Archaeology and Ancient Egypt
English edition  
Apr  2005
264 pp.
100 illus. incl. 60 in color 
Hardbound
17X24 cm
$34.95
LE 180.00
ISBN
978 977 424 858 0

For sale worldwide
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Divine Creatures
Animal Mummies in Ancient Egypt
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Edited by Salima Ikram

A new look at animals and the afterlife in ancient Egypt


The invention of mummification enabled the ancient Egyptians to preserve the bodies not only of humans but also of animals, so that they could live forever. Mummified animals are of four different types: food offerings, pets, sacred animals, and votive offerings. For the first time, a series of studies on the different types of animal mummies, the methods of mummification, and the animal cemeteries located at sites throughout Egypt are drawn together in a definitive volume on ancient Egyptian animal mummies. Studies of these animals provide information not only about the fauna of the country, and indirectly, its climate, but also about animal domestication, veterinary practices, human nutrition, mummification technology, and the religious practices of the ancient Egyptians. Contributors: Edda Bresciani, Aidan Dodson, Salima Ikram, Dieter Kessler, Abd el-Halim Nur el-Din, Paul Nicholson, Donald Redford, Susan Redford, Roger Lichtenberg, and Alain Zivie.

Salima Ikram is associate professor of Egyptology at the American University in Cairo. She is the co-author of The Mummy in Ancient Egypt: Equipping the Dead for Eternity (AUC Press 1998).




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