The EEF Guide to Internet Resources for Ancient Egyptian Texts Paleolithic Notation Bibliography: "...over 400 academic articles, books, dissertations, and related publications (excluding book reviews and non-academic material) that discuss or evaluate the theory that some Paleolithic (primarily European Upper Paleolithic) artifacts contain non-
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She's really very nice, Mrs. Ptah.
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You wouldn't happen to have Piankoff and Rambora's "Egyptian Religious Texts and Representations" volume III lying around there, would you?
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And no, this isn't the medical papyrus. It's very much in the same genre as the Jumilhac Papyrus, if you've seen that one. It's a list of towns and important myths and rituals associated with them. It's lacunose in places, but unlike, say, the Book of Thoth, which was a real tease, you can actually read most of it. And the amount of notes and commentary is just ridiculous, Meeks really goes to town trying to eke out every last bit of information the text can provide.
And it's got crazy stuff in it, things that are just wrong: the title of one section is "La dame du balsamaire et le prolapsus rectal". I mean, stop already. Or how about "Seth violeur, la naissance de Thot et le singe foetus d'Imet"?
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