A blind door set into a pharaonic tomb to allow the spirit of the deceased to come and go. |
|
Very architectural in style, the tapered and fluted columns with their palm leaf capitals evoke Egyptian pharaonic columns. |
|
By the end of the 18th century, archaeological findings led to the conclusion that pharaonic Egypt was black. |
|
Lastly, infibulation or pharaonic circumcision includes clitoridectomy and sewing of the vulva. |
|
He transformed Albany, the state capital, by building the Empire State Plaza, a modernist mall on a pharaonic scale. |
|
There is no doubt that Egypt's stolid old pyramid of state, capped by a pharaonic president, will be reshaped into something else. |
|
Ancient Egyptians left behind a rich artistic heritage in the form of pyramids, pharaonic painting and sculpture, hieroglyphics, and architecture. |
|
Egyptians used it alongside beeswax as a cleanser, moisturizer, and antibacterial agent since pharaonic times. |
|
The building was designed, after a suggestion by North Korea's Kim Il Sung, in a style combining pharaonic grandeur and totalitarian monumentalism. |
|
In the face of the public outrage against the pharaonic compensation of some, the government of many countries are threatening to limit by statutory action compensation of senior executives of listed companies. |
|
Citizens with voting rights can exercise some leverage over public policy priorities, and may prefer clean drinking water to pharaonic dams and other such projects. |
|
Archaeological evidence suggests that children living along the banks of the river Nile were being disabled by the disease even in pharaonic times. |
|
He respected the pharaonic religions and customs and he was proclaimed Pharaoh of Egypt. |
|
We are left with the honest hope that one day Pope Francis will visit our country that politicians love to call biblical country but treat it as pharaonic and sultan-like. |
|
Just like the rock art, Pharaonic Egyptian art emphasises the clothing and accoutrements rather than the physical features. |
|
At about 3300 BC, the historical record opens in Northern Africa with the rise of literacy in the Pharaonic civilization of Ancient Egypt. |
|
The Thirtieth Dynasty was the last native ruling dynasty during the Pharaonic epoch. |
|
Pharaonic circumcision is, perhaps significantly, a name given to the extreme infibulation form of the operation. |
|
This would strictly be the so called Pharaonic circumcision or infibulation which was the only type practiced in Sudan by then. |
|
In 1946, the Legislative Assembly passed a law that considered Pharaonic circumcision as an offence punishable by fine and imprisonment. |
|
|
There are also reports on early Holocene and Pharaonic period finds and occupations and one on magnetometric survey. |
|
The discovery was made at a site in the ancient Pharaonic capital of Heliopolis, today a sprawl of working and middle class districts in Cairo. |
|
Al said that the group had been shooting a part of their graduation project near Pharaonic monuments where they staged a protest. |
|
In the Sudan, advocacy against Pharaonic circumcision dates back to the third quarter of the 17th century by Sheikh Hamad Wad Um Mariom. |
|
The ancient Puntites were a nation of people that had close relations with Pharaonic Egypt during the times of Pharaoh Sahure and Queen Hatshepsut. |
|
The murals are also similar to others which were discovered in Pharaonic temples and cemeteries as far as composition and style are concerned, al-Sayyed added. |
|
Together, excision and infibulation are known as Pharaonic circumcision, from the fact that it is first known to have been practiced in the time of the pharaohs. |
|