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Bestseller
BestsellerE-book
Author Price, Campbell.

Title Mummies, magic and medicine in ancient Egypt: Multidisciplinary essays for Rosalie David.

Publication Info. [Place of publication not identified] : Oxford University Press USA : Manchester University Press, 2016.

Item Status

Description 1 online resource
Physical Medium polychrome
Description text file
Contents Cover; Mummies, magic and medicine in ancient Egypt; Contents; List of figures ; List of plates ; List of tables ; Notes on contributors ; Preface ; Rosalie David: a biographical sketch: Joyce Tyldesley ; My first meeting with Rosalie David: Kay Hinckley ; I: Pharaonic sacred landscapes; 1. Go west: on the ancient means of approach to the Saqqara Necropolis: Aidan Dodson; 2. The Sacred Animal Necropolis at North Saqqara: narrative of a ritual landscape: Paul T. Nicholson; 3. The Manchester 'funeral' ostracon: a sketch of a funerary ritual: Peter Robinson.
4. The tomb of the 'Two Brothers' revisited: Steven Snape5. A review of the monuments of Unnefer, High Priest of Osiris at Abydos in the reign of Ramesses II: Angela P. Thomas; 6. Thoughts on Seth the con-man: Philip J. Turner; 7. A Psamtek ushabti and a granite block from Sais (Sa el-Hager): Penelope Wilson; II: Magico-medical practices in ancient Egypt; 8. A most uncommon amulet: Carol Andrews; 9. The sting of the scorpion: Mark Collier; 10. Magico-medical aspects of the mythology of Osiris: Essam El Saeed.
11. Trauma care, surgery and remedies in ancient Egypt: a reassessment: Roger Forshaw12. One and the same? An investigation into the connection between veterinary and medical practice in ancient Egypt: Conni Lord; 13. Bread and beer in ancient Egyptian medicine: Ryan Metcalfe; 14. On the function of 'healing' statues: Campbell Price; 15. Writings for good health in social context: Middle and New Kingdom comparisons: Stephen Quirke; 16. Schistosomiasis, ancient and modern: the application of scientific techniques to diagnose the disease: Patricia Rutherford.
17. An unusual funerary figurine of the early 18th Dynasty: John H. TaylorIII: Understanding Egyptian mummies; 18. The biology of ancient Egyptians and Nubians: Don Brothwell; 19. Further thoughts on Tutankhamun's death and embalming: Robert Connolly and Glenn Godenho; 20. Proving Herodotus and Diodorus? Headspace analysis of 'eau de mummy' using gas chromatography mass spectrometry: David Counsell; 21. Science in Egyptology: the scientific study of Egyptian mummies, initial phase, 1973-79: Alan Curry; 22. Slices of mummy: a thin perspective: John Denton.
23. Life and death in the desert: a bioarchaeological study of human remains from the Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt: Tosha L. Dupras, Lana J. Williams, Sandra M. Wheeler and Peter G. Sheldrick24. An investigation into the evidence of age-related osteoporosis in three Egyptian mummies: Mervyn Harris; 25. The International Ancient Egyptian Mummy Tissue Bank: Patricia Lambert-Zazulak; 26. The enigma of the Red Shroud mummies: Robert D. Loynes; 27. The evolution of imaging ancient Egyptian animal mummies at the University of Manchester, 1972-2014: Lidija M. McKnight and Stephanie Atherton-Woolham.
Summary Combining approaches to ancient Egyptian religious expression, medical practice and the modern scientific study of human and material remains from Egypt and Sudan, this volume celebrates the multidisciplinary career of Professor Rosalie David OBE. The UK's first female Professor in Egyptology, Rosalie David's pioneering work at the University of Manchester on Egyptian mummies, magic and medicine has been of international importance. This volume presents research by a number of leading experts in their fields: recent archaeological fieldwork, new research on Egyptian human remains and unpublished museum objects along with reassessments of ancient Egyptian texts concerned with healing and the study of technology through experimental archaeology. Contributors try to answer some of Egyptology's most enduring questions - How did Tutankhamun die? How were the Pyramids built? How were mummies made? - along with less well-known puzzles. Rather than address these areas separately, the volume adopts the so-called 'Manchester method' instigated by Rosalie David and attempts to integrate perspectives from both traditional Egyptology and scientific analytical techniques. Much of this research has never appeared in print before, particularly that resulting from the Manchester Egyptian Mummy Project, set up in the 1970s. The resulting overview gives a good history of the discipline, illustrating how Egyptology has developed over the last forty years, and how many of the same big questions still remain. This book will be of use to researchers and students of archaeology or related disciplines with an interest in multidisciplinary approaches to understanding life and death in ancient Egypt and Sudan.
Local Note eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America
Subject Egyptology.
Egyptology.
Egypt -- History -- To 332 B.C.
Egypt.
History.
Chronological Term To 332 B.C
Subject Egypt, Ancient.
Chronological Term To 332 B.C.
Genre/Form Electronic books.
History.
Festschrift.
Festschrift.
Added Author Forshaw, Roger.
Chamberlain, Anw.
Nicholson, Paul.
ISBN 9781784997502 (electronic book)
1784997501 (electronic book)