Naqada
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Naqada
Naqada (Egyptian Arabic: ; Coptic language: ; Ancient Greek: , Ancient Egyptian: ''Nbyt'') is a List of cities and towns in Egypt, town on the west bank of the Nile in Qena Governorate, Egypt, situated ca. 20 km north of Luxor. It includes the villages of Tukh, Khatara, Danfiq, and Zawayda. According to the 1960 census, it is one of the most uninhabited areas and had only 3,000 inhabitants, mostly of Christian faith who preserved elements of the Coptic language up until the 1930s. The ancient town contained a cemetery that held approximately 2,000 graves. The first person to excavate the site was archaeologist Sir Flinders Petrie in 1894. Petrie was working for the Egypt Exploration Fund (now the Egypt Exploration Society) when he excavated the site. Some of the findings during the excavation included artifacts from the Amratian culture, Amratian (Naqada I) and the Gerzeh culture, Gerzeh (Naqada II). Archaeology Naqada stands near the site of a prehistoric Egyptian necrop ...
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Naqada Culture
The Naqada culture is an archaeological culture of Chalcolithic Predynastic Egypt (c. 4000–3000 BC), named for the town of Naqada, Qena Governorate. A 2013 Oxford University radiocarbon dating study of the Predynastic period suggests a beginning date sometime between 3,800 and 3,700 BC. The final phase of the Naqada culture is Naqada III, which is coterminous with the Protodynastic Period of Ancient Egypt, Protodynastic Period (Early Bronze Age ) in ancient Egypt. Chronology William Flinders Petrie The Naqada period was first divided by the British Egyptologist William Matthew Flinders Petrie, who explored the site in 1894, into three sub-periods: *Naqada I: Amratian (after the cemetery near El-Amrah, Egypt) *Naqada II: Gerzean (after the cemetery near Gerzeh) *Naqada III: Semainean (after the cemetery near Es-Semaina) Werner Kaiser Petrie's chronology was superseded by that of Werner Kaiser (Egyptologist), Werner Kaiser in 1957. Kaiser's chronology began c. 4000 BC, but th ...
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