86 research outputs found
Review of Fischer, E. – Tell El-Far’ah (Süd). Ägyptisch-Levantinische Beziehungen Im Späten 2. Jahrtausend v. Chr.
BABESCH Tenth Byvanck lecture : Guy D. R. Sanders : recent finds from ancient Corinth : how little things make big differences
BABESCH Eleventh Byvanck lecture : Roger J.A. Wilson : dining with the dead in early Byzantine Sicily excavations at Punta Secca near Ragusa
Review of Keel, O. Corpus Der Stempelsiegel-Amulette Aus Palästina/Israel. Von Den Anfangen Bis Zur Perserzeit. Katalog Band IV
The Middle Bronze Age ‘Green Jasper Seal Workshop’: New Evidence from the Levant and Egypt
BABESCH Thirteenth Byvanck lecture : Gilbert Wiplinger : de aquaeductu urbis Ephesi : water for Roman Ephesus
Review of Ben-Tor, D., Scarabs, Chronology and Interconnections. Egypt and Palestine in the Second Intermediate Period
Review of Kim Duistermaat and Ilona Regulski (Eds.), with the Collaboration of Gwen Jennes and Lara Weiss, Intercultural Contacts in the Ancient Mediterranean. Proceedings of the International Conference at the Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo, 25th to 29th October 2008
From a land far away : Egyptian(izing) amulets from Jebel Qurma, Black Desert, Jordan
This paper presents an Egyptian and an Egyptian-style amulet, recently excavated in tombs in the Jebel Qurma uplands in the Black Desert of northeastern Jordan. The amulets (a pataikos and a scarab) date to the early to mid-1st millennium BCE. It is extremely rare to find such objects in this remote part of the southern Levant. While the scarab is a Levantine product from the early Iron Age, the pataikos amulet is Egyptian in origin and may have arrived in the Jebel Qurma region of Jordan after traveling from Egypt across the Sinai or northwestern Arabia
The multispectral portable light dome : documenting the Egyptian execration figurines of the Royal Museums of art and history, Brussels
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