Egypt by Simone Nannucci
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger (BAEFE), 2024
Année de la campagne : Autorité nationale présente : Numéro et intitulé de l'opération de terrain... more Année de la campagne : Autorité nationale présente : Numéro et intitulé de l'opération de terrain : Ḫ Composition de l'équipe de terrain :
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger (BAEFE), 2023
Autorité nationale présente : Ministère du Tourisme et des Antiquités (MoTA) représenté par Saber... more Autorité nationale présente : Ministère du Tourisme et des Antiquités (MoTA) représenté par Saber Attia Doyb. Numéro et intitulé de l'opération de terrain : 17124-Mission archéologique au site de Philadelphie, le Fayoum (Kūm al-Ḫarāba al-Kabīr Ğirza) Composition de l'équipe de terrain : Ruey-Lin Chang (papyrologue,
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger (BAEFE), 2022
Nous tenons à remercier les membres du Comité permanent du MoTA et, en particulier, Dr Mostafa Wa... more Nous tenons à remercier les membres du Comité permanent du MoTA et, en particulier, Dr Mostafa Wasiri, secrétaire général, Dr Nashwa Gaber, directeur général chargé des missions étrangères et du Comité permanent, Dr Sayed Ashur, responsable de l'inspectorat du Fayoum, et Mostafa Feisal, directeur des magasins de Kom Aushim, pour leur généreuse assistance et leurs conseils lors de notre travail à Gourob. Il n'a pas Gourob (2021) Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l'étranger , Égypte 9 Gourob (2021) Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l'étranger , Égypte
Bulletin archéologique des Ecoles Françaises à l'Etranger (BAEFE), campagne 2021
Fr. Colin, C. Hartenstein, V. Asensi Amorós, C. Dupuis, S. Marchand, S. Mérigeaud, A. Micheau, B. Mulot, S. Nannucci, « Assassif (2021). La construction d’une rampe à la XVIIIe dynastie pour niveler une paléorivière pléistocène », BAEFE 2022, https://journals.openedition.org/baefe/6128. Année de la campagne : 2021 Autorité nationale présente : Hanan Hassan et Kerolos Wagdi (inspecte... more Année de la campagne : 2021 Autorité nationale présente : Hanan Hassan et Kerolos Wagdi (inspecteurs des antiquités), ainsi que Mohamed Ahmed Aly (restaurateur) représentaient le ministère du Tourisme et des Antiquités (MoTA). Numéro et intitulé de l'opération de terrain : 17147-Archéologie contextuelle du temple funéraire de Padiaménopé dans l'environnement de l'Assassif Composition de l'équipe de terrain : Frédéric Colin, égyptologue
BAEFE (Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger), 2022
Fr. Colin, G. Clapuyt, C. Dupuis, Br. Gavazzi, C. Hartenstein, S. Marchand, F. Mi, S. Nannucci, H. Smets, « Assassif (2019) », Bulletin Archéologique des Écoles Françaises à l’Étranger (BAEFE), 05/10/2020, https://journals.openedition.org/baefe/985 Preliminary report of the 2019 excavation season of the French archaeological mission in the Assa... more Preliminary report of the 2019 excavation season of the French archaeological mission in the Assassif.
"Tanis" [Rapport 2019] - Fr. Leclère, S. Nannucci, S. Connor, S. Poudroux, P. Le Guilloux, A. Banaszak, Fr. Payraudeau, R. Meffre, P. Poiron, S. Pistre, Ph. Bromblet, S. Duberson & L. Thibout. Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger, 2020 [en ligne].
Rapport d'activités d... more Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger, 2020 [en ligne].
Rapport d'activités de la Mission française des fouilles de Tanis en 2019.
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l'étranger, Nov 2020
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger (BAEFE), 2020
Bulletin de liaison de la céramique égyptienne (BCE) 28, IFAO, Le Caire, 125-154, Dec 2018
Article fully downloadable at: http://ifao.egnet.net/uploads/publications/enligne/IF1175_BCE28.pdf
Ancient Near East by Simone Nannucci
In: N. Laneri (ed.), Hirbemerdon Tepe Archaeological Project 2003-2013 Final Report: Chronology and Material Culture. Bologna, 17-25., 2016
The Hirbemerdon Tepe Archaeological Project was initiated in 2003 as part of a broader cultural h... more The Hirbemerdon Tepe Archaeological Project was initiated in 2003 as part of a broader cultural heritage rescue project associated with the construction of the Ilısu Dam and planned as part of a scienti c collabora- tion between the University of Catania, the Istituto per l’Africa e l’Oriente and the Archaeological Museum of Dıyarbakir.
The site is located on the western bank of the Tigris river about 100 km southeast of the modern city of Dıyarbakir. During the 10 years of archaeological work performed at the site 11 archaeological phases were recorded starting from the fourth millennium BC until the XIXth century AD.
This volume represents the nal report on the studies of the material culture belonging to this long chrono- logical sequence that was unearthed during the excavations and aims at allowing the interested scholars at reconstructing the history of the settlement as well as a broader sociocultural landscape that involved other social groups inhabiting the upper Tigris region as well as other Anatolian and Mesopotamian regions.
In: S. Mazzoni (ed.), Studi di Archeologia del Vicino Oriente. Scritti degli allievi fiorentini per Paolo Emilio Pecorella. Firenze: Firenze University Press (2012), 39-76., 2012
Tell Hassan is one of the few sites in the Hamrin basin region in Iraq that hasshown remains of a... more Tell Hassan is one of the few sites in the Hamrin basin region in Iraq that hasshown remains of an Uruk period settlement along with Tell Rubeidheh and Tell al-Ahmad Hattu. The site was excavated by the archaeological mission of the Centro Ricerche Archeologiche e Scavi di Torino per il Medio Oriente e l’Asia in the late ‘70s. The investigations have unearthed at least three different Uruk levels but only the two most recent ones have been investigated on a limited surface. The ceramic assemblage provided by the excavation is made by a series of distinctive features that are attributed to the middle Uruk period. Numerous types considered as characteristic of the ceramic production of this period are reported including conical bowls, jars with thickened, rounded everted rim, jars with sharp-angled rim, jars with short, out-turned neck and flat rim and jars with out-turned neck and thickened, flattened rim, in addition to strap handles and tapering spouts. Moreover other types of characteristic middle Uruk decoration on jars are reported including incised parallel horizontal lines, curving cross-hatched comb decoration, bands of incised cross-hatching, rocker pattern, applied pellets and finger-impressed ribs. Comparisons with middle Uruk ceramic assemblage from sites of southern Mesopotamia as Uruk/Warka ‘Eanna-Tiefschnitt’ VIII-VI, Nippur ‘Inanna’ XX-XVII and Abu Salabikh ‘Uruk Mound’ confirm this dating. Other comparisons have been found with sites of northern Mesopotamia and the iranian Zagros as Sheikh Hassan 6-13, Nineveh ‘Uruk B’, Hacınebi B2 and Godin VI. The settlement may have been created as an outpost in a fertile region where no preexisting occupation existed at that time because no settlement dating after the end of the Ubaid period has been recorded in the area. Moreover the site, strategically located along the Great Khorasan Road, could have had a role in the control and exploitation of this major east-west trade route connecting the Mesopotamian lowlands with the Iranian plateau.
In: Ancient Near Eastern Studies 46 (2009), 212-276., 2009
"Recent excavations in the upper Tigris River valley have yielded an increasing number of archaeo... more "Recent excavations in the upper Tigris River valley have yielded an increasing number of archaeological data that have been helping archaeologists in the reconstruction of ancient histories in this specific region. Among these projects, the Hirbemerdon Tepe Archaeological Project has focused its attention on a fundamental phase of occupation - the Middle Bronze Age - that characterises the site as well as numerous other settlements in the upper Tigris River valley. The present article will emphasise the role played by Hirbemerdon Tepe, located along the western bank of the upper Tigris river valley in southeastern Turkey, at both a local and inter regional level during the Middle Bronze Age period that shows an increase in long-distance commercial exchanges between Mesopotamian and Anatolian polities. More specifically, an in depth analysis will be given to the large architectural complex discovered on the site’s High Mound and on a preliminary interpretation of the material culture found within it."
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Egypt by Simone Nannucci
Rapport d'activités de la Mission française des fouilles de Tanis en 2019.
Ancient Near East by Simone Nannucci
The site is located on the western bank of the Tigris river about 100 km southeast of the modern city of Dıyarbakir. During the 10 years of archaeological work performed at the site 11 archaeological phases were recorded starting from the fourth millennium BC until the XIXth century AD.
This volume represents the nal report on the studies of the material culture belonging to this long chrono- logical sequence that was unearthed during the excavations and aims at allowing the interested scholars at reconstructing the history of the settlement as well as a broader sociocultural landscape that involved other social groups inhabiting the upper Tigris region as well as other Anatolian and Mesopotamian regions.
Rapport d'activités de la Mission française des fouilles de Tanis en 2019.
The site is located on the western bank of the Tigris river about 100 km southeast of the modern city of Dıyarbakir. During the 10 years of archaeological work performed at the site 11 archaeological phases were recorded starting from the fourth millennium BC until the XIXth century AD.
This volume represents the nal report on the studies of the material culture belonging to this long chrono- logical sequence that was unearthed during the excavations and aims at allowing the interested scholars at reconstructing the history of the settlement as well as a broader sociocultural landscape that involved other social groups inhabiting the upper Tigris region as well as other Anatolian and Mesopotamian regions.