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10
Feb

The Rosetta Stone: A History of the Sacred Characters

   Posted by: Trish    in Ancient Egypt, Ancient Greece, Ancient History, Ancient World, Cultural History, Historical Events, History Blog, Personalities in History, The Napoleonic Era, World History

The Rosetta Stone: A History of the Sacred CharactersFor over two thousand years, the secrets of the ancient Egyptians were lost to history. All the tombs, trinkets, statues and cenotaphs were pretty but indecipherable, covered as they were in a pictographic script that had no meaning. It wasn’t decades of research, the intricate technologies of archaeology or the explanation of some ancient king risen from the dead that unlocked the lost language of the ancient Egyptians. In fact, it was the accidental discovery of some half buried rock that came to be known as the Rosetta stone, by a French soldier that would change the face of Egyptology and provide a much needed window into the language and belief systems of the most celebrated ancient culture.

It was 1799 and Napoleon’s troops were preparing to defend against the encroaching Ottoman Army as they grew closer and closer to the city of Rosetta on Egypt’s West bank just miles from the sea.  As they cleared away rocks to improve their fortifications, a small group of soldier engineers led by 28 year old Lieutenant Bouchard discovered a large polished rock with a dark surface and what seemed to be some engraved text.

Napoleon in EgyptOn closer inspection, Bouchard noticed three separate texts on the rock: hieroglyphs at the top, an unknown text in the middle and Greek at the bottom.  It was not just the middle text that didn’t make sense; it was the stone’s location inside an Arab fort far from the ancient tombs in Luxor’s Valley of the Kings. Speculation as to possible ancient structures below the fort were quickly dismissed and the stone sent to Cairo for further research by Napoleon’s famed Commission of Arts and Sciences.

The stone was almost a meter high with missing pieces at the top and bottom right. After a thorough cleaning the group of French scholars was able to read the Greek inscription. It was nothing sensational, just an inscription of an anniversary. That was until they read the last sentence.

“This decree shall be inscribed on stelae of hard rock, in sacred characters, both native and Greek, and they shall be erected in each of the temples of the first, second and third category, next to the image of the king living eternally.”

The Rosetta Stone Replica/ReproductionThe realization that what was written in Greek was also written in hieroglyphics was a revelation. Finally, here was the chance to understand what the ancients had been whispering for all these centuries.  A group of notable scholars and archeologists gathered in Cairo to work on the stone, including trying to figure out what the middle language on the Rosetta stone actually was.

Disappointedly the Egyptian elite had little interest in the stone, perhaps due to the constant influx of Greeks, French and British in their country with every new ‘discovery’ of the ancient Egyptian world. For Islamic Egyptians, pyramids were pagan relics of the past with little bearing on their advanced culture.

Copyists went to work, reproducing the text on the stone and disseminating it to colleagues around the world. Although other texts had been discovered, the connecting language, the middle language on the stone, remained a mystery. It wasn’t Aramaic and it wasn’t Coptic. And in 1801, the British stole the stone making its middle text even more elusive for its French discoverers.  

By 1802, the Rosetta stone would find its permanent, if not definitely legal, home in the British Museum. It would be another thirty years before hieroglyphics would be understood enough for full decipherment and the middle text would be designated as hieratic, a simple version of the hieroglyphs.

Through the dedicated efforts of Jean Francois Champollion, a French scholar who was only nine years old when the stone was first discovered by Bouchard, the text and dictionary of ancient Egyptian

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Rosetta Stone Bookends Rosetta Stone Bookends
Ptolemaic Relief - Painted Ptolemaic Relief - Painted
Bust of Queen Nefertiti Bust of Queen Nefertiti
Bust of King Akhenaton Bust of King Akhenaton

languages was first published. His work showed that the ancient text didn’t contain vowels and used pictures to represent both sounds and statements.

To this day, the Rosetta stone sits in the British Museum, a highlight of the Egyptian collection and a testament to perseverance and scholarship.  The ability to read hieroglyphics helped archaeologists and Egyptologists to understand the succession of dynasties, the religion and cults of the dead, the ancient gods and their followers and of course, the secret world of one history’s most fascinating cultures - Ancient Egypt.

Tags: ancient egypt, Ancient Egypt Store, Archaeology, British Museum, Bust of King Akhenaton, Bust of Queen Nefertiti, Cairo, Cenotaphs, Coptic, Egypt, egyptology, Greek, Heiratic, hieroglyphics, hieroglyphs, History of the Rosetta Stone, Lieutenant Bouchard, Luxor, Napoleon, Napoleon Bonaparte, Napoleon in Egypt, Napoleon's Egyptian Campaign, Ottoman Empire, Ptolemaic Relief - Painted, Rosetta Stone, Rosetta Stone Bookends, Rosetta Stone Museum Replica, Rosetta Stone Museum Reproduction, Rosetta Stone Replica, Rosetta Stone Reproduction, The Rosetta Stone History, The Rosetta Stone Remembered, Valley of the Kings

1 Comment
14
Nov

Ancient Egypt

   Posted by: Administrator    in Ancient Egypt, Ancient History, History Blog, World History

The Nile RiverThe Ancient Egyptians developed their civilization sometime between 4000 and 1800 B.C. along the fertile Nile River. The annual floods of the Nile deposited rich soil along its banks and helped establish Egypt as a green oasis in an unforgiving desert. Since the welfare of the Ancient Egyptians depended almost entirely on the Nile an intricate relationship grew between man and the river that sustained them. The Egyptians cultivated the land along the Nile River’s banks and grew essential crops to help sustain their way of life. Their farming endeavors yielded the wheat and barley used for bread and beer and the flax they utilized for their linen. Over time, the Ancient Egyptian’s concept of religion became highly developed and they also advanced their knowledge in medicine, astronomy and engineering, all of which would serve as examples to many societies that followed in their footsteps.

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Nile River Goddess Nile River Goddess
Mask of King Tutankhamun Mask of King Tutankhamun
Set of Small Canopic Jars Set of Small Canopic Jars
18 kt. Gold Ring with Lapis Scarab 18 kt. Gold Ring with Lapis Scarab
The source of governing power in Ancient Egypt lay with the Pharaohs, who kept the Egyptians united under one kingdom. The Ancient Egyptians revered their king, the Pharaoh, as a god and though authority rested with the Pharaoh, he nevertheless delegated much of the everyday management to priests and administrators. The Ancient Egyptians performed elaborate ceremonies which they believed appeased the Gods and kept the annual floods of the Nile River flowing. They thought that as long as the Nile River flowed, a delicate balance between man and nature existed which ultimately helped keep their society in order. When a Pharaoh died, great care was taken in embalming and mummifying his body and placing it in a stone
sarcophagus. This sarcophagus in turn was placed in a large tomb along with all of the dead Pharaoh’s belongings including jewelry, clothing, furniture and food – all the essential needs for the life he would lead in eternity. The walls of the tomb were inscribed with sacred writings in the form of hieroglyphics meant to protect him in the afterlife and to frighten off any would be grave robbers or evil spirits.

Since their society relied to a large extent on agriculture, most of the Ancient Egyptians were farmers. The priests would tax these farmers a portion of their produce which was given to the local temple. Most people in Ancient Egyptian society were illiterate and in fact, only boys were schooled and taught to read and write. As scribes, these boys were groomed to become the priests and administrators who would later help the Pharaoh in managing their society. The scribes used papyrus, a stiff paper made from papyrus reeds, to transcribe the administrative and religious texts of Ancient Egyptian society.

Ancient Egyptian Reliefs
Isis Relief - Painted Isis Relief - Painted
Thoth Relief Painted Thoth Relief Painted
Anubis Relief Painted Anubis Relief Painted
The Offering of Maat Relief Painted The Offering of Maat Relief Painted
With their dependence on their habitat and the elements of the Nile River valley, it is not difficult to imagine why the Ancient Egyptians projected characteristics of nature and the animal life on their deities. Some notable Egyptian gods include: Horus, Ptah, Hathor, Isis and Osiris. Horus was the sky god, his eyes were the sun and the moon and it is said that his spirit manifested itself within the living Pharaoh. Ptah was the creator god who invented the arts. Hathor, known to the Egyptians as the goddess of love and beauty is said to have raised the sun up to the heaven on her horns. Isis was both the sister and wife of Osiris and the mother of Horus and was thought to have magical powers. Osiris, the god of the dead, would judge souls
in the afterlife.

The Great Pyramids of GizaThe Egyptians built many pyramids around 2630 B.C. the most famous of which is the Great Pyramid of Giza which may have taken about 30 years to build. Some of the stone blocks in these pyramids weigh as much as 60 tons and it is estimated that over 2.3 million of them were used. Archaeologists believe the scale and dimensions of these pyramids suggest that they had astronomical, mathematical and spiritual purposes. The Pharaohs no doubt built these immense structures to appease the gods and to leave a symbol of their reign as an indelible mark on history, leaving others to behold their engineering skill through the ages.

Tags: 18 kt. Gold Ring with Lapis Scarab, ancient egypt, Ancient Egypt Store, ancient egyptian jewelry, Ancient Egyptian Reliefs, Anubis Relief Painted, astronomical, Egyptian Religion, great pyramid of Giza, Hathor, hieroglyphics, hieroglyphs, Horus, Isis, Isis Relief - Painted, Mask of King Tutankhamun, mathematical, mummification, Nile River, Nile River Goddess, Osiris, Pharaoh, Ptah, pyramids, sarcophagus, scarabs, Scribes, Set of Small Canopic Jars, spiritual, The Offering of Maat Relief Painted, Thoth Relief Painted

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