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PL
W artykule przedstawiono papirusy Księgi Umarłych z kolekcji Muzeum Czartoryskich w Krakowie, z uwzględnieniem papirusu ze zbiorów Muzeum Narodowego w Krakowie (nr inw. XI-A-831). Szczególną uwagę zwrócono na brakujące fragmenty papirusów, przechowywanych, jak się okazuje, w kolekcjach egiptologicznych na świecie (Bruksela, Paryż, Nowy Jork). Zaproponowano datowanie poszczególnych dokumentów oraz rekonstrukcję rozmieszczenia zachowanych fragmentów papirusu Uja (rozdziały 99 i 148 Księgi Umarłych).
EN
The subject of the present paper are two hitherto unpublished hieratic dipinti from the Birth Portico of the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari. One of them had been written on the north wall of the portico and can be related precisely to the second phase of restoration undertaken in the Temple of Queen Hatshepsut in the post-Amarna period, and more specifically to the reign of Ramesses II. The other inscription, written on the south wall of the portico, can be ascribed to a certain Minnakht and his colleague Ired, presumably builders of the temple. In addition, a comment on other dipinti on the walls of the portico and its pillars has been included.
EN
Two graffiti of Senenmut from the Temple of Hatshepsut at Deir el-Bahari are presented in this paper: one located in the granite portal leading to the Upper Court of the temple, and another in the entrance to the Chapel of Thutmose I in the Royal Mortuary Cult Complex. In addition, photographs of heavily erased graffiti of Senenmut in the entrance to the Chapel of Hatshepsut are published here as well.
EN
This paper presents a group of nine fragmentarily preserved dipinti from the Temple of Thuthmose III in Deir el-Bahari. The pieces belong to the corpus of dipinti discovered by the Polish Archaeological Mission at the beginning of the 1960s, the bulk of which was already published by the late Marek Marciniak.
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