However, don't forget that Aayko will be updating the EEF website later today with the online version of last Thursday's email newsletter, which is a must-read weekly digest of all the most interesting news on everything from exhibitions, conferences and lectures to the latest digitized publications available online. There are also a couple of News items that I missed, summarized below - I was clearly off on Planet Elsewhere last week.
The newsletter actually contains a HUGE news item which I missed (sorry!) about discoveries dating to the 7th millennium bp in Dakhleh Oasis, and one which is very dear to my own interests: "A group of Poznań archaeologists has discovered new examples of cave paintings dating back to the 7th millennium B.C. in Dakhla oasis, Egypt. Inventory works were run in February till mid-March. They had been commenced by Prof. Lech Krzyżaniak, an eminent specialist of Saharan cave art, of the Archaeological Museum in Poznań, who passed away in 2004 – says Prof. Michał Kobusiewicz of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology at the Polish Academy of Sciences (PAN), running the research." The URL for this is http://tinyurl.com/pbco4 (naukawpolsce.pl) but there are other relevant links too - check the EEF newsletter.
There is also an article linked to in the newsletter in Spanish, about the tomb of Djehuty, with photos, including one of the Senet game board about which I posted recently:
http://tinyurl.com/ma2rf (informativos.telecinco.es): "Cuatro vasos para guardar vísceras, un juego de mesa, un papiro considerado mágico dentro de un colgante y exquisitos recipientes para perfumes. Todo esto, dentro de una tumba que fue sellada hace 3.400 años, es el resultado de una excavación arqueológica que científicos españoles realizan en Luxor, Egipto, llamada Proyecto Djehuty. Ésta es ya su quinta campaña, y de momento es la más fructífera."
Roughly translated as: Four canopic jars, one table jug, a magical papyrus, and exquisite perfume holders. All this in a tomb which was sealed 3400 years ago, is the result of an archaeological excavation which Spanish scientists have been carrying out in Luxor, Egypt, called the Djehuty Project. This is their fifth season, and to date the most fruitful.
The project's home page (in Spanish), with dig diary and photos, is at http://www.excavacionegipto.com/. The site was down when I tried to access it, but it has always been reliable in the past so if you have any difficulties with it today, try it again during the week.
The newsletter also points to two excavations recently updated online:
Deir el-Banat, Faiyum Depression, Fourth Season, 2006 (Graeco Roman and Christian)
Russian version: http://www.cesras.ru/arch/db/rep.htm
English version: http://www.cesras.ru/eng/arch/db/rep.html
Kom Tuman, Memphis, Fifth Season (2005-2006)
Russian version: http://www.cesras.ru/arch/memph/rep.htm
English version: http://www.cesras.ru/eng/arch/memph/rep.htm
Thanks to EEF and its helpers for doing such a great job. If you want to subscribe to EEF (it is free of charge) go to:
http://showcase.netins.net/web/ankh/eefmain.html
Cheers
Andie
- News From 13th February 013
Copied from @egyptologynews The Oriental Institute Electronic Publics. Initiative has made several new Egyptology publications available as PDFs: http://oi.uchicago.edu/news/ I had missed that the Djehuty dig diary is back online for 2013, with several...
- Online: Virtual Tour Of The Tomb Of Djehuty
Luxor News Blog Thanks to Jane Akshar for publishing a virtual tour, in video, of the tomb of Djehuty on the above page. If you speak Spanish full details of the Djehuty excavation can be found on the Project's website. A briefer English version,...
- Dig Diaries
In all the fuss about Tutankhamun don't forget that work carries on as normal at the excavations in Egypt. In the north, the Leiden team at Saqqara have now posted seven weeks of their Mission Digging Diary. Even though the new tomb failed to produce...
- La Tercera Visita A Djehuty
Publico.es (Juan J Gomez) Thanks very much to "Tepsicore" for sending me the above link. The seventh season of work at the tomb of Djehuty in Luxor is taking place. Djehuty was a noble who had senior roles under the reign of Hatshepsut. The aim of the...
- Tt320 Royal Cachette Website
http://www.tt320.org/ Thanks very much to Jane Akshar's Luxor News blog for the information that TT320 has a dedicated website, at the above address. Additional information about the site, including some season summaries in English, can be found at:...
Egypt