Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
The early Naqada III Period is of great importance for the relative chronology of Predynastic and Early Egypt because it includes the final phase of state formation in Egypt, just before the commencement of the First Dynasty.
The book is divided into nine chapters covering, step by step, the development of the Egyptian tomb and society from the Predynastic Period to the end of the first six Egyptian dynasties, a lengthy period of time which covers the Early Dynastic and the Old Kingdom periods.
The focus of this paper* is to establish a precise relative chronology of the Nile Delta sites which are contemporary with the first two cultures of Naqada (around 38503300 BC).
Chronology of the Naqada Period. Petrie was the first to produce a chronology for the Naqada Period. Using pottery he developed the sequence dates. Eventually he divided the Naqada period into three main periods:
The Naqadan culture took over from the Badarian around 4500 BC and became arguably the most important prehistoric culture in Upper Egypt. It is named after the city of Naqada where much of the archaeological evidence for the period was found.
Abstract The Naqada relative chronology forms the main cultural framework for the Predynastic period of ancient Egypt. It was devised in the late nineteenth century by Flinders Petrie to facilitate understanding of the prehistoric origins of the Egyptian state.
The Naqada Culture, also known as the Naqada I, Naqada II, and Naqada III periods, was a prehistoric culture that flourished in Upper Egypt during the late Neolithic and early Chalcolithic periods (circa 4400–3000 BCE).