On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals

In ancient Egypt, annals were more diverse as a genre of royal inscriptions than has mostly been appreciated. Discoveries since 1980 have almost doubled the amount of available material and broadened its range considerably. Two basic types are known: 'central' royal annals with often diver...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Baines, J
Other Authors: Engel, E
Format: Book section
Language:English
Published: Harrassowitz Verlag 2008
Subjects:
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author Baines, J
author2 Engel, E
author_facet Engel, E
Baines, J
author_sort Baines, J
collection OXFORD
description In ancient Egypt, annals were more diverse as a genre of royal inscriptions than has mostly been appreciated. Discoveries since 1980 have almost doubled the amount of available material and broadened its range considerably. Two basic types are known: 'central' royal annals with often diverse content; and temple annals that recorded royal donations to particular institutions. 'Commemorative scarabs' of Amenhotep III may also belong with annals. Annal inscriptions related to underlying records, kept on papyrus or leather, in various ways; the source documents were probably not unitary in type or in content. The genre of annals may have been the most ancient and prestigious of royal inscription types. Although not discursive in form, annals display a strong sense of history and ideology. Their content may have been disseminated far beyond the restricted contexts in which surviving examples were set up.
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spelling oxford-uuid:d8c406c9-e9ea-4bac-86ef-8477eb58ff812022-04-29T10:13:57ZOn the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annalsBook sectionhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_1843uuid:d8c406c9-e9ea-4bac-86ef-8477eb58ff81EgyptologyIntellectual HistoryEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetHarrassowitz Verlag2008Baines, JEngel, EMüller, VHartung, UIn ancient Egypt, annals were more diverse as a genre of royal inscriptions than has mostly been appreciated. Discoveries since 1980 have almost doubled the amount of available material and broadened its range considerably. Two basic types are known: 'central' royal annals with often diverse content; and temple annals that recorded royal donations to particular institutions. 'Commemorative scarabs' of Amenhotep III may also belong with annals. Annal inscriptions related to underlying records, kept on papyrus or leather, in various ways; the source documents were probably not unitary in type or in content. The genre of annals may have been the most ancient and prestigious of royal inscription types. Although not discursive in form, annals display a strong sense of history and ideology. Their content may have been disseminated far beyond the restricted contexts in which surviving examples were set up.
spellingShingle Egyptology
Intellectual History
Baines, J
On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title_full On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title_fullStr On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title_full_unstemmed On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title_short On the evolution, purpose, and forms of Egyptian annals
title_sort on the evolution purpose and forms of egyptian annals
topic Egyptology
Intellectual History
work_keys_str_mv AT bainesj ontheevolutionpurposeandformsofegyptianannals