Marilina Betrò: Tombs in transition: MIDAN.05 and windows in the early Eighteenth Dynasty Anna Consonni: Precious finds from an early Middle Kingdom tomb in Thebes: reconstructing connections between the dead and their goods John Darnell, Colleen Darnell: Umm-Mawagir in Kharga Oasis: an Industrial Landscape of the Late Middle Kingdom/Second Intermediate Period Vivian Davies: The tomb of a Governor of Elkab of the Second Intermediate Period Marleen De Meyer: An Isolated Middle Kingdom Tomb At Dayr Al-Barsha Nathalie Favry: The Transmission of Offices in The Middle Kingdom Wolfram Grajetzki Gianluca Miniaci: The stela of the Thirteenth Dynasty treasurer Senebsumai Karin Kopetzky: Some Remarks on the Relations between Egypt and the Levant during the late Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period Ingrid Melandri: Female Burials in the Funerary Complexes of the Twelfth Dynasty: an Architectonic Approach Stephen Quirke: Diachronic questions of form and function: falcon-head utensils in Middle Kingdom contexts Mohammed Gamal Rashed: The Egg is a metaphor for Isis: a Coffin Text Imagery Gloria Rosati: ‘Writing-Board Stelae’ with Sokar-Formula: Preliminary Account Ashraf Senussi, Said Abd Alhafeez Abd Allah Kheder: Two loose blocks from Hawara of Sobek-Hotep Julien Siesse: An unpublished Scarab of Queen Tjan (Thirteenth Dynasty) from the Louvre Museum (AF 6755) Pascal Vernus: Literary exploitation of a craftman’s device: the sandal-maker biting leather (Teaching of Chety, pSallier VIII, 12). When philology, iconography and archaeology overlap Fred Vink: Boundaries of Protection: Function and Significance of the Framing (Lines) on Middle Kingdom Apotropaia, in particular Magic Wands Paul Whelan On the Context and Conception of Two ‘Trademark’ Styles from Late Middle Kingdom Abydos
Gianluca Miniaci is Associate Professor in Egyptology at the University of Pisa, Honorary Researcher at the Institute of Archaeology, UCL – London and Chercheur associé at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Paris. He is currently co-director of the archaeological mission at Zawyet Sultan (Menya, Egypt) and principal investigator for the project PROCESS (fingerprints on clay figurines). He is author of several volumes, including Rishi Coffins (2011), The Middle Kingdom Ramesseum Papyri Tomb (2021) and The Treasure of the Egyptian Queen Ahhotep (2022) and more than 100 scientific articles. Wolfram Grajetzki studied Egyptology from 1982 to 1998 at the Free University and Humboldt University in Berlin, earning his PhD in 1998. He has worked on a range of projects and excavations in Egypt and Pakistan. He has been living in the UK since 2000 and is a freelance honorary research assistant at the Institute of Archaeology at UCL and has published several books.
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