Monday 24 December 2018

Egyptology


Egyptology
How 18th - 20th Century Climate Affected Pursuit of Egyptology knowledge
Archeology in Egypt started in earnest with the invasion of Egypt by Napoleon in the 18th Century. Napoleon was accompanied by a group of scholars who after the successful invasion started recording archaeological artifacts of Egypt. Their findings were published in a book called the Description de l’ Egypt. Courtesy of these scholars finding, Jean- Francois Champollion who was a French Historian and language expert was able to interpret and decipher the ancient writings of the Egyptian in for the first time in 1882[1].
The deciphering of the Egyptian writings made it possible for scholars to read and understand many writings which have been left by the past Egyptians. The deciphering was the most important step leading to Egyptian archeology otherwise known as the Egyptology. Egyptology is the study of ancient Egypt culture and languages that existed between the 6th millennium BC to the first century AD. It combines the latest archaeological methods and practices, to decipher ancient Egyptian texts using philological and linguistic investigations.
The first document which was written by the pharaohs was written around 3150 BCE[2] after the development of hieroglyphic script founded in Upper Egypt. The preservation of the documents written by the pharaohs, their children and their successors were greatly aided by the arid climate of Egypt. These documents formed the foundation upon which Egyptology was founded.
The history of Egypt was affected briefly after the Romans conquered Egypt at around 31 BCE[3]. The coming of the Romans witnessed the introduction of Hellenism which greatly influenced the Egyptian culture. This was because the Romans wanted Egyptian to desert their way of living their religion particularly and start practicing Catholicism.  Because of this, the Egyptian culture was greatly contaminated by this invasion. However, what contributed significantly to the preservation of the Egyptian culture and their religion was the existence of the hieroglyphic scripts which had been written on the walls of the Egyptian temples. Introduction of Christianity in Egypt during the 1st century also contributed to the erosion of the Egyptian culture, in a way when Greek alphabet was introduced in Egypt in 250 CE as a replacement of Egypt’s hieroglyphic alphabets[4].
The other great discovery that gave a big boost to the study of the Egyptology was the discovery of Rosetta stone. A French engineer discovered the Rosetta stone, and it contained hieroglyphic and demotic texts from Greece. Jean-François Champollion helped to decipher what was inscribed in the Rosetta in 1822[5]. After the successful deciphering, Champollion together with an Italian scholar embarked on an expedition of Egypt at around 1828 and published their findings in a book named Monuments de L’Egypte et Nubie. Their expedition was followed closely by another one by Karl Richard Lepsius in 1845. Sir John Gardener from England also made an essential contribution to this end of copying and collecting materials in Egypt. As a result of these expeditions, a lot of information about Egypt was made available to European scholars and archeologist who would later visit Egypt for archaeological purposes.
During Muhammad Ali’s reign as the Egyptian president from 1805- 1849, the president opened Egypt to foreigners and consular representatives. This ushered in the period of adventures by the foreigners in search of antiquities. The ensuing rash for antiquities was at times done in ways that can be categorized as plunder. From this act of opening of Egypt to foreigners, it captivated the establishments of numerous European Egyptian Museum collections. Most of the museums relied on restocking mostly from smuggled and stolen Egyptian artifacts.     An archaeologist called Auguste Mariette after discovering the Serapenum successfully approached Sa’id Pasha who was a viceroy of Egypt to establish an Egyptian Museum as well as open a department of services for the antiquities. The viceroy made Auguste Mariette the director of both establishments. These two establishments were instrumental in curtailment of uncontrolled plundering, collection and digging of antiquities in an uncontrolled manner.
Egyptology became an academic discipline was founded by three gentlemen from France, Germany, and England. In 1880 a technique of scientifically recording excavation in a controlled manner was introduced in Egypt by Sir Flinders Petrie. Sir Petrie is credited with inventing techniques for excavation and sequence dating which helped greatly in in the reconstruction of the Egyptian history from Egypt’s ancient artifacts and cultures. This technique literally, revolutionized archeology because it managed to shove back the origin of the Egypt culture to 4500 BCE[6].  The establishment of British Egypt Exploration Fund which was founded in 1882, promoted some excavation using the newly founded Petrie’s principles.
There are other factors, however, that affected the pursuit of knowledge of the Egyptian past like first the tomb robbers. Tomb robbing took away with it precious artifacts that archeologists would have pieced together to advance the furtherance of the knowledge we have today of ancient Egypt. Secondly, stealing of Egyptian Obelisk by the Romans also hindered the advancement of the understanding of the Egypt past. Stealing them was tantamount to taking the Egyptian history as the Obelisk was significant items central to the Egyptian religion and culture. The two most notable Obelisks stolen from Egypt and now found in Rome were Lateranense obelisk and Flamingo Obelisk. Other factors that affected the furtherance of the knowledge included, the existence of people who traded mummies for money and leisured antiquarians, the demand for Egyptian artifacts by European museums and lastly individual. Like Giovanni Belzoni who is famed for rooting and plundering Egyptian artifacts more than any other individual.
Archeologist's Differences About Nature and Purpose of Archaeology
Archeology can be defined as the study of the human past and present using past material remains. It is a subfield in the discipline of anthropology, which is the study of human cultures. Archeologists study the past and present remains to pursue and comprehend the understanding of past human culture and the way of living. Archeologist main purpose is to reconstruct past cultures from material remains touching on human activities, or items people made and left behind in the past. These material remains are known as the artifacts.
From these remains, archeologists try to re-model what that past culture was like. Archeologists usually study the pattern of artifacts to give them clues about how those people who used to use them lived. There are different types of archaeology, such as historic, prehistoric, underwater and classic, however more often than not the different kinds of archeology overlaps in nature and purpose.
Most relevant part of an archeologist is placing artifacts in their respective time and space. The process of putting objects in the right space and identifying the correct time is known as the context. This process finds its support from what is known in the archeological circles as the geological law of association. This law means that artifacts found in similar geological placement are connected and contemporary to each other in addition to this, objects which sit in lower layers are judged to be older than those which are found above them (geological law of superposition)[7].
The process and the nature of archeology often differ from an archeologist to another. A perfect example is about the pyramids of Giza where two Egyptologists who have undertaken a comprehensive scientific investigation to uncover the engineering technology, religious and the cultural worth of the Giza findings, could not agree on the interpretations of the evidence they had found. In another instance, some archeologists do not agree with suggestions made by classical Greek Historian Herodotus that slaves constructed the Pyramids of Egypt. They are however they were all in agreement that; innovation, good administration and social organization were key in the formation of Egyptian civilization.
The Roles of Divergent Views on Egypt’s Excavations and Discoveries.
The major purpose of archeology is learning about how the human race evolved and how the past communities and societies were developed. Most of the notable societal developments occurred during the period of the prehistoric culture. These ancient cultures existed during a time when writing had not yet been discovered, and for that reason, there was no existing record of writing upon which people would have referred to.
No universal archeological theory can be said to be agreeable to all archeologists. Over time, and as a result of professional rivalries in the field of archeology, there have been several theories which have evolved. The first archeological theory was known as cultural history archeology, which major goal was to explain why cultures have evolved and adapted. Later on, American archeologists rebelled against the cultural history archeology and introduced processual archaeology. These archeologists, led by Binford and Kent Flannery, introduced processual archeology which would be anthropological as well as scientifically supported by hypothesis as well as scientific testing[8].
Another factor that has played a significant role in the field of archeology is imperialism.  The basic entry point of imperialism is power to dominate one society by another. This started from Egypt’s archaic period, the middle period, the new kingdom, the Roman conquest just to mention a few. Other factors that played an essential role in archeology include sexism and racial prejudices.
Questions Great Archeologists Neglect to Ask
The great archeologists to start with, failed to address themselves to the question on the impact of the discovery of human artifacts on the science of prehistoric archaeology. There was a need to explore the links between real science and fiction. The finding of the human antiquities and the acceptance of Charles Darwin’s theory of evolution casted an aspersion as to how the social and cultural nature of the human race could have been met within such a vast period. This current course of events regarding time dramatically hinders the conclusive dealing of contemporary issues that are emanating from a re-evaluation about the meaning and interpretation of archaeological time.
The archeologists also failed to address the question as to the accuracy of the dating of the discovered artifacts. This is because the existing dating techniques are still undergoing refinement and there has never been an accurate dating technique, this then raises the fundamental moral question as to whether the current information we rely on as the correct dating of the archeological finding is correct after all. Even though there exists more than one method of verifying the accuracy of artifacts dating, lack of accurate technique of dating raises questions on the credibility of the accepted history of the human race. If a precise method of dating is found some of the things that are considered factual and certain today will undoubtedly be errors in the future.













Bibliography
Breasted, James Henry. 2001. Ancient records of Egypt. Urbana: University of Illinois Press.

Fagan, Brian M. 2004.The rape of the Nile: tomb robbers, tourists, and archaeologists in Egypt.    Boulder, CO: Westview Press.

Lorton, David, and Miriam Lichtheim. 2008. Ancient


[1]  "Cracking the Egyptian code: the revolutionary life of Jean-Francois Champollion." Choice Reviews Online 50
[2] Jill Kamil, "Egyptology in the Early Twentieth Century," Labib Habachi, 2007

[3] Breasted, James Henry. "A History Of Egypt.
[4] "Cracking the Egyptian code: the revolutionary life of Jean-Francois Champollion." Choice Reviews Online 50,  

[5] "Rosetta Stone Sequences." Encyclopedia of Genetics, Genomics, Proteomics and Informatics, 2008.

[6] Daly, Okasha El. Egyptology: the missing millennium: ancient Egypt in medieval Arabic writings. Walnut Creek, CA: Left Coast Press, 2009.
[7] Rieppel, Olivier. "The “Law of Superposition”." Evolutionary Theory and the Creation Controversy, 2011, 111-33.
[8] Krieger, William H. "Processual Archaeology." Oxford Bibliographies Online Datasets, 2012.


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