Citations:abnormal hieratic

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English citations of abnormal hieratic

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  • 2018 May 15, Cary J. Martin, Francisca A.J. Hoogendijk, Koenraad Donker van Heel, Hieratic, Demotic and Greek Studies and Text Editions: Of Making Many Books There Is No End: Festschrift in Honour of Sven P. Vleeming, BRILL, →ISBN, page 121:
    During the Saite period the influence of demotic from the north of Egypt gradually spread to the south, having its effect on the work of abnormal hieratic scribes, until the demoticadministrative tradition officially replaced the []
  • 2020 February 28, Vanessa Davies, Dimitri Laboury, The Oxford Handbook of Egyptian Epigraphy and Palaeography, Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 599:
    But this is where the abnormal hieratic scribes stopped, whereas the (early) Demotic scribes took standardization to the extreme, as can be taken from Erichsen (1937, 44; Figure IV.6.3). The ligatures and signs that would acquire an []
  • 2021 April 6, Koenraad Donker van Heel, Dealing with the Dead in Ancient Egypt: The Funerary Business of Petebaste, American University in Cairo Press, →ISBN:
    We can even trace how individual abnormal hieratic scribes from a single family from Thebes adopted the conventions and writings of the new script, to become early demotic scribes themselves. The most convenient way to achieve this []
  • 2013 June 7, Juan Carlos Moreno García, Ancient Egyptian Administration, BRILL, →ISBN, page 1023:
    In the documents in abnormal hieratic, it was customary to swear on Amun and the Pharaoh. In the demotic wording, all reference to the Theban divinity was eliminated. It was as if—and it is impossible to say if this was the effect of []
  • 1994, Klaus Baer, University of Chicago. Oriental Institute, For His Ka: Essays Offered in Memory of Klaus Baer, Oriental Inst Publications Sales:
    The hand is a legible late hieratic, which displays no features of abnormal hieratic. The following forms are worth noting:  []
  • 1993, Sesto Congresso internazionale di egittologia: atti:
    This archive consists of twenty - eight abnormal hieratic and early demotic texts. Twenty - four of these are kept in the Louvre, two in the British Museum, and another two in the Cairo Museum 2 : Publication Inv. nr. Type of doc.
  • 2003, INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS OF EGYPTOLOGISTS, Egyptology at the Dawn of the Twenty-first Century: Language, conservation, museology, American Univ in Cairo Press, →ISBN, page 15:
    This was seen as a purely business script, but P Queen's College Oxford, a tale in abnormal hieratic inscribed on the other side of a journal of Year 12 of Taharqa, 96 shows that it was used for fictional texts, rather as Late []
  • 1992, Janet H. Johnson, Life in a Multi-cultural Society: Egypt from Cambyses to Constantine and Beyond, Oriental Inst Publications Sales:
    The similarities between the signs in these stelae and abnormal hieratic and early Demotic signs are demonstrated more clearly in table 10.1. The two columns on the left show examples from the Serapeum and C. 101 Stelae; those on the []
  • 2004, Frederick George Walker, The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology:
    This clause appears to be an adaptation of the clause usually found in abnormal hieratic marital property settlements, where the husband promises to pay the wife if he decides to leave her. The earliest example occurs in P. Berlin []
  • 2003, Raymond Westbrook, Gary M. Beckman, A History of Ancient Near Eastern Law, Brill Academic Pub:
    1.4 Private Legal Documents 1.4.1 The corpus of texts in so - called abnormal hieratic is almost entirely legal and economic in character.30 These often deal with the sale of slaves or servants, and a few seem to form true archives of []
  • 1910, American Journal of Archaeology: The Journal of the Archaeological Institute of America, page 489:
    F. L. Griffith publishes in hieroglyphic text and translation an early Egyptian contract relating to the sale of a slave, that is preserved in the Vatican library, and exhibits the rare “abnormal hieratic” writing which prevailed []
  • 1932, Egypt Exploration Society, Studies presented to F. Ll. Griffith:
    We do not know the palaeography of abnormal hieratic well enough to be able to fix the date of the text more closely, and the mention of a ' year 14 ', verso l. 19, does not help us very much. Shabaka and Shabataka are excluded []
  • 2006, Mark Depauw, The Demotic Letter: A Study of Epistolographic Scribal Traditions Against Their Intra- and Intercultural Background, Gisela Zauzich Verlag:
    The abnormal hieratic predecessors After the 21st dynasty evidence from El - Hiba a long epistolographic silence follows. The next letters emerge only at the end of the 8th and beginning of the 7th century BC.
  • 1991, The Cambridge Ancient History: pt. 1. The prehistory of the Balkans; and the Middle East and the Aegean world, tenth to eighth centuries B.C:
    ... cursive documentary texts continued to widen as time went by, and by the Twenty - fifth Dynasty cursive hieratic in southern Egypt had diverged so far from the parent hieroglyphic script that it is now called abnormal hieratic.
  • 1997, Mark Depauw, A Companion to Demotic Studies:
    The contracts drafted in abnormal hieratic differ from their Demotic counterparts not only by the script, but also in wording and form. F.Ll. Griffith, Catalogue of the Demotic Papyri in the John Rylands Library Manchester []
  • 1979, British Museum. Dept. of Egyptian Antiquities, Thomas Garnet Henry James, An Introduction to Ancient Egypt:
    Not more than about forty - five documents written in abnormal hieratic have been identified (of which one long text is in this Museum, 10798). One of the earliest, dealing with the sale of a collection of shabtis (10800), dates []
  • 2009, Archives polonaises d'etudes orientales:
    One wooden tablet with a teaching (in abnormal hieratic) on one side and on the other the beginning of the Middle Kingdom literary text; “Teaching of Cheti”; P. Chassinat II, a very fragmentary story about a king and a ghost may []
  • 1964, British Museum, British Museum. Department of Egyptian and Assyrian Antiquities, A General Introductory Guide to the Egyptian Collections in the British Museum:
    Moreover, two even more cursive scripts, namely demotic and the so - called abnormal hieratic, developed out of the business hieratic of the late New Kingdom. Not more than about forty documents written in abnormal hieratic are []
  • 1952, George Robert Hughes, Saite Demotic Land Leases:
    The ' w is written in our text in the abnormal hieratic form appearing in the name ' Iw.f - ' w in Doc. III / 11. Compare the in Leiden Tablet I 431, verso 16. Sk. This is a strange name for a man, “Their dog,” but Ranke lists []
  • 1991, Marti Lu Allen, The Beginning of Understanding: Writing in the Ancient World:
    We have difficulties in The Egyptians therefore adopted the Greek letter reading these abnormal hieratic texts not only writing system (as well as a lot of Greek expresbecause of the new, highly cursive sign combina- sions).
  • 1972, Richard Holton Pierce, Three Demotic Papyri in the Brooklyn Museum: A Contribution to the Study of Contracts and Their Instruments in Ptolemaic Egypt:
    In Late Egyptian and abnormal hieratic legal texts the date is often followed by the words hrw pn, “on this day,” []
mixed case
  • 1991, Journal of Biblical Literature:
    The Demoticists ' consensus was that Demotic came into use later; in the Kushite period abnormal Hieratic was in use, and in 688–687 BC. Taharqa the Kushite ruled Egypt.45 Thus the date of the Adon Papyrus is left most preferably at []
  • 2002 November 29, Muffs, Studies in the Aramaic Legal Papyri from Elephantine, BRILL, →ISBN, page 148:
    AN ABNORMAL HIERATIC ANALOGUE The term m-ib-hr “with a satisfied heart” is found in the conveyances written in abnormal Hieratic. Even though it is based on the same root metaphor as the Aramaic tyb lbby, there is some question as to []
capitalized
  • 1986, Charles Albert Ferguson, The Fergusonian Impact: In Honor of Charles A. Ferguson on the Occasion of His 65th Birthday, De Gruyter Mouton, →ISBN:
    ... the conquest by Alexander the Great in 332. Thereafter Greek rule was continued under the Ptolemies until the incorporation of Egypt into the Roman Empire. After a transitional period of “Abnormal Hieratic” (dated by Grapow []
  • 1995, Christopher Eyre, Seventh International Congress of Egyptologists, Cambridge, 3-9 September 1995: Abstracts of Papers, Oxbow Books Limited:
    Kushite Abnormal Hieratic Land Leases Koenraad Donker van Heel While visiting Karnak in the winter of 1884—5 the German egyptologist August Eisenlohr purchased a sizeable and interesting lot of abnormal hieratic and early demotic papyri []
  • 1996, Peter T. Daniels, William Bright, The World's Writing Systems, Oxford University Press on Demand:
    Regional variations are also notable, so that by the Twenty - fifth Dynasty the chancery styles of the south (Abnormal Hieratic) and north (Demotic) were no longer mutually legible. With Demotic accorded royal preference TABLE 4.5 []
  • 1998, AEB:
    However, owing to the scarcity of documents in Abnormal Hieratic texts from other collections (the Louvre and the British Museum) have been added to permit a more thorough study of this type of script. The work is presented in two []
  • 2004, American Research Center in Egypt, Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt:
    One need only point to the magnificent Abnormal Hieratic papyrus of a literary character that had been slipped between the pages of a book in an Oxford Library centuries ago, and only recently rediscovered.
  • 2016 August 2, Brian Muhs, The Ancient Egyptian Economy: 3000–30 BCE, Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 169:
    In contrast, several Abnormal Hieratic papyri document sales of individual slaves for silver, which appear to have resulted in the actual movement of slaves from one household to another. Abnormal Hieratic sales contract P. Leiden K 128 []
  • 2019 September 23, Franziska Naether, New Approaches in Demotic Studies: Acts of the 13th International Conference of Demotic Studies, Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG, →ISBN:
    The Count Louis de Vaucelles travelled in Egypt and Nubia in 1829, buying some ancient Egyptian antiquities on the way, including a long Abnormal Hieratic account from years 12 and 13 of Taharqa (this papyrus being the second of its []