PRICE: Free and open to the public.
TIME: 06:00 pm - 07:30 pm
Elizabeth Minor
Visiting
Assistant Professor in Anthropology, Wellesley College
The Kerma Kingdom was an ancient Nubian civilization located in
present-day Sudan. Its capital, the city of Kerma, had monumental architecture
and religious art depicting deities in the form of lions, scorpions and hybrid
figures such as winged giraffes and hippopotamus goddesses. During the Classic
Kerma Period (1700–1550 BCE), funerary monuments of Kerman kings could be up to
one hundred meters long and included hundreds of sacrificed individuals.
Elizabeth Minor discusses the complexity of Kerman culture and its practice
of human sacrifice as a means to negotiate social hierarchies.
Lecture. Free and open
to the public. Presented by the Harvard Semitic Museum.
Geological Lecture Hall, 24 Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138.
Free event
parking at the 52 Oxford Street Garage