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The third translation / by Bondurant, Matt,1971-(CARDINAL)466446;
Walter Rothschild, a middle-aged Egyptologist at the British Museum, has abandoned his wife and child to spend his time obsessively poring over the dusty inscriptions of a dead civilization. He is forced to reconnect with life when he is seduced by a mysterious woman who then steals an ancient papyrus containing the key to the enigmatic hieroglyphics of the Stela of Paser. The conspiracy trail leads Walter to a modern-day cult of the Egyptian sun god, Aten, protected by a menacing team of pro wrestlers. In Bondurant's ambitious debut, a sprawling picaresque is infused with mythic resonance by linking it to ancient Egyptian literature and mythology and to concepts in avant-garde physics, including black holes, general relativity and string theory.
Subjects: Thrillers (Fiction); British Museum; Americans; Archaeological thefts; Egyptologists;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 3
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The riddle of the Rosetta : how an English polymath and a French polyglot discovered the meaning of Egyptian hieroglyphs / by Buchwald, Jed Z.,author.; Josefowicz, Diane Greco,author.;
"In 1799, a French officer was clearing debris from a military installation when he discovered a stele bearing three scripts: ancient Greek, hieroglyphic, and a third that could not be definitively identified. This artifact, which came to be known as theRosetta Stone, has traditionally played the starring role in the history of decipherment, which has until now been understood as an instance of code-breaking, a kind of Bletchley Park avant la lettre. In The Riddle of the Rosetta, Buchwald and Josefowiczdelve into a wide array of British and French sources as well as archival material to produce a comprehensive new history of the decipherment. More than a puzzle-solving exercise based on a single artifact, the decipherment engaged with the era's social,cultural and intellectual contexts. It grew in the midst of heated disputes about language, historical evidence, the status of the Bible, the nature of polytheism, and the importance of classical learning. Jean-François Champollion in France and his British rival, the medical doctor and polymath Thomas Young, approached the decipherment from different standpoints derived from their contrasting temperaments, educational experiences, and attitudes to antiquity. Imbued with reverence for Greek culture and raised a Quaker, Young disdained Egyptian culture and saw Egyptian writing principally as a way to uncover new knowledge about Greco-Roman antiquity. To him, the decipherment was akin to a challenge posed by a problem in mathematics or science. Champollion's altogether different motivations and attitude unfolded amidst the political chaos of Restoration France, in fierce response to the intrigues of opposing scholars aligned with throne and altar. Unlike Young, Champollion admired ancient Egypt, and this sympathy, coupled with his willingness to upend conventional wisdom about the enigmatic Egyptian signs, freed him to travel a path down which Young refused to go. A remarkable intellectual adventure reaching from the filthy back streets of Georgian Londonto the hushed lecture rooms of the Institut de France, from the forgotten byways of provincial France to the splendor of the Valley of the Kings, this book reveals the decipherment in its full historical complexity"--Includes bibliographical references and indexes.Part 1 : A Quaker's odyssey. Dinner at Longman's -- In the classroom of nature -- An errand in the city -- The vocal circle -- Lecturer and physician -- The Herculaneum papyri -- Part 2 : Antiquity embraced. Words from Egypt's past? -- The sounds of an ancient language -- Paris atmospheres -- Rooted in place -- Hier pour demain -- L'Affaire Polycarpe -- An Egyptian geography of Egypt -- Indications -- Part 3 : Scripts and bones. Summer at Worthing -- Letters from Paris -- The papyri of the Description de l'Égypte -- Seeking uxellodunum -- The master of conditions -- Abandoning the alphabet at Grenoble -- Demonstrations -- Iconoclasm at the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres -- Part 4 : Reading the past. The obelisk from Philae -- A singular and puzzling artifact -- A momentous change -- Words and sounds -- Parisian reactions -- Words across the Channel -- Part 5 : Antique letters. Grey's box -- An opportune encounter -- The "true key" to Egyptian hieroglyphs -- The semantic trap avoided -- The reception of the Précis -- "Hold your laughter, friends!".
Subjects: Young, Thomas, 1773-1829.; Champollion, Jean-François, 1790-1832.; Rosetta stone.; Egyptian language;
Available copies: 4 / Total copies: 4
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Cracking the Maya code [videorecording] / by Coe, Michael D.Breaking the Maya code.; Guthrie, Rosey.; Hendrie, Nathan.; Holt, Sarah,1956-(CARDINAL)332836; Lebrun, David,1944-; Marin, Eric.; Sanders, Jay O.,1953-(CARDINAL)340322; ARTE France.(CARDINAL)326939; National Science Foundation (U.S.)(CARDINAL)138156; Night Fire Films.; WGBH (Television station : Boston, Mass.)(CARDINAL)154259; WGBH Educational Foundation.(CARDINAL)132712; WGBH Video (Firm)(CARDINAL)268015;
1. The forgotten Maya temples -- 2. A hidden history -- 3. Political roadblock -- 4. Child's play -- 5. Cultural revelations.Editors, Nathan Hendrie, David Lebrun, and Eric Marin ; cinematography, Amy Halpern, Steven Kline ; music, Yuval Ron, Ed Tomney.Narrated by Jay O. Sanders.The ancient Maya civilization of Central America left behind an intricate and mysterious hieroglyphic script carved on monuments and painted on pottery and bark books. This program highlights the ingenious breakthroughs that cracked the code, unleashing a flood of dramatic new insights about the ancient civilization.DVD, NTSC, region 1, 16:9 anamorphic presentation; Dolby Digital.
Subjects: Documentary television programs.; Video recordings for people with visual disabilities.; Video recordings for the hearing impaired.; Coe, Michael D.; Archaeology; Archaeology; Inscriptions, Mayan.; Mayan languages;
Available copies: 2 / Total copies: 2
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Discovery! / unearthing the new treasures of archaeology / by Fagan, Brian M.(CARDINAL)141937;
Includes bibliographical references (pages 247-251) and index.
Subjects: Case studies.; Illustrated works.; Excavations (Archaeology); Archaeology; Archaeology; Archaeology; Archaeology; Antiquities.; Archaeology and history.;
Available copies: 5 / Total copies: 5
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