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This is an account of the rise and fall of the civilization in the Nile Valley, covering the first human settlement (c 120,000 BC) to its conquest by Alexander the Great in 333 BC.
This is the first history of ancient Egypt for 25 years
Brings together the very latest textual and archaeological evidence
The index, bibliography and appendices make this an invaluable reference tool
New guide to further reading in English especially commissioned for the paperback edition
Bibliografia Glosariusz/słownik Wydanie ilustrowane
"Very up–to–date . . . The index, the illustrations, the bibliography and the tables make this book an excellent reference tool."
La Croix.
"The range of recent revisions, particularly chronological, and the ever increasing amount of archaeological material demanded a new synthesis. Here it is, both lively and well written." Le Quotidien de Paris.
List of Illustrations.
Introduction.
Part I: The Formative Period:.
1. From Prehistory to History.
2. Religion and History.
3. The Thinite Period.
Part II: The Classical Age:.
4. The Old Kingdom.
5. Funerary Ideas.
6. The Struggle for Power.
7. The Middle Kingdom.
8. The Invasion.
Part III: The Empire:.
9. The Tuthmosids.
10. Akhenaten.
11. The Ramessid Period.
12. The Domain of Amun.
Part IV: The Final Phase: .
13. The Third Intermediate Period.
14. Nubians and Saites.
15. Persians and Greeks.
Conclusion.
Appendix.
Glossary.
Bibliography.
Guide to Further Reading by Kent R. Weekes.
Index.
Nicolas Grimal is Professor of Egyptology at the University of Paris, Sorbonne.
Ian Shaw is Lecturer in Egyptian Archaeology at the University of Liverpool.
This is an account of the rise and fall of the civilization in the Nile Valley, covering the first human settlement (c. 120,000 BC) to its conquest by Alexander the Great in 333 BC. It is the first reign–by–reign history of ancient Egypt to be published since Sir Alan Gardiner′s
Egypt of the Pharaohs (1961) and takes full account of the many archaeological, scientific and linguistic discoveries of the last three decades. The author blends archaeological and textual evidence into a lucid and vivid narrative and, by quoting extensively from contemporary sources, such as the funerary autobiographies of individuals and the official accounts of military campaigns, adds a strong sense of atmosphere to the unfolding of events.
Nicolas Grimal recounts the political, cultural and economic history of the Egyptians within the framework of an intricate and well–argued chronology. At a time when the vast accumulation of information from ancient Egypt is becoming almost too diverse for a single mind to encompass, he has managed to transform – without disguising current gaps in knowledge – disparate sources of evidence and the findings of many different disciplines into a coherent historical sequence. This is in itself a considerable achievement: it has also provided the means of presenting one of the most scholarly and at the same time most readable histories ever written of a civilization whose mysteries and achievements have fascinated the West for well over two millennia.
For the paperback edition a section of further reading in English has been prepared by Kent R. Weekes, Professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo.