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2010 | 2 | 5-20

Article title

The necropolis at Tell el-Farkha reconsidered

Content

Title variants

Languages of publication

EN

Abstracts

EN
Works on the necropolis at Tell el-Farkha have reached the 9th season and resulted in locating over 100 burials. In this situation, almost every succeeding campaign was bringing such a number of new data that preliminary statements were continuously being changed almost year by year. Numerous analyses of pottery, stone vessels, architectural details and stratigraphy, finally, seem to lead to some more profound conclusions. According to them, all graves at Tell el-Farkha have been divided into 3 main chronological groups. Group 1 is the oldest one. It is dated back from Naqada IIIB phase to the middle of Dynasty 1. People buried in the graves of this group represented wealthy society, and they also experimented, trying to reach a perfect grave form. The process is the best explanation of the presence of so many “strange” structures and differences in position of the deceased, but on the other hand, also numerous elements of typically early dynastic burial custom (e.g. niche façades or subsidiary burials) seem to emerge in that time. Tombs belonging to the group 2 come from the middle of Dynasty 1 to late Dynasty 1 or even to early Dynasty 2. Main social features they express are stressing of wealth inequality and presence of clearly definite and quite strictly obeyed rules of burial ritual. However the graves of the younger group are clearly a continuation of the older custom and so the origin of both societies must have been similar, the changes in orientation of tombs as well as examples of younger burials cutting into older ones suggest that both groups were divided by short break in occupation of cemetery. The final phase (group 3) of the cemetery at Tell el-Farkha was surely separated from the previous ones by a much longer period of time. The tombs representing phase in question are distributed only in the highest part of the tell, and may be dated on the basis of stratigraphic observations to the beginning of the Old Kingdom. They characterise of very simple burial custom (all the bodies were found resting in simple pits) and are hardly equipped with any objects.

Year

Volume

2

Pages

5-20

Physical description

Dates

published
2010

Contributors

  • Institute of Archaeology, Jagiellonian University; Gołębia St. 11, 31-007 Kraków, Poland

References

  • Ciałowicz K.M., 2006 Excavations at the Eastern Kom. Southern trench, (in:) M. Chłodnicki, K. M. Ciałowicz et al., Polish Excavations at Tell el-Farkha (Ghazala) in the Nile Delta. Preliminary report 2004 – 2005, Archeologia, 57, pp. 92 – 94.
  • Ciałowicz K.M., 2008 The nature of the relation between Lower and Upper Egypt in the Protodynastic period. A view from Tell el-Farkha, (in:) B. Midant-Reynes, Y. Tristant (eds), Egypt at its origin 2. Proceedings of the International Conference “Origin of the State. Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt” Toulouse (France), 5th – 8th September 2005, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 172, Leuven – Paris, pp. 501– 513.
  • Czarnowicz M., 2009 Tell el-Farkha 2006. Oval-shaped pottery from grave no. 9, Studies in Ancient Art and Civilization, 13, pp. 43 – 49.
  • Dębowska-Ludwin J., 2010 The catalogue of graves from Tell el-Farkha, Recherches Archéologiques NS, 1, pp. 458 – 486.
  • Dębowska-Ludwin J., 2011 Sepulchral architecture in details: new data from Tell el-Farkha, (in:) R. F. Friedman and P. N. Fieske (eds.) Egypt at its Origins, Proceedings, of the Third International Conference Origin of the State. Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt, London, 27th July–1st August 2008, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta, 205, pp. 257–268.
  • Dębowska-Ludwin J., Jucha M. A., Pryc G., Kołodziejczyk P., 2010 Tell el-Farkha (2009 Season); grave no. 100, Studies in Ancient Art and Civilization, 14, pp. 23 – 42.
  • Jucha M.A., 2006 Pottery from the graves, (in:) M. Chłodnicki, K. M. Ciałowicz et al., Polish Excavations at Tell el-Farkha (Ghazala) in the Nile Delta. Preliminary report 2004 – 2005, Archeologia, 57, pp. 97 – 101.
  • Jucha M.A.,2008 The corpus of “potmarks” from the graves at Tell el-Farkha (in:) B. Midant-Reynes, Y. Tristant (eds), Egypt at its Origin 2. Proceedings of the International Conference “Origin of the State. Predynastic and Early Dynastic Egypt” Toulouse (France), 5th – 8th September 2005, Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 172, Leuven-Paris, pp. 133 – 149.
  • Jucha M.A.,2010 A The early Egyptian rulers in the Nile Delta. A view from the necropolis at Tell el-Farkha, (in:) A. Hudecz, M. Petrik (eds), Commerce and Economy in Ancient Egypt. Proceedings of the Third International Congress for Young Egyptologists held in Budapest in September 2009, Budapest, pp. 81– 97.
  • Jucha M.A.,2010 B Pottery from the graves, (in:) M. Chłodnicki, K. M. Ciałowicz et al., Polish Excavations at Tell el-Farkha (Ghazala) in the Nile Delta. Preliminary report 2006 – 2007, Archeologia, pp. 132 – 135.
  • Koehler C., 2004 Seven Years of Excavations at Helwan, Egypt, Bulletin of the Australian Centre for Egyptology, 15, pp. 79 – 88.
  • Kołodziejczyk P., 2009 Tell el-Farkha 2006. Granary models, Studies in Ancient Art and Civilization, 13, pp. 49 – 54.
  • Kroeper K., Wildung D., 2000 Minshat Abu Omar II. Ein vor- und fruhgeschichtlicher Friedhof im Nildelta, Mainz.
  • Pryc G., 2006 Stone vessels from the Western and Eastern Koms, (in:) M. Chłodnicki, K. M. Ciałowicz et al., Polish Excavations at Tell el-Farkha (Ghazala) in the Nile Delta. Preliminary report 2004 – 2005, Archeologia, 57, pp. 101 – 106.
  • Pryc G., 2009 Tell el-Farkha 2007. Stone vessesls from grave no. 55, Studies in Ancient Art and Civilization, 13, pp. 55 – 65.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-16347a38-2a65-4ab0-87d6-9c3099d10467
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