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Hieroglyph

Index Hieroglyph

A hieroglyph (Greek for "sacred writing") was a character of the ancient Egyptian writing system. [1]

267 relations: Aitou, Aker (deity), Aleph, Alien (film), Alien vs. Predator (film), All I Ever Wanted (The Prince of Egypt), Ancient Aliens, Ancient Egyptian medicine, Animal mummy, Antimony, Antoine Fabre d'Olivet, Anubis Shrine, April 5, Arabesque (1966 film), Arkady Davidowitz, Armenian Egyptology Centre, Arroyo de Piedra, Asemic writing, Ba (pharaoh), Bagshaw Museum, Bandar Sunway, Battiscombe Gunn, Battle of Djahy, Bentresh stela, Bertha Porter, Black Adam, Bolon K'awiil II, Book of the Dead, Book of the Earth, Bronze Age, C. Auguste Dupin, Carlsberg papyrus, Carr Van Anda, Carreras Cigarette Factory, Cattle in religion and mythology, Central Park, Challenge of the Ancient Empires!, Character (symbol), Ch’orti’ language, Chocolá, Coin purse, Congo (film), Cretan hieroglyphs, Cubist sculpture, Cubit, Culture of Venezuela, Dagon (short story), Damaidi, Defective script, Den (pharaoh), ..., Diary of Merer, Djer, Domestic pigeon, Don't Wake Me Up (song), Dream interpretation, Drill, Dropa stones, Dwarfs and pygmies in Ancient Egypt, E. A. Wallis Budge, Edward Hincks, Egyptian faience, Egyptian hieroglyphs, Egyptian medical papyri, El Matareya, Cairo, El Perú (Maya site), Elmar Rojas, Emoticon, Empire and Communications, Epigraphy, Evelyn Underhill, Ezekiel Stone Wiggins, Faiyum Oasis, Famine Stela, Ferret, Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi, Fortune (Chris Brown album), Four sons of Horus, Fourth Dynasty of Egypt, Francesco Salvolini, Geb, Gentleman detective, Ghost, Giuseppe Raddi, Glyph, Goad, Great Karnak Inscription, Great Sphinx of Giza, Green, Hapi (Nile god), Hapi (Son of Horus), Hatshepsut, Heinrich Wuttke, Helmuth Theodor Bossert, Hieroglyph (disambiguation), Hieroglyphic Mountains, History of alcoholic drinks, History of deaf education, History of early Tunisia, History of education, History of games, History of neuroscience, History of the wine press, History of writing, Horror vacui, Hotep, Hotepsekhemwy, Human brain, Hypnerotomachia Poliphili, In Bed with Medinner (series 4), Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, Isis, Isputahsu, Israelites, Ithyphallic (album), Jacques Kinnaer, Jade, James Douglas (businessman), Jan Best, John Scanes, John W. Tait, Julien Friedler, Julio Alpuy, Karatepe bilingual, Kathy Aoki, Khenti-Amentiu, Knot (hieroglyph), L, La Joyanca, Latins (Italic tribe), Lepsius list of pyramids, List of Ace of Cakes episodes, List of birds of Egypt, List of CD-i games, List of Foundation universe planets, List of Greek and Latin roots in English/G, List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H, List of Mighty Max episodes, List of people considered father or mother of a scientific field, Logogram, Loren Eiseley, Lost Kingdom Adventure, Lotus chalice, Louis Joseph d'Albert d'Ailly, Maahes, Mahmoud Ezzamel, Manitoba Legislative Building, Martinez de Pasqually, Maya script, Maya stelae, Memphite Formula, Mesoamerica, Metropolis (Anatolia), Michael Gericke, Minoan civilization, Miraculous births, Mothra (film), Muisca, Muisca calendar, Muisca Confederation, Muisca numerals, Mummy: Tomb of the Pharaoh, Muong people, Museo Popol Vuh, Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, Naqa, Nebra (Pharaoh), Nefer-Setekh, Neith, Neithhotep, Neocalyptis aperta, Niello, Night of Pan, Niki de Saint Phalle, Noli Me Tángere (novel), Nubia, Oahspe: A New Bible, Only Connect, Outline of ancient Egypt, Pahor Labib, Paleo-European languages, Paromeos Monastery, Pendant, Perot Museum of Nature and Science, Phaistos Disc, Pictogram, Piedras Negras (Maya site), Platform bed, Poultry, Power Rangers Operation Overdrive, Prehistoric Egypt, Primitivism, Proto-Cubism, Proto-Sinaitic script, Puppetry, Pyramid of Pepi II, Qahedjet, Quiriguá, Rachel Jordan, Ramesseum medical papyri, Recipe, Register (art), Relief, Rhapsodomancy, Roberto Calasso, Roof comb, Rosetta Stone, Rylands Papyri, Saddle-billed stork, Samuel Sharpe (scholar), Scarab (artifact), Scion of Ikshvaku, Scorpion I, Sea Peoples, Sekhem scepter, Semerkhet, Semitic languages, Sendion, Senedj, Senet, Seshat, Shechem, Shuti hieroglyph (two-feather adornment), SMS language, Sneferka, Solomon Kane, Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations, Static in Transmission, Statues of Amun in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa, Staveless runes, Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu, Sumer, Sun Language Theory, Superman: The Feral Man of Steel, Text comics, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket, The Search (TV series), Theobroma cacao, Thoth, Three hares, Tikal, Timeline of Middle Eastern history, Tomb of Ptahmes, Turin King List, Two Ladies, Unown, Valyrian languages, Voortrekker Monument, Vriesea hieroglyphica, Wad ban Naqa, Wadjenes, Wadjet, Wah-Sut, Wassily Kandinsky, Weneg (pharaoh), What the Ancients Did for Us, William E. Gates, Writing, Writing system, Yupik, Yupik languages, 0, 12 to the Moon, 1790s in archaeology, 1799 in science, 1815 in archaeology, 1820s, 196 BC. Expand index (217 more) »

Aitou

Aitou (also Ayto, Aytou, Aytu, Aïtou, Aito, Itoo, أيطو) is a village located in the Zgharta District in the North Governorate of Lebanon.

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Aker (deity)

Aker was an Ancient Egyptian earth and death deity.

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Aleph

Aleph (or alef or alif) is the first letter of the Semitic abjads, including Phoenician 'Ālep 𐤀, Hebrew 'Ālef א, Aramaic Ālap 𐡀, Syriac ʾĀlap̄ ܐ, Arabic ا, Urdu ا, and Persian.

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Alien (film)

Alien is a 1979 science fiction horror film directed by Ridley Scott, and starring Sigourney Weaver, Tom Skerritt, Veronica Cartwright, Harry Dean Stanton, John Hurt, Ian Holm and Yaphet Kotto.

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Alien vs. Predator (film)

Alien vs.

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All I Ever Wanted (The Prince of Egypt)

"All I Ever Wanted" is a song from the 1998 DreamWorks animated feature The Prince of Egypt.

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Ancient Aliens

Ancient Aliens is an American television series that premiered on April 20, 2010, on the History channel.

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Ancient Egyptian medicine

The medicine of the ancient Egyptians is some of the oldest documented.

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Animal mummy

Animal mummification originated in ancient Egypt.

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Antimony

Antimony is a chemical element with symbol Sb (from stibium) and atomic number 51.

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Antoine Fabre d'Olivet

Antoine Fabre d'Olivet (December 8, 1767, Ganges, Hérault – March 25, 1825, Paris) was a French author, poet and composer whose Biblical and philosophical hermeneutics influenced many occultists, such as Eliphas Lévi, Gérard Encausse - Papus and Édouard Schuré.

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Anubis Shrine

The Anubis Shrine was part of the grave goods of Tutankhamun (18th Dynasty, New Kingdom).

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April 5

No description.

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Arabesque (1966 film)

Arabesque is a 1966 comedy thriller film directed by Stanley Donen and starring Gregory Peck and Sophia Loren, written by Julian Mitchell, Stanley Price and Peter Stone, based on The Cypher, a 1961 novel by Alex Gordon.

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Arkady Davidowitz

Arkady Davidowitz (born Adolf Filippovich Freudberg, 12 June 1930, Voronezh) is a writer and aphorist, author of over 50,000 published aphorisms.

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Armenian Egyptology Centre

Egyptology and the Armenian Egyptology Centre (AEC) were both simultaneously created in Armenia on December 25, 2006 under the initiative of director, Dr.

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Arroyo de Piedra

Arroyo de Piedra is a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site in Guatemala located approximately 2-3 km east/northeast of Dos Pilas and 3 km west of Tamarindito.

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Asemic writing

Asemic writing is a wordless open semantic form of writing.

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Ba (pharaoh)

Ba, also known as Horus Ba, is the serekh-name of an early Egyptian or ancient Egyptian king who may have ruled at the end of the 1st dynasty, the latter part of 2nd dynasty or during the 3rd dynasty.

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Bagshaw Museum

Bagshaw Museum is a local museum in the town of Batley, West Yorkshire.

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Bandar Sunway

Sunway is a township in Subang Jaya, Petaling District, Selangor, Malaysia.

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Battiscombe Gunn

Battiscombe George "Jack" Gunn, (30 June 1883 – 27 February 1950) was an English Egyptologist and philologist.

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Battle of Djahy

The Battle of Djahy was a major land battle between the forces of pharaoh Ramesses III and the Sea Peoples who intended to invade and conquer Egypt.

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Bentresh stela

The Bentresh Stella or Bakhtan Stella is an ancient Egyptian sandstone stela with a hieroglyphic text telling the story of Bentresh, daughter of the prince of Bakhtan (i.e. Bactria), who fell ill and was healed by the Egyptian god Khonsu.

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Bertha Porter

Bertha Porter (1852-1941) was an English biographer and bibliographer known for her editorial role in the compilation of the Topographical Bibliography of Ancient Egyptian Hieroglyphic Texts, Reliefs, and Paintings.

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Black Adam

Black Adam is a fictional supervillain and occasional antihero appearing in American comic books published by DC Comics.

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Bolon K'awiil II

Bolon K’awiil II was a Maya king of Calakmul (>771-789?>).

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Book of the Dead

The Book of the Dead is an ancient Egyptian funerary text, used from the beginning of the New Kingdom (around 1550 BCE) to around 50 BCE.

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Book of the Earth

The Book of the Earth is an Ancient Egyptian funerary text that has been called many names such as The Creation of the Sun Disk and the Book of Aker.

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Bronze Age

The Bronze Age is a historical period characterized by the use of bronze, and in some areas proto-writing, and other early features of urban civilization.

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C. Auguste Dupin

Le Chevalier C. Auguste Dupin is a fictional character created by Edgar Allan Poe.

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Carlsberg papyrus

The Carlsberg papyrus is an ancient Egyptian medical papyrus.

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Carr Van Anda

Carr Vattal Van Anda (December 2, 1864 – January 29, 1945) was the managing editor of The New York Times under Adolph Ochs, from 1904 to 1932.

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Carreras Cigarette Factory

The Carreras Cigarette Factory is a large art deco building in Camden, London in the United Kingdom.

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Cattle in religion and mythology

Due to the multiple benefits from cattle, there are varying beliefs about cattle in societies and religions.

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Central Park

Central Park is an urban park in Manhattan, New York City.

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Challenge of the Ancient Empires!

Challenge of the Ancient Empires!, also known as "Super Solvers: Ancient Empires!" is an educational computer game created by The Learning Company in 1990 for both MS-DOS and Macintosh.

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Character (symbol)

A character is a sign or symbol.

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Ch’orti’ language

The Ch'orti' language (sometimes also Chorti) is a Mayan language, spoken by the indigenous Maya people who are also known as the Ch'orti' or Ch'orti' Maya.

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Chocolá

Modern village of Chocolá Chocolá is a Preclassic Southern Maya site whose developmental emphasis was from ca. 1000 BC to AD 200.

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Coin purse

A purse or pouch (from the Latin bursa, which in turn is from the Greek, býrsa, oxhide), sometimes called coin purse for clarity, is a small money bag or pouch, made for carrying coins.

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Congo (film)

Congo is a 1995 science fiction action-adventure film loosely based on Michael Crichton's novel of the same name.

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Cretan hieroglyphs

Cretan hieroglyphs are generally considered undeciphered hieroglyphs found on artefacts of early Bronze Age Crete, during the Minoan era.

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Cubist sculpture

Cubist sculpture developed in parallel with Cubist painting, beginning in Paris around 1909 with its proto-Cubist phase, and evolving through the early 1920s.

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Cubit

The cubit is an ancient unit of length that had several definitions according to each of the various different cultures that used the unit.

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Culture of Venezuela

The cultures of Venezuela are diverse and complex, influenced by the many different people who have made Venezuela their home.

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Dagon (short story)

"Dagon" is a short story by American author H. P. Lovecraft, written in July 1917, one of the first stories he wrote as an adult.

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Damaidi

Damaidi (literally: Big wheat field), is the location of 3,172 sets of early Chinese petroglyphs, carved into the cliffs which feature 8,453 individual figures.

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Defective script

A defective script is a writing system that does not represent all the phonemic distinctions of a language.

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Den (pharaoh)

Den, also known as Hor-Den, Dewen and Udimu, is the Horus name of a pharaoh of the Early Dynastic Period who ruled during the First Dynasty of Egypt.

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Diary of Merer

The diary of Merer (Papyrus Jarf A and B) are logbooks written over 4,500 years ago that record the daily activities of workers who took part in the building of the Great Pyramid of Giza.

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Djer

Djer (or Zer or Sekhty) is considered the third pharaoh of the First Dynasty of ancient Egypt in current Egyptology.

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Domestic pigeon

The domestic pigeon (Columba livia domestica) is a pigeon subspecies that was derived from the rock dove (also called the rock pigeon).

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Don't Wake Me Up (song)

"Don't Wake Me Up" is a song by American recording artist Chris Brown, taken from his fifth studio album, Fortune (2012).

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Dream interpretation

Dream interpretation is the process of assigning meaning to dreams.

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Drill

A drill is a tool fitted with a cutting tool attachment or driving tool attachment, usually a drill bit or driver bit, used for boring holes in various materials or fastening various materials together.

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Dropa stones

The Dropa stones, otherwise known as the Dzopa stones, Dropas stones or Drop-ka stones, are said by some ufologists and pseudoarchaeologists to be a series of at least 716 circular stone discs, dating back 12,000 years, on which tiny hieroglyph-like markings may be found.

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Dwarfs and pygmies in Ancient Egypt

In Ancient Egypt, especially during the Early Dynastic and Old Kingdom periods, dwarfs and pygmies were seen as people with celestial gifts.

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E. A. Wallis Budge

Sir Ernest Alfred Thompson Wallis Budge (27 July 185723 November 1934) was an English Egyptologist, Orientalist, and philologist who worked for the British Museum and published numerous works on the ancient Near East.

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Edward Hincks

The Reverend Edward Hincks (19 August 1792 – 3 December 1866) M.A., D.D., was an Anglo-Irish clergyman, best remembered as an Assyriologist and one of the decipherers of Mesopotamian cuneiform.

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Egyptian faience

Egyptian faience is a sintered-quartz ceramic displaying surface vitrification which creates a bright lustre of various colours, with blue-green being the most common.

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Egyptian hieroglyphs

Egyptian hieroglyphs were the formal writing system used in Ancient Egypt.

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Egyptian medical papyri

Egyptian medical papyri are ancient Egyptian texts written on papyrus which permit a glimpse at medical procedures and practices in ancient Egypt.

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El Matareya, Cairo

Mataria (المطرية) is a district in the northern region of Greater Cairo, east of the Nile, in Egypt.

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El Perú (Maya site)

El Perú (also known as Waka'), is a pre-Columbian Maya archeological site occupied during the Preclassic and Classic cultural chronology periods (roughly 500 BC to 800 AD).

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Elmar Rojas

Elmar René Rojas Azurdia (1942 in San Raymundo Peñafort, Guatemala – 18 February 2018), practiced as an architect before studying art in Guatemala, Spain, France and Italy.

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Emoticon

An emoticon (rarely pronounced) is a pictorial representation of a facial expression using characters—usually punctuation marks, numbers, and letters—to express a person's feelings or mood, or as a time-saving method.

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Empire and Communications

Empire and Communications is a book published in 1950 by University of Toronto professor Harold Innis.

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Epigraphy

Epigraphy (ἐπιγραφή, "inscription") is the study of inscriptions or epigraphs as writing; it is the science of identifying graphemes, clarifying their meanings, classifying their uses according to dates and cultural contexts, and drawing conclusions about the writing and the writers.

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Evelyn Underhill

Evelyn Underhill (6 December 1875 – 15 June 1941) was an English Anglo-Catholic writer and pacifist known for her numerous works on religion and spiritual practice, in particular Christian mysticism.

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Ezekiel Stone Wiggins

Ezekiel Stone Wiggins (December 4, 1839 – August 14, 1910) was a Canadian weather and earthquake predictor known as the "Ottawa Prophet".

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Faiyum Oasis

The Faiyum Oasis (واحة الفيوم Waḥet El Fayyum) is a depression or basin in the desert immediately to the west of the Nile south of Cairo.

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Famine Stela

The Famine Stela is an inscription written in hieroglyphs located on Sehel Island in the Nile near Aswan in Egypt, which tells of a seven-year period of drought and famine during the reign of the 3rd dynasty king Djoser.

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Ferret

The ferret (Mustela putorius furo) is the domesticated form of the European polecat, a mammal belonging to the same genus as the weasel, Mustela of the family Mustelidae.

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Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi

Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi (Fountain of the Four Rivers) is a fountain in the Piazza Navona in Rome, Italy.

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Fortune (Chris Brown album)

Fortune is the fifth studio album by American singer Chris Brown, released on June 29, 2012.

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Four sons of Horus

The four sons of Horus were a group of four gods in Egyptian religion, who were essentially the personifications of the four canopic jars, which accompanied mummified bodies.

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Fourth Dynasty of Egypt

The Fourth Dynasty of ancient Egypt (notated Dynasty IV or Dynasty 4) is characterized as a "golden age" of the Old Kingdom of Egypt.

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Francesco Salvolini

Francesco Salvolini (Faenza 1810February 1838) (also known as François Salvolini) was a scholar of Ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs who worked with Jean-François Champollion on deciphering hieroglyphs near the end of the latter's life.

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Geb

Geb was the Egyptian god of the Earth and later a member of the Ennead of Heliopolis.

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Gentleman detective

The gentleman detective is a type of fictional character.

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Ghost

In folklore, a ghost (sometimes known as an apparition, haunt, phantom, poltergeist, shade, specter or spectre, spirit, spook, and wraith) is the soul or spirit of a dead person or animal that can appear to the living.

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Giuseppe Raddi

Giuseppe Raddi (9 July 1770 in Florence, Italy – 6 September 1829 the island of Rhodes) was an Italian botanist.

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Glyph

In typography, a glyph is an elemental symbol within an agreed set of symbols, intended to represent a readable character for the purposes of writing.

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Goad

The goad is a traditional farming implement, used to spur or guide livestock, usually oxen, which are pulling a plough or a cart; used also to round up cattle.

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Great Karnak Inscription

The Great Karnak Inscription is an ancient Egyptian hieroglyphic inscription belonging to the 19th dynasty Pharaoh Merneptah.

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Great Sphinx of Giza

The Great Sphinx of Giza (translit,, The Terrifying One; literally: Father of Dread), commonly referred to as the Sphinx of Giza or just the Sphinx, is a limestone statue of a reclining sphinx, a mythical creature with the body of a lion and the head of a human.

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Green

Green is the color between blue and yellow on the visible spectrum.

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Hapi (Nile god)

Hapi was the god of the annual flooding of the Nile in ancient Egyptian religion.

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Hapi (Son of Horus)

Hapi, sometimes transliterated as Hapy, is one of the Four sons of Horus in ancient Egyptian religion, depicted in funerary literature as protecting the throne of Osiris in the Underworld.

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Hatshepsut

Hatshepsut (also Hatchepsut; Egyptian: ḥꜣt-šps.wt "Foremost of Noble Ladies"; 1507–1458 BCE) was the fifth pharaoh of the Eighteenth Dynasty of Egypt.

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Heinrich Wuttke

Johann Karl Heinrich Wuttke (12 February 1818 – 14 June 1876, Leipzig) was a German historian and politician.

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Helmuth Theodor Bossert

Helmuth Theodor Bossert (September 11, 1889 – February 5, 1961) was a German art historian, philologist and archaeologist.

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Hieroglyph (disambiguation)

A hieroglyph is a character of the ancient Egyptian writing system.

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Hieroglyphic Mountains

The Hieroglyphic Mountains are a mountain range located in central Arizona.

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History of alcoholic drinks

Purposeful production of alcoholic drinks is common and often reflects cultural and religious peculiarities as much as geographical and sociological conditions.

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History of deaf education

The deaf community over time has worked to improve the educational system for those who are deaf and hard of hearing.

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History of early Tunisia

Human habitation in the North African region occurred over one million years ago.

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History of education

The systematic provision of learning techniques to most children, such as literacy, has been a development of the last 150 or 200 years, or even last 50 years in some countries.

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History of games

The history of games dates to the ancient human past.

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History of neuroscience

From the ancient Egyptian mummifications to 18th century scientific research on "globules" and neurons, there is evidence of neuroscience practice throughout the early periods of history.

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History of the wine press

The history of the wine press and of pressing is nearly as old as the history of wine itself with the remains of wine presses providing some of the longest-serving evidence of organised viticulture and winemaking in the ancient world.

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History of writing

The history of writing traces the development of expressing language by letters or other marks and also the studies and descriptions of these developments.

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Horror vacui

In visual art, horror vacui (from Latin "fear of empty space"), also kenophobia (from Greek "fear of the empty"), is the filling of the entire surface of a space or an artwork with detail.

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Hotep

Hotep (ḥtp) is an Egyptian word that roughly translates as "to be at peace".

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Hotepsekhemwy

Hotepsekhemwy is the Horus name of an early Egyptian king who was the founder of the 2nd dynasty.

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Human brain

The human brain is the central organ of the human nervous system, and with the spinal cord makes up the central nervous system.

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Hypnerotomachia Poliphili

Hypnerotomachia Poliphili (from Greek hýpnos, 'sleep', érōs, 'love', and máchē, 'fight'), called in English Poliphilo's Strife of Love in a Dream or The Dream of Poliphilus, is a romance said to be by Francesco Colonna.

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In Bed with Medinner (series 4)

This is a list of episodes of In Bed with Medinner episodes in broadcast order (where known), from series 4.

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Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull

Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull is a 2008 American action-adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg and the fourth installment in the ''Indiana Jones'' series.

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Isis

Isis was a major goddess in ancient Egyptian religion whose worship spread throughout the Greco-Roman world.

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Isputahsu

Isputahsu (also transliterated as Išputaḫšu) was a king of Kizzuwatna, probably during the mid 15th century BC (short chronology).

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Israelites

The Israelites (בני ישראל Bnei Yisra'el) were a confederation of Iron Age Semitic-speaking tribes of the ancient Near East, who inhabited a part of Canaan during the tribal and monarchic periods.

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Ithyphallic (album)

Ithyphallic is the fifth studio album by American technical death metal band Nile.

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Jacques Kinnaer

Jacques Kinnaer (born 1966) is a Belgian Egyptologist and author with an M.A. from the University of Leuven (1988).

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Jade

Jade is an ornamental mineral, mostly known for its green varieties, which is featured prominently in ancient Asian art.

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James Douglas (businessman)

James Douglas (4 November 1837 – 25 June 1918) was a Canadian born mining engineer and businessman who introduced a number of metallurgical innovations in copper mining and amassed a fortune through the copper mining industry of Arizona and Sonora.

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Jan Best

Jan Gijsbert Pieter Best (born 29 August 1941, Grou) is a Dutch pre- and protohistorian, comparative linguist, archaeologist, and author.

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John Scanes

John Scanes (1928–2004) was a British artist.

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John W. Tait

John W. Tait (born 1945) is a British Edwards Professor of Egyptology at the Institute of Archaeology, University College London, and was the head of the department till 2010.

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Julien Friedler

Julien Friedler (born 1950), a writer and contemporary artist, is the leading figure in the visual art movement known as Be art.

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Julio Alpuy

Julio Uruguay Alpuy (January 27, 1919 – April 5, 2009) was an Uruguayan painter, sculptor, and muralist.

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Karatepe bilingual

The Karatepe Bilingual (8th century BC), also known as the Azatiwada inscription, is a bilingual inscription on stone slabs consisting of Phoenician language and Luwian language text each, which enabled the decryption of the Anatolian hieroglyphs.

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Kathy Aoki

Kathy Aoki is a feminist artist who works in many different mediums, including printmaking, video and painting.

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Khenti-Amentiu

Khenti-Amentiu, also Khentiamentiu, Khenti-Amenti, Kenti-Amentiu and many other spellings, is an ancient Egyptian deity whose name was also used as a title for Osiris and Anubis.

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Knot (hieroglyph)

The ancient Egyptian knot hieroglyph, or girdle knot, Gardiner sign listed no.

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L

L (named el) is the twelfth letter of the modern English alphabet and the ISO basic Latin alphabet, used in words such as lagoon, lantern, and less.

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La Joyanca

La Joyanca is the modern name for a pre-Columbian Maya archaeological site located south of the San Pedro Martir river in the Petén department of Guatemala.

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Latins (Italic tribe)

The Latins (Latin: Latini), sometimes known as the Latians, were an Italic tribe which included the early inhabitants of the city of Rome.

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Lepsius list of pyramids

The Lepsius list of pyramids is a list of sixty-seven Ancient Egyptian pyramids established in 1842–1843 by Karl Richard Lepsius (1810–1884), an Egyptologist and leader of the "Prussian expedition to Egypt" from 1842 until 1846.

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List of Ace of Cakes episodes

The following is an episode list of the Food Network series, Ace of Cakes.

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List of birds of Egypt

This is a list of the species of birds found in Egypt, a country in north-east Africa.

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List of CD-i games

This is a list of games for the Philips CD-i media player/video game system, organised alphabetically by name.

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List of Foundation universe planets

This is a list of Foundation universe planets featured or mentioned in the ''Robot'' series, ''Empire'' series, and ''Foundation'' series created by Isaac Asimov.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/G

Category:Lists of words.

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List of Greek and Latin roots in English/H

Category:Lists of words.

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List of Mighty Max episodes

The following is a list of episodes for the television series Mighty Max.

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List of people considered father or mother of a scientific field

The following is a list of people who are considered a "father" or "mother" (or "founding father" or "founding mother") of a scientific field.

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Logogram

In written language, a logogram or logograph is a written character that represents a word or phrase.

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Loren Eiseley

Loren Eiseley (September 3, 1907 – July 9, 1977) was an American anthropologist, educator, philosopher, and natural science writer, who taught and published books from the 1950s through the 1970s.

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Lost Kingdom Adventure

Lost Kingdom Adventure is a Sally Corporation Interactive Dark Ride located at four Legoland theme parks around the world.

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Lotus chalice

The Lotus chalice or Alabaster chalice, called the Wishing Cup by Howard Carter, derives from the tomb of the Ancient Egyptian Pharaoh Tutankhamun (18th dynasty, New Kingdom).

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Louis Joseph d'Albert d'Ailly

Louis Joseph d'Albert d'Ailly (1741–1792), seventh Duke of Chaulnes and son of Michel Ferdinand d'Albert d'Ailly, was a chemist and French aristocrat.

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Maahes

Maahes (also spelled Mihos, Miysis, Mios, Maihes, or Mahes) (Greek: Μαχές, Μιχός, Μίυσις, Μίος, or Μάιχες) was an ancient Egyptian lion-headed god of war, whose name means "he who is true beside her".

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Mahmoud Ezzamel

Dr.

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Manitoba Legislative Building

The Manitoba Legislative Building (Palais législatif du Manitoba) is the meeting place of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba," ", at the Legislative Tour, Province of Manitoba.

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Martinez de Pasqually

Jacques de Livron Joachim de la Tour de la Casa Martinez de Pasqually (1727?–1774) was a theurgist and theosopher of uncertain origin.

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Maya script

Maya script, also known as Maya glyphs, was the writing system of the Maya civilization of Mesoamerica and is the only Mesoamerican writing system that has been substantially deciphered.

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Maya stelae

Maya stelae (singular stela) are monuments that were fashioned by the Maya civilization of ancient Mesoamerica.

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Memphite Formula

The Memphite Formula was a standardized greeting of First Intermediate Period and early Middle Kingdom Egyptian letters, which fell out of use in the early Twelfth Dynasty.

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Mesoamerica

Mesoamerica is an important historical region and cultural area in the Americas, extending from approximately central Mexico through Belize, Guatemala, El Salvador, Honduras, Nicaragua, and northern Costa Rica, and within which pre-Columbian societies flourished before the Spanish colonization of the Americas in the 15th and 16th centuries.

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Metropolis (Anatolia)

The classical city of Metropolis is situated in western Turkey near Yeniköy village in Torbali municipality - approximately 40 km SE of Izmir.

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Michael Gericke

Michael Gericke (born 1956) is an American graphic designer.

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Minoan civilization

The Minoan civilization was an Aegean Bronze Age civilization on the island of Crete and other Aegean Islands which flourished from about 2600 to 1600 BC, before a late period of decline, finally ending around 1100.

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Miraculous births

Stories of miraculous births often include conceptions by miraculous circumstances and features such as intervention by a deity, supernatural elements, astronomical signs, hardship or, in the case of some mythologies, complex plots related to creation.

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Mothra (film)

is a 1961 science fiction kaiju ''tokusatsu'' film from Toho Studios, directed by genre regular Ishirō Honda with special effects by Eiji Tsuburaya.

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Muisca

The Muisca are an indigenous group of the Altiplano Cundiboyacense, Colombia, that formed the Muisca Confederation before the Spanish conquest.

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Muisca calendar

The Muisca calendar was a lunisolar calendar used by the Muisca.

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Muisca Confederation

The Muisca Confederation was a loose confederation of different Muisca rulers (zaques, zipas, iraca and tundama) in the central Andean highlands of present-day Colombia before the Spanish conquest of northern South America.

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Muisca numerals

Muisca numerals were the numeric notation system used by the Muisca, one of the four advanced civilizations of the Americas before the Spanish conquest of the Muisca.

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Mummy: Tomb of the Pharaoh

Mummy: Tomb of the Pharaoh is a point-and-click adventure video game released on August 31, 1996 by Interplay Productions on Windows and by MacPlay, a division of Interplay Productions at the time, on Macintosh.

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Muong people

The Mường is an ethnic group native to Vietnam; it is the country's third largest of 53 minority groups, with an estimated population of 1.26 million (based on the 2009 census and five years of population growth).

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Museo Popol Vuh

The Museo Popol Vuh (Popol Vuh Museum) is home to one of the major collections of Maya art in the world.

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Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

Mustafa Kemal Atatürk (19 May 1881 (conventional) – 10 November 1938) was a Turkish army officer, revolutionary, and founder of the Republic of Turkey, serving as its first President from 1923 until his death in 1938.

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Naqa

Naqa or Naga'a (An-Naqʿah) is a ruined ancient city of the Kushitic Kingdom of Meroë in modern-day Sudan.

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Nebra (Pharaoh)

Nebra or Raneb is the Horus name of the second early Egyptian king of the 2nd dynasty.

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Nefer-Setekh

Nefer-Setekh (also written Nefersetekh) is the name of an Ancient Egyptian high official, who lived and worked either during the late midst of the 2nd or during the beginning of the 3rd dynasty.

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Neith

Neith (or; also spelled Nit, Net, or Neit) is an early goddess in ancient Egyptian religion who was said to be the first and the prime creator.

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Neithhotep

Neithhotep or Neith-hotep was an Ancient Egyptian queen consort living and ruling during the early 1st dynasty.

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Neocalyptis aperta

Neocalyptis aperta is a species of moth of the family Tortricidae.

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Niello

Niello is a black mixture, usually of sulphur, copper, silver, and lead, used as an inlay on engraved or etched metal, especially silver.

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Night of Pan

Within the system of Thelema, the Night of Pan, or N.O.X., is a mystical state that represents the stage of ego-death in the process of spiritual attainment.

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Niki de Saint Phalle

Niki de Saint Phalle (born Catherine-Marie-Agnès Fal de Saint Phalle, 29 October 193021 May 2002) was a French-American sculptor, painter, and filmmaker.

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Noli Me Tángere (novel)

Noli Me Tángere (Latin for Don’t Touch Me) is a novel written by José Rizal, one of the national heroes of the Philippines, during the colonization of the country by Spain to describe perceived inequities of the Spanish Catholic priests and the ruling government.

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Nubia

Nubia is a region along the Nile river encompassing the area between Aswan in southern Egypt and Khartoum in central Sudan.

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Oahspe: A New Bible

Oahspe: A New Bible is a book published in 1882, purporting to contain "new revelations" from "...the Embassadors of the angel hosts of heaven prepared and revealed unto man in the name of Jehovih..." It was produced by an American dentist, John Ballou Newbrough (1828–1891), who reported it to have been written by automatic writing, making it one of a number of 19th-century spiritualist works attributed to that practice.

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Only Connect

Only Connect is a British game show presented by Victoria Coren Mitchell.

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Outline of ancient Egypt

The following outline is provided as an overview of a topical guide to ancient Egypt: Ancient Egypt – ancient civilization of eastern North Africa, concentrated along the lower reaches of the Nile River in what is now the modern country of Egypt.

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Pahor Labib

Pahor Labib (Arabic: باهور لبيب Bahur Labib; born 19 September 1905 at Ain Shams, Cairo; died 7 May 1994) was Director of the Coptic Museum, Cairo, Egypt, from 1951 to 1965 and one of the world leaders in Egyptology and Coptology.

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Paleo-European languages

The Paleo-European languages, or Old European languages, are the mostly-unknown languages that were spoken in Europe prior to the spread of the Indo-European and the Uralic families caused by invasion of pastoralists from the Bronze Age Eurasian steppe that dominate the continent today.

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Paromeos Monastery

The Paromeos Monastery (ⲡⲁⲣⲟⲙⲉⲟⲥ), also known as Baramos Monastery (البراموس), is a Coptic Orthodox monastery located in Wadi El Natrun (the Nitrian Desert), Beheira Governorate, Egypt.

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Pendant

The word pendant derives from the Latin word pendere and Old French word pendr, both of which translate to "to hang down".

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Perot Museum of Nature and Science

The Perot Museum of Nature and Science (shortened to Perot Museum) is a natural history and science museum located in Dallas, Texas.

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Phaistos Disc

The Phaistos Disc (also spelled Phaistos Disk, Phaestos Disc) is a disk of fired clay from the Minoan palace of Phaistos on the island of Crete, possibly dating to the middle or late Minoan Bronze Age (second millennium B.C.). The disk is about 15 cm (5.9 in) in diameter and covered on both sides with a spiral of stamped symbols.

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Pictogram

A pictogram, also called a pictogramme, pictograph, or simply picto, and in computer usage an icon, is an ideogram that conveys its meaning through its pictorial resemblance to a physical object.

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Piedras Negras (Maya site)

Piedras Negras is the modern name for a ruined city of the pre-Columbian Maya civilization located on the north bank of the Usumacinta River in the Petén department of northeastern Guatemala.

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Platform bed

A platform bed, also known as a cabin bed, is a bed the base of which consists of a raised, level, usually rectangular horizontal solid frame, often with rows of flexible wooden slats or latticed structure meant to support just a mattress.

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Poultry

Poultry are domesticated birds kept by humans for their eggs, their meat or their feathers.

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Power Rangers Operation Overdrive

Power Rangers Operation Overdrive is the fifteenth season and anniversary of the American television franchise Power Rangers.

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Prehistoric Egypt

The prehistory of Egypt spans the period from earliest human settlement to the beginning of the Early Dynastic Period of Egypt around 3100 BC, starting with the first Pharaoh, Narmer for some egyptologists, Hor-Aha for others, (also known as Menes).

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Primitivism

Primitivism is a mode of aesthetic idealization that either emulates or aspires to recreate "primitive" experience.

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Proto-Cubism

Proto-Cubism (also referred to as Protocubism, Pre-Cubism or Early Cubism) is an intermediary transition phase in the history of art chronologically extending from 1906 to 1910.

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Proto-Sinaitic script

Proto-Sinaitic, also referred to as Sinaitic, Proto-Canaanite, Old Canaanite, or Canaanite, is a term for both a Middle Bronze Age (Middle Kingdom) script attested in a small corpus of inscriptions found at Serabit el-Khadim in the Sinai Peninsula, Egypt, and the reconstructed common ancestor of the Paleo-Hebrew, Phoenician and South Arabian scripts (and, by extension, of most historical and modern alphabets).

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Puppetry

Puppetry is a form of theatre or performance that involves the manipulation of puppets – inanimate objects, often resembling some type of human or animal figure, that are animated or manipulated by a human called a puppeteer.

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Pyramid of Pepi II

The Pyramid of Pepi II was the tomb of Pharaoh Pepi II, located in southern Saqqara, to the northwest of the Mastabat al-Fir’aun.

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Qahedjet

Qahedjet (also Hor-Qahedjet) could be the horus name of an Ancient Egyptian king (pharaoh) who may have ruled during the 3rd dynasty or could be a voluntarily archaistic representation of Thutmose III.

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Quiriguá

Quiriguá is an ancient Maya archaeological site in the department of Izabal in south-eastern Guatemala.

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Rachel Jordan

Rachel Jordan (born 8 May 1968) is a British artist and has been a frequent guest exhibitor with the Stuckists.

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Ramesseum medical papyri

The Ramesseum medical papyri constitute a collection of ancient Egyptian medical documents dating back to the early 18th century BC, found in the temple of the Ramesseum.

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Recipe

A recipe is a set of instructions that describes how to prepare or make something, especially a culinary dish.

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Register (art)

In art and archaeology, in sculpture as well as in painting, a register is a horizontal level in a work that consists of several levels arranged one above the other, especially where the levels are clearly separated by lines.

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Relief

Relief is a sculptural technique where the sculpted elements remain attached to a solid background of the same material.

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Rhapsodomancy

Rhapsodomancy is an ancient form of divination performed by choosing through some method a specific passage or poem from which to ascertain information.

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Roberto Calasso

Roberto Calasso (born 30 May 1941 in Florence) is an Italian writer and publisher.

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Roof comb

Roof comb (or roof-comb) is the structure that tops a pyramid in monumental Mesoamerican architecture.

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Rosetta Stone

The Rosetta Stone is a granodiorite stele, found in 1799, inscribed with three versions of a decree issued at Memphis, Egypt in 196 BC during the Ptolemaic dynasty on behalf of King Ptolemy V.

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Rylands Papyri

The Rylands Papyri are a collection of thousands of papyrus fragments and documents from North Africa and Greece housed at the John Rylands University Library, Manchester, UK.

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Saddle-billed stork

The saddle-billed stork (Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis) is a large wading bird in the stork family, Ciconiidae.

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Samuel Sharpe (scholar)

Samuel Sharpe (1799–1881) was an English Unitarian banker who, in his leisure hours, made substantial contributions to Egyptology and Biblical translation.

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Scarab (artifact)

Scarabs were popular amulets and impression seals in Ancient Egypt.

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Scion of Ikshvaku

Scion of Ikshvaku (also known as Ram: Scion of Ikshvaku) is a fantasy book by Indian author Amish Tripathi, released on 22 June 2015.

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Scorpion I

Scorpion I was the first of two rulers of Upper Egypt during Naqada III.

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Sea Peoples

The Sea Peoples are a purported seafaring confederation that attacked ancient Egypt and other regions of the East Mediterranean prior to and during the Late Bronze Age collapse (1200–900 BC).

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Sekhem scepter

*For the alternative therapy sometimes referred to as Sekhem, see Seichim. The Sekhem-scepter is a type of ritual scepter in ancient Egypt.

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Semerkhet

Semerkhet is the Horus name of an early Egyptian king who ruled during the first dynasty.

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Semitic languages

The Semitic languages are a branch of the Afroasiatic language family originating in the Middle East.

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Sendion

Sendion also spelled Sendiun or sendyoun (Arabic language: سنديون is a village in northeastern Egypt located in Qalyubia Governorate belonging to the town of Qalyub about 20 km north of Cairo.

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Senedj

Senedj (also known as Sened and Sethenes) is the name of an early Egyptian king (pharaoh), who may have ruled during the 2nd dynasty.

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Senet

Senet (or Senat) is a board game from ancient Egypt whose original rules are the subject of conjecture.

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Seshat

Seshat, under various spellings, was the ancient Egyptian goddess of wisdom, knowledge, and writing.

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Shechem

Shechem, also spelled Sichem (שְׁכָם / Standard Šəḵem Tiberian Šeḵem, "shoulder"), was a Canaanite city mentioned in the Amarna letters, and is mentioned in the Hebrew Bible as an Israelite city of the tribe of Manasseh and the first capital of the Kingdom of Israel.

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Shuti hieroglyph (two-feather adornment)

hieroglyph #2|P7|align.

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SMS language

SMS language, textese or texting language is the abbreviated language and slang commonly used with mobile phone text messaging, or other Internet-based communication such as email and instant messaging.

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Sneferka

Sneferka is the serekh-name of an early Egyptian king who may have ruled at the end of the 1st dynasty.

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Solomon Kane

Solomon Kane is a fictional character created by the pulp-era writer Robert E. Howard.

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Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations

Spanish conquest of the Chibchan Nations refers to the conquest by the Spanish monarchy of the Chibcha language-speaking nations, mainly the Muisca and Tairona that inhabited present-day Colombia, beginning the Spanish colonization of the Americas.

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Static in Transmission

Static in Transmission is the 8th studio album by the Canadian new wave band Spoons.

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Statues of Amun in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa

At least three Ancient Egyptian granitic gneiss statues of Amun in the form of a ram protecting King Taharqa were displayed at the Temple of Amun at Kawa in Nubia.

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Staveless runes

Staveless runes were the climax of the simplification process in the evolution of runic alphabets that had started when the Elder Futhark was superseded by the Younger Futhark.

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Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu

The Stele of Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu (also known as the Stele of Revealing) is a painted, wooden offering stele located in Thebes, Egypt.

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Sumer

SumerThe name is from Akkadian Šumeru; Sumerian en-ĝir15, approximately "land of the civilized kings" or "native land".

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Sun Language Theory

The Sun Language Theory (Güneş Dil Teorisi) was a Turkish nationalist pseudoscientific linguistic hypothesis developed in Turkey in the 1930s that proposed that all human languages are descendants of one proto-Turkic primal language.

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Superman: The Feral Man of Steel

Superman: The Feral Man of Steel (Superman Annual #6) is a DC Comics Elseworlds special published in 1994.

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Text comics

Text comics or a text comic is a form of comics where the stories are told in captions below the images and without the use of speech balloons.

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The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket

The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket (1838) is the only complete novel written by American writer Edgar Allan Poe.

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The Search (TV series)

The Search was a seven part television show on Channel 4, which first aired on 7 January 2007, the final episode was broadcast on 24 February 2007.

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Theobroma cacao

Theobroma cacao, also called the cacao tree and the cocoa tree, is a small (tall) evergreen tree in the family Malvaceae, native to the deep tropical regions of the Americas.

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Thoth

Thoth (from Greek Θώθ; derived from Egyptian ḏḥw.ty) is one of the deities of the Egyptian pantheon.

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Three hares

The three hares (or three rabbits) is a circular motif or meme appearing in sacred sites from the Middle and Far East to the churches of Devon, England (as the "Tinners' Rabbits"), and historical synagogues in Europe.

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Tikal

Tikal (Tik’al in modern Mayan orthography) is the ruin of an ancient city, which was likely to have been called Yax Mutal, found in a rainforest in Guatemala.

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Timeline of Middle Eastern history

This timeline tries to compile dates of important historical events that happened in or that led to the rise of the Middle East.

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Tomb of Ptahmes

The Tomb of Ptahmes is a sepulchre in the necropolis of Saqqara, Egypt.

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Turin King List

The Turin King List, also known as the Turin Royal Canon, is an ancient Egyptian hieratic papyrus thought to date from the reign of Pharaoh Ramesses II, now in the Museo Egizio (Egyptian Museum) in Turin.

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Two Ladies

In Ancient Egyptian texts, the "Two Ladies" (Egyptian: Nebty) was a religious euphemism for the goddesses Wadjet and Nekhbet, two deities who were patrons of the Ancient Egyptians and worshiped by all after the unification of its two parts, Lower Egypt, and Upper Egypt.

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Unown

is a Pokémon species in Nintendo and Game Freak's Pokémon franchise.

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Valyrian languages

The Valyrian languages are a fictional language family in the A Song of Ice and Fire series of fantasy novels by George R. R. Martin, and in their television adaptation Game of Thrones.

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Voortrekker Monument

The Voortrekker Monument is located just south of Pretoria in South Africa.

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Vriesea hieroglyphica

Vriesea hieroglyphica is a plant species in the genus Vriesea.

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Wad ban Naqa

Wad ben Naga (also Wad Ban Naqa or Wad Naga) is the name of an ancient town of the Kushitic Kingdom of Meroë in present-day Sudan.

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Wadjenes

Wadjenes (ancient Eyptian Wadj-nes, which means "fresh of tongue"), also known as Wadjlas, Ougotlas and Tlas, is the name of an early Egyptian king who may have ruled during the 2nd dynasty.

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Wadjet

Wadjet (or; Egyptian wꜢḏyt "green one"), known to the Greek world as Uto (Οὐτώ/) or Buto (Βουτώ/) among other names including Wedjat, Uadjet, and Udjo was originally the ancient local goddess of the city of Dep (Buto).

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Wah-Sut

Wah-Sut (Wah-sut-Khakaure-maa-kheru-em-Abdju- Enduring-are-the-places-of-Khakaure-justified-in-Abydos) is a town located south of Abydos in Middle Egypt.

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Wassily Kandinsky

Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky (Vasily Vasilyevich Kandinsky) (– 13 December 1944) was a Russian painter and art theorist.

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Weneg (pharaoh)

Weneg (or Uneg), also known as Weneg-Nebty, is the throne name of an early Egyptian king, who ruled during the second dynasty.

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What the Ancients Did for Us

What the Ancients Did for Us is a 2005 BBC documentary series presented by Adam Hart-Davis that examines the impact of ancient civilizations on modern society.

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William E. Gates

William Edmond Gates (December 8, 1863 – April 24, 1940) was an American Mayanist.

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Writing

Writing is a medium of human communication that represents language and emotion with signs and symbols.

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Writing system

A writing system is any conventional method of visually representing verbal communication.

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Yupik

The Yupik are a group of indigenous or aboriginal peoples of western, southwestern, and southcentral Alaska and the Russian Far East.

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Yupik languages

The Yupik languages are the several distinct languages of the several Yupik peoples of western and south-central Alaska and northeastern Siberia.

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0

0 (zero) is both a number and the numerical digit used to represent that number in numerals.

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12 to the Moon

12 to the Moon is a 1960 independently made American black-and-white science fiction film, produced and written by Fred Gebhardt, directed by David Bradley, that stars Ken Clark, Michi Kobi, Tom Conway, and Anna-Lisa.

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1790s in archaeology

The decade of the 1790s in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1799 in science

The year 1799 in science and technology involved many significant events, listed below.

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1815 in archaeology

The year 1815 in archaeology involved some significant events.

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1820s

The 1820s decade ran from January 1, 1820, to December 31, 1829.

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196 BC

Year 196 BC the fifth year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar.

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References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hieroglyph

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