From 891ad5224b0d42774fb1f88d9846ea962df6941c Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Alexandros Tsakos Date: Fri, 1 Nov 2024 17:26:27 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] sadeq2 --- content/article/sadeq.md | 10 +++++----- 1 file changed, 5 insertions(+), 5 deletions(-) diff --git a/content/article/sadeq.md b/content/article/sadeq.md index 067b4bd..97499f3 100644 --- a/content/article/sadeq.md +++ b/content/article/sadeq.md @@ -106,7 +106,7 @@ passengers, goods, letters, and money orders from migrating men to their families in the village. Kawthar Abd El-Rasoul and Mohamed Riad visited the village in 1962 and -described it. Their description is worth quoting at length: +described it. Their description is worth quoting at length (2014, 68, 132): > "This was the first time we saw Abu Hor on a summer morning, and the > view was beautiful, (...) , the Nile had dropped below its winter @@ -129,7 +129,7 @@ described it. Their description is worth quoting at length: > Nile is much narrower, the eastern plateau is high and continuous for > kilometers, the western bank is less high and continuous and consists > of groups of unconnected hills. (...) We rested a little on the west -> bank and saw many flying fish (2014, 68, 132)." +> bank and saw many flying fish." ![Photograph of Old Abu Hor in 1962 showing camels in front of the village.](../static/images/sadeq/fig1.jpg "Photograph of Old Abu Hor in 1962. Source: Riad, M. and Abdel-Rasoul, K. (2014), A journey in the time of Nubia.") @@ -285,7 +285,7 @@ joyful atmosphere and bought sweets and toys from travelling vendors. **After displacement** -On the 27^th^ of December 1963, the displacement of the people of Abu +On the 27th of December 1963, the displacement of the people of Abu Hor began to their village in New Nubia, where the new Abu Hor is one of the five villages that are under the administrative local council of Kalabsha, a main village which provides the neighboring villages with @@ -632,14 +632,14 @@ United Nations Archives at Geneva, Survey of Egypt, Kalabsha, 1935. Hassan Fathy, -[^1]: []{dir="rtl"}Khor: an Arabic word stands for a natural swale +[^1]: Khor: an Arabic word stands for a natural swale cutting through the desert plateau at right angles to the Nile. [^2]: Shaʼreya: a vermicelli-like food with milk and sugar which was served as breakfast to the guests and to the bride and groom after the wedding. -[^3]: []{dir="rtl"}Karej: Nubian traditional plates weaved of brightly +[^3]: Karej: Nubian traditional plates weaved of brightly colored palm fiber strips. [^4]: Arras: a young boy relative of the groom who accompanied him