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Friday, December 13, 2019

AWOL - The Ancient World Online: Open Access Journal: British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (BMSAES)


http://ancientworldonline.blogspot.com/2009/10/open-access-journal-british-museum.html
On 12/04/2019 11:55 AM, Chuck Jones wrote:
Open Access Journal: British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (BMSAES) [First posted in AWOL 8 October 2009. Updated 4 December 2019]

British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan (BMSAES)
ISSN: 2049-5021 (on-line)
http://www.britishmuseum.org/images/ResPub_BMSAES_19_304x176.jpg
The British Museum Studies in Ancient Egypt and Sudan(BMSAES) is a peer-reviewed, academic journal dedicated to presenting research on all aspects of ancient Egypt and Sudan and the representation of these cultures in modern times.
BMSAES is open-access: all articles in this journal can be viewed and downloaded free-of-charge.
This journal offers scholars the opportunity to include a large number of colour images, and other multimedia content, where appropriate to the article. Accepted papers will be published as soon as possible: there is no defined publication schedule or deadlines, as with print journals. The articles do not need to concern British Museum objects or projects.

Editorial

This issue comprises an article presenting the outputs of a multi-disciplinary collaboration of scholars from the Departments of Egypt and Sudan, Middle East and Conservation at the British Museum. It combines research into, and conservation of, a group of glazed tiles found at the Assyrian city of Nimrud, which depict military scenes in Egypt. The renewed study of these long-known objects with, as presented here, the first detailed drawings and photographs of all the surviving fragments, in addition to newly identified and discovered fragments, enables the authors to thoroughly reassess the discovery, production and narrative content of the tiles in relation to other known later-Sargonid glazed material and artwork. It demonstrates how the close study of objects and archives, even seemingly well-published material, can yield significant results in understanding key issues, in this case the development of architecture and Egyptian influence on Assyrian art.
Neal Spencer

Contents

Esarhaddon in Egypt: An Assyrian-Egyptian battle scene on glazed tiles from Nimrud
Manuela Lehmann, Nigel Tallis with Duygu Camurcuoglu and Lucía Pereira-Pardo

For more open access publications of the British Museum, see here.


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