscure . It seems rather odd that a cult of Hathor should have been located in such an institution . Perhaps , as Malek ( 1986 : 79 ) suggested , r - š ( also ) signified ' the valley part of the pyramid - complex ' which might ...
Sommario
Prologue | 9 |
PARTI THE ROYAL ANNALS IN CONTEXT | 15 |
TRANSLITERATION TRANSLATION AND COMMENTARY | 83 |
Copyright | |
2 sezioni non visualizzate
Altre edizioni - Visualizza tutto
Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt: The Palermo Stone and Its Associated Fragments Toby A. H. Wilkinson Anteprima limitata - 2000 |
Parole e frasi comuni
ancient annals appearance argued arouras associated attested Barta beginning belong building Cairo census ceremonies Clagett column compartment compiled complete creating crown cubits cult Daressy deity divine Djer dual early Egypt Egyptian electrum entry established evidence example festival Fifth Dynasty figure fingers following of Horus Fourth fragments Gauthier give given gods height Helck Hence identified important indicate inscriptions interpretation Kaiser king lists king's land later lengths Lower Egypt meaning measurements mentioned months monument Museum Nile noted O'Mara occasion offered Old Kingdom original Palermo particular perhaps period Petrie portion possible preserved probably Pyramid question r.II reading reconstruction recorded recto reference regular reign remains represent ritual royal scholars seems Sethe shows signs Sneferu statue stone suggested temple third titulary translation Turin Canon unlikely Upper usual verso Wilkinson 1999