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ARCE was founded in 1948 in Boston by Edward W. Forbes, then the director of the Fogg Museum at Harvard, and Sterling Dow, then president of the Archaeological Institute of America, with the intention of creating a scholarly research center in Egypt.
Assistant Professor of Egyptology, Brown University, 1983–1988 Editor, Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt, from July 2008 Editor, Journal of the Society for the Study of Egyptian Antiquities (Toronto), 1998–2007
The Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt (JARCE) is an academic journal published for the American Research Center in Egypt by Lockwood Press. [1] It was established in 1962 to publish research "into the art, archaeology , languages, history , and social systems of the Egyptian people."
AUC Libraries and Learning Technologies [1] (LLT) is a school of the American University in Cairo.It is located on the University’s New Campus, in New Cairo, Egypt.. LLT is composed of several units: the Main Library, the Rare Books and Special Collections Library (RBSCL; includes University Archives and Records Management), [2] and the Center for Learning and Teaching (CLT).
Library associations connect libraries and library workers at the local, national, and international level. Library associations often provide resources to their individual and institutional members that enable cooperation, exchange of information, education, research, and development.
Grand Egyptian Museum, Giza, Egypt: Over 100,000 artifacts [1] (due to being partly opened in 2018, currently housed in the Egyptian Museum, Cairo); British Museum, London, England: Over 100,000 artifacts [2] (not including the 2001 donation of the six million artifact Wendorf Collection of Egyptian and Sudanese Prehistory) [3] [4]
"The Date of the End of the Old Kingdom of Egypt". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 21 (2): 140– 147. doi:10.1086/371680. S2CID 161488411. Bennett, Chris (2002). "A Genealogical Chronology of the Seventeenth Dynasty". Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt. 39: 123– 155. doi:10.2307/40001152. JSTOR 40001152.
The American University in Cairo was founded in 1919 by the American Mission in Egypt, a Protestant mission sponsored by the United Presbyterian Church of North America, as an English-language university and preparatory school. [4] University founder Charles A. Watson wanted to establish a western institution for higher education. [5]