The City of Akhenaten and Nefertiti: Amarna and Its People
By (Author) Barry Kemp
Thames & Hudson Ltd
Thames & Hudson Ltd
1st August 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ancient history
African history: pre-colonial period
932.014
Paperback
320
Width 185mm, Height 247mm
1010g
A city of temples, royal palaces, civic offices and elite tombs, and simultaneously a city of small-scale mud-brick dwellings, Amarna was an 'urban village', where most of its citizens were only two or three steps removed in the social scale from the king himself.
Barry Kemp evokes the unique character of this famous capital, bringing to life its people, from Akhenaten, Nefertiti and the royal family to priests and craftsmen, in this brilliantly written and imaginatively conceived account of the mysterious Amarna interlude.
'Kemp brilliantly combines history, archaeology, and art history to develop a complete picture of the onetime capital of ancient Egypt A beautiful and informative book, a rare find for experts and general readers alike' - Publishers Weekly
'Professor Barry Kemp, perhaps the worlds most experienced Egyptologist, has devoted over 30 years to Amarnas exploration and excavation. In this book he is able to offer unparalleled insights into the life and times of the citizens of ancient Egypt and of the exceptional man, the so-called 'heretic pharaoh', who ruled over them more than three millennia ago' - Colin Renfrew, University of Cambridge
'Well-written and clearly structured very well illustrated' - Egyptian Archaeology
'More than any other study that I am aware of, Kemps book succeeds in bringing to life the day-to-day workings of this ancient Egyptian capital A superb book, written and illustrated by a superb archaeologist and scholar of ancient Egypt' - Antiquity
Barry Kemp is Emeritus Professor of Egyptology at Cambridge University and has been conducting research and excavation at Amarna since 1977. He lives in England.