The Aga Khan Award for Architecture

Nubian Museum , Egypt

Architect: Mahmoud El-Hakim Cairo, Egypt

Consultants: Arab Bureau for Design and Technical Consultation Cairo, Egypt

Landscape Architects: Dr Werkmeister & M Heimer Landscape Architects Hildesheim, Germany

and Sites International Landscape Architects Cairo, Egypt

Clients: Nubian Antiquities Salvage Fund Supreme Council of Antiquities

Cairo, Egypt

Sponsors: UNESCO - ICOM (International Council of Museums)

Paris, France

Date of Completion: 1997

1447.EGY Table of Contents

2001 Technical Review Summary (20 pages) 2001 Architect’s Record (5 pages)

2001 Project Data Form (1 page)

Architect’s Presentation Panels (10 panels on 5 pages) Images and Drawings (20 pages) List of Visual Materials (18 pages)

List of Additional Materials (1 page)

Lists of Slides (1 page)

Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

I. Introduction

The Nubian Museum celebrates the culture and civilization of the Nubian region of Egypt from prehistoric times to the present. It is located in the city of Aswan, on the eastern bank of the , 899 kilometres south of Cairo. The museum is a three-storey building with an outdoor exhibition area. It houses the main finds of the UNESCO salvage campaign carried out at the time of the building of the High Dam, which eventually flooded that whole region. Another major exhibit is a diorama which shows the daily life of Nubian villagers. It is a community museum with an education section that organizes trips, lectures and workshops for schoolchildren, and cultural events for the public at large. In April 2000 the museum was approved by UNESCO as a centre for museology and the preservation and conservation of archaeological remains for Africa and the Middle East.

II. Contextual Information a. Historical background

Egypt consists of five well-defined regions: the Delta, the Valley, the Eastern desert, the Western desert and . The region called Nubia today stretches along the Nile from Aswan south to Dabba in . The name Nubia is said to come from the ancient Egyptian ‘nbu’, which means gold, in reference to the famous gold mines of the area.

Historically, Nubia’s position as Egypt’s gateway to the rest of Africa made it an important trade centre. The Nubian people were settlers, who lived by agriculture, trade and pastoral activities. During the Old Kingdom, Nubia maintained its independence from Egypt but from the Middle Kingdom until the Thirteenth Dynasty it came under the domination of Egyptian kings. The Egyptians ruled Nubia again in the Eighteenth Dynasty, but through local governors and when the Twenty-Fifth Dynasty was established, Nubian rulers enjoyed a time of independence, political stability and economic prosperity. Even the Roman emperors, who showed great interest in Nubia, allowed it to retain independence under their sovereignty.

By the end of the sixth century AD Nubia had converted to Christianity. In the eighth and ninth centuries, political and economic stability again brought prosperity to the region. Nubia’s conversion to Islam occurred gradually through intermarriage with Arab traders. Muslim leaders from Egypt sent expeditions to Nubia but it wasn’t until the sixteenth century that its conversion was complete. Today, there is no political entity called Nubia. Its lands now lie partly in Egypt and partly in Sudan, with most of the northern region completely submerged under Lake Nasser following the building of the High Dam. b. Local architectural character

Traditional Nubian architecture is either the vernacular architecture of the villages, built in mud brick, or the architecture of the great temples. These were simple buildings of granite or

1 stone consisting of one or more gateways leading to a colonnaded courtyard, which led in turn to a hypostyle hall, followed by a vestibule and then the sanctuary, usually at the highest level.

Nubian villages spread along the Nile in clustered terraces, and throughout Nubia the principal entrances to houses face the river. The main entrance opens onto a courtyard with mastabas – raised seating areas. The rooms of the house are arranged along the courtyard’s far wall, the most important being the mandara, or guest room, which has a separate entrance and a catenary vault roof. Some living rooms – called tents or khayma – are simply open with a flat roof of palm branches. The houses are of mud, mud brick or stone, plastered inside and out by the women and children, who decorate the walls, especially the entrances, with bright and colourful designs. The roofs of the houses are of palm trunks or timber beams covered with palm thatch. Small openings at high level help to circulate the air brought into the house via the courtyard, which acts as a ventilating space and a ‘private piece of sky’ for the benefit of the household. c. Climatic conditions

Aswan is in a dry, temperate zone which enjoys a very mild climate in winter, making it a favoured winter resort since the beginning of the nineteenth century. It rarely rains, although torrential downpours occur every four or five years. The prevailing winds are from the north- east. Sandstorms come from the west during spring but last only a couple of days. In winter the temperature ranges from a maximum of 26˚C to a minimum of 10˚C, with a humidity maximum of 56 per cent. In the summer months the temperature can reach 42˚C, becoming mild at night at a minimum of 26˚C. The humidity in May goes down to 7 per cent. d. Immediate surroundings

The museum is in the hotel district of Aswan. To the east is the main road to the airport, which divides the site from two of Aswan’s key attractions, the Fatimid Cemetery and the Unfinished Obelisk. To the west is a local road which provides access to the site. A number of major hotel developments along this road have obscured the view to the Nile. The land along the northern boundary of the site is marked on the plans as public garden. Only a water tank at the top of the hill is visible from the museum site. The southern edge has an observatory structure but is mainly undeveloped. The architecture of the immediate surroundings is mainly of modern concrete construction in the ‘International Style’. e. Topography

The museum sits on a ridge running south-west of Aswan between the Nile Valley and the road to the airport. The site is an ancient Pharaonic granite quarry for obelisks and statues. The slope to the east is rather steep and the building platform sits 15 metres higher than the main road, a gradient of approximately 30 per cent. The west slope is gentler with the western road following up towards the museum.

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III. Programme a. What conditions gave rise to the formulation of the programme?

The foundation stone of the High Dam was laid on 9 January 1960 and the dam was opened on 15 January 1971. As a consequence a section of the Nile Valley was flooded to form Lake Nasser. This necessitated resettlement of 40,000 , movement of temples that would otherwise be submerged and excavation of the land before it disappeared under water.

The International Campaign to Save the Monuments of Nubia was launched by UNESCO in 1960. It ran forty archaeological missions from five continents and managed to move twenty- two monuments in twenty years. With the Egyptian government, UNESCO decided to establish the Nubian Museum at Aswan and the Egyptian Civilization Museum in Cairo to exhibit the finds of the excavations. To this end, a UNESCO executive committee was formed, consisting of fourteen members from different countries (one of which was Egypt), with observers from ICOM (International Council of Museums), IFLA (International Federation of Landscape Architects) and ICOMOS (International Council on Monuments and Sites). b. Objectives

The Nubian Museum is part of a wider policy of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (formerly the Egyptian Antiquities Organization) to showcase Egypt’s many civilizations over the centuries. The museum contains not only three thousand objects found in the UNESCO expeditions, representing the history of the area from the prehistoric, Pharaonic, Roman, Coptic and Islamic ages, but also a diorama of the daily life of the Nubian people, who sacrificed their homes for the continued progress of the Egyptian nation.

The museum is also a celebration of the amazing combined effort of the people of the world in response to the international appeal launched by UNESCO in 1960. It aims to play the role of ‘community museum’ through its education section, which organizes school trips around the museum itself and also to neighbouring temples, and hosts cultural events by Nubian artists in the outdoor amphitheatre (organized by the Ministry of Culture and recently brought under the management of the Egyptian Opera House). The museum is now also a centre for the preservation and conservation of archaeological remains from Africa and the Middle East under the supervision of ICOM. c. Functional requirements

According to the architect’s report submitted in March 1983, the list of accommodation was as follows: main exhibition hall; temporary exhibition hall; lobby with shops; ticket and information office; lecture room; VIP lounge; cafeteria; public toilets including facilities for the disabled; administration areas including a trustees’ meeting room; a library; an education department with schoolroom, workshop, patio, etc.; storage for exhibits; various workshops; restoration facilities and laboratories; security and workers’ quarters; a service entrance for

3 exhibits and staff with one control point; service lifts; and a service yard with all building utilities.

IV. Description a. Building data

The total area of the museum is 10,110 square metres, with a ground-floor area of 7,000 square metres on a 50,000-square-metre site. The project is in two sections: the museum building, which is in one volume, and the landscaped outdoor exhibition. The building comprises three storeys.

On the ground floor are the main entrance hall; shops; the temporary exhibition hall; VIP lounge and associated service areas; a 150-seat lecture theatre with three translation booths; public toilets; security and administration offices; staff living quarters and facilities area; and lifts for visitors, staff and services.

On the first floor are the cafeteria (with a kitchen service); the library; administration offices and meeting room.

At basement level are the main exhibition space of the museum, measuring 3,500 square metres, and the diorama; the education section with its own entrance from the garden and reception area, workshop, classroom, servery and dining area, children’s toilets and outside theatre; the restoration studios, comprising five laboratories – papyrus and fabric, organic, metal, inorganic, and a fumigation lab – as well as other facilities; the main storage areas; exhibition workshops; and the service yard with generator room, air-conditioning units, electrical room, boiler and loading platform.

The outdoor exhibition area includes a cave housing prehistoric drawings of animals; a Nubian house; an outdoor theatre for five hundred people; various exhibition pieces; two shrines – the maqqam of Saida Zeinab and the maqqam of the 77 Walis; one musalla (place of prayer) – Qubat Al-Mukhasal; and several graves, said to be Fatimid, Roman and Coptic in origin. A water canal represents the River Nile, surrounded by local flora and fauna. c. Evolution of design concepts

The positioning of the building was planned jointly by the architect, Dr El-Hakim, and Dr Werkmeister, the first landscape architect to work on the project. The museum was placed on the ridge of the site to preserve rock formations and provide an open view of the Fatimid Cemetery and the Unfinished Obelisk to the east. An overpass across the main airport road was even proposed to link these three sites, making the museum part of a tourist circuit.

The entrance is located on the west side of the building, oriented towards the Nile in the same way as traditional Nubian houses. The building is organized so that the main exhibition hall is placed centrally between the educational facilities to the north and the laboratories and service areas to the south. The massing of the building follows the contours of the site and

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blends well with the rock formation. The taller central zone was intended by Dr El-Hakim to reflect the architecture of the Pharaonic temples.

Dr El-Hakim’s concept for the internal planning of the museum was a series of ramps leading along the walls to a platform where the entire exhibition area would have been open to view, with the statue of Rameses II in the centre, lit from above by a skylight. The flow of the exhibits would end at the lowest point of the museum, at the eastern portico, leading to the outdoor exhibition areas. Due to the client’s misunderstanding that the ramps were for disabled visitors and therefore superfluous since there are two lifts, the ramps and walls were dropped from the scheme, and visitors now descend directly into the exhibition area via steps. Due to security considerations, the garden access was eliminated and the exhibition flow now ends at the foot of the stairs leading back to the main entrance.

The façades are all clad in hand-textured local sandstone built in alternating courses 30 and 60 centimetres wide. The windows are long, narrow, lozenge-shaped openings, grouped in pairs. An open triangle motif, used on the west façade, is taken from traditional Nubian vernacular architecture.

The concept behind the landscaping was the preservation and celebration of the granite rock formation. Dr Werkmeister even designed a rock formation that would climb the building from the east and link a roof garden to the rest of the scheme below. A stream of water would emanate from this formation for the irrigation of the plants, ending in a small pond at the Nubian ‘village’.

In 1988, Dr Leila Masri of Sites International became involved in landscaping the project. Her concept was that the landscape should represent the Nile Valley and she organized the outdoor exhibition area chronologically, starting with the prehistoric caves, then the Nubian village and the amphitheatre, and so on, ending at the front entrance of the museum.

Both designers envisaged entry to the garden to be from the lowest point of the internal exhibition as a continuation of the experience, and both linked the roof garden to the main garden with a rock formation. They also specified similar indigenous plants, requiring little soil and water, because the granite terrain makes plant propagation very difficult – it has been necessary to drill in order to create drainage channels and add soil for the planting. Sites International introduced waterfalls into the stream to reflect the cataracts that were historically so important to the Nubian environment. The ‘source of the Nile’ was to start from the rock formation that abutted the building. Abundant planting was intended to reflect crops. All paving and hard landscaping is of granite and sandstone. This was the first landscape project in Egypt carried out by an Egyptian firm.

The maqqama are run by Sufi sheikhs who hold dhikr (a remembrance ritual dedicated to Sufi saints) on Saturdays and Sundays. Independent access has been provided and the Supreme Council of Antiquities has upgraded the sites, adding services such as drinking fountains, toilets and seating areas at a cost of EGP 300,000.

5 c. Structure, materials, technology

The structural system of the museum is a reinforced-concrete frame with concrete block infill panels. The walls are cavity walls of 25 blocks, then 10 voids, then 25 more blocks, clad with 15 centimetre-thick sandstone dry-fixed on the outside and pink granite on the inside, except in one exhibition area where the internal wall finish is plaster. The floors are also of pink granite.

The roof-slab is of reinforced concrete with waterproofing and 7-centimetre extruded styropore for insulation, covered with granite tiling because the roof was originally intended to be a roof terrace. The ceilings in the exhibition areas are open-timber grids set out to reflect the wall layout of the museum and provide maximum flexibility for the moving of lights and services.

The building is completely air-conditioned and artificially lit, even during the day, in all parts. The air-conditioning system runs twenty-four hours a day at various capacities appropriate to the exhibits. The air-conditioning load is 300 tonnes per hour, designed for an ambient temperature of 42˚C and a required temperature of 24˚C. The system runs on two chillers, each with two sections, and fourteen air-handling units, which give some flexibility to the system. However, at the engineer’s office an analysis by the reviewer of the loads found that the exhibition areas (including the temporary exhibits and the diorama) require only 112.5 tonnes, i.e., one-third of the total load. The electrical load is 900 KVA and the building is provided with two generators. The water feature in the garden is a completely closed-circuit system and the water pumped around it is changed once every four months. Irrigation is through a combination of sprinkler and drip systems. d. Origin of technology, materials, labour force and professionals

The project employs the international technology of reinforced-concrete frame with infill blocks. The labour force are all local but the architects, consultants and contractors are from Cairo, with the exception of the original landscape consultant, who was German, and the designer of the display system, who is Mexican.

V. Construction Schedule and Costs a. Project history

The project was awarded to Dr Mahmoud El-Hakim in December 1979. Between then and April 1983 Dr Al-Hakim created five different schemes to accommodate changes requested by the client. The fifth scheme, dated 5 April 1983, was approved by the client, the Supreme Council of Antiquities. On the basis of this design the landscape architect, Dr Werkmeister, drew up his proposal and the architect provided 80 per cent of his working drawings. These were submitted to the client on 15 September 1983. A meeting to review the project by UNESCO was held at the end of September in Paris, to which the architect was not invited. The scheme was misunderstood and the architect was asked to review his work in light of the

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comments made. Because these comments, which would have changed the design considerably, were based on a misreading of the drawings, the architect responded to UNESCO’s report explaining himself in writing. The architect received a cancellation of his contract on 25 August 1984 on the grounds that he had missed the original deadline of 15 February 1980 for the submission of working drawings. After the architect’s dismissal, the project was taken over by the Arab Bureau for Design, the engineering consultants brought in by the architect. His inheritors sued the client successfully for the wrongful cancellation of the contract and were paid all the fees for his work.

From September 1984 until October 1985 the Arab Bureau altered the drawings to fit the client’s requirements. The museum as built is basically to the design of Dr El-Hakim. Changes were made in the internal circulation of the exhibition area, the shape of the skylight there, and the windows. Construction started on site in 1986 and was halted in 1991 with the building constructed but not fitted out. The project stopped for five years until 1996, when the building was fitted out and the landscaping finished. Sites International became involved at the end of 1988, and finished working drawings in 1991. They started work on site in 1996. The building was inaugurated on 23 November 1997 by President and Mrs Mubarak, with two hundred dignitaries from all over the world. The opening of the museum made the front page of the daily newspaper, Al-Ahram. The building was opened to the public in December 1997. b. Total costs and main sources of financing

The total cost of the building without the land or the interior fit-out is EGP 57 million (approximately USD 15 million). The project was completely funded by the Egyptian government, except for the cost of the display consultant, who was paid by UNESCO.

Breakdown of costs: Infrastructure : EGP 4,200,000 (USD 1,105,000). Labour: EGP 14,280,000 (USD 3,758,000). Materials: EGP 23,520,000 (USD 6,200,000). Landscaping: EGP 15,000,000 (USD 3,900,000). Professional Fees: Structure and engineering: design 3%, supervision 3%. Landscape: design 4%, supervision 3.5 %. Interior: design 5%, supervision 5%. Exhibit fees: EGP 875,000 (USD 250,000). c. Comparative costs

It is very difficult to compare the cost of this museum to others as it took a total of eleven years to build, with a hiatus of five years.

7 d. Qualitative analysis of costs

Building cost: EGP 2,065 (USD 590) per square metre Landscape: EGP 420 (USD 120) per square metre Furniture and equipment: EGP 1,340 (USD 383) per square metre e. Maintenance costs

The maintenance cost is EGP 1,250,000 per year, not including the salaries of the ten maintenance staff required to run the building, who are paid by the Egyptian government.

VI. Technical Assessment a. Functional assessment

The interior display functions well in terms of flow. Disabled access is provided to all parts of the building. However, the break in continuity between the indoor and outdoor exhibits is regrettable, as visitors miss out on one of the designer’s key features – the view across to the Fatimid Cemetery. This change of access also makes the chronological order of the outdoor displays hard to follow.

The lighting for some of the display cabinets and statues is very low, making it difficult to see them and weakening their hold on the viewer’s interest. The truncation of the first view of the statue of Rameses II, now partially hidden by a difference in levels, is also unfortunate. The client seems happy with the building as a centre of restoration and it has the largest facilities in Egypt but it currently seems under utilized. b. Climatic performance

The main orientation of the museum responds to the topography of the site and not the climate. The building is totally air-conditioned and artificially lit, even in the education section, cafeteria, offices and so on. The only concession to climate is the double-wall construction and the western portico, which shades the entrance from the sun. The ticket office, however, has no shading to protect waiting visitors. There are no treatment systems for either water or rainfall due to the dry climate and the function of the building.

Although the rock formations of the site have been preserved, the ‘River Nile’ is a closed circuit of water that requires constant pumping. Moreover, the existing garden has several features that are not according to the design of Sites International. The rock formation, which was planned to rise to the roof of the building, has not been built and now the ‘source of the River Nile’ is a mound that stands alone approximately 3 metres from the building. Three water jets have been added to the ‘River Nile’ and patches of lawn have appeared in several places. There are no shaded areas at all for sitting and enjoying the gardens, although ‘London park’-type benches are now being manufactured at the museum as seating for the garden.

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c. Choice of materials, level of technology

Local material is used to clad both the inside and outside of the museum. The project employs the modern technology of building in reinforced concrete with block infill. It is a well- finished building.

Seismic regulations were introduced into Egyptian building law in 1994, after design of this building was complete. The Aswan Fire Department controlled the fire aspects of the design. Four years ago, after torrential rain, the building did leak but was then, apparently, properly waterproofed. The local climate is seeing some changes due to the creation of Lake Nasser. d. Ageing and maintenance

The building is ageing well considering that it was completed in 1991. The only ageing problems it may suffer will be to due to the mechanical aspects of the project: the air- conditioning system, lighting and pumping of water around the site will require constant maintenance.

The building itself will not need extensive maintenance as its finishes are all hardy and well detailed, from the external sandstone finish to the granite on the inside walls and floors. Four years after completion the building is undergoing maintenance/upgrading work, at an estimated cost of EGP 200,000 (USD 57,000), mainly in the basement areas, where finishes are being improved. e. Design features

The project is well integrated into the site. The massing of the exterior works very well with the topography. The use of natural stone also helps in blending the building with the landscape.

The project has very little impact on its site. It is accessible on foot by tourists. School parties are carefully organized so that there is no overcrowding. As it is situated in a tourist district, there are no residences that would be disturbed by any increase in traffic.

The project is very successful with both tourists and local Nubians. At times, organizers have to divide parties between the garden and the building to accommodate everyone. The visitor numbers for last year are: 70,000 foreigners; 61,000 Egyptians; 8,300 foreign students; 36,300 Egyptian students; and 22,500 schoolchildren. The museum earned just over EGP 1,400,000 (USD 400,000) last year.

The main feature of the interior display is the statue of Rameses II (1304–1237 BC), the builder of the great temple at . This statue is unique because it retains some of its colour. Due to an unfortunate interior arrangement, when visitors first enter the museum they see the statue from just below his shoulders to his knees. They must then descend twenty- eight steps to the lower level of the museum before they can see the statue in its entirety.

9 The policy of the museum organizers is to use artificial lighting throughout and they have even closed off the skylight in the main hall, originally designed to illuminate the statue of Rameses. The objects are lit by fibre-optic light sources, which are completely safe. The level of light, however, is very low – whether due to design or bad maintenance is not clear. The use of pink granite everywhere, on walls and floors, adds to the dimness of the interiors and in some cases interferes with the visibility of the statues on display. Environmental control is monitored daily and controlled manually. Humidity is controlled through silicon gel placed in special drawers in the display cabinets. There is no seating in the museum exhibition areas; even the guards have nowhere to sit.

VII. Users a. Description of those who use or benefit from the project

The Nubian Museum is open in two shifts: in the morning, from 9.00am until 1.00pm, and in the evening, from 5.00pm until 9.00pm, seven days a week, all year long. This allows tourists to visit other sites during the day and enjoy the museum and Aswan’s evening climate at night. The users of the museum are: foreign tourists, who pay EGP 20 (USD 5), and Egyptian tourists, who pay EGP 2 (USD 0.5); Egyptian visitors to the Nubian performances (admission free); and school parties (admission free).

This museum is the first in Egypt to have an educational section. Students are offered lectures and workshops as well as guided tours. Plans are also underway to utilize this section in the evenings for teaching young women, aged from eighteen to thirty-five, traditional crafts and literacy.

The museum is also used by restorers and museologists from throughout the region. It hosted four workshops in the year 2000, including one for ICOM’s Programme for the Development of Museums in the Arab States, attended by fifteen countries.

A total of 120 staff members is required to cover the double shift (twenty administrative, forty security, ten educational, ten conservators, ten building technicians, thirty building maintenance). In the year 2000, the number of visitors to the museum reached a total of 198,215. Approximately half were Egyptian, not counting the schoolchildren, who numbered 22,489. b. Response to project

Architectural professionals like the project and are impressed with the level of finishing, taking into account the Egyptian context. They find that the building sits well in the environment but that the garden is artificial. The use of sandstone as a cladding material for a Nubian museum has been questioned in light of the tradition of mud brick architecture in this region, particularly in Nubia.

The local people are very proud of their museum. They bring their visitors to see it and feel it reflects their way of life. Their favourite section is the diorama, which has provoked interest

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and strong memories. Local users complain about the low level of illumination of the objects, the lack of seating areas both inside and outside the building and the absence of guides, as some visitors are illiterate. The museum plays a very important role in informing the rest of Egypt about the rich Nubian culture, combating prejudice against what some consider to be a backward part of Egypt.

Some of Aswan’s main hotels are in the vicinity of the museum. Hence its neighbours are tourists, who like the project but have complained about the low levels of illumination and the lack of labels on plants in the gardens.

VIII. Persons involved a. Identification

The Supreme Council of Antiquities: client. Ossama A W Abdel Meguid: museum director. Dr Mahmoud El-Hakim: architect. Consultants: Arab Bureau for Design: design and technical consultation. Mohamad Yusri Abdel Khalik: project architect. Samir Halawa: mechanical engineer. Shahrazad Abdel Fattah: electrical engineer. Mohamad Hafez: structural engineer. Dr Werkmeister, Dr Werkmeister & M Heimer Landscape Architects: original landscape architect. Dr Leila Masri, Sites International: final landscape architect. Pedro Ramerez Vazquez: museum art display designer. Contractors: Hassan Allam, Al-Nasr General Contracting Company. Silver Knight Exhibitions Ltd., interior contractors.

Hana Alamuddin May 2001

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Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

1 R010407 Interior displays 01.06.2001 KONRAD Aglaia 18x28 Y 2 R010408 Interior displays 01.06.2001 KONRAD Aglaia 18x28 Y 3 R010409 Interior displays 01.06.2001 KONRAD Aglaia 18x28 Y 4 S212923 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 5 S212924 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 6 S212925 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 7 S212926 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 8 S212927 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 9 S212928 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 10 S212929 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 11 S212930 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 12 S212931 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 13 S212932 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 14 S212933 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 15 S212934 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 16 S212935 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 17 S212936 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 18 S212937 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 19 S212938 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 20 S212939 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 21 S212940 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 22 S212941 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 23 S212942 25.03.2001 LATIF Gamil 24x36 Y 24 S213134 Lower ground flr/working drawing 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 25 S213135 Mezzanine floor plan/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 26 S213136 Elevations, E W/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 27 S213137 Elavations/N S/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 28 S213138 Sections AA-BB/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 29 S213139 Sections EE-FF/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 30 S213140 Stair details/working drawing 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 31 S213141 Sections details/WD 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 32 S213142 Cover/design drawing 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 33 S213143 Layout/design drawing 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 34 S213144 Upper ground flr/design drawiing 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 35 S213145 Mezzanine floor plan/DD 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 36 S213146 Ground floor plan/design drawing 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 37 S213147 1st floor plan/design drawing 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 38 S213148 Sections elevations/DD 5/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 39 S213149 General layout landscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 40 S213150 Lower ground floor 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 41 S213151 Sections elevations 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 42 S213152 General photos 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 43 S213153 Topography/working drawing 9/1983 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 44 S213154 Sites Int.-landscape design 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 45 S213155 Location map 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 46 S213156 Arab Bureau-axonometry 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 47 S213157 Werkmeister-sketch design-landscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 48 S213158 Map of Egypt/Aswan 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 49 S213159 Arab Bureau-topography map 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 50 S213160 Arab Bureau-elevations 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

51 S213161 Arab Bureau-lower ground floor plan 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 52 S213162 Arab Bureau-Ground 1st floor plan 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 53 S213163 Arab Bureau-sections AA-BB-CC 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 54 S213164 Arab Bureau-sections EE-GG 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 55 S213165 Arab Bureau-sections AA-A1A1-BB 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 56 S213172 Approach from road on W boundary 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 57 S213173 Approach from road on W boundary 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 58 S213174 West edge of site 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 59 S213175 West edge of site, tomb of 77 Walis 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 60 S213176 West edge of site 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 61 S213177 Looking back to Cathedral of Aswan 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 62 S213178 W boundary wall/water reservoir 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 63 S213179 W boundary wall 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 64 S213180 Seating area along W boundary 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 65 S213181 W boundary wall a museum in back 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 66 S213182 W boundary wall near entrance 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 67 S213183 Entrance gate 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 68 S213184 Ticket window, entrance gate 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 69 S213185 Entrance gate 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 70 S213186 Approach to museum 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 71 S213187 Museum, main entrance portico 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 72 S213188 Museum, main entrance portico/ramp 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 73 S213189 West portico looking to entry arch 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 74 S213190 Education section, entrance 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 75 S213191 Education section, courtyard 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 76 S213192 Education section, fire-fighting gear 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 77 S213193 Education section, schoolchildren 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 78 S213194 Education section courtyard, looking W 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 79 S213195 Education section amphitheatre/looking W 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 80 S213196 Education section amphitheatre/looking E 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 81 S213197 Education section, classroom 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 82 S213198 Education section, classroom 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 83 S213199 Start of service road looking East 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 84 S213200 Service road to service yard 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 85 S213201 Service road looking back to West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 86 S213202 South facade/wall of service yard 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 87 S213203 Service yard, looking North 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 88 S213204 Service yard, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 89 S213205 Service yard, looking East 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 90 S213206 Roofscape, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 91 S213207 Roofscape, looking to door of cafeteria 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 92 S213208 Roofscape, screen of cafeteria 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 93 S213209 Roofscape, looking North 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 94 S213210 Roofscape, looking Southeast 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 95 S213211 Roofscape, looking South 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 96 S213212 Roofscape, looking East 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 97 S213213 Roofscape, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 98 S213214 Roofscape, old skylight 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 99 S213215 Roofscape, old skylight 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 100 S213216 From roof looking E to Fatimid cemetery 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

101 S213217 From roof looking SE to Fatimid cemetery 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 102 S213218 From roof looking SE to Fatimid cemetery 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 103 S213219 Garden from roof 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 104 S213220 From roof looking NE to Aswan 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 105 S213221 View of "Source of Nile" from roof 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 106 S213222 Garden, from roof looking East 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 107 S213223 Garden, from roof looking East 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 108 S213224 Garden view looking South 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 109 S213225 Toilet window, AC unit detail 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 110 S213226 West facade, toward entrance portico 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 111 S213227 Southwest corner, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 112 S213228 Eastern curved wall 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 113 S213229 Eastern curved wall, exit portico 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 114 S213230 Portico to garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 115 S213231 "Source of Nile" in garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 116 S213232 View from portico to garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 117 S213233 Coptic ehibits in garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 118 S213234 Garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 119 S213235 Garden looking North 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 120 S213236 Exhibit in garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 121 S213237 Garden/view of stage E boundary wall 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 122 S213238 North facade 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 123 S213239 From entrance looking North 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 124 S213240 Water reservoir on Northern boundary 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 125 S213241 North section, graves 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 126 S213242 Maqqam Saida Zeinab 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 127 S213243 Maqqam Saida Zeinab 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 128 S213244 Maqqam 77 Walis 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 129 S213245 Maqqam 77 Walis 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 130 S213246 Garden detail, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 131 S213247 Exhibit detail, looking West 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 132 S213248 Garden on West side 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 133 S213249 Exhibit between entrance gate portico 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 134 S213250 Seating area near Nubia house 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 135 S213251 Cave exit 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 136 S213252 Nubian house in museum garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 137 S213253 Nubian house decoration 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 138 S213254 Eastern garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 139 S213255 Eastern garden, looking South 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 140 S213256 Nubian house in museum garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 141 S213257 "Village square" in front of Nubian hse 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 142 S213258 Entrance to cave 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 143 S213259 Museum garden lawn 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 144 S213260 Amphitheatre 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 145 S213261 Amphitheatre stage 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 146 S213262 East curved wall 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 147 S213263 Waterfall in garden 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 148 S213264 Museum workshop, garden bench making 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 149 S213265 Building detail 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 150 S213266 Landscape detail, floor finish 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

151 S213267 Landscape detail, wall floor finish 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 152 S213268 Childs room, A/C wall stain 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 153 S213269 Window detail, interior 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 154 S213270 Parapet detail 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 155 S213271 Window detail, exterior 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 156 S213272 Window detail, exterior 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 157 S213273 Inauguration plaque 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 158 S213274 Window detail, exterior 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 159 S213275 Window detail, interior 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 160 S213276 Gharb Aswan village, contemporary bldg 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 161 S213277 Gharb Aswan village, contemporary bldg 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 162 S213278 Gharb Aswan village, contemporary bldg 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 163 S213279 Gharb Aswan village, contemporary bldg 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 164 S213280 Gharb Aswan village, streetscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 165 S213281 Gharb Aswan village, streetscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 166 S213282 Gharb Aswan village, internal court 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 167 S213283 Gharb Aswan village, internal court 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 168 S213284 Gharb Aswan village, internal court 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 169 S213285 Gharb Aswan village, roofscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 170 S213286 Gharb Aswan village, roofscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 171 S213287 Gharb Aswan village, from roof 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 172 S213288 Gharb Aswan village, internal court 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 173 S213289 Gharb Aswan village, village square 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 174 S213290 Gharb Aswan village, courtyard 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 175 S213291 Gharb Aswan village, mandara 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 176 S213292 Gharb Aswan village, new house 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 177 S213293 Gharb Aswan village, khayma 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 178 S213294 Gharb Aswan village, roofscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 179 S213295 Gharb Aswan village, house door 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 180 S213296 Gharb Aswan village, streetscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 181 S213297 Gharb Aswan village, streetscape 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 182 S213298 Gharb Aswan village, mandara 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 183 S213299 Gharb Aswan village, town square 15.03.2001 ALAMUDDIN Hana 24x36 Y 184 S213300 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 185 S213301 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 186 S213302 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 187 S213303 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 188 S213304 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 189 S213305 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 190 S213306 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 191 S213307 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 192 S213308 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 193 S213309 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 194 S213310 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 195 S213311 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 196 S213312 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 197 S213313 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 198 S213314 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 199 S213315 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 200 S213316 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

201 S213317 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 202 S213318 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 203 S213319 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 204 S213320 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 205 S213321 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 206 S213322 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 207 S213323 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 208 S213324 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 209 S213325 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 210 S213326 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 211 S213327 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 212 S213328 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 213 S213329 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 214 S213330 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 215 S213331 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 216 S213332 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 217 S213333 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 218 S213334 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 219 S213335 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 220 S213336 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 221 S213337 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 222 S213338 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 223 S213339 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 224 S213340 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 225 S213341 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 226 S213342 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 227 S213343 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 228 S213344 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 229 S213345 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 230 S213346 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 231 S213347 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 232 S213348 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 233 S213349 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 234 S213350 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 235 S213351 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 236 S213352 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 237 S213353 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 238 S213354 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 239 S213355 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 240 S213356 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 241 S213357 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 242 S213358 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 243 S213359 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 244 S213360 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 245 S213361 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 246 S213362 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 247 S213363 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 248 S213364 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 249 S213365 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 250 S213366 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

251 S213367 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 252 S213368 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 253 S213369 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 254 S213370 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 255 S213371 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 256 S213372 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 257 S213373 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 258 S213374 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 259 S213375 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 260 S213376 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 261 S213377 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 262 S213378 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 263 S213379 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 264 S213380 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 265 S213381 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 266 S213382 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 267 S213383 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 268 S213384 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 269 S213385 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 270 S213386 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 271 S213387 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 272 S213388 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 273 S213389 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 274 S213390 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 275 S213391 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 276 S213392 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 277 S213393 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 278 S213394 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 279 S213395 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 280 S213396 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 281 S213397 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 282 S213398 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 283 S213399 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 284 S213400 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 285 S213401 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 286 S213402 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 287 S213403 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 288 S213404 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 289 S213405 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 290 S213406 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 291 S213407 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 292 S213408 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 293 S213409 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 294 S213410 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 295 S213411 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 296 S213412 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 297 S213413 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 298 S213414 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 299 S213415 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 300 S213416 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

301 S213417 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 302 S213418 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 303 S213419 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 304 S213420 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 305 S213421 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 306 S213422 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 307 S213423 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 308 S213424 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 309 S213425 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 310 S213426 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 311 S213427 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 312 S213428 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 313 S213429 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 314 S213430 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 315 S213431 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 316 S213432 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 317 S213433 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 318 S213434 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 319 S213435 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 320 S213436 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 321 S213437 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 322 S213438 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 323 S213439 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 324 S213440 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 325 S213441 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 326 S213442 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 327 S213443 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 328 S213444 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 329 S213445 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 330 S213446 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 331 S213447 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 332 S213448 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 333 S213449 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 334 S213450 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 335 S213451 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 336 S213452 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 337 S213453 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 338 S213454 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 339 S213455 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 340 S213456 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 341 S213457 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 342 S213458 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 343 S213459 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 344 S213460 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 345 S213461 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 346 S213462 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 347 S213463 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 348 S213464 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 349 S213465 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 350 S213466 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

351 S213467 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 352 S213468 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 353 S213469 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 354 S213470 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 355 S213471 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 356 S213472 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 357 S213473 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 358 S213474 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 359 S213475 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 360 S213476 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 361 S213477 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 362 S213478 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 363 S213479 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 364 S213480 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 365 S213481 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 366 S213482 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 367 S213483 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 368 S213484 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 369 S213485 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 370 S213486 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 371 S213487 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 372 S213488 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 373 S213489 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 374 S213490 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 375 S213491 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 376 S213492 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 377 S213493 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 378 S213494 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 379 S213495 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 380 S213496 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 381 S213497 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 382 S213498 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 383 S213499 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 384 S213500 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 385 S213501 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 386 S213502 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 387 S213503 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 388 S213504 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 389 S213505 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 390 S213506 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 391 S213507 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 392 S213508 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 393 S213509 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 394 S213510 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 395 S213511 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 396 S213512 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 397 S213513 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 398 S213514 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 399 S213515 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 400 S213516 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

401 S213517 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 402 S213518 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 403 S213519 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 404 S213520 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 405 S213521 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 406 S213522 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 407 S213523 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 408 S213524 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 409 S213525 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 410 S213526 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 411 S213527 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 412 S213528 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 413 S213529 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 414 S213530 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 415 S213531 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 416 S213532 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 417 S213533 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 418 S213534 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 419 S213535 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 420 S213536 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 421 S213537 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 422 S213538 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 423 S213539 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 424 S213540 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 425 S213541 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 426 S213542 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 427 S213543 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 428 S213544 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 429 S213545 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 430 S213546 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 431 S213547 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 432 S213548 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 433 S213549 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 434 S213550 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 435 S213551 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 436 S213552 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 437 S213553 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 438 S213554 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 439 S213555 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 440 S213556 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 441 S213557 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 442 S213558 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 443 S213559 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 444 S213560 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 445 S213561 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 446 S213562 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 447 S213563 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 448 S213564 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 449 S213565 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 450 S213566 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

451 S213567 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 452 S213568 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 453 S213569 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 454 S213570 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 455 S213571 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 456 S213572 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 457 S213573 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 458 S213574 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 459 S213575 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 460 S213576 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 461 S213577 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 462 S213578 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 463 S213579 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 464 S213580 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 465 S213581 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 466 S213582 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 467 S213583 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 468 S213584 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 469 S213585 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 470 S213586 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 471 S213587 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 472 S213588 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 473 S213589 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 474 S213590 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 475 S213591 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 476 S213592 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 477 S213593 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 478 S213594 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 479 S213595 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 480 S213596 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 481 S213597 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 482 S213598 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 483 S213599 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 484 S213600 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 485 S213601 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 486 S213602 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 487 S213603 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 488 S213604 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 489 S213605 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 490 S213606 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 491 S213607 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 492 S213608 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 493 S213609 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 494 S213610 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 495 S213611 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 496 S213612 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 497 S213613 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 498 S213614 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 499 S213615 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 500 S213616 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

501 S213617 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 502 S213618 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 503 S213619 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 504 S213620 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 505 S213621 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 506 S213622 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 507 S213623 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 508 S213624 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 509 S213625 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 510 S213626 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 511 S213627 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 512 S213628 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 513 S213629 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 514 S213630 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 515 S213631 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 516 S213632 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 517 S213633 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 518 S213634 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 519 S213635 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 520 S213636 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 521 S213637 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 522 S213638 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 523 S213639 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 524 S213640 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 525 S213641 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 526 S213642 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 527 S213643 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 528 S213644 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 529 S213645 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 530 S213646 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 531 S213647 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 532 S213648 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 533 S213649 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 534 S213650 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 535 S213651 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 536 S213652 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 537 S213653 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 538 S213654 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 539 S213655 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 540 S213656 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 541 S213657 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 542 S213658 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 543 S213659 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 544 S213660 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 545 S213661 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 546 S213662 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 547 S213663 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 548 S213664 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 549 S213665 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 550 S213666 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

551 S213667 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 552 S213668 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 553 S213669 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 554 S213670 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 555 S213671 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 556 S213672 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 557 S213673 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 558 S213674 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 559 S213675 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 560 S213676 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 561 S213677 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 562 S213678 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 563 S213679 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 564 S213680 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 565 S213681 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 566 S213682 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 567 S213683 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 568 S213684 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 569 S213685 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 570 S213686 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 571 S213687 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 572 S213688 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 573 S213689 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 574 S213690 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 575 S213691 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 576 S213692 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 577 S213693 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 578 S213694 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 579 S213695 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 580 S213696 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 581 S213697 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 582 S213698 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 583 S213699 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 584 S213700 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 585 S213701 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 586 S213702 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 587 S213703 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 588 S213704 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 589 S213705 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 590 S213706 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 591 S213707 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 592 S213708 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 593 S213709 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 594 S213710 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 595 S213711 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 596 S213712 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 597 S213713 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 598 S213714 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 599 S213715 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 600 S213716 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

601 S213717 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 602 S213718 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 603 S213719 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 604 S213720 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 605 S213721 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 606 S213722 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 607 S213723 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 608 S213724 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 609 S213725 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 610 S213726 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 611 S213727 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 612 S213728 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 613 S213729 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 614 S213730 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 615 S213731 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 616 S213732 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 617 S213733 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 618 S213734 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 619 S213735 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 620 S213736 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 621 S213737 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 622 S213738 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 623 S213739 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 624 S213740 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 625 S213741 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 626 S213742 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 627 S213743 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 628 S213744 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 629 S213745 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 630 S213746 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 631 S213747 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 632 S213748 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 633 S213749 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 634 S213750 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 635 S213751 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 636 S213752 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 637 S213753 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 638 S213754 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 639 S213755 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 640 S213756 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 641 S213757 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 642 S213758 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 643 S213759 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 644 S213760 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 645 S213761 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 646 S213762 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 647 S213763 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 648 S213764 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 649 S213765 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 650 S213766 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

651 S213767 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 652 S213768 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 653 S213769 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 654 S213770 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 655 S213771 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 656 S213772 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 657 S213773 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 658 S213774 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 659 S213775 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 660 S213776 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 661 S213777 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 662 S213778 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 663 S213779 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 664 S213780 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 665 S213781 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 666 S213782 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 667 S213783 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 668 S213784 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 669 S213785 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 670 S213786 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 671 S213787 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 672 S213788 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 673 S213789 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 674 S213790 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 675 S213791 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 676 S213792 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 677 S213793 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 678 S213794 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 679 S213795 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 680 S213796 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 681 S213797 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 682 S213798 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 683 S213799 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 684 S213800 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 685 S213801 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 686 S213802 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 687 S213803 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 688 S213804 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 689 S213805 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 690 S213806 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 691 S213807 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 692 S213808 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 693 S213809 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 694 S213810 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 695 S213811 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 696 S213812 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 697 S213813 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 698 S213814 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 699 S213815 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 700 S213816 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

701 S213817 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 702 S213818 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 703 S213819 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 704 S213820 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 705 S213821 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 706 S213822 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 707 S213823 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 708 S213824 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 709 S213825 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 710 S213826 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 711 S213827 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 712 S213828 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 713 S213829 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 714 S213830 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 715 S213831 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 716 S213832 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 717 S213833 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 718 S213834 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 719 S213835 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 720 S213836 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 721 S213837 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 722 S213838 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 723 S213839 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 724 S213840 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 725 S213841 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 726 S213842 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 727 S213843 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 728 S213844 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 729 S213845 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 730 S213846 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 731 S213847 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 732 S213848 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 733 S213849 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 734 S213850 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 735 S213851 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 736 S213852 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 737 S213853 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 738 S213854 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 739 S213855 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 740 S213856 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 741 S213857 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 742 S213858 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 743 S213859 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 744 S213860 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 745 S213861 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 746 S213862 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 747 S213863 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 748 S213864 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 749 S213865 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 750 S213866 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

751 S213867 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 752 S213868 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 753 S213869 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 754 S213870 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 755 S213871 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 756 S213872 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 757 S213873 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 758 S213874 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 759 S213875 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 760 S213876 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 761 S213877 15.03.2001 IVERSON Barry 24x36 Y 762 S217426 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 763 S217427 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 764 S217428 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 765 S217429 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 766 S217430 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 767 S217431 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 768 S217432 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 769 S217433 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 770 S217434 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 771 S217435 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 772 S217436 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 773 S217437 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 774 S217438 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 775 S217439 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 776 S217440 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 777 S217441 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 778 S217442 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 779 S217443 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 780 S217444 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 781 S217445 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 782 S217446 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 783 S217447 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 784 S217448 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 785 S217449 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 786 S217450 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 787 S217451 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 788 S217452 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 789 S217453 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 790 S217454 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 791 S217455 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 792 S217456 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 793 S217457 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 794 S217458 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 795 S217459 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 796 S217460 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 797 S217461 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 798 S217462 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 799 S217463 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 800 S217464 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

801 S217465 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 802 S217466 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 803 S217467 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 804 S217468 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 805 S217469 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 806 S217470 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 807 S217471 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 808 S217472 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 809 S217473 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 810 S217474 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 811 S217475 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 812 S217476 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 813 S217477 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 814 S217478 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 815 S217479 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 816 S217480 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 817 S217481 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 818 S217482 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 819 S217483 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 820 S217484 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 821 S217485 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 822 S217486 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 823 S217487 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 824 S217488 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 825 S217489 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 826 S217490 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 827 S217491 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 828 S217492 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 829 S217493 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 830 S217494 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 831 S217495 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 832 S217496 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 833 S217497 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 834 S217498 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 835 S217499 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 836 S217500 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 837 S217501 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 838 S217502 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 839 S217503 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 840 S217504 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 841 S217505 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 842 S217506 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 843 S217507 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 844 S217508 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 845 S217509 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 846 S217510 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 847 S217511 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 848 S217512 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 849 S217513 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 850 S217514 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt Nubian Museum Aswan, Egypt

List of Visual Materials

No VM Num CD Id IMG Ord VM Title Date Photographer Format Copyright

851 S217515 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 852 S217516 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 853 S217517 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 854 S217518 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 855 S217519 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 856 S217520 01.04.2001 IVERSON Barry 6x6 Y 857 S219971 Lower ground floor plan AKAA Reproduction 24x36 Y 858 S219972 Isometric plan AKAA Reproduction 24x36 Y

Nubian Museum, Aswan, Egypt