Library Services
© Reliefs From The Tomb Of Bakenrenef. 664–610 B.C.This file was donated to Wikimedia Commons as part of a project by the Metropolitan Museum of Art
There any many journals available for the study of Egyptology. Some are general in nature, others focus on particular subject areas or themes, geographical regions, or chronological periods, e.g., Journal of Coptic Studies.
Printed journals for Egyptology can be found within the Institute of Archaeology Library's alphabetical sequence of journals INST ARCH Pers (periodicals). You will need to consult both print and e-journals for thorough research in Egyptology. You can search, or browse a comprehensive list of online journals available at UCL.
You may also find it useful to consult the inventory of E-Journals and Digitized Paper Periodicals (Egyptology) maintained by the Egyptologists' Electronic Forum. This is updated regularly.
Used to disseminate scholarly information that relates to a particular academic discipline. They are aimed at researchers and are often peer-reviewed, which means that articles are evaluated by experts in the field before publication to ensure the information in them is accurate and well presented. An example of academic journal is the Journal of the American Research Center in Egypt.
Generally printed on glossy paper (but can also be available online), they are aimed at a more general audience than academic journals and can include opinions and news items too. An example of magazine is KMT: a modern journal of Ancient Egypt.
Published on a daily basis, the focus of these is on news items. They can include a sections on education, art and culture, but are wide in scope. Examples of newspapers are The Guardian and for more specialist ancient Egyptian art and artefact news The Art Newspaper.
Usually published by a special group, learned society, or professional organisation and aimed at people working in a specific industry. An example of trade publication is Journal of Egyptian Archaeology.
If you're using one of our databases to find journal articles, you might not be able to read the article within the database itself. If you see the Findit@UCL icon, click on it to link to the full-text
Sometimes you will see a link to the publisher's site. Unless the article is open access, you might find that you can't reach the full-text.
Clicking on the Findit@UCL link instead will link you to the full-text via UCL's subscription access, if available.
If you're using Google Scholar you can set up the Library Links feature so that it will display a findit@UCL link to help show you which articles are available via UCL subscriptions.
UCL has an amazing collection of e-resources, but no library can have full-text access to everything. If you identify a piece of information that would be beneficial to your research, the library will try and source a copy for you via the Inter Library Loans service.You can make a request by logging into UCL Explore and then clicking on the three dots 'show more' menu to access the Inter Library Loan Request form.
Check out our Explore guide to find out more about how to use Explore for your research.
UCL subscribes to Browzine, a resource that allows you to organise UCL's academic journals in a browsable format, displayed on virtual bookshelves. Browzine is a great tool to help stay up to date with new content, and bookmark articles that you want to read in the future.