From Single Sign to Pseudo-Script: An Ancient Egyptian System of Workmen’s Identity Marks: Culture and History of the Ancient Near East, cartea 93
Autor Ben Haringen Limba Engleză Hardback – 10 ian 2018
From Single Sign to Pseudo-Script is the first book to fully discuss the nature and development of an ancient marking system, its historical background, and the fascinating story of its decipherment. Chapters on similar systems in other cultures and on semiotic theory help to distinguish between unique and universal features. Written by Egyptologist Ben Haring, the book addresses scholars interested in marking systems, writing, literacy, and the semiotics of visual communication.
"With this publication, the author exemplified how a close familiarity with a subject enables research in areas of Egyptian society that had not been touched until now and how the resulting insight is presented properly." - Eva-Maria Engel, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, in: Bibliotheca Orientalis 76.1-2 (2019)
"This work should certainly become a guidebook to scholars wishing to publish ostraca of this sort, who have in the past shied away from the complex task due to the enigmatic nature of the materials. The time has arrived for this study of this hitherto neglected facet of Egyptian writing, to find its fitting place in the history of literacy and script in Ancient Egypt, as well as in the history of workmen’s signs in general." - Orly Goldwasser, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, in: Journal of Near Eastern Studies (2019, 78/2)
"The technical data and Egyptological scholarship of the book are deliberately made very accessible to be of assistance in the understanding of identity marks in other periods and cultures. This is a remarkable work of social history." - George J. Brooke, in: Journal for the Study of the Old Testament 43.5 (2019)
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004357532
ISBN-10: 900435753X
Pagini: 292
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Culture and History of the Ancient Near East
ISBN-10: 900435753X
Pagini: 292
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Culture and History of the Ancient Near East
Notă biografică
Ben Haring, Ph.D. (1997), Leiden University, is Senior Lecturer at that university. His publications on administration and writing in Pharaonic Egypt include Divine Households (NINO, 1997); Writing in a Workman’s Village (together with Koen Donker van Heel, NINO, 2003); Palaéographie hiéroglyphique 2 (IFAO, 2006).
Recenzii
"With this publication, the author exemplified how a close familiarity with a subject enables research in areas of Egyptian society that had not been touched until now and how the resulting insight is presented properly." - Eva-Maria Engel, Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, in: Bibliotheca Orientalis 76.1-2 (2019)
"Over one thousand ostraca are assessed, together with other objects from the workmen’s settlement and tombs, especially pottery vessels, and hundreds of graffiti in the Theban mountains. The technical data and Egyptological scholarship of the book are deliberately made very accessible to be of assistance in the understanding of identity marks in other periods and cultures. This is a remarkable work of social history." - George J. Brooke, in: Society for Old Testament Study Book List 2019
"Over one thousand ostraca are assessed, together with other objects from the workmen’s settlement and tombs, especially pottery vessels, and hundreds of graffiti in the Theban mountains. The technical data and Egyptological scholarship of the book are deliberately made very accessible to be of assistance in the understanding of identity marks in other periods and cultures. This is a remarkable work of social history." - George J. Brooke, in: Society for Old Testament Study Book List 2019
Cuprins
Preface
List of Figures
Prologue
1 Making Sense of Funny Signs
1.1An Ancient Text from Berlin
1.2Documentary Texts, Hieratic and Otherwise
1.3The Research History of the Necropolis Workmen’s Marks
1.4A Quick Lesson in Hieroglyphs
1.5Marks and Hieroglyphs
1.6The Aim of the Present Book
2 Identity Marks, Egyptian and Other
2.1A Unique Document
2.2Ancient Egyptian Pot Marks
2.3Builders’ Marks, from Teams to Individuals
2.4Marking Systems Worldwide
2.5Masons’ Marks in Europe, Medieval and Later
2.6The Morphology of Masons’ Marks
2.7Why Were Masons’ Marks Applied?
2.8Masons and Masters
2.9Masons’ Marks in Families and Workshops
2.10General Characteristics of Marking Systems
3 Writing and Other Sign Systems
3.1Theories of the Sign
3.2The Sign in Structuralism: Paradigm and Syntagma, Signifier and Signified
3.3The Sign According to Peirce: Referentiality and Semiosis
3.4Visual and Material Communication: To Write, or Not to Write?
3.5Writing and Other Graphic Systems, Independently and Together
3.6Literacy: Mastering Writing … and Much More
4 The Setting: The Workmen of the Royal Tomb and Their Textual Legacy
4.1An Exceptional Village
4.2The Early History of the Royal Necropolis and Its Workmen
4.3Great Changes for Egypt and for the Royal Necropolis
4.4Ramesside Necropolis Administration, and Administrators
4.5The End of the Royal Necropolis
4.6Hieratic Necropolis Records … by the Thousands
4.7The Nature of the Documentary Texts
4.8Local Knowledge and Output, Textual and Visual
5 The Use of the Workmen’s Marks: Historical Overview
5.1The Earliest Marks of the Royal Necropolis Workmen
5.2The Origin of the Marking System
5.3A Break in the History of the Marking System?
5.4Nineteenth-Dynasty Ostraca with Marks
5.5Marks and Families
5.6The Function of the Nineteenth-Dynasty Marks
5.7The Twentieth-Dynasty Duty Rosters
5.8Other Types of Record from the Twentieth Dynasty
5.9The Late Twentieth Dynasty
6 How the Men Came by Their Marks, and Vice Versa
6.1Marks and Their Users
6.2Long- and Short-Lived Marks: Pomegranate, Lotus and Jackal
6.3Long-Lived Marks and Their Graphic Variety: The Families of Qaha and Sennedjem
6.4Short-Lived Marks: Name, Reputation and Status
6.5Mark, Family and Position
6.6Morphology: Distinctive Forms versus Allomorphs
6.7Sign Categories and Fuzzy Borders
6.8The Role of Writing and Literacy
6.9Morphology and Semiosis: Anything Goes?
6.10Historical and Functional Context: Graphic Communication and Literacy
Epilogue: The Alphabet
Bibliographical Essay
References
Timetable
Index
List of Figures
Prologue
Ancient Egyptian Identity Marks in Theoretical and Comparative Perspective
1 Making Sense of Funny Signs
1.1An Ancient Text from Berlin
1.2Documentary Texts, Hieratic and Otherwise
1.3The Research History of the Necropolis Workmen’s Marks
1.4A Quick Lesson in Hieroglyphs
1.5Marks and Hieroglyphs
1.6The Aim of the Present Book
2 Identity Marks, Egyptian and Other
2.1A Unique Document
2.2Ancient Egyptian Pot Marks
2.3Builders’ Marks, from Teams to Individuals
2.4Marking Systems Worldwide
2.5Masons’ Marks in Europe, Medieval and Later
2.6The Morphology of Masons’ Marks
2.7Why Were Masons’ Marks Applied?
2.8Masons and Masters
2.9Masons’ Marks in Families and Workshops
2.10General Characteristics of Marking Systems
3 Writing and Other Sign Systems
3.1Theories of the Sign
3.2The Sign in Structuralism: Paradigm and Syntagma, Signifier and Signified
3.3The Sign According to Peirce: Referentiality and Semiosis
3.4Visual and Material Communication: To Write, or Not to Write?
3.5Writing and Other Graphic Systems, Independently and Together
3.6Literacy: Mastering Writing … and Much More
The Deir el-Medina Marking System
4 The Setting: The Workmen of the Royal Tomb and Their Textual Legacy
4.1An Exceptional Village
4.2The Early History of the Royal Necropolis and Its Workmen
4.3Great Changes for Egypt and for the Royal Necropolis
4.4Ramesside Necropolis Administration, and Administrators
4.5The End of the Royal Necropolis
4.6Hieratic Necropolis Records … by the Thousands
4.7The Nature of the Documentary Texts
4.8Local Knowledge and Output, Textual and Visual
5 The Use of the Workmen’s Marks: Historical Overview
5.1The Earliest Marks of the Royal Necropolis Workmen
5.2The Origin of the Marking System
5.3A Break in the History of the Marking System?
5.4Nineteenth-Dynasty Ostraca with Marks
5.5Marks and Families
5.6The Function of the Nineteenth-Dynasty Marks
5.7The Twentieth-Dynasty Duty Rosters
5.8Other Types of Record from the Twentieth Dynasty
5.9The Late Twentieth Dynasty
6 How the Men Came by Their Marks, and Vice Versa
6.1Marks and Their Users
6.2Long- and Short-Lived Marks: Pomegranate, Lotus and Jackal
6.3Long-Lived Marks and Their Graphic Variety: The Families of Qaha and Sennedjem
6.4Short-Lived Marks: Name, Reputation and Status
6.5Mark, Family and Position
6.6Morphology: Distinctive Forms versus Allomorphs
6.7Sign Categories and Fuzzy Borders
6.8The Role of Writing and Literacy
6.9Morphology and Semiosis: Anything Goes?
6.10Historical and Functional Context: Graphic Communication and Literacy
Epilogue: The Alphabet
Bibliographical Essay
References
Timetable
Index