The archaeological study of interregional trade provides the unique opportunity to reconstruct not only the foreign relations of cultures that are no longer in existence, but also how these relations evolved over extended periods of time. This study examines interactions between the Egyptian Naqada and Nubian A-Group cultures - located near the present day border of Egypt and The Sudan - between 3800 and 2900 B.C.E. Cemeteries from each group were compared looking at frequency of grave goods, burial architecture, the treatment of the deceased, and how these factors changed over time, in order to determine: (a) the degree of social complexity in Nubian A-Group society, and (b) the ability of trade to influence culture. The study found that w...
During the New Kingdom, Egypt began a military campaign to regain command over Nubia. Extremely succ...
Adopting a bottom-up approach, informed by theoretical discourse on borderlands and culture contact ...
In the early days of Egyptological scholarship, the regions of Upper and Lower Egypt were considered...
Through the analysis of multiple lines of archaeological evidence, this dissertation examines the wa...
From the 16th to 11th Century BC (in this thesis referred to as the Late Colonial Period), the ancie...
The ancient Nubian Classic Kerma culture remains understudied despite the excavation of the burials ...
Recent survey at the well known cemetery site of el-Amra in Upper Egypt has revealed surprising find...
Recent survey at the well known cemetery site of el-Amra in Upper Egypt has revealed surprising find...
An analysis of the Predynastic cemetery of el-Gerzeh: social identities and mortuary practices duri...
grantor: University of TorontoSince the discovery of the A-Group culture in 1907, much emp...
grantor: University of TorontoSince the discovery of the A-Group culture in 1907, much emp...
Several twentieth century archaeological expeditions to Lower Nubia recovered the skeletal and cultu...
During the Second Intermediate Period (ca. 1775-1550 BC) period, Egypt was politically and culturall...
One of the major problems of Nubian history is assessing the impact of Egyptian rule in Kush during ...
The societies occupying the Nile Delta in the 4th millennium BC were not cut off from the neighborin...
During the New Kingdom, Egypt began a military campaign to regain command over Nubia. Extremely succ...
Adopting a bottom-up approach, informed by theoretical discourse on borderlands and culture contact ...
In the early days of Egyptological scholarship, the regions of Upper and Lower Egypt were considered...
Through the analysis of multiple lines of archaeological evidence, this dissertation examines the wa...
From the 16th to 11th Century BC (in this thesis referred to as the Late Colonial Period), the ancie...
The ancient Nubian Classic Kerma culture remains understudied despite the excavation of the burials ...
Recent survey at the well known cemetery site of el-Amra in Upper Egypt has revealed surprising find...
Recent survey at the well known cemetery site of el-Amra in Upper Egypt has revealed surprising find...
An analysis of the Predynastic cemetery of el-Gerzeh: social identities and mortuary practices duri...
grantor: University of TorontoSince the discovery of the A-Group culture in 1907, much emp...
grantor: University of TorontoSince the discovery of the A-Group culture in 1907, much emp...
Several twentieth century archaeological expeditions to Lower Nubia recovered the skeletal and cultu...
During the Second Intermediate Period (ca. 1775-1550 BC) period, Egypt was politically and culturall...
One of the major problems of Nubian history is assessing the impact of Egyptian rule in Kush during ...
The societies occupying the Nile Delta in the 4th millennium BC were not cut off from the neighborin...
During the New Kingdom, Egypt began a military campaign to regain command over Nubia. Extremely succ...
Adopting a bottom-up approach, informed by theoretical discourse on borderlands and culture contact ...
In the early days of Egyptological scholarship, the regions of Upper and Lower Egypt were considered...