Zitat:
... Was ich im Moment allerdings am meisten vermisse, ist eine digitale Version von Hölbls "Altägypten im Römischen Reich - Der römische Pharao und seine Tempel II - Die Tempel des Römischen Nubien", denn dieses Buch habe ich leider auch noch nicht. ... |
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Oooch, dat jibbet aber auch schon recht günstig als Druckversion, z.B. bei "booklooker" ab / für 19,50 € (incl.Versand)1. Zitat:
... Und ich würde doch gerne wissen, was für eine Quellenangabe Hölbl zur Abb. 135 (s.o.) dieses Buches macht. ... |
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Lt. Bildnachweis auf S. 160 stammt Abb. 135 aus "Arnold, 1999". Gemeint ist hier wohl mit Sicherheit ... Dieter Arnold : Temples of the Last Pharaohs. - New York / Oxford : Oxford University Press, 1999. - ISBN : 0195126335. - 373 S., Maps, Plans, Fig., Ill., Tables. Zitat:
OEB 44185 (AEB 1999.0838) : "This book deals with the last 1,300 years of the long history of temple building in Ancient Egypt, undertaken by about 50 kings, from the collapse of the N.K. to the end of the Roman Period. It includes descriptions of architectural features, stylistic evaluations, and building methods, and a detailed account of all known temple buildings from the period. The temples of this period have been much less intensively studied than its art. Furthermore, the temples are very unevenly distributed over Egypt and Nubia, the Delta and Middle Egypt being rather depleted of temples. This disappearance is especially unfortunate for tracing the building history of the XXVIth-XXXth Dynasties, which built most of their temples in Lower Egypt. The remaining buildings not only bear witness to the high standard of Late Egyptian temple building in general but also demonstrate that architecture took significant steps in development, creating a new world of pharaonic temples that compares well with the achievements of preceding periods. Even more than temples of earlier periods, those of the T.I.P., the Late Period and the Graeco-Roman Period were characterized by the two typical conflicting intentions of maintaining the traditional as well as developing contemporary forms, which aspect is repeatedly addressed. In the introduction the author further remarks that during the Late Period, Egyptian cults and their specific building forms were spreading over the whole range of the Mediterranean, while simultaneously Egypt was exposed to foreign influence. Thus, repeated glimpses at the contemporary architecture of Egypt's neighbours are required. Indeed, two prominent side branches of Egyptian Late Period architecture developed into such extensive and specific architectural entities that they cannot properly be treated in the framework of a book about Late Egypt: the building of the Kushites in the Sudan and the Hellenistic architecture of Alexandria. The book begins with 15 plans of the reconstructions of the main Egyptian temples of the period under study, which are constantly referred to in the main text, furthermore with three maps showing the distribution of the temples in Lower and Upper Egypt, the Faiyum and Lower Nubia. Part 1, on the development of the architecture during the subsequent reigns in the T.I.P., the Late Period and the Graeco-Roman Period, with a summarizing ch. 1 on the last temples of the N.K. After ch. 2, on the temples of the T.I.P., the author explains in ch. 3 the building methods of the Kushite Period and describes the buildings. In ch. 4, on the Saite Period, also the historical background, the building and style of temple building in the period, the building methods, and Egyptian architecture in relation to the Mediterranean countries in the period are elucidated. The same procedure is followed in ch. 5, concerning the XXVIIIth to XXXth Dynasties. After the brief ch. 6 on the Second Persian Domination and the Macedonian Dynasty follows the Ptolemaic Period in ch. 7, which, apart from the description of the many Ptolemaic temples, also draws attention to the formal and stylistic aspects of Ptolemaic temple architecture, and the architecture in relation to foreign countries. In ch. 8, on the Roman Period, which ends with building activities as late as the end of the 4th century A.D., also metrological details are briefly considered. In part 2, the characteristics of the architecture of the Late Egyptian temples are discussed. Ch. 9 studies sacred building forms of the period: the wabet, the pronaos, entrance porches and kiosks, birth houses (mammisi), cult terraces, columns, screen walls, broken-door lintels. The concluding remarks in ch. 10 summarize the stylistic developments and the formation of temple types, archaistic tendencies, divinities distinguished by new temples, patrons and builders, and Egyptian architecture of the period and Western architecture. A list of temples arranged by dynasty, a glossary, a select bibliography, and an index conclude the book. (L.Z.) |
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Interessant auch der Eintrag aus Dieter Arnold : Lexikon der Ägyptischen Baukunst. - Düsseldorf : Albatros, 2000. - ISBN : 3491960010. - 301 S., [32] Pl. von S. 57 : - Vollbild - Zitat:
... Und ausserdem kann ich die Bemerkung von Lutz ... Vielleicht hat da jemand den Eintrag bei "P & M" falsch interpretiert ? ... leider nicht verstehen. Mit Hölbl hat das wohl nichts zu tun(?). |
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Nö, dat nimmt Bezug auf Antwort #6 hier im Thread, vom 25.10.2014 um 19:36:26, speziell TOPOGRAPHICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ANCIENT EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHIC TEXTS, RELIEFS, AND PAINTINGS VII - NUBIA, THE DESERTS, AND OUTSIDE EGYPT. - OXFORD : GRIFFITH INSTITUTE, ASHMOLEAN MUSEUM, [1952] 1975. - Seite 4 : Zitat:
"... Columns (destroyed). Capitals, ROEDER, op. cit. pl. 5 [b-d], p. 21; GAU, Antiquites de la Nubie, pl. 4 [a, b]. ..." |
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"P & M" ist eine gebräuchliche Abkürzung für die "TOPOGRAPHICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ANCIENT EGYPTIAN HIEROGLYPHIC TEXTS, RELIEFS, AND PAINTINGS2", gebildet aus den Anfangsbuchstaben der Namen der Autorinnen Bertha Porter & Rosalind L. B. Moss. Gruß, Lutz.
> Antwort auf Beitrag vom: 01.11.2014 um 23:00:57
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