Kirsty Grant
Thesis title: The Cult of Nocturnal Horus: An Investigation of Horus Menti-(n)-irti's Role in the Egyptian Religious Landscape of the First Millennium BC

PhD Archaeology
Year of study: 3
- School of History, Classics and Archaeology
Contact details
- Email: s1440996@ed.ac.uk
PhD supervisors:
Address
- Street
-
William Robertson Wing
Old Medical School
Teviot Place - City
- Edinburgh
- Post code
- EH8 9AG
Background
Kirsty obtained her MA (Hons) and MSc at the University of Edinburgh between 2014-2019, specialising in animal cults and animal mummification in the Late Dynastic to Early Roman Period, Egypt. Her MA (Hons) dissertation focussed on the cat as a religious symbol in Pharaonic Egypt, while her MSc research investigated and presented evidence for the animal mummification industry from the Late Period to the occupation of Egypt by the Roman Empire. Her PhD thesis focuses on the cult of Horus Menti-(n)-irti and its prevalence across Egypt during the first millennium BC.
Kirsty has excavation experience in Scottish and Egyptian archaeology. She also has experience in the heritage sector in both curation and conservation.
Qualifications
MA (Hons) Ancient History & Classical Archaeology - The University of Edinburgh 2014-2018
MSc Classical Art & Archaeology - The University of Edinburgh 2018-2019
Undergraduate teaching
Tutor for:
- Greek Art & Archaeology
- Archaeology 1A
- Archaeology 1B
- Roman World 1B
- Classical Literature
Research summary
- Egyptian religion
- Animal cults
- Mummification
- Zooarchaeology
- Egyptology
- Archaeology in popular culture