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More About This Title A Companion to Ancient Egypt
- English
English
- Provides the very latest and, where relevant, well-illustrated accounts of the major aspects of Egypt?s ancient history and culture
- Covers a broad scope of topics including physical context, history, economic and social mechanisms, language, literature, and the visual arts
- Delivered in a highly readable style with students and scholars of both Egyptology and Graeco-Roman studies in mind
- Provides a chronological table at the start of each volume to help readers orient chapters within the wider historical context
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Alan B. Lloyd is Professor Emeritus in the Department of History and Classics at Swansea University and President of the Egypt Exploration Society. He is the author of many publications on Egyptological and Classical subjects, including a three-volume commentary on Herodotus Book II (1975 – 1985).
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List of Illustrations ix
Notes on Contributors xix
Preface xxvi
Acknowledgments xxviii
List of Abbreviations xxix
Chronology xxxvii
Maps xlix
PART I The Land of Egypt 1
1 The Physical Context of Ancient Egypt 3
Sarah Parcak
PART II Historical Narratives 23
2 Prehistory 25
E. Christiana Koehler
3 The Early Dynastic Period 48
Toby Wilkinson
4 The Old Kingdom 63
Michel Baud
5 The First Intermediate Period and the Middle Kingdom 81
Harco Willems
6 The Second Intermediate Period and the New Kingdom 101
Ludwig D. Morenz and Lutz Popko
7 Libyans and Nubians 120
Christopher Naunton
8 Saites and Persians (664–332) 140
Olivier Perdu
9 The Ptolemaic Period 159
Katelijn Vandorpe
10 The Roman Period 180
Livia Capponi
PART III State and Economic Structures 199
11 The Pharaoh and Pharaonic Office 201
Ellen F. Morris
12 Administration and Law: Pharaonic 218
Ben Haring
13 Administration and Law: Graeco-Roman 237
Jane Rowlandson
14 Priests and Temples: Pharaonic 255
Neal Spencer
15 Egyptian Temples and Priests: Graeco-Roman 274
Willy Clarysse
16 The Economy: Pharaonic 291
Christopher Eyre
17 The Economy: Graeco-Roman 309
Dennis Kehoe
18 Settlements – Distribution, Structure, Architecture: Pharaonic 326
Gregory D. Mumford
19 Settlements – Distribution, Structure, Architecture: Graeco-Roman 350
Paola Davoli
20 Transport in Ancient Egypt 370
Robert B. Partridge
21 Science and Technology: Pharaonic 390
Corinna Rossi
22 Science and Technology: Alexandrian 409
T. E. Rihll
23 Military Institutions and Warfare: Pharaonic 425
Anthony J. Spalinger
24 Military Institutions and Warfare: Graeco-Roman 446
Nigel Pollard
PART IV The Social Order 467
25 Social Structure and Daily Life: Pharaonic 469
Elizabeth Frood
26 Social Structure and Daily Life: Graeco-Roman 491
Eugene Cruz-Uribe
27 Religion in Society: Pharaonic 507
Kasia Szpakowska
28 Religion in Society: Graeco-Roman 526
David Frankfurter
Bibliography to parts I-IV 547
PART V Language and Literature 639
29 Language, Scripts, and Literacy 641
James P. Allen
30 Middle Kingdom Literature 663
Roland Enmarch
31 New Kingdom Literature 685
Gerald Moers
32 Late Period Literature 709
Kim Ryholt
33 Coptic and Coptic Literature 732
Leo Depuydt
34 Greek Literature in Egypt 755
A. D. Morrison
PART VI The Visual Arts 779
35 Temple Architecture and Decorative Systems 781
Penelope Wilson
36 Mortuary Architecture and Decorative Systems 804
Aidan Dodson
37 Early Dynastic Art and Iconography 826
Stan Hendrickx and Frank Forster
38 Old Kingdom Sculpture 853
Hourig Sourouzian
39 Sculpture of the Middle Kingdom 882
Rita E. Freed
40 New Kingdom Sculpture 913
Betsy M. Bryan
41 Late Period Sculpture 944
Edna R. Russmann
42 Ptolemaic and Romano-Egyptian Sculpture 970
Sally-Ann Ashton
43 Pharaonic Painting through the New Kingdom 990
Betsy M. Bryan
44 Mosaics and Painting in Graeco-Roman Egypt 1008
Helen Whitehouse
45 Egyptian Art of Late Antiquity 1032
Thelma K. Thomas
PART VII The Reception of Egyptian Culture 1065
46 The Reception of Pharaonic Egypt in Classical Antiquity 1067
Alan B. Lloyd
47 The Reception of Egypt in Europe 1086
Andrew Bednarski
48 The Reception of Pharaonic Egypt in Islamic Egypt 1109
Michael Cooperson
49 Ancient Egypt in the Museum: Concepts and Constructions 1129
Christina Riggs
Bibliography to parts V-VII 1154
Index 1213
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“Alan Lloyd’s edited two-volume Companion to ancient Egypt is a very impressive achievement . . . Wendrich and Lloyd have shown that text and reference books on ancient Egypt can be accessible and interesting and can serve to break traditional boundaries between Egyptology and the related disciplines of Archaeology and Classics, for which they should be heartily congratulated.” (Antiquity, 1 January 2013)
“The Companion is a well-edited, comprehensive approach to the history, culture, literature, and high art of ancient Egypt … In bringing together some of the best authors on their respective topics, Lloyd has assembled an in-depth complement to ancient Egyptian studies.” (Near Eastern Archaeology, 2012)
"The aim of this companion is to provide a competent and authoritative overview on ancient Egypt. This has been accomplished well. All articles are concise, with comprehensive summaries which reflect the most recent scholarship. The interested reader, student, or scholar will find a very helpful and satisfactory platform to start from with this companion. It will guide him or her to further reading and in their own research." (Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 14 October 2011)
“This Companion is a current, readable and, on occasion, illustrated account of all major events, aspects of history and culture in ancient Egypt….it has a broad appeal with an extensive range of subjects covered in differing depths allowing the reader to dip in for pleasure or study.” (Reference Reviews, 2011)
"For anyone interested in ancient Egypt . . . Recommended. All levels/libraries." (Choice, 1 March 2011)
"Part of a highly regarded series, this 2-volume work offers the student, interested general reader, and specialist a thorough and up-to-date resource on ancient Egypt. Written by curators and academics at museums and institutions in Egypt, Europe, and North America, the chapters present definitions and context in framing the current state of the question for each topic, with the time frame deliberately extended into the Greco-Roman period." (Book News, Inc., November 2010)