This book is a refreshingly new study on a little known but important fortress settlement representative of Ramesside period fortifications along the western border of the Nile Delta. It offers important new insights into the life of the inhabitants of such a site and provides a detailed analysis of new archaeological data from the recent University of Liverpool excavations.

- Nadine Moeller, Professor of Egyptian Archaeology, Yale University, USA,

Drawing on more than 20 years of archaeological study and investigation at Zawiyet Umm el-Rakham by a team from the University of Liverpool (led by Professor Steven Snape), this book paints a nuanced picture of daily life not only at this liminal military site, but also in Ramesside Egypt more broadly. Constructed during the reign of Ramesses II, the fortified settlement was situated 300 kilometres west of Alexandria and represents the furthest western outpost of the Egyptian New Kingdom empire. Excavations in Area K of the fortress have uncovered extensive evidence for the living arrangements, minor industries, food production and daily life of the fort’s inhabitants.

This previously unpublished material forms the bedrock of this volume, which focuses on analysing the various subsistence and craft production strategies that were conducted alongside each other in this area, from baking, brewing and butchery to lithics working, bone-carving and weaving. These traces of the activities of the soldiers and their families shed new light on what life was like at this military installation and for ordinary Egyptians more widely, shifting away from a focus on elite social groups. The archaeological evidence covered in this book prompts a re-evaluation of the realities of the relationship between Egyptians and Libyans at the close of the Late Bronze Age. The purpose of the fortress' construction was primarily defensive, however the surviving material points to co-operation by means of collaborative farming and trading, and provides a direct counterpoint to the more belligerent contemporary royal monumental inscriptions describing Egypto-Libyan relations.

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List of Figures
List of Tables
Acknowledgements
Preface

1. The Fortress at the End of the World
2. Subsistence
3. Manufacture and Decoration of Pottery from Area K
4. Craft Production
5. The West Delta and Marmarican Fortresses
6. Subsistence and Production Strategies at Early- to Mid-Ramesside Forts
Conclusion: Living and Working at Zawiyet Umm el-Rakham

Abbreviations
Bibliography
Appendix I: Catalogue of Area K Ceramic Vessels

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Sheds new light on aspects of daily life at a remote ancient Egyptian site of the New Kingdom using hitherto unpublished archaeological data.
Presents a corpus of hitherto unpublished material and archaeological analysis

The Bloomsbury Egyptology series welcomes proposals for monographs and edited volumes that showcase innovative and original research. The series provides a platform for cutting-edge scholarship from early, mid and late-career scholars across a wide range of areas, including art and archaeology, language and philology, history, religion, culture and society, archival studies, critical reception and the history of the discipline.

The series is thematically open, with a primary focus on Ancient Egypt and Nubia between c. 3000–300 BCE. We invite proposals exploring diverse topics such as object studies and material culture; archaeological contexts including temples, settlements, and tombs; languages and textual analysis; iconography, reliefs, and sculpture; royal and private funerary practices; individual and communal life trajectories; socio-political developments and cultural dynamics; socio-cultural phenomena; theoretical and methodological approaches; as well as museology and cultural heritage.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781350327375
Publisert
2025-08-21
Utgiver
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Vekt
366 gr
Høyde
232 mm
Bredde
150 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
238

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Nicky Nielsen is Senior Lecturer in Egyptology at the University of Manchester, UK. He worked on the Area K material from Zawiyet Umm el-Rakham as part of his PhD at the University of Liverpool, UK. He specialises in ancient Egyptian material culture, in particular from the New Kingdom and Late Periods and on relations between the New Kingdom Egyptian state and the inhabitants of the Western Desert.