Enormous thanks to @theAliceRoberts and @PaulxCrompton for the opportunity to contribute to Roman Empire by Train (Channel 4) - arranging for the trip to Etruscan site at San Giuliano and to my surprise invited to co-present!
tinyurl.com/4x5jm6kww.sgarp.org
The Grand Egyptian Museum completely opens today -30,000 objects, many that haven’t been on display before including Tutankhamun’s full tomb! Grateful to be listening to the AUC discussion about what this means for Egyptology!
British tin in Levantine bronze? This is a tremendously exciting study suggesting an interconnected Middle Bronze Age across massive distances!! bit.ly/3YvaRpW
There has been a lot of debate over who Egtved Girl was, as isotope analysis indicates they travelled regularly. Were they a foreign bride, an itinerant ritual specialist, or perhaps a wool trader? We may never know for sure.
🆓 doi.org/10.15184/aqy.2024.99
Bronze Age clothing (copy) as worn by ‘Egtved Girl’ some 3,400 years ago.
National Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen en.natmus.dk/historical-know…
📷 by me
#Archaeology
ALT My photo shows a short-sleeved brown woollen tunic top and a brown woollen skirt made of cords which hang down from a narrow woven band like a fringe. It is a copy of the costume worn by so-called ‘Egtved Girl’, a 16-18 year old young woman whose well-preserved oak-coffin grave, dated 1370 BC, was excavated in 1921. The original skirt was wrapped twice around the girl’s waist and measures 38 cm in length. On display at the National Museum of Denmark in Copenhagen
Professor Lord Colin Renfrew, former Disney Professor of Archaeology and founding Director of the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, has sadly died aged 87.
Read the full tribute in honour of Colin, who will be deeply missed.
arch.cam.ac.uk/news/professo…
Fantastic Day 1 at Bodies of Knowledge conference! Detailed field diaries of Reis Sayyid Ahmed Sayyid Diraz reveal his archaeological knowledge that informed Reisner at Giza and other sites. universiteitleiden.nl/en/nvi…
Today, cats are favoured family pets, proudly living lives of luxury within many of our homes. And, if we look back to the distant past, it might initially seem that the ancient Egyptians felt the same way. However, Egyptologist @EgyptMcr suggests that's not quite the case.
Very intriguing greywacke ‘libation dish’ at the MET today - combination of ankh and ka signs - specified as 1st Dynasty but no provenance… and ‘libation’?? (MET 19.2.16)
Walking through streets of the Nubian village of Elephantine on a hot sunny day. Some of the houses are still built using mudbricks like in ancient Egypt and the streets are not wider. This street level view is entirely missing in archaeological publications. #streetlife#egypt
We’re back in the 4th millennium BCE for our chat this month with the very relatable Chris Fowler @ArchaeologyNCL on biological & social kin systems indicated by aDNA from skeletal remains at Hazelton North chambered tomb in the Cotswolds! @HCAatEdinburghbit.ly/3vjLkEC