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6 result(s) for "Egypt Fayyūm."
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The Pyramid Builders of Ancient Egypt
In Rosalie David's hands, the Egyptian builders of the pyramids are revealed as simple people, leading ordinary lives while they are engaged on building the great tomb for a Pharoah. This is an engrossing detective story, bringing to the general reader a fascinating picture of a special community that lived in Egypt and built one of the pyramids, some four thousand years ago.
A Jewish Epitaph from the Fayum
This paper presents an edition of a previously unpublished Ptolemaic Jewish epitaph from the Fayum (Egypt). The epitaph is stored in the Kom Aushim (Karanis) magazine and was discovered by the author in the spring of 2014 while working in the magazine. This is the first known Jewish epitaph from the Fayum region.
Multi-Image and Multi-Sensor Change Detection for Long-Term Monitoring of Arid Environments With Landsat Series
An automated procedure has been proposed to monitor by multispectral satellite imagery the cultivation expansion between 1987 and 2013 in the arid environment of the Fayyum Oasis (Egypt), which is subject to land reclamation. A change detection procedure was applied to the four years investigated (1987, 1998, 2003 and 2013). This long-term analysis is based on images from the Landsat series, adopting a classification strategy relying on vegetation index computations. In particular: (a) the consequences of the radiometric differences of three Landsat sensors on the vegetation index values were analyzed using data simulated by a hyperspectral Hyperion image; (b) the problems resulting from harvesting cycles were minimized using five images per year, after a preliminary analysis on the effects deriving from the number of processed images; (c) an accuracy assessment was carried out on the 2003 and 2013 maps using high resolution images for a portion of the investigated area, with an estimated overall accuracy of 91% for the change detection. The method is implemented in a batch procedure and can be applied to other similar environmental contexts, supporting analyses for sustainable development and exploitation of soil and water resources.
AN IRRIGATED EMPIRE: THE VIEW FROM OTTOMAN FAYYUM
Using both Ottoman Turkish and Arabic archival materials, this article narrates the history of irrigation in Fayyum during the first half of the 18th century. Its environmental perspective shows how a shared reliance on natural resource management bound together extremely rural regions of the Ottoman Empire like Fayyum with centers of power in Istanbul and Cairo. It seeks to make two historiographical interventions. First, its focus on irrigation reveals how the center–periphery model of early modern empires fails to capture the complexity of relationships that rural regions of the Ottoman Empire maintained with other provinces and towns both in the empire and beyond. Water in Fayyum grew food that forged connections of commodity movement with areas of the Mediterranean and Red Seas. Second, through an examination of such intraimperial and transregional ties, this article argues that Egyptian peasants held much of the power in these relationships.
Irrigation in the Medieval Islamic Fayyum: Local Control in a Large-Scale Hydraulic System
Abstract Because of the unique set of sources available, the Fayyum in Middle Egypt offers a unique case study of large-scale irrigation from antiquity to the Islamic period. A close reading of a cadastral survey of the province from 641/1243-4 shows that the distinctive aspect of the Islamic period was the local control of water supply and management. Drawing on the engineering experience of the villagers, water allocation and management in the gravity-fed canals of the Fayyum were in the hands of iqṭāʿ holders and tribal groups along the main canals, a pattern similar to that which pertained in mediaeval al-Andalus.