For long, the Cahiers Caribeens d'Egyptologie (CCdE) have been a joint yearly publication, in paper format, of the University of Antilles Guyane (France), of the University of Yaounde (Cameroon) and of the University of Barcelona (Spain). From 2010 to 2020, they were published by a research group named The Ankhu. Alain Anselin, founder of the ancient Egyptian lesson at the University of Antilles-Guyane, was the redactor in chief as well as the editor of this journal since its creation in 2000 until his death on May 2019. Below is the issue 21, published in 2016 ...
This collection of eleven articles, whose summaries or introductions are provided below, is available for purchase for €26.00 (shipping included).
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Issues published : CCdE 1 | CCdE 2 | CCdE 3/4 | CCdE 5 | CCdE 6 | CCdE 7/8 | CCdE 9 | CCdE 10 | CCdE 11 | CCdE 12 | CCdE 13/14 | CCdE 15 | CCdE 16 | CCdE 17 | CCdE 18 | CCdE 19/20 | CCdE 21 | CCdE 22 | CCdE 23 | CCdE 24/25
Le vingt et unième numéro des Cahiers Caribéens d'Egyptologie suit le fil de l'histoire, qui n'est jamais un long fleuve tranquille ...
The extraordinary personnality of Fred Wendorf made the members of the Combined Phrehistoric Expedition at the Western Desert call him "Desert's Lion" despite of the fact that there are no lions in the Western Desert in Egypt, as a matter of fact he is a Leo, So we were right !
Publishing of a distinguished Predynastic ostrich eggshell at the Egyptian Museum in Cairo under the number of temporary inventory N. 93. It was acquired among other repatriated ancient Egyptian artifacts from Australia in 2011 after they were investigated by Prof. N. Kanawati on the behalf of the SCA. The eggshell is incised with typical decorations that are well known from the pottery of Naqada I and II ...
En Egypte ancienne comme dans toutes les cultures humaines, les bestiaires et leurs iconographies ne représentent pas plus la faune, que les icônes végétales ou minérales le paysage. S'y condense le regard d'une société sur son propre univers. Ce qui est vrai du bestiaire et de l'iconographie vaut pour la langue, pour les langues où la faune trouve nom ...
The myth of the "Destruction of Mankind" is an Egyptian text first attested during the period of the New Kingdom. It has been described, from a narrative standpoint, as "one of the few coherent narrative accounts of the deeds of the gods of ancient Egypt" (Guilhou, 2010). The question of the synchrony of the Egyptian language used to write this text has generated several hypothesises ...
During my current work on the Egyptian Etymologial Word Catalogue (ongoing since summer 1994), I have identified a many new lexical correspondences between Egyptian and its vast Afro-Asiatics (Semito-Hamitic) kindred. I have been reporting these results in my papers "Aegyptio-Afrosiatica" since 1995. The numbering of the etymological entries has been continuous beginning from my very first report ...
The paper in hand deals with an Old Kingdom architrave, orginally found near Unis' Causeway, now kept in a government magazine at Saqqarah. It bears the number 41/2003 (also 801 excavations). It has been in storage at Saqqara for several decades, with no record of it ever having been exhibited ...
The two pieces studied in this paper are two false doors of King Amenemhat I (1985 - 1956 BC) that were found in his funerary complex at el-Lisht with the names and titles of the king on it. They shall be studied there as Document One and Document Two and are both currently on display in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. Document One is the limestone false door JdE 40485 and Document Two is the granite false door JdE 45086 and both have not been published before.
This article is concerned with Armana royal clothing, specifically the kilt, the bag-tunic and the robe of Amenhotep IV / Akhenaten, Nefertiti and the princesses, and sheds light through artistic description and analysis on any religious implications that their clothing may reveal. The Armana royal clothing was among the innovations of the Armana Age ...
The oldest depictions which have sometimes been considered as violent are the anthropomorphic figures on five Naqada I C-Ware tall bakers. As subtly observed by Wengrow & Baines, these human depictions are among the few filled with solid colours on C-Ware. Two elongated bottles are from Abydos U-415 and are interpreted by the excavators as victory scenes ...
Que ce soit dans les textes gravés sur les parois des temples et des tombeaux ou sous forme de restes d'offrandes matérielles, les Egyptiens de l'Antiquité ont laissé de nombreux témoignages de leur mode d'alimentation. Traditionnellement cultivés le long des rives du fleuve et sur les îles alluviales, l'oignon et l'ail y sont parmi les légumes les plus cuisinés, avec les fèves, pois chiches, lentilles, concombres, laitues, poireaux, lotus et papyrus ...
The title, Wn Pth, of high priest of the god Sopdu in Saft el-Henna area pr spd Oriental Delta, appeared in El-Sowwa, necropolis of the capital of the twentieth nome of Lower Egypt. The author studies the known attestations of the title ...
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