The work was carried out from 1 September 2020 to 31 August 2022. It was mainly based at the CNRS (France, CNRS, UMR 7041, ArScAn, team HAROC) under the supervision of Dr. Aline Tenu, Assyriologist and specialist of funerary practices (CNRS, team HAROC). The offices of this CNRS laboratory are located in Nanterre, at the MSH Mondes (“Maison des Sciences de l’Homme Mondes”) under the triple tutelage of the CNRS and the Universities of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne and Paris Nanterre. Due to this collaborative research center, I was able to participate in several training courses at University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (Akkadian, Cuneiform, Mesopotamian History, Gender Studies).
The subject of the PRINCESS project required to collect textual, iconographic and archaeological data already published.
Two stays of three months each were initially planned for the secondment at the University of Basel (Unibas, Switzerland) with Pr. Susanne Bickel, Egyptologist, as my mentor in order to work on material she excavated in Egypt in the Luxor area (King’s Valley, KV 40). I was able to work on the data discovered by Pr. Bickel, which includes notably women of the royal entourage of the pharaoh Amenhotep III (1390-1352 BC) bearing foreign names. I also had access there to the library of the University.
During the fellowship, two fieldwork seasons in Egypt were planned on the site of Gurob (20 november-22 december 2020 and 21 november-22 december 2021), where I am leading excavations since 2017. The site houses the remains of a harem-palace of the Late Bronze Age Period as well as the necropolis of its inhabitants, including foreign population. Even with the COVID-19 situation, the first season was done but shortened. Consequently, during the first short season (03-17 december 2020) the team was able to make surveys of the area interesting for the PRINCESS project (ie. the location of ancient town and tombs in sectors Alpha and Beta) and the excavations were initiated during the second season (21 november-22 december 2021).