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Full Description
The late Professor Fred Leemhuis was an Arabist and Islamist at the University of Groningen, well known in the Netherlands for his translation into Dutch of the Qur'an, sometime Director of the Dutch-Flemish Institute Cairo, and Director of the Qasr Dakhleh Project. His interests ranged across all things to do with Egypt but especially those following the Arab conquest, and this tribute to his memory attempts to reflect that diversity and also highlight his significant work at al-Qasr which cast valuable light on periods not well known for the Western Desert of Egypt. Several papers focus upon this imposing medieval and Ottoman settlement in Dakhleh, and the discovery of the late Roman fort there: these range from conservation, to archaeology, artefacts, and texts as well as an imaginative account of people moving to the fort from nearby Trimithis when it was going into decline in the late fourth century. Aspects of burial practice in that oasis and neighbouring Kharga, both early Christian and Roman, are discussed, and the identification of cancer amongst the inhabitants of Kellis in Dakhleh is proposed. The extent of settlement in Dakhleh during the Fatimid to Mamluk Periods is discussed using glazed ceramics; other topics include aspects of architecture at another of Dakhleh's Islamic sites, al-Qasaba, and Arab tribal marks on rock surfaces in Dakhleh. Rock art study also extends into Kharga. The discoveries at a site in the Nile valley possibly occupied by the Blemmeyes, who harassed many parts of Egypt in late antiquity, are outlined, along with the associated rock art. Moving into more recent times, the survival of a medieval tradition of large mud-brick walls on the edge of the area of cultivation amongst modern Egyptians in the valley, and a contemporary fertility ritual in Dakhleh, are described, as are notions of how to address God and others in translations of the Qur'an. The restoration of a spectacular mausoleum in Cairo's 'City of the Dead' is described, and the first detailed account of hostilities in the Egyptian oases during the First World War is presented.
Contents
Editorial Note
Fred Leemhuis - Biography - Vreni, Rob and Benni Leemhuis
Qasr Dakhleh Project - Anthony J. Mills
Remembering Fred Leemhuis - Barbara Roggema
Working with Fred Leemhuis - Anja van de Put
An Appreciation of Fred Leemhuis - Maher Bashandy Amin and Sabry Yusuf Abd ar-Rahman
Publications of Fred Leemhuis
Bearing Witness: Fred Leemhuis Breathes Life into al-Qasr's Ancient Mud-Brick Houses - Yasser Ali
From Trimithis to al-Qasr - Anna Lucille Boozer
The Late Antique Burials at Dayr Abu Matta - Gillian E. Bowen, Tosha Dupras, Rosanne Livingstone and Peter Sheldrick
A Probable Blemmye Site with Associated Rock Art Near the Wadi Abbad - John C. Darnell, Axelle Brémont, Sofia Kane, Colleen M. Darnell and Alberto Urcia
Legacy for the Living in the 'City of the Dead' - Agnieszka Dobrowolska and Jarosław Dobrowolski
Day of Palms Crosses in Egyptian Tombs at El-Deir, Kharga Oasis, Fourth-Fifth Centuries CE - Françoise Dunand and Roger Lichtenberg
A Note on Silo Houses at al-Qasaba (Dakhleh Oasis) and Istabl 'Antar (Fustat-Cairo) - Roland-Pierre Gayraud
Archaeological Evidence for Islamic Activity in Dakhleh Oasis - Colin A. Hope, Julie Monchamp and Anthony J. Mills
The Western Front in Egypt: The Senussiyya, Ottoman and British Military Intervention in the Western Desert, 1915-1917 - Olaf E. Kaper
al-Qasr: A Synthesis of the Archaeological Work of the Qasr Dakhleh Project - Paul N. Kucera
Graffiti Interactions at Pet Rock, Kharga Oasis - Nikolaos Lazaridis and Salima Ikram
The Glazed Wares from Excavations in front of Bayt al-Qadi and Bayt al-Qurashi at al-Qasr - Anetta Łyzwa-Piber
Archives de famille dans les oasis d'Égypte à l'époque ottomane. Les papiers al-Qurašī d'al-Qaṣr en contexte - Nicolas Michel
Marking One's Moves: A Minor Contribution to the Study of Tribal Marks in Egypt and Beyond - Pawel L. Połkowski
A Roman Mummy Mask in the Brooklyn Museum: Detecting Cartonnage. Provenience through Regional Indicia and Craftsmanship Investigation - Carlo Rindi Nuzzolo
Rehabilitation and Reuse of Historical Mud-Brick Architecture in al-Qasr, Dakhleh Oasis, Egypt - Wolf Schijns
Cancer in the Dakhleh Oasis - Peter Sheldrick and J. Eldon Molto
How to Address God and Others in Qur'an Translations - Geert Jan van Gelder
A Visitor to Dakhleh in 1929: Herbert Ricke and the Orbis Terrarum - Nicholas Warner and Salima Ikram in collaboration with Cornelius von Pilgrim
A Modern Survival of the Medieval Traditions on the 'Wall of the Old Lady' - Harco Willems
Über mulagā die ‚Begegnung': Ein Fruchtbarkeitsritual in Bashandi in Ost-Dakhleh - Manfred Woidich
The Dakhleh Oasis Project Monographs