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Books in the Excavation Memoirs series

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  • - The Prehistoric Period at Sa El-Hagar
    by Penelope Wilson
    £69.99

  • - The Production of Faience at Roman Period Kom Helul
    by Paul T. Nicholson
    £25.49

  • - The Amarna Stone Village Survey, 2005-9: Volume II: The Faunal and Botanical Remains, and Objects
    by Anna Stevens
    £38.49

    From 2005 to 2009 a survey and excavation project was undertaken at the Stone Village, a small settlement on the eastern desert plain of Amarna, not far from the Workmen s Village. This was the first concerted effort to record this site, and introduce it into the story of Amarna."

  • - The Cathedral Church
    by Fred Aldsworth
    £25.49

    This book records the results of excavations and investigations undertaken by the Egypt Exploration Society between 1963 and 1998 on the largest surviving building, the Cathedral Church, on the significant site of Qasr Ibrim, one of the very few not totally destroyed by inundation following the construction of the Aswan Dam and the creation of ...

  • - Pottery from the Archaic to the Third Intermediate Period
    by Peter French
    £25.49

  • - Scenes and Texts from the Memphite Tomb of Horemheb
    by G. T. Martin
    £69.99

  • - Kom Rabia: The Objects from the Late Middle Kingdom Installations (Levels VI-VIII)
    by Lisa Giddy
    £69.99

  • - Kom Rabia: The New Kingdom Pottery
    by Janine Bourriau
    £25.49

    This volume is a study of ceramic change in a stratified settlement at Kom Rabia, Memphis, during the New Kingdom. Ceramic chronology of this period has traditionally relied on pottery associated with dated individuals, usually from burials. In contrast, this study presents quantified evidence from a random sample taken from all contexts.

  • - Pottery of the Late Dynastic Period with Comparative Material from the Sacred Animal Necropolis
    by Peter French
    £69.99

    This volume continues the ceramic history of the Saqqara Anubis temple, excavated by the Egypt Exploration Society from 1977 to 1979. Volume IV covers the Late Dynastic Period. From at least the mid- 6th century BC onwards, burials appear to have been made in the earlier shaft tombs as well as in a new cemetery in the sand. A temple to Anubis, god of the dead, was commenced at the same time, abandoned during the Persian Period but restarted around 400 BC. The ceramics include bowls used by the embalmers as well as offering vessels and the repertoire of the fourth century builders.

  • - The Ottoman Period
    by John Alexander
    £60.99

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