Saturday, April 30, 2022

Travelling the Korosko Road: Archaeological Exploration in Sudan’s Eastern Desert

Contributions by W. Vivian Davies 
book cover

 This volume publishes accounts of archaeological exploration carried out during the last 30 years or so in the Sudanese Eastern Desert. It is divided into two related parts.

The first and foremost covers results from the work of the Centro Ricerche sul Deserto Orientale (CeRDO), which is based at Varese in northern Italy. Between 1989 and 2006, CeRDO, directed by the brothers Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni, ran a pioneering programme of expeditions, which traversed the so-called ‘Korosko Road’ (the main desert route connecting Egypt and Sudan) and followed multiple other tracks throughout the Eastern Desert. They encountered in the process a rich archaeological landscape, hundreds of previously undocumented sites, many frequented over millennia, prominent among them gold-production areas and their associated settlements. The CeRDO record, the photographic database, the material retrieved, to which several of the papers published here are devoted, are now all the more valuable, in that many of these sites have since been badly disturbed and some entirely destroyed by recent goldmining activities.

The second part, introduced by a concise account of the historical usage of the Korosko Road, reports in full on a single, short season of documentation, organized in 2013 under the auspices, and with the support, of the Sudan Archaeological Research Society. Its main aim was detailed recording of a group of pharaonic rock-inscriptions discovered by CeRDO expeditions, most located along the Korosko Road and almost all related to the colonial gold-working industry. The project included also a degree of investigation and mapping of the wider context, as well as the recording and study of associated archaeological material, in particular of ceramic remains. The results complement and usefully extend in part those of CeRDO.

H 290 x W 205 mm

252 pages

493 plates, 74 figures (colour throughout)

Published Dec 2020

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Hardback: 9781789698039

Digital: 9781789698046

Contents

Preface – W. Vivian Davies and Derek A. Welsby ;

Part I. The CeRDO expeditions (1989-2006) ;
1. Explorations in Sudan’s Eastern Nubian Desert, 1989 to 2006 1-4 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
2. Wadi Terfowi 5-10 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
3. The gold mines of Kerma and exploration of the south-eastern Nubian Desert 11-21 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
4. The Tracks of Egyptian Penetration 22-47 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
5. Traces of the Past – First Expedition 48-55 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
6. Traces of the Past – Second Expedition 56-61 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni ;
7. The Journey to Onib Crater (el-Hofra) 62-67 – Alfredo and Angelo Castiglioni 8. The Nubian and Pharaonic Ceramic Materials 68-83 – Andrea Manzo ;
9. Imported wares in the Sudanese Eastern Desert: finds from the CeRDO Survey 2004 84-98 – Serena Massa ;
10. Preliminary study of the macro-lithic tools collected by CeRDO in the Sudanese Eastern Desert 99-124 – Francesco Michele Rega ;

Part II. The SARS Korosko Road Project (2013) ;
11. The Korosko Road as a major cross-desert route: a brief overview 125-130 – Derek A. Welsby ;
12. Gazetteer of sites 131-163 – Derek A. Welsby ;
13. The Korosko Road Project: Final Report on the Pottery 164-183 – Philippe Ruffieux and Mahmoud Suliman Bashir ;
14. The hand-axe and denticulated tool 184 – Donatella Usai ;
15. Securing the Gold of Wawat: pharaonic inscriptions in the Sudanese-Nubian Eastern Desert 185-220 – W. Vivian Davies

 

Friday, April 29, 2022

Open Access Journal: Oriental Institute News & Notes

 [First posted in AWOL 23 April 2010. Most recently updated 29 April 2022]

Oriental Institute News & Notes
News & Notes is a Quarterly Publication of The Oriental Institute, printed for members as one of the privileges of membership.

n.b. issue 247, p. 1: "COVID-19 restrictions stemming from office closure have led to the decision to transition the bulk of OI print material to online-only formats. We will no longer mail print copies of News & Notes. We will continue to publish News & Notes each quarter in a digital format available to our members. Moving away from printed editions will ensure that every dollar of your membership donation now fully supports the current work and scholarship of the Oriental Institute."

2022Winter/Spring (#251)   
2021 Winter (#248)   Spring/Summer (#249) Fall (#250)
2020 Winter (#244) Spring (#245) Summer (#246)  
2019 Winter (#240) Spring (#241) Summer (#242) Fall (#243)
2018 Winter (#236) Spring (#237) Summer (#238) Fall (#239)
2017 Winter (#232) Spring (#233) Summer (#234) Fall (#235)
2016 Winter (#228)   Summer (#230) Fall (#231)
2015 Winter (#224)   Summer (#226) Fall (#227)
2014 Winter (#220) Spring (#221) Summer (#222) Fall (#223)
2013 Winter (#216) Spring (#217) Summer (#218) Fall (#219)
2012 Winter (#212) Spring (#213) Summer (#214) Fall (#215)
2011 Winter (#208) Spring (#209) Summer (#210) Fall (#211)
2010 Winter (#204) Spring (#205) Summer (#206) Fall (#207)
2009 Winter (#200) Spring (#201) Summer (#202) Fall (#203)
2008 Winter (#196) Spring (#197) Summer (#198) Fall (#199)
2007 Winter (#192) Spring (#193) Summer (#194) Fall (#195)
2006 Winter (#188) Spring (#189) Summer (#190) Fall (#191)
2005 Winter (#184) Spring (#185) Summer (#186) Fall (#187)
2004 Winter (#180) Spring (#181) Summer (#182) Fall (#183)
2003 Winter (#176) Spring (#177) Summer (#178) Fall (#179)
2002 Winter (#172) Spring (#173) Summer (#174) Fall (#175)
2001 Winter (#168) Spring (#169) Summer (#170) Fall (#171)
2000 Winter (#164) Spring (#165) Summer (#166) Fall (#167)
1999 Winter (#160) Spring (#161) Summer (#162) Fall (#163)
1998 Winter (#156) Spring (#157) Summer (#158) Fall (#159)
1997 Winter (#152) Spring (#153) Summer (#154) Fall (#155)
1996 Winter (#148) Spring (#149) Summer (#150) Fall (#151)
1995 Winter (#144) Spring (#145) Summer (#146) Fall (#147)
1994 Winter (#140) Spring (#141) Summer (#142) Fall (#143)
1993 Winter (#136) Spring (#137) Summer (#138) Fall (#139)
1992   Spring (#133) Summer (#134) Fall (#135)
1991 Winter (#127) Spring (#128)
Spring (#129)
Summer (#130) Fall (#131)
Fall (#132)
1990 Winter (#122) Spring (#123) Summer (#124) Fall (#125)
Fall (#126)
1989 Winter (#117) Spring (#118) Summer (#119) Fall (#120)
Fall (#121)
1988 Winter (#112) Spring (#113) Summer (#114) Fall (#115)
Fall (#116)
1987 Winter (#107) Spring (#108) Summer (#109) Fall (#110)
Fall (#111)
1986 Winter (#102) Spring (#103) Summer (#104) Fall (#105)
Fall (#106)
1985 Winter (#97) Spring (#98) Summer (#99) Fall (#100)
Fall (#101)
1984 Winter (#92) Spring (#93) Summer (#94) Fall (#95)
Fall (#96)
1983 Winter (#84)
Winter (#85)
Winter (#86)
Spring (#87)
Spring (#88)
Summer (#89) Fall (#90)
Fall (#91)
1982 Winter (#75)
Winter (#76)
Winter (#77)
Spring (#78)
Spring (#79)
Summer (#80) Fall (#81)
Fall (#82)
Fall (#83)
1981 Winter (#67)
Winter (#68)
Winter (#69)
Spring (#70) Summer (#71) Fall (#72)
Fall (#73)
Fall (#74)
1980 Winter (#58)
Winter (#59)
Winter (#60)
Spring (#61)
Spring (#62)
Summer (#63) Fall (#64)
Fall (#65)
Fall (#66)
1979 Winter (#49)
Winter (#50)
Winter (#51)
Spring (#52)
Spring (#53)
Summer (#54) Fall (#55)
Fall (#56)
Fall (#57)
1978 Winter (#39)
Winter (#40)
Winter (#41)
Winter (#42)
Spring (#43)
Spring (#44)
Summer (#45) Fall (#46)
Fall (#47)
Fall (#48)
1977 Winter (#33) Spring (#34) Summer (#35) Fall (#36)
Fall (#37)
Fall (#38)
1976 Winter (#23)
Winter (#24)
Winter (#25)
Spring (#26)
Spring (#27)
Summer (#28) Fall (#29)
Fall (#30)
Fall (#31)
Fall (#32)
1975 Winter (#13)
Winter (#14)
Winter (#15)
Spring (#16)
Spring (#17)
Summer (#18)
Summer (#19)
Fall (#20)
Fall (#21)
Fall (#22)
1974 Winter (#4)
Winter (#5)
Winter (#6)
Spring (#7)
Spring (#8)
Summer (#9) Fall (#10)
Fall (#11)
Fall (#12)
1973Fall (#1)
Fall (#2)
Fall (#3)
For years prior to 2002 the  Lead Article(s) from various issues were also being made available electronically with the permission of the editor.

1998


1997


1996


1995


1994


1993


1992


1991


1990

See also  The Oriental Institute Archaeological Newsletter (1950-1973)

For an up to date list of all Oriental Institute publications available online see:




Down to Earth Archaeology

book cover

Sudan Archaeological Research Society Publication 25

Down to Earth Archaeology collects sixteen archaeological papers by Professor William Y. Adams chosen by the author, who added introductory commentary to each. These articles were written at various times during his lengthy and productive academic career for different purposes and for different audiences. Most of those selected had been previously published only in a limited way, either as conference proceedings or contributions to various Festschriften, and as such he wanted to enable them to reach a wider readership than they had originally. He described this collection as his ‘dernières pensées’.

The essays encompass a wide range of topics, from reflections upon the successes, failures and lessons learned from the UNESCO International Campaign to Save the Monuments of Nubia in the 1960s, in which Bill was very much a leading figure and which he was uniquely positioned to critique, to discussions and criticisms of the theoretical framework of ‘New’ or ‘Processual Archaeology’ and its application of ‘scientific’ methods. Other papers included here are seminal works discussing the ideological concepts of typology and classification and their practical application to archaeological excavations, notably his own major excavations conducted at the large Nubian cityscapes of Meinarti, Kulubnarti and Qasr Ibrim, and the ceramic kilns at Faras.

H 290 x W 205 mm

244 pages

29 figures, 23 plates, 1 map (colour throughout)

Published May 2022

Archaeopress Archaeology

ISBN

Hardback: 9781803272290

Digital: 9781803272306

Contents

Acknowledgements ;
List of Plates ;
List of Figures ;
Map ;
Editor’s Preface – Julie R. Anderson ;
Preface – Genesis of a Maverick ;

PERSPECTIVES ;
1. Three Questions for the Archaeologist (1992) ;
2. Science and Ethics in Rescue Archaeology (1984) ;
3. Three Perspectives on the Past: The Historian, The Art Historian, and The Prehistorian (1987) ;

STRATEGY ;
4. Strategy of Salvage Archaeology (1973) ;
5. Organizational Problems in International Salvage Archaeology (1968) ;
6. Ends and Means in Large-Scale Excavations: Meinarti, Kulubnarti, and Qasr Ibrim (1995) ;

CLASSIFICATION ;
7. Principles and Pragmatics of Pottery Classification: Some Lessons from Nubia (1975) ;
8. Archaeological Classification: Theory Versus Practice (1988) ;
9. Purpose and Scientific Concept Formation (1987) ;

DATING ;
10. From Pottery to History: The Dating of Archaeological Deposits by Ceramic Statistics (1989) ;
11. Times, Types, and Sites: The Interrelationship of Ceramic Chronology and Typology (1987) ;

CERAMICS ;
12. The Archaeologist and The Ceramologist (1981) ;
13. On the Argument from Ceramics to History: A Challenge Based on Evidence from Medieval Nubia (1979) ;

INTERPRETATION ;
14. On Migration and Diffusion as Rival Paradigms (1978) ;
15. Paradigms in Sudan Archaeology (1981) ;
16. The Archaeologist as Detective (1973)

 

Open Access Journal: Archaeological Textiles Newsletter - Archaeological Textiles Review

 [First posted in AWOL 7 March 2017, updated 29 April 2022]

Archaeological Textiles Newsletter - Archaeological Textiles Review
The ATN ISSN is 0169-7331 
The ATR ISSN is 2245-7135

In 2008, The Centre for Textile Research in Copenhagen (CTR) took over the publication of ATN/ATR.

In 2012 the Archaeological Textiles Newsletter changed its name to Archaeological Textiles Review and became a once-yearly journal.

Current Issue

ATR 63*

 

 

Editorial

 

Articles

 

Textile fibres from the Caleta Vitor Archaeological Complex, northern Chile

Tracy Martens

 

Problems with Greek clothing terminology

Quentin Richard

 

Nubian textile features: wool fragments from Hisn al-Bab and a tunic from Fag el-Gamus, Egypt

Anne Kwaspen

 

Raincoats or riches? Contextualising vararfeldir through multi-perspective experiments

Julia Hopkin

 

Golden textiles from Gokstad

Marianne Vedeler

 

Viking Age textiles and tapestries: drawings by Miranda Bødtker

Lise Bender Jørgensen, Dagfinn Moe and Hana Lukesova

 

The textile bog find from Vong in Denmark

Ulla Mannering, Charlotte Rimstad and Irene Skals

 

Reconstructions revived: a handweaver’s personal perspective

Anna Nørgård

 

Margrethe Hald: the quest for the tubular loom

Ulrikka Mokdad and Morten Grymer-Hansen

 

Projects

 

EgYarn: Unravelling the thread: textile production in New Kingdom Egypt

Chiara Spinazzi-Lucchesi

 

Knowledge sharing: a newly found 2,700-year-old tablet-woven band from Hallstatt, Austria

Karina Grömer, Silvia Ungerechts and Hans Reschreiter

 

Unravelling Nubian funerary practices: textiles and body wrappings in ancient Sudan

Elsa Yvanez

 

Metallic idiophones 800 BCE to 800 CE in Central Europe: their function and acoustic influence in daily life

Karina Grömer, Kayleigh Saunderson and Beate Maria Pomberger

 

RECONTEXT: Reconstructing the history of Egyptian textiles from the first millennium CE at the National Museum of Denmark

Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert

 

Unwrapping the Galloway Hoard

Susanna Harris and Martin Goldberg

 

Fashioning the Viking Age: status after the first three years

Ulla Mannering

 

All the goods of the earth: making and marketing in the pre-Mongol marketplace

Corinne Mühlemann

 

Conferences

 

THEFBO: the significance of archaeological textiles

Mila Andonova and Karina Grömer

 

Textiles and Seals: carving out a new research field and weaving data together

Marie Louise Nosch

 

Funerary Textiles in Situ: an interdisciplinary workshop

Magdalena M Wozniak

 

The Association of Dress Historians’ Annual New Research Conference

Lena Larsson Lovén

 

Old Textiles – More Possibilities: the Centre for Textile Research‘s 15th anniversary conference

Elsa Yvanez

 

The textile dimension: textile finds in archaeology

Petra Linscheid and Sabine Schrenk

 

North European Symposium for Archaeological Textiles

Erika Ruhl and Sanna Lipkin

 

Resources: New Books and News

 

 


 

Open Access Journal: Origini : prehistory and protohistory of ancient civilizations = preistoria e protostoria delle civiltà antiche

Issue, Origini : prehistory and protohistory of ancient civilizations = preistoria e protostoria delle civiltà antiche : XLV, 2021, Edizioni Quasar

See AWOL's full List of Open Access Journals in Ancient Studies

Thursday, April 28, 2022

Sun Temples Project

https://www.suntemplesproject.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/cropped-SUN-1-Logo-3.png

The “Sun Temples Project” is an interdisciplinary endeavor that aims at deepening our knowledge of a so far unparalleled category of royal monuments in ancient Egyptian history, the so-called “sun temples” of the Fifth Dynasty (mid-Third Millennium BC).

Solar cult was a characteristic features of ancient Egyptian history ever since its beginning. Only in the Fifth Dynasty, however, this cult took over any other forms of royal patronaged cults, stimulating the creation of a new type of building, which will have dramatic consequences in the architecture and religion of the ages to come.

Despite their importance, our knowledge of Sun Temples is still blurred, especially when we consider that out of the 6 temples known from historical sources, only 2 have been unearthed so far. Out of them, only one – the sun temple of Niuserra, located in the site of Abu Ghurab, c. 20 km south of modern-day Cairo – is still preserved enough today to give us an idea of how these temples should look like.

Massimiliano Nuzzolo (2021), “Abu Ghurab”, in: M. Barta, V. Bruna (eds.), The Pyramid Fields of Ancient Egypt: A Satellite Atlas, Prague: Charles University, pp. 60-69. IBSN: 987-80-7671-053-5

Massimiliano Nuzzolo (2021), “The Palermo Stone and Its Associated Fragments: New Discoveries on the Oldest Royal Annals of Ancient Egypt”, in: The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 107, 2021, pp. 57-78. ISSN: 0307-5133

Massimiliano Nuzzolo (2021), “The Appearance of Osiris: a case of royal patronage or a bottom-up process?”, in: M. Franci, S. Ikram, I. Morfini (eds.),Re-Thinking Osiris. Proceedings of the International Conference Florence, Italy, 26-27 March 2019, Rome: Arbor Sapientiae 2021, pp. 111-146. ISBN: 978-88-94820-43-0.

Massimiliano Nuzzolo et alii (2020), “Sun Temple of Niuserra in Abu Ghurab: Report of the Season 2018-2019”, in: Newsletter Centro Interdipartimentale di Servizi per l’Archeologia 11, Napoli: Università di Napoli L’Orientale, pp. 269–310. ISSN 2036-6353.

Massimiliano Nuzzolo (2020), La pierre de Palerme et les fragments associés. Nouvelles découvertes sur les plus anciennes annales royales égyptiennes, in: Bulletin de la Société française d’égyptologie 202 (Octobre 2019 – février 2020), pp. 55-78. ISSN : 0037-9379.

Massimiliano Nuzzolo (2020), The Unpublished False Door of Iti in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo (CG 57192): The First Mention of Osiris?, in: J. Kamrin, M. Barta, S. Ikram, M. Lehner, M. Megahed (eds.), Guardian of Ancient Egypt. Studies in Honor of Zahi Hawass, Prague: Charles University, pp. 1077-1103. ISBN: 978-80-7308-980-1.

 

 

Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology publications accessible on-line

Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology publications accessible on-line
The Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology produces quality books and periodicals that record the results of archaeological excavation and conservation projects carried out by the Centre’s expeditions — mainly in Egypt and Sudan, but also in Syria, Lebanon, Cyprus, Kuwait and Iran. All submitted publications are subjected to preliminary qualifying evaluation by members of the Editorial Board and the International Advisory Board, and to double-blind reviewing procedures.