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#8589620
26 Jul 2022
A lens is used to observe against the light the fibers and textures of the papyrus already placed to try to connect the fragments of the papyrus known as the Turin King List. The difficult part is finding the right position using the texture, the orientation of the fibers, and the literal content. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589622
26 Jul 2022
A lens is used to observe against the light the fibers and textures of the papyrus already placed to try to connect the fragments of the papyrus known as the Turin King List. The difficult part is finding the right position using the texture, the orientation of the fibers, and the literal content. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589624
26 Jul 2022
A Close-up of orphaned fragments of the papyrus known as Turin King List, the hard part is to find the right position using texture, fibers orientation, and literal content. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589626
26 Jul 2022
A Close-up of orphaned fragments of the papyrus known as Turin King List, the hard part is to find the right position using texture, fibers orientation, and literal content. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589642
26 Jul 2022
Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer at the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin, checks the positioning of the fragments in their final disposition. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589644
26 Jul 2022
Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer at the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin, checks the positioning of the fragments in their final disposition. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8589652
26 Jul 2022
Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer at the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin, checks the positioning of the fragments in their final disposition. The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus dated to Ramesses II's reign (1290 a.C. - 1224 a. C). The papyrus is the most complete list available of kings compiled by the ancient Egyptians. Now is a series of small fragments after the disgregation during the transport in Italy made by Drovetti after the discovery in Luxor. The restoration began on June 20,2022 and is nearing completion. The reconstruction was curated by Dr. Susanne Toepfer, head of the Papyrus Collection of the Egyptian Museum with Dr. Myriam Krutzsch, papyrus restorer of the Ägyptisches Museum und Papyrussammlung der staatlichen Museen zu Berlin with the advice of Dr. Kim Ryholt, Egyptologist of the University of Copenhagen is one of the most important papyrus experts who commuted between Copenhagen and Turin.
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#8139248
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139250
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139252
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139254
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139256
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139258
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139260
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139262
28 Apr 2022
A newly-discovered stone statuette over 4,500 years old depicting the face of an ancient goddess, that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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#8139264
28 Apr 2022
An employee of the ministry of tourism and antiquities holds a rare 4,500-year-old stone sculpture that was found by a Palestinian farmer while working his land in the southern Gaza Strip, at ElBacha Place Museum in Gaza City, April 28, 2022. The ministry said the 22-centimeter (6.7-inch) tall limestone head is believed to represent the Canaanite goddess Anat and is estimated to be dated to around 2,500 B.C.
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