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Le rituel de l'offrande de la Campagne à Edfou: étude de la compositionLabrique, Françoise January 1991 (has links)
Doctorat en philosophie et lettres / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
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Obřízka ve starém Egyptě, judaismu a odraz obřízky v křesťanství / Circumcision in ancient Egypt and Judaism, and the reflection of circumcision in ChristianityVachatová, Radka January 2015 (has links)
The aim of this work is to familiarize the reader more closely with the issue of male circumcision in ancient Egypt and ancient Israel, and subsequently also in Judaism, and to outline how the theme of Jewish circumcision was adapted by Christianity. It describes the custom of male circumcision in ancient Egypt using pictorial and textual evidence, including findings on mummies. It looks for similarities and differences between male circumcision in ancient Egypt and in Judaism, in which it represents one of the most important rituals, and a sign of belonging to God and the nation. Attention is also given to the significant transformation in Christianity to the new initiation ritual of baptism, and opinions damning circumcision. Biblical themes, including the mystery of Jesus' circumcision and Christ's crucifixion, are reflected in European visual art, which is discussed in the final part of the work. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
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The presence and significance of Khepri in Egyptian religion and artVan Ryneveld, Maria Magdalena 13 December 2007 (has links)
Please read the abstract in the section, 10summary / Dissertation (MA (Visual Arts))--University of Pretoria, 2007. / Visual Arts / MA / unrestricted
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The Diasporic Writer in the Post-colonial Context: The Case of Ahdaf SoueifLebœuf, Yvette Katherine January 2012 (has links)
The purpose of this study of Anglo-Egyptian writer Ahdaf Soueif’s two novels, In the Eye of the Sun (1999), first published in 1992, and The Map of Love (2000), first published in 1999, is to examine how they are arenas for hybrid politics in the post-colonial Egyptian context and the Arab diasporic context. This thesis examines how Soueif deals with residual colonial logics by using Post-colonial theories of transculturation. These theories reveal, through an analysis of Soueif’s use of Pharaonicism and her depiction of social and religious divides, that Soueif sometimes legitimizes and sometimes contests the results of transculturation by using products of this very process of transculturation. In the diasporic context, Soueif’s work deterritorializes these hybrid politics of legitimation and contestation by collapsing disparate temporalities and emphasizing continuity between them. To do this she deterritorializes and reterritorializes Pharaonicism, as well as Western literary tradition, the English language and political activism, to emphasize the cultural affinities between Egyptians/Arabs and Western culture. In this manner, she composes an integration strategy designed to facilitate her incorporation into her Western society of settlement, Great-Britain. This allows her to build a political platform from which she can contest and influence politics in her homeland, her society of settlement and the shape of Western cultural and political hegemony on a global scale. She is consequently able to transcend residual colonial logics through the very hybrid politics that they have created. Moreover, in the process, through the political agency that she exercises in her writing and activism, she builds a deterritorialized diasporic identity based on integration into many spheres of belonging that problematizes the victim model of diaspora in Diaspora studies.
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Educational administration's role in economic and social development plans in developing countries : the Egyptian case studyBayoumy, Kamal Hosney 01 January 1983 (has links)
This study represents an attempt to answer the question: How can educational administration contribute to the economic and social development plans in developing countries? Although major emphasis must be given to this question, some
thought will be given to the educational problems and needs that face developing countries and the new techniques of educational administration which can be used to meet them. Moreover, in an attempt to apply the findings acquired the research will eventually focus on· Egypt, as one of the developing countries, to identify to what extent Egypt's educational administration addresses the needs of the economic and social development plans.
Objectives of the Study
The purpose of the study was fourfold as follows:
1. To investigate the role of educational administration in the economic and social development plans in developing countries.
2. To delineate the educational problems and needs of developing countries and to determine how educational administration can help to meet them.
3. To identify new trends and techniques in educational administration which may be helpful to the economic and social development plans in developing countries.
4. To develop a case study and some models which will provide direction to educational administrators who wish to contribute to Egypt's economic and social development plans.
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Přístavy ve starém Egyptě / Přístavy ve starém EgyptěŠichan, Daniel January 2011 (has links)
The work deals with landing facilities in ancient Egypt, both in the Nile Valley and in coastal areas. The aim has been to collect and interpret written, iconographic and archaeological evidence from the Early Dynastic to the Late Periods. The material is presented chronologically and individual groups of sources are arranged by type (written, archaeological and iconographic). The knowledge thus obtained has then been used to form a comprehensive overview of the development, function, importance and organization of harbour/port facilities in ancient Egypt. The main problem of the study of landing facilities in ancient Egypt lies in the extreme fragmentation of sources which makes it impossible to provide a continuous picture of the development of the subject and which raises as many questions as answers. The best preserved group of sources is written evidence, followed by information obtained by archaeology. The least informative is iconographic evidence. Although the majority of these sources are relatively straightforward to interpret, there are cases where interpretation is speculative. A fundamental question has arisen during this study. It is the relationship of the ancient Egyptians themselves to the facilities which undoubtedly played a significant role in the life of the inhabitants of the...
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The Relationship between Privatization, Culture, Adoption of International Accounting Standards, and Accounting in EgyptDahawy, Khaled M. 12 1900 (has links)
This study explores how the Egyptian socioeconomic factors impacted the implementation of International Accounting Standards (IASs) in Egypt. Prior research concluded that developing nations have special needs when it comes to accounting and financial reporting and recommended nation-specific analysis. The author adapts Gray's (1988) model, which connects Hofstede's cultural dimensions with accounting practice, to fit the Egyptian environment.
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Sociální role a význam šperku ve Staré říši / The social role and meaning of jewels in the Old KingdomKovalovská, Soňa January 2019 (has links)
This work offers a view into the representation and function of the jewellery in the Old Kingdom. We can consider jewellery as a part of the cultural values of mankind, not only because of its aesthetic function. My purpose is a comprehensive insight of the importance and the representation of jewellery in the Old Kingdom, which is associated with a social role of the tomb owners. The primary source of knowledge of the meanings and functions of the jewellery are the iconographic sources in the Old Kingdom nonroyal tombs, including the scenes of the jewellery workshops and jewels as part of the funerary equipment.
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Produkční, percepční a fonologické aspekty řeči v povědomí starověkých Egypťanů / Articulatory, perceptual and phonological aspects of speech in the knowledge of the ancient EgyptiansHoneš, Daniel January 2020 (has links)
The topic of this master's thesis is the analyzis of a general conception of linguistics in ancient Egypt, with a narrow focus on the ancient Egyptians' knowledge of phonetics and phonology as well as language production and perception. These findings are compared with the information with which non-egyptological disciplines work. We analyse the ancient Egyptian material culture. This analysis also focuses on primary written records provided with the author's own translation and linguistic annotation using the Leipzig Glossing Rules. This study has a potential to help the fields outside of Egyptology better to understand the notions of ancient people's phonetic/phonological knowledge. It is clear from the sources discussed that the Egyptians considered the heart to be the seat of the speech center in today's conception, although there is evidence that they saw the connection between speech and the brain. Written sources also provide information on the categorization of hieroglyphic characters according to phonetic value, which points to the existence of segmental perception of the ancient Egyptians. However, there are no explicit mentions of vocal folds and voice formation, the essence of speech and language was seen by the Egyptians in the magical-religious sphere. Part of the thesis is a summary...
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Egyptian policy towards the Arab world, 1955-1958Torobin, Allan Jeffrey January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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