My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

Jean-François Champollion broke the code of the hieroglyphs on 14 September 1822. But this didn't yet mean understanding how old the culture of the pharaohs was, or any of its details. This next milestone Champollion achieved six years later when he embarked on a two-year expedition to Egypt and became the first person to read the hieroglyphs on the monuments that had been built along the Nile for three thousand years. Single-handedly he paved the way for the scientific expeditions that would follow in his footsteps. Every day brought new discoveries and insights which he excitedly recorded in his letters and diaries. But he also marvelled at the lives of the 'modern' descendants of the ancient Egyptians and in these letters he provides a snapshot of both cultures, showing how little had changed in five millennia.

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My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

Jean-François Champollion broke the code of the hieroglyphs on 14 September 1822. But this didn't yet mean understanding how old the culture of the pharaohs was, or any of its details. This next milestone Champollion achieved six years later when he embarked on a two-year expedition to Egypt and became the first person to read the hieroglyphs on the monuments that had been built along the Nile for three thousand years. Single-handedly he paved the way for the scientific expeditions that would follow in his footsteps. Every day brought new discoveries and insights which he excitedly recorded in his letters and diaries. But he also marvelled at the lives of the 'modern' descendants of the ancient Egyptians and in these letters he provides a snapshot of both cultures, showing how little had changed in five millennia.

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My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

My Journey to Egypt: By the Code-Breaker of the Hieroglyphs

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Overview

Jean-François Champollion broke the code of the hieroglyphs on 14 September 1822. But this didn't yet mean understanding how old the culture of the pharaohs was, or any of its details. This next milestone Champollion achieved six years later when he embarked on a two-year expedition to Egypt and became the first person to read the hieroglyphs on the monuments that had been built along the Nile for three thousand years. Single-handedly he paved the way for the scientific expeditions that would follow in his footsteps. Every day brought new discoveries and insights which he excitedly recorded in his letters and diaries. But he also marvelled at the lives of the 'modern' descendants of the ancient Egyptians and in these letters he provides a snapshot of both cultures, showing how little had changed in five millennia.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781783340408
Publisher: Gibson Square
Publication date: 10/31/2019
Sold by: Bookwire
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 16 MB
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About the Author

Jean-François Champollion is considered to be the godfather of modern Egyptology. He was born in 1790 and, at the age of twelve, rapidly learned Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Arabic, Syriac, Chaldean, Ethiopic, and Coptic. The study of hierogplyphs saved him from being drafted into Napoleon's army, nonetheless he suffered from ill-health during his short life - including gout and tinnitus.
Peter A. Clayton is an Egyptologist, archaeologist and numismatist who has excavated at sites in England and Egypt. He is a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of London, heads a number of archaeological societies, and is an Honorary Member of the Institute of Archaeology, University College London and was the editor of Minerva: The International Review of Ancient Art and Archaeology.
Martin Rynja read jurisprudence at St Edmund Hall, Oxford, and law and philosophy at Leiden University. He is a publisher based in London.
Joyce Tyldesley was born in Bolton, Lancashire. She studied archaeology at Liverpool and Oxford Universities. She currently teaches Egyptology at the University of Manchester.
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