Academic literature on the topic 'Egyptian Pottery'

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Journal articles on the topic "Egyptian Pottery"

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Doherty, Sarah K. "The Introduction of the Potter’s Wheel to Ancient Sudan." Interdisciplinaria Archaeologica Natural Sciences in Archaeology XII, no. 2 (December 30, 2021): 299–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.24916/iansa.2021.2.14.

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Doherty (2015) has previously investigated the origins of the potter’s wheel in Egypt in depth. However, how the potter’s wheel came to be used in Sudan has not yet been properly analysed. This paper will present the author’s initial investigations into the pottery industry of Sudan and the manufacturing techniques employed by Sudanese potters. Evidence seems to suggest that rather than being an indigenous invention, the potter’s wheel came to Sudan as part of the colonisation of Sudan by Egypt during the Middle-Late Bronze Age. Throughout this period, various Egyptian towns were founded along the river Nile. One such town was Amara West (inhabited c. 1306–1290 BC). By the Middle Bronze Age, Sudanese potters had well-developed pottery techniques, principally coil- and slab-building. Amara West and other Egyptian colonies used the by then well-established wheel-throwing and coiling techniques (RKE) to manufacture their pottery, principally imported from Egypt. However, these colony towns contained both Sudanese and Egyptian vessels, sometimes in the same contexts, and occasionally with blended manufacture techniques and decoration. This paper will endeavour to postulate upon the effect and legacy of the imposed technology of the potter’s wheel on the Sudanese pottery industry.
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Yarmolovich, Victoria. "The Problem of Greek Influence on Egyptian Pottery during 1st Millennium BCE." Oriental Courier, no. 4 (2023): 186. http://dx.doi.org/10.18254/s268684310029247-9.

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The paper is devoted to the issue of Greek impact on ancient Egyptian pottery during the Late period (7th–4th c. BCE). According to evidence of various historical sources at that period a lot of Greeks lived in many Egyptian cities. They maintained a customary way of life. Moreover a lot of Greek pottery (amphorae, various black glazed pottery, and etc.) was imported to Egypt due to extensive trade with various Greek colonies. Cultural and political contacts were maintained as well. As a result of this active interaction with Greek civilization there was cross-cultural exchange between Egyptians and Greeks. Potters could try to meet the needs of Greeks, adapting new shapes of vessels which were unusual for Egyptians. Egyptians could also be interested in the vessels which imitated Greek shapes.
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French, Peter, and Colin Hope. "Egyptian Pottery." Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 77 (1991): 199. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/3821975.

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Martin, M. A. S. "Egyptians at Ashkelon? An Assemblage of Egyptian and Egyptian-Style Pottery." Ägypten und Levante 18 (2009): 245–74. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/aeundl18s245.

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Redlak, Małgorzata. "Egyptian imitations of Chinese celadon from the 13th–15th centuries from Kom el-Dikka in Alexandria." Polish Archaeology in the Mediterranean 26, no. 1 (July 9, 2018): 59–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.5604/01.3001.0012.1769.

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In Islamic Egyptian glazed ceramics there are three ceramic types inspired by Chinese pottery, stoneware and porcelain: sancai pottery, celadon stoneware and Blue and White porcelain. Egyptian imitations of Chinese celadon ware, produced in the 14th and 15th centuries mainly by Cairene potters working at the Fustat workshops, are particularly noteworthy and the Kom el-Dikka site in Alexandria, excavated by the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology University of Warsaw, has yielded a collection of over 300 pieces. The typological analysis was based on 235 distinct fragments of utilitarian wares selected on account of their form, decorative elements, technical quality, possible technological defects and, first and foremost, characteristics that qualify them as imitations of Chinese celadon. Two typological ware groups were distinguished: those inspired by Chinese prototypes and those representing indigenous Egyptian ceramics infused with certain motifs copied from the Chinese celadons.
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Sanada, Sakura. "The Implications of Applying the Vienna System to Published Data on Prehistoric Pottery in Lower Egypt." Studies in Ancient Art and Civilisation 18 (December 30, 2014): 47–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/saac.18.2014.18.04.

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Pottery discovered at Lower Egyptian sites has several features that are distinctly different to those of pottery from Upper Egyptian sites. In this paper, the manner in which data on pottery fabric from Lower Egyptian sites has been classified and presented in published reports will be reviewed and certain problems stemming from this manner of publication will be examined. On the basis of this examination, the type of classification that would be most suited to the integration of all published data on pottery fabric at Lower Egyptian sites (as well as their features) and to the storage of this data as an objective record for future analysis by other researchers will be discussed. It would seem that, although the issue of problematic and biased published pottery data still remains, notating data using a code is one of the most promising methods. This classification method is useful as both a mnemonic device and as an effective means to record and classify the pottery fabric data gathered from Lower Egyptian sites.
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French, Peter. "Book Review: Egyptian Pottery." Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 77, no. 1 (October 1991): 199. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/030751339107700128.

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Ben-Dov, Rachel. "Egyptian and Egyptian-Style Pottery at Tel Dan." Ägypten und Levante 17 (2008): 191–204. http://dx.doi.org/10.1553/aeundl17s191.

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Malykh, Svetlana E. "Pottery from the Survey in 2022 at the Gebel el-Nur Archaeological Site in Middle Egypt: Dating and Planigraphy." Vostok. Afro-aziatskie obshchestva: istoriia i sovremennost, no. 6 (2023): 246. http://dx.doi.org/10.31857/s086919080027073-7.

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The article analyzes the ceramic material discovered in 2022 during the survey of the settlement and necropolis of Gebel el-Nour (Beni Suef governorate, Middle Egypt) by the Russian-Egyptian archaeological expedition (Institute of Oriental Studies RAS – Supreme Council of Antiquities of Egypt). Pottery fragments belong to the household group – tableware and kitchen utensils; they are dated to the Ptolemaic (332–30 BC) and Roman Periods (30 BC to 395 AD), mostly to the 1st–2nd centuries AD. Numerous analogies for the Gebel el-Nour pottery come from Memphite and Theban regions, but mostly from Middle Egypt, including Graeco-Roman cities of the Fayum Oasis. Technological features of the pottery from Gebel el-Nour indicate that the ancient population used mainly the products of local pottery workshops, but imported ceramics were also found, for example, a bowl with “barbotine” decoration from Aswan and an amphora for olive oil from Leptis Magna (Libya). Kitchen and table utensils from Gebel el-Nour demonstrate the Hellenization of pottery and similarity not only with the ceramic types synchronous with it from other Egyptian regions, but also with pottery from Asia Minor and Magna Graecia. In the Ptolemaic and Roman Periods, the original Egyptian types of tableware and kitchen utensils practically disappear, while everywhere there is a replacement for Hellenizated shapes. Thus, Egypt as a whole and Gebel el-Nour in particular organically fit into the Hellenic world both at the level of nobility and ordinary population. This process was extended in time and prepared by earlier changes in Egyptian material culture.
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Gophna, Ram. "The Egyptian Pottery of 'En Besor." Tel Aviv 17, no. 2 (September 2, 1990): 144–62. http://dx.doi.org/10.1179/tav.1990.1990.2.144.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Egyptian Pottery"

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Williams, Cheri Lynne. "Egyptian Red Slip Pottery at Aila." NCSU, 2009. http://www.lib.ncsu.edu/theses/available/etd-08172009-104842/.

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The Roman Aqaba Project, an archaeological investigation of a Roman port on the Red Sea in southern Jordan, recovered over 500 sherds of Egyptian Red Slip Ware (ERS). This included both ERS A (presumably from the Aswan region of Upper Egypt) and ERS B (from various production centers along the Nile valley). ERS was the second most common imported fine ware found at Aila from the Late Roman and Byzantine periods (3rd through early 7th centuries A.D.), trailing far behind African Red Slip Ware (from Tunisia) but easily exceeding imports of Cypriote Red Slip and Phocaean Red Slip (from the Aegean). The most striking fact about the ERS at Aila is its chronological distribution. In most parts of Palestine and Jordan ERS appears in quantity only in the late 6th and 7th centuries. But at Aila both ERS A and ERS B wares begin appearing in securely attested 3rd century contexts and are most common in the 4th century, long before their appearance in the remainder of the Levant, generally in late 6th and 7th centuries.
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Bernedo, Alfredo Victor Bellido. "Neutron activation analysis of ancient Egyptian pottery." Thesis, University of Manchester, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.329729.

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This work was concerned with compositional analysis of archaeological ceramics from the Nile Valley and surrounding region. This is a vital step in the tracing patterns of ceramic production in Ancient Egypt, a topic which has not been investigated in any detail because of the apparent physical homogeneity of the raw materials. For this reason a large number of elements (22) was measured by neutron activation to give maximum differentiation between the samples. Multivariate clustering methods were used to identify sample groups on the basis of their composition. The main aim of the work was to examine the basis of the fabric classification procedure known as the Vienna System, in terms of the elemental composition of the ceramics. This was achieved, not only in terms of the major fabric groups ( Nile alluvium and Marl clays) but also in finer detail. The composition of these Egyptian pottery sherds is therefore a complex function of the fabric and of the geographical origin ( provenance) since clay compositions vary from place to place. In the case of the Marl fabrics, the compositional variations associated with the fabric are large and overshadow variations arising from provenance, whereas for the Nile alluvium pottery, fabric and provenance variations were more equal
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Bellido-Bernedo, Alfredo Victor. "Neutron activation analysis of ancient Egyptian pottery." Online version, 1989. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?did=1&uin=uk.bl.ethos.329729.

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Bland, Helen Alicia. "Chemical investigations of ancient biomolecules in artefacts and ecofacts from Qasr Ibrim, Egyptian Nubia." Thesis, University of Bristol, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.310603.

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Patten, Shirley Fay. "Pottery from the late period to the early Roman period from Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt." Australia : Macquarie University, 2000. http://hdl.handle.net/1959.14/44492.

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Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Division of Humanities, Dept. of Ancient History, 2000.
Bibliography: p. 475-498.
PART I -- Thesis introduction -- Location, environment and routes of the Western Desert -- Cultural, historical and archaeological setting of Dakhleh Oasis -- Introduction to the vessel typology -- Introduction to the site catalogue -- Technology of pottery manufacture -- Fabrics and wares -- Conclusion -- PART II -- The vessel typology -- The site catalogue.
This thesis analyses a body of largely unpublished ceramic material from Dakhleh Oasis in the Western Desert of Egypt. The material is primarily from the survey of Dakhleh Oasis and the testing of sites by members of the Dakhleh Oasis Project and, except for some Phase 4 material recovered from excavations at Ismant el-Kharab, is unstratified. It covers a thousand years of Egyptian pottery-making from the eighth century BC to the late second century AD. -- A comprehensive survey of published and unpublished material from other sites in Egypt and adjacent regions has been undertaken to acquire comparative material for the pottery from Dakhleh Oasis. In addition, a study of the technical characteristics of the vessels that have remained accessible has been undertaken to describe and explain ancient pottery practices and to build up a framework for comparative purposes. -- With this body of information, a vessel typology divided into two series, each of which are further divided into two phases, has been devised and the chronology of the vessels determined. This ceramic typology has been used to compare surveyed sites of different utilisation - cemetery, settlement and temple sites - and to establish a dating system for these sites. The resulting chronology will be a guide to the determination of future excavations in the oasis and will assist in the on-going study of the socio-economic development of the oasis. The typology also provides a corpus of pottery for the processing of material from future excavations in Dakhleh Oasis and information for other ceramicists working in Egypt and elsewhere. -- The comparative survey of ceramic material from other sites demonstrates that Dakhleh Oasis, although a remote region in the Western Desert of Egypt, maintained contact with the Nile Valley and more distant areas. It also shows that, while this interaction influenced local pottery styles, the oasis retained and developed its own pottery traditions. -- In addition, a preliminary analysis has been made of fabrics and clays for descriptive purposes and to increase knowledge of the ancient ceramics from the oasis. -- A database has also been built to store and manipulate the information on this extensive body of ceramic material from Dakhleh Oasis. The pottery drawings have been produced in a format readily accessible for electronic transfer to researchers in the field of Egyptian ceramics.
Mode of access: World Wide Web.
498, [199] p. ill. (some col.), maps
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Lebon, Sylvie. "« La céramique égyptienne du Néolithique à l’époque arabe. Ses développements régionaux et leurs implications dans l’histoire culturelle de l’Égypte »." Thesis, Lyon 2, 2012. http://www.theses.fr/2012LYO20129.

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Mon inscription en thèse sur travaux est l’aboutissement et la reconnaissance d’un parcours de céramologue en Égypte dans le cadre de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire (Ifao). Un grand nombre d’opérations archéologiques sur tout le territoire égyptien nourrissent mes recherches, et m’ont logiquement conduite à développer la question des groupes céramiques régionaux, à les comparer et à en suivre les évolutions du Néolithique à l’époque arabe.La première partie de la synthèse établit un inventaire archéologique des centres de production de céramiques publiés en Égypte, de l’époque prédynastique à l’époque moderne. La seconde partie est consacrée aux groupes céramiques régionaux égyptiens. Une démarche linéaire et diachronique a été choisie pour la réalisation d’un parcours général des groupes céramiques régionaux en Égypte du VIIe millénaire à la fin de l’époque ottomane. Elle tente d’en décrire de façon dynamique les grandes lignes de rupture ou de continuité. Afin d’illustrer la richesse et l’intérêt de ce point de vue pour l’étude des céramiques égyptiennes, nous proposons deux études de cas qui sont situées aux antipodes l’une de l’autre tant sur les plans chronologiques et géographiques que culturels. En effet, chacune se réfère à des problématiques historiques, culturelles et techniques très différentes. L’une concerne la céramique funéraire datée de la fin de l’Ancien Empire à Bahariya ; l’autre étude se concentre sur la céramique égyptienne domestique du début de l’époque ptolémaïque, autour du IIIe siècle av. J.-C
My registration to a thesis based on work experience is the outcome and recognition of a ceramologist career in Egypt within the framework of the Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire (Ifao). A large number of archaeological operations throughout Egypt feed my research and they have logically led me to enlarge the issue of regional pottery groups, to compare and to monitor them and to follow their developments from the Neolithic Period to the Islamic Period. The first part of the synthesis provides an archaeological inventory of pottery production centres published in Egypt, from the Predynastic Period to the Modern Era. The second part is devoted to the Egyptian regional pottery groups. A linear and diachronic approach was chosen for the implementation of a general course of regional pottery groups in Egypt from the seventh millennium to the end of the Ottoman Period, attempting to dynamically outline the ruptures or continuities. To illustrate the richness and relevance of this perspective for the study of Egyptian potteries, we propose two case studies that are to the opposite of each other, at a chronological and geographical level as well as at a cultural level. Indeed, each refers to very different historical, cultural and technical issues. One concerns the funerary pottery dated of the end of the Old Kingdom in Bahariya; the other study focuses on Egyptian domestic pottery at the beginning of the Ptolemaic Period, dated around the third century BC
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Mumford, Gregory Duncan. "International relations between Egypt, Sinai, and Syria-Palestine during the Late Bronze Age to Early Persian period (dynasties 18-26: c.1550-525 B.C.), a spatial and temporal analysis of the distribution and proportions of Egyptian(izing) artefacts and pottery in Sinai and selected sites in Syria-Palestine." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1998. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk1/tape10/PQDD_0020/NQ45825.pdf.

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Boulet, Stéphanie. "Les productions céramiques égyptiennes en région thébaine du 8e au 6e siècle avant notre ère: traditions, influences et innovations." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/209108.

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L’étude des productions céramiques thébaines des 25e et 26e dynasties (c. 750-525 avant notre ère) a longtemps été négligée en raison d’un manque incontestable de contextes archéologiques stratifiés. Cette thèse a pour objectif l’étude de cette industrie par un examen rigoureux du matériel céramique de la chapelle d’Osiris Ounnefer Neb-Djefaou à Karnak (IFAO – sous la direction de L. Coulon) et du secteur du temple de Ptah à Karnak (CFEETK – sous la direction de Chr. Thiers). A cela s’ajoutent les données extraites des fouilles récentes des tombes TT 29 et TT C3 à Cheikh Abd el-Gourna (ULB / MANT – sous la direction de L. Bavay et D. Laboury).

En plus d’une définition précise de cette industrie par de l’établissement d’une analyse typologique fine, ce travail vise à associer les changements politiques de la ville de Thèbes avec les développements des productions céramiques locales.

Vers le milieu du 8e siècle avant notre ère, des évolutions techniques et morphologiques majeures se produisent dans l’industrie céramique thébaine, donnant naissance à un nouveau répertoire spécifique de cette région, se distinguant clairement des productions de la Basse-Egypte. Cette différenciation semble être le reflet des tensions politiques entre le nord et le sud du pays. Cette industrie va se développer au cours de la Basse Epoque avec des formes devenant plus sinueuses, complexes et carénées. Un nouveau traitement de surface se développe grâce au tour rapide :les stries plates, éléments caractéristiques des productions thébaines de la Basse Epoque.

Sous la dynastie nubienne, les produits vraisemblablement originaires de la région thébaine sont diffusés en Egypte et en Nubie. Cette diffusion a pour conséquence quelques phénomènes d’interactions en Egypte, mais surtout en Nubie où se développe un nouveau répertoire formel inspiré des productions céramiques thébaines, en parallèle aux productions locales.

Ce travail s’articule en trois parties. La première reprend une présentation des différents sites et contextes archéologiques exploités dans cette analyse. La deuxième correspond à une étude typologique des productions céramiques thébaines alors que la troisième partie se penche sur une synthèse reprenant une définition complète de la production thébaine.

Cette thèse a pour objectif d’utiliser l’objet céramique comme un élément datant et le témoin d’un savoir-faire, mais également comme un marqueur de changements politiques et économiques./

The study of the Theban ceramic production from the 25th to the 26th Dynasty (c. 750-525 BC) has been neglected for a long time because of a lack of stratified archaeological context. The aim of the thesis is to analyse the ceramic material coming from the chapel of Osiris Wennefer Ned-Djefau at Karnak (IFAO – Dir. L. Coulon) and from the temple of Ptah at Karnak (CFEETK – Dir. Chr. Thiers). The study of the pottery from the tombs TT 29 and TT C3 at Cheikh abd el-Gourna broadens our knowlegde on this production (ULB-ULg – MANT – Dir. L. Bavay et D. Laboury).

In addition to the formulation of a precise definition of this industry by the establishment of a new ceramic typology, this work aims to associate the political changes occurring in Thebes at that period with the evolution of the local ceramic production.

In the mid-8th century BC, technical and morphological changes are observed in the Theban ceramic industry, defining a specific industry in the region, a pottery repertoire which is easily distinctive from the ceramic production from the North of Egypt. This distinction is the reflection of political tensions between the North and the South at this time. The above-mentioned industry developed during the Late Period with more complex, marked and carinated shapes; a new surface treatment appeared thanks to the use of the kick-wheel: ribbed surface, which is a specific element of the Theban production in the Late Period.

Under the Nubian Dynasty, pottery from the Theban area is spread through Egypt and Nubia. This distribution caused some interaction phenomenas in Egypt, but also in Nubia where a new ceramic repertoire developed alongside the local ceramic industry.

This work has been divided in 3 parts. The first part corresponds to a presentation of archaeological sites and contexts used for the study. The second part presents a typological analysis of the Theban production. The last part is a synthetic analysis of the Theban pottery production.

The thesis tends to prove that the ceramic object is certainly a dating data and the testimony of a savoir-faire, but also the testimony of political and economical changes.


Doctorat en Histoire, art et archéologie
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished

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Bavay, Laurent. "Dis au potier qu'il me fasse un kôtôn: archéologie et céramique de l'Antiquité tardive à nos jours dans la TT29 à Cheikh Abd el-Gourna, Egypte." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/210569.

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Depuis 1999, le Centre de recherches archéologiques de l'Université libre de Bruxelles a entrepris l'étude de la tombe thébaine numéro 29 à Cheikh Abd el-Gourna, construite pour le vizir et maire de la ville Aménémopé sous le règne d'Amenhotep II (vers 1425-1401 av. J.-C.). La fouille du monument, sous la direction du Professeur Roland Tefnin, a été menée suivant deux axes de recherches. Le premier, dans une perspective synchronique, visait à étudier les aménagements et le fonctionnement d'origine de la tombe, sous la 18e dynastie. Le second, dans une perspective diachronique, visait à reconstituer l'histoire du monument et de ses occupations successives jusqu'à l'intervention de la mission. La thèse porte sur les résultats de cette seconde approche, et plus particulièrement sur l'analyse des occupations de l'antiquité tardive et post-antiques. Celles-ci se distinguent par une affectation de l'espace différente de sa fonction d'origine :la tombe n'est plus utilisée comme lieu de sépulture et de culte funéraire mais comme habitation. La fouille a ainsi livré les vestiges d'une installation érémitique datée des VIIe et VIIIe siècles de notre ère, associés à un matériel archéologique et épigraphique particulièrement abondant, ainsi que les ruines d'une maison villageoise construite durant la seconde moitié du XIXe siècle.
Doctorat en Histoire, art et archéologie
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Vorster, Lambert. "The Badarian culture of ancient Egypt in context : critical evaluation." Thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10500/21941.

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This study aims to determine whether current and past research on the Badarian culture of early Egypt accurately reflects the evidence uncovered in the past and the evaluation of the excavation reports by the early excavators. An archaeological re-evaluation of the Badarian culture and relevant sites is presented in the introduction. Inter-regional development of the Badarian is crucial to placing the Badarian in the temporal ladder of the predynastic cultures, leading up the formation of the dynastic era of Ancient Egypt. The following thesis is not meant to be a definitive answer on the origins and placement of the Badarian people in the Predynastic hierarchy of ancient Egypt, but one of its aims is to stimulate discussion and offer alternatives to the narrative of the Badarian culture. A set of outcomes is presented to test all hypotheses. Research questions are discussed to determine whether the Badarian culture is a regional phenomenon restricted to a small area around the Badari-Mostagedda-Matmar region, or as a wider inter-regional variable carrying on into the later Nagada cultures. To reach a hypothesis, the chronology of the Badarian is analysed, in-depth study of the original excavation reports and later research on the Badarian question. An important facet of this study is a literature review of the Badarian culture, past and present. The Badarian culture had always been a subject of speculation, especially in terms of its chronology and regional development. There is no consensus on the chronology of dispersion out of the desert to the Nile Valley, as well as areas north and south of the Nile Valley. It is important to establish the concept of an agronomic sedentary lifestyle by the Badarian, and to re-evaluate the evidence for the long-standing idea that the Badarian was in fact the first farmers of the Nile Valley, also in terms of their perceived exchange and trade networks.
Biblical and Ancient Studies
D. Litt. et Phil. (Ancient Near Eastern Studies)
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Books on the topic "Egyptian Pottery"

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Egyptian pottery. 2nd ed. Princes Risborough, Buckinghamshire, UK: Shire, 2001.

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Wodzińska, Anna. A manual of Egyptian pottery. Boston: Ancient Egypt Research Associates, 2009.

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Brigitte, Dominicus, Ford Paul O, and Jaritz Horst, eds. The pottery. Mainz am Rhein: Von Zabern, 2008.

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Ashraf, Senussi, ed. Old kingdom pottery from Giza. Cairo, Egypt: Supreme Council of Antiquities (S.C.A), 2008.

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Paice, Patricia. The pottery of daily life in ancient Egypt. Mississauga, Ont: Benben Publications/SSEA Publications, 1997.

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Edwards, W. I. Ceramics from the Dakhleh Oasis: Preliminary studies. Burwood, Australia: Victoria College Press, 1987.

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Seiler, Anne. Tradition & Wandel: Die Keramik als Spiegel der Kulturentwicklung Thebens in der Zweiten Zwischenzeit. Mainz am Rhein: Verlag Philipp von Zabern, 2005.

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Pelizaeus-Museum, ed. Die Keramik des Grabungsplatzes Q I. Mainz: von Zabern, 1998.

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Gophna, R. Excavations at 'En Besor. Tel Aviv: Ramot Pub. House, Tel Aviv University, 1995.

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J, Exner Larry, ed. Umm el-Qaab II: Importkeramik aus dem Friedhof U in Abydos (Umm el-Qaab) und die Beziehungen Ägyptens zu Vorderasien im 4. Jahrtausend v. Chr. Mainz: P. von Zabern, 2001.

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Book chapters on the topic "Egyptian Pottery"

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Nelson, Kit. "The Pottery of Nabta Playa: A Summary." In Holocene Settlement of the Egyptian Sahara, 534–43. Boston, MA: Springer US, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-0653-9_20.

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"Egyptian Pottery." In A Manual of Egyptian Pottery Volume 4, 29–341. Ancient Egypt Research Associates, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvr7fbm1.11.

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Martin, Mario A. S., and Tristan J. Barako. "Egyptian and Egyptianized Pottery." In Tel Mor, 129–65. Israel Antiquities Authority, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctt1fzhddh.8.

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Higginbotham, Carolyn R. "Typology of Egyptian-Style Pottery." In Egyptianization and Elite Emulation in Ramesside Palestine, 145–70. BRILL, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004493643_009.

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Doherty, Sarah K. "Investigating Dynastic Egyptian Pottery-Making:." In Approaches to the Analysis of Production Activity at Archaeological Sites, 122–40. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.15135947.12.

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"Pottery technology." In Egyptian and Imported Pottery from the Red Sea port of Mersa Gawsis, Egypt, 35–61. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv170x4mk.9.

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Aston, David A. "POTTERY OF THE EGYPTIAN NEW KINGDOM:." In Dust, Demons and Pots, 1–24. Peeters Publishers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctv1q26ngg.9.

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"Lower Egyptian Culture (Buto-Maadi)." In A Manual of Egyptian Pottery, Volume 1, 151–200. Ancient Egypt Research Associates, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvr7fbrz.17.

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D’Ercole, Giulia. "Material meanings, technology and cultural choices: Pottery production in Late Bronze Age Nubia." In Contributions to the Archaeology of Egypt, Nubia and the Levant, 207–22. Harrassowitz Verlag, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.13173/9783447121378.207.

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Abstract:
This chapter tackles the concepts of materiality and style in relation to the manufacturing sequence of the production of Egyptian-style and Nubian-style vessels in Nile clay, presenting case studies from the two colonial sites of Sai Island and Dukki Gel (Kerma) in Late Bronze Age Nubia. Through a combined macroscopic and microscopic analysis of the ceramic assemblages, it was possible to determine in which stages of the chaîne opératoire the influence of the Egyptian and Nubian cultures, and associated pottery traditions, were the most emphasised. This demonstrates the potential of integrating a multi-analytical approach to the study of material evidence with the aim of expanding our knowledge of the interplay between the system of production and use of vessels, as well as the surrounding cultural and environmental landscape. Keywords: Materiality, chaîne opératoire, Late Bronze Age, Sudan, Nubian-style pottery, Egyptian-style pottery
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"Detecting the Use of the Potter’s Wheel in Egyptian Pottery." In The Origins and Use of the Potter’s Wheel in Ancient Egypt, 70–91. Archaeopress Publishing Ltd, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvr43ks9.12.

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Conference papers on the topic "Egyptian Pottery"

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Seglins, Valdis. "EGYPTIAN PREHISTORIC POTTERY SHAPE ANALYSIS." In 16th International Multidisciplinary Scientific GeoConference SGEM2016. Stef92 Technology, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5593/sgem2016/b11/s01.022.

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Caumes, Jean-Pascal, Ayesha Younus, Simon Salort, Bruno Chassagne, Benoit Recur, Anne Ziegle, Alain Dautant, and Emmanuel Abraham. "3D millimeter wave imaging of XVIIIth dynasty Egyptian sealed pottery." In 2011 36th International Conference on Infrared, Millimeter, and Terahertz Waves (IRMMW-THz 2011). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/irmmw-thz.2011.6105153.

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