The Tomb and Beyond  
Burial Customs of Egyptian Officials
Author(s): Naguib Kanawati
Published by Oxbow Books
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9798888570883
Pages: 0

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ISBN: 9798888570883 Price: INR 1695.99
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Provides a much needed summary overview of the key elements of Egyptian tomb form, use and decoration over time.

The tombs, with their scenes, inscriptions, objects and human remains, represent our richest source of information for the understanding of Egyptian beliefs and practices, art and architecture and of many aspects of daily life. Detailed, scholarly reports on individual cemeteries and tombs are abundant but in this fully illustrated, more general work, reproduced in this facsimile edition, Kanawati provides an invaluable introduction to, and overview of, the key elements of Egyptian tombs from Predynastic to the Late Period. The Egyptian dead enjoyed a continued existence in both the Netherworld and the land of the living – the individual possessing multiple entities that experienced different destinies after death. The tomb provided an everlasting earthly dwelling and consisted of a chapel above ground where the deceased’s cult was maintained and offerings presented, and a burial chamber for the body. Either or both could be richly decorated with paintings, reliefs and inscriptions. Kanawati describes and illustrates the principal forms and features of architecture and nature and subject matter of decoration and demonstrates how tomb design and decoration changed through time.
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Provides a much needed summary overview of the key elements of Egyptian tomb form, use and decoration over time.

The tombs, with their scenes, inscriptions, objects and human remains, represent our richest source of information for the understanding of Egyptian beliefs and practices, art and architecture and of many aspects of daily life. Detailed, scholarly reports on individual cemeteries and tombs are abundant but in this fully illustrated, more general work, reproduced in this facsimile edition, Kanawati provides an invaluable introduction to, and overview of, the key elements of Egyptian tombs from Predynastic to the Late Period. The Egyptian dead enjoyed a continued existence in both the Netherworld and the land of the living – the individual possessing multiple entities that experienced different destinies after death. The tomb provided an everlasting earthly dwelling and consisted of a chapel above ground where the deceased’s cult was maintained and offerings presented, and a burial chamber for the body. Either or both could be richly decorated with paintings, reliefs and inscriptions. Kanawati describes and illustrates the principal forms and features of architecture and nature and subject matter of decoration and demonstrates how tomb design and decoration changed through time.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright
  • Contents
  • Map of Egypt
  • Preface
  • Chronology
  • INTRODUCTION
  • I THE HOUSE OF DEATH IS FOR LIFE
    • Vulnerability and Strength
    • One Person, Multiple Entities
    • Mummification
    • From Life to Eternity
    • In the Realm of the Dead
    • Sustenance and Remembrance Forever
    • Sadness and Scepticism
  • II TOMB ARCHITECTURE
    • The Earliest Graves
    • The Old Kingdom Mastabas
    • The Old Kingdom Rock-cut Tombs
    • From the First to the Second Intermediate Period
    • Tombs of the New Kingdom and the Ramesside Period
    • Tombs of Deir El-Medina
    • New Kingdom Tombs outside Thebes
    • Later Dynasties
  • III TOMB SCENES AND INSCRIPTIONS
    • Artists and Craftsmen
    • Decoration Techniques
    • Themes Represented
      • Regular Themes
        • The Tomb Owner and his Family
        • Rural Life
        • Fishing, Fowling and Desert Hunting
        • Professions and Industries
        • Sport and Recreation
        • Funerary Rites
        • In the Hereafter
      • Incidental Themes
    • Significance of Tomb Decoration
  • Deities Mentioned and their Attributes
  • List and Sources of Figures and Plates
  • Bibliography
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