Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
LONDON
BERNARD QUARITCH,
11
P R m T E ~ BY
EAZELL, WATSON' AND VINEY, C D . ,
W N D O N AND AYLESBURY
G E N E R A L C O M M I T T E E (*Execstiue Memders) Lord ABERCROMEY HENRY BALFOUR Rev. Dr. T. G. RONNEY Prof. X. C. BOSANQUET Rt. Hon. VISCOUNT BRYCEO F
~ECHMONT
*Prof. J. B. BURY "SO~IERS CLARKE E O W A ~CLOUD II Sir W. Rovn I ~ A W K I N S Prof. Sir S. DILL *Miss ECKENSTEIN Sir GREGORY FOSTER Sir JAMES FRAZER "Prof. ERNEST GARDNER
Prof. PERCY GARDNER Rt. Hon. Sir GEORCE T. GOLDIE Dr. GOWI.AND Mrs. J. R. GREEN Rt. Hon. F.-M. LORD GRENFELL Mrs. F. LL. GRIFFITH Dr. A. C. HADDON Rev. Dr. A. C. HEADLAM D. G. HOGARTH *BASILHOLMES Sir HENRY H. HOWORTH Baron A. YON HWCEL Prof. A. S. HUNT Mrs. C. I-I. W. JOHNS Sir HENRY MIERS
J. G. MILNE KOBERT MOND Prof. MONTAGUE ~VALTKR MORRISON *Miss M. A. MURRAY P. E. NEWDERRY F. W. PERCIVAL Dr. P l ~ c r i e s Dr. G. W. PROTHERO Dr. G. A. REISNER Sir WII,LIA~I ,RICHDZOND Prof. F. W. ~IIDGEWAY Mrs. %KONO Lady TIRARD E. TOWRY WHYTE
Zfonorary Treasurer-*I-I. SEPTON-JONES PETRIE Honorary Director-Prof. FLINDERS Honorary Secretary-Mrs. 13. F. PETRIE
AMERICAN BRANCH
WILLIAM J. HOLLAND, PH.D., Sc.D., LL.D. E D ~ I U NJ. D JAMES, PH.D., LL.D. F. W. SHIPLEY, PH.D.
Hon. Sewdary Prof. MITCHELL CARROLL, PH.D. Hon. Treasurer Rev. WILLIAM C. WINSLOW, D.D.
PUBLICATIONS
O F THE EGYPTIAN RESEARCH ACCOUNT AND
BRITISH
SCHOOL O F ARCHAEOLOGY I N
EGYPT
I. BALLAS, 1895; by J. E. QUIBELI,. (Out of print j obtainable in joint volume NAQADA AND BALLAS, by W. M. F. PETRIE.) 11. THE RAMESSEUM, 1896; by J. E. QUIBELL. (Out of print.) 1 1 1 . EL KAB, 1897; by J. E. QUIBELL. IV. HIERAKONPOLIS I, 1898; text by W. M. F. P. 43 plates. 20s. nef. V. HIERAKONPOLIS 1 1 , 1899; by F. W. GREENand J. E. QUIBELL. 39 plates (4 coloured and ao
photographic).
35s. net.
VI. EL ARABAH, 1900; by J. GARSTANG.40 plates. 16s. ntt. (Out of print.) VII. MAHASNA, 1go1 ; by J. GARSTANG and KURTSETHE. 43 plates. (Out of print.) 2 4 plates. 16s. net. (Out of print.) VIII, TEMPLE OF THE KINGS, ~ g o ; z by A. ST. GEORGE CAULFEILD. IX. THE OSIREION, 1903; by MARGARET A. MURRAY. 37 plates. X. SAQQARA MASTABAS I, 1904; by ill. A. MURRAY; and GUROB, by L. LOAT. 64 plates. 30s. net. XI. SAQQARA MASTABAS 1 1 , 1905; by HILDAPETRIE. ( I n prcpnration.) XII. HYKSOS AND ISRAELITE CITIES, 1906 ; by W. M. FL~NDERS PETRIR and J. GARROW DUNCAN.
40 plates.
25s.
net.
455.
net.
F,. B. KNOBEL. 43 plates, 25s. net. (Out of print.) XV, MEMPHIS I, 1908; by W. M. F. PETRIEand J. H. WALKER. 54 plates. 25s. net. XVI. QURNEH, 1 9 ~ 9 by ; W. M. F. PETRIEand J. H. WALKER. 56 plates. (Out of print.) XVII. THE PALACE OF APRIES (MEMPHIS 11), 1909; by W. M. FLINDERS PETRIE and J. H. WALKER. 35 plates. 25s. net. XVIII. MEYDUM AND MEMPHIS (III), 1 9 1 ~ ;by W. M. F. PETRIE,E. MACKAY, and G. WAINWRIGHT. 47 plates. 2 5 s net. XIX HISTORICAL STUDIES, 1910. 2 5 plates. 25s. net. (Studies, vol. ii.) XX. ROMAN PORTRAITS (MEMPHIS IV), 1911; by W. M. F. PETRIE. 35 plates. ass. net. XXI. THE LABYRINTH AND GERZEH, 1911 ; by W. M. F. PETRIE,E. MACKAY, and G. WAINWRIGHT. 5 2 plates. 25s. net. XXII. PORTFOLIO OF HAWARA PORTRAITS. 24 coloured plates. 50s. net. XXIII. TARKHAN I AND MEMPHIS V, 1912; by W. M. F. PETRIE. 81 plates. 25s. net. XXIV. HELIOPOLIS I AND KAFR AMMAR, 1912; by W. M. F. PETRIE. 58 plates. 25s. n d . XXV. RIQQEH AND MEMPHIS VI, 1913; by R. ENGELBACH, HILDA PETRIE, M. A. MURRAY, and W. M. F. PETRIB. 6 2 plates. 25s. net. XXVI. TARKHAN 1 1 , 1913; by W. M. F. PETRIE. 7 2 plates. 25s. nrt. . s . )(coloured), deruo l oc ( se t a l 6 net. XXVII. LAHUN I, THE TREASURE, 1914; by GUYBRUNTON. 2 3 plates XXVIII. HARAGEH ; by R. ENGELBACH.( I n preparation.) XXIX. SCARABS AND CYLINDERS, 1915; by W. M. F. PETRIE.73 plates. 32s. net. XXX. TOOLS AND WEAPONS, 1916; by W. M. F. PETRIE.76 plates. 355. net. XXXI. PREHISTORIC EGYPT, 1917; by W. M. F. PETRIE. 53 plates. 25s. net. XXXII. PREHISTORIC POTTERY OF EGYPT3 by W. M. F. PETRIE. 58 plates. 25s. net. LAHUN 1 1 , THE PYRAMID. (IPS preparation.)
Subscriptionr of One Guinea for the Annual Single Volumes, or Two Guineas for the Two Annual Volumrs, arc recziz)ed by the Hon. Sewetary, a t d h Edwards L i b r a v , Umiversidy Collcge, G o w Street, London, W.C., where also copies o f the above works can b# obtained.
additions not recognising the principles of arrangement. Such principles may be arbitrary, but yet they must be kept up, or else a corpus would become so confused that identification of forms would be difficult. The principles which must be observed in all additions to the corpus are as follow : I. The forms are chiefly classed from the most open, such as shallow saucers, to the most closed, such as bottles. In carrying this out, the bowls are classed by the slope of the edge,-the most open, the most sloping, the almost upright, the vertical and the different degrees of incurving. Another criterion is the proportion of height to width ; some large classes of vases are divided into those under or over certain proportions. In some cases obvious inversions of order occur, because some types continue to vary to a great extent, and after tracing out that line, a turning back to some other type has to be made. The indefinite variation over so large a number of features, makes any single-line order necessarily illogical. All that can be hoped for is to arrange the types so that they can be searched for in the shortest time. In all additions the principle of arrangement must first be observed before inserting a new form. 2. Another confusion has been caused by not noticing what is included in an established class, such as the black polished pottery in F class. Additions to this have been made into a new class, but are here restored to F. 3. A needless multiplication of new types has been made, when the differences from established types were but slight or imperceptible. Variations should be ignored when they are within the chances of copying; the two sides of a jar often differ perceptibly, and such slight differences are immaterial. Strictly, no vase is perfectly like another, and we must put together all those which
may reasonably have been intended to be alike. To separate them detracts from ihe value of the ranges of types in date. 4. Additions should be spaccd apart in the lettering, not as a b c d but as c, g, m, r, so as to allow of intermediate forms being inserted. Of course variations closely alike may have consecutive letters. The lettering should follow the natural order of forms, as near as may be. 5. Differences of size and of material may be largely ignored. It is usual to find vases of the same form of various sizes, and even in different material, yet contemporary, as in B, P, and R. The system of the corpus follows the classification in " Naqada " into nine classes, as no more distinctive method has appeared. The first object of all divisions must be the most rapid identification of a form, and the existing classes provide for that. The class of Late refers to distinctive styles of pottery, hard and thin, or else to the long jars sometimes brown and soft, in any case distinct from the previous classes. At the top right of each figure is the type number and letter. At the bottom left is the refetence to the source, those without reference being from the Naqada corpus. At the bottom right is the sequence date of the reference. The works referred to are as follow : Ab. Petrie, Abydos, I.
MacIver, El Amrah. Peet, Cemeteria of Abydos. De Morgan Age de L a Pierre. Petrie, Diospolis. Wainwright, Gerzeh (in The Labyrinth, etc.). Engelbach, Harageh (not yet published). Ayrton and Loat, Mahasna. Naqada (not marked to types, only to tomb numbers). N.D. No date. Nub. 7. Reisner, Archaeological Survey of Nubia. Nub. 8. Firth, Archaeological S ~ r v e y of Nubia, 1908-9 (with references, E.D., etc., to classes). R.T. Petrie, Roycsl Tombs. Tark. Petrie, Tarkhan I and I I . University College collection, with N and U.C. grave number if from Nagadeh. The date such as 32-38 means that the examples extend between 32 and 38 ; 32, 38 means that dated examples are only known a t 32 and at 38 ; (32-38) means that only one dated example is known, in a grave of uncertain date between 32 and 38. It should be observed that there is a different system in the corpus of white cross-lined pottery arranged by the forms, scale I : 6, and the U.C. examples in Prehistoric Egypt, scale I : 3, arranged by the subject of the designs.
THE REGISTERS
ON pl. xl are given the cor$us equivalents of the numbers used by Dr. Reisner in the first volume of the Archaeological Survey of Nubia, 1907-8 : these were abandoned in the succeedimg volumes: also the alterations which have proved to be necessary in unifying all the cov$us numbers of many publications. All these registers are needed when referring to previous works. On pl. lxi is a list of the pottery types in University College, with reference to their sources when known : D, Diospolis; Gerz., Gerzeh ; N, Naqada, with
number of grave. Also a list of the sources of the type drawings of white Cross-lined pottery, with sequence dates when known; and the same for Black-incised pottery. Below are references to a few more types, so far as they can be distinguished in the photographs of Mahasna, by Ayrton and Loat, and four copies of the unusual types. The curved spray in 498 is unique ; the figures of women with a fringe girdle in IOO K are very rare ; the vase with animals along the length of it, is unique; and the hippopotamus hunt is very rare, see type 5 m.
1:6
BLACK TOP.
B 1-10.
I.
1:6
BLACK TOP,
B 11-20.
II.
Mah.
see L.7
U.C.
U .>go
U.C.
1:6
B L A C K TOP.
B 21--25.
22w
U.C. 8.83
0V
57,b4
Mah.
31-38
5h
U.C.
r
-.
* l _ _
1:6
B L A C K TOP.
E3 25-34.
IV.
1:6
BLACK TOP.
B 35-51.
V,
1:6
BLACK TOP.
B 53-644
V I.
B L A C K TOP.
B 65 78.
VSI.
1:6
BLACK TOP.
B 79-99.
VIII.
1: 6
P O L I S H E D RED.
P 23-34,
Xe
U.C.
L'
1:6
P O L I S H E D RED.
P 35-41.
XI.
1:6
POLISHED
RED.
P 41-62,
XII,
War
00
U.C.
N 1509
i-"
1:6
POLISHED RED.
P 63-82.
Xlll.
1:6
POLISHED RED.
P 82-99.
XIV.
FANCY.
F 5-24.
xv.
C13'
' U
U.C.
1 :6
FANCY.
F 24-39.
XVI.
US.
, k3w-+.reb
etay
(S"
03-69
U.C.
(--U7
.. . . '
...,. _
1: 6
FANCY.
F 40-55.
XVII,
U.C.
czsE7
U.C.
1:6
FANCY.
F 58-69.
XVIII.
U.C. N ILII
U
40-SS
V.C.
U C.
U.C.
U.C.
1:6
BLACK POLISHED.
F 70-99.
XIX.
75
U.C.
Di.SSb
c3
34
J
v
Bob
U.C.
80 F
80 F
80 G
80 H
80
80 M
80 N
L.P.v.~
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L.P.V.S
k 235 (98 - 6 7 )
41-61
L.P. v.3
L . ?.v. 4
1:6
W H I T E CROSS-LINED.
C 1-15.
XX.
1:6
WHITE CROSS-LINED.
C 16-31,
XXI,
1:6
WHITE CROSS-LINED.
C 32-47.
XXII.
1: 6
W H I T E CROSS-LINED.
C 48-74.
XXIII,
1:6
W H I T E CROSS-LINED.
C 75-85.
XXIV.
1:6
W H I T E CROSS-LINED.
C 91-100,
XXV.
BLACK INCISED.
N 2-40.
xxv I,
1:3
BLACK INCISED.
N 50-80.
XXVII,
1:6
WAVY HANDLED.
W 1-23,
XXVIII.
1C
1:6
W A V Y HANDLED.
W 24--47.
XXIX.
v"' 6''
C&.
6ur.C~-63)
47 A
47 M
Mak.
66-71
D ;
71-7s Mlh.
1:6
W A V Y HANDLED.
S1
W 48-90.
XXX.
56
56 G
M r h.
Mak.
77
1:6
Lj & m 3
1-r
DECORATED.
D 1-14.
XXXI.
& \:
* + $ ?
'P "=
+r
h . ' H
".C.
U.C.
G er.
W,-&,
I: 6
DECORATED.
D 15-29.
XXXII.
U.C.
L/
1: 6
DECORXTED.
D 31-42.
XXXIIIo
.--.
D
33b
/' --,
'6'
34 K
40-52
U.C.
1:6
43
DECORATED.
D 43-49.
@yjJ
43 T
N 1 7 2 3 eo
U. C.
1:6
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D 50-66.
xxxv,
1:6
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D 61-76,
XXXVI.
incised
1: 6
DECORATED.
D 78-93.
XXXVII.
1:6
ROUGH.
R 1-40.
XXXVIII.
1: 6
ROUGH.
R 50-74.
XL.
1:6
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R 74-81.
XLI,
Har
1: 6
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R 81-84.
X LII .
1:6
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R 84-86.
XLlll
1:6
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L 36-43.
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XLIX.
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88-92.
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REGISTERS.
POTTERY
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UNIVERSITY
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Electronic publication prepared by Kelvin Smith Library Case Western Reserve University Cleveland, Ohio for ETANA Core Texts http://www.etana.org/coretexts.shtml