The Tomb of Parennefer, Butler of Pharaoh Akhenaten
Theban Tomb 188
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Pennsylvania State University Press
Published:15th Nov '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
The definitive record of Theban Tomb 188, belonging to Parennefer, the butler of the heretic pharaoh Akhenaten.
Theban Tomb 188 is the sole archaeological site in the ancient Theban necropolis securely dated to the reign of the “heretic pharaoh” Akhenaten (1353–1336 BCE). The result of several years of clearance and recording by Dr. Susan Redford, director of the Akhenaten Temple Project’s Theban Tomb Survey, this richly illustrated book provides a detailed description of the remaining wall scenes and texts of this historically important ancient monument.
In the fourteenth century BCE, Pharaoh Akhenaten attempted to institute a radical religious reform and moved his capital city to Amarna. This book publishes important evidence related to the Amarna period in ancient Egypt, specifically the plans, reliefs, and inscriptions of Theban Tomb 188, belonging to Parennefer, the tutor and butler of the king. Dr. Redford’s detailed archaeological study traces the rapid evolution of ideology, iconography, and iconoclasm, as revealed in Parennefer’s tomb. The decoration kept pace with the momentous changes in the king’s thinking, so that, when dovetailed with the pictorial evidence from the excavations of the great Gem-pa-aten temple at Karnak, it becomes possible to chronicle these rapid changes.
This definitive study of the tomb of Parennefer will appeal to archaeologists, Egyptologists, historians of religion, and art historians working on the ancient Near East.
“. . .this is a beautifully produced volume that addresses, in detail, the archaeology of a historically important ancient Egyptian monument. . . . Perhaps most significantly, Redford’s definitive guide to this tomb, and to Parennefer himself, provides unique insight into the changes in art and culture at that time, especially at a non-royal level of society.”
—Elizabeth Eltze Bryn Mawr Classical Review
ISBN: 9781646021925
Dimensions: 279mm x 216mm x 20mm
Weight: 975g
200 pages