A great place to start learning more about Jebel Barkal, its place in history, and the history of excavations at the site are overview essays written by Timothy Kendall, who has worked at the site since 1986; for these see Jebel Barkal in Detail. Also useful is a bibliography containing much of the important research that has been conducted at the site since 1819.
Tim Kendall has also put much of this information into a Visitors Guide; this handbook designed for visitors is designed for visitors to the site, but it’s useful for anyone interested in the site. See: Jebel Barkal Visitors Guide.
There are many specialized publications about the site. Some of George Reisner’s original publications, from his excavations of 1916-1920, are available online:
- Reisner, George A. (1917), “The Barkal Temples in 1916,” Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 4(4):213-27 (and continued in the same journal in 1918 and 1920).
- Reisner, George A. (1931), “Inscribed Monuments from Gebel Barkal.” Zeitschrift für ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde 66:76-100 (and continued in the same journal in 1933 and 1934).
Reisner’s assistant Dows Dunham made great efforts to organize and publish the finds from Reisner’s excavations in a series of volumes, many of which have recently been made available online:
- Chapman, Suzanne E. and Dows Dunham (1952), Decorated Chapels of the Meroitic Pyramids at Meroë and Barkal. Royal Cemeteries of Kush 3. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts.
- Dunham, Dows (1957), Royal Tombs at Meroë and Barkal. Royal Cemeteries of Kush 4. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts.
- Dunham, Dows (1970), The Barkal Temples. Boston: Museum of Fine Arts.
Recent Publications
More recent work has been published by our own project (the Jebel Barkal Archaeological Project, co-directed by Geoff Emberling and El-Hassan Ahmed Mohamed), by the American-Sudanese team directed by Tim Kendall from 1986-2018 (with El-Hassan Ahmed Mohamed being co-director from 2014), by the Italian team working on the Natakamani palace, currently directed by Emanuele Ciampini, and by a Spanish team that has now completed its work. Selected publications (with a preference for publications available online) are given here:
Tucker, Gregory and Geoff Emberling (2016), “Settlement in the Heartland of Napatan Kush: Preliminary Results of Magnetic Gradiometry at El-Kurru, Jebel Barkal and Sanam,” Sudan & Nubia 20:50-56.
American/Sudanese team
Kendall, Timothy (1997), “Excavations at Gebel Barkal, 1996. Report of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Sudan Mission.” Kush17:320-54. (PDF of a section of the volume available online).
Kendall, Timothy and El-Hassan Ahmed Mohamed (2017), “Jebel Barkal in the New Kingdom: An Emerging Picture.” In Nubia in the New Kingdom: Lived Experience, Pharaonic Control and Indigenous Traditions, edited by Neal Spencer, Anna Stevens, and Michaela Binder, pp. 155-88. British Museum Publications on Egypt and Sudan 3. Leuven: Peeters.
Italian team
Ciampini, Emanuele (2020), “The Royal District of Natakamani at Napata. Report of the Season 2019.” online.
Taurino, Salvatore (2018), “Glazed Terracotta Decorations from the Palace of Natakamani (B1500) at Napata.” In Current Research in Egyptology 2017, ed. Ilaria Incordino et al., pp. 210-225. Oxford: Archaeopress.
Spanish team
Berenguer, Francesca (1997), “Report of the First Season at Gebel Barkal Necropolis, 1995,” Kush 17:108-36. (PDF of a section of the volume available online)
Diaz-de-Cerio, Montserrat (2018), “A New Meroitic Complex–Abasseya Project (Karima, Sudan),” in Nubian Archaeology in the XXIst Century: Proceedings of the Thirteenth International Conference for Nubian Studies, ed. Matthieu Honegger, pp. 449-55. Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta 273. Leuven: Peeters.
Finally, there are numerous interpretations and studies of Jebel Barkal and its significance. Here is a small selection.
Török, László (2009), Between Two Worlds: The Frontier Region between Ancient Nubia and Egypt, 3700 BC-AD 500. Probleme der Ägyptologie 29. Leiden: Brill.
Yellin, Janice (2014), “The Chronology and Attribution of Royal Pyramids at Meroe and Gebel Barkal.” Journal of Ancient Egyptian Interconnections 6(1):76-88.