May 12, Thursday
9.00–9.45 |
Registration |
10.00–10.30 |
Opening |
10.30–11.00 |
Horst Beinlich (Universität Würzburg), Der Herrschaftsbereich als Prestige-Objekt |
11.00–11.30 |
Coffee break |
11.30–12.00 |
Tamás A. Bács (Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest), The pride of the Ramessides: a note on a late Ramesside king-list |
12.00–12.30 |
Florian Löffler (Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften / Universität Tübingen), Der Thron der Götter (Nst-nTrw) in Edfu |
12.30–14.30 |
Lunch break |
14.30–15.00 |
Ewa Laskowska-Kusztal (Polish Academy of Sciences), The “centre for development” of the royal authority in Kalabsha |
15.00–15.30 |
Christine Raedler (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz), Creating authority – the high priest of Osiris Wennefer and a special kind of deification of Ramesses II |
15.30–16.00 |
Elizabeth Eltze (University of Auckland), The creation of royal identity and ideology through self-adornment: The jewels of ancient Napata and Meroë |
May 13, Friday
10.00–10.30 |
Ulrich Luft (Budapest), The Gate of Power |
10.30–11.00 |
Massimiliano Nuzzolo (Charles University, Prague), Human and divine: the royal paradigm in Fifth Dynasty Egypt |
11.00–11.30 |
Coffee break |
11.30–12.00 |
Julia Budka (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, München), Constructing royal authority in New Kingdom towns in Nubia: some thoughts based on inscribed monuments from private residences |
12.00–12.30 |
Balázs Irsay-Nagy (Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest), “Scratch ‘Faith’ on nameless graves”: A new attribution for KV 42 |
12.30–14.30 |
Lunch break |
14.30–15.00 |
Anthony Spalinger (University of Auckland), Ramesses III at Medinet Habu: Sensory Models |
15.00–15.30 |
Andrzej Ćwiek (Adam Mickiewicz University / Poznań Archaeological Museum), The two fathers of Hatshepsut and the ideology of kingship |
15.30–16.00 |
Coffee break |
16.00–16.30 |
Monika Dolinska (National Museum, Warsaw), Birds and felines in royal iconography |
16.30–17.00 |
Daniel von Recklinghausen (Heidelberger Akademie der Wissenschaften / Universität Tübingen), Wie die Göttlichkeit auf den König übergeht. Überlegungen anhand der Szenen der Übergabe des Sichelschwertes an den König in den Tempeln der griechisch-römischen Zeit |
May 14, Saturday
10.00–10.30 |
Dieter Kurth (Universität Hamburg), The wnn-formula in the ritual scenes of the late temples and the presence of the king |
10.30–11.00 |
Carola Vogel (Johannes Gutenberg-Universität, Mainz), From power to reputation and vice versa: The relationship between Thutmosis III and Senusret III reconsidered |
11.00–11.30 |
Coffee break |
11.30–12.00 |
Christopher Eyre (University of Liverpool), Calculated frightfulness as display of authority |
12.00–12.30 |
Filip Coppens & Jiří Janák (Charles University, Prague), The near and the distant king. Two oppositions in the concept of divine authority of the Egyptian king |
12.30–12.45 |
Closing |
Poster
Shih-Wei Hsu (Freie Universität, Berlin), Images of the Pharaoh
Download programme (updated)