Academic literature on the topic 'Hyksos origins'

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Journal articles on the topic "Hyksos origins"

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Candelora, Danielle. "Entangled in Orientalism: How the Hyksos Became a Race." Journal of Egyptian History 11, no. 1-2 (October 8, 2018): 45–72. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18741665-12340042.

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Abstract This paper presents a historiographical critique of Hyksos scholarship and the impact of Imperialism and Orientalism on the foundations of such studies. I trace the creation and maintenance of the misconception of the Hyksos as a race through the scholarship, examining the context and influences behind the research, and discuss the appeal of new scientific techniques for the question of Hyksos origins.
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Seong Kim. "The Hyksos Tradition and the Origin of Anti-Judaism." Journal of Classical Studies ll, no. 36 (December 2013): 7–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.20975/jcskor.2013..36.7.

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Małecka-Drozd, Natalia. "Notes on the Origin of Casemate Foundation Platforms in Ancient Egypt." Studies in Ancient Art and Civilisation 18 (December 30, 2014): 149–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.12797/saac.18.2014.18.10.

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Casemate foundation platforms appeared in Egypt in the middle of the 2nd millennium BC during the 2nd Intermediate period. As they are similar in nature to palace-citadel structures from the capital of Egypt under the Hyksos, Avaris, the possibility of their being Asiatic in origin has been considered. Recently, however, similar structures from Deir el-Ballas have been associated with Nubian funerary architecture. Yet making a choice between these two hypotheses means forgetting about the achievements of Egyptian brick architecture. The link between casemate foundation platforms and high Nile floods, as well as their structural features, unquestionably suggest Egyptian origin. Over the course of this paper, I would like to consider if the appearance of casemate platforms in the 2nd Intermediate period and the beginning of the New Kingdom could be related to mastaba burials and the local development of foundation laying methods.
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Hassan, Tammam. "The Children of Israel in Ancient Egypt as Taken from the Holy Qur'an." Journal of Qur'anic Studies 2, no. 1 (January 2000): 218–23. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/jqs.2000.2.1.218.

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The Qur'an gives us many details about the history of the migration of the Children of Israel and their expulsion from Egypt. In this article, their history is traced through the Qur'an from the many different verses which provide us with these details. The article begins with the advent of Yūsuf to Egypt as a child and the beginning of his prophethood. His message was believed by some Egyptians, but after the expulsion of the more tolerant Hyksos, those believers of Asian origin and the Jews among them were persecuted. Mūsā was born into this atmosphere of persecution and evidence is discussed that the Pharaoh of Mūsā was Ramses and his wife Nefertari. Having accidentally killed someone, Mūsā was persecuted and forced to flee, but subsequently on Mount Sinai received the message to go back to Pharaoh. He called upon the Children of Israel to adopt his faith, but only a few of them did. Finally they fled, but on the shore of the Gulf of Suez (al-cayn al-sukhnā) Pharaoh caught up with them and there occurred the miracle of the passing over the sea and the drowning. The Israeli followers passed the Gulf and headed for Sinai, but were lost in the wilderness for forty years before they reached the land of Canaan in Palestine. Many Qur'anic verses show that the Children of Israel suffered punishment because their faith was shaken and they committed sins.
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Pedracki, М., G. Bukesheva, and М. Khabdulina. "The Bronze Age of Kazakhstan in the context of Asian cultural relations." BULLETIN of L.N. Gumilyov Eurasian National University. HISTORICAL SCIENCES. PHILOSOPHY. RELIGION Series 130, no. 1 (2020): 50–63. http://dx.doi.org/10.32523/2616-7255-2020-130-1-50-63.

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It seems that there are some events in the history of Ancient Near Eastern civilizations directly related to the Bronze Age of Kazakhstan. Those events have taken place in the first half of the second millennium BC and were associated with the invasion of mobile groups chariot warriors who brought with themselves a cult of a horse, a war chariot, advanced weapons, and some new ideologies to the Ancient Near East. Those chariotry men became the military aristocracy in many new founded states in Ancient Near East They propagated a heroized image of a warrior- king ride in a chariot, which was widely used in the palace reliefs of the countries of the Ancient Near East. During the last fifty years the archeologists discovered many Bronze Age monuments in Kazakhstan, with cultural indicators which coincided with the characteristics of the historical tribes that invaded early agricultural civilizations of Near East at the beginning of the 2nd millennium BC and created new dynasties of rulers. The names of those incomers are preserved in the writing sources of the Near Ancient East states. They are mentioned as: Hyksos, Kassites, Amorites, Mariannu. It is known that some part of them were Indo-Aryans by language. For many decades, linguists, historians and archaeologists have been searching for their ancestral home. The purpose of the article is to characterize the main cultural factors of the Bronze Age cultures of Ural-Kazakhstan steppes and to investigate the possibility of the steppe origin of the chariot warriors income to the Near East in the first half of second millennium BC and thus show the contribution of the ancient population of the Kazakhstan steppes to the world historical process.
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FitzGerald, RD. "Evaluation of legumes for introduction into native grass pastures on the North-west slopes of New South Wales." Australian Journal of Experimental Agriculture 34, no. 4 (1994): 449. http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/ea9940449.

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A range of pasture legumes was either broadcast or drilled into native grass pastures on the North-west Slopes of New South Wales to identify legumes that would persist in that environment and improve the quality of winter pastures based on native grasses. There were 2 experiments conducted over 12 sites. In the first, sites were selected to permit identification of effects of altitude and 2 soil types on legume adaptation. In the second, the lower altitude range was extended and a wider range of soil types was sampled. Subterranean clover (Trifolium subterraneum L.) was the most persistent and productive species, with cultivar performance varying with altitude. At the lowest altitude (340 m) the early-maturing cv. Dalkeith was the most productive, and at 500-600 m there was little difference between the tested cultivars. Stand density, herbage yield, and seed yield all declined as altitude increased, but the decline was greater with earlier maturing cultivars than with the later maturing cv. Woogenellup White clover (T. repens cv. Haifa) established poorly in native grass swards, but plants that did establish persisted during favourable seasons at higher altitudes. Herbage yields of woolly pod vetch (Vicia dasycarpa cv. Namoi) and rose clover (T. hirtum cv. Hykon) occasionally exceeded yield of subterranean clover at some lower altitude sites, but those species failed to persist at other sites where grazing management may have been unsuitable. Barrel medic (Medicago truncatula) established satisfactorily but did not persist on the more acidic soils (pH <6.0). Both drilling and broadcasting establishment techniques produced satisfactory legume stands. Legume plant density was generally greater on heavier soils of basaltic origin than on lighter soils of rhyolitic origin.
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مخيمر, عصام كامل جبر. "الهكسوس ودورهم الحضاري في مصر القديمة." Journal of Faculty of Education 12 (October 24, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.53332/jfe.v12i.557.

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This study aims to respond to the claims of the historians that the Hyksos are foreign, and barbarian tribes had occupied Egypt and had spread Corruption, and destruction. They had tortured its people, had stolen their money and property. They had also destroyed its temples, and fortifies .Then the Egyptians threwthem out after establishing the modern Egyptian state at the era of the Feraohnee Ohmsthe first. The study clarified the origins of the Hyksos, their religion, how they entered Egypt and the Constructions and civilized establishments they established in all the Egyptian places. The study conclusion has shown an interesting fact which is that the Arab Hyksos are Arabian tribes, they had great and pioneer civilization which Egypt got benefits from even after throwing them out after along age and generation.
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Ownby, Mary F. "Review of The Foreign Relations of the “Hyksos.” A Neutron Activation Study of Middle Bronze Age Pottery from the Eastern Mediterranean." Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt 57, no. 1 (December 14, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.5913/jarce.57.2021.rev007.

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Patrick E. McGovern, The Foreign Relations of the “Hyksos.” A Neutron Activation Study of Middle Bronze Age Pottery from the Eastern Mediterranean. With Updated Preface 2020. Oxford: BAR International Series 888, 2020. ISBN 9781841710884. Pp. Xxii + 242, 17 black and white plates and 29 black and white figures. £57 Online Addendum to the above publication, entitled “Origins of the Enigmatic Hyksos?: New Data, Working Hypo- thesis, and Methodological Considerations.” Pp. 243, 86 black and white figures. Addendum available at: https:// www.researchgate.net/publication/343290808_APPENDIX_4_AFTERWORD_PETROGRAPHIC_ ADDENDUM_AND_POTTERY_FIGURES_by_Patrick_E_McGovern_and_Christopher_Wnuk_to_be_ appended_to_The_Foreign_Relations_of_the_Hyksos_A_Neutron_Activation_Study_of_Middle_Bro
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Stantis, Chris, Arwa Kharobi, Nina Maaranen, Colin Macpherson, Manfred Bietak, Silvia Prell, and Holger Schutkowski. "Multi-isotopic study of diet and mobility in the northeastern Nile Delta." Archaeological and Anthropological Sciences 13, no. 6 (June 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12520-021-01344-x.

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AbstractThe origin of the Hyksos dynasty (c. 1638–1530 BCE) is thought to be rooted in the Near East given the architectural features and burial customs present at the site of Tell el-Dabca, identified as the capital of Hyksos rule in the Eastern Delta of Egypt. We expand previous 87Sr/86Sr research on the site’s cemetery assemblage using a multi-isotopic methodology: oxygen (δ18O) and carbon (δ13Ccarb) stable isotopes from the carbonate portion of tooth enamel (n = 75), along with collagen (δ13Ccoll, δ15N) analysis of dentine and bone (n = 31). Pairing δ18O with previous 87Sr/86Sr data identifies 60% of the cohort as non-locals (45/75). Although there were a greater proportion of non-local females (24/30, 80%) compared to males (10/20, 50%), there were no significant differences between the sexes in δ13Ccarb or δ18Ocarb values. There were no spatial patterns regarding the three cemetery sites, nor any observable patterns regarding where non-locals were interred in the largest excavated cemetery, Area A/II. Both first-generation immigrants and individuals from the northeastern Nile Delta were buried following elite Asiatic burial customs, suggesting continuation of foreign burial culture. All collagen showed poor preservation; δ13Ccoll and δ15N analysis were not possible. δ13Ccarb showed no significant difference between locals and non-local diet, although non-locals at Tell el-Dabca did eat a broader variety of foods as a group, suggested by a wider δ13Ccarb range (− 13.5 to − 9.6‰ in non-locals compared to locals’ − 12.1 to − 10.3‰). If there is a difference in food culture between immigrants and native Egyptians, it was not observable using isotopic analyses.
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Books on the topic "Hyksos origins"

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Cohen, Irvin. Jewish genealogy: A secular compendium of the Middle East's bronze age. [S.l.]: I. Cohen, 2002.

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Book chapters on the topic "Hyksos origins"

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Glassman, Ronald M. "Egypt After the Hyksos Invasion: The New Kingdom and the New Religious Ideas." In The Origins of Democracy in Tribes, City-States and Nation-States, 565–77. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51695-0_56.

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Stantis, Chris, and Holger Schutkowski. "Stable Isotope Analyses to Investigate Hyksos Identity and Origins." In Contributions to the Archaeology of Egypt, Nubia and the Levant, 321–38. Harrassowitz Verlag, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.13173/9783447113328.321.

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