[1]
Adams, W.Y. 1997. Anthropology and Egyptology: a developing dialogue. Anthropology and Egyptology: a developing dialogue. Sheffield Academic Press. 25–32.
[2]
Allen, J.P. and Der Manuelian, P. 2005. The ancient Egyptian pyramid texts. Society of Biblical Literature.
[3]
Assmann, J. 2011. Egypt. Cultural memory and early civilization: writing, remembrance, and political imagination. Cambridge University Press. 147–174.
[4]
Assmann, J. 2002. The mind of Egypt: history and meaning in the time of the Pharaohs. Metropolitan Books.
[5]
Assmann, J. 2001. The new gods. The search for God in ancient Egypt. Cornell University Press. 189–244.
[6]
Bader, B. et al. 2013. Functional aspects of Egyptian ceramics in their archaeological context: proceedings of a conference held at the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research, Cambridge, July 24th - July 25th, 2009. Uitgeverij Peeters en Departement Oosterse Studies.
[7]
Baines, J. 1995. Kingship, definition of culture and legitimation. Ancient Egyptian kingship. E. J. Brill. 4–47.
[8]
Baines, J. 2007. On the status and purpose of Egyptian art. Visual and written culture in ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press. 299–337.
[9]
Baines, J. 1994. On the Status and Purposes of Ancient Egyptian Art. Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 4, 01 (Apr. 1994). DOI:https://doi.org/10.1017/S0959774300000974.
[10]
Baines, J. 1991. Society, morality and religious practice. Religion in ancient Egypt: gods, myths, and personal practice. Routledge. 123–200.
[11]
Baines, John and Málek, Jaromír 2000. Cultural atlas of Ancient Egypt. Checkmark Books.
[12]
Bard, K.A. 2007. Introduction to the archaeology of ancient Egypt. Blackwell.
[13]
Bard, K.A. 2007. The rise of complex society and early civilization. Introduction to the archaeology of ancient Egypt. Blackwell. 89–120.
[14]
Bard, Kathryn A. and Shubert, Steven Blake 1999. Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. Routledge.
[15]
Bard, Kathryn A. and Shubert, Steven Blake 1999. Encyclopedia of the archaeology of ancient Egypt. Routledge.
[16]
Bender, B. Place and landscape. Handbook of material culture / edited by Christopher Tilley ... [et al.]. 303–314.
[17]
Bevan, A. 2010. Making and marking relationships: Bronze Age brandings and Mediterranean commodities. Cultures of commodity branding. Left Coast. 35–85.
[18]
Bietak, M. 1997. The center of Hyksos rule: Avaris (Tell el-Dab’a). The Hyksos: new historical and archaeological perspectives. University Museum, University of Pennsylvania. 87–139.
[19]
Bietak, M. 1979. Urban archaeology and the ‘town problem’ in Ancient Egypt. Egyptology and the social sciences: five studies. American University in Cairo Press. 97–144.
[20]
Bloxam, E. 2010. Quarrying and Mining (Stone) [eScholarship]. UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology. (2010).
[21]
Breasted, James Henry 1906. Ancient records of Egypt: historical documents from the earliest times to the Persian conquest. The University of Chicago Press; [etc., etc.].
[22]
Brewer, Douglas J. 2012. The archaeology of ancient Egypt: beyond pharaohs. Cambridge University Press.
[23]
Bunbury, J.M. et al. 2008. Stratigraphic landscape analysis: Charting the Holocene movements of the Nile at Karnak through ancient Egyptian time. Geoarchaeology. 23, 3 (May 2008), 351–373. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/gea.20219.
[24]
Butzer, K.W. 1976. Ecology and predynastic settlement of the floodplain and Delta. Early hydraulic civilization in Egypt: a study in cultural ecology. University of Chicago Press. 12–25.
[25]
Chapman, R. 2003. Death, society and archaeology: The social dimensions of mortuary practices. Mortality. 8, 3 (Aug. 2003), 305–312. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/13576270310001599849.
[26]
Colla, E. 2007. Introduction: the Egyptian sculpture room. Conflicted antiquities: Egyptology, Egyptomania, Egyptian modernity. Duke University Press. 1–23.
[27]
Cooney, K.M. 2008. Profit or Exploitation? The Production of Private Ramesside Tombs Within the West Theban Funerary Economy. Journal of Egyptian History. 1, 1 (Mar. 2008), 79–115. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1163/187416608784118776.
[28]
Díaz-Andreu García, M. and Lucy, S. 2005. Introduction. The archaeology of identity: approaches to gender, age, status, ethnicity and religion. Routledge. 1–12.
[29]
Doyon, W. 2008. The Poetics of Egyptian Museum Practice. British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan. 10, (2008), 1–37.
[30]
El Daly, O. 2003. Ancient Egypt in medieval Arabic writings. The wisdom of ancient Egypt: changing visions through the ages. UCL Press. 39–63.
[31]
El Shakry, O.S. 2007. Introduction: Colonialism, nationalism and knowledge production. The great social laboratory: subjects of knowledge in colonial and postcolonial Egypt. Stanford University Press. 1–19.
[32]
Elizabeth M. Brumfiel 1992. Distinguished Lecture in Archeology: Breaking and Entering the Ecosystem - Gender, Class, and Faction Steal the Show. American Anthropologist. 94, 3 (1992), 551–567.
[33]
Encylopedia of Egyptology: Chronological chart: http://www.uee.ucla.edu/contributors/chronology.htm.
[34]
Faulkner, Raymond O. 2004. The ancient Egyptian coffin texts: spells 1-1185 & indexes. Aris & Phillips.
[35]
Frood, E. and Baines, J. 2007. Biographical texts from Ramessid Egypt. Society of Biblical Literature.
[36]
Hill, J.A. et al. 2013. Comparing kingship in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia: cosmos, politics and landscape. Experiencing power, generating authority: cosmos, politics, and the ideology of kingship in ancient Egypt and Mesopotamia. University of Pennsylvania Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology. 3–32.
[37]
James A. Harrell and V. Max Brown 1992. The Oldest Surviving Topographical Map from Ancient Egypt: (Turin Papyri 1879, 1899, and 1969). Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt. 29, (1992), 81–105.
[38]
Jeffreys, D. 2010. Regionality. Cultural and cultic landscapes. Egyptian archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. 102–118.
[39]
Joy, J. 2009. Reinvigorating object biography: reproducing the drama of object lives. World Archaeology. 41, 4 (Dec. 2009), 540–556. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1080/00438240903345530.
[40]
K. A. Kitchen 1991. The Chronology of Ancient Egypt. World Archaeology. 23, 2 (1991), 201–208.
[41]
Kemp, B. J. 1983. Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and Second Intermediate Period c. 2686-1552 BC. Ancient Egypt: a social history. Cambridge University Press. 71–182.
[42]
Kemp, B. and Stevens, A. 2010. Life in the suburbs: chapter 10. Busy lives at Amarna: excavations in the main city : (grid 12 and the House of Ranefer, N49.18). Egypt Exploration Society. 473–516.
[43]
Kemp, B.J. 2006. Ancient Egypt: anatomy of a civilization. Routledge.
[44]
Kemp, B.J. 1995. How Religious were the Ancient Egyptians? Cambridge Archaeological Journal. 5, (1995), 25–54.
[45]
Kemp, B.J. 2012. What kind of city? The city of Akhenaten and Nefertiti: Amarna and its people. Thames & Hudson. 265–300.
[46]
Kitchen, K. A. 2008. Ramesside inscriptions: translated & annotated, Vol. 5: Translations. Blackwell.
[47]
Kitchen, K. A. 2012. Ramesside inscriptions: translated & annotated, Vol. 6: Translations. Wiley-Blackwell.
[48]
Kitchen, K. A. 2000. Ramesside inscriptions: translated & annotated, Vol.3: Translations. Blackwell.
[49]
Kitchen, K. A. 2003. Ramesside inscriptions: translated & annotated, Vol.4: Translations. Blackwell.
[50]
Kitchen, K. A. 1993. Ramesside inscriptions: translated and annotated, 1: Translations. Blackwell.
[51]
Kitchen, K. A. 1996. Ramesside inscriptions: translated and annotated, 2: Translations. Blackwell.
[52]
Lehner, M. 1997. The living pyramid: chapter 4. The complete pyramids. Thames and Hudson. 200–239.
[53]
Lichtheim, Miriam 2006. Ancient Egyptian literature: a book of readings. University of California Press.
[54]
Lloyd, A.B. ed. 2010. A Companion to Ancient Egypt. Wiley-Blackwell.
[55]
Lloyd, A.B. 2014. Kingship. Ancient%20Egypt%20%3A%20state%20and%20society. Oxford%20University%20Press. 65–96.
[56]
Lynn Meskell 1998. An Archaeology of Social Relations in an Egyptian Village. Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory. 5, 3 (1998), 209–243.
[57]
MacDonald, S. 2003. Lost in time and space: Ancient Egypt in museums. Consuming ancient Egypt. UCL Press. 87–99.
[58]
Málek, J. et al. 1999. Topographical bibliography of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic texts, statues, reliefs and paintings: 8: Objects of provenance not known. Griffith Institute.
[59]
Manfred Bietak 1991. Egypt and Canaan during the Middle Bronze Age. Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 281 (1991), 27–72.
[60]
Meskell, L. 2008. The Egyptian Ways of Death. Archeological Papers of the American Anthropological Association. 10, 1 (Jun. 2008), 27–40. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1525/ap3a.2001.10.1.27.
[61]
Moeller, N. 2007. Urban life. The Egyptian world. Routledge. 57–72.
[62]
Morkot, R. 2001. Egypt and Nubia. Empires: perspectives from archaeology and history. Cambridge University Press. 227–251.
[63]
Murnane, W.J. and Meltzer, E.S. 1995. Texts from the Amarna period in Egypt. Scholars Press.
[64]
Myśliwiec, K. 2000. Persians and Greeks on the throne of the pharaohs. The twilight of ancient Egypt: first millennium B.C.E. Cornell University Press. 135–184.
[65]
Nicholson, P. et al. 2000. Pottery. Ancient Egyptian materials and technology. Cambridge University Press. 121–147.
[66]
Nicholson, P.T. and Shaw, I. 2000. Ancient Egyptian materials and technology. Cambridge University Press.
[67]
O’Connor, D. 2009. The landscape completed: Abydos in the New Kingdom. Abydos: Egypt’s first pharaohs and the cult of Osiris. Thames & Hudson. 104–119.
[68]
Parkinson, R.B. 1998. The Tale of Sinuhe: and other ancient Egyptian poems, 1940-1640 BC. Oxford University Press.
[69]
Pinch, G. 1993. The place of votive offerings in popular religion. Votive offerings to Hathor. Griffith Institute, Ashmolean Museum. 323–360.
[70]
Pritchard, James Bennett 1955. Ancient Near Eastern texts relating to the Old Testament. Princeton University Press.
[71]
Quirke, S. 2007. The Hyksos in Egypt. Regime change in the ancient Near East and Egypt: from Sargon of Agade to Saddam Hussein. Published for the British Academy by Oxford University Press. 123–139.
[72]
Quirke, Stephen 2004. Egyptian literature 1800 BC: questions and readings. Golden House Publications.
[73]
Ramsey, C.B. et al. 2010. Radiocarbon-Based Chronology for Dynastic Egypt. Science. 328, 5985 (Jun. 2010), 1554–1557. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1126/science.1189395.
[74]
Redford, D.B. 2001. The Oxford encyclopedia of ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press.
[75]
Reid, D.M. Introduction. Whose pharaohs? : archaeology, museums, and Egyptian national identity from Napoleon to World War I / Donald Malcolm Reid. 1–20.
[76]
Richards, J. 1997. Ancient Egyptian mortuary practice and the study of socio-economic difference. Anthropology and Egyptology: a developing dialogue. Sheffield Academic Press. 33–42.
[77]
Richards, J.E. 1999. Conceptual landscapes in the Egyptian Nile Valley. Archaeologies of landscape: contemporary perspectives. Blackwell Publishers. 83–100.
[78]
Riggs, C. 2010. Ancient Egypt in the Museum: Concepts and Constructions. A Companion to Ancient Egypt. A.B. Lloyd, ed. Wiley-Blackwell. 1129–1153.
[79]
Ritner, R.K. and Wente, E.F. 2009. The Libyan anarchy: inscriptions from Egypt’s Third Intermediate Period. Society of Biblical Literature.
[80]
Robins, G. 2007. Art. The Egyptian world. Routledge. 355–365.
[81]
Robins, G. 1990. Problems in interpreting Egyptian art. Discussions in egyptology. 17, (1990), 45–58.
[82]
Rudolph Kuper and Stefan Kröpelin 2006. Climate-Controlled Holocene Occupation in the Sahara: Motor of Africa’s Evolution. Science. 313, 5788 (2006), 803–807.
[83]
Rzeuska, T. 2006. Pottery in funerary ceremonies and cult. Saqqara: II: pottery of the late old kingdom : funerary pottery and burial customs. Editions Neriton. 428–515.
[84]
Sasson, Jack M. et al. 2000. Civilizations of the ancient Near East. Hendrickson.
[85]
Schlanger, N. 2002. Special section. Ancestral archives: explorations in the history of archaeology. Antiquity. 76, 291 (2002), 127–131.
[86]
Schneider, T. 2010. Foreigners in Egypt: archaeological evidence and cultural context. Egyptian archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. 142–163.
[87]
Schneider, T. 2008. Periodizing Egyptian history: Manetho, Convention and Beyond. Historiographie in der Antike. Walter De Gruyter. 183–197.
[88]
Seidlmayer, S. 2003. The First Intermediate Period (c. 2160-2055). The Oxford history of ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press. 108–136.
[89]
Shaw, Ian 2003. The Oxford history of ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press.
[90]
Simpson, William Kelly et al. 1973. The literature of ancient Egypt: an anthology of stories, instructions and poetry. Yale University Press.
[91]
Smith, S.T. 2003. Boundaries and ethnicity. Wretched Kush: ethnic identities and boudaries in Egypt’s Nubian empire. Routledge. 1–9.
[92]
Spencer, N. 2010. Sustaining Egyptian culture? Non-royal initiatives in Late Period temple building. Egypt in transition: social and religious development of Egypt in the first millennium BCE. Faculty of arts, Charles University in Prague. 441–490.
[93]
Stevenson, A. 2014. Artefacts of excavation: the British collection and distribution of Egyptian finds to museums, 1880 - 1915. Journal of the History of Collections. 26, 1 (Mar. 2014), 89–102. DOI:https://doi.org/10.1093/jhc/fht017.
[94]
Stevenson, A. 2009. Social relationships in Predynastic burials. Journal of Egyptian archaeology. 95, (2009), 175–192.
[95]
Stevenson, A. 2012. ‘We Seem to be Working in the Same Line’: A.H.L.F. Pitt-Rivers and W.M.F. Petrie. Bulletin of the History of Archaeology. 22, 1 (Jul. 2012). DOI:https://doi.org/10.5334/bha.22112.
[96]
Stocks, D.A. 2003. Introduction. Experiments in Egyptian archaeology: stoneworking technology in ancient Egypt. Routledge. 1–3.
[97]
Strudwick, N. 2005. Texts from the pyramid age. Society of Biblical Literature.
[98]
Susan and Andrew Sherratt 1993. The Growth of the Mediterranean Economy in the Early First Millennium BC. World Archaeology. 24, 3 (1993), 361–378.
[99]
Taylor, J. 2003. The third intermediate period (1069-664). The Oxford history of ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press. 324–363.
[100]
Taylor, John H. and British Museum 2010. Journey through the afterlife: ancient Egyptian Book of the dead. British Museum Press.
[101]
Teeter, E. and University of Chicago 2011. Before the pyramids: the origins of Egyptian civilization. Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago.
[102]
Tomber, R. 2012. From the Roman Red Sea to beyond the empire: Egyptian ports and their trading partners. British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan. 18, (2012), 201–215.
[103]
Topographical bibliography of ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic texts, statues, reliefs and paintings: http://topbib.griffith.ox.ac.uk//index.html.
[104]
Trigger, B.G. et al. 1983. Ancient Egypt. Cambridge University Press.
[105]
Trigger, B.G. 1995. Early civilizations: ancient Egypt in context. American University in Cairo Press.
[106]
UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology: https://uee.ats.ucla.edu/welcome/.
[107]
Van de Mieroop, Marc 2011. A history of ancient Egypt. Wiley-Blackwell.
[108]
Vischak, D. 2006. Agency in Old Kingdom elite tomb programs: traditions, locations and variable meanings. Dekorierte Grabanlagen im Alten Reich: Methodik und Interpretation : Beiträge. Golden House Publications. 255–276.
[109]
Wendrich, W. 2010. Identity and personhood. Egyptian archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell. 200–219.
[110]
Wendrich, Willemina 2010. Egyptian archaeology. Wiley-Blackwell.
[111]
Wengrow, D. 2006. The archaeology of early Egypt: social transformations in North-East Africa, 10,000 to 2650 BC. Cambridge University Press.
[112]
Wengrow, D. 2006. The archaeology of early Egypt: social transformations in North-East Africa, 10,000 to 2650 BC. Cambridge University Press.
[113]
Wenke, Robert J. 2009. The ancient Egyptian state: the origins of Egyptian culture (c. 8000-2000 BC). Cambridge University Press.
[114]
Wente, E.F. and Meltzer, E.S. 1990. Letters from ancient Egypt. Scholars Press.
[115]
Wilkinson, Richard H. 2008. Egyptology today. Cambridge University Press.
[116]
Wilkinson, T. 2011. The Egyptian World. Routledge.
[117]
2001. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt. Oxford University Press.