Camilla Saler is PhD student in History at the Department of Civilization and Forms of Knowledge at the University of Pisa where she is conducting a thesis project focused on the relations between Egypt and the site of Byblos (in Lebanon) during the Middle Bronze Age (2000-1500 BC). She has carried out various collaborations and internships with museums, including the Egyptian Museum in Turin (2016) and the British Museum in London (2018). She is a scientific member for the Project of Relevant National Interest funded by the Italian Ministry of University and Research, PRIN 2017 "PROCESS - "Pharaonic Rescission: Objects as Crucibles of ancient Egyptian Societies". Since 2020 she collaborates with the project "Queen Ahhotep Treasure and its Context: The long Road to the Egyptian Museum of Cairo, c. 1550 B.C.- 1863 C.E." directed by Prof. Gianluca Miniaci, University of Pisa in collaboration with the Egyptian Museum of Cairo, aimed at the study and realization of a new display for the burial equipment of the Egyptian Queen Ahhotep. She is editorial assistant for the Element series “Ancient Egypt in Context”, Cambridge University edited by Gianluca Miniaci, Anna Stevens and Juan Carlos Moreno Garcia, Press and for the Journal “Egitto e Vicino Oriente”, Pisa University Press, directed by Maria Carmela Betrò.