Bob Brier on Napoleon and the Beginning of Egyptology

4:30 PM  - 5:30 PM
Friday Sep 28, 2012
John B Davis Lecture Hall, Ruth Stricker Dayton Campus Center

When Napoleon Bonaparte invaded Egypt in 1798, along with his army he brought 150 artists, linguists, and scientists of all kinds to describe Egypt. It would be the first ethnographic study of its kind but also was the beginning of modern Egyptology. They discovered the Rosetta stone, the key to deciphering hieroglyphs. When the savants returned to France, they published the Description de L’Egypte, the first accurate representation of Egyptian antiquities written to the western world. It was a massive work taking 20 years to complete, and started a wave of Egyptomania that continues today. This lecture traces Bonaparte’s Egyptian campaign and shows how much modern Egyptology owes to it.

Friday Sept. 28. 2012 at 4:30pm in the John B. Davis Lecture Hall in the Ruth Stricker Dayton Campus Center, reception to follow. Sponsored by the Art History Department and the MN society of the Archaeological Institute of America. http://aiamn.blogspot.com/

Contact: Vanessa Rousseau, vroussea@macalester.edu

http://aiamn.blogspot.com/

This event is for: Alumni, Students, Staff, Faculty, Parents and Families and Public

Admission: free and open to the public

Sponsored By: Art and Art History

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