This volume presents a series of papers delivered at a two-day session
of the Theban Workshop held at the British Museum in September 2003. Due
to its political and religious prominence throughout much of pharaonic
history, the region of ancient Thebes offers scholars a wealth of
monuments whose physical remains and extant iconography may be combined
with textual sources and archaeological finds in ways that elucidate the
function of sacred space as initially conceived, and which also reveal
adaptations to human need or shifts in cultural perception. The
contributions herein address issues such as the architectural framing of
religious ceremony, the implicit performative responses of officiants,
the diachronic study of specific rites, the adaptation of sacred space
to different uses through physical, representational, or textual
alteration, and the development of ritual landscapes in ancient Thebes.