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2 changed files with 65 additions and 65 deletions
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@ -26,9 +26,7 @@ Earth was used as the building material in all ancient cultures, not
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only for homes but for religious buildings as well.[^4] In Sudan, the
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study of earthen construction materials is very rare, mudbricks were
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considered common building materials that were used in Sudan from 2500
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BCE, during
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the Kerma period, and are still widely used as building materials in
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BCE, during the Kerma period, and are still widely used as building materials in
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many regions of Sudan. The materials used to make these bricks include
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Nile mud, sand, chopped straw, and animal dung. Makers mixed these
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materials in varying quantities to produce bricks with different
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@ -67,10 +65,10 @@ trees also play an essential role in the building of animal pens.
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As for the elements of the interior homescape, wood, palm and doum
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fronds are used as a basic element in the manufacture of home
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furniture, such as beds, wooden chairs, and *brooches* that are used
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as rugs for sitting, in addition to the use of palm and doum palm
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leaves in the manufacture of ropes, shoes, also were used as hangers
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as rugs for sitting. In addition palm and doum palm
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leaves were used in the manufacture of ropes, shoes, as well as hangers
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called locally "*mashlaib*" which are used to place food utensils in
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high areas of the ground and *Tabag* which used for the covering food.
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high areas of the ground and *Tabag* which are used for the covering food.
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In the internal homescape of Sudanese houses wood is also used to
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manufacture what is called "Sahara" which is used to store clothes,
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decorative items, and other items inside homes. In addition, human
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@ -109,7 +107,7 @@ Dosha (west bank) and Wawa (east bank), in the north. Its northern
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boundary is most visibly marked by the cliff-face known as Jebel Dosha
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which overlooks the west bank of the river some five kilometers
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downstream of Soleb, the end of a long ridge that runs approximately
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three kilometers into the desert to the west-north- west, forming a
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three kilometers into the desert to the west-north-west, forming a
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prominent natural feature, the region extends over a distance of
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approximately 141 kilometers (ca. 88 miles) from Hannik to Wawa.
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Within this area, the landscape is highly varied, including some very
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@ -121,6 +119,12 @@ three main areas (north, middle, and south) of the El Mahas region in
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April 2019. I chose these four sites to serve as case studies for the
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study of mudbrick inclusions in Christian Sudan.
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**~~Figure 1. The area of study.~~**
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These four sites can be described in brief as follows:
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**Site (1) TMB016** (19°42.935/30°22.72)**:** This site was located
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@ -156,7 +160,7 @@ is Hambujneen Kisse (Osman and Edwards 2012) (Fig.2b).
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a rocky hillock, with modern buildings on lower ground below the hill.
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It is a well-preserved medieval settlement known by local people as
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Tinutti. At least five substantial mudbrick structures can be
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identified. It is well-preserved. Several rooms still retain their
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identified. Several rooms still retain their
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barrel vaulting and parts of the central structure stand nearly 5
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meters high.
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@ -183,10 +187,6 @@ survived appears to be 'Late' and 'Terminal Christian' ceramic types.
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Outside this structure are traces of less substantial structures
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surviving as a few courses of rough stone walling (Fig.2d).[^9]
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**~~Figure 1. The area of study.~~**
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 TMB016. b) MAS021. c) DFF008. d) DFF009 (photos by Eng. Omer).")
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**~~Figure 2. The four sites discussed in the chapter: a) TMB016. b) MAS021. c) DFF008. d) DFF009 (photos by Eng. Omer).~~**
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@ -205,7 +205,7 @@ and sand. Two metal sieves with a mesh size of 0.5 and 1 millimetres
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were used for the wet sieving to separate the plant remains. The
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separated material was dried and examined under binoculars in the
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Department of Archaeology, Faculty of Arts, University of Al Neelain
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(Sudan), and Institute of Archaeology, University of Nicolas Copernicus,
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(Sudan), and Institute of Archaeology, University of Nicolas Copernicus
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(Poland). To aid with identification, we used fresh seeds as a reference
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collection alongside determination literature. Some animal dung and
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insect remains were separated during the sorting processing of the plant
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@ -215,23 +215,23 @@ macro-remains.
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## Results of extracted plant remains from the Homescape
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Seven plant species were encountered as seeds\\fruits were extracted and
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Seven plant species were encountered as seeds, while fruits were extracted and
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identified from the mudbrick samples. The assemblage of seeds and fruits
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were preserved by desiccation. Table (1) shows the Latin names of the
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determined species and their distribution in the sites. The cereal
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appeared clearly and can be identified from the seeds of the *Triticum
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aestivum* (Fig.3a)*, Hordeum vulgare* (Fig.3b) added to some parts of
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spikelets, chaffs, and glume fragments for those two cereals. *Sorghum
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aestivum* (Fig.3a)* and Hordeum vulgare* (Fig.3b). These two cereals were added to some parts of
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spikelets, chaffs, and glume fragments. *Sorghum
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bicolor* was presented from spikelet with grain inside (Fig.4c) and
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*Setaria italica* was also represented from their seeds. (Fig.3d)
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*Setaria italica* was also represented from their seeds (Fig.3d).
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*Adansonia digitate* appeared from small fragments of the fruit pulp
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shell (Fig.3e) *Acacia nilotica* was identified from the seed remains
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(Fig.3f) the *Cyperus rotundus* which appeared in the materials from the
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shell (Fig.3e). *Acacia nilotica* was identified from the seed remains
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(Fig.3f) and the *Cyperus rotundus* appeared in the materials from the
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complete purple nutsedge roots (Fig.3g). Some animal remains, animal
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dung (Fig. 3h) and insect remains (Fig.3i) appeared in the samples. More
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analysis for identification will be done at a later date.
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dung (Fig. 3h), and insect remains (Fig.3i) appeared in the samples. More
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analysis for further identifications will be done at a later date.
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**~~Table 1. Plant species that were identified from the Samples.~~**
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@ -334,7 +334,7 @@ others (namely rice, wheat, barley, maize).[^17] Sorghum is especially
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important in the semiarid tropics of Africa and South Asia, with
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significant production also in China, Southeast Asia, and the
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Americas.[^18] There is clear evidence for the use of wild sorghum in
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the eastern Sahara as early 6000 BCE and by Neolithic populations in
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the eastern Sahara as early as 6000 BCE and by Neolithic populations in
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central Sudan by the fourth millennium BCE.[^19] Evidence for the
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transition from wild sorghum to domesticated sorghum can be sequenced
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in the stratigraphy of Qasr Ibrim. It suggests that domestication may
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@ -396,7 +396,7 @@ of which have medical and ethnographic value. These plants were
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probably collected or available for this purpose by people living in
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the Christian settlements in the Third Cataract region. One of these
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riverine wild floras is *Cyperus rotundus,* a type of grass that
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appear from the complete purple nutsedge roots from site TMB016,
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appeared from the complete purple nutsedge roots from site TMB016,
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DFF008 and DFF009. This species has been in association with humans
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from remote pre-history to the present. It was consumed as a food for
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thousands of years in prehistoric times, but is viewed as a
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@ -406,8 +406,8 @@ tuber, thought to have been collected as food, were found at the
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later sites at Al Khiday, 25 kilometers south of Omdurman.[^30] The
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complex of burial sites has yielded dental calculus samples from
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pre-Mesolithic, Neolithic, Late Meroitic, and Mesolithic ages,
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covering more than 7000 years, Cyperaceae tuber was recoded from the
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Kushite site at Kawa dating back to Napatan period 750-400 BCE.[^31]
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covering more than 7000 years. Cyperaceae tuber was recorded from the
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Kushite site at Kawa dating back to Napatan period (750-400 BCE).[^31]
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Ecologically, *Cyperus rotundus* is commonly found in cultivated
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areas, disturbed areas, roadsides, lawns, parks, and wastelands, and
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@ -533,7 +533,7 @@ period for water storage, medical needs, and shelter as well. Today
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Sudanese women employ *Cyperus rotundus* for cosmetic and perfumery
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purposes, and it may have been used during the Christian period also.
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There are three flora landscape in the area of study based on our
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There are three flora landscapes in the area of study based on our
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plant remains, cultivated flora which include the four cereals:
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*Triticum aestivum*, *Hordeum vulgare, Sorghum bicolor,* and *Setaria
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italica*. Riverine wild flora which can noted clearly form the remains
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@ -574,10 +574,10 @@ International Symposium on Archaeometry*, edited by Isabella Turbanti-Memmi,
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@ -593,16 +593,16 @@ Third International Conference on the Archaeology of the Fourth Nile
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@ -620,7 +620,7 @@ Doggett, Hugh. *Sorghum*. Harlow, UK: Longman, 1970.
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@ -678,7 +678,7 @@ and Barley on the Fire-Mud Basin from the Christian Site MRB-05-001 at
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||||
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||||
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||||
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||||
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||||
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||||
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||||
and the Nile Valley*. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1988.
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||||
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||||
|
@ -884,7 +884,7 @@ Agricultural Information"; O' Rourke, "Pollen from Adobe Brick."
|
|||
[^4]: Minke *Building with Earth Design and Technology of a
|
||||
Sustainable Architecture*, pp. 11--12.
|
||||
|
||||
[^5]: Van Beek and Van Beek *Glorious Mud!*, p. 135.
|
||||
[^5]: Van Beek and Van Beek, *Glorious Mud!*, p. 135.
|
||||
|
||||
[^6]: Hillman, "Traditional Husbandry and Processing of Archaic
|
||||
Cereals in Recent Times," pp. 127--8.
|
||||
|
@ -914,7 +914,7 @@ Middle Bronze Age Southern Levant"; Houben and Guillaud, *Earth Construction*, p
|
|||
[^16]: On the Napatan site HP736 in the Wadi Umm Rahau at the Fourth
|
||||
Nile Cataract, see Badura, "Plant Remains from the Napatan Settlement in Wadi
|
||||
Umm-Rahau." On the Egyptian and Napatan site in
|
||||
Kawa, see Fuller, "Early Kushite Agriculture." On Gala Abu Ahmad, see Kahlheber, "Archaeobotanical Investigations at the Gala Abu
|
||||
Kawa, see Fuller, "Early Kushite Agriculture." On Gala Abu Ahmed, see Kahlheber, "Archaeobotanical Investigations at the Gala Abu
|
||||
Ahmed Fortress in Lower Wadi Howar, Northern Sudan." On
|
||||
Meroe, see Shinnie and Anderson, *The Capital of Kush 2*, p. 366.
|
||||
|
||||
|
|
|
@ -384,21 +384,21 @@ than ever.
|
|||
**References**
|
||||
|
||||
Ingold, Tim. \"The Temporality of the Landscape.\" *Conceptions of Time
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||||
and Ancient Society/World Archaeology* 25, no. 2 (1993): 152-74.
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||||
and Ancient Society/World Archaeology* 25, no. 2 (1993): pp. 152--74.
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||||
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||||
Janmyr, Maja. \"The Nubians of Egypt: A Displaced Population.\" In *An
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||||
Atlas of Contemporary Egypt*, edited by Hala Bayoumi and Karine Benafla,
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||||
96-7. Paris: CNRS Éditions 2023.
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||||
pp. 96-7. Paris: CNRS Éditions 2023.
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||||
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||||
Yao, Alice. \"The Great Wall as Destination? Archaeology of Migration
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||||
and Settlers under the Han Empire.\" In *Archaeologies of Empire: Local
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||||
Participants and Imperial Trajectories*, edited by Anna Lucille Boozer,
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||||
B.S. Düring and Bradley J Parker, 57-88. Albuquerque, NM: SAR & UNM
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||||
B.S. Düring, and Bradley J Parker, pp. 57-88. Albuquerque, NM: SAR & UNM
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||||
Press, 2020.
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||||
|
||||
Youssef, Maaï, and Mayada Madbouly. \"Displaced People and Migrants in
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||||
Cairo.\" In *An Atlas of Contemporary Egypt*, edited by Hala Bayoumi and
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||||
Karine Benafla, 32-3. Paris: CNRS Editions, 2023.
|
||||
Karine Benafla, pp. 32-3. Paris: CNRS Editions, 2023.
|
||||
|
||||
[^1]: For a basic geographic and temporal introduction to Nubia, see
|
||||
Janmyr, \"The Nubians of Egypt: a displaced population.\"
|
||||
|
|
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