BMSAES Issue 10, September 2008
Egypt

BMSAES Issue 10, September 2008


British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan

The three papers in this issue epitomise the range of subjects covered by BMSAES: a report on new fieldwork, the publication of an object in a museum collection, and a study of the modern reception and presentation of ancient artefacts. The journal is intended to cover the same range of cultures and time periods as the Department of Ancient Egypt and Sudan, namely the prehistoric, ancient and pre-modern cultures of Egypt and Sudan.

Contents:

The Poetics of Egyptian museum practice
Wendy Doyon

Tombos and the Viceroy Inebny/Amenemnekhu
Vivian Davies

A Mamluk Coin from Kulubnarti, Sudan
Julie Anderson





- Online Journal: Bmsaes 14
British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan 14 I've posted about BMSAES 14 in dribs and drabs but here's the entire volume, all available free of charge online from the above address. The final issue of 2009 features two articles based on...

- Bmsaes 7 (september 2007)
British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan Förster, F.,'With donkeys, jars and water bags into the Libyan Desert:the Abu Ballas Trail in the late Old Kingdom and First Intermediate Period ', BMSAES 7 (2007), 1–39, http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/research/publications/bmsaes/issue_7/foerster.aspx...

- Model Coffin Of Teti
http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/bmsaes/index.htmlhttp://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/bmsaes/issue5/grajetzki.html The most recent issue of the British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (BMSAES) online journal is now available online. There are...

- Bmsaes Updated
http://www.thebritishmuseum.ac.uk/bmsaes/issues.html#is4 The December 2004 issue of the British Museum's online publication, the "British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (BMSAES)" has been published on the BM's website at the above address.Egyptology...

- Bmsaes 9
The British museum studies on ancient Egypt and the Sudan has published its issue number nine. The articles include "Who was who on Elephantine in the third millennium BC". http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/online_journals/bmsaes/issue_9.aspx...



Egypt








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