The article presents a fragment of the cornice from the Ptolemaic Portico of the Hatshepsut temple at Deir el-Bahari discovered in 2021 in the fill of the Middle Kingdom tomb MMA 28. The fragment carries remnants of two dipinti in red ochre, of which one is illegible and the other preserves vestiges of the three first lines of the Greek inscription I. Deir el-Bahari 196. They show that the inscription was a proskynema (act of adoration) addressed to Amenothes (Greek for Amenhotep son of Hapu). The name of the author cannot be read with certainty (perhaps Pe[---]); the text also mentions a certain Menodoros, who may be the father of the protagonist of the inscription or another man. In an appendix, a fragment of another text in Greek, probab...
The article is devoted to the investigation of the Achaemenid trilingual inscription, having been pu...
Two Phoenician inscriptions are known from tomb no. V in the royal necropolis of Byblos: one on a wa...
Lintel of a carved limestone doorways at the Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, Deir el Bahari, Lu...
The subject of the present paper are two hitherto unpublished hieratic dipinti from the Birth Portic...
The representations of all the gods on the western wall of the Portico of Obelisks in Hatshepsut’s t...
This paper presents a group of nine fragmentarily preserved dipinti from the Temple of Thuthmose III...
This article presents the discovery of two fragmentary inscriptions which demonstrate the existence ...
The Main Sanctuary of Amun-Ra in the Temple of Hatshepsut in Deir el-Bahari has been studied repeate...
This publication unveils a set of fifteen fragmented sandstone blocks currently located in the court...
The temple of queen Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari was a terraced ancient Egyptian temple of millions ...
Two broken limestone slabs, stored in the Luxor temple magazine and carefully documented by the team...
Artykuł poświęcony jest kapitelom hathoryckim pochodzącym z kaplicy Hathor świątyni Dżeser achet wzn...
This publication unveils a set of fifteen fragmented sandstone blocks currently located in the cour...
This article introduces, two ancient Hellenic tomb inscriptions from the Roman imperial period, one ...
The eastern temple of Karnak known as “Temple of Amun-Ra-Who-Hears-Prayers” was partly built and ent...
The article is devoted to the investigation of the Achaemenid trilingual inscription, having been pu...
Two Phoenician inscriptions are known from tomb no. V in the royal necropolis of Byblos: one on a wa...
Lintel of a carved limestone doorways at the Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, Deir el Bahari, Lu...
The subject of the present paper are two hitherto unpublished hieratic dipinti from the Birth Portic...
The representations of all the gods on the western wall of the Portico of Obelisks in Hatshepsut’s t...
This paper presents a group of nine fragmentarily preserved dipinti from the Temple of Thuthmose III...
This article presents the discovery of two fragmentary inscriptions which demonstrate the existence ...
The Main Sanctuary of Amun-Ra in the Temple of Hatshepsut in Deir el-Bahari has been studied repeate...
This publication unveils a set of fifteen fragmented sandstone blocks currently located in the court...
The temple of queen Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari was a terraced ancient Egyptian temple of millions ...
Two broken limestone slabs, stored in the Luxor temple magazine and carefully documented by the team...
Artykuł poświęcony jest kapitelom hathoryckim pochodzącym z kaplicy Hathor świątyni Dżeser achet wzn...
This publication unveils a set of fifteen fragmented sandstone blocks currently located in the cour...
This article introduces, two ancient Hellenic tomb inscriptions from the Roman imperial period, one ...
The eastern temple of Karnak known as “Temple of Amun-Ra-Who-Hears-Prayers” was partly built and ent...
The article is devoted to the investigation of the Achaemenid trilingual inscription, having been pu...
Two Phoenician inscriptions are known from tomb no. V in the royal necropolis of Byblos: one on a wa...
Lintel of a carved limestone doorways at the Mortuary Temple of Queen Hatshepsut, Deir el Bahari, Lu...