Egypt
New Albums on Egyptological
Photo Albums, Egyptological
We have posted some lovely Albums of photos recently on Egyptological. Have a look at the above page. We have had a Horemheb theme running, with photographs from his tomb at Saqqara and of objects from the Leiden Museum and the British Museum. The beautiful illustrations of the Qustul Incense Burner by Jac Strijbos are particularly unmissable.
- Qustul Cemetery L (Nubia) Incense burner by Jac Strijbos
- Wooden figures from the Tomb of Horemheb in the Valley of the Kings
- Photos of Karnak Temple by Glyn Morris
- Reliefs from the Tomb of Horemheb in Leiden Museum by Yvonne Buskens
- The Saqqara tomb of Horemheb by James Whitfield, Part 2
- The Saqqara tomb of Horemheb by James Whitfield, Part 1
- The Akhmenu, Hall of Sokar by Glyn Morris
- Headrests in Brighton Museum, Sussex, England
-
New Edition Of Egyptological Now Out
Egyptological Edition 3 of the Journal section and Edition 4 of the Magazine are now available. There's a real mixture of topics in this edition, and as usual we thank our great authors and proof readers for all their hard work. Welcome to...
-
New Book: The Memphite Tomb Of Horemheb
Brepols Publishers M. J. Raven, V. Verschoor, M. Vugts, R. v. Walsem 2011 The Memphite Tomb of Horemheb. Commander-in-Chief of Tutankhamun, V: The Forecourt and the Area South of the Tomb with Some Notes on the Tomb of Tia This book is the first in a...
-
Tuesdays Egyptian: Looking For Amenia
This statue is of the last king of ancient Egypt's 18Th Dynasty, Horemheb, who reigned from about 1323-1295 BC. The statue was found at his Saqqara tomb he had created before his accession to kingship. Here the king is seated next to his likely first...
-
Still Seeking Amenia?
This is a statue of the last king of Egypt's ancient 18th Dynasty Horemheb from his Saqqara tomb seated next to his likely first wife Amenia and sadly this is what it looks like today in Luxor. The Egyptian Supreme Council of Antiquities has a...
-
The Cash Register In The Desert
"Even though we had allowed people to take pictures in the Valley, people continued to bribe the guards and take cameras into the tombs and use flash." ...
Egypt