Accueil - Présentation - Bureau

  Groupe de Recherche Européen Pour l'Archéologie au Levant ______________Français

 

 
 

Archaeology news


 Wild oxen at the Qurta cliff

[15/06/2007]  

Cliffs in Upper-Egypt, located at some 10km from Djebel Silsileh, in 2005 revealed prehistoric rock decorations: Qurta I, Qurta II and Qurta III. The team of Dirk Huyge, The Royal Art and Brussles History museums (Belgium), reidentified in 2007 numerous representations of animals, both engraved and hammered [read more]


 Opening of the unpublished objects section

 [16/05/2007]  

Discover two unpublished predynastic objects, published by the GREPAL and revealed for the first time. You can discover the earliest known representation of a lion, a miniature palette, as well as a red ceramic with black rim etched with the figure of a wild ox, the ealiest animal representation found on a neolithic Egyptian vase. .

Also, a new travel program to the Oasis is proposed.


 Online publication of the Bamiyan Buddha file

[29/03/2007]  

You can now read a new file about the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhas, in 2001. In that year, Taliban forces used explosives to destroy two colossal and unique statues representing Buddha, to the west of Kabul, in the name of a Fatwa issued by the mollah Mohammed Omar.

We also draw your attention to the online publication of articles by our members, which you will find in the publications


 The site back online!

[23/01/2007]  

Dear visitors, the updated version of the GREPAL internet welcomes you. Those familiar with our site will notice that it has been overhauled. It has been enriched with new categories and offers of new services. We hope that you will take the time to discover it and that our online communications will respond to your expectations.

Thank you.


 Egypt building its first prehistory museum.

[23/01/2007]  

The Egyptian Supreme Counsel of Antiquities (SCA) has decided to construct a museum dedicated to the prehistory of the Egyptian Nile area. The governor of Quena, in Upper Egypt, has offered to host the building, not far from the Qena bridge. This museum is slated to expose more than a thousand objects that are currently conserved by the SCA. The opening date remains to be announced.


 From the Sahara to the Nile

 [23/01/2007]  

Illustrated by several photographs, this work by Jean-Loïc Le Quellec, Pauline and Philippe de Flers explores the early art of the Egyptian Sahara. The authors, through new mythologies, heighten understanding of the relations between the Nile Valley and the luxurious savannah which in Neolithic times stretched from the Atlantic to Egypt. The Sahara was fertile. [read more


 Tell el-Farkha

[23/01/2007]  

In February 2006, the Polish archaeology establishment made two major discoveries in the predynastic layers of Tell el-Farkha in the eastern Delta. Two statues with lost wooden cores and covered with gold foil were unearthed in a habitation layer dated to Naqada IIIb. One is 65cm long and the other is 35cm, and they have lapis-lazuli eyes. They are the only such examples for predynastic archaeology in Egypt. [read more ]


 Congrès ICOM, janvier 2007

 [23/01/2007]  

The 2007 international Egyptological event took place in Upper-Egypt at Naqada. The ICOM organized a convention on the history of the regions of Naqada and of Qus. 25km North of Luxor, Naqada was the seat of a powerful chiefdom of the 4th millennium. Most of the communications deal with Egyptian prehistory. The Italian school, in particular, presented the results of its excavations at Naqada. The academic sessions took place the 24, 25 and 26 January. [read more


 

 

In brief…

The GREPAL is an association under French law of 1901 and was created in 1997. It is made up of archaeologists, trained in Europe and in the East, as well as professionals from other scientific disciplines and communications specialists. The GREPAL addresses an informed public seeking greater knowledge of the origins, the relationships, and the civilizations of the Near-East and Egypt.

 

 

A few links...
 
http://www.muzarp.poznan.pl/muzeum/eindex.html
 

© 2007 Grepal. All rights reserved (unless otherwise mentioned).