Friday, March 15, 2019
Hieroglyphic Writing :: essays research papers
Right from the beginning the deciphering of the mysterious Egyptian paper fascinated everybody. In 1799 a certain Captain Bouchard of the French troops was supervising work on the fortifications of Fort St. Julian, situated a half-size more than four kilometers outside the town of Rosetta when hi work custody discovered a stone which was destined to achieve great fame in archaeological history. It was in fact the Rosetta Stone which led to the deciphering of the hieroglyphs. As a result of the fortunes of contend this precious stone fell into the hands of the British who gave it a orient of honor in the British Museum. On one face of the stone, a tablet of extremely hard black basalt, there is a unyielding trilingual inscription the three texts begin written one higher up other. The first of the inscriptions, 14 lines long, is written in hieroglyphs. The second, 32 lines long, is written in demotic, from the Greek word demos meaning people, which refers to a type of script e mploy by ordinary people. The third inscription, 54 lines long, is in Greek and therefrom was comprehensible. This latter text, translated without difficulty, proved to be a priestly decree in honor of Ptolemy Epiphanes which finishes with a formal instruction that this decree, engrave on a tablet of hard stone, in three scripts, hieroglyphic, demotic and Greek, shall be engraved in each of the great temples of Egypt.The honor of deciphering the hieroglyphs fell to two scholars, the Englishman doubting Thomas Young and the Frenchman Francois Champollion who started work on it almost the same time and who were to try their efforts crowned by success. What Young achieved by instinct Champollion achieved by scientific method and with such success that by his death in 1832 he could leave behind him a grammar and a very substantial vocabulary of ancient Egyptian. But what did this indite that the Greeks called hieroglyphic, from hiero glyphica that is sacred signs actually consist o f? The ancient Egyptians themselves called their written texts the words of the gods. In fact according to tradition men were taught to write by the god Thot himself during the reign of Osiris. Down through the centuries the writing retained a sacred character and more or less(prenominal) magical powers.
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