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Schlagwort: Egypt

Was sich im Inneren von 3.000 Jahren alten ägyptischen Tiermumien befindet

Vor Tausenden von Jahren wickelten und versiegelten die alten Ägypter sorgfältig Tiermumien. Darunter Falken, Schlangen, Fische, Spitzmäuse oder ein zwei Meter langes Krokodil.

Dieses Video des Projekts „Divine Creatures“ des British Museum dokumentiert, wie Forscher und Museumsspezialisten die Mumien ins Royal Brompton Hospital brachten, wo Röntgengeräte und CT-Scanner durch die fragilen Verpackungen hindurch sehen, ohne sie zu berühren.

Join Marie Vandenbeusch, Emma Phillips, and others in the British Museum as they embark on an exciting new research project aimed at better understanding the meaning and the evolution of animal mummification in ancient Egypt. We’ll show you how we scan the mummies using X-rays in the museum, revealing what’s inside these animal mummies, how we transport and CT scan them at a hospital, and then Marie and Emma breakdown the scan results, and explain how they add to our knowledge of the ancient Egyptian embalming practice.


(Direktlink, via The Kid Should See This )

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Hieroglyphen meißeln

Die Bildhauerin Miriam Johnson meißelt Hieroglyphen von Hand, so wie damals im alten Ägypten – nur mit Hammer und Meißel.

Watch the detailed process as she creates a cartouche (oval-shaped frame displaying a royal name frame) which spells Pharaoh Khufu, using both sunken relief and raised relief techniques.

Filmed with natural sound only, this video features unintentional ASMR stone carving sounds — the rhythmic tapping of hammer and chisel against stone, just like artisans would have worked in ancient Egypt thousands of years ago.

Pharaoh Khufu, builder of the Great Pyramid, is one of the most famous rulers of ancient Egypt. His name, written in hieroglyphs inside a cartouche, symbolises royal authority and divine kingship.


(Direktlink, via Book of Joe)

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Ask the Girls in Cairo

Der Regisseur JP Micallef trifft in Kairo auf junge Frauen, die gegen die dortigen Konventionen hinweg skaten, driften oder Motorrad fahren.

Capturing the sprawling landscape of Cairo through a subset of its youth, director JP Micallef connects with a group of young female skateboarders, drifters and motorbike riders in the Egyptian capital for short film Ask the Girls in Cairo. Finding freedom coasting through the city, yet confronted by the strict gender standards of a traditional, religious society, the film lenses these young women outside the risks that link their experiences – each coming against derogatory remarks and abuse on the city’s streets, and pressure and punishment from family for pursuing their passions.

Meeting Cairo-based Moroccan skateboarder Zineb Koutten via her photography, Micallef reached out to friends and other girls connected by the Cairo scene, gathering an entirely Egyptian cast and crew to work across the project – and music by Egyptian artist Felukah. Shooting on location over two days and witnessing first hand the abuse the girls receive, Ask the Girls in Cairo celebrates the optimism and strength of the young women refusing to bow to expectations, on a visual ride through the city they have made their playground.


(Direktlink)

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… und ein vielleicht lachendes Kamel

Vielleicht das beste Selfie des Jahres 2014. Aufgenommen von Mahmoud Salem in Ägypten.

(via findichnichtmehr)

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