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Inscriptions from Lisht - Texts from Burial Chambers (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,890
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Inscriptions from Lisht - Texts from Burial Chambers (Hardcover)
Series: Egyptian Expedition Publications of The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This volume incorporates all of the inscribed material associated
with more than one hundred burial chambers and graves found at
Lisht North and Lisht South, two sites excavated by the Egyptian
Expedition of The Metropolitan Museum of Art from 1907 until 1934
and from 1984 to 1991. The inscribed objects found in or close to
the burial chambers of Middle Kingdom officials and others provide
an important addition to our appreciation of ancient Egyptian
funerary culture. These include the coffins and sarcophagi as well
as canopic chests and jars, mummy masks, ivory wands, miniature
coffins, and shawabtis. Two kings, members of the royal family and
many elite persons, as well as a community of middle-class people,
found their resting place in and around the royal pyramids at
Lisht, which served as the principal cemetery for Egypt's capital
during the Middle Kingdom (ca. 2030-1650 B.C.). The material
published here represents a sequence of seven chronological phases
at Lisht that range from the reigns of the kings Amenemhat I and
Senwosret I through the late Dynasty XIII and the Second
Intermediate Period. The inscribed texts presented here are
transliterated and translated, and are accompanied by extensive
drawings that meticulously detail these texts, as well as
annotations to some previously published material. The lavishly
illustrated volume includes heretofore unpublished photographs from
the Department of Egyptian Art's archives. Each object has been
assigned a code referring to the primary individual associated with
it, and its description includes transliterations of the deceased's
name(s) and title(s). Because the location of an inscription on a
coffin or sarcophagus is usually significant and because some of
these include multiple texts, the author has designed a system of
references that reflects the location on the object. Further, the
catalogue of objects draws on Museum archives and also provides
information concerning the findspot and current location of the
object as well as relevant archival material and bibliography.
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