Griffiths Institute website updated
Egypt

Griffiths Institute website updated


http://griffith.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/gri/4.html
http://griffith.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/gri/4paser.html (Paser)
http://griffith.ashmus.ox.ac.uk/gri/4sethos.html (Sethos)
Keeper of the Griffith Institute Archive, Jaromir Malek, has announced that another batch of paper impressions has been made available on the Griffith Institute's website. They are impressions from Theban tomb TT 106 (Paser, of the reigns of Sethos I and Ramesses II) and from the Valley of the Kings tomb KV 17 (Sethos I) in the mid-19th century. A site plan accompanies the black and white images. As always, they are lovely. Click on the thumbnail image to see it in detail.




- Recent Online Updates From The Griffith Institute
The Griffith Institute Thanks to Ancient World Online and Chuck Jones for the above link. The Griffith Institute has updated its site and the above pages give details of new additions. If you're anywhere near Oxford, UK, you may be interested to know...

- Recent Offerings From The Griffith Institute
Ancient World Online (Charles Ellwood Jones) Thanks to Chuck Jones for posting a list of recent open access offerings from the Griffith Institute, Oxford, including some 1,800 photographs of Egypt and Sudan taken by Reginald St. Alban Heathcote between...

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Griffith Institute Thanks to Charles Ellwood Jones for posting to The Ancient World Online blog that some 1,000 sheets of tracings made in various Theban tombs by Norman and Nina de Garis Davies sometime between 1920 and 1940, now in the Archive of the...

- Weekly Websites
I thought that as all the decent trivia has dwindled to nothing, I would liven up the weekend by listing some websites of interest that I find during a given week, some of which may have been around for a while, but may be new and of interest to some...

- Tutankhamun Online
http://technology.guardian.co.uk/news/story/0,,1774854,00.html An update about the work of the Griffith Institute in Oxford, who have already published some of the original notes and diary extracts from the Tutankhamun excavation: "It was the most famous...



Egypt








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