Weseretkau “Mighty of Kas”: Papers in Memory of Cathleen A. Keller
Synopsis
Weseretkau “Mighty of Kas” honors the life and career of Professor Cathleen “Candy” Keller, a truly extraordinary teacher, scholar, Egyptologist, and polymath. The contributors to this volume were Professor Keller’s students, friends, and colleagues. Though much of the research presented here centers around the honoree’s two primary passions—Egyptian art and the study of the village of Deir el-Medina—the range of topics reflects her broad Egyptological interests, including religious organization, artistic technique, museum collections, textual analyses, historical events, and archaeological studies at sites throughout Egypt.
Chapters
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Front Matter
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Coffin Reuse in the Twenty-First DynastyA Case Study of Egyptian Coffins in Italian Collections
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Why Gild the Lily?On “Color Symbolism” and Color Use in Egyptian Art
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“The Tomb”A Small Cache of Statuary and Reliefs at South Karnak
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Akhenaten, Smiting Egypt’s EnemiesRemarks on the Character of the “House of the King’s Statue” at Amarna
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“Gods’ Red” and the Separation of Divine from Human
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A Singer in the Residence of the Temple of Amun at Berkeley
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“Isis Nursing Harpocrates” EnthronedReconstructing a Greco-Egyptian Plaster Plaque from the Phoebe Apperson Hearst Museum of Anthropology
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Faience Tiles from Deir el-Ballas and KermaNew Evidence of Egyptian-Nubian Relations at the Foundation of the New Kingdom
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The Eyes Have ItA Figured Ostracon with Baboon in the Museum of Art and Archaeology, University of Missouri
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The Decorative Program in the Nonroyal Tombs at Amarna
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The Mapping of Landscape in Old Kingdom Mastaba Chapels
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The Wab-Priests of Deir el-Medina
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A Modest BurialA New Perspective on Roman Period Mummy Shrouds and Burials from Deir el-Medina
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Continuity and Change at Deir el-MedinaLegal Texts
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The Priesthood of Hathor at Deir el-MedinaDevotion to the Goddess by her Clergy and Their Families
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For Whom the Gods Hear
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The Birth of the KingWord Play in the Westcar Papyrus
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The Palestinian Campaign(s) of Shoshenq I
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Mummy by the BayIrethorrou, an Egyptian Priest of the Early Persian Period
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Ancient Egyptian Bits and BittingAn Equestrian Viewpoint
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Was Shedsukhonsu’s Wife Overbearing or Was She the Owner of the Field?
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When Death Comes, He Steals the InfantChild Burials at the Wall of the Crow Cemetery, Giza
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Tomb 526 at the Site of El Ahaiwah
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Eight Inscribed Stones, the First Chariot Driver of His Majesty, and Tell el-Muqdam in the Ramesside Period
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Requiem for a SanctuaryIn Memory of the Shoshenq I Temple at El Hibeh, Middle Egypt
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Indexes
Published
April 17, 2023
Copyright (c) 2023 Lockwood Press Online
Details about the available publication format: print edition
print edition