
The Birds of Egypt and the Middle East
Kyle Pakka
Richard Hoath
The American University in Cairo Press, 2021.
“Nowhere else in the world can you stand and admire the representation of the falcon-headed god Horus, at Kom Ombo in the Nile Valley, for instance, only to find that a pair of the living bird, the Common Kestrel, is breeding on a masonry ledge in that same temple today.”
—From The Birds of Egypt and the Middle East
—KYLE PAKKA
You may also be interested in...
Untold Stories of British Muslim Women as Agents of Change
Sociologist Sariya Cheruvallil-Contractor and historian Jamie Gilham present 100 years of Muslim women who have contributed to the dynamism of Islam in Britain.Book Dispels Myths Behind Power Relations Shaping Medieval Levant
Historian James Wilson offers assesses the political situation in Syria (Bilad al-Sham) in the decades leading up to the First Crusade.Book Deconstructs Myth Surrounding Egypt’s Most-Famous Boy King
Egyptologist Aidan Dodson sifts the evidence—from tomb paintings to statuary to temple inscriptions—in his quest to recover the real King Tutankhamun.