Archive by Articles 2024 (Ch. 10) Report on the Ceramics Recovered from Area TD (2013-2015) (Ch. 9) A New Cluster of Mud Vessels (Ch. 8) Foreign Pottery (Ch. 7) Ceramic Methodology (Ch. 5) The North Scarp (Ch. 4) The Western Scarp (Ch. 3) Mud-Brick Structures in the TC Area (Ch. 2) Mapping at the Tausret Temple (Ch. 1) Introduction (Ch. 6) Texts An Aromatic Levantine Plant (Thymbra spicata L.) in Tutankhamun’s Tomb as a Case of Failed Domestication The Production of Middle Bronze Age Steatite Scarabs from the Southern Levant: A Chaîne Opératoire Approach Akhenaten’s Libyans: Reinterpreting a Relief Fragment from the Mortuary Temple of Amenhotep II Remodeling Parker’s Egyptian Lunar Month: A New Solution to Eighteenth Dynasty Chronology Reconsidering the Seth Animal Conundrum: An African Perspective 2023 The Head of Anubis: A Curious Gift from Aegean Emissaries in the Tomb of Menkheperreseneb Sweetness Out of Chaos: The Archaeology of Early Beekeeping in the Near East and Aegean Einige neue Gedanken zum ägyptischen Verhältnis von Hunden und Feinden unter besonderer Berücksichtigung einer sumerischen Vergleichsstelle Communicating and Assimilating Foreign Ideologies Through Art: The Diffusion of Egyptian Iconography from the Middle Bronze Age Levant to Achaemenid Persia Dedication: Dr. Nadine Guilhou Gods and Humans in Ancient Egypt: Current Research and Multidisciplinary Approaches Was the Notion of Purgatory Known in Ancient Egyptian Religious Funerary Beliefs? The Representation of “Humans” and Gods in the So-Called Satirical Ostraca and Papyri from Deir el-Medina Ptah, South of His Wall, Lord of Ankhtawy Time of Creation, Creation of Time: Notes on the Making of Time in Six Religious Hymns of the New Kingdom (ca. 1539–1077 BCE) New Kingdom Private Theban Tombs: Places of Interaction between the Living, the Dead and the Gods Self-Presentation in the Ptolemaic-Early Roman Period: Looking at Non-royal Portraiture To “Osirify” Royal Mummies in the Theban Necropolis Remarques préliminaires sur le rôle des grands prêtres ramessides d’après leurs textes autobiographiques et leurs titres Everything Is Not What It Seems: A New Examination of a Purported Naos Fragment from the 4th Century BCE in Verona