Beitrag: 1;2;3 oder 1-3 oder 1;2-7;8
 

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Ägyptologie Forum >> Architektur & Kunst


1) Karnak das Dorf
 Fritz am 01.02.2013 um 17:54:24

Hallo
gibt es eigentlich zu dem alten Dorf Karnak irgendwelche Informationen, Unterlagen, Bücher?
Ich meine hier nicht den Tempel sondern die alte Stadt die es um dem Karnak Tempel gegeben haben soll!
Danke für jede Info!!!!
Viele Grüße
Fritz


2) Re: Karnak das Dorf
 Iufaa am 03.02.2013 um 13:03:40

Ich würde mal bei Aigyptos mit den Stichworten: Karnak, Siedlungsarchäologie, -geschichte, etc. suchen.

Gruss

> Antwort auf Beitrag vom: 01.02.2013 um 17:54:24


3) Re: Karnak das Dorf
 Fritz am 03.02.2013 um 13:19:17

Hallo Lutz,
vielen Dank.
Jetzt muß ich mal sehen wie man da etwas ausleihen kann.
Gruß
Fritz

> Antwort auf Beitrag vom: 03.02.2013 um 13:03:40


4) Re: Karnak das Dorf
 Lutz am 03.02.2013 um 13:46:33

Der Typ heisst Karl...

Eine eher seltene Gelegenheit für Einblicke in die Siedlungsgeschichte (das meisste dürfte für immer unzugänglich unter der modernen Bebauung bzw. unter dem Karnak-Tempel selbst begraben liegen) bot sich dem "Akhenaten Temple Project". Siehe dazu u.a. ...

REDFORD / OREL / SHUBERT : East Karnak Excavations, 1987-1989. - In: JARCE 28. - 1991. - S. 75 - 106., Fig., Pl., Table :

Zitat:
AEB 91/21192 : The 13th-15th seasons of excavation at East Karnak by the Akhenaten Temple Project, undertaken from 1987 to 1989, were governed in their planning and execution by two goals: 1) to lay bare the northern sector of the first court of the Gm-pA-itn temple and to uncover its north wall; 2) to expose a broad area of the city of the Late Period as well as that of the M.K.

First, D. Redford discusses: a) the building phases in the north-eastern sector of Thebes in the Late Period; b) Ramesside occupation. Thanks to two epigraphic finds a Ramesside level could be identified, which began no earlier than the end of the XIXth Dynasty; c) Phase L: The Late XVIIIth Dynasty. All reliefs of the talatat blocks depict the rites of the sed-festival. Similarly, all the fragments recovered in the excavations of the East Karnak structure now known to be the Gm-pA-itn came from scenes depicting the sed-festival. Redford concludes that the Gm-pA-itn was erected primarily for the celebration of the king's first jubilee.

S. Orel discusses the 1988 Season at Karnak: Pre-Akhnaton Levels. There was a widespread M.K. occupation stretching considerably north and east of the location of the XIIth Dynasty Amun Temple, an area now occupied by the Ax-Mnw of Tuthmosis III. Artefact content of Pre-Akhnaton levels at East Karnak was very limited. To the east of the Sacred Lake of the Temple of Amun, the artefact content was significantly more varied and enriched by the presence of non-local pottery. Excavators suggest that the amount of Pan-Grave pottery indicates that the population of this area of the site used the pottery in its daily activities and leaves open the possibility of a "Pan-Grave" (Nubian?) population.

S. Redford discusses the evidence of the Pan-Grave Culture at East Karnak. There is archaeological evidence of a foreign people of Nubian extraction that lived side by side with the Egyptians' culture during the S.I.P. In the course of the excavations at East Karnak over the past 15 years, some 42 Pan-Grave pottery sherds have been recovered across the site. The majority of the sherds was found in the northern end of the concession (field F and N) and almost two-third of the sherds turned up in stratigraphical levels dated to the Late Ramesside Period.

Finally, S. Shubert discusses a terracotta female head of the Tanagra style from East Karnak, found during the 1981 excavations, illustrated in the preliminary report for the season (AEB 83.0689). The head was found in the context of a 4th century B.C./early Ptolemaic village built over the site of the Gm-pA-itn temple. Stylistically, it can be dated in the late 3rd century B.C. Although not certain, it is likely to have been an import from Greece.

Gruß, Lutz.

> Antwort auf Beitrag vom: 03.02.2013 um 13:19:17