Amongst much appalling news about Trump's war, I think this wins the award for the last thing anyone would think of doing (after public money has been spent flying them out) www.theguardian.com/politics/202...
Posts by Robert Frost
Having recently exchanged thoughts about criticism over human remains in UK collections, I hope this is not where we are heading (though there are some quite concerning parts about S Asian 1980s human remains trading, used to create part of this). Governance (or lack of it) is an issue here.
If you look hard enough, there's a Victorian mega-project for every occasion it seems! What could possibly go wrong with oil tankers heading for the Mediterranean via the Orontes?
By "good and bad practice": we need to distinguish between human remains dating back millennia (which are treated in much the same way whether in the UK or Egypt) from some of the unethically collected human tissue samples in anthropological collections.
Thanks for sharing. I saw the article (with "war on museums" theme) but not the letter: very well considered. One thing I'd add is that every article on this subject has an Egyptian mummy picture and, whilst it's clearly making headlines, it's impeding us from distinguishing good and bad practice.
New (short) article in @uk.theconversation.com: here, I explore why many British people (esp academics it seems) in Egypt and the Middle East wore indigenous dress in the C19th/ C20th. Cultural appropriation doesn't capture everything. theconversation.com/cultural-app...
Let's hope so, especially for those seeking "fiscal optimization" yet still expect to be given priority in evacuations ahead of the millions who will actually suffer from all this. Good set of posts though.
Our next season for The Oxford Seminars in Cartography ... #TOSCA @bodleian.ox.ac.uk @oxfordgeography.bsky.social Register at: visit.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/tosca
More info at: www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/maps/tosca @bcsmaps.bsky.social @ordnancesurvey.bsky.social
1st speaker is @drpragyaagarwal.bsky.social
Legend has it that one of the departmental geographers liaised with the architect who designed the Nottingham room, because he (cynically?) suspected estates might remove freestanding cabinets to free up space. So he had them built into the walls, floor to ceiling, making them hard to take away.
Robert Morkot is sadly no longer with us. Three months ago he was as energetic as ever, sharing research on forgotten byways on the history of Egyptology, keen to talk about anything I wanted to do so. His Black Pharaohs, was a key postcolonial work before we came up with the term. Rest in peace.
Not many of these places left unfortunately. Nottingham is an exception and the brilliant cartographer there, Elaine Watts, was showing me some maps last summer. It got "rediscovered" a few years ago after central timetabling tried to get their hands on the room...
Can you give a clue to the nearest order of magnitude?
At least they have got Ukraine correct.
Brilliant! Do you mind sharing who you went with and whether you needed extra insulation? Asking for a friend.
Congratulations Richard!
I certainly had no idea that author names get translated before today!
The absurdity of their argument is basically: "It's too hard to figure out how to pay everyone we stole from." arstechnica.com/tech-policy/...
Congratulations to @issegyptomania.bsky.social for hosting a great conference this weekend. Conferences always bring new insights: pyramids in Ukraine; faux Pharaonic fantasies at the British seaside; and the popularity of ancient in modern Egypt. Look forward to more to come in the future.🎉
Staff at the Louvre go on strike due to too many visitors. The Louvre is a first-class museum in many ways, but having only one entrance and exit doesn't help visitor flow. And the Mona Lisa doesn't just need its own room, it should be in a separate building.
news.artnet.com/art-world/lo...
I was about to write "not again!", but entirely understandable at the moment.
10/10 agreed for this case.
That sounds plausible and makes me wonder what's happening in areas that look like they're doing well in Europe. Very much hope the edgelands you've been studying are a special case, but clearly there's a warning here that they might not be. Thanks also for the news article.
This International Archives Week (9-13 June), BILNAS is celebrating the #ArchivesAreAccessible campaign by spotlighting the Libyan Archive Project, focused on enhancing the Archive’s descriptive metadata to better reflect Libyan cultural contexts and lived experiences.
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V interesting, thanks for sharing. Do you think the conclusions are applicable elsewhere too? In Mediterranean Europe (esp N Italy) the opposite trend of succession is occurring and biodiversity is increasing, esp with headline species like wolves and other large mammals. Unsure about other species.
This article makes some good points about the need to review human tissue samples on display in museums (e.g. in some anthropological collections), but I don't think it's useful to piggyback this onto Egyptology. The picture also shows coffins and not human remains.
If only...
Some quite extraordinary scenes in the House of Commons: former hardliners denounce Israel's actions. The ground is shifting. A chance for the government to take leadership www.theguardian.com/world/2025/m...
Some interesting stats on reading. Not much of a gap (as is sometimes reported) between men and women for amount of reading, but a more significant one for fiction vs non-fiction. 45% don't have an organizing system, see the page for size of personal libraries.
yougov.co.uk/entertainmen...