Post by anansi on Oct 19, 2016 22:52:38 GMT -5
Zarahan and flydesign52 is to be given thumbs up on their work of pumping so much info out there, that in the words of Donald J Trump Is absolutely tremendous I tell ya, tremendous it will make ya head spin.
In this they often reference the works of European Institutions, now not enough have been said about how those said institutions have changed and the people with in them that caused that seismic shift in attitudes regarding the Nile valley Population and the Kemitians in particular,gone are the euphemisms of a generation ago, Off course they could have long ago been on board with our African and African diasporean researchers and scientist in stating the obvious, but as those Institutions carry a lot of weight in officialdom, better late than never.
Most of us have heard of Shelly Ann Ashton and her work placing Egypt in it's African context over at the Manchester Museum, but others are also in play in different Institutions.
Maria Carmela Gatto
Publication and research
leicester.academia.edu/MariaCGatto
You guys may wanna klik the link^.
Stephen Quirke
Some here might reconize him from that excellent documentary Nubain Spirit.
[a href="http://egyptsearchreloaded.proboards.com/thread/2025/ancient-africas-golden-
times"]http://egyptsearchreloaded.proboards.com/thread/2025/ancient-africas-golden-times[/a]
And finally Sally Ann Ashton.
Black to Kemet
Placing Egypt in Africa
www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/kemet/
Now Inspiration for this thread came in part from a vid from an up loader who is about trouncing Phoenician 7 and others, the info is good, but effort wasted imo as he could have just put the info out there without referring to known lairs and trolls,and hence got a little repetitive, however like I said pretty good information.
In this they often reference the works of European Institutions, now not enough have been said about how those said institutions have changed and the people with in them that caused that seismic shift in attitudes regarding the Nile valley Population and the Kemitians in particular,gone are the euphemisms of a generation ago, Off course they could have long ago been on board with our African and African diasporean researchers and scientist in stating the obvious, but as those Institutions carry a lot of weight in officialdom, better late than never.
Most of us have heard of Shelly Ann Ashton and her work placing Egypt in it's African context over at the Manchester Museum, but others are also in play in different Institutions.
Maria Carmela Gatto
ERC Research Associate (Trans-Sahara Project)
Italian Laurea (Sapienza University of Rome), Ph.D. (University L’Orientale of Naples)
Email: mcg25@le.ac.uk
Telephone: 01162297217
Maria completed her undergraduate and graduate education in Archaeology at “Sapienza” University of Rome, where she received a Master degree in 1993 (summa cum laude) with a dissertation on the prehistory of Nubia. In 2001 she received a PhD degree in African Archaeology from the University of Naples “L’Orientale” with a research on ceramic traditions and cultural boundaries in the late prehistory of North-East Africa.
After being awarded her PhD, Maria worked at the British Museum as a research curator for prehistoric pottery collections from the Nile Valley, and in Italy and abroad as a museum educator, lecturer, field archaeologist and ceramic specialist. From 2008 to 2013, she has been at Yale University, holding positions in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations (postdoctoral fellow, associate research scholar and lecturer in Egyptology) as well as in Anthropology (research associate). Sine 2005 she co-directs in Egypt the Aswan-Kom Ombo Archaeological Project, co-sponsored by Yale University and University of Bologna.
Maria research mainly focuses on processes of interregional interaction and cultural contact in the Nile Valley and Central Sahara; social complexity and early state formation; nomadic pastoralism and social complexity in pastoral societies; landscape archaeology; human-environment interaction, and material culture, particularly ceramics and rock art.
Maria joined the School of Archaeology and Ancient History's ERC-funded Trans-Sahara Project in August 2014. Her role is to analyse human mobility and identity through the burial evidence. She also organised a workshop on the Garamantian handmade pottery.
Over the course of the past decade Maria has had the opportunity to teach a variety of courses, in Italy, Egypt and the US to undergraduate and graduate students. She also has experience supervising graduate students on their master’s and doctoral projects. Maria has published widely in the field of Nubian, Egyptian and Saharan prehistory and archaeology, and in addition to extensive fieldwork experience in North Africa, including Libya, Egypt, Sudan and Eritrea, she has a long and continuously evolving record of conference participations.
www2.le.ac.uk/departments/archaeology/people/associates/maria-gatto
Italian Laurea (Sapienza University of Rome), Ph.D. (University L’Orientale of Naples)
Email: mcg25@le.ac.uk
Telephone: 01162297217
Maria completed her undergraduate and graduate education in Archaeology at “Sapienza” University of Rome, where she received a Master degree in 1993 (summa cum laude) with a dissertation on the prehistory of Nubia. In 2001 she received a PhD degree in African Archaeology from the University of Naples “L’Orientale” with a research on ceramic traditions and cultural boundaries in the late prehistory of North-East Africa.
After being awarded her PhD, Maria worked at the British Museum as a research curator for prehistoric pottery collections from the Nile Valley, and in Italy and abroad as a museum educator, lecturer, field archaeologist and ceramic specialist. From 2008 to 2013, she has been at Yale University, holding positions in Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations (postdoctoral fellow, associate research scholar and lecturer in Egyptology) as well as in Anthropology (research associate). Sine 2005 she co-directs in Egypt the Aswan-Kom Ombo Archaeological Project, co-sponsored by Yale University and University of Bologna.
Maria research mainly focuses on processes of interregional interaction and cultural contact in the Nile Valley and Central Sahara; social complexity and early state formation; nomadic pastoralism and social complexity in pastoral societies; landscape archaeology; human-environment interaction, and material culture, particularly ceramics and rock art.
Maria joined the School of Archaeology and Ancient History's ERC-funded Trans-Sahara Project in August 2014. Her role is to analyse human mobility and identity through the burial evidence. She also organised a workshop on the Garamantian handmade pottery.
Over the course of the past decade Maria has had the opportunity to teach a variety of courses, in Italy, Egypt and the US to undergraduate and graduate students. She also has experience supervising graduate students on their master’s and doctoral projects. Maria has published widely in the field of Nubian, Egyptian and Saharan prehistory and archaeology, and in addition to extensive fieldwork experience in North Africa, including Libya, Egypt, Sudan and Eritrea, she has a long and continuously evolving record of conference participations.
www2.le.ac.uk/departments/archaeology/people/associates/maria-gatto
Publication and research
leicester.academia.edu/MariaCGatto
You guys may wanna klik the link^.
Stephen Quirke
BA, PhD
Edwards Professor of Egyptian Archaeology and Philology
Research Curator, Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology
Course Co-ordinator: ARCLG200 Egyptian Archaeology through the Petrie Museum: an Object-Based Theoretical Approach
Course Co-ordinator: ARCLG342 Intangible Dimensions of Museum Objects from Egypt
Research Interests
History of state/institutionalisation
Gender
Egyptian language
Museology
Ethics in archaeology and anthropology
Research Directory Records
Archaeology and Empire
Decolonising Archaeology: Ethnographies in Egypt
Digital Lahun Papyri
Egypt Object Subject: 'treasuring things' as knowledge-histories
History of Archaeology
Material Cultures of Prehistoric and Dynastic Egypt
Collaborations
Digital Egypt for Universities, with CASA, UCL
Educational Background
BA: University of Cambridge
PhD: University of Cambridge
www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/people/staff/quirke
www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/people/staff/quirke
Edwards Professor of Egyptian Archaeology and Philology
Research Curator, Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology
Course Co-ordinator: ARCLG200 Egyptian Archaeology through the Petrie Museum: an Object-Based Theoretical Approach
Course Co-ordinator: ARCLG342 Intangible Dimensions of Museum Objects from Egypt
Research Interests
History of state/institutionalisation
Gender
Egyptian language
Museology
Ethics in archaeology and anthropology
Research Directory Records
Archaeology and Empire
Decolonising Archaeology: Ethnographies in Egypt
Digital Lahun Papyri
Egypt Object Subject: 'treasuring things' as knowledge-histories
History of Archaeology
Material Cultures of Prehistoric and Dynastic Egypt
Collaborations
Digital Egypt for Universities, with CASA, UCL
Educational Background
BA: University of Cambridge
PhD: University of Cambridge
www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/people/staff/quirke
www.ucl.ac.uk/archaeology/people/staff/quirke
Some here might reconize him from that excellent documentary Nubain Spirit.
[a href="http://egyptsearchreloaded.proboards.com/thread/2025/ancient-africas-golden-
times"]http://egyptsearchreloaded.proboards.com/thread/2025/ancient-africas-golden-times[/a]
And finally Sally Ann Ashton.
Senior Assistant Keeper of Antiquities, Fitzwilliam Museum
Ancient Egyptian art and archaeology
Classical Greek art and archaeology
Visual culture and criminology
www.hoart.cam.ac.uk/people/dr-sally-ann-ashton
Ancient Egyptian art and archaeology
Classical Greek art and archaeology
Visual culture and criminology
www.hoart.cam.ac.uk/people/dr-sally-ann-ashton
Black to Kemet
Placing Egypt in Africa
www.fitzmuseum.cam.ac.uk/gallery/kemet/
Now Inspiration for this thread came in part from a vid from an up loader who is about trouncing Phoenician 7 and others, the info is good, but effort wasted imo as he could have just put the info out there without referring to known lairs and trolls,and hence got a little repetitive, however like I said pretty good information.