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Victoria Jensen
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Index

Ahhotep 26
Ahmose, Nebpehtyre 24, 26, 102–103
Ahmose, queen 104
Ahmose, Senakhtenre 25
Amenhotep I (Djeserkare) 103–104
amphorae
see jars, amphorae
amulets 107–114, 332–333
basketry 141–142
beads 117–120, 315, 331–332, 387–392
large pottery 118–119, 389
wallet 119–120
Base Ring I ware
see Eastern Mediterranean pottery
bichrome decorated pottery 225–232, 316–318, 355–358
Black Lustrous Ware, Egyptian 280–282
black-painted pottery 213–222, 352–354, 396–398
blue-painted pottery 235–245, 359–360, 398
boat, wooden model 145–146
botanical samples
see food offerings
bottles
cup-like quatrefoil mouth 193–195, 346
wavy neck 191–192, 344–346
bowls
carinated 167
ring-base 165–166, 341
stone 333–334
with Hathor cow figurine 167–173, 483
with uraeus figurine 167–168, 173–174
boxes, wooden 142–143
bronze 144, 336–337
burial
elite 467–469
positions 425–430
17th–early 18th Dynasty 469–470
Canaanite pottery 254
chapels 479–482, 486–487
see also tombs, superstructures
children 456–463, 466
chronological analysis 412–420
coffins 411
Cemetery 1–200 89–98
Cemetery 1200–1300 330–331
dug-out log 97–98
combs 135–136
cultural memory 9–11, 17–21
Cypriot pottery
see Eastern Mediterranean pottery
Cypriot-inspired monochrome and bichrome pottery 222–233, 355–358
dishes
large 175, 341
small 175–177, 342
earrings 115–116
Eastern Mediterranean pottery 249–254, 361, 363–366, 464–465
Base Ring I ware 252–254, 363–365
Black Lustrous Ware 251
pilgrim flask 365–366
Red Lustrous Wheelmade ware 251–252, 363–364
Egyptian Museum, Cairo 51–52
feminoform vase
see jars, Hathor
figurines
animal 293–294, 368–371, 406–407
female (anthropomorphic) 13–15, 282–293, 367–368, 398–406
finger rings 117
“flower pots” 161–165, 341–342
food offerings 154–156, 299–307, 371–372, 408, 489, 491–492
goblet, faience 147–148
Green, Frederick W.
excavation methods 47, 50
Hatshepsut 105
Hearst Expedition to Egypt 40–41, 44–58
horn 140–141, 336
human remains 54
Cemetery 1–200 75–78
Cemetery 500 314
Cemetery 1200–1300 327–329
inlay panels 143–144
incised parallel lines on pottery 200–203, 347–349
jars
amphorae 188–191, 343–344
beakers 152–158, 340
“beer” 158–161, 340–341
funnel-necked 181–183, 343
Hathor 177–180, 394–396
hes 195–197, 346–347
tall storage 180–182, 316–317, 343
tapering kettle-mouthed 193–194
three-handled 182, 184–188
Kamose 25–26, 31
“kill holes” in pottery 245–249, 361–362, 398, 490–491
kohl applicators 134–135
kohl jars 120–133, 332–334
landscape archaeology 5–12
literacy 447–451
Lythgoe, Albert
excavation methods 46–47
marsh bowls 146–147, 149
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York 53
milk vase
see jars, Hathor
mirror, bronze 137–138, 393–394
multiple burials 430–434
see also tombs, reuse of
mummy mask 98–99
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston 52–53
necropolei in Egyptian settlements 66–71
non-elite
access to written texts 447–451, 478
definition of 438–441
Nubian cultural indicators at Deir el-Ballas 271–280, 464
Nubian pottery 74–75, 255–271, 365–366, 497–499
black-topped burnished ware 269–270
Kerma culture 73–74, 258–271
mat-impressed ware 270–271
Pan-Grave culture 265–266
offering slabs, stone 377
offering stands 198–200, 347, 396
ostraca, administrative 29–30
palace 8–10, 32–34
phenomenology 5–8
Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology, Berkeley 51, 53–58
pottery
as grave good 488–491
Cemetery 1–200 151–282
Cemetery 500 317–319
Cemetery 1200–1300 339–367
uncertain provenience 394–398
priests 444–445, 479–483
rattles, clay 294–299
razors 136–138, 335
red-painted pottery 233–235, 358
Red Lustrous Wheelmade ware
see Eastern Mediterranean pottery
Reisner, George Andrew
excavation methods 44–46, 48–49
royal ancestor, worship of 9–11, 17–21
sarcophagus, stone 315–316, 374–376
scarabs 99–107, 316–317, 331–332
Sedjefatawy 27–31
Senenmut 105, 479
Seqenenre (Djehuty-Aa/Tao) 24–25, 39
Seti I 105
settlement locations 471–477
shabtis 114–115, 378–387
shell 134
social status 441–447
stelae, faience 84–89
stelae, stone 78–83, 375–376
Thebes
Deir el-Ballas connection with 477–479, 482–483
Thutmose I 104
Thutmose III (Menkheperre) 105–106
tiles, faience 149–150, 337–339, 500
tombs
architectural styles 63–66, 312–313, 325–327, 420–422
orientation 423
reuse of 435
superstructures 423–425, 484–485
tweezers 136–137
white-painted pottery 203–213, 349–352, 396–397
wig 139
women, social roles 442–444
Workers’ Village 36–38, 70–73
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