Egyptian-Type Documents from the Mediterranean Littoral of the Iberian Peninsula before the Roman Conquest, Volume 1 Introductory Survey


Book Description

Preliminary material -- CHRONICLE OF PREVIOUS RESEARCH -- POSSIBLE CONTACTS WITH EGYPT BEFORE THE FIRST MILLENNIUM -- THE EGYPTIAN, PSEUDOEGYPTIAN AND EGYPTIANIZING MATERIAL -- INDEX -- LIST OF PLATES -- Plates I-XXVIII.




Egyptian-Type Documents from the Mediterranean Littoral of the Iberian Peninsula before the Roman Conquest, Volume 2 Study of the Material


Book Description

Preliminary material /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- INTRODUCTION /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- I. WESTERN LANGUEDOC /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- II. CATALONIA /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- III. VALENCIA /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- IV. MURCIA /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- INDEX /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- LIST OF PLATES /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA -- Plates XXIX-LXV /JOSEP PADRÓ I PARCERISA.







Egyptian-Type Documents from the Mediterranean Littoral of the Iberian Peninsula before the Roman Conquest, Volume 3 Study of the Material. Andalusia


Book Description

Preliminary material -- ANDALUSIA -- SEXI, ALMUÑÉCAR (GRANADA) -- (GRANADA) -- CORTIJO DE LAS SOMBRAS. FRIGILIANA (MALAGA) -- TRAYAMAR. ALGARROBO (MALAGA) -- EL JARDÍN, TORRE DEL MAR (MALAGA) -- MAINAKE (?), CORTIJO DE LOS TOSCANOS. TORRE DEL MAR (MALAGA) -- MÁLAGA -- MALAKA (?), CERRO DEL VILLAR, MÁLAGA -- CALPE, GORHAM'S CAVE. GIBRALTAR -- NOTICE TO THE READER -- INDEX -- LIST OF PLATES.




Egyptian-type Documents


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AEGIS


Book Description

Festschrift in honour of Matti Egon. Papers range from prehistory to the modern day on Greece and Cyprus. Neolithic animal butchery rubs shoulders with regional assessments of the end of the Mycenaean era, Hellenistic sculptors and lamps, life in Byzantine monasteries and the politics behind modern museum exhibitions.




Egyptian-type Documents


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The Phoenician Diaspora


Book Description

In this approachable and articulate study, Philip C. Schmitz offers close interpretations of six ancient texts, four previously published Phoenician and Punic inscriptions and two Phoenician inscriptions published for the first time. The author selected the previously known texts because readings of their letters and interpretation of their grammar and syntax are not yet well established. Each of the selected texts stands as an original source concerning Phoenician settlement in the western Mediterranean, Phoenician activity in Egypt, or the economic life and religious beliefs and practices of ancient Carthage. Chapter 1 rapidly surveys the history of Phoenician-Punic epigraphy and offers a limited inventory of recent publications of epigraphic texts. Chapter 2 undertakes a new reading and translation of the Phoenician stele from Nora, Sardinia (CIS I 144). Chapter 3 edits and translates the larger Phoenician inscriptions from Abu Simbel, in Egypt (CIS I 112). Chapter 4 concerns the paleographic analysis of selected Phoenician graffiti from Tell el-Maskhuta. Chapter 5 publishes an overlooked dipinto inscription on an amphora excavated at Carthage. (An appendix by Joann Freed contextualizes the amphora.) Chapter 6 takes a text-critical look at CIS I 6068, an enigmatic Punic inscription on lead, thought since its discovery to be a curse text. Schmitz argues that it is not a curse but a quittance for debt. Chapter 7 is a new reading and translation of CIS I 6000bis, a Punic epitaph from the Hellenistic period of Carthage. Among the features of this book that may interest students and scholars are: new translations and interpretations of important inscriptions the translation and interpretation of which have been disputed; previously unpublished photographs of inscriptions, illustrating difficult readings; author’s hand drawings of difficult readings; and grammatical analysis with reference to other known texts and standard reference works.




The Last Days of the Kingdom of Israel


Book Description

Despite considerable scholarly efforts for many years, the last two decades of the Kingdom of Israel are still beneath the veil of history. What was the status of the Kingdom after its annexation by Assyria in 732 BCE? Who conquered Samaria, the capital of the Kingdom? When did it happen? One of the primary reasons for this situation lies in the discrepancies found in the historical sources, namely the Hebrew Bible and the Assyrian texts. Since biblical studies and Assyriology are two distinct disciplines, the gaps in the sources are not easy to bridge. Moreover, recent great progress in the archaeological research in the Southern Levant provides now crucial new data, independent of these textual sources. This volume, a collection of papers by leading scholars from different fields of research, aims to bring together, for the first time, all the available data and to discuss these conundrums from various perspectives in order to reach a better and deeper understanding of this crucial period, which possibly triggered in the following decades the birth of "new Israel" in the Southern Kingdom of Judah, and eventually led to the formation of the Hebrew Bible and its underlying theology.