An edition of 100 Hieroglyphs (2005)

100 Hieroglyphs

Think Like an Egyptian

New Ed edition
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

My Reading Lists:

Create a new list

Check-In

×Close
Add an optional check-in date. Check-in dates are used to track yearly reading goals.
Today

  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Buy this book

Last edited by cyberneticdryad
August 29, 2022 | History
An edition of 100 Hieroglyphs (2005)

100 Hieroglyphs

Think Like an Egyptian

New Ed edition
  • 2 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

Ancient Egyptian culture is separated from us by several millennia, a lost people, and a bygone language. We can discover much about this fascinating civilization from its physical remains, but perhaps the greatest insights into the Egyptian mind come from hieroglyphs. They reveal the priorities, concerns and beliefs of the Egyptians -- a whole worldview.

Unlike the Western alphabet, which is an arbitrary set of symbols not anchored in reality, each Egyptian hieroglyph visually denotes a concep central to Egyptian thinking. The language and its written form are intimately bound up with their imaginative world. Here Barry Kemp presents 100 of the Egyptian hieroglyphs to provide access to this unique culture.

Kemp takes us on a sweeping journey through the Egyptian mind, revealing not only aspects of day-to-day life in ancient Egypt, but gradually building a picture of the historical and mythological references that were the cornerstones of Egyptian thought. This fascinating book helps us get inside a long-vanished world.

Publish Date
Publisher
Granta Books
Pages
256

Buy this book

Edition Availability
Cover of: 100 Hieroglyphs
100 Hieroglyphs: Think Like an Egyptian
2012, Granta Books
in English
Cover of: 100 Hieroglyphs
100 Hieroglyphs
May 2, 2005, Granta Books
Hardcover
Cover of: 100 Hieroglyphs
100 Hieroglyphs: Think Like an Egyptian
2005, Granta Books
Paperback - New Ed edition

Add another edition?

Book Details


First Sentence

"The idea for this book came from the fertile mind of George Miller; the carving of my unwieldy English into something more readable and accurate was the task of Bella Shand, both of them of Granata Books."

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements. v
Timeline. vi
Maps. vii
Introduction. ix
1. Land
Page 1
2. Desert
Page 4
3. Grain (of sand )
Page 6
4. Life
Page 9
5. Sun
Page 12
6. Horizon
Page 14
7. 'To appear'
Page 16
8. Water
Page 18
9. Field/countryside
Page 22
10. Papyrus column
Page 24
11. Lotus
Page 27
12. Tree
Page 29
13. Province
Page 32
14. Stela (standing block or slab of stone)
Page 36
15. Plough
Page 38
16. Sickle
Page 41
17. Grain pile
Page 43
18. Beer jug
Page 45
19. Bull
Page 47
20. Pig
Page 49
21. Seth-animal
Page 51
22. Red
Page 54
23. Sparrow
Page 56
24. Good
Page 57
25. Serpent
Page 59
26. House
Page 61
27. Door
Page 64
28. Mat
Page 66
29. Cat
Page 68
30. Fire
Page 70
31. Wick
Page 72
32. City
Page 74
33. Wall
Page 76
34. Mound
Page 79
35. West
Page 81
36. Cemetery
Page 83
37. Pyramid
Page 86
38. Mummy
Page 89
39. Jackal
Page 92
40. Road
Page 94
41. Donkey
Page 96
42. Chariot
Page 98
43. Boat, travelling upstream
Page 100
44. Sail
Page 103
45. Sacred barque
Page 105
46. Sky
Page 107
47. Otherworld (Duat)
Page 109
48. Star
Page 111
49. Year
Page 113
50. Moon
Page 115
51. Eternity
Page 117
52. Primaeval time
Page 119
53. Spirit
Page 122
54. King
Page 124
55. Cartouche
Page 129
56. Palace
Page 132
57. To unite
Page 135
58. Truth (Maat)
Page 137
59. To be stable
Page 140
60. to Follow
Page 142
61. Enemy
Page 144
62. Bow
Page 147
63. Man and woman
Page 149
64. Razor
Page 152
65. Unguent
Page 154
66. To love
Page 156
67. Sistrum
Page 160
68. Baboon
Page 162
69. To hear
Page 164
70. Mouth
Page 167
71. Body
Page 170
72. Pustule
Page 173
73. Ka
Page 175
74. Ba
Page 179
75. Heart
Page 182
76. To be born
Page 185
77. To come into existence
Page 188
78. Child
Page 190
79. Old man
Page 193
80. Official
Page 196
81. Sceptre of power
Page 199
82. Scribal kit
Page 201
83. Cylinder seal
Page 205
84. Papyrus roll
Page 207
85. Soldier
Page 209
86. Craftsman
Page 212
87. Gold
Page 214
88. Bronze
Page 217
89. Potter's kiln
Page 219
90. Balance
Page 221
91. Cloth
Page 224
92. To be pure
Page 227
93. To be divine
Page 229
94. Sacred
Page 232
95. Festival
Page 234
96. Statue
Page 236
97. Wonder
Page 239
98. Offering place
Page 242
99. Protection
Page 244
100. Wedjat (eye of wellbeing)
Page 247
Note on sources. 249
Index. 252

Edition Notes

Published in
London, United Kingdom
Copyright Date
2005

Classifications

Library of Congress
DT61 .K442 2005b

Contributors

Illustrator
Andy Boyce
Typesetter
M Rules

The Physical Object

Format
Paperback
Number of pages
256
Dimensions
7.6 x 5.1 x 0.9 inches
Weight
7 ounces

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL12060677M
Internet Archive
100hieroglyphsth0000kemp_v2s9
ISBN 10
1862078440
ISBN 13
9781862078444
LCCN
2006281157
Library Thing
1408936
Goodreads
2194772

Community Reviews (0)

Feedback?
No community reviews have been submitted for this work.

History

Download catalog record: RDF / JSON
August 29, 2022 Edited by cyberneticdryad added subtitle, added publisher location, corrected date of publish, added copyright date, added illustrator and typesetter, added first sentence, added work description, added table of contents
December 14, 2020 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
April 28, 2010 Edited by Open Library Bot Linked existing covers to the work.
December 10, 2009 Created by WorkBot add works page