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18 Feb 2008 04:53:16 | Dr. Sherin ElKhawaga
The Rosetta stone is very famous for it provided the key to
solve the ancient Egyptian language. The Rosetta Stone was
carved in 196 B.C. It was discovered by the French soldiers who
came with Napoleon. The Frenchman Jean François Champollion is
the one who cracked the code of the stone.
The discovery of the stone of rosette later called Rosetta stone
is an interesting story. The stone was discovered by the French
troops in Napoleon's military expedition, in 1799 in Lower
Egypt, when they were digging the foundations of an addition to
a fort near the town of el-Rashid (Rosetta), in the Nile Delta.
It was discovered near the town of Rosetta (now Rashid), located
in the Nile Delta about 40 miles northeast of Alexandria, by a
Frenchman, Pierre Bouchard, on 15 July 1799. Captain Bouchard,
an engineer officer in Napoleon's expedition to Egypt, was
supervising the reconstruction of an old fort, as part of the
preparations for defending the French from attacks by British
and Turkish forces in the area. The Rosetta Stone came to light
during the demolition of a wall in the fort. Captain Bouchard
saw that the polished black basalt stone contained three
sections of different types of writing, and recognized its
significance immediately. He sent the stone to Cairo, to the
scholars who also accompanied the French expedition to Egypt. In
1801, after two years of warding off attacks by the British, and
after their defeat at Abuquir Bay, the French forces in Egypt
surrendered. Under the terms of the Treaty of Capitulation, all
antiquities in the possession of the French, including the
Rosetta Stone, were ceded to the British.
The stone is a compact basalt slab (114x72x28 cm) that was
found in July 1799 in the small Egyptian village Rosette
(Raschid), which is located in the western delta of the Nile.
The stone contained words in three types of writing: Egyptian
hieroglyphs, Demotic, which is a shorthand version of Egyptian
hieroglyphic writing, and Greek. By translating the Greek
section, scholars were able to learn what the hieroglyphs meant.
This enabled them to translate inscriptions inside the Egyptian
temples.
The inscription on the stone was a decree passed by a general
council of priests which assembled at Memphis on the first
anniversary of the coronation of Ptolemy V Epiphanes, king of
all Egypt. The text concerns the honours bestowed on the king by
temples of Egypt in return for services rendered by him to Egypt
both at home and abroad. Priestly privileges, especially those
of an economic nature, are listed in detail. Because the
inscription appears in three scripts, hieroglyphic, demotic, and
Greek, scholars were able to decipher the Egyptian hieroglyphic
and demotic versions by comparing them with the Greek version.
The representation of a single text of the three mentioned
script variants enabled the French scholar Jean Francois
Champollion (1790-1832) in 1822 to basically decipher the
hieroglyphs. Furthermore, with the aid of the Coptic language
(language of the Christian descendants of the ancient
Egyptians), he succeeded to realize the phonetic value of the
hieroglyphs. This proved the fact that hieroglyphs do not have
only symbolic meaning, but that they also served as a "spoken
language". this article is courtesy of www.kingtutshop.com Home
of educational kits and handmade crafts. Another British
physicist Thomas Young worked on the translation of the stone
with the French Egyptologist Jean François Champollion. Thomas
Young, the English Physicist, was the first to prove that the
elongated ovals or cartouches in the hieroglyphic section of the
stone contained a royal name written phonetically, in this case
that of Ptolemy. Jean François Champollion went on to correct
and enlarge Young's list of phonetic hieroglyphs and lay the
foundations of our knowledge of the ancient Egyptian language in
a paper which was read to the Académie des Inscriptions et
Belles-Lettres in Paris in 1822. It was this discovery -- that
the Egyptian hieroglyphic writing system used a combination of
ideograms, phonetic signs, and determinatives -- that provided
the breakthrough in the translation of hieroglyphic writing. And
this ability to read the ancient hieroglyphs in turn opened the
door to the history of ancient Egypt and gave birth to the new
discipline of Egyptology.
About Author :
Dr. Sherin ElKhawaga, egyptian radiologist, interested in
egyptology.
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