

Hunting, Fishing, and Water (Arabic edition)
Fishing, fowling, and hunting were practiced widely by ancient Egyptians in the New Kingdom and were commonly represented in their tombs, as both professions and sports.
A nobleman was often shown armed with bow and arrows, accompanied by attendants and by hounds to capture living animals in a netted stockade. Boomerang fowling was commonly depicted in connection with spear fishing, pursued only by the tomb owner and accompanied by his family and attendants. Scenes depicting the harpooning of a hippopotamus were always shown as part of a larger composition depicting the tomb owner fishing and fowling. Fishing as a profession involved the use of large nets, while fowlers used a clap-nets to catch waterfowl.
- Undertittel
- Fowling Scenes in the Private Theban Tombs of the Eighteenth Dynasty
- Forfatter
- Laila Abd El-Kader Hassan Mohamed
- ISBN
- 9781649031549
- Språk
- Arabiska
- Utgivelsesdato
- 1.1.2015
- Tilgjengelige elektroniske format
- PDF - Adobe DRM
- Les e-boka her
- E-bokleser i mobil/nettbrett
- Lesebrett
- Datamaskin
