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Afrika --- Afrique --- Geschiedenis van de Oudheid --- Histoire de l'Antiquité --- Linguistique --- Taalkunde --- Egyptian language --- Inscriptions, Egyptian --- Egyptien (Langue) --- Inscriptions égyptiennes --- Dictionaries --- English. --- Dictionnaires anglais --- Ptolemaic dynasty, --- Temple of Edfu --- Temple d'Edfou --- -Egyptian language --- -Academic collection --- Afroasiatic languages --- -English --- Inscriptions --- Ptolemaic dynasty, 305-30 B.C. --- Temple of Horus (Idfu, Egypt) --- Inscriptions égyptiennes --- Academic collection --- Demotic inscriptions --- Egyptian inscriptions --- Hieratic inscriptions --- Hieroglyphic inscriptions (Egyptian) --- Inscriptions, Demotic --- Inscriptions, Hieratic --- Inscriptions, Hieroglyphic (Egyptian) --- Dictionaries&delete& --- English --- Temple of Horus (Idfū, Egypt) --- Egyptian language - Dictionaries - English. --- Inscriptions, Egyptian - Egypt - Idfū
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In this study, Penelope Wilson explores the cultural significance of hieroglyphic script with an emphasis on previously neglected areas such as crptography, the continuing decipherment into modern times, and examines the powerful fascination hieroglyphs still hold for us today.
Egyptian language --- Egyptian hieroglyphics --- Hieroglyphics, Egyptian --- Writing, Hieroglyphic.
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Excavations (Archaeology) --- History --- Ṣā al Ḥajar (Egypt) --- Egypt --- Antiquities --- Ṣā al Ḥajar (Egypt) --- Antiquities. --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Saïs (ville ancienne) --- Sâ el-Haggar (Égypte) --- Égypte --- Antiquités --- Fouilles archéologiques --- Saïs (ville ancienne) --- Sâ el-Haggar (Égypte) --- Égypte --- Antiquités
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"The site of Zawiyet Umm el-Rakham, on Egypt's Mediterranean coast 300 km west of Alexandria, was one of the largest and most important of the fortresses built by Ramesses II. It was constructed in order to protect Egypt's trade links in the Eastern Mediterranean and to guard Egypt itself from the invasions of Libyan tribesmen. The site was briefly investigated by the archaeologist Labib Habachi in the 1950s and, since 1994, has been the subject of a major archaeological project under the auspices of the University of Liverpool, led by Dr. Steven Snape"--Author's website.
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