Showing posts with label Book of the Dead. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Book of the Dead. Show all posts

Friday, April 20, 2012

Precious Manuscript Fragments Found - After 100 Years!

This is very exciting news!  From the Brisbane Times:

Ancient manuscript found in Brisbane

April 20, 2012 - 5:21PM

The Queensland Museum has been revealed as an unlikely resting place for the missing pieces of a rare manuscript from ancient Egypt. 

Archaeologists had been searching for the missing fragments of the rare Book of the Dead for 100 years when a visiting Egyptologist stumbled across them while in Brisbane to open a mummy exhibition.  Fragments from the rest of the papyrus, more than 3000 years old, lie in the British Museum, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.

The religious parchment is believed to have been buried with a top Egyptian official who lived in 1420 BC.  Parts of it were discovered in the late 19th century, but archaeologists have never found it all.

Dr John Taylor from the British Museum identified the fragments while being shown part of the museum's Egyptian collection.  He says a name on one of the pieces caught his eye and his suspicions were confirmed when he viewed the rest of the collection of more than 100 manuscript fragments.  The discovery was very significant, he said.

"This is not the papyrus of just anybody. This is one of the top officials from Egypt at the peak of ancient Egypt's prosperity," he said in Brisbane  "After over 100 years we're in a position to reconstruct this really important manuscript, perhaps in its entirety."

Dr Taylor said he was thrilled to make the once-in-a-lifetime discovery.

"It doesn't happy very often, not in this way. You get a really special feeling," he said.

Queensland Museum chief executive Ian Galloway says the manuscript fragments were donated to the Queensland Museum by a woman 100 years ago.  The museum is now trying to track down her family.

"We are incredibly surprised that we had such a significant object in our collection," Mr Galloway said.

He paid tribute to the museum's past curators for keeping the fragile fragments in such good condition. 

There was no doubt the rare manuscript would boost interest in the Queensland Museum, and potentially the value of its collection, he added.  "Our collections are valued every year and perhaps this year our collections will go up a notch," he said.

The fragments will remain in Brisbane and scholars are expected to attempt to piece together the papyrus on a computer, using photographs.

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

News from Egypt

This one isn't exactly "news" - it's been known for a long time that various pharaohs carried out restoration projects on the Sphinx and that the never-ending issue of wind-driven sand was a constant, vexing problem just about from Day One!  From Heritage Key:

Early conservation effort? 3,400 year old wall found at Giza shows Thutmose IV tried to preserve Sphinx
Submitted by owenjarus on Tue, 11/02/2010 - 14:16

From BBC News, a video feature on a new exhibit at the British Museum, on the world's longest recovered Egyptian Book of the Dead - 37 meters long!  I did not see an "embed" feature at the BBC, so here is the link to the video (for as long as it lasts), with striking images and rather crappy musical background :)

1 November 2010 Last updated at 17:23 ET
The British Museum's major autumn exhibition this year examines ancient Egyptian beliefs about life after death.

Journey through the afterlife: Ancient Egyptian Book of the Dead will show off the museum's collection of papyri, a rare and very fragile collection of spells which were designed to guide the dead safely into eternal life.

The exhibition will include the longest Book of the Dead in the world, the Greenfield Papyrus, which is 37 metres long and has never been shown publicly in its entirety before.

Curator John H Taylor gave BBC News a tour of the exhibition.

Late Period Egyptian Papyri Reveal Age-Old Problems and Concerns
From the University of Cincinnati
Papyrus Research Provides Insights into the ‘Modern Concerns’ of the Ancient World
Date: 10/29/2010 12:00:00 AM

A University of Cincinnati-based journal devoted to research on papyri is due out Nov. 1. That research sheds light on an ancient world with surprisingly modern concerns: including hoped-for medical cures, religious confusion and the need for financial safeguards.
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