Whispers from the desert. Predynastic rock art in wadi Abu Subeira (Aswan, Eastern desert, Egypt) - Eastern concession

Par : Gwenola Graff
  • Réservation en ligne avec paiement en magasin :
    • Indisponible pour réserver et payer en magasin
  • Nombre de pages136
  • PrésentationBroché
  • FormatGrand Format
  • Poids0.416 kg
  • Dimensions19,8 cm × 26,0 cm × 0,9 cm
  • ISBN979-10-320-0536-1
  • EAN9791032005361
  • Date de parution04/12/2024
  • CollectionPréhistoires de la Méditerrané
  • ÉditeurPU de Provence
  • AuteurAdel Kelany
  • AuteurFred Hardtke
  • AuteurMaxence Bailly

Résumé

This volume is the first of a collection of four presenting the results of research cured out jointly by tao teams (French and Egyptian) in a dry valley situated in Egypt's Eastern desert over the last fifteen years : The wadi Abu Subeira, which opens onto the Nile valley some fifteen kilometers north of Aswan. The present study focuses more specifically on the discoveries of rock-art representations attributable to the Predynastic period, in the 4th millennium.
Nearly a thousand previously unpublished panels, comprising some twenty thousand engravings, are made accessible to the reader, thus renewing our knowledge of prehistoric Egyptian imagery and for the first time, they are integrated into a landscape perspective, within a systematically studied area of about sixty square kilometers. This enormous volume of hitherto unpublished documents allows us to enrich our knowledge of predynastic Egypt, and to reconsider the cultural, societal and environmental issues of that period In the end it opens up new ; unexpected horizons.
Indeed, by considering the establishment of the Pharaonic phenomenon and its local variations from territories as marginal as the wadi Abu Subeira, this study provides a new and broader perspective.
This volume is the first of a collection of four presenting the results of research cured out jointly by tao teams (French and Egyptian) in a dry valley situated in Egypt's Eastern desert over the last fifteen years : The wadi Abu Subeira, which opens onto the Nile valley some fifteen kilometers north of Aswan. The present study focuses more specifically on the discoveries of rock-art representations attributable to the Predynastic period, in the 4th millennium.
Nearly a thousand previously unpublished panels, comprising some twenty thousand engravings, are made accessible to the reader, thus renewing our knowledge of prehistoric Egyptian imagery and for the first time, they are integrated into a landscape perspective, within a systematically studied area of about sixty square kilometers. This enormous volume of hitherto unpublished documents allows us to enrich our knowledge of predynastic Egypt, and to reconsider the cultural, societal and environmental issues of that period In the end it opens up new ; unexpected horizons.
Indeed, by considering the establishment of the Pharaonic phenomenon and its local variations from territories as marginal as the wadi Abu Subeira, this study provides a new and broader perspective.