Focus 1, 27
Forum: Letters 1
Bookshelf 4
Malcolm Lowery: Some Notes on Senmut’s Ceiling 7
Michael Reade: Senmut and Phaeton 10
Hyam Maccoby:
“Worlds in Collision” and the Birth of Monotheism 18
Lewis M. Greenberg:
“Peoples of the Sea”: an Art Historical Perspective 20
Eric Crew: Electricity in Astronomy (4) 24
Editor: R. M. Lowery 11, Adcott Road Acklam Middlesbrough Cleveland TS5 7ER Assistant Editors: Andrew Hamilton Associate Editor: |
OFFICERS OF THE SOCIETY
Chairman: Secretary: Ralph Amelan Treasurer: Information Officer: Convenor, |
The S.I.S. Review appears four times per year. Membership subscription includes entitlement to one year’s issues; the Review is also available to non-members on a subscription basis. The views expressed in these pages are not necessarily those of the Society; nor can the Society vouch for the accuracy of statements of fact (outside the immediate sphere of Society business) or of interpretations contained herein. Letters addressed to the Editor will be assumed to be for publication unless including a statement to the contrary; the Editors reserve the right to abridge letters for publication. Whilst every care will be taken with material received, no responsibility can be accepted for loss of or damage to unsolicited mss. or illustrative matter.
COVER ILLUSTRATION: The astronomical ceiling in the unfinished tomb of Senmut (XVIIIth Dynasty), as shown in the Isis article of 1930 by A. Pogo (first publication: Bull. Met. Mus. of Art, 1923, Vol. 18). It is said to measure approx. 10 x 12ft, At the top: the Southern Panel; the Northern Panel below. West is to the left, East to the right. The four deities in boats on the southern panel are identified (from left) as Saturn, Jupiter (both manifestations of Horus), Sirius (Isis-Sepdet) and Orion (Osiris-Sah). Venus is taken to be represented by the Phoenix (Bennu) at far left, immediately preceded by a tiny figure of Set as Mercury. Mars is absent. |
ISSN 0308-3276