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Decoding Signs of Identity

Egyptian Workmen's Marks in Archaeological, Historical, Comparative and Theoretical Perspective
ID 344982
Slug decoding-signs-of-identity
Contributors
Annotation
Description <p><em>Decoding Signs of Identity</em> is the volume of proceedings resulting from the symposium with the same name and held in Leiden, 13-15 December 2013, in the framework of the NWO research project ‘Symbolizing Identity: Identity marks and their relation to writing in New Kingdom Egypt’. The aim of the project, and indeed of the symposium, was to investigate identity marks of Ancient Egyptian workmen, both in a specialist, in-depth manner, and in a more general, comparative perspective. The reader will recognise both of these approaches in the present collection of papers. In the course of its three sections, the topic is narrowed down from general considerations and non-Egyptian cases, to various sorts of Ancient Egyptian identity marks, and finally to the specific marking system of the royal necropolis workforce of the Egyptian New Kingdom, which was the core material of the NWO project. This volume can be considered a follow-up to <em>Pictograms or Pseudo Script?</em> (EU XXV, 2009), and testifies to the continuing scholarly interest in systems of identity marks, both in Egyptology and outside.</p>
Genres
Subjects
683 Oudheid (tot 500) NUR
NSTC
Publisher Peeters
Imprint
Language eng
Page count 218
Duration
Publication date first 2018-12-19
Publication date latest 2018-12-19
Cover URL
Editions
  • ISBN: 9789042937055 (BC)

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