<p>This study of Palaeolithic Africa, an interim report, describes a large number of sites in the region of the Zebra River, Western Namibia. After the Introductory Sections, a complete list of all sites is given in Section 4, presenting the raw information gathered in the fieldwork. The interpretat
Catalogue of Palaeolithic Artefacts from Egypt in the Pitt Rivers Museum
โ Scribed by Sarah Milliken
- Publisher
- BAR Publishing
- Year
- 2003
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 232
- Series
- BAR British Archaeological Reports International Series 1166
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This book provides a complete catalogue of the collections of Palaeolithic artefacts from Egypt housed in the Pitt Rivers Museum, Oxford. Though none of these collections derive from excavations, they nevertheless constitute a valuable research resource from both a historical and an archaeological point of view, and additional information is provided in order that this may become clear. The seventeen collections comprise 1009 objects. The founding collection of the Pitt Rivers Museum, which arrived in 1884, included only a handful of such objects, but the numbers dramatically increased during the forty-eight years that Henry Balfour served as Curator (1891-1939). The earliest donations made during this period came from two Oxford graduates, Quibell (1896) and MacIver (1899-1901). These were followed by the collections of Forbes (1900), Garstang (1901), Mace (1904), Hall (1905), the Committee of the Egypt Exploration Fund (1910), Ruffer (1919), Bell (1921), Currelly (1924), Balfour's own small collection (1926), Davies (1926), Evans (1928) and Evans-Pritchard (1934). Henry Balfour died in 1939 and was succeeded by Tom Penniman, and it was during Penniman's term of office that the Seligman Collection was donated in 1940. The last collection, the Bishop Collection, arrived into the care of the fifth Curator, Schuyler Jones, in 1988. The collections fall into two categories: the largest category consists of those artefacts which were collected with a scientific and/or anthropological interest in mind; a much smaller category consists of artefacts collected by 'collectors', be they professional (the Egyptologists) or amateur (Seton-Karr and Ruffer). Among these field collectors, however, one man stands out. Charles Seligman collected everything: tools, cores, waste flakes and even small fragments. Because of his significant role in the development of Palaeolithic archaeology, and because his collection is by far the largest among the Pitt Rivers Museum Egyptian Palaeolithic collections, Seligman therefore constitutes the focus of this study. This book is divided into two parts. The first part provides a historical, archaeological and geographical context for the Pitt Rivers Museum collections of Palaeolithic artefacts from Egypt. The second part of the book consists of three catalogues. These collections represent a significant historical document which covers the first sixty years of Palaeolithic archaeology in Egypt.
โฆ Table of Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
Part I
1. Introduction
2. Charles Gabriel Seligman
3. A History of Palaeolithic Research in Egypt
4. The Chronological Development of the Egyptian Palaeolithic
5. The Geographical Distribution of Palaeolithic Sites in Egypt
6. Technological and Typological Glossary
Part II
7. Catalogue of the Seligman Collection of Egyptian Palaeolithic Artefacts in the Pitt Rivers Museum
8. Catalogue of the Other Collections of Egyptian Palaeolithic Artefacts in the Pitt Rivers Museum
Appendix. Catalogue of the Seligman Collections of Palaeolithic Artefacts in Other Museums
Bibliography
Index of People
Index of Sites
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