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This is a handy and colourful illustrated guide to reading, writing
and understanding ancient Egyptian names, epithets, titles and
phrases. The Egyptians believed that the creator god Ptah brought
the world into being by naming everything in it. Names had great
power, and kings often over-wrote their own names on the monuments
of earlier rulers. A person's name was a vitally important part of
them, and the Egyptians were very concerned that their names should
be recorded, remembered and spoken. Criminals and those who had
fallen out of favour could be punished - wiped out of history - by
having their names destroyed or defaced. The hieroglyphic script
provided a beautiful, flexible and expressive means to write the
names of humans, gods and animals. Angela McDonald explains the
meanings of Egyptian personal names and how they were made up
(Rameses = 'Ra has given birth to him') and demonstrates how they
were written in different ways to convey various shades of meaning.
Royal and divine names are always given special treatment. The
Egyptians were not always formal, and nicknames were common. Even
the names of pet animals are recorded in tomb paintings.
For the last ten years, Bishop Oirion Hennen has been struggling to
pick up the pieces of his life after having been lost for a year
with no memory of what happened to him. When he and his partner are
called to Brosten and asked to investigate a series of murders,
things begin to unravel. His paranoid restlessness is soon proved
to be well founded.
Novels of Shannon Series; Not all vampires are evil and not all
priests are holy. This is a lesson that Father Oirion is about to
learn. Crashed on the cost of a forbidden and magically isolated
continent Oirion must put aside his suspicions and work with the
mysterious Shannon for the sake of the other survivors, but that
does not mean he has to like it. This is an epic fantasy with
everything from vampires to Druids; orcs, to fairies; This is a
story where necromancers and priests become allies, and angels
become men.
Novels of Shannon Series; Shannon and Theo search for Ivan and
Oirion, desperate to rescue them from Xen-Sha and rejoin the
others. With Gerome closing in and local lords after them, those
who continue to travel together must pull on deeper magics than
they have yet. They must come to accept one another, as well as
accepting the magics they each hold themselves. With the Barrier
and escape almost within reach, it seems they are blocked at every
turn. Even Shannon questions if escape is possible.
War has risen against Gerome. Ezeer rising in revolt was bad
enough, but Tharadon Lords has done so as well. Furious, Gerome
sends assassins to take down the Bear of Ezeer and he personally
leads his army to Awens. Nothing will stand in his way for crushing
the rebellion and making an example of Awens and its king. But
neither king, not that of Ezeer nor that of Awens stands alone.
A selection of 17 papers from the first Symposium of "Current
Research in Egyptology", held in Oxford in 2000. The Symposium was
held to foster communication and exchange of ideas among students
of Egyptology at UK institutions. The UK enjoys a wealth of
Egyptological resources, but it is sometimes difficult for graduate
students from different universities to interact. In many cases,
the very diverse papers presented, constitute ongoing research,
offering authors the opportunity to formulate the current state of
their work, and to present it to a wider audience. Topics covered
range from "Hysteria Revisited: Women's Public Health in Ancient
Egypt" to "Papyrological Evidence of Travelling in Byzantine
Egypt".
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