Catalogue des publications
- Pour effectuer une commande, remplissez votre panier puis terminez votre commande. Vous pourrez effectuer un paiement sécurisé et être livré dans le monde entier. J’ai un code promotionnel
- To perform an order, fill your cart then proceed the order. You will be driven to a secured page for the electronic payment which includes worldwide shipping fees. I have a promotional code.
Fichiers à télécharger
Les articles des volumes suivants sont vendus sous forme de PDF à télécharger: BiEtud: numéros 110, 120, 138, 140, 165 (gratuit), EtudUrb: 9.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
22 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Pierre de Maret
L’oryctérope, un animal « bon à penser » pour les Africains, est-il à l’origine du dieu égyptien Seth ?
Although many attempts have been made to identify the Seth-animal, it is usually regarded as an imaginary creature. However, there are striking similarities between the shape if its ears, forehead and snout with those of the aardvark.
In many parts of sub-Saharan Africa this animal plays an important symbolic role, as the appearance and the behavior of this very peculiar mammal make good “food for thought”. It is often associated, like Seth, with the night, the underworld and the dead.
Furthermore, such an identification may also explain most of Seth’s characteristics, such as why it is linked to the origin of kingship, disorder, confusion, sexuality, strength, drunkenness, voracity, etc.- Pierre de Maret ( : 255869037)
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
4 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Khaled El-Enany
Adaptation locale du titre royal s3-R’.
This short study shows a particularity in royal protocol: the title sȝ-Rʿ preceding the cartouche of the birth name could change occasionally depending on the origin of the monument. The examples discussed in this article give the variants sȝ-Jmn and sȝ-Ptḥ. They appear on monuments coming exclusively from the cult centers of Amon (Thebes and al-Kawa) and Ptah (Memphis). This rare substitution of Ra in this title is certainly the work of the local clergy who tried to promote their gods.
- Khaled El-Enany ( : 79118437)
Former Minister of Tourism & Antiquities, Egypt Ph.D. Montpellier Chevalier Arts & Lettres, France Order of Merit, Poland Order of Rising Sun, Japan
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
13 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Françoise Dunand, Gaëlle Tallet, Fleur Letellier-Willemin
Un linceul peint de la nécropole d’El-Deir. Oasis de Kharga.
During the 2003 season of excavations at El Deir (East area of the necropolis), several fragments of a painted shroud were discovered in a lot of funerary wrappings much disturbed by pillaging. The body is decorated with a diamond pattern and a column of hieroglyphic text inscribed on the centre of the shroud gives the name of the deceased with the usual funerary formulas. Comparative analysis of these fragments with shrouds preserved in select museums located in Cairo, London and Paris shows that it belongs to a well-known series, dating primarily from the first to second centuries a. d., found throughout the Theban area.
- Françoise Dunand ( : 030109396)
Professeur émérite de l'université de Strasbourg - Gaëlle Tallet ( : 119250713)
Gaëlle Tallet est professeur d’histoire ancienne à l’Université de Limoges. Elle dirige depuis 2008, à la suite de Françoise Dunand, la mission archéologique d’El-Deir dans l’oasis de Kharga et est porteuse du projet collaboratif international CRISIS (ANR-15-CE03-0004), en partenariat avec Roger S. Bagnall (New York University), Salima Ikram (American University in Cairo), Corina Rossi (Politecnico di Milano) et Jean-Paul Bravard (UMR 5600 EVS). Ce consortium travaille sur les réponses impériales et provinciales apportées aux défis environnementaux et économiques dans la Grande Oasis, à la frontière de l'Empire romain, du Ier au VIe s. p.C. Elle a publié, avec Roger S. Bagnall, The Great Oasis of Egypt. Dakhla and Kharga during Antiquity, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2018, et avec Thierry Sauzeau, Mers et déserts de l’Antiquité à nos jours : approches croisées. Actes du colloque international de Limoges, 7-9 novembre 2013, Rennes, Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2018. - Fleur Letellier-Willemin ( : 146638654)
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
13 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Françoise Dunand, Roger Lichtenberg
Des chiens momifiés à El-Deir. Oasis de Kharga.
During the last campaigns (2002-2004) carried out at the necropolis at El Deir (Kharga Oasis) by Fr. Dunand and the French team, a significant collection of mummies and skeletons of dogs were discovered inside several human tombs. These tombs, which had been occupied during the Ptolemaic period, were reused for mummified animals. Many of these were carefully wrapped. X-rays identified traces of violent death. So it is obvious that they must have been offered as ex voto to a canine god, Anubis or Wepwawet , whose sanctuary has not yet been discovered in this area.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
25 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Neil G.W. Curtis, Holger Kockelmann, Irmtraut Munro
The Collection of Book of the Dead Manuscripts in Marischal Museum, University of Aberdeen, Scotland. A Comprehensive Overview.
The Marischal Museum of the University of Aberdeen houses a fine collection of more than 60 individual copies of the Book of the Dead written on papyrus and mummy linen. The present survey, which is the first detailed treatment of the Book of the Dead material in Marischal Museum, starts with a short introduction to the history of the collection of Egyptian antiquities (N. Curtis) and continues with an overview of the Book of the Dead documents (papyri: I. Munro, mummy wrappings: H. Kockelmann), specifying names of owners, spell sequences and measurements. Moreover, it discusses a number of peculiari-ties found in some of the manuscripts.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
13 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Frédéric Colin
Kamose et les Hyksos dans l’oasis de Djesdjes.
This paper is divided in two parts. Part one is a translation and a commentary on the sections of the Kamose stelae mentioning the conquest of the oasis of Djesdjes by the king of the Theban XVIIth dynasty. It is argued that all the passages about the oasis, in the Kamose text, concern only one campaign and one oasis, Bahariya. Bahariyans are considered enemies like other Egyptian populations from Middle Egypt who collaborated with the Hyksos rulers. Part two presents the recently prospected cemeteries of Bahariya in the context of the material culture of Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period. The IFAO mission in Bahariya has discovered on the surface of the necropolis of Qaret al-Toub some clear fragments of Tell al-Yahudiya ware, probably imported from one of the production centres located mainly in the Eastern Delta of the Nile. This attestation to commercial relations between Bahariya and the Northern part of Egypt, directly under Asiatic rule, provides interesting data complementary to textual evidence suggesting that Bahariyan elites were in contact with the Hyksos at the end of the Second Intermediate Period.
- Frédéric Colin ( : 117476145)
Professeur d’égyptologie, UMR 7044, université de Strasbourg
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
22 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Ramez Boutros, Marie-Hélène Rutschowscaya, Sylvie Marchand, Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert
Sondages dans le monastère de Baouit. - 2003.
The monastery of Bawit (Middle Egypt) was discovered by the French archaeologist Jean Clédat in 1900. The site was excavated from 1901 to 1913 by Ifao which published several reports. The new excavation concerns two places on the kôm: the so-called “north church” and sondages. Sondages 1 and 2, completed in 2003, have permitted the clarification of the stratigraphy of the northern part of the monastery, where excavations were made in 1913 by Jean Maspero. The structures indicate that they were originally dwellings dating to the Byzantine period (from the sixth to the second half of the seventh centuries).
- Ramez Boutros ( : 059052724)
- Marie-Hélène Rutschowscaya ( : 02711581X)
- Sylvie Marchand ( : 117052582)
Sylvie Marchand est responsable du laboratoire de céramologie de l’Ifao, céramologue, éditrice du périodique Bulletin de liaison de la Céramique Égyptienne et de la collection des Cahiers de la Céramique Égyptienne. - Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert ( : 187403511)
Archéologue et historienne, formée à l’université de Varsovie, ancien membre scientifique à titre étranger de l’Ifao, Maria Mossakowska-Gaubert est actuellement chercheuse contractuelle à l’université de Copenhague, où elle a bénéficié d'une bourse européenne (Marie Skłodowska-Curie) et dirige le projet RECONTEXT. Elle est spécialiste de la culture matérielle et du monachisme de l'époque antique tardive – début de l’époque arabe en Égypte.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 105
2005 IFAO
12 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Dominique Bénazeth
Calques de Baouit archivés à l’Ifao.
Four unpublished drawings related to the monastery of Bawit are kept in the archives of the French Institute. The group contains two maps from the excavation led by Jean Maspero in 1903 that give little information regarding other published documents. However, the recent reopening of excavations in this area makes them worthy of consideration. Two fragments of mural paintings, now lost, present some iconographical interest: A Saint on Horseback Killing the Evil, sketched by François Daumas, and the Murder of the Innocents, by Jean Clédat.
- Dominique Bénazeth ( : 029888212)
Dominique Bénazeth est conservatrice générale honoraire du patrimoine. Sa carrière s’est déroulée au sein de la section copte du département des Antiquités égyptiennes au musée du Louvre, dont elle a rédigé le catalogue des objets en métal. Elle a dirigé les premières fouilles Louvre-Ifao à Baouît et enseigné à l’École du Louvre.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 104
2004 IFAO
176 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Bernard Mathieu (éd.)
Travaux de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale en 2003-2004
- Bernard Mathieu ( : 030609607)
Agrégé de lettres classiques, égyptologue, Bernard Mathieu est professeur à l’Université Paul Valéry - Montpellier 3 et ancien directeur de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire. Membre de la Mission archéologique franco-suisse de Saqqâra, Bernard Mathieu travaille principalement sur la langue et la littérature de l’Égypte pharaonique, de l’Ancien Empire à la fin du Nouvel Empire, ainsi que sur l’édition, la traduction et le commentaire des Textes des Pyramides. Sa thèse portait sur La poésie amoureuse de l’Égypte ancienne.
Extrait pdf de l’ouvrage :
Bulletin de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale 104
2004 IFAO
12 p.
gratuit - free of charge
Gihane Zaki
Formules et commentaires sur la valeur sacrée du scarabée.
This article discusses the translation of additional texts coming from the Edfu version of the myth of Horus. Through these glosses, priests certainly wanted to highlight religious thought through the universality of scarab/winged scarab in architecture. These commentaries appear throughout the "Victory of Winged Disk" story and the ritual of Victory festival studied by Maurice Alliot in Le culte d’Horus à Edfou au temps des Ptolémées.
Those texts come from liturgical literature and don’t have a direct relation with the myth ritual process. It shows once more the skill and ability of Edfu priests to use manuals of the pr ʿnḫ to complete and coordinate all temple texts.- Gihane Zaki ( : 055791980)