Illustrations.
Preface.
Acknowledgements.
Translator's Note.
Introduction.
Part I: The Land of Egypt:.
1. Between the River and the Desert.
Part II: The Palaeolithic Period: .
2. The Earliest Evidence for Humans in the Nile Valley.
3. The Beginnings of Cultural Diversity.
4. Diversity or Nilotic Adaptation.
Part III: The Neolithic Period:.
5. The Process of 'Neolithicization'.
6. The Neolithic Period (Fifth Millennium BC).
Part IV: The Approach to the Pharaonic Period (Fourth Millennium BC): .
7. The Predynastic Period (c. 4000-3000 BC).
8. The First Pharaohs and the Unification of the Two Lands.
Conclusion.
Appendix 1: Relative Chronology and the Traditional Dating Systems.
Appendix 2: 'Absolute Dates'.
Glossary.
Abbreviations.
Bibliography.
Index.
The author, Béatrix Midant-Reynes, is Head of Research at the
Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique in Toulouse (Centre
d’Anthropologie, Université Paul Sabatier). She is also editor of
Archéonil (a journal dedicated to the study of prehistoric Egypt
and Nubia) and Director of the excavations at the Predynastic site
of Adaïma (on behalf of IFAO). In 1986 she was Humbolt Stipendiatin
in Staatliche Sammlung Ágyptischer Kunst’ in Munich.
The translator, Ian Shaw, is lecturer in Egyptian archaeology at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London. He is the author of Ancient Egyptian Warfare and Weapons (1991), co-author of The British Museum Dictionary of Ancient Egypt (with Nicholson, 1995) and co-editor of The Dictionary of Archaeology (with Jameson: Blackwell, 1998) and Ancient Egyptian Materials and Technology (with Nicholson, 1999). He also translated Nicolas Grimal’s A History of Ancient Egypt (Blackwell, 1992).
"Egyptologists frequently have little understanding of the
prehistoric past, especially the paleolithic periods, and it is
commendable that Midant-Reynes has included this overview."
International Journal of African Historical Studies
"... integrate[s] the prehistory of Egypt and Nubia through into
the (Egyptian) Unification period, thus investigating the entire
united Nile region and its flanking deserts in a logical but rarely
encountered attempt to develop a cohesive picture ... In this the
book succeeds admirably." Journal of African History
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