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Tomb of the Overseer of the Treasury Maya, Saqqara, by Kate Gingell


  Editor’s Note: The team resp0nsible for the excavation and restoration of the tomb have provided an excellent summary of both Maya and his tomb on the  Saqqara.nl website.   In the administration of Tutankhamen, Maya was a contemporary of the General Horemheb, who later became Pharaoh, and both were involved in stabilising Egypt following the  [more…]

Tomb of Horemheb, Saqqara, by Kate Gingell


    Editor’s Note We are most grateful to Kate Gingell for supplying us with a short series of photographs that she took at Saqqara. Her photos from the tomb of Horemheb are lovely.  Horemheb was an important army general of the 18th Dynasty who became the last pharaoh of that dynasty, following Tutankhamen and  [more…]

Serabit el-Khadim by Francis Lankester


      Editor’s note: Serabit el-Khadim, in south-west Sinai, was a turquoise and copper mine exploited from the Predynastic period onwards.  Most of the surviving remains, including mining shafts and tunnels, inscriptions carved into the surrounding rocks, stelae and a temple complex date to the Middle and New Kingdoms. The main deity of the  [more…]

Question about healthcare facilities

We’ve had a query from andrea@hydeinc, who works in healthcare facility design and would like to know if any healtchare facilities have been identified from Ancient Egypt and how they wre laid out. She is particularly interested in floor plans and what sort of access to daylight and water were provided, with a view to  [more…]

Painted Vessel 3

Exhibition spotlight: ‘Before the Pyramids’ at the Oriental Institute

The following short article provides a virtual tour of some of the items on show in the recent exhibition from the Oriental Institute Museum’s 2011 exhibit, Before the Pyramids: The Origins of Egyptian Civilization, at the University of Chicago.  [more…]

Tombs at Djanet (Tanis) by Francis Lankester


    A second set of photographs by Francis Lankester from Djanet, this time capturing the tombs at the site.   [more…]

Sarcophagus of Ni Hms Bastet in KV64

Tomb K64 in the Valley of the Kings – The Story as it Broke

This brief article was written on 15th January when the discovery of Tomb KV64 in the Valley of the Kings was formally announced.  Please refer to the Addendum of 18th January for the latest news, which also corrects some of the orginal report. The tomb was announced in Luxor by Mansour Boraik in Luxor and  [more…]

Djanet (Tanis) by Francis Lankester


  Editor’s Comment: Our thanks to Francis, who wrote the article Who Is King Scorpion?, for the above set of photographs of Djanet ( – hold the cursor over the hieroglyphs to view them) , more commonly known by its Greek name Tanis. Located in the eastern Delta, Tanis was particularly important during the Third  [more…]

Papyrus Salt 124, BM 10055. Copyright of the British Museum, London.

Paneb – “The All Round Bad Guy”

In Joyce Tyldesley’s Judgment of the Pharaohs, Tyldesley makes several references to an individual at Deir el-Medineh named Paneb, whom she describes evocatively as “the all round bad guy” (2000, p.127). In this short article, I have brought together some of the misdemeanours outlined in a letter known as Papyrus Salt 124 (BM 10055) for a closer look at this colourful character.  [more…]

In the above figure, image d depicts Kharakhamun 'brother' with grid system

Lecture Review: Dancers, Donkeys, and Dirt: New Discoveries from the Time of the Black Pharaohs from South Asasif, Egypt

Dr Pischikova recently gave a fascinating lecture on the rediscovered Twenty-fifth Dynasty early Kushite tomb of Karakhamun (TT 223) in the South Asasif necropolis, situated in Luxor’s West Bank. The lecture took place on 24th November 2011 in the Friends of the Egypt Centre in Swansea, south Wales (U.K.). [more…]

Help researching Ankhesenamum

I have been an armchair egyptologist for over 50 years. I have two main interests in Egyptology; Ankhesenamum and Tutmania. As a psychologist, I have long been interested in the impact of the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun as a social and cultural phenomenon and as an aspect of popular culture to the present  [more…]

Valley of the Kings from the Theban Hills by Heidi Kontkanen


A set of photographs of the Valley of the Kings near Luxor taken in December 2011.  These days there is a photography ban in the Valley of the Kings so these were taken from the Theban Hills looking down into the valley.  There is a second set to follow in a couple of weeks. There  [more…]

A very happy New Year

We hope you have enjoyed Egyptological throughout 2011. Why not celebrate the New Year by writing an article for Egyptological?  Add it to your New Years Resolution list :-) Wishing you all the best for 2012.   Andrea and Kate   [more…]