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Pottery from Manqabad 2 presents, documents and analyses a new
selection of ceramics from the Egyptian site of Manqabad (Asyut).
The Italian Egyptian project at this monastic complex started in
2011, sponsored by the University of Naples “L’Orientale”
(UNIOR) and the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Development
Cooperation (MAECI). One of the principal goals of the project is
the study and publication of the related finds, today stored at the
SCA warehouses in el-Ashmunein and Shutby, together with the
analysis of the material deriving from the ongoing excavations. Of
course, pottery has a prominent role in the identification of the
different phases of occupation and production/domestic activities
performed in the ancient monastic community. Therefore this volume
aims at presenting the most significant ceramic typologies from
Manqabad, while collecting as many references and parallels as
possible deriving from several different monastic sites in Egypt.
Pottery of Manqabad presents a catalogue of selected pottery from
the monastic site of Manqabad (Asyut, Egypt), which has, since
2011, been the object of an ongoing study and conservation project
at the University of Naples 'L'Orientale' (UNIOR). The ceramic
material, dated to the Late Antique Period, derives mostly from the
SCA warehouse of el-Ashmunein, where it was kept soon after its
accidental discovery in 1965. About 40 items derive from the
surface collection and survey conducted on the site during the last
fieldwork season (2018). The typologies identified include the most
relevant Byzantine classes and a particular link with production
from the Middle Egypt region. Part of the field survey was devoted
to the analysis of the pottery material still in situ, found in the
Northern Sector of the site where a 230m long row of monastic
housing units is located. Further investigations will hopefully
support the hypothesis of a local pottery production area, which
could be identified in a large 'dump' at the southern end of the
site. More generally, the analysis of the ceramics from Manqabad
has underlined the undoubtedly high cultural level of the local
monastic community, which can be deduced also from the textual,
architectural and wall depiction evidence from the site. Manqabad
was largely unknown to the scientific community, but since the
first season of work by the Italian-Egyptian project, it has
emerged as an important venue for the religious development of
Coptic culture between the second half of the Vth to the end of the
VIII- early IXth century AD.
Current Research in Egyptology 2017 presents papers delivered
during the eighteenth meeting of this international conference,
held at the University of Naples "L'Orientale", 3-6 May, 2017. Some
122 scholars from all over the world gathered in Naples to attend
three simultaneous sessions of papers and posters, focussed on a
large variety of subjects: Graeco-Roman and Byzantine Egypt, Nubian
Studies, Language and Texts, Art and Architecture, Religion and
Cult, Field Projects, Museums and Archives, Material Culture,
Mummies and Coffins, Society, Technologies applied to Egyptology,
Environment. The participants attended seven keynote presentations
given by Rosanna Pirelli (Egyptologist), Irene Bragantini (Roman
Archaeologist) and Andrea Manzo (Nubian Archaeologist) from the
University of Naples "L'Orientale"; Marilina Betro (Egyptologist)
from Pisa University; Patrizia Piacentini (Egyptologist) from Milan
University; Christian Greco (Director of Turin Egyptian Museum) and
Daniela Picchi (Archaeological Museum of Bologna). Delegates were
able to take advantage of a guided tour of the Oriental Museum
Umberto Scerrato (University of Naples "L'Orientale"), access to
the National Archaeological Museum of Naples (MANN) and guided
tours of the archaeological site of Pompeii and the Gaiola
Underwater Park. The editors dedicate this volume to the late Prof.
Claudio Barocas who inaugurated the teaching of Egyptology and
Coptic Language and Literature in Naples.
A fresh look at the inscriptions, backed up by architectural
developments and the geographical distribution of finds, to try and
clear up some of the knotty problems which crop up in regard to the
Third Dynasty. There is currently no agreement as to the sequence
of third dynasty pharaohs, the number of pharaohs, or indeed their
names. Estimates of the length of the dynasty range from 50 to 100
years. Among other conlcusions Ilaria Incordino identifies Sanakht
as the founder of the dynasty, and also attempts some
reconsttruction of his reign.
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