|
Callender, V. G. (2011). The art of Egyptian hieroglyphs as seen by the Akhmin painters. In N. Strudwick and H. Strudwick (Ed.), Old Kingdom, New Perspectives. Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC (pp. 33–41). Oxford: Oxbow Books, Oxford.
|
|
|
De Meyer, M. (2011). Two cemeteries for one provincial capital? Deir el-Bersha and el-Sheikh Said in the fifteenth Upper Egyptian nome during the Old Kingdom. In N. Strudwick and H. Strudwick (Ed.), Old Kingdom, New Perspectives. Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC (pp. 42–49). Oxford: Oxbow Books, Oxford.
|
|
|
Hays, H. M. (2011). The death of the Democratisation of the Afterlife. In N. Strudwick and H. Strudwick (Ed.), Old Kingdom, New Perspectives. Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC (pp. 115–130). Oxford: Oxbow Books, Oxford.
|
|
|
Roth, A. M. (2011). Twisted Kilts: variations in aspective representation in Old Kingdom mastaba chapels. In N. Strudwick and H. Strudwick (Ed.), Old Kingdom, New Perspectives. Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC (pp. 234–243). Oxford: Oxbow Books, Oxford.
|
|
|
Staring, N. (2011). Fixed rules or personal choice? On the composition and arrangement of daily life scenes in Old Kingdom elite tombs. In N. Strudwick and H. Strudwick (Ed.), Old Kingdom, New Perspectives. Egyptian Art and Archaeology 2750-2150 BC (pp. 256–269). Oxford: Oxbow Books, Oxford.
|
|