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2020/2021

Egyptological specialization: History and Civilisation

Code: 43625 ECTS Credits: 15
Degree Type Year Semester
4315555 Egyptology OB 2 A
The proposed teaching and assessment methodology that appear in the guide may be subject to changes as a result of the restrictions to face-to-face class attendance imposed by the health authorities.

Contact

Name:
Jose Lull Garcia
Email:
Jose.Lull@uab.cat

Use of Languages

Principal working language:
spanish (spa)

Teachers

Marc Orriols Llonch
Jose Lull Garcia

External teachers

Francisco Bosch Puche
Juan Carlos Moreno García

Prerequisites

To complete this module, you must have previously completed the modules "Egyptian History and Civilization I" and "Egyptian History and Civilization II" of the first course of the master.

Objectives and Contextualisation

The objective of the module is to specialize the student in Egyptian history and civilization based on a critical study of epigraphic, archaeological, and iconographic sources, the analysis of specialized literature, the use of the main bibliographic repertoires and instruments of the Egyptology discipline, and the knowledge of the main methods and theoretical currents of analysis in Egyptology.
 
As general objectives:
 
1) To know the history of Egypt from the end of the Second Intermediate Period to the Roman Period, from the interpretation of archaeological, iconographic and textual sources and paying special attention to social and ideological phenomena.
2) Analyze the Egyptian administration, society and economy, noting especially the situation in Egypt during the New Kingdom.
3) Reflect on issues of sociology and gender (life, sexuality, identity, violence), so that the student, through texts, iconography and archaeological remains, can know how the individual lived and developed in society in ancient Egypt .
4) Analyze the theoretical and methodological assumptions with which the study of these contents is approached.

Competences

  • Act in a creative and original way with solidarity and spirit of scientific collaboration.
  • Assess the quality, self-imposed, rigor, responsibility and social commitment, both in training and in the scientific and informative work.
  • Contextualize the historical and cultural evolution of Egypt in the wider framework of the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East and evaluate the synchronicity between the Egyptian civilization and other civilizations of antiquity.
  • Critically analyze a given scientific problem based on historical and cultural sources.
  • Critically interpret texts as historical and cultural sources.
  • Describe the historical and cultural evolution of ancient Egypt, from the critical analysis of the textual, archaeological and iconographic sources.
  • Describe the physical and human geography, geology, natural resources and the climate of Egypt since the beginning of the Holocene until today.
  • Knowledge and understanding that provide a basis or opportunity for originality in developing and / or applying ideas, often in a research context.
  • Recognize and evaluate sociological or ecological issues such as gender, otherness, multiculturalism, identity, immigration and the relationship between human societies and the environment, responding to the concerns of the society of our time.
  • Reflect critically on sociological and anthropological current issues in Egyptology.
  • Support the epistemology and methodology of historiography Egyptology and evaluate the different historiographical trends of the discipline.
  • Teaming up with special sensitivity interdisciplinarity.
  • That students are able to integrate knowledge and handle complexity and formulate judgments based on information that was incomplete or limited, include reflecting on social and ethical responsibilities linked to the application of their knowledge and judgments.
  • That students have the learning skills that enable them to continue studying in a way that will be largely self-directed or autonomous.

Learning Outcomes

  1. Act in a creative and original way with solidarity and spirit of scientific collaboration.
  2. Apply the critical analysis of the textual, archaeological and iconographic reconstruction of the history of Egypt from the New Kingdom to the Greco-Roman era and the end of the Pharaonic civilization sources.
  3. Assess the quality, self-imposed, rigor, responsibility and social commitment, both in training and in the scientific and informative work.
  4. Critically analyze a given scientific problem based on historical and cultural sources.
  5. Critically analyze the historical problem of relations between Egypt and the biblical world.
  6. Critically interpret textual sources of Egyptian history from the New Kingdom to the Greco-Roman era.
  7. Demonstrate knowledge of the history of Egypt since the fall of the New Kingdom to the Greco-Roman era and the end of the Pharaonic civilization.
  8. Demonstrate knowledge of the history of Egypt's New Kingdom.
  9. Describe the different classes and social spheres Egyptians and administrative organization of Pharaonic State at different stages of its history, from the textual, archaeological and iconographic sources and from the latest models of analysis in these areas.
  10. Describe the main networks of exchange and international trade in the Middle East in the Late Bronze Age and Iron Age and its historical and cultural significance.
  11. Identify new trends in the focus of anthropological phenomena, gender and private life in ancient Egypt.
  12. Identify the defining features of conceptions and practices and gender identity in ancient Egypt centered on the individual: age, intimacy, sexuality, marginalization.
  13. Identify the defining features of conceptions and practices and gender identity in ancient Egypt centered society: ethnicity, territoriality, otherness, foreignness, kinship and social and economic relations between individuals and families.
  14. Knowledge and understanding that provide a basis or opportunity for originality in developing and / or applying ideas, often in a research context.
  15. Recognize and evaluate sociological or ecological issues such as gender, otherness, multiculturalism, identity, immigration and the relationship between human societies and the environment, responding to the concerns of the society of our time.
  16. Reflect on the problem of human-medium relationships society, exploitation of resources and economic foundations of civilization these matters.
  17. Relating the history of Egypt with the cultures of their geographical environment from the New Kingdom to the Greco-Roman era.
  18. Teaming up with special sensitivity interdisciplinarity.
  19. That students are able to integrate knowledge and handle complexity and formulate judgments based on information that was incomplete or limited, include reflecting on social and ethical responsibilities linked to the application of their knowledge and judgments.
  20. That students have the learning skills that enable them to continue studying in a way that will be largely self-directed or autonomous.
  21. Valuing the new historiographical trends related to the study of society and the Egyptian economy.

Content

Brief description of module content
 
History of Egypt from the New Kingdom to the Greco-Roman Era, from the interpretation of archaeological, iconographic and textual sources and paying special attention to social, political and diplomatic phenomena, as well as Egypt's relations with Mediterranean civilizations, Near East and Africa (Nubia) during the 1st millennium BC and to the incorporation of Egypt in the empire of Alexander and in the Hellenistic and Roman world and the progressive disarticulation of the foundations of Pharaonic civilization. Egyptian society: social classes and organization of social spheres (elites, urban communities, village communities). Kinship, extended family and patronage. The Pharaonic State: structure and operation of the administration. Geography, ecology, economy and geopolitics in ancient Egypt. Gender studies: women in ancient Egypt. Sociological and anthropological aspects: sexuality, intimacy, identity, territoriality, marginalization, immigration. All these contents are approached from specialization, that is, from the critical discussion of the most recent approaches and the latest analysis trends in these issues.
 
 
Course:
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO GRECO-ROMAN TIMES)
 
First part
 
From the New Kingdom to the Saite Period
 
7.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: José Lull
 
Class schedule: Wednesday, from 4 to 7 p.m.
 
Class days: from Wednesday, September 23, 2020 to Wednesday, March 17, 2021, except for Christmas holydays and February 3.
 
Exam days: Wednesday, November 11, Wednesday, February 10 and Tuesday, April 13, from 4 to 6pm.
 
Seminar days: Wednesday, November 4 and Wednesday, February 17, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
 
Tutoring: Wednesday from 12 noon to 2pm, IEPOA headquarters (MRA Building, door 010), requires an appointment.
 
 
 
CLASS 1 - Wednesday SEPTEMBER 23, 2020
 
The Second Intermediate Period and the Theban dynasties of the Second Intermediate Period
 
  
CLASS 2 - Wednesday, SEPTEMBER 30, 2020
 
The beginning of the 18th dynasty, from Ahmose to Tuthmosis II
 
  
CLASS 3 - Wednesday OCTOBER 7, 2020
 
Hatshepsut: Great Royal Wife, Regent and Pharaoh
 
 
CLASS 4 - Wednesday OCTOBER 14, 2020
 
Tutmosis III to Tutmosis IV
 
  
CLASS 5 - Wednesday OCTOBER 21, 2020
 
Amenhetep III
 
 
CLASS 6 - Wednesday OCTOBER 28, 2020
 
Amenhetep III
 
  
CLASS 7 - Wednesday, NOVEMBER 4, 2020
 
Case study: The political transition from Amenhetep III to Amenhetep IV / Akhenaten
 
  
CLASS 8 - Wednesday, NOVEMBER 11, 2020
 
EXAM - First exam (classes 1-7 and compulsory readings). From 4pm to 6pm.
 
  
CLASS 9 - Wednesday, NOVEMBER 18, 2020
 
Amarna and Akhenaton
 
  
CLASS 10 -Wednesday NOVEMBER 25, 2020
 
Diplomacy seen through the letters of the greatkings
 
 
CLASS 11 - Wednesday DECEMBER 2, 2020
 
Case study: The transition from Akhenaten to Tutankhamun
  
 
CLASS 12 - Wednesday DECEMBER 9, 2020
 
Case study: chronology of the end of the 18th dynasty
 
  
CLASS 13 - Wednesday DECEMBER 16, 2020
 
The beginning of the XIX dynasty with Ramses I and Seti I
 
  
CLASS 14 - Wednesday, JANUARY 13, 2021
 
Ramses II and Merenptah
 
 
CLASS 15 - Wednesday, JANUARY 20, 2021
 
Case study: The end of the XIX dynasty: from Seti II to Tausert
 
  
CLASS 16 - Wednesday, JANUARY 27, 2021
 
The Peoples of the Sea
  
 
CLASS 17 - WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2021
 
EXAM - Second exam (classes 9-16 and compulsory materials).
  
 
CLASS 18 - Wednesday, FEBRUARY 17, 2021
 
Case study: The end of the XX dynasty and the wHm mswt
 
  
CLASS 19 - Wednesday FEBRUARY 24, 2021
 
The XXI dynasty
 
  
CLASS 20 - Wednesday, March 3, 2021
 
The XXII and XXIII dynasty
 
  
CLASS 21 - Wednesday MARCH 10, 2021
 
The XXIV and XXV dynasty
 
  
CLASS 22 - Wednesday, MARCH 17, 2021
 
The XXVI dynasty
 
 
 
Course:
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO GRECO-ROMAN TIMES)
 
Second part
 
From Persian to Greco-Roman Egypt
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Francisco Bosch Puche
 
Class days: From April 3 to 14, 2021, M, T, W, Th, F from 16:00 to 18:00.
 
Tutorials: M, T, W, Th, F from 3:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m., IEPOA headquarters (MRA Building, gates 010 and 011).
 
  
The First Persian Domination (Dynasty XXVII)
[classes 1 and 2: 03-04 / 05/2021]
 
  
The last indigenous dynasties (Dynasties XXVIII-XXX)
[class 3: 05/05/2021]
 
  
The Second Persian Domination ("Dynasty XXXI")
[class 4 (first part): 05/06/2021]
 
  
The conquest of Alexander the Great and the Argead Dynasty
[classes 4 (second part), 5 and 6: 06-07 and 05/10/2021]
 
  
Ptolemaic Egypt
[classes 7, 8 and 9: 11-13 / 05/2021]
 
  
Aegyptus, Roman province
[class 10: 05/14/2021]
 
 
Course:
 
SOCIOLOGY AND GENDER ISSUES (LIFE, SEXUALITY, IDENTITY, VIOLENCE)
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Marc Orriols i Llonch
 
Hours: Monday from 4 to 5:30 p.m., from SEPTEMBER 21, 2020 to JANUARY 25, 2021
Tutorials: Wednesdays from 12 a.m. to 2 p.m.
 
ITEM 1 - MONDAY 21 SEPTEMBER 2020
Gender studies and Egyptology
 
 
ITEM 2 - MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 28 and OCTOBER 5, 2020
Fertility and pregnancy
 
 
ITEM 3 - MONDAY 19 and 26 OCTOBER 2020
The birth
 
 
ITEM 4 - MONDAY 2 and 9 NOVEMBER 2020
The conception of childhood and lactation
 
 
ITEM 5 - MONDAY 16 NOVEMBER 2020
Puberty Rituals
 
 
ITEM 6 - MONDAY 23 NOVEMBER 2020
Erotic-loving poetry
 
 
ITEM 7 - MONDAY 30 NOVEMBER and 7 DECEMBER 2020
Men and women: gender roles
 
 
ITEM 8 - MONDAY 14 and 21 DECEMBER 2020
Marriage and family
 
 
ITEM 9 - MONDAY 11 AND 18 JANUARY 2021
Sexual intercourse
 
 
ITEM 10 - MONDAY 25 JANUARY 2020
Old age and death
 
 
 
Course:
 
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPT
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Juan Carlos Moreno García
 
Hours: Monday to Friday, from April 19 to 30, 2021, from 18 to 20h.
 
The course will focus on the organization of space in PharaonicEgypt, the problemsof interpretation derived from a partial use of cartography ("borders", "sovereignty", "states", etc.), the use of space by diverse social groups and the strategies used by each one (shepherds, nomads, the Pharaonic monarchy itself, etc.). The existence of alternative poles of power established in certain areas of the Nile Valley (especially Middle Egypt) and how their strategies pursue the control of wealth flows through Egypt will also be addressed; sometimes acknowledging the authority of the pharaohs. In other cases, pursuing greater political autonomy. Ultimately, the course content is located at the crossroads between social, economic, political and geopolitical history.
 
CLASS SCHEDULE:
 
First week (April 19-23): physical geography, built landscapes, differentiated spaces and circulation networks.
 
Second week (April 26-3O): spaces and populations, land uses, conflicts and identities, capture of commercial circuits.

Methodology

The student's personal work will consist of:
 
a) Study.
 
b) Compulsory readings, carrying out assignments and practices, preparation of lectures in class, translation exercises and analysis of textual sources, interpretation exercises of iconographic and archaeological sources, case studies, critical reading of bibliography, consultation of source repertoires and of the main bibliographic instruments and reference works of the discipline.
 
Any activity that cannot be done in person will be done online.

Activities

Title Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
Type: Directed      
Exams 20 0.8 1, 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 11, 6, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 17, 18, 3, 21
Theoretical and practical face-to-face classes (virtual if necessary), guided discussions, seminars and / or group activities 100 4 1, 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 11, 6, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 17, 18, 3, 21
Type: Supervised      
Tutorials 20 0.8 1, 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 11, 6, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 17, 18, 3, 21
Type: Autonomous      
Study Personal work of the student 235 9.4 1, 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 9, 10, 12, 13, 11, 6, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 17, 18, 3, 21

Assessment

The final grade of the module will be the weighted average of the final grades of the four subjects that compose it (depending on the credits of each one).
 
 
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO THE GRECO-ROMAN TIMES) First part: From the New Kingdom to the Saite Period
 
It will be carried out through 3 exams, 2 seminars, and 5 brief analyzes of primary sources
 
Exams:
 
1- WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 2020: classes 1-7 and compulsory readings. From 4pm to 6pm.
 
2- WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2021: classes 9-16 and compulsory materials included. From 4pm to 6pm.
 
3- TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 2021: classes 18-22 and compulsory materials included. From 4pm to 6pm.
 
Each exam will be worth 20% of the total grade.
 
 
 
Seminars:
 
1- WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 2020: central theme: Was there "co-emergence" between Amenhetep III and Amenhetep IV-Akhenaten?
 
2- WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2021: Central theme: When and why does the “suppression” of the PSA Amenhetep occur? What role do characters like PSA Amenhetep, Panehesi, Paiankh and Herihor play?
 
 
 
Brief analysis of primary sources:
 
1- Sample of the piece (September 30, 2020) - delivery of the analysis October 14, 2020
 
2- Sample of the piece (October 21, 2020) - delivery of the analysis November 4, 2020
 
3- Sample of the piece (18 November 2020) - delivery of the analysis 2 December 2020
 
4- Sample of the piece (10 February 2021) - delivery of the analysis 24 February 2021
 
5- Sample of the piece (February 24, 2021) - delivery of the analysis March 10, 2021
 
 
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO THE GRECO-ROMAN TIMES) Second part: From Persian to Greco-Roman Egypt
 
Presence and class participation / mandatory reading commentary [Johnson, 1974 (10%)
[The reading should be done before the beginning of the school period.]
 
Practical activity: translation of an Egyptian text and commentary (20%)
[The instructions for this activity will be detailed on the first day of class and the student will have one week to complete it (delivery date: May 10, 2021).]
 
Small group tutoring: study and discussion of the royal titulatures of the Ptolemies (20%)
[On the first day of class the groups will be established for the tutoring and it will be explained how it should be prepared and how it will develop; the tutorials will take place throughout the second week of classes.]
 
Final exam (50%)
[its date will be set in agreement with the students and the teaching team.]
 
 
 
SOCIOLOGY AND GENDER ISSUES (LIFE, SEXUALITY, IDENTITY, VIOLENCE)
 
Course work: 50% (Delivery: MONDAY, JANUARY 18, 2021)
Presence and participation in class: 10%
 
Exams:
 
-First partial 20% (MONDAY 23 NOVEMBER 2020)
 
-Second partial 20% (MONDAY 25 JANUARY 2021)
 
 
 
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPT
 
It will consist of the elaboration of a short final work inspired either by a precise historical problem or by reading andcommenting on a significant article. The work must bedelivered before June 10, 2021.
 
Active participation in the course (questions, readings of the proposed works, etc.) will also contribute to the final grade.
 
 
 
Grade review procedure
 
The grades of the exams, short tests or assignments may be reviewed at the site of personal tutoring, during the tutoring hours of the teachers.
  
 
Recovery process
 
To pass the module, you must pass the four subjects that comprise it. In the event that a student does not pass one or more subjects, the teachers will set the dates of the eventual recovery tests or the delivery of the eventual works. These dates will never be later than a month from the date of the original test or delivery.
 

In the event of a student committing any irregularity that may lead to a significant variation in the grade awarded to an assessment activity, the student will be given a zero for this activity, regardless of any disciplinary process that may take place. In the event of several irregularities in assessment activities of the same subject, the student will be given a zero as the final grade for this subject.

In the event that tests or exams cannot be taken onsite, they will be adapted to an online format made available through the UAB’s virtual tools (original weighting will be maintained). Homework, activities and class participation will be carried out through forums, wikis and/or discussion on Teams, etc. Lecturers will ensure that students are able to access these virtual tools, or will offer them feasible alternatives.

Assessment Activities

Title Weighting Hours ECTS Learning Outcomes
2 exams SOCIOLOGY AND GENDER ISSUES: 50% 0 0 4, 12, 13, 11, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 21
3 exams HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT First part: From the New Kingdom to the Saite Epoch: 60% 0 0 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 6, 14, 19, 21
Final exam HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT Second part: From Persian Egypt to Greco-Roman Egypt: 50% 0 0 4, 2, 7, 6, 14, 20, 19
Group work HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT First part: From the New Kingdom to the Saite Epoch: 40% 0 0 1, 5, 4, 2, 8, 7, 6, 14, 20, 19, 18, 3, 21
Practical activity: translation of an Egyptian text and commentary HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT Second part: From Persian Egypt to Greco-Roman Egypt: 20% 0 0 1, 4, 2, 7, 6, 14, 20, 19, 18, 3, 21
Presence and class participation / compulsory reading commentary HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT Second part: From Persian Egypt to Greco-Roman Egypt: 10% 0 0 1, 4, 2, 7, 6, 14, 20, 19, 18, 3, 21
Small group tutoring: study and discussion of the royal titulatures of the Ptolemies HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT Second part: From the New Kingdom to the Saite Epoch: 20% 0 0 1, 4, 2, 7, 6, 14, 20, 19, 18, 3
Work and active participation SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPT: 100% 0 0 4, 8, 9, 10, 6, 14, 20, 19, 16, 17, 18, 21
Work, presence and participation at class SOCIOLOGY AND GENDER ISSUES: 60% 0 0 1, 4, 2, 9, 12, 13, 11, 14, 20, 19, 15, 16, 18, 3

Bibliography

Course:
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO THE GRECO-ROMAN TIMES)
 
First part
 
From the New Kingdom to the Saite Period
 
7.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: José Lull
 
 
Handbook:
Parra, J. M. (coord.), El antiguo Egipto (Madrid: Marcial Pons, 2009).
 
CLASS 1 – 
El Segundo Período Intermedio y las dinastías tebanas del Segundo Período Intermedio
 
Related bibliography:
Goedicke, H., Studies about Kamose and Ahmose (Baltimore: Halgo, 1995).
Marée, M. (ed.), The Second Intermediate Period (Thirteenth-Seventeenth Dynasties). Current Research, Future Prospects, OLA 192 (Lovaina: Peeters, 2010).
Ryholt, K., The Political Situation in Egypt During the Second Intermediate Period, C. 1800-1550 B.C. (Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press, 1997).
 
CLASS 2 – 
El inicio de la dinastía XVIII, de Ahmose a Tutmosis II

Related:

Al-Ayedi, A. R., The Liberation War: The Expulsion of the Hyksos from Egypt (Ismailia: Obelisk, 2008).
Barbotin, C., Âhmosis et le début de la XVIIIe dynastie (París: Pygmalion, 2008).
Goedicke, H., Studies about Kamose and Ahmose (Baltimore: Halgo, 1995).
 
CLASS 3 – 
Hatshepsut: Gran Esposa Real, Regente y Faraón

Related:

Laboury, D.,  “How and Why Did Hatshepsut Invent the Image of Her Royal Power?”, en José M. Galán, Betsy M. Bryan, andPeter F. Dorman (eds.) Creativity andInnovation in the Reign of Hatshepsut,SAOC 69, (Chicago: The Oriental Institute, 2014).
Roehring, K. H. et alii, Hatshepsut, from Queen to Pharaoh (Nueva York: MMA, 2005)
 
CLASS 4 – 
Tutmosis III a Tutmosis IV

Related:

Bryan, B. M., The Reign of Thutmose IV (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1991).
Cline, E. H. y D. O’Connor (eds.), Thutmose III. A New Biography (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2009).
Der Manuelian, P., Studies in the Reign of Amenophis II (Gerstenberg: HÄB, 1987)
Maruéjol, F., Thoutmosis III et la corégence avec Hatchepsout (París: Pygmalion, 2007).
Redford, D.B.,The wars in Syria and Palestine of Thutmose III, (Leiden: Brill, 2003).
Roehring, K. H. et alii, Hatshepsut, from Queen to Pharaoh (Nueva York: MMA, 2005)
 
CLASS 5 – 21-10-2020
Amenhetep III
 
Related:
O’Connor D. y E.H. Cline (eds.), AmenhotepIII. Perspectives on His Reign (Michigan: The University of Michigan Press, 1998).
 
CLASS 6 – 28-10-2020
Amenhetep III

Related:

O’Connor D. y E.H. Cline (eds.), Amenhotep III. Perspectives on His Reign (Michigan: The University of Michigan Press, 1998).
 
CLASS 7 – 4-11-2020
Caso de estudio: La transición política de Amenhetep III a Amenhetep IV / Akhenaton

Compulsory:

Dodson, A., “The Coregency Conundrum”, KMT 25:2 (2014)
https://www.academia.edu/8204701/The_Coregency_Conundrum 
Dorman, P.F. “The long coregency revisited: architectural and iconographic conundra in the tomb of Kheruef,” en P.J. Brand y L. Cooper. eds., Causing his Name toLive:studies in Egyptian epigraphy and history in memory of William J. Murnane (Leiden, 2009),pp. 65-82.
https://oi.uchicago.edu/sites/oi.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/shared/docs/LongCoregency.pdf 
Forbes, D. “Circumstantial evidence for an Amenhotep III/IV coregency”, KMT 25:2 (2014)
Johnson, W.R. “Amenhotep III and Amarna: Some New Considerations,” JEA 82 (1996), pp. 65-82.
http://faculty.uml.edu/ethan_spanier/teaching/documents/amenhotepiiiandamarna.pdf 
Lull, J., “A Chronological Perspective on the Transition from Amenhotep III to Amenhotep IV / Akhenaten", Aula Orientalis 37-1 (2019), pp. 61-89.
https://www.academia.edu/43364646/A_Chronological_Perspective_on_the_Transition_from_Amenhotep_III_to_Amenhotep_IV_Akhenaten
Martín, F. y Bedman. T., “Proof of a ‘Long Coregency’ between Amenhotep III & Amenhotep IV found in the chapel ofVizier Amenhotep-Huy [Asasif Tomb 28] West Luxor”, KMT 25:2 (2014), pp. 17-27.

CLASS 9 –18-11-2020

Amarna y Akhenaton
Related:
Dodson, A., Amarna Sunrise. Egypt from Golden Age to Age of Heresy (El Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 2014)
Gabolde, M. D’Akhenaton à Toutânkhamon (París: Université Lumière Lyon 2, 1998)
Kemp, B., The City of Akhenaten and Nefertiti. Amarna and its People, Thames and Hudson (Londres, 2012).
Kemp, B.J., El antiguo Egipto. Anatomía de una civilización, Barcelona, 1992 [1989], cap. IV, pp. 331-402 (Amarna).
Laboury, D., Akhenatón (Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros, 2012).
 
CLASS 10 – 25-11-2020
La diplomacia vista a través de las cartas de los grandes reyes
Related:
Cohen, R., y R. Westbrook, Amarna Diplomacy (Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 2000)
Liverani, M., Relaciones internacionales en el Próximo Oriente antiguo, 1600-1100 a.C. (Barcelona: Bellaterra Arqueología, 2005).
Lull, J., „La diplomacia internacional en el siglo XIV a.C. a través de las Cartas de Amarna“, Red Cultural Universidad Finisterre (2020).
Rainey, A. y W.M. Scheidewind (ed.)., The El-AmarnaCorrespondence, HdO 110 (Leiden: Brill, 2015)
 
CLASS 11 – 2-12-2020
Caso de estudio: La transición de Akhenaton a Tutankhamon
 
Compulsory:
Allen, J.P. “The Amarna Succession”, en P. J. Brand y L. Cooper (eds), Causing His Name to Live: Studies in Egyptian Epigraphy and History in Memory of William J. Murnane (Leiden / Boston, 2009)
https://web.archive.org/web/20130701103124/http://cassian.memphis.edu/history/murnane/Allen.pdf 
Belmonte, J.A., “DNA, Wine and Eclipses: The Dakhamunzu Affaire”, Anthropological Notebooks 19 (2013)
http://www.iac.es/proyecto/arqueoastronomia/media/SEAC2012_Proceedings_Belmonte.pdf 
Dodson, A. “Amarna Sunset: the late-Amarna succession revisited” (2009)
https://www.academia.edu/8206029/Amarna_Sunset_the_late-Amarna_succession_revisited 
Lull, J: Video de la conferencia “La transición política entre Akhenaton, Smenkhkara, Ankhetkheperura, Neferneferuaton y Tutankhamon”. impartida en el Museo San Isidro de Madrid el 9/10/2014:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MyHt5fTqyWo 
 
Related:
Krauss, R., “Eine Regentin, ein köning und eine Königin zwischen dem Tod von Achenaten und der Thronbesteigung von Tutanchaten”, AoF 34 (2007)
Gabolde, M. D’Akhenaton à Toutânkhamon (París: Université Lumière Lyon 2, 1998)
Gabolde, M. Toutankhamoun (París: Pygmalion, 2015)
Santos, J. "La identidad del rey Anj(et)jeperura… Neferneferuatón… Consideraciones sobre las evidencias epigráficas, iconográficas y arqueológicas”, Aula Orientalis 36-2 (2018), pp. 315-358.
Silverman, D.P., J.W. Wegner y J.H. Wegner, Akhenaten & Tutankhamun. Revolution & Restoration (Filadelfia: University of Pennsylvania, 2006).
 
CLASS 12 – 9-12-2020
Caso de estudio: cronología de finales de la dinastía XVIII 
Compulsory:
Van Dijk, J., “New Evidence on the Length of the Reign of Horemheb”, JARCE 44 (2008).
http://jacobusvandijk.nl/docs/JARCE_44.pdf 
 
Related:
Booth, C., Horemheb. The Forgotten Pharaoh (Chalford: Amberley Publishing, 2009).
Van Dijk, J., “Horemheb and the Struggle for the Throne of Tutankhamun”, BACE 7 (1996).
http://www.jacobusvandijk.nl/docs/BACE_7.pdf 
Dodson, A.  Amarna Sunset: Nefertiti, Tutankhamun, Ay, Horemheb and the Egyptian Counter-Reformation (El Cairo: American University Press, 2009)
Gabolde, M. Toutankhamon (París: Pygmalion, 2015)
 
CLASS 13 – 16-12-2020
El comienzo de la dinastía XIX con Ramsés I y Seti I
Related:
Masquelier-Loorius, J., Séthi Ier et le début de la XIXe dynastie(París: Pygmalion, 2013).
 
CLASS 14 – 13-01-2021
Ramsés II y Merenptah

Related:

Kitchen, K.A., Pharaoh Triumphant. The Life and Times of Ramesses II (1982)
Obsomer, C., Ramsès II (París: Pygmalion, 2012).
Servajean, F., Mérenptah et la fin de laXIXe Dynastie (París: Pygmalion, 2014).
 
CLASS 15– 20-01-2021
Caso de estudio: El final de la dinastía XIX: de Seti II a Tausert

Compulsory:

Callender, V. G., “Queen Tausert and the End of Dynasty 19”, SAK 32 (2004).
Lull, J: Video de la conferencia “Damnatio Memoriae, usurpación y conflicto. Turbulencias al final de la dinastía XIX”, impartida dentro de las "VIII Jornadas de Egiptología" del IVDE (Instituto Valenciano de Egiptología) el 21 de mayo de 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmzxPAEEZD4&index=3&t=542s&list=PLL-SwiJiTUcgzijKe4BEDF_TY-D-EJehY 

Related:

Dodson, A., Poisoned Legacy. The Fall of the XIXth Egyptian Dynasty (El Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 2010).
 
CLASS 16 – 27-01-2021
Ramsés III y los Pueblos del Mar 

Related:

Cline, E. H y D. O’Connor (eds.), Ramesses III. The life and Times of Egypt’s Last Hero (Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2011).
Cline, E. H., 1177 B.C.: The Year CivilizationCollapsed (Woodstock: Princeton University Press, 2014).
Dothan, T. y M. Dothan, Los Pueblos del Mar. Tras las huellas de los filisteos (Barcelona: Bellaterra Arqueología, 2002).
Lull, J., “De la Guerra de Troya a los Pueblos del Mar. Un posible contexto histórico”, Red Cultural Universidad Finisterre 37 (2018), pp. 42-53.
 
CLASS 18 – 17-02-2021
Caso de estudio: El final de la dinastía XX y la wHm mswt
Compulsory:
Lull, J., “El problema de la supresión del primer sacerdote de Amón Jmnw-htp documentación y consideraciones cronológicas”, Aula Orientalis 22 (2004).
https://www.academia.edu/3072016/El_problema_de_la_supresi%C3%B3n_del_primer_sacerdote_de_Am%C3%B3n_Amenhetep_ 
Niwinski, A. "Lepassage de la XXeà la XXIIe dynastie. Chronologie et histoire politique", BIFAO 95(1995)
https://www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/095/15/ 
Wente, E.F. "The Supression of the High Priest Amenhotep", JNES 25:2 (1966)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/543967.pdf?refreqid=excelsior%3Aa87303c4eae8a3f331fd4b52d464d4d1
 
Related:
Barwik, M., The Twilight of the Ramesside Egypt. Studies on the History of Egypt at the End of the Ramessside Period, Varsovia: Agade, 2011.
Dodson, A.,Afterglow of Empire. Egypt from the Fall of the New Kingdom to the Saite Renaissance (El Cairo: American University in Cairo Press, 2012)
Jansen-Winkeln, K., "Das Ende des Neuen Reiches", ZÄS 119 (1992)
http://archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/2326/1/Jansen_Winkeln_Das_Ende_des_Neuen_Reiches_1992.pdf 
Kitchen, K. A., The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, Warminster: Aris & Philips,1986. 
Lull, J., “Cuestiones en torno a la erawHm mswt a finales del reinado de Ramsés XI”, BAEDE 15 (2005).
https://www.academia.edu/3072065/Cuestiones_en_torno_a_la_era_wHm_mswt_a_finales_del_reinado_de_Rams%C3%A9s_XI
Lull, J., Los sumos sacerdotes de Amón tebanos de la wHm mswt y dinastía XXI (ca. 1083 – 945 a.C.), Oxford: BAR IS 1469, 2006.
Lull, J., “Algunas cuestiones cronológicas de la wHm mswt y dinastía XXI, sobre Amenhetep, Paiankh y Herihor”, Trabajos de Egiptología 5:2 (2009)
https://www.academia.edu/3095080/Algunas_cuestiones_cronol%C3%B3gicas_de_la_wHm_mswt_y_dinast%C3%ADa_XXI_sobre_Amenhetep_Paiankh_y_Herihor
Morales, J.A., "The Suppression of the High Priest Amenhotep: A Suggestion to the Role of Pahnesi", GM 181 (2001)
https://www.academia.edu/286982/The_Suppression_of_the_High_Priest_Amenhotep_A_Suggestion_to_the_Role_of_Panhesi 
Peet, T.E."The Supposed Revolution of the High-Priest Amenhotpe under Ramesses IX", JEA 12 (1926)
http://www.jstor.org/stable/3854394?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents 
Ridealgh, K., “A Tale of Semantics and Suppressions: Reinterpreting Papyrus Mayer A and the So-called ‘War of the High Priest’ during the Reign of RamessesXI”, SAK 43 (2014), pp. 365-379.
https://www.academia.edu/5752384/A_Tale_of_Suppressions_and_Semantics_Reinterpreting_Papyrus_Mayer_A_and_the_So-called_War_of_the_High_Priest_during_the_Reign_of_Ramesses_XI
 
CLASS 19 – 24-02-2021
La dinastía XXI
Related:
Dodson, A., “The Transition between the 21st and 22nd Dynasties Revisited”, en The Libyan Period inEgypt. Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st – 24th Dynasties: Proceedings of a Conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Lovaina: Peeters, 2009).
https://www.academia.edu/8205999/The_Transition_between_the_21st_and_22nd_Dynasties_Revisited 
Kitchen, K. A., The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, Warminster: Aris & Philips, 1986. 
Lull, J., Los sumos sacerdotes de Amón tebanos de la wHm mswt y dinastía XXI (ca. 1083 – 945 a.C.), Oxford: BAR IS 1469, 2006.
Lull, J. “Psusennes, primer sacerdote de Amón, y Psusennes II, rey de Egipto: genealogía, documentación y problemas”, Aula Orientalis 24 (2006)
https://www.academia.edu/3072101/Psusennes_primer_sacerdote_de_Am%C3%B3n_y_Psusennes_II_rey_de_Egipto_genealog%C3%ADa_documentaci%C3%B3n_y_problemas 
Lull, J. “Los orígenes de los reyes tanitas Smendes, Neferkara Amenemnesu y la dama *nt-Jmnw en la dinastía XXI”, BAEDE 43 (2007)
https://www.academia.edu/3072141/Los_or%C3%ADgenes_de_los_reyes_tanitas_Smendes_Neferkara_Amenemnesu_y_la_dama_nt-Jmnw_en_la_dinast%C3%ADa_XXI 
Niwinski, A. "Le passage de la XXe à la XXIIe dynastie. Chronologie et histoire politique", BIFAO 95 (1995)
http://www.ifao.egnet.net/bifaos/BIFAO_095/Bifao095_art_15.pdf
 
CLASS 20 – 3-03-2021
La dinastía XXII y XXIII
Related:
Aston, D.A., “Takeloth II. A King of the Herakleopolitan / Theban Twenty-Third Dynasty Revisited: The Chronology of Dynasties 22 and 23”, en Broekman y Demarée (eds.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st – 24th Dynasties: Proceedings of a Conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Lovaina: Peeters, 2009).
Broekman,G.P.F., “Takeloth III and the End of the 23rd Dynasty”, en Broekman y Demarée (eds.), The Libyan Period in Egypt. Historical and Cultural Studies into the 21st –24th Dynasties: Proceedings of a Conference at Leiden University, 25-27 October 2007 (Lovaina: Peeters, 2009).
Kitchen, K. A., The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, Warminster: Aris & Philips,1986. 
Lull, J., “La identidad de la XXIII dinastía egipcia”, BAEDE 12 (2002).
https://www.academia.edu/3071988/La_identificaci%C3%B3n_de_la_XXIII_dinast%C3%ADa
 
CLASS 21 – 10-03-2021
La dinastía  XXIV y XXV
Related:
Kitchen, K. A., The Third Intermediate Period in Egypt, Warminster: Aris & Philips,1986. 
Morkot, R.G., The Black Pharaohs, 2000.
Török, L., The Frontier Region between Ancient Nubia and Egypt 3700 BC - 500 AD (Leiden; Brill, 2009).
 
CLASS 22 – 17-03-2021
La dinastía XXVI
 
Related:
Gozzoli, R. B., Psammetichus II. Reign, Documents and Officials (London, 2017)
Lull, J: Video de la conferencia “Damnatio Memoriae, usurpación y conflicto. Turbulencias al final de la dinastía XIX”, impartida dentro de las "VIII Jornadas de Egiptología" del IVDE (Instituto Valenciano de Egiptología) el 21 de mayo de 2016
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pzj4ZpLLnB4&list=PLXmX3Td1wwOZf7d1L5NQXjY1moQ_3aHgx&index=4 
Perdu, O., “De Stéphinatès à Néchao ou les débuts de la XXVIe dynastie”, Comptes rendus des séances de l'Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres, 146ᵉ année, N. 4, 2002.
 

Seminar 1: 4-11-2020, 10-14h

Main topic: ¿Hubo “corregencia” entre Amenhetep III y Amenhetep IV-Akhenaton?

Compulsory readings: 

Dorman, P.F. “The long coregency revisited: architectural and iconographic conundra in the tomb of Kheruef,” en P.J. Brand y L. Cooper (eds.), Causing his Name to Live: studies in Egyptian epigraphy and history in memory of William J. Murnane (Leiden, 2009), pp. 65-82 - https://oi.uchicago.edu/sites/oi.uchicago.edu/files/uploads/shared/docs/LongCoregency.pdf 

Johnson, W.R. “Amenhotep III and Amarna: Some New Considerations,” JEA 82 (1996), pp. 65-82 - https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/58ce/5d5f1ddf2a142b4bb3c6dd2e54a0d70ab0d8.pdf

Lull, J., “A Chronological Perspective on the Transition from Amenhotep III to Amenhotep IV / Akhenaten", Aula Orientalis 37-1 (2019), pp. 61-89 -https://www.academia.edu/43364646/A_Chronological_Perspective_on_the_Transition_from_Amenhotep_III_to_Amenhotep_IV_Akhenaten

Martín, F. y Bedman. T., “Proof of a ‘Long Coregency’ between Amenhotep III & Amenhotep IV found in the chapel of Vizier Amenhotep-Huy [Asasif Tomb 28] West Luxor”,KMT 25:2 (2014), pp. 17-27.

 

Seminar 2: 17-02-2021, 10-14h

Main topic: ¿Cuándo y por quése produce la “supresión” del PSA Amenhetep? ¿qué papel desempeñan personajes como el PSA Amenhetep, Panehesi, Paiankh y Herihor?

Lull, J., “El problema de la supresión del primer sacerdote de Amón Amenhetep”, Aula Orientalis 22 (2004), pp. 211-228 -https://www.academia.edu/3072016/El_problema_de_la_supresi%C3%B3n_del_primer_sacerdote_de_Am%C3%B3n_Amenhetep_

Morales, J.A., "The Suppression of the High Priest Amenhotep: A Suggestion to the Role of Pahnesi", GM 181 (2001), pp. 59-76 -https://www.academia.edu/286982/The_Suppression_of_the_High_Priest_Amenhotep_A_Suggestion_to_the_Role_of_Panhesi

Ridealgh, K., “A Tale of Semantics and Suppressions: Reinterpreting Papyrus Mayer A and the So-called ‘War of the High Priest’ during the Reign of Ramesses XI”, SAK 43 (2014), pp. 365-379 -https://www.academia.edu/5752384/A_Tale_of_Suppressions_and_Semantics_Reinterpreting_Papyrus_Mayer_A_and_the_So-called_War_of_the_High_Priest_during_the_Reign_of_Ramesses_XI

Wente, E.F. "The Supression of the High Priest Amenhotep", JNES 25:2 (1966), pp. 73-87 - https://www.jstor.org/stable/pdf/543967.pdf?refreqid=excelsior%3Aa87303c4eae8a3f331fd4b52d464d4d1

 
 
Course:
 
HISTORY OF PHARAONIC EGYPT (FROM THE NEW KINGDOM TO THE GRECO-ROMAN TIMES)
 
Second part
 
From Persian to Greco-Roman Egypt
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Francisco Bosch Puche

a) BASIC

Baines, J. y Málek, J., Atlas cultural de Egipto. Dioses, templos y faraones,Barcelona: Folio, 2000 (ed. orig. Oxford: Phaidon, 1980).
 
Bosch Puche, F., La ocupación macedónica y la Dinastía Lágida. Impacto político, económico y social,Trabajos de Egiptología – Papers on Ancient Egypt 8, 2017 (publ. 2018), pp. 33-73.
 
Bowman, A.K., Egypt after the Pharaohs, 332 BC – AD 622: From Alexander to the Arab Conquest, Londres: British Museum Publications, 1986.
 
Bresciani, E., La satrapia d’Egitto, Studi Classici e Orientali 7, 1958, pp. 132-188.
 
Bresciani, E., The Persian Occupation of Egypt, en: Gershevitch, I. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. II: The Median and Achaemenian Periods, Cambridge - Londres - Nueva York - New Rochelle - Melbourne - Sydney: Cambridge University Press, 1985, cap. 9, pp. 502-528.
 
Herodotus, [The Persian Wars], vol. I: Books I-II (Trad. A.D. Godley) (Loeb Classical Library [117), Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press y Londres: W. Heinemann, 1920 (edición bilingüe griego-inglés).
(Traducción española: Biblioteca Clásica Gredos 3)
(Edición bilingüe griego-catalán: Col·lecció Bernat Metge 324)
 
Hölbl, G., A History of the Ptolemaic Empire, Londres - Nueva York: Routledge, 2001 (ed. orig. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1994).
 
Lloyd, A.B., Herodotus, Book II, 3 vols. [vol. I: Introduction, vol. II: Commentary 1-98 y vol. III: Commentary 99-182] (Études préliminaires aux religions orientales dans l’Empire romain 43), Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1975, 1976 y 1988.
 
Lloyd, A.B., The Late Period (664-332 BC) y The Ptolemaic Period (332-30 BC), en: Shaw, I. (ed.), The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, caps. 13 y 14, pp. 369-394 y 395-421, respectivamente(ed.española Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros, 2007).
 
Lloyd, A.B. (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Egypt, 2 vols., Chichester:Wiley-Blackwell, 2010 (distintos capítulos).
 
Peacock, D., The Roman Period (30 BC – AD 311), en: Shaw, I. (ed.), The Oxford History of Ancient Egypt, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2000, cap. 15, pp. 422-445 (ed. española Madrid: La Esfera de los Libros, 2007).
 
Riggs, Ch. (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2012.
 
Serrano Delgado, J.M., La Baja Época, en: Parra, J.M. (coord.), El antiguo Egipto. Sociedad, economía, política, Madrid: Marcial Pons, 2009, cap. 10, pp. 463-493.
 
b) COMPLEMENTARY
 
Agut-Labordère, D., Le sens du Décret de Cambyse, Transeuphratène 29, 2005, pp. 9-16.
 
Agut-Labordère, D., Darius législateur et les sages de l’Égypte: un addendum au Livre des Ordonnances, CRIPEL 28, 2009, pp. 353-358.
 
Alexandria and Alexandrianism: Papers Delivered at a Symposium Organized by the J. Paul Getty Museum and the Getty Center for the History of Art and the Humanities and Held at the Museum, April 22-25, 1993, Malibú: J. Paul Getty Museum, 1996.
 
Alston, R., Soldier and Society in Roman Egypt: A Social History, Londres - Nueva York: Routledge, 1995.
 
Arnold, D., Temples of the Last Pharaohs, Nueva York - Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1999.
 
Ballet, P., La Vie quotidienne à Alexandrie, 331-30 avant J.-C., París: Hachette Littératures, 1999.
 
Bagnall, R.S. y Frier, B.W., The Demography of Roman Egypt (Cambridge Studies in Population, Economy, and Society in Past Time 23), Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994.
 
Bagnall, R.S. y Rathbone, D.W. (eds.), Egypt from Alexander to the Copts: An Archaeological and Historical Guide, Londres: British Museum Press, 2004.
 
Bell, H.I., Cults and Creeds in Graeco-Roman Egypt. Being the Forwood Lectures for 1952, New York: Philosophical Library, 1953.
 
Blöbaum, A.I., „Denn ich bin ein König, der die Maat liebt“. Herrscherlegitimation im spätzeitlichen Ägypten. Eine vergleichende Untersuchung der Phraseologie in den offiziellen Königsinschriften vom Beginn der 25. Dynastie bis zum Ende der makedonischen Herrschaft (Aegyptiaca Monasteriensia 4), Aquisgrán: Shaker, 2006.
 
Bonacasa, N. y Di Vita, A. (eds.), Alessandria e il mondo ellenistico-romano. Studi in onore di Achille Adriani, 3 vols. (Studi e Materiali 4-6), Roma: “L’ERMA” di Bretschneider, 1983-1984.
 
Bowman, A.K, Egypt, en: Bowman, A.K.; Champlin, E. y Lintott, A. (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History, Second Edition, vol. X: The Augustan Empire, 43 B.C. – A.D. 69, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1996, cap. 14b, pp. 676-702.
 
Briant, P., Ethno-classe dominante et populations soumises dans l’Empire achéménide: le cas de l’Égypte, en: Kuhrt, A. y Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. (eds.), Method andTheory. Proceedings of the London 1985 Achaemenid History Workshop (Achaemenid History 3), Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor het Nabije Oosten, 1988, pp. 137-173.
 
Briant, P., Histoire de l’Empire perse. De Cyrus à Alexandre, París: Fayard, 1996.
 
Briant, P. y Chauveau, F. (eds.), Organisation des pouvoirs et contacts culturels dans les pays de l’empire achéménide. Actes du colloque organisé auCollège de France parla « Chaire d’histoire et civilisation du monde achéménide et de l’empire d’Alexandre » et le « Réseau international d’études et de recherches achéménides » (GDR 2538 CNRS), 9-10 novembre 2007 (Persika 14), París: de Boccard, 2009.
 
Bringmann, K., The King as Benefactor: Some Remarks on Ideal Kingship in the Age of Hellenism, en: Bulloch, A.; Gruen, E.S.; Long, A.A. y Stewart, A. (eds.), Images and Ideologies: Self-definition in the Hellenistic World (Hellenistic Culture and Society 12), Berkeley - Los Angeles - Londres: University of California Press, 1993, pp. 7-24.
 
Capponi, L., Roman Egypt, Londres: Bristol Classical Press, 2011.
 
Chauveau, M., Rhakôtis et la fondation d’Alexandrie, Égypte. Afrique et Orient 24, 2001, pp. 13-16.
 
Chauveau, M., Les égyptiens face à leur passé de Cambyse à Auguste, en: Barstad, H.M. y Briant, P. (eds.), The Past in the Past: Concepts of Past Reality in Ancient Near Eastern and Early Greek Thought, Oslo: The Institute for Comparative Research in Human Culture – Novus Press, 2009, pp. 79-89.
 
Depuydt, L., New Date for the Second Persian Conquest, End of Pharaonic and Manethonian Egypt: 340/38 B.C.E., JEGH 3, 2010, pp. 191-230.
 
Devauchelle, D., Le sentiment anti-perse chez les anciens Égyptiens, Transeuphratène 9, 1995, pp. 67-80.
 
Devauchelle, D., Réflexions sur les documents égyptiens datés de la Deuxième Domination perse, Transeuphratène 10, 1995, pp. 35-43.
 
Dodson, A., Rituals Related to Animal Cults, en: Dieleman, J.; Wendrich, W. y Frood, E., (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology [UEE], Los Angeles, 2009.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/nelc/uee/1027 (Version 1, July 2009)
 
Fitzenreiter, M., Tierkulte im pharaonischen Ägypten (Ägyptologie und Kulturwissenschaft 5), Múnich: Wilhelm Fink, 2013.
 
Forgeau, A., Nectanébo. La dernière dynastie égyptienne, París: Khéops, 2018. 
 
Frankfurter, D., Religion in Roman Egypt: Assimilation and Resistance, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1998. 
 
Fraser, P.M., Ptolemaic Alexandria, 3 vols., Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1972.
 
Gorre, G., Les relations du clergé égyptien et des Lagides d’après les sources privées (Studia Hellenistica 45), Lovaina: Peeters, 2009. 
 
Gorre, G., ‘Nectanébo-le-Faucon’ et la dynastie Lagide, AncSoc 39, 2009, pp. 55-69.
 
Gozzoli, R.B., The Writing of History in Ancient Egypt during the First Millennium BC (ca. 1070-180 BC). Trends and Perspectives (Egyptology 5), Londres: Golden House, 2006.
 
Grenier, J.-C., Les titulatures des empereurs romains dans les documents en langue égyptienne (Papyrologica Bruxellensia 22), Bruselas: Fondation Égyptologique Reine Élisabeth, 1989.
 
Herklotz, F., Prinzeps und Pharao. Der Kult des Augustus in Ägypten (Oikumene, Studien zur antiken Weltgeschichte 4), Frankfurt: Antike, 2007. 
 
Hölbl, G., Altägypten im Römischen Reich. Der römischePharao und seine Tempel, 3 vols., Maguncia: Philipp von Zabern, 2000-2005.
 
Huss, W., Der makedonische König und die ägyptischen Priester. Studien zur Geschichte des ptolemaiischen Ägypten (Historia. Einzelschriften 85), Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 1994. 
 
Huss, W.,Ägyptenin hellenistischer Zeit, 332-30 v. Chr., Múnich: C.H. Beck, 2001.
 
Johnson, J.H.,The Demotic Chronicle as an Historical Source, Enchoria 4, 1974, pp. 1-17.
(https://www.academia.edu/12672407/_Demotic_Chronicle_as_an_Historical_Source_Enchoria_4)
 
Kienitz, F.K., Die politische Geschichte Ägyptens vom 7. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert vor der Zeitwende, Berlín: Akademie,1953.
 
Koenen, L., The Ptolemaic King as a Religious Figure, en: Bulloch, A.; Gruen, E.S.; Long, A.A. y Stewart, A. (eds.), Images and Ideologies: Self-definition in the Hellenistic World (Hellenistic Culture and Society 12), Berkeley - Los Angeles - Londres: University of California Press, 1993, pp. 25-115.
 
Klotz, D., Persian Period, en: Grajetzki, W. y Wendrich, W. (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology [UEE], Los Angeles, 2015.
http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/viewItem.do?ark=21198/zz002k45rq 
(Version 1, September 2015)
 
La gloire d’Alexandrie. Exposition. Paris – Musée du Petit Palais, 7 mai – 26 juillet 1998, París: Musées de la Ville de Paris – Association Française d’Action Artistique, 1998.
 
Lançon, B. y Schwentzel, Gh.-G., L’Égypte hellénistique et romaine (Histoire 128), París: Nathan, 1999.
 
Legras, B., L’Égypte grecque et romaine (Collection U. Histoire), París: Armand Colin, 2004.
 
Lewis, N., Life in Egypt under Roman Rule, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983.
 
Lloyd, A.B., TheInscription of Udjahorresnet: A Collaborator’s Testament, JEA 68, 1982, pp. 166-180.
 
Lloyd, A.B.,Nationalist Propaganda in Ptolemaic Egypt, Historia 31, 1982, pp. 33-55. 
 
Lloyd, A.B., The Late Period, 664-323 BC, en: Trigger, B.G.; Kemp, B.J.; O’Connor, D. y Lloyd, A.B. (eds.), Ancient Egypt: A Social History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983, cap. 4, pp. 279-348.
 
Lloyd, A.B., Egypt, 404-332 B.C., en: Lewis, D.M.; Boardman, J.; Hornblower, S. y Ostwald, M. (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History, Second Edition, vol. VI: The Fourth Century B.C., Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1994, cap. 8e, pp. 337-360.
 
Manning, J.G., The Last Pharaohs: Egypt under the Ptolemies, 305-30 BC, Princeton - Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2010.
 
Milne, J.G., A History of Egypt under Roman Rule (A History of Egypt 5), Londres: Methuen & Co., 1924 (3ª ed. rev. y aum.).
 
McKechnie,P.y Cromwell, J. (eds.), Ptolemy I and the Transformation of Egypt, 404-282 BCE (Mnemosyne, Supplements 415), Leiden - Boston: Brill, 2018.
 
Montserrat, D., Sex and Society in Graeco-Roman Egypt, Londres: Kegan Paul International 1996.
 
Moyer, I.S., Egyptian History in the Classical Historiographers, en: Grajetzki, W. y Wendrich, W. (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology [UEE], Los Angeles, 2014.
http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/viewItem.do?ark=21198/zz002hwc3t (Version 1, May 2014)
 
Myśliwiec, K., The Twilight of Ancient Egypt, First Millennium B.C.E., Ithaca - Londres: Cornell University Press, 2000 (ed. orig. Varsovia: Wydawnictwo Naukowe, 1993; ed. alemana: Maguncia: Philipp von Zabern, 1998).
 
Pfeiffer, S. (ed.), Ägypten unter fremden Herrschern zwischen persischer Satrapie und römischer Provinz (Oikumene, Studien zur antiken Weltgeschichte 3), Frankfurt: Antike, 2007.
 
Pfeiffer, S., Herrscher- und Dynastiekulte im Ptolemäerreich: Systematik und Einordnung der Kultformen (MBPAR98), Múnich: C.H. Beck, 2008.
 
Pfeiffer, S., Der römische Kaiser und das Landam Nil. Kaiserverehrung und Kaiserkult in Alexandria und Ägypten von Augustus bis Caracalla (30 v. Chr. – 217 n. Chr.) (Historia. Einzelschriften 212), Stuttgard: Franz Steiner, 2010.
 
Pfeiffer, S., Egypt and Greece Before Alexander, en: Grajetzki, W. y Wendrich, W. (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia ofEgyptology [UEE], Los Angeles, 2013.
http://digital2.library.ucla.edu/viewItem.do?ark=21198/zz002hj251 
(Version 1, November 2013)
 
Pfeiffer, S., Griechische und lateinische Inschriften zum Ptolemäerreich und zur römischen Provinz Aegyptus (Einführungen und Quellentexte zur Ägyptologie 9), Berlín: Lit, 2015.
 
Pfeiffer, S., Die Ptolemäer, Stuttgart: W. Kohlhammer, 2017.
 
Pomeroy, S.B., Women in Hellenistic Egypt from Alexander to Cleopatra, Nueva York: Schocken Books, 1984.
 
Posener, G., La Première Domination perse en Égypte. Recueil d’inscriptions hiéroglyphiques (BdE 11), El Cairo: IFAO, 1936.
 
Quack, J.F., Zum Datum der persischen Eroberung Ägyptens unter Kambyses, JEGH 4, 2011, pp. 228-246.
 
Ray, J.,D., Egypt: Dependence and Independence (425-343 B.C.), en: Sancisi-Weerdenburg, H. (ed.), Sources, Structures and Synthesis. Proceedings of the Groningen 1983 Achaemenid History Workshop (Achaemenid History 1), Leiden: Nederlands Instituut voor hetNabije Oosten, 1987, pp. 79-95.
 
Ray, J.D., Egypt 525–404 B.C., en: Boardman, J.; Hammond, N.G.L.; Lewis, D.M. y Ostwald, M. (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History, Second Edition, vol. IV: Persia, Greece and the Western Mediterranean c. 525 to 479 B.C., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988,cap. 3g, pp. 254-286.
 
Ruzicka, S., Trouble in the West: Egypt and the Persian Empire, 525-332 BCE, Oxford -Nova York: Oxford University Press, 2012.
 
Sales, J.d.C., Ideologia e propaganda real no Egipto ptolomaico (305-30 a.C.), Lisboa: Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, 2005.
 
Schäfer, D., Makedonische Pharaonen und hieroglyphische Stelen. Historische Untersuchungen zurSatrapenstele und verwandten Denkmälern (Studia Hellenistica 50), Lovaina - París - Walpole: Peeters, 2011.
 
Serrano Delgado, J.M., La titulatura real de los faraones persas, a: Cervelló Autuori, J. y Quevedo-Álvarez, A.J. (eds.), ...ir a buscar leña. Estudios dedicados al Prof. Jesús López (Aula Ægyptiaca-Studia 2), Barcelona:Aula Ægyptiaca, 2001, pp. 175-184.
 
Serrano Delgado, J.M., Cambyses in Sais: Political and Religious Context in Achaemenid Egypt, CdE 79/157-158, 2004, pp. 31-52.
 
Sternberg-el Hotabi, H., Ägypter und Perser. Eine Begegnung zwischen Anpassung und Widerstand (AIDA 4), Rahden, Westf.: Marie Leidorf, 2016.
 
Sternberg-el Hotabi, H., Quellentexte zur Geschichte der ersten und zweiten Perserzeit in Ägypten (Einführungen und Quellentexte zur Ägyptologie 11), Berlín: Lit, 2017.
 
Thompson, D.J., Memphis under the Ptolemies, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2012 (2ª ed. rev.).
 
Thompson, D.J., Egypt, 146-31 B.C., en: Crook, J.A.; Lintott, A. y Rawson, E. (eds.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Second Edition, vol. IX: The Last Age of the Roman Republic, 146-43 B.C., Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994, cap. 8c, pp. 310-326.
 
Vittmann, G., Ägypten und die Fremden im ersten vorchristlichen Jahrtausend (Kulturgeschichteder antiken Welt 97), Maguncia: Philipp von Zabern, 2003.
 
Von Beckerath, J., Handbuch der ägyptischen Königsnamen (MÄS 49), Maguncia: Philipp von Zabern, 1999 (2ª ed. rev. y aum.).
 
Walbank, F.W.; Astin, A.E.; Frederiksen, M.W. y Ogilvie, R.M. (eds.): The Cambridge Ancient History. Second Edition, vol. VII, parte I: The Hellenistic World, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984. 
 
Wasmuth, M., Ägypto-persische Herrscher- und Herrschaftspräsentation in der Achämenidenzeit (Oriens et Occidens 27), Stuttgart: Franz Steiner, 2017.
 
Weber, G. (ed.), Alexandreia und das ptolemäische Ägypten. Kulturbegegnungen in hellenistischer Zeit, Berlín: Antike: 2010.
 

 

Course:
 
SOCIOLOGY AND GENDER ISSUES (LIFE, SEXUALITY, IDENTITY, VIOLENCE)
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Marc Orriols i Llonch

General bibliography:

Blackman, W.S., The Fellāhīn of Upper Egypt, Londres - Bombay - Sidney, 1927.
Donadoni, S. (ed.), L'uomo egiziano, Roma, 1990 [trad. castellana: El hombre egipcio, Madrid, 1991].
Graves-Brown, C. (ed.), Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt. 'Don Your Wig for a Joyful Hour', Swansea, 2008.
Frood, E., Social Structure and Daily Life: Pharaonic, en: Lloyd, A.B. (ed.), A Companion to Ancient Egypt, vol. 1, Oxford, 2010, pp. 469-490. www.academia.edu/1915189/Social_structure_and_daily_life_pharaonic_in_A_companion_to_ancient_Egypt_
Janssen, R.M. y Janssen, J.J., Growing up in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1990.
Janssen, R.M. yJanssen, J.J., Getting old in AncientEgypt, Londres, 1996.
Meskell, L., Archaeologies of Social Life. Age, Sex,Classet cetera in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1999.
Meskell, L., Cycles of Lifeand Death. Narrative homology and archaeological realities, World Archaeology31, 2000, pp. 423-441. www.academia.edu/10706492/Cycles_of_life_and_death_narrative_homology_and_archaeological_realities
Meskell, L., Private Life in New Kingdom Egypt, Princeton, 2002.
Meskell, L., Object Worlds in Ancient Egypt: Material Biographies Past and Present, Oxford, 2004.
Szpakowska, K., Daily Life in Ancient Egypt. Recreating Lahun, Oxford, 2008.
Vernus, P. Affaires et scandales sous les Ramsès. La crise des valeurs dans l'Égypte du Nouvel Empire, París, 1993.
 
Subject 1 – 21-09-2020
Estudios de género y Egiptología
Compulsory:
Sweeney, D., Sex and Gender, en: Frood, E. y Wendrich, W. (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Ángeles, 2011. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/3rv0t4np) 
Related:
Ambridge, L.J., Searching History: The Non-Elite in Ancient Egypt, History Compass 5/2, 2007, pp. 632-645. https://www.academia.edu/419695/Searching_History_The_NonElite_In_Ancient_Egypt
Baines, J., Society, Morality, and Religious Practice, en: Shafer, B. (ed.), Religion in Ancient Egypt. Gods, Myths, and Personal Practice, Londres, 1991, pp. 123-165.
Graves-Brown, C. (ed.), Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt. 'Don Your Wig for a Joyful Hour', Swansea, 2008, introducción.
Johnson, M., Archaeological Theory. An Introduction, Malden - Oxford: Blckwell Publishing, 1999 [trad. Castellana: Teoría arqueológica. Una introducción., Barcelona: Ariel, 2000], capítulo 8 (Arqueología y género).
Lords, K., TheImportance of Gender Studies for Predynastic Egypt: A Case Study of Cemetery N7000 atNaga-ed-Deir,UCLACenterfor the Study of Women, 2008. http://escholarship.org/uc/item/1070z066
Meskell, L., Engendering Egypt, en: Wyke, M. (ed.), Gender and the Body in the Ancient Mediterranean, Oxford, 1998, pp. 173-178.
Meskell, L., Archaeologies of Social Life. Age, Sex, Class et cetera in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1999, capítulo 2.
Meskell, L., Private Life in New Kingdom Egypt, Princeton, 2002, capítulo 1.
Robins, G., Women in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1993 [trad. castellana: Las mujeres en el antiguo Egipto, Madrid, 1996], introducción.
Wilfong, T.G., Gender and sexuality, en: Wilkinson, T. (ed.), The Egyptian World, Londres - Nueva York, 2007, pp. 205-217.
Wilfong, T.G., Gender in Ancient Egypt, en: Wendrich, W. (ed.), Egyptian Archaeology,Malden, 2010, pp. 164-179.
 
Suject 2 – 28-09 and 5-10-2020
La fertilidad y el embarazo
Compulsory:
Marshall, A., Égypte ancienne. De l’efficacité des tests de grossesse, Archéologia 538, 2015, pp. 62-65. www.academia.edu/20059207/De_lefficacit%C3%A9_des_tests_de_grossesse_en_Egypte_ancienne
Related:
Adam,S., La femme enceinte dans les papyrus, Anagennesis 3, 1983, pp. 9-19.
Cole, D., Obstetrics for Women in Ancient Egypt, DE 5, 1986, pp. 27-33.
Desroches-Noblecourt, C., Pots anthropomorphes et recettes magico-médicales dans l’Égypte ancienne, RdÉ 9, 1952, pp. 49-67.
Ghalioungui, P., Khalil S. y Ammar, A.R., On an ancient Egyptian method of diagnosing pregnancy and determining foetal sex, Medical History 7, 1963, pp. 12-46.
Guiter, J., Contraception en Égypte ancienne, BIFAO 101, 2001, pp. 221-236. www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/101/
Jonckheere, F., La durée de la gestation d’après les textes égyptiens, CdÉ 30, 1955, pp. 19-45.
Jean, R.A. y Loyrette,A.M., La mère, l'enfant et le lait en Egypte Ancienne, París, 2010.
Manniche, L., In the Womb, BACE 17, 2006, pp. 97-112.
Marshall, A., Maternité et petite enfance en Égypte Ancienne, Monaco, 2015, pp. 23-68.
Robins, G., Women and Children in Peril: Pregnancy, Birth and Infant Mortality in Ancient Egypt, KMT: A Modern Journal of Ancient Egypt 5/4, 1994-1995, pp. 24-35.
Sauneron, S., Les «dix mois» précédant la naissance (Esna 300, 2 et 302, 14), BIFAO 58, 1959, pp. 33-34. http://www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/58/
Sauneron, S., À propos d’un pronostic de naissance (pap. de Berlin 3.038, V° II, 2-5), BIFAO 60, 1960, pp. 29-30. http://www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/60/
Spieser, C., Femmesetdivinités enceintes dans l'Égypte du Nouvel Empire, en: Dasen, V. (ed.), Naissance et petite enfance dans l’Antiquité (OBO 203), Friburgo, 2004, pp. 55-70.
 
Subject 3 – 19/26-10- 2020
El nacimiento
Compulsory:
Wegner, J., A Decorated Birth-Brick from South Abydos: New Evidence on Childbirth and Birth Magic in the Middle Kingdom, en: Silverman, D.P., Simpson, W.K., y Wegner, J. (eds.), Archaism and Innovation: Studies in the Culture of Middle Kingdom Egypt, New Haven - Philadelphia, 2009, 447-496. www.academia.edu/894376/A_Decorated_Birth_Brick_from_South_Abydos_New_Evidence_on_Childbirth_and_Birth_Magic_in_the_Middle_Kingdom
Related:
Altenmüller, H., Die Apotropaia und die Götter Mittelägyptens; eine typologische und religionsgeschichtliche Untersuchung der sogenannten "Zaubermesser" des Mittleren Reichs, Munich, 1965.
Aufrére, S.H., Le hiéroglyphe du crible á grain et la métaphore désignant le nouveau-nédans l'Égypte ancienne, en: Grimal, N.,Kamel, A., y May-Sheikholeslami, C. (eds.), Hommages aFayza Haikal, BdE 138, 2003, pp. 17-27.
Arnette, M.L., Purification du post-partum et rites des relevailles dans l’Égypte ancienne, BIFAO 114, 2015.
Baines, Egyptian Twins, Orientalia 54, 1985, pp. 461-482.
Brunner, H., Die Geburt des Gottkönigs, Studien zur Überlieferung eines Altägyptischen Mythos (ÄA10), Wiesbaden, 1964.
Crum, W.E., Bricks as Birth-Stool, JEA 28, 1942, p. 69.
Erman, A., Zaubersprüche für Mutter und Kind aus dem Papyrus 3027 des Berliner Museums (APAW 1), Berlín, 1901. ia600708.us.archive.org/24/items/39002086410355.med.yale.edu/39002086410355.med.yale.edu.pdf
Frankfort, H., A Note on the Lady of Birth, JNES 3, 1944, pp. 198-200.
Goedicke, H., Rudjedet's Delivery, VA 1,1985, pp. 19-26.
Janssen, R.M. y Janssen, J.J., Growing up in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1990.
Jean, R.A., y Loyrette, A.M., La mère, l’enfant et le lait en Egypte Ancienne, París, 2010.
Koltsida, A., Birth-bed, sitting place, erotic corner or domestic altar? A Study of the so-called “elevated bed” in Deir el-Medina houses, SAK 35, 2006, pp. 165-174.
Marshall, A., Maternité et petite enfance en Égypte Ancienne, Monaco, 2015, pp. 69-117.
Pillet, M., Les scènes de naissance et de circoncision, ASAE 52, 1952, pp. 77-104.
Pinch. G., Childbirth and Female Figurines at Deir el-Medina and el-‘Amarna, Orientalia 52, 1983, pp. 405-414.
Posener, G., Sur l’attribution d’un nom à un enfant, RdÉ 22, 1977, 204-205.
Roberson, J., The Early History of "New Kingdom" Netherworld Iconography: A Late Middle Kingdom Apotropaic Wand Reconsidered, en: Silverman, D.P.; Simpson, W.K.; y Wegner, J., Archaism and Innovation: Studies in the Culture ofMiddle Kingdom Egypt, New Haven - Filadelfia,2009,pp. 427-445.
Robins, G., Women and Children in Peril: Pregnancy, Birth and Infant Mortality in Ancient Egypt,KMT: AModern Journal of Ancient Egypt 5/4, 1994-1995, pp. 24-35.
Roth, A.M., y Roehrig, C.H., Magical Bricks and the Bricks of Birth, JEA 88, 2002, pp. 121-139.
Roth, A.M., The psS-kf and the Opening of the Mouth Ceremony: A Ritual Birth and Rebirth, JEA 78, 1992, pp. 113-147.
Scalf, F., Magical bricks in the Oriental Institute Museum of the University of Chicago, SAK 38, 2009, pp. 275-295.
Schulman, A.R., A Birth Scene (?) from Memphis, JARCE 22, 1985, pp. 97-103.
Teeter, E., Baked Clay Figurines and Votive Beds from Medinet Habu (OIP 133), Chicago, 2010. oi.uchicago.edu/research/publications/oip/oip-133-baked-clay-figurines-and-votive-beds-medinet-habu
Wegner, J., A decoratedbirth-brick from South Abydos, JEA 21, 2002, pp. 3-4.
   
Subject 4 – 2/9-11-2020
La concepción de la infancia y la lactancia
Compulsory:
Marshall, A., The nurture of children in ancient Egypt, GM 247, 2015, p. 51-62. www.academia.edu/23958935/_The_nurture_of_children_in_ancient_Egypt_GM_247_pp._51-62
Related:
Borrego Gallardo, F.L., Las escenas de amamantamiento en los complejos funerarios regios delReino Antiguo. Una aproximación Semiológica (Biblioteca Aegyptiaca Hispanica 2), Cuenca, 2010.
Desroches Noblecourt, C., Pots anthropomorphes et recettes magico-médicales dans l’Égypte Ancienne, RdE 9, 1952, pp. 49-67.
Dunand, F., Les enfants et la mort en Égypte, en: Dasen, V. (ed.), Naissance et petite enfance dansl'antiquité. Actes du colloque de Fribourg, 28novembre-1er décembre 2001 (OBO 203), Friburgo, 2004, pp. 13-32.
Durisch, N. y Feucht, E., Das Kind im Alten Ägypten: Die Stellung des Kindes in Familie und Gesellschaft nach altägyptischenTexten und Darstellungen, RdÉ 48, 1997, pp. 292-296.
Eyre, C., Children and Literature in Pharaonic Egypt, en:Collier, M. y Snape, S. (eds.), Ramesside Studies in Honour of K.A. Kitchen, Bolton, 2011, pp. 177-187.
Harrington, N., Children and Dead in New Kingdom Egypt, en: Stevenson A. y Mairs, R. (eds.), Current Research in Egyptology 2005: Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Symposium, Oxford, 2007, pp. 52-65. www.academia.edu/1334134/Children_and_the_Dead_in_New_Kingdom_Egypt
Janssen, R.M. y Janssen, J.J., Growing up in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1990.
Jean, R.A., y Loyrette, A.M., La mère, l'enfant et le lait en Egypte Ancienne, París, 2010.
Jonckheere, F., Une Chapitre de pédiatrie égyptienne: l’allaitement, Aesculape 37, 1955, pp. 203-223.
Kasparian, B., La condition des nourrices sous le Moyen Empire, BIFAO 107, 2007, pp. 117-118.
www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/107/
Kasparian, B., La condition de l’enfant et du fils aîné dans l’Égypte ancienne, en: Bouineau, J.(ed.), Enfant et romanité, Analyse comparée de la condition de l'enfant, París, 2007, pp. 17-64. www.academia.edu/9258017/La_condition_de_lenfant_et_du_fils_a%C3%AEn%C3%A9_dans_lEgypte_ancienne_in_Enfant_et_romanit%C3%A9_Analyse_compar%C3%A9e_de_la_condition_de_lenfant_coll._M%C3%A9diterran%C3%A9es_2007_p._17-64
Feucht, E., Das Kind im Alten Ägypten, Frankfurt - Nueva York, 1995.
Leclant, J., Le rôle du lait et de l’allaitement d’après les Textes des Pyramides, JNES 10, 1951, pp. 123-127.
MacDonald, D.N., Terms for 'Children' in Middle Egyptian: A Sociolinguistic view, BACE 5, 1994, pp. 53-59.
Marshall, A., Être un enfant en Égypte ancienne, Clamecy, 2013.
Marshall, A., Maternité et petite enfance en Égypte ancienne, Mónaco, 2015.
Marshall,A.,The child and the hoopoe inancient Egypt, KMT 26,2, 2015, pp. 59-63. www.academia.edu/15366631/_The_child_and_the_hoopoe_Kmt_26_2_pp._59-63
Maruéjol, F., La Nourrice: un thème iconographique, ASAE 69, 1983, pp. 311-319.
Mekhitarian, A., L’enfant dans la peinture thébaine, BSFE 108, 1987, pp. 7-25.
Miosi, F.T., Two Additional Examples of right side Breast-Feeding, JSSEA 3, 1973, pp. 4-7.
Seco Álvarez, M., El niño en las pinturas de las tumbas tebanas de la XVIII Dinastía (Kolaios 6), Sevilla, 1997. www.academia.edu/11832263/Myriam_SECO_%C3%81LVAREZ_El_ni%C3%B1o_en_las_pinturas_de_las_tumbas_tebanas_de_la_XVIII_dinast%C3%ADa
Seco, M., Representaciones de niñas acompañando a las plañideras en las tumbas privadas de Tebas de la XVIII Dinastía, en: García Moreno, L.A. y Pérez Largacha, A., (eds.), Egipto y el exterior. Contactos e influencias (Aegyptiaca Complutensia 3), Alcalá de Henares, pp. 143-156.
Seco, M., El papel del niño en las pinturas de las tumbas tebanas de la XVIII Dinastía, Complutum 21, 2010, pp. 155-162. revistas.ucm.es/index.php/CMPL/article/viewFile/CMPL1010220155A/28868
Stefanović, D., The Non-Royal Women of the Middle Kingdom I - mnat, GM 216, 2008, pp. 79-90.
Tristant, Y., Les enterrements d’enfants dans l’Égypte prédynastique et pharaonique, en: Nenna, M.D. (ed.), L’Enfant et la mort dans l’Antiquité II. Types de tombes et traitement du corps des enfants dans l’antiquité (Études Alexandrines 26), Alexandría, 2012, pp. 15-59. www.academia.edu/7772421/Tristant_2012_-_Tristant_Y._Les_enterrements_d_enfants_dans_l_%C3%89gypte_pr%C3%A9dynastique_et_pharaonique_in_Nenna_M.-D._ed._L_Enfant_et_la_mort_dans_l_Antiquit%C3%A9_II._Types_de_tombes_et_traitement_du_corps_des_enfants_dans_l_antiquit%C3%A9_%C3%89tudes_Alexandrines_26_Alexandrie_2012_p._15-59
 
Subject 5 – 16-11- 2020
Los rituales de pasode lapubertad
Related:
Bailey, E., Circumcision in Ancient Egypt, BACE 7, 1996, pp. 15-28.
Capart, J., Note sur un fragment de bas-relief au British Museum, BIFAO 30, 1931, pp. 73-75. www.ifao.egnet.net/bifao/30/
Deme, H.M., Circoncision et excision en Égypte pharaonique et en Afrique noire: une même signification ontologique, Ankh 18-19-20, 2009-2011, pp. 96-105.
Eyre, C., Funerals, Initiation and Rituals of Life in Pharaonic Egypt, en: Mouton, A. y Patrier, J. (eds.), Life, Death, and Coming of Age in Antiquity: Individual Rites of Passage in the Ancient Near East and Adjacent Regions (PIHANS CXXIV), Leiden, 2014, pp. 287-308.
Feutch, E., Pharaonische Beschneidung, en: Meyer, S. (ed.), Egypt: Temple of the Whole World. Studies in Honour of Jan Assmann, Leiden, 2003, pp. 81-94. archiv.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/propylaeumdok/2004/
Jonckheere, F., La Circoncision des anciens Égyptiens, Centaurus I, 1951, pp. 212-234.
Jonckheere, F., Subincision et excision. Mutilations sexuelles pharaoniques?, Histoire de la médicine, vol. I, nº 10, 1951, pp. 4-7.
Megahed, M. y Vymazalová, H., Ancient Egyptian royal circumcision from the pyramid complex of Djedkare, Anthropologia 49/2, 2011, pp. 155–164. www.academia.edu/8364952/Megahed_M._Vymazalov%C3%A1_H._Ancient_Egyptian_royal_circumcision_from_the_pyramid_complex_of_Djedkare_in_Anthropologia_49_2_2011_155_164
Montes, A., La circuncisión en el antiguo Egipto, en: Cervelló Autuori, J. (ed.), África Antigua. El antiguo Egipto, una civilización africana(Aula Aegyptiaca Studia 1), Barcelona, 2001, pp. 195-203.
Naguib, S.A., L’excision pharaonique. Uneappellation erronée?, BSEG 7, 1982, pp. 79-83.
Pillet, M., Les scènes denaissance etde circoncision, ASAE52, 1952, pp. 77-104. www.cfeetk.cnrs.fr/fichiers/Documents/Ressources-PDF/documents/K1288-PILLET.pdf
Quack, J., Zur Beschneidung im Alten Ägypten, en: Berlejung, A.; Dietrich, J.; Quack, J.F. (eds.), Menschenbilder und Körperkonzepte im Alten Israel, in Ägypten und im Alten Orient (ORA 9), Tübingen, 2012, pp. 561-651.
Stracmans, M., Un rite d’initiation à masque d’animal dans la plus ancienne religion égyptienne?, Annuaire de l’Institut de Philologie et d’Histoire Orientales et Slaves 12, Bruselas, 1952, pp. 427-440.
Stracmans, M., A propos d’un texte relatif à la circoncision égyptienne (1re période intermédiaire), Annuaire de l’Institut de Philologie et d’Histoire Orientales et Slaves 13, 1953,pp. 631-639.
Stracmans, M., Les fêtes de la circoncision chez les anciens Égyptiens, CdÉ 60, 1985, pp. 292-297.
Willems, H., A Note on Circumcision in Ancient Egypt, en: Flossmann-Schütze,M.C. et al. (eds.),Kleine Götter – Grosse Götter. Festschrift für Dieter Kessler zum 65. Geburtstag (Tuna el-Gebel 4), Vaterstetten, 2013, pp. 553-558.
 
Subject 6 – 23-11-2020
La poesía erótico-amorosa
Compulsory:
Baines, J., Literacy and Ancient Egyptian Society, Man 18, 1983, pp. 572-599.
Related:
Duquesne, T., Sacred and profane in Egyptian love poetry, SESHAT 1, 1998, pp. 28-36. 
Fox, M.V., The Cairo Love Songs, JAOS 100, 1980, pp. 101-109.
Fox, M.V., 'Love' in the Love Songs, JEA 67, 1981, pp. 181-182.
Fox, M.V., Love, Passion, and Perception in Israelite and Egyptian Love Poetry, JBL 102, 1983, pp. 219-228.
Fox, M.V., The Song of Songs and the Ancient Egyptian Love Songs, Wisconsin, 1985.
Griffiths, J.G., Love as Disease, en: Israelit-Groll, S. (ed.),Studies in Egyptology presented toM. Lichtheim I, 1990, Jerusalem, pp. 349-364.
Hagedorn, A.C., Searching for a common background: Egyptian love poetry and the Biblical Song of Songs, Berlín, 2005.
Landgrafova, R. y Navratilova, H., Sex and the Golden Goddess I. Ancient Egyptian Love Songs in Context, Praga, 2009.
Landgrafova, R. y Navratilova, H., Sex and the Golden Goddess II. The World of the Love Songs, Praga, 2016.
López, J., Le verger d’amour (P. Turin 1966, recto), RdÉ 43, 1992, pp. 133-143.
López, J., La Disputa de los árboles del huerto, en: Cervelló, J., Díaz de Cerio, M. y Rull, D. (eds.), Actas del Segundo Congreso Ibérico de Egiptología, Bellaterra, 2005, pp. 19-25.
Mathieu, B., Lapoésie amoureuse de l'Égypte ancienne. Recherches sur un genre littéraire au Nouvel Empire (BdÉ 115), El Cairo, 1996.
Sweeney, D., Gender and Language in the Ramesside Love Songs, BES 16, 2002, pp. 27-50. www.academia.edu/8333429/Sweeney_D._2003._Gender_and_Language_in_the_Ramesside_Love_Songs._Bulletin_of_the_Egyptological_Seminar_16_27_50
Vernus, P., Chants d'amour de l'Égypte antique, París, 1992.
 
Subject 7 – 30-11 and 7-12-2020
Hombres y mujeres: los roles de género
Compulsory:
Roth, A.M., Little women: gender and hierarchic proportion in Old Kingdom mastaba chapels, en: Bárta, M. (ed.), The Old Kingdom Art and Archaeology. Proceedings of the Conference Held in Prague, May 31 - June 4, 2004, Praga, 2006, pp. 281-296. www.gizapyramids.org/pdf_library/roth_okaa_2006.pdf
Related:
Bagnal, R.S. y Cribiore, R., Women’s Letters from Ancient Egypt, 3000 BC – 800 AD, Ann Arbor, 2006.
Baligh, R.O., Representation on Femalesin Egyptian Art, en: Daoud, K.; Bedier, S.; y El Abd el-Fatah, S. (eds.), Studies in Honor of AliRadwan(CASAE 34/1),El Cairo, 2005, pp. 169-176.
Callender, V.G., Non-royal women in Old Kingdom Egypt, Archiv Orientálí 68(2), 2000, pp. 219¬-236.
Callender, V.G., A Contribution to the Burial of Women in the Old Kingdom, Archiv Orientálí 70, 2002, pp. 301-308. www.gizapyramids.org/pdf_library/callender_archiv_or_70.pdf
Capel, A.K. y Glenn, E.M. (eds.), Mistress of the House Mistress of the Heaven: Women in Ancient Egypt, Nueva York, 1996.
Castañeda, J.C., Señoras y esclavas. El papel de la mujer en la historia social del Egipto antiguo, México DF, 2008.
Depla, A., Women in Ancient Egyptian Wisdom Literature, en: Archer, L.J., Fischler, S., y Wyke, M. (eds), Women in Ancient Societies. An illusion of the night, Londres, 1994, pp.24-52.
Dieleman, J., Fear of women? Representations of women in demotic wisdom texts, SAK 25, 1998, pp. 7-46. www.academia.edu/3670489/Fear_of_Women._Representations_of_Women_in_Demotic_Wisdom_Texts
Fay, B., Royal Women as Represented in Sculpture during the Old Kingdom, en: Grimal, N. (ed.), Les critéres de datation stylistiques á l'Ancien Empire (BdE 120), El Cairo, 1998, pp. 159-186. www.gizapyramids.org/pdf_library/fay_art_101-147.pdf
Fischer, H.G., Egyptian Women of the Old Kingdom and of the Heracleopolitan Period, Second Edition, Nueva York, 2000. www.gizapyramids.org/pdf_library/fischer_eg_women.pdf
Förster, F., Ringende Frauen im Alten Ägypten, GM 205, 2005, pp. 37-41. www.academia.edu/2461512/F%C3%B6rster_F._2005_Ringende_Frauen_im_Alten_%C3%84gypten
Graff, G., Les représentations de femmes et de laplante nagadienne sur les vases decorated-ware de NagadaII, Cahiers Caribéens d'Egyptologie 12, 2009, pp. 33-69. www.academia.edu/592021/Les_repr%C3%A9sentations_de_femmes_et_de_la_plante_nagadienne_sur_les_vases_Decorated-Ware_de_Nagada_II
Graves-Brown, C., Dancing forHathor. Womenin Ancient Egypt, Londres, 2010.
Hare, T.,ReMembering Osiris: Number, gender, and the word in ancient Egyptian representational systems, Stanford, 1999.
Johnson, J.H., The Social, Economic, andLegal Status of Women in Ancient Egypt, en: Teeter, E., y Johnson, J.H. (eds.), The Life of Meresamun. A Temple Singer in ancient Egypt (OIM 29), Chicago, 2009, pp. 82-97.
Kleinke, N., Females Spaces; Untersuchungen zu Gender und Archáologie im pharaonischen Agypten (GM Beihefte 1), 2007.
Lesko, L.H., The Perception of Women in Pharaonic Egyptian Wisdom Literature, en: Lesko, L.H. (ed), Ancient Egyptian and Mediterranean Studies in Memory of William A. Ward, Providence, 1998, pp. 163-171.
Lesko, B.S., “Listening” to the ancient Egyptian Woman: Letters, Testimonials, and other Expressions of self, en: Teeter, E., y Larson, J.A., Gold of Praise: Studies on Ancient Egypt in Honor of Edward F. Wente (SAOC 58), Chicago, 1999, pp. 247-254. oi.uchicago.edu/research/publications/saoc/saoc-58-gold-praise-studies-ancient-egypt-honor-edward-f-wente
Malaise, M., La position delafemme sur les stèles de Moyen Empire, SAK 5, 1977, pp. 183-198.
Orriols i Llonch, M., La traición a la maat. La violencia contra las mujeres en el antiguo Egipto, en: Molas Font, Mª Dolors(ed.), Violencia deliberada. Las raíces de la violencia patriarcal, Barcelona: Icaria, 2007, pp. 57-70. www.academia.edu/709435/La_traici%C3%B3n_a_la_maat._La_violencia_contra_las_mujeres_en_el_antiguo_Egipto_Betraying_Maat._Violence_against_Women_in_ancient_Egypt_
Orriols-Llonch, M., Mujer ideal, mujer infractora. La transgresión femenina en el antiguo Egipto, Lectora 18, 2012, pp. 17-40. www.academia.edu/2103200/Orriols-Llonch_M._Mujer_ideal_mujer_infractora._La_transgresi%C3%B3n_femenina_en_el_antiguo_Egipto_Lectora._Revista_de_Dones_i_Textualitat_18_Barcelona_2012_pp._17-40
Pakinson, R.B., Boastingabout hardness:constructions of Middle Kingdom masculinity, en: Graves-Brown, C. (ed.), Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt. 'Don Your Wig for a Joyful Hour', Swansea, 2008, pp. 115-142.
Quirke, S., Reading gender in ancient Egyptian healing papyri, en: National Healths: Gender, Sexuality and Health in a Crosscultural Context, 2013, pp. 191-199. 
Quirke, S., Women in Ancient Egypt: temple titles and funerary papyri, en: Tait, W.J., y Leahy, A. (eds.), Studies on Ancient Egypt in Honour of H.S. Smith(Occasional Publications 13), Londres, 1999, pp. 227-235.
Ridealgh, K., Yes dear! Spousal dynamics in the Late Ramesside Letters, en: Horn, M., van den Hoven, C., Kramer, J., Soliman, D., Staring, N. y L. Weiss (eds.), Current Research in Egyptology 2010: Proceedingsof the Eleventh Annual Symposium, Oxford, 2011, pp. 124-130. www.academia.edu/857118/Yes_Dear_Spousal_Dynamics_in_the_Late_Ramesside_Letters
Robins, G., Some Principles of Compositional Dominance and Gender Hierarchy in Egyptian Art, JARCE 31, 1994, pp. 33-40.
Robins, G., Women in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1993 [trad. castellana: Las mujeres en el antiguo Egipto, Madrid, 1996].
Robins, G., An Unusual Statue of a Royal Mother-in-Law and Grandmother, en: Tait, W.J., y Leahy, A. (eds.), Studies in Ancient Egypt in Honour of H.S. Smith (Occasional Publications 13), Londres, 1999, pp. 255-259.
Robins, G., Male Bodies andthe Construction of Masculinity in New Kingdom Egyptian Art, en: D’Auria, S.H. (ed.), Servant of Mut. Studies in Honor of Richard A. Fazzini (PdÄ 28), Leiden, 2008, pp. 208-215.
Roth, A.M., The Absent Spouse: Patterns and Taboos in Egyptian Tomb Decoration,JARCE 36, 1999, pp. 37-53. arthistory.as.nyu.edu/docs/IO/2596/RothAbsentSpouse.pdf
Savage, S., The Status of Women in Predynastic Egypt as Revealed through Mortuary Analysis,en: Rautman, A.E. (ed.), Readingthe Body: Representations and Remains in the Archaeological Record,2000, pp. 77-92. www.academia.edu/3046909/The_Status_of_Women_in_Predynastic_Egypt_as_Revealed_through_Mortuary_Analysis
Shubert, S.B., Does She or Doesn’t She? Female Literacy in Ancient Egypt, en: Proceedingsof theNear and Middle EasternCivilizations Graduate Student's Annual Symposia 1998-2000, Toronto, 2001, pp. 55-76.
Stefanović, D., The Non-Royal Regular Feminine Titles of the Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period: Dossiers (GHP Egyptology 11), Londres, 2009.
Stefanović, D. y Satzinger, H., I am a nbt-pr, and I am independent, en: Grajetzki, W., y Miniaci, G. (eds.), The World of Middle Kingdom Egypt (GHP Egyptology 23), Londres, 2015, pp. 333-338.
Sweeney, D., Women’s Correspondence from Deir El-Medineh, en: Curto, S. et al. (eds.), Sesto Congresso Internationale di Egittologia: Atti, vol. 2, 1993, pp. 523-530.
Sweeney, D., Women and Language in the Ramesside Period or, why Women don’t say please, en: Eyre, C.J. (ed.), Procedings of the Seventh International Congres of Egyptologist, Cambridge, 3-9 September 1995, Leuven, 1998, pp. 1109-1117.
Sweeney, D., Gender and Conversational Tactics in the Contendings of Horus and Seth, JEA 88, 2002, pp. 142-162.
Swinton, J., The Depiction of Wives of Tomb Owners in Later Old Kingdom, BACE 14, 2003, pp. 95-110.
Szpakowska, K., Hidden Voices: Unveiling Women in Ancient Egypt, en: James, S.L. y Dillon, S. (eds.), A Companion to Women in the Ancient World, Malden-Oxford, 2012, pp. 25-38.                                                           
Toivari-Viitala, J., Women at Deir el-Medina. A Study of the Status and Roles of the Female Inhabitants in the Workmen's Community during the Ramesside Period (EU 15),Leiden,2001.
Tyldesley, J., Daughters of Isis, Londres,1994 [trad. castellana:Las hijas de Isis. La mujer en el antiguo Egipto,Barcelona,1998].
Vasiljević, V., An Unusual Representation of Tomb Owner’s Wife (Deir el Gebrawi Tomb No 67), JES 1, 2004, pp. 117-126. www.academia.edu/900678/An_Unusual_Representation_of_the_Tomb_Owner_s_Wife_Deir_el_Gebrawi_Tomb_no_67_
Vasiljević, V., Der Grabherr und seine Frau. Zur Ikonographie der Status- und Machtverhältnisse in den Privatgräbern des Altes Reiches, SAK 36, 2007, pp. 333-345. www.academia.edu/776894/Der_Grabherr_und_seine_Frau._Zur_Ikonographie_der_Status-_und_Machtverh%C3%A4ltnisse_in_den_Privatgr%C3%A4bern_des_Alten_Reiches
Vasiljević, V., Hierarchy of Women within Elite Families. Iconographic Data from the Old Kingdom, en: Kóthay, K.A. (ed.), Art and Society. Ancient and Modern Contexts of Egyptian Art, Budapest, 2012, pp. 139-149. www.academia.edu/1633915/Hierarchy_of_women_within_elite_families_Iconographic_data_from_the_Old_Kingdom
Ward, W.A., Essays on Feminine Titles of the Middle Kingdom and Related Subjects, 1986, Beirut.
Wenig, S., Die Frau im alten Ägypten, Leipzig, 1967.
 
Subject 8 – 14/21-12- 2020
El matrimonio y la familia
Copulsory:
Campagno, M., Kinship and Family Relations, en:  Frood, E., y Wendrich, W., UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles,2009. escholarship.org/uc/item/7zh1g7ch
Related:
Allam, S., Quelques aspects du mariage dans l’Égypte ancienne, JEA 67, 1981, pp. 116-135.
Allen, T.D., The Ancient Egyptian Family, Nueva York-Londres, 2009.
Borghouts, J. F., Monthuand Matrimonial Squabbles, RdÉ 33, 1981, pp. 11-22.
Díaz Rivas, H., La herencia en el antiguo Egipto: entre el modelo mítico y la realidad social, en: Campagno,M. (ed.), Parentesco, patronazgo y Estado en las sociedades antiguas (PEFSCEA 5), Buenos Aires, 2009,pp. 69-86.
Díaz Rivas, H., xArt, la viuda: unaaproximación a través de los determinativos, en: de Araújo, L.M. y das Candeias Sales, J. (eds.), Novos trabalhos de Egiptologia Ibérica, vol. I, Lisboa, 2012, pp. 357-373. www.academia.edu/11606910/La_viuda_una_aproximaci%C3%B3n_a_trav%C3%A9s_de_los_determinativos
Díaz Rivas, H, The widowhood in Ancient Egypt, en: Kousoulis, P. y Lazaridis, N. (eds.), Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Egyptologists, University of the Aegean, Rhodes, 22-29 May 2008 (OLA), Leuven, 2016.
Eyre, C.J., Crime and Adultery in Ancient Egypt, JEA 70, 1984, pp. 92-105.
Eyre, C., The evil Stepmother and the Rights of a second Wife, JEA 93, 2007, pp. 223¬-243.
Frandsen, P.J., Incestuous and Close-Kin Marriage in Ancient Egypt and Persia: An Examination of the Evidence, Copenhagen, 2009.
Kóthay, K., The Widow and Orphan in Egypt before the New Kingdom,AcAnt. (B) 46, 2006, pp. 151-164.
Janssen, J.J., Marriage Problems and Public Reactions (P. BM 10416), en: Baines, J. et al. (eds.), Pyramid Studies and other Essays Presented to I.E.S. Edwards (Occasional Publications 7), Londres, 1988, pp. 134-137.
Johnson, J.H., Speculations on Middle Kingdom Marriage, en: Leahy, A., y Tait, J. (eds.), Studies on Ancient Egypt in Honour of H.S. Smith (EES Occasional Publications 13) Londres, 1999, pp. 169-172. nelc.uchicago.edu/sites/nelc.uchicago.edu/files/Speculations_on_Middle_Kingdom_Marriage.pdf
Johnson, J.H., Sex and Marriage in Ancient Egypt, en: Grimal, N., Kamel, A., y May-Sheikholeslami, C. (eds.), Hommages a Fayza Haikal, BdE 138, 2003,pp. 149-159. www.academia.edu/12673061/_Sex_and_Marriage_in_Ancient_Egypt_from_Hommages_Haikal
Lustig, J., Ideologies of Social Relations in Middle Kingdom Egypt: Gender, Kingship, ancestors, Ann Arbor, 1993.
Martin, C.J.,A Twenty-Seventh Dynasty 'Marriage Contract' fromSaqqara,en: Leahy, A.y Tait, J. (eds.), Studies in Ancient EgyptinHonour of H.S. Smith (EES Occasional Publications 13), Londres, 1999, pp. 193-199.
Pestman, P.W., Marriage and Matrimonial Property in Ancient Egypt. A Contribution to Establishing the Legal Position of the Woman (Papyrologica Lugduno-Batava 9), Lugdum Batavorum, 1976.
Robins, G., The Relationships Specified by Egyptian Kinship Terms of the Middle and New Kingdoms, CdÉ 54 (108), 1979, pp. 197-217.
Toivari, J., Marriage at Deir el-Medina, en: Eyre, C.J. (ed.), Procedings of the Seventh International Congres of Egyptologist, Cambridge, 3-9 September 1995, Leuven, pp. 1157-1163.
Toivari-Viitala, J., Man versus Woman. Interpersonal Disputes in the Workmen’s Community of Deir el-Medina, JESHO 15, 1997, pp. 151-173.
Toivari-Viitala, J., Marriageand Divorce, en: Frood, E. y Wendrich, W. (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles, 2013, pp. 1-17. www.academia.edu/2971079/Marriage_and_Divorce
Vernus, P., Production-pouvoir et parente dans l’Égypte pharaonique, en: Breteau, C.H., Lacoste-Dujardin, C., Lefebvre, C., y Zagnoli, N. (eds.), Production et parenté dans le monde Méditerranéen: De Sumer à nous jours. Actes du séminaire organisé par l’era 357 CNRS/EHSS, París, Décembre 1976, París, 1981, pp. 103-115.
Willems, H., A Description of Egyptian Kinship Terminology of the Middle Kingdom c. 2000-1650 B.C., Bijdragen tot de taal-, land- en volkenkunde 139, 1983, pp. 152-169. booksandjournals.brillonline.com/content/journals/10.1163/22134379-90003459?crawler=true
 
TEMA 9 –  11/18-91- 2021
Las relaciones sexuales
Compulsory:
Orriols i Llonch, M., Léxico e iconografía erótica del antiguo Egipto: la cópula a tergo, TdE 5/2,Tenerife, 2009, pp. 123-137. www.academia.edu/712971/L%C3%A9xico_e_iconograf%C3%ADa_er%C3%B3tica_del_antiguo_Egipto._El_coito_a_tergo
Related:
Abdalla, M.A., Bemerkungen zu Papyrus Turin Nr. 55001, GM 223, 2009, pp. 7-16.
Amenta, A., SomeReflections on the 'Homosexual' Intercourse between Horus and Seth, GM 199, 2004, pp. 7-22.
de Araújo, L.M., Erotismo e sexualidade no antigo Egito (Temas Pré-clássicos 6), 2012, Lisboa.
Barta, W., Zur Reziprozität der homosexuellen Beziehung zwischen Horus und Seth, GM 129, pp. 33-60.
Buchberger, H., Sexualität und Harfenspiel. Notizen zur "sexuellen" konnotation der Altägyptischen ikonographie, GM 66, 1983, pp. 11-43.
Brawanski, A. y Fischer-Elfert, H.W., Der „erotische“ Abschnitt der Turiner Papyrus 55001: Ein Lehrstück für männliche Ego?, SAK 41, 2012, pp. 67-97.
Booth, C., In bed with ancient Egyptians, Gloucestershire,2015.
Collombert, P. y Volokhine, Y., De Aegyptiacis Rebus Doctorum Verecundia ou "Let's Talk about Sex, Égypte, Afrique et Orient 40, 2005, pp. 45-56. www.academia.edu/3224899/Philippe_Collombert_et_Youri_Volokhine_De_Aegyptiacis_Rebus_Doctorum_Verecundia_ou_Lets_Talk_About_Sex_Egypte_Afrique_et_Orient_40_2005_p._45-55
Dowson, T.A., Queering Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt, en: Graves-Brown, C. (ed.), Don your Wig for a Joyful hour. Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt, Swansea, 2008, pp. 27-46. www.academia.edu/236651/Queering_Sex_and_Gender_in_Ancient_Egypt
Duquesne,T., The Spiritual and theSexual in Ancient Egypt, DE 61, 2005, pp. 7-24.
Eissa, A., Eine metaphorische Geste der sexuellen Vereinigung, GM 184, 2001, pp. 7¬-11.
Janák,J. yNavrátilová, H., People vs. PTurin 55001, en: Graves-Brown, C. (ed.), “Don Your Wig for a Joyful Hour- Sex and Gender in Ancient Egypt, Swansea, 2008, pp. 63-70.
Kammerzell, F. y Toro Rueda, M.I., Nicht der Homosexuelle istpervers. Die ZweiuddreiBigste Maxime der Lehre des Ptahhotep, LingAeg 11, pp. 2003, pp. 63-78.
Kessler, D., Der Satirisch-Erotische Papyrus Turin 55001 und das verbringen des schönen Tages, SAK 15, 1998, pp. 171-196.
Manniche, L., Some Aspects of Ancient Egyptian Sexual Life, Acta Orientalia 38, 1977, pp. 11-23. manniche.daes.dk/wp/wp-content/uploads/1977AO8.pdf
Manniche, L. Sexual Life in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1987 [trad. Castellana, La esfinge erotica, Barcelona, 1988].
Martin, G.T., Erotic figurines: The Cairo Museum Material, GM 96,  1987, pp. 71-84.
Myśliwiec, K., Eros on the Nile, Londres, 2004.
O’Connor, D., Satire or Parody? The Interaction of the Pictorial and the Literaryin Turin Papyrus 55001, en: Collier,M. y Snape, S. (eds.), Ramesside Studies in Honour of K.A. Kitchen, Bolton, 2011, pp. 361-380.
Omlin, J.A., Der Papyrus 55001 und seine Satirisch-erotischen Zeichnungen und Inschriften (Catalogo del Museo Egizio di Torino, serie prima - Monumenti e testi, volume 3), Turín, 1973.
Orriols i Llonch, M., Divine Copulation in the Pyramid Texts. A Lexical and Cultural Approach, en: Goyon, J.C y Cardin, C. (eds), Proceedings of the Ninth International Congress of Egyptologist. Grenoble, 6-12 September 2004 (OLA 150), Leuven, 2007, pp. 1421-1427. www.academia.edu/697420/Divine_Copulation_in_the_Pyramid_Texts._A_Lexical_and_Cultural_Approach
Orriols i Llonch, M., La sexualidad en el antiguo Egipto. Un estudio léxico y cultural (tesis doctoral inédita), Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, 2010.
Orriols-Llonch, M., Sex and Cosmogony. The Onanism of the Solar Demiurg, GM 233, 2012, pp. 31-42. www.academia.edu/1568607/Orriols-Llonch_M._Sex_and_Cosmogony._The_Onanism_of_the_Solar_Demiurg_G%C3%B6ttinger_Miszellen_233_G%C3%B6ttingen_2012_pp._31-42
Orriols-Llonch, M., Semen ingestion and oral sex in ancient Egyptian Texts, en:Kousoulis, P., y Lazaridis, N.(eds.), Proceedings of the Tenth International Congress of Egyptologists, University of the Aegean, Rhodes, 22-29 May 2008 (OLA 241), Leuven, 2015, pp. 839-848. https://www.academia.edu/5109898/Orriols-Llonch_M._Semen_ingestion_and_oral_sex_in_ancient_Egyptian_Texts_in_Kousoulis_P._and_Lazaridis_N._eds._Proceedings_of_the_Tenth_International_Congress_of_Egyptologists_University_of_the_Aegean_Rhodes_22-29_May_2008_Orientalia_Lovaniensia_Analecta_241_Leuven_2015_839-848
Orriols-Llonch, M., Women’s role in sexual intercourse in ancient Egypt, en: Budin, S. y Turfa, J.M. (eds.), Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, Londres – Nueva York, 2016, pp. 194-203.
Parkinson, R.B., 'Homosexual' desire and Middle Kingdom Literature, JEA 81, 1995, pp. 57-76.
Reeder, G., Musings on the Sexual Nature of the Human-Headed Ba Bird, KMT 9 (3), 1998, pp. 72-78. www.academia.edu/3287150/Musings_on_the_Sexual_Nature_of_the_Human-Headed_Ba_Bird
Robins, G., Ancient Egyptian Sexuality, DE 11, 1988, pp. 61-72.
Schreiber, S., Keusch wie kaum ein anderes Volk? Einige Anmerkungen zum Sexual-Vokabular der alten Ägypter, en: Mendel, D. y Claudi, U. (eds.), Ägypten im Afro-Orientalischen Kontext. Gedenkschrift Peter Behrens, Colonia, 1991, pp. 315-335.
Schukraft, B., Homosexualität im Alten Ägypten, SAK 36, 2007, pp. 297-331.
Vernus, P., Stratégie d’épure et stratégie d'appogiature dans les productions dites «artistiques» à l’usage des dominants. Le papyrus dit « érotique » de Turin et la mise à distance des  dominés, en: Kóthay, K.A. (ed.), Art and Society. Ancient and Modern Context ofEgyptianArt, Budapest, 2012, pp. 109-121. www.academia.edu/7947278/Strat%C3%A9gie_d_%C3%A9pure_et_strat%C3%A9gie_d_appogiature_dans_les_productions_dites_artistiques_%C3%A0_l_usage_des_dominants._Le_papyrus_dit_%C3%A9rotique_de_Turin_et_la_mise_%C3%A0_distance_des_domin%C3%A9s
Westendorf, W., Ein neuer Fall der „homosexuellen Episode“ zwischen Horus und Seth?, GM  97, 1987, pp. 71-77.
 
Subject 10 – 25-01- 2021
La vejez y la muerte
Compulsory:
Sweeney, D., Women Growing Older in Deir el-Medina, en: Dorn, A., y Hofmann, T. (eds.), Living and Writing in Deir el-Medine. Socio-historical Embodiment of Deir el-Medine Texts (AH 19), Basilea,2006, pp. 135-153. www.academia.edu/810499/_Women_Growing_Older_in_Deir_el-Med%C3%AEna
Related:
Assmann, J., Death and Salvation in Ancient Egypt, Ithaca - Nueva York – Londres, 2005.
Baines, J. y Lacovara, P., Burial and the Dead in ancient Egyptian Society: Respect, formalism, neglect, Journal of Social Archaeology 2, 2002, pp. 5-36. www.researchgate.net/profile/Peter_Lacovara/publication/249631679_Burial_and_the_Dead_in_Ancient_Egyptian_Society/links/570bb1b308ae8883a1ffd3fa.pdf/download?version=va
Carreira, P., A imagem do velho no antigo Egipto, en: de Araújo, L.M. y Sales, J. das C. (eds.), Novos trabalhos de Egiptologia Ibérica, vol 1, Lisboa, 2012, pp. 213-225.
Cooney, K.M., The Functional Materialism of Death in Ancient Egypt:a CaseStudy of Funerary Materials from the Ramesside Period, en: Fitzenreiter, M. (ed.), Das Heilige und die Ware. Zum Spannungsfeld von Religion und Ökonomie (IBAES 7), Londres, 2007, pp. 273-300. www2.hu-berlin.de/nilus/net-publications/ibaes7/publikation/cooney_ibaes7.pdf
Cooney, K.M., The Cost of Death: The Social and Economic Value of Ancient Egyptian FuneraryArt in the Ramesside Period (EU 22), Leiden, 2007. www.academia.edu/5063352/The_Cost_of_Death_The_Social_and_Economic_Value_of_Ancient_Egyptian_Funerary_Art_in_the_Ramesside_Period
www.academia.edu/5063387/The_Cost_of_Death_part_II
Cooney, K.M., Gender transformation inn Death:A case ofstudy of coffins from Ramesside Period Egypt, NearEastern Archaeology 73:4, 2010, pp. 224-237. www.academia.edu/998725/Gender_Transformation_in_Death_A_Case_Study_of_Coffins_from_Ramesside_Period_Egypt
Grajetzki, W., Burial Customs in Ancient Egypt: Life in Death for Rich and Poor, Londres, 2003.
Hays, H., Between Identity and Agency in ancient Egyptian Ritual, en: Nyord, R. y Kjolby, A. (eds.), Ancient Egyptian Rituals, 'Being in Ancient Egypt'. Thoughts on Agency, Materialityand Cognition. Proceedings of the Seminar held in Copenhagen, September 29-30, 2006 (BAR 2019), 2009, pp. 15-30. openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/15716/Hays+2009+Between+Identity_Page_01.pdf?sequence=1
Hays, H.M., Funerary Rituals (Pharaonic Period), en: J. Dieleman y W. Wendrich (eds.), UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles, 2010. escholarship.org/uc/item/1r32g9zn
Ikram, S., Mummification, en: Wendrich, W.; Dieleman, J.; Frood, E.; y Baines, J., UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology, Los Angeles, 2010. eprints.cdlib.org/uc/item/0gn7x3ff
Janssen, J.M.A., On the Ideal Lifetime of the Egyptians, OMRO 31,1950, pp. 33-43.
Janssen, R.M. y Janssen, J.J., Getting old in Ancient Egypt, Londres, 1996.
Manniche, L., Eternal Youth, The Heritage of Egypt 2/2 May 2009, pp. 29-32. manniche.daes.dk/wp/wp-content/uploads/2009Heritage.pdf
McDowell, A.G., Legal aspects of the Care of the Elderly in Egypt to the End of the New Kingdom, en: Stol, M. (ed.), The care of the Elderly in the Ancient Near East (Studies in the History and Culture of the ancient Near East 14), Leiden, 1998, pp. 199-221.
Medina Sánchez, M., Sabiduría versus debilidad: Los modelos de representación de la vejez en el Egipto faraónico sobre soporte mural, BAEDE 18, 2008, pp. 161-186.
Meskell, L., Spatial analysis ofthe Deir el Medina Necropolis,en: Demarée, R.J.y Egberts, A. (eds), Deir el-Medina in the ThirdMillenniumAD (EU 14) Leiden, 2000, pp. 259-273.
Meskell, L., The Egyptian waysof death,en: Chesson, M. (ed.), Social Memory, Identity and Death: Anthropological Perspectives on Mortuary Rituals, Washington, 2001, pp. 27-40. www.researchgate.net/publication/229832548_The_Egyptian_Ways_of_Death
Molinero, M.A., Prácticas funerarias y creencias escatológicas del Egipto Antiguo, Biblioteca de recursos electrónicos de Humanidades e-excellence, Madrid, 2005, pp. 1 23.
Riefstahl, E., An Egyptian Portrait of an Old Man, JNES 10, 1951, pp. 65-73.
Sweeney, D., Forever Young? The Representation of Older and Ageing Women in Ancient Egyptian Art, JARCE 41, 2004, pp. 67-84.
Taylor, J., Death and the Afterlife inAncient Egypt, Londres, 2001.
Volokhine, Y., Tristesse rituelle et lamentations funéraires en Égypte ancienne, Revue de l’histoire des religions 225, 2008, pp. 163-197. www.academia.edu/646832/Tristesse_rituelle_et_lamentations_fun%C3%A9raires_en_Egypte_ancienne
Zandee, J., Death as an Enemy: According to Ancient Egyptian Conceptions, Nueva York, 1977.
 

  

Course:
 
SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC HISTORY OF ANCIENT EGYPT
 
2.5 ECTS credits
 
Lecturer: Juan Carlos Moreno García

Proposed readings:

First week:

- Juan Carlos Moreno García, “Les échanges entre l'Égypte et lesrégions voisines (2100-1800 avant J.-C.)”, Égypte, Afrique & Orient 73 (2014), 7-18:
https://www.academia.edu/7422538/_Les_%C3%A9changes_entre_l%C3%89gypte_et_les_r
%C3%A9gions_voisines_2100-1800_avant_J.-C._

- Juan Carlos Moreno García, “Invaders or just herders? Libyans inEgypt in the 3rd and 2nd
millennia BCE”, World Archaeology 46 (2014), 610-623:
https://www.academia.edu/6964784/_Invaders_or_just_herders_Libyans_in_Egypt_in_the_3rd_and_2nd_millennia_BCE_World_Archaeology_46_4_2014_610-623

- Seth Richardson, “Early Mesopotamia: the presumptive state”, Past & Present 215 (2012),3-49:
https://www.academia.edu/4338807/EARLY_MESOPOTAMIA_THE_PRESUMPTIVE_STATE_2012_

Second week:

- T. C. Wilkinson, “Macro-scale analysis of material culture in their landscapes: case-studies in ‘invisible flows’”, en R. Matthews &J. Curtis (eds.), Proceedings of the 7th International
Congress on the Archaeology of the Ancient Near East. Vol.1: Mega-cities & Mega-sites: The Archaeology of Consumption & Disposal, Landscape, Transport & Communication,Wiesbaden,2012, p. 647-662:
https://www.academia.edu/1359007/Macroscale_analysis_of_Material_culture_in_their_landscapes_case-studies_in_invisible_flows_

- Susan Sherratt, “The Mediterranean economy: ‘Globalization’ at the end of the second millennium B.C.E”, en W. G. Dever & S. Gitin (eds.), Symbiosis, Symbolism and the Power of the Past. Canaan, Ancient Israel, and Their Neighbors from the Late Bronze Age through Roman Palaestina, Winona Lake, 2003, pp. 37-62:
https://www.academia.edu/2163666/The_Mediterranean_economy_Globalizationat_the_end_of_the_second_millennium_BCE


- Judith Bunbury, David Jeffreys, “Real and literary landscapes in ancient Egypt”, Cambridge Archaeological Journal 21 (2011), 65-76.