The eighth issue of Abgadiyat overflows with a group of valuable papers, such as ‘Unpublished Four Canopic Jars from Al-Ashmunien Magazine’, ‘Philological Development of Sdi.t’, ‘Hathor: Lady of Mefkat’ in the Nile Delta Textual Evidences, ‘On Ancient Egyptian Philology’, and ‘An Unpublished New Collection of Shabtis’. It might the most interesting of these papers that speaks about the inscription of the king Djer in South Sinai as the first complete sentence written in hieroglyphs.
From here, we can state that this issue might present a serious, practical study to continue the path the Writing and Scripts center had begun nine years ago.
Contents
Unpublished Four Canopic Jars from Al-Ashmunien Magazine
Philological Development of Sdi.t until the End of the Middle Kingdom
Names Allocated to the Fayoum Region in Ancient Egypt
Hathor ‘Lady of Turquoise’ or ‘Lady of Mefkat’ in the Nile Delta Textual Evidences
On Ancient Egyptian Philology
Analysing Current Egyptian Displays in the United Kingdom
A New Light on Coptic Cryptography
Lasso and its Role as Nets in Religious Texts
An Unpublished New Collection of Shabtis 'Ushebtis' Housed in Al-Salam School Museum in Assiut, Egypt
An Epitaph of a Roman Legionary Soldier from the Legio II Traiana stationed in Alexandria --First Publication
The Memorial Of Metrodoros Greek Stoikhed on from North Africa
The Inscriptions of the King Djer in South Sinai:Is It the First Complete Sentence Written in Hieroglyphs?
The Maryannu in the Western Desert in the Ramesside Period
Presentation of Manuscript ‘Aqd al-Gawhar or Necklace of Beads’