Meketre project

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Available

Director

  • Peter Jánosi

Description

The Middle Kingdom Tomb Relief Evolution (MeKeTRE) project started in November 2009 and ended in May 2013. The name derives from the owner of the famous early Middle Kingdom tomb in Thebes, and the project's main focus, i.e. the art of the Middle Kingdom.

It sought to systematically collect, research, and study the reliefs and paintings of Middle Kingdom tombs of Ancient Egypt. The project targeted two- dimensional art of the Middle Kingdom (11th to 13th Dynasty, ca. 2040 – 1640 B.C.) and one of its main aims was to map and elaborate the development of the scenes and their content in comparison to the Old Kingdom.

MeKeTRE was an interdisciplinary research project, conducted at Institute of Egyptology in cooperation with the research group Multimedia Information Systems at the University of Vienna. It was funded by the Austrian Science Fund.

The project's technical part covered the research-based development of the MEKETREpository, a specialised software solution that supports the assessment, organisation and analysis of the collected material and bibliographic metadata. It supports the collaborative development of ontologies and collaborative annotation on the available media material.

See also