Egyptian Rock-cut Tombs (Shire Egyptology)

Egyptian Rock-cut Tombs (Shire Egyptology)

by Aidan Dodson (Author)

Synopsis

The rock-cut tomb was the most ubiquitous of Egyptian funerary monuments. This book surveys many of these varieties and traces their development. The New Kingdom royal tombs at Thebes and Amarna are described and capters are devoted to the groups of private tombs that date from the Old Kingdom onwards; the distinction is drawn between the tomb-chapels, decorated with the so-called 'scenes of daily life', and the associated burial chamters, in some casese cut a considerable distance away. The changes in decorative themes are explored, as are those in architecture and location. The book concludes with a brief look at the contruction of rock tombs, particularly in the context of workmen's village of Deir el-Medina, and their uncertain future.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 64
Edition: illustrated edition
Publisher: Shire Publications Ltd
Published: 31 May 1991

ISBN 10: 0747801282
ISBN 13: 9780747801283

Author Bio
Aidan Dodson became interested in Egyptian archaeology at an early age and studied the subject at Collingwood College, Durham, Liverpool University and Christ's College, Cambridge. He received his BA in 1985 and an MPhil in 1986, spending a period working on the Egyptian collections in the University of Cambridge's Fitzwilliam Museum and Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology.