The Second Cataract Fortress of Dorginarti. NE 12.

Citation:

Heidorn, Lisa, The Second Cataract Fortress of Dorginarti. NE 12. (Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures, U. of Chicago, 2023), pp. • Pp. lii + 496; 184 figures, 7 tables, 3 maps, 10 plans, 107 plates.
The Second Cataract Fortress of Dorginarti. NE 12.

Abstract:

With contributions by Carol Myer and Joanna Then-Obluska

The best-known sites along the length of the Nile River's Second Cataract are the ruins of Egyptian towns and fortresses occupied during the Old, Middle, and New Kingdoms. One of the fortresses in the Second Cataract region, Dorginarti existed in a later era than the better-known Middle and New Kingdom forts. The earliest ceramics found at the site date from the later tenth or early ninth century BC, and those from a later occupation stem from the early eighth century. The latest phase of occupation did not extend far beyond the first phase of Persian dominance in Egypt beginning in the last quarter of the sixth century BC.
This volume is the final report of the emergency excavations undertaken at Dorginarti for five months in 1964 by the University of Chicago's Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures as part of the UNESCO Nubian salvage project necessitated by the building of the Aswan High Dam. Following a description of the fortress's landscape and resources, the book describes Dorginarti's architecture in detail and then presents the selection of artifacts brought back from the Sudan and stored in the ISAC Museum. The picture that emerges from the archaeological record shows the continuing importance of Lower Nubia after the withdrawal of Egyptian control in the late second millennium BC and before the rise of the Kushite empire in the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty.

The book is authored by Lisa Heidorn
Please visit the publisher's website to download, purchase or for additional information.

ISBN: 978-1-61491-083-1
Last updated on 07/27/2023