Les pyramides de Sakkara = The pyramids of Sakkara / Jean-Philippe Lauer.

By: Lauer, Jean-Philippe, 1902-2001Material type: TextTextLanguage: French, English Series: Publications de l'Institut français d'archéologie orientale du Caire ; 1104. | Bibliothèque générale (Institut français d'archéologie orientale du Caire) ; t. 47.Publisher: Le Caire : Institut français d'archéologie orientale, 2015Edition: Septième édition revue et augmentéeDescription: 226 pages : illustrations ; 20 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9782724706598Other title: The pyramids of Sakkara : la pyramide à degrés, la pyramide de l'Horus-Sekhem-Khet, la pyramide d'Ounas, la pyramide d'Ouserkaf, la pyramide de Téti, le Sérapeum et les mastabas de Ti et de Ptah-Hotep = The pyramids of Sakkara : The Step Pyramid, the Pyramid of Horus Sekhem-Khet, the Pyramid of Unis, the Pyramid of Userkaf, the Pyramid of Teti, the Serapeum and the Mastabas of Ti and Ptah-hotep, The Step Pyramid, the Pyramid of Horus Sekhem-Khet, the Pyramid of Unis, the Pyramid of Userkaf, the Pyramid of Teti, the Serapeum and the Mastabas of Ti and Ptah-hotepSubject(s): Pyramids -- Egypt -- Ṣaqqārah | Excavations (Archaeology) -- Egypt -- Ṣaqqārah | Ṣaqqārah (Egypt) -- AntiquitiesDDC classification: 911 LOC classification: DT73.S3 | L37 2015Summary: Around 2700 BC, Neteri-khet, the first pharaoh of the Third Dynasty of Egypt-better known today as Djoser-sited his funerary complex at the heart of the Sakkara necropolis. Kings before him had already made Sakkara a place of veneration over the four centuries preceding his reign, and later kings followed Djoser's example. Surrounded by the later pyramids of Sekhem-khet, Userkaf, Unis, and Teti, Djoser's famous Step Pyramid is still the tallest construction at Sakkara. The French architect Jean-Philippe Lauer devoted seventy-five of his hundred years to Sakkara, as a permanent employee of the Service des Antiquités d'Égypte and honorary research director of the CNRS, working on the reconstruction of the Djoser complex. In 2015, this seventh edition of The Pyramids of Sakkara, re-issued with new illustrations by the Institut français d'archéologie orientale, bears faithful witness to Jean-Philippe Lauer's work. Its informative, succinct text and numerous illustrations provide an immersive experience of the site and give a clear account of the fascinating story of the discovery and long restoration of the Djoser complex.
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Around 2700 BC, Neteri-khet, the first pharaoh of the Third Dynasty of Egypt-better known today as Djoser-sited his funerary complex at the heart of the Sakkara necropolis. Kings before him had already made Sakkara a place of veneration over the four centuries preceding his reign, and later kings followed Djoser's example. Surrounded by the later pyramids of Sekhem-khet, Userkaf, Unis, and Teti, Djoser's famous Step Pyramid is still the tallest construction at Sakkara. The French architect Jean-Philippe Lauer devoted seventy-five of his hundred years to Sakkara, as a permanent employee of the Service des Antiquités d'Égypte and honorary research director of the CNRS, working on the reconstruction of the Djoser complex. In 2015, this seventh edition of The Pyramids of Sakkara, re-issued with new illustrations by the Institut français d'archéologie orientale, bears faithful witness to Jean-Philippe Lauer's work. Its informative, succinct text and numerous illustrations provide an immersive experience of the site and give a clear account of the fascinating story of the discovery and long restoration of the Djoser complex.

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