251 44 15MB
English Pages 225 Year 1999
CRACKING
CODES THE
HOSETTA STONE AND DECIPHERMENT RICHAUD PARKINSON
CKACKING
CODES TIIC
ROSETTA STONE AND DCCiniCRMENT
:Tifri(ei^!gD*fV«:^.^CCC.T«gS.sm/terXIZI!|?V-fU
.
w»Mfy
{ } /:i;}/'(r..'H
.
)/.
Iiat\>haies the hierogjiyphic script (and its derivatives) to other writing
systems, and
its
decipherment to diat of other ancient scripts. It explores in depth
the role of writing in ancient Egypt religious properties, as well as
extent to
w hich
its
the cracking of
—
its
aesthetic,
more mundane a Hiii-^uistic
iconographic and niagico-
scribal uses
- and considers
the
code and the reading of a text allow
one
to read" the underlying cultural code, inevitably an uncertain process in tlic
case
of a kti^-dead society. It also assesses the relative eflkiency of difieient types
of script and questions the
view
vridely held but simplistic
the future,
w itli codes
yet to he cracked, with scripts
secrets, p.uu-niK .nv.niing ihcir
The
own "Rosetta
still
significant
itself,
fiom the
number fiom other sources
British
in the
It
ends with
unyielding of their
Stone*.
exhibition contains over two hundred objects, most ot
ing of course the Stone
modern
that the
western alphabet represents the high point of a process of evolution.
Museum's
tlie
them, mclud-
collections, a small
but
UK and abroad The curator of the
-
'-'i-j
'
FOREWORD
exhibition
is
Dr Riclurd
Parkinson, an Assiscaiu Keeper
worked duoug^out in dose coUaboiation with Office and of the Conservation I>epanment.
also the principal .luthor
of
with an exjdanatoiy
ctmtribution by
Mary
Ro«.etta Stone ot the
book
The
is
demotic
owed
Museum
tiritish
on
display,
effect.
and
is
highly stimulating
Systems Ltd, California, and his wife
of modem
the subject a
is
a selective.
divided into tour main
h indudes a brief but
and
Dr Parkinson
which contains
cry|>tanalysis
and
valuable up-to-date translation
by Dr R.S. Simpson
to the expertise ot Joanna
ut
Osrord The
tinal
its
of the
appearance
Chanipness and her colleagues
at
Press.
Mr
ai
>l
Mr NUs
and Mrs Aiicy, M. and S,
Berlin, the Aslinioleaii
de
text
on
scripts;
of the Museum's Design
following individuals and organizations kindly agreed to loan material to
die exhibition: Searle.
nanative;.
Dr Whitfidd Diffie of Sun
undeciphered
l^epartineiu of
in pieparaiion for the exhibi-
volunie.
this associated
Fischer, an Egyptologist,
applicability to
staff
m^o
and to wonderful
Cully illustrated catalogue ot the objects
sections,
(lie
on ancient Egyptian litennue, who has
Egyptian Antiquities and an authority
tion have cleaned the Stone carefully
m
9
Museum. ONford.
I'lcardie. Ainiciis. tlie .Vlusee t
Ronald
(;i.uu Atcluve,
enormously
gratefiil
Mme
Z.Young, the Ag>'ptische
to
Mr
Ronald
Papynissanimlung,
European Space Agency, the MuNce
'hampollion. Pigeac.
London and
them
tlie
Chateauminois,
Museum und The
National
the Victoria and Albert
for dieir co-operation
nist.
the
Museum. We
are
and for helping
'Cracking Codes' worthy of die great annivefsary diat
it
i
us to
make
marks.
W.V. Davies KnycT iiritish
of F.i;yptiitu Antiqmtks
Museum
Copyrighted material
PR.EFACE Read
on. Reader, read on.
and work S.
Smith,
it
out for yoiuself
Nwd ou YttlMf P»per (1936)
This book
some
cxaiiuncs
aspects of
decipherment
to
v
range of cultural (and mostly textual)
li
i
bicentenary of the discovery of the Rosetta Stone in 179
i
focused description eral
available; instead
quesdom amused by (he
it
are narrative, but the centre
format has been adopted to allow the leader Co
of items
Due
presents an accessible account
of
Stone.
Most of the following chapters
the artefacts and sources.
to enter a
records. It does not provide a narrowly
Storu-s cOTitents, context or deciphernient. since sev-
(if'tlu'
such arc already widely
various
its
the
fiom Egypt to show
artefiicts
how writing shapes and is shaped by cultures, and how it can allow us dialogue with the past in interpreting
bi irc
pr. ^cnts a
t
come fiice
of ^tace, diis
is
a catalogue; diis
to face with
some of
is
a selective cat^tlogue
in the exhibition that this publication .iccompanies
Attempts have been
made within
to liniitadons
the format to provide translauons of at least samples of each text;
I
have only rendered into verse those texts fiom the catalogue which are mariced as such
by
verse-points, aldiough
selected with the
most are in metrical form. Pieces have been
aim of presenting hitherto unpublisfacd
known
better
accessibility- for
the general rc.iJcr; references have likewise
minimum and It is
arc not
periods of Egyptian history in order to increase
been kept to the
comprehensive.
phenomena
always an exciting challenge to have to write about artefacts and
that are millennia outside cultures,
when
and have been
items,
drawn from the
and
I
one^
am gntefiil
area
of specialized
to colleagues
study, let alone
fiom
dealing with these auMs: Dominicpie Collon. Vincent Daniels
l^^ate, Irvint;
Finkel, Lesley Fitton.
Mike Ncilson, Robert
Lynn MeskelL Andrew Middleton.
iiimpson, Uorota Starzecka,
of Thomas Youi^ which was generously
'
li
hi
i
:opher
K Miller.
Uerek Welsby, Ted Woods.
Jacob Simon of the National Portrait Gallery kindly portrait
different
who have corrected some of my errors
oflfered
an opinion of die
lent to the exhibition
by
Mr
Copyrighted material
PREFACE
and Mrs Simon Young. UruceTate faciliuted
11
admire (he liankes obelisk.
a crip to
Tom Hanlwick chased seveml dusiTC items of bibliography. I am exoemely gntefiil to Whit6eld DiflSe, a noted modern
cryptognpher,
and Mary Fischer for contributing a masterly summary of decipherment and
of the Memphis
cryptography, and to Robert S. Simpson for his recent translation
Decn'f. I
.iR'
li.iiikN
above
t)\vcki
to
ail
W,V. Djvics for conceiving, enabling and
supporting the project, and for generously providing
money from Departmental
funds to subsidise the colour plates. Within the Department of Egyptian Antiquities, Caiol Andrews,
and
assistance
been
inv.ilu.iMf.
Thornc nicntal
jdlm
exhibition
Stone
graphics
and limia
skiilx
has been
An
been
much
the
of which has
all
debt
Museum
was surprised
killed
ui
bed and
Indian police 42.Ani. 7.2.
attempts to recover the lives of ordinary- individunU from most of society' must compriM.' archaeological investigations. Archaeological data can be as eloquent as
any
text,
and. as the EgV'ptoiogist John Uaincs has noted, archaeolog\' and writing
'complement each
other's silences'.-
measure of dialogue with the dead
While is
it is
impossible to travel to the past, a
possible. In
countering the constraints
imposed by the passage of time, rigorous scholarship and archaeology' only effective
tools.
Reading
texts
over the shoulders of the dead, as
among the most immediate ways of entering such The
world's writing systems are
takes writing for granted,
means by the Sysims
is 'a
and
is
a w.iy that
it
less
(fig.
1)
is
by Peter Daniels
permanent marks used
can be recovered more or
intervention of the utterer'.' Writing picture writing
varied. Tlie reader
of
surprisingly difficult to specify
tern). The definition oflered
system of more or
ance in such
numerous and it
is
it
are the
were,
is
a dialogue.
in Tlu-
this
book
what one
llvrWs
IVriiiitg
to represent an utter-
less
exactly without the
bound up with
language, and thus
not true writing, even though information can be
Cl
a.Ut'ial
14
CRACKING CODES
recorded with pictures, and writing can encode extra-iinguistic Pictine
wridi^
is
often assumed to be a univeisal
thought to be the origin of aO writing and even of language
means of sign language. ventions, as
It is,
nuclear waste
mnemonic device that
itself bounded
when
realized
form of pictun•^
the
sites in
nuUennia/ Picture
tuture
however,
Thomas Scbcok
wri[ini»,
such
iiiiui
uution.
phenomenon, and was once
by
itscdf,
tluough the
local interpretative
con-
asked to devise a warning about uniKi
ili.it
as (..entra)
can prompt the reader to
be read precisely
still
American picture codices,
remember a
narrative, but it
in
is
a
can
never record the exact phrasing of die original nanadve.'
The
pictorial nature
the fact that writing differ
of some
relies
scripts,
immensely. T he impact of wTiting on societies and
nieinor\'
and expression
poses, as
much
as they
world
best writing system, but this as
llif 7f/i»)i/'/i of
tlif
is
how
it
shapes LiikutMl
discussed in anthropology: ditferem
of what can be written and for what pur-
have different shapes of script.
modem
alphabet in the
much
are topics
societies have different conventions
such
such as Egyptian hietog^hic, di^iuises
on langui^. Written language and spoken language
finnniis
The prominence of the
the assumption diat
not the case, even
it is
inherendy the
thou^ many studies, with tides
have presented the history of writing
Alplhihct.
as
an
evolution towards this modern, primarily Western, ideal. This evolutionary model
can surest that the birth of writing was a single event, and
maintained that
all
forms of early
Far East was ceivable,
it
a result
l
has sometimes been East were derived
that the appearance
ontacts with the
Near
East.
of writing in the
While
this is
highly unlikely. Tiic existoiiLe of independent writing
is
America was
of cultuml
it
Near
script in the ancient
fiom a sin^e 'discovery' or 'invention', and
pii
v
imislv LOiiMdereil uru
crt.iiii
.ind
its
systems t.iken to he pu ture
writmg, but the recent decipherment of Mayan hieroglyphs has shown that true writing system,
di&rent
parts
due to the
con-
in C'entral
it is
a
and thus that writing has indeed independendy arisen in
of the worid. The predominance, or 'triumph*, of the alphabet b
cultural fortunes
of the usen of alphabetic
scripts radier
than to die
inherent superiority of the system.
'AMONG THE RUINED LANGUAGES' The
pictorial allure
of hieroglyphs was fidt by contemporary
cultures throughout
Egyptian history, as can be seen in Egyptianiring arte&cts with pseudo-hieio^yphs
fiom the Near
East. Hieroglyphs
alsci
the empire of Meroe. and possibK argtiablv a distant .uu estor
inspired .ilso
of the imHicrn
an
essentially
alphabedc script in
the I'roto-SHi.iitic script,
.ilph.ibct.
The
l-.gx
ptiaii script,
which
is
however,
remained intimately bound up with Lg\ptian culture; unhke contemporaneous
cuneiform
scripts,
Egyptian hieroglyphs were never used outside Egyptian
dependencies.*
The Hellenistic Hermetic that
was probably written
overcome: "Then completely
filled
this
tractate Asdepius describes, in
an apocalyptic section
how the former glory of Egypt would be land, home of shrines and temples, will be
in Egypt,
most sacred
with tombs and dead things.
O Egypt, Egypt, of your religions
DECIPHERINt. THE IIOSETTA STONE
15
only fables will sumve. unbelievable to posterity, and only words will survive
on stones
inscribed
your pious accomplishments."
that narrate
came
'words inscribed on stones' later unintelligible. The
of it
Hermetic
and probably copied
in
ad
c.
^T^^).
almost disappeared from use. The
could
still
on
obelisks erected in
who
Antinous.
fS^^m
ar^'
chapel
Pincio
At
priest
(fig. 2).'*
Its
it
a
is
now
at
funerary
.in
stela.
inscription
scripts
on temple
was
walls
and by the time
its
whose use was
become Eg^^pt,
and
gradu,'illy
subsumed
ilif
last
wj»
E|;yptun obclUk. rrrcicd by n--itvi'itJ in lUc ginlvin
MiHiif PiniHo in 1S22,
of
vmw iiunitlH iftet
in
other cul-
its
distinctive religious
and hmerar>'
practices.
it
had
The hos-
images of Eg^'pt in the Bible compounded the indecipherable
survived The
floNsxring
its last
became synonymous with hidden
impenetrable mysteries. Accounts ot hieroglyphs by
2
restricted to
increasingly cut ofT
repute had arrived in the West,
repute of hieroglyphs, which
H.idri.iii. Ii
is
irrevocably associated with oriental and antique mystique, in
part through
Fit;.
lector
who
Nevertheless, the hiero-
Italy.
and languages of
a
however, was
in the third centurv' ad.
Pharaonic Eg>'ptian culture was
tile
itself,
Monte
in classical
called I'etchorncbkhem,
The
temples and similar monuments, had
from the living
composed
Egyptian, and coiueiv.ibly hy
Akhmim.
probably carved onto the obelisk in
become
memory of
g,miens of the
in the
skilfully
is
gK-phic script, which was a sacred sj-stem
tures,
had
rwo centuries ad
first
such as that of Hadrian in
Italy,
inscribed text
of the temple
known from
emperors of the
and
portion
died in ad 130. This was prob.ibly placed in a mortu-
Egyptian, almost certainly by
' ''^
a
Nag Hammadi
at
inscriptions, not only in the Egyptian heart-
Koine, where
at
discovered
library'
this period, the hicroi;K-phic script
Roman
commission hieroglyphic
land, but also
and
tractate survives in a Latin translation,
Coptic version in the Gnostic
also in a
Ironically, the
to indicate something mysterious
the
into
European
Kenaissance; these
emphasized the symbolic pictorial nature of the
script
-
its
classical
.ind
authors
understandably
most
aspect for people accustomed to an alphabet - and they conveyrd
distinctive
little
under-
standing of how hieroglyphs were read linguistically. Kenaissance tradition con-
Chaiijpollion'4 decipherment. Courtesy J.
G;i(heKole.
tinued to present each sign as an emblem, and elaborated on the neo-Platonic description of Plotiiuis (thml century ad).
It
considered hieroglyphs to be a
writing s>'stcm that recorded pure things and ideas without the confusion of dif-
forming the
ferent languages, thus
Thomas Browne's These
classical
*a
of the confusion of Babel'
a direct result
Cireco-Koman Period,
sensual presence
of the Egyptians' tendency, particularly
to foreground the script's figurative nature as
of the greatest imaginable
intensit\''.''
manuscript containing the HivroiilyphUs of the EaypUiw. 1
41 9.
The
first
part
of
this
century
.ad.'" Its
An
HorafHillo
intluential (Ireek
was recovered
in
emblematic-style treatise was prob,ibly composed in
Alexandria by a Hellenized Egyptian philosopher fit"th
in
and European interpretations were not due to simple mis-
understanding, but were in the
'best evasion
words.
who
lived at the
end of the
account seems to be based in part on native Egyptian
Cc
lists
a.crial
of hieroglyphic,
hieratic
Akhmim, which
or
and demotic
signs,
probably txoin libraries
at
Alexandria
inchided exphiuttoty and often theological grosses," Thus
the Renaissance view of hieroglyphs was part of a continuous tradition of recep-
Period. This system, with
not be scon
but
as
the
last
elaboration
its
\ i'stii:cs
w
oi a
t
on the
ittiMi
SLript's
symbolic aspects, should
tradition sinknig into ohst iiiaiuism,
ensured
lailiei a liiMl llowtriiii,' ol initik-ctuai sophiiiticacioii that
tion's survival
From
Grcco-Roman
writing system of the
tion, originating in the hieroglyphic
by captivating the imagination of Euiopc in
tile
tradi-
later centuries.
the Renaissance on, attempts at decipherment involved a process
of
explaining the mystical significance of hieroglyphs radier than trying to read thcin. In his study
one
ot the
most
of the obelisk now
in the Piazza
monuments
accessible Eg\'pcian
Minerva
riddles answered'.
He
Rome
in
(1667),
at the time, tlie Jesuit antic)uar-
ian Aclunasius Kircher (1602-80) claimed that 'the Sphnix
h.Ls
been
killed,
interpreted die cartouche containing simply the
of King Apries (589-570 bc)
as follows:
The
her
name
protection of Osiris against die
violence oflypho must be elicited according to the proper rites and ceremonies
by
sacrifices
and by appeal to the
tutelar^'
Genii of the
world, in order to
triple
ensure the en joyment of the prosperirv' customarily given by the Nile against the
violence of the
enemy Typho.
attracted derision, iitteiest in
by
his puUications,
Christian Egypt and
The
onic Egypt.
'
Although
Kirclier's
readings subsequendy
and knowledge of Egyptian matters was stimulated
which included much work on Coptic die language of now known to be the descendent of the language of i^iara-
relevance of Coptic to the hierogl^'phic script was, however,
imdcrestimated. since
intormatu^n
'
it
was believed hieroglvphs could not record
of dreams,
(l()y8-177'>), dismissed Kircher's attempts as iieo-Platonic sliadows
and argued
linguistic
1741 the bishop ot (doucester. William W'arbiirton
In
directly.
hiero^yphs were not ways of concealing mysteries
(correctly) that
fiom the vulgar masses; but
his
pubUcations offered Utde practical pnigiess
towards decipherment.
By
the early eii'hceeiirli fenrurv neo-I'latonism
although reverence for circles (as
tiie
the hiero^yphs
came
masonic
remove fundamental miscoiueptions first
significant
as a 'language
of dung$' had a new
and C^hinese writing systems were explored
.iboiit
known fiom
the two. and
in the 17()iK
coin legends. In
17fil
might contain
pos-
script
was
that
of I'ahnyrenc,
the church £idiets to be similar to
Syriac'^ In 1756 accurate copies of paired inscripdom in Greek .allowing
as
the venpt.
decipherment of an ancient
the language of which was
were published,
appeal.
been bv Knelier. but the^e investigations did Utdc to
sible parallels, as thev liad
tions
in
to be identified with Nature, and dius appealed also to
pictorially based Aztec
The
intlueiuial.
be strong
seen in Mozart's Die Zauberflaie of 1791). The 'mysteries' encoded by
Enlightenment scholars: hieroglyphs
The
was no loi^r so
intluence of Eg>pt continued to
and Palmyrene
Abbe Jean-Jacques Barthelemy (1716-^3) he
-dso
deciphered Phoenician on the
he sLiggested that the oval cartouches royal
names, many ot which were
in
to correlate
basis (if bilingual
Eg\ptian inscrip-
known from
classical
DECIPHERING THE ROSETTA STONE
17
authors, a suggescion that wis tund.uiieiu.il to later progress. Cuiieitorui writing
had been known since tlw (Uscovery of
Persepolis in the early seventeenth
fiom Penepolis and
century. G.F. Giotefend (1775-1853) studied inscriptions
made
the plausible assumption diat certain names
would occur
known the
in
Miins. u!)i
ptian
campaign of Napoleon (179H-lii01)"' marks the turning point in die modern history
of ancient Egypt. As weU
Ottoman
rule in Egypt,
of the Enlightenment
Napoleon
a
it
as the
can^gn's
political objectives
had symbolic overtones since
country that was supposedly the origin of
himsclt' bad adopted the
bee
as a
agauut
cdonized in die name
it
personal heraldic
all
emblem,
wisdom. instead
of
the French royal tleur-dc-lys, because the bee was a hieroglypliic symbol for 'ruler^
according to
classical audicns.'^
The French occupation of Egypt began
in July 1798,
was accompanied by a body of scientiiti, scholars and 151 persons. Their
tim de
Vl^gjfptt.
country and
its
work culminated
natural history,
between 1809 and 1828." The record,
in the magnificent
whoso volumes included
and aldiougb
it
Desaip^
now vdued
its
modern
state
of the
of topics
principally as a visual
attempts to analyse
savants' inability to read
numbering
in that order
many more inscriptions
previously avaihble to European scholars,
were hampered by the
is
initiaUy
and monumental Dcsaip-
antiquities, the
and were published
provided access to
and die invading force
artists,
than had been its
discoveries
hieio^yphs. This inability pie-
vented them, for example, fiom distinguishing between temples and palaces, as
Copyrighted material
D E CI H I'
Fig. i
The Ros«tj S«one (CA
bottom
lett
corner h»i been
thou' (he darkened
24)
left
The
mi at the
unconver\ed to
wax and while
well as causing
them
traditions,
and
of its society
is
dominated by the
as ruled absolutely
scientific truth rather
RIN
i;
KO
THIi
S
Greco-Roman temples of Philae
to date the
Tlie image of Egy pt presented in the text
inAlt.
F.
ideas
wlumes
is
idealistic,
than theologians.
ot
its
TTA
to
as a cult
STUNK
2500
drawing on
of Egyptian religion
by a wise king, and
r.
19
bc.''*
classical
of Nature,
priests as seekers after
One consequence of the
publication was
the unleashing of a tide of Egyptomania in European art and design.
REVEALING THE ROSETTA STONE: DISCOVERY, PUBLICATION AND DISPLAY As
a result
of the French campaign,
a
new
piece of evidence concerning the
nature of hieroglyphs was discovered in 1799.
was quickly recognized
.is
'a
most valuable
yet discovered link ot the Egyptian to the
The Ro&etta Stone
relic
of antiquity, the
known
languages'.-^'
(fig.
3, pi. 1)
feeble but only
and has become
perhaps 'the most famous piece of rock in the world"."' To pbce
its
discovery in
context, the same year wittiessed Beethoven's Graiule soiutw piuUeiiqut, and the
following year the appearance of Coleridge atid Wordsworth's Lyriail BiiUads, Maithiis' Bssay on the Fijj.
4
A
view of the interior of Fort St Julien
R>nett.i, the site
CouncN)- M.
at
of the Ro>iMl.i Siihu-s dium'erx'.
l*riiiciplis
of Population and the posthumous publication of
William Jones' Discourse (cited above).
The Stone
tiicrbricr.
75.7
cm wide
is
an irregularly shaped slab of
and 2S.4
cm
thick;
its
weight
is
a
dark hard rock, 112..^
estimated
at
cm
tall,
762 kg. The discovery
laterlal
20 CRACKING CODES
was made
second
in inid-Juiy, shortly before the
PuUished accounts of its
battle ot
but
early history vary in details,
found during works on the defences
at
it
Abuqir on 25
July.
seems to have been
Fort St Julien on the west bank of die
when an
Nile, at the sniaQ port
was .appointed is
said that
to
be prefect of Isere when he returned to FnuKe
he told
t.iles
in 1801,
and
it
of Egypt to the ten-year-old Champollion. A copy of the
CcunicT report of the Stone s discosrry reached Champollion's elder brother and life-long mentor, Jacques Joseph (1778-1867) in 1802. followed
Stone
itself
two
years later.
The
by
a
print
elder C^hampollion presented a paper
Rosetta Stone that year to the Societe des Sciences
et
of the
on the
Arts de Grenoble, and he
advised Jean- Francois that if he was intea-sted in hieroglyphs, he should study the inscription.
At the age of sixteen the yoimger Champollion presented
the Grenoble
Academie ai^iing
that
a
paper to
Coptic was the langtiage of ancient Egypt,
a
belief that, although not original, laid the foundation of his later achievements. In
1807 the two brothers
left
for Paris; the
younger studied Arabic under
DECIPHERING THE
— -•
Silvcstn:
dc Sacy and acquired
STONK
R 11 S E T T A
with
a full fainiliaritv'
all
the lan-
guage^i considered relevant to Egyptian, including Sanskrit
Chinese.
He
was also taught Coptic by a Coptic
was nineteen he had been awarded
'
Grenoble together with
his brother,
the necessary paper making
him
a chair at the University
doctor
a
of
hinisclf signed
in lSrt9.
Champollion wrote to the Royal
In 1814
and
Before he
priest.
and Napoleon
33
whose For-
Society,
eign Secretary was Young, starting a correspondence that continued
Youngs
until
in the Drsaiptioii,
requested a
were
tions
activities
wrote that he had only an engraving of
the English Royal Society, and the French copy
and since these differed
cast. Ditficultics
a persistent
was
in
problem, and epigraphy
checkmg
some
like
two or
three months.'^"*
The
you
sieur, that
you, to
it
If
te.xt.
1
been
first."'
'
It
mKh I
*3
'Jk
'He
;
,
is
discoveries too
I
In another letter, Silvestre
sympathies had done him
dc Sacy used the word
Champollion
little
pirp*rjtion for thr publu anon 'Grnmctru-al cirv'anon ot
.in
obelisk t'mm I'hiloc
H. 18.3 cm. From die Uankn MSS. Lacy.
By kind
\sif\'.
\
in
Napoleonist
s
honour. Again he warned,
prone to playing the role of a jackdaw
in
The need
for further bilingual inscriptions
borrowed pea-
and supplementary
keys in order to advance decipherment was keenly nude
much
could happen that he might then claim to
cocks plumes.''"
'
•
obcliik,
Mon-
a great part
had one piece of advice to give
'charlatanism', as well as noting that political
have only
1
think.
'i
and you read
would be to not communicate your
M. Champollion.
ha%-e
*P
are further forward today,
of the Egyptian
at least
d»wii)g of the Ujnko
have not yet
'I
following year Silvestre de
wrote to Young:
Sacy, disillusioned with his pupil,
A
other scholarly
the passages Champollion requested, and
phrases in his letter suggest a certain rcscrvr:
for
he
of nationalistic competition. Young
had time to skim through your interesting work, w-hich
had
Hg. 13
respects,
over the accuracy of copies of inscrip-
a potential object
obliged only by
some
i
He
death.''''
made by
the Stone
the collectors
who
was discovered
were working
at Philae
in
Egypt
by the British
(sec cat. 10),
dilettante, antiquarian
H2\.
Uyron, William John Bankes
(1
and
7S(>-18.S5).
felt
by several of
in IS 15
an obelisk
and close friend of
At Young's request he had copied
Kin)$.lon
permi-siion ot'thr National TruM.
many
inscriptions
on
through Egypt, and he had the
his travels
brought to England,
where
Rosftta en route). ^'
The
it
(tig.
13)
is
Ptolemy Vlll Euergertes
II
and the
priests
official
correspondence between
of Isis on Philae
in
124 Bc concerning
exemption. Bankes. Young and the English collector and consul
Henry
Salt (178(>-1827)
sent the
same
text, thus
were mistaken,
as
in Eg\'pt
considered that the hieroglyphs and Greek must repreproviding another potential bilingual key. In
this
they
Clhampollion recognized, but Bankes correcdy supposed that
cartouche on the obelisk should write the
Ptolemy VIII,
of
inscribed with hieroglyphs, but on
the base are Greek inscriptions that record
ta.\
monument
arrived in 1821 (after p.issing through the port
obelisk
who
was mentioned
in the
name of Cleopatra
III,
the
a
queen of
Greek, although he was unable to read
laterial
34 CRACKING CODES
the individual si^ns.
Tim
Young
idcniiticacioii rL-iiuiiicd uiipublislicd, .lUiiough
adopted and used it; in 1821. however, Bankes issu«d a publication of the obehsk,
and in some copies he added in pend) die name 'Oeopatia* beside the cartouche.
The presumed
Wellington hid It U'js finally
a
foundation stone for
two
it
at
relevant
a brief
inscriptions generated
second Rosetti Stone. In
as a
erected in 1H39, but
being conumlted for
of the
bilingual natuie
period of fome for the obelisk
Kingston Lat\.
1
S27 the Duke of Dorset
B.uikL-s
years later iiaiikes tied troni
estate.
England
after
for indecency with a guardsman. The inscription
trial
on
the pedestal impUcidy and discreetly mamtains Bankes' andYoung'k assertion diat
monument was a
the
bilingual text. The obelisk can stiU
be seen in the grounds
of Kingston Lacy; considerably eroded by the English weather and overlooked by the rtuighly contetnpor.ineous Iron Age-
remarkably
at
home among
the decipliernient,
its
role
ot'H.uibury Rings, but looking
hill tort
the swallows and cedars. Like
now
is
many
protagoimcs in
largely forgotten (pi. 7).
In France Champollion^ poHdcal sympathies for Napoleon had caused
be deprived of his post in Grenoble, and he arrived in with
his brother,
two
he
C
hanipollioii rc.ul his
Academie des
tjjj'pticns' to the
years earlier,
who
Aradi'iiiii- ilcs Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in
Despite hi^ precarious situation.
written
him
still
"He
to
in July 1S21 to live
then secretary to Baron Joseph Dacier (1742-1833),
perpetual secn'tarv of the
des anciens
Piiris
was
Paris.
I'ecriture hieratique
Inscriptions. In this paper, actually
held that hieroglyphs were exclusively symboUc
and logographic, a published view
that later English critics asserted
he had subse-
quently attended to suppress. The paper; however, established that die hieratic script
found on papyri was
was consequently enlarged.
on
also a
Deceniber IK21 he compared the number of signs
In
number of Greek words
the Rosetta Stone with the
tively),
and showed that the
fimn of hiemglyphs, and the corpus of texts
script
and 486 respec-
(1.41
could not be pua-ly logographic, with a single
picture representing each word.
By
this date
Young had proposed
a set
of alphabetic
names of Ptolemy and Cleopatra, publishing the
Hr(i')'(7ii;>.ici/fi/
Brinintiiui (4th edition) in
m
(he liankes obelisk reached Champollion
conclusion as
Young about
Clec^tn. From cient for
him
diese
was
later
Suf^ement
Roman
to
copy of the inscriptions on
1822 and he arrived
at the
same
the alphabetic signs in the names Ptolemy and
names he had fourteen alphabetic signs, vi^iich were
also
the obelisk. In the case of the
\v
on
is
b
I'-ed,
he progressed.
as
It
without acknowledgetheory about the
liaiikes pencilled
latter,
suffi-
members of the Ptolemaic
emperors, expanding the alphabet
claimed that ChampoUion's work
ment, on Young's published work, and
name on
A
to decipher die cartouches of other
Dynasty and of the
signs used to write the
these findings in the
ISl'J.
however, there
is
no
definite evi-
dence that ChampoOioa saw a copy of the obelisk^ inscriptions widi Bankes* pencil annotations,'^
on the copy
ahhou^
Salt subsequently
sent to the French Institute in Paris
claimed that they were present
which Champollion did
("hampollion's insight about the nature ot the hicroglvphic script
presented as an almost mythical event, as a
moment
ot
superhuman
sec. is
often
a-veiation.
Uopyiiyhioo
inaieiial
OECIPHBRINC THE ROSETTA STONB SS
On
4 September
1
1
S22 he received copies of
Abu Simb«l which had been
Nkdas Huyot
de Triomidie, Jean
inscriptions
(1780-1840),
who had been
Bankes* party.^ These included die cartouche sflP
two
final
signs
read
bi-
from [he
.k
.i'-
Ke'se^,
the tetnplc of
of the Arc
at the site
word
the
l
for sun. in C'optii:
suL'gcstiiig the
iiist.intl\
with
Champo liop could read the
.
knowledge of Coptic suggeMcd
as SS, atld his
I'P
sli.ipcd sign niit^ht represent
could
firoin
sent by a travelling friend, the architect
nn j]
counts ot the Greek hhtonan M.inetiio
.is
th.u the
sun-
hence the n.ime
ir:
ii.une K^anises t.nnduir
Kainesni. ChanipoUion's
reading of the cartouche was subttandaUy correct, although he beUeved that each
phonetic sign lepresented one consonant (taking
whereas some signs
as m),
A
were subsequendy recognized to represent more than one (A
Another sheet fmin Huyot had a instead
of the sun-disk,
the animal of the this
similar
contained an
it
group of
which
ibis
cartouche could be read Thotnics, another
Fn»n
these
was predominantly phonetic, but was used to write
room
native
sources described as
affaire!')
name
preserved by the Greek
names Champollion
realized diat the script
More
importantly,
it
names from the pharaonic period, and so could have
nephew Ainie
in the
same manner. According
to the
Champollioii-Fige.ic. he rushed to his brother's
on the afternoon of the same
in the Institut
dens tnon
classical
also included logograms.
been used to write the Egxprian lant;uage his
ffu).
god Thoth. By comparison with the cartouche of Ramses,
historians as TbulhmSsis.
account of
actually being
signs in a cartouche, but,
day, cried "I've
done
it'
jc
(
and collapsed in a dead &int lasting five days.^
ChampoUion's &nous
report, die
UttK
i
M.
Dacier (fig» 14-16),
was read
at
the Academie des Inscriptions ct Belles Lettres in Paris on Friday 27 September 1822, a romantically dark and rainy day, in
a
romantically ev-entful year that saw
declarations of independence in Greece (troni the ("Ottoman Fmpire) and in Brazil (from Portugal). Bankes'
£ot the present buildings
Smirl».The Lettn is text
Byron was writing LXw Juan and the plans
tiriend
of the British
oflScially
Museum were being drawn up by Robert
dated 22 September to match the day on which
its
was completed. In the report Champollion described the alphabet which to write non-Egyptian names, and in the
was used announced
that he
earlier "pure hieroglyphic writing'.
Young, whose
conduding pages he
was certain that the phonetic signs were an integral part of
initial
reaction
is
Among
die select audience was
recorded in a
letter
Thomas
written to Sir William
Hamilton on the Sunday after the reading: I
have found here, or rather recovered, Mr. Champollion, jimior, who has been
living for these ten years
been making some gigantic. It
may be
gate for him, and first
on
the Inscription of Rosetta, and
said that it is
he found the key
it;
not the
in
often observed that c'at
step diat costs the effort]: but if he did
was so dreadfiiUy rusty, that no turn
who has lately
steps in F.gypti.in literature, whicli really appear to
be
England which has opened the
k premier pas qui coutc
borrow an EngjUsh
|it's
the
key, the lock
common arm would have strength enough to
and, in a path so beset with thorns, and so enctunbeied with rubbish, first
step only, but every step, is painfully laborious; especially
such as
Copyrighted matBrial
}6
CRACKING CODES
are retrograde;
I.ETTRK
A
make
few
a
conjectures
M. DAClEiV,
and such
false steps
become confirmed by
made more You
lour
mi rt nu.
rest.
I
should
feel
were
ever so
and of a person
too,
(now
who
|i.e.
.\f.
h
A Jcdiduon on
copy of the Lrnrt
i
Diincf written in liien^lyphs
lJubois'),
.IS
recorded
dr.iu^)t\ni.iii. Lt'iin
(17HO-lK4f>).Th«
'
by
Kf*-
I'M'*),
and
success: niy
versed in the
gracious, but underlying
is
many of Champollion's 'ingenious*
letters
much more
so
claims
would be proved
it
is
his
flilse.
continued between the two. with Chanipollion asking in for the use of Bankes'
in the British
Museum).
In
copy of the Abydos king
March
182.^,
He
however, a
list
of Ramses
ChampoUion wrote
review of the
also protested:
'I
lu-nrc a
II
in
M. Dodet
find in the
same
llion.
m i note hy the
Jean JoMrph I>ubiii%
t i>)iy
is
wai Ulcr owned h) the
now
in the
Hg\'pti.iii Aiiiiquiiici, Uriiith 1 1,
the victim of the bad
Mr. Champollioti s
('lo iny- friend
eminent English Efiyptolopst Percy
that
title
have only
I
in Hieroglyphka} Litemturc ivul Eiiypu.v< AmiqiiitifF Incluilin'; the Aiiilun'f
Alphiihcl
()ri{;i)h)l
of an alphabet which
original audior
tin-
i
i'siilt
apparent
it
a spirit
uf great
wdl as national competition."
personal as
In September of die same year Ysung announced to the daiddst SirTX^lliam Gell (1777-1836) that his planned series of volumes w.is costing
second
him too much
fascicule,
continue the
and
alter thai
was
rc
tfi.
He commented:
series'.
iu>ttiiiig
C^hainpoUion
not sufir anything of material consequence to be have that
now
If
it
at
tliiit
time
to display
is
much
doing so
lost.
that lie will
For these duee reasons
He
did,
I
however; note
I littiv slated,
and he
aihiwwlciii;cd the receipt
the precise dates than
more parade than
I
have done
the thing required, or to have
shown too much hostility to Chanipollion« to whom I would nthcr something that is
in file
'of sutiicient tinportaiKc to
major discovery:
more emphasis on
In have placed
would have been
his
ChampoUioii. as
to
inscriptions
was to be puhhslu'd
Egyptian studies as amdiukd'^
he had communicated
/ sciif 0/
my
considered
of hieroglyphic
moiic\-.TIu- Rosotra Stone
give
up
my r^t, than take fiom him anythii^ that ought to be
his."
Yount^ died on 10
May
1S2'>,
death bod. His memorial the obscurit)
The
which had
decipherment.
still
woildi^ on demotic matters on
his
penetrated
first
veiled for ages the hieroglyphics of Eg>*pt\
was published
in 1824. The Pnfeu
script,
The publicadon was
hinted
stt
in
systime kUr^^Yphifue
M. Qum^Uoit k jtvm macks
anciens ^ypiiens par
des in
Lettie,
and was
Westminster Abbev records that 'he
of die nature of die hieroglyphic
full tealizatitNi
ChampoUion's
111
the decisive step
presented to Louis XVIII in person on
2y March, and the fame attendant on the iJecipherinent restored Chanipollioii to with the authorities.
political respectability
A
later edition,
1828, included the description of 'decerminadve* signs:
which followed
in
ChampolUon^ study of
the Dendera zodiac, which had been dii^layed in the Louvie since 1822, showed that
some
signs
were pictures indicating the category of the preceding words,
and Egyptologists
still
use the term he coined, 'determinatives'.
In the sprint; of 1824. before settini» out for brierty to
England with
his
only time that the decipherer gazed on the Stone
of the inscripdon.The
visit,
however, is not
Egyptologists have doubted that
it
Champollion
System «^ Hk-nylyphics hy Ihiny
itself, as
travelled It
was the
opposed to the copies
wdl documented, and some
English
ewer actuafly took f^ce.^'
hi 1825 there appeared an Esuty
ment on
Italy.
brother and visited the British Museum.' "
.Sit//
inscriptions in the British
011
This
DnYbut^i and M. Omh); was
a test
Museum, and
;
>'/.
v
'
posed neu decipherit
convinced
Salt
of its
validity.
Copyrighted material
DECIPHERING THE aoSETTA STONE 39
He noted
ih.it
conceiving
it
there was
'a
very decided prejudice against the phonetic system, as
on too
to be founded
asscfted in strong terms diat Young
and
that
conjectural a
had been the
ChampoUion had fioled to acknowledge
nationality
of ChampoDum were not
likely to
However, he
basis'.''-
He
i»ivc a
still
modern
him to any English schdar.
inspired
give
by
Many
.1
were
also
his letter"
made by
ologist
and
(
all thiii}^
for
one would not
a dirty scoundrel,
and
- hut some unfavourable comments about him
'
Freiu h otlu
,1
supposedly written by
his
iii.aurf .ini)L;ai)ce.
'monopolist' ni
him a copy of an inscription 'because he thought him
would not answer
of
.u ctnints
assessments of his personality are obviously
- 'William John Bankes
antagonism
nationalistic
m
rcider the iinpressitin ot
appears impatient, easily thrown into despair and
Egyptian, but uttedy brilliant.
and the
his debt.Ttie brilliance
endear
His personal character was not admired, and contoiiipor.ineou'^
behaviour can
also
fint to discover the alphabet,
in
i.il
ihampoihon,
Fo pr A
limerick-like
known tmm
is
poem
French,
in
a letter ot the Hritish
Egypt-
John Gardner Wilkinson (1797-1875). The poem gives an
traveller
impiession of his abtolute-souiiding tone:
Les Pyranudes,'sans aucun doute*
Qe veux le dire couie ce
qu'il cofite),
Om sept mille ans, quelque chow de phis: Le
[su\
pieuve est dans tm pqiynis.*^
(The pyramids 'without a doubt* (I
will say
it
no matter the
cost)
are seven thousand vears old, or
somewhat older;
the proof IS in a papyrus.)
Champollion
w.is
given to writinjj poerry, and
edly a petition trom
but this
The
Ramses
11
to the
composed
a
witty letter suppos-
modern keepers of his
statues
problematic relationship between 'Vbung and Champollion and their
reactive contribudons demonstrates
how
partial written records ave.
they do not correlate exacdy with events; rewritten the discovery.
posthumously
in
The
letters
many
preface
and
how
partisans have subseqiu tub.
of Young, quoted above, were published
1H55 in an attempt to show that Young had discovered the
Egyptian alphabet' 'several years before C^hampoUion suspected
The
m Turin,^
poem is probably a parody written by Gardner Wilkinson.
makes
this
its
e.xistence'.
prqgranunatic intent dear: 'That Champollion himself,
indeed, shoidd have put fbiward pretensions to that great discovery could excite
no astonishment
in those
who
wxrc u quainted with
his character
.
.
.
the
ingenious but unscrupulous Frenchman', and: 'Throughout the correspondence
we
have carctulK onntted evcr>' cxptXTSsion that might reasonably be supposed to
hurt the feelings of any one; except in the case of ChampoUion
attempts to evaluate the competing dainis to priority are
by delays in the
original publication
scholars, notably
made
.
the
.
more
Modem di£5cult
and dtculation of ideas.The work of French
Michel Dewachter, continues to
clarify'
the process and to
hdp
us to assess the impact of ChampoUion's genius. The churn of Thomas Young, as
Copyrighted material
uiiackiiowlcd^Ld English underdog, has proved intluential with English
ail
historians, especially English
scholan of Egypcian demotic,'^ bat Young can
hardly be given the credit for Champollion's decipherment glyphs,
when he
symbolist
refused to admit
iiitfrpR-tntion'.''*'
of Egyptian hiero-
and remained 'trapped in the
validity
its
Equally. French scholars have
sometimes chanipKinovl
ChampollioiiV claims almost to excess, ("hampollion himself" admitted I
recognise that lYouiig) was the
first
pubhsh some correct
to
ndent wridngi of Egypt; that he also was the distinctiom concerning the general nature
throu^ a
substantial
characters. possibilirv'
first
to establish
correct
comparison of texts, the value of several groups of
used to write foreign proper nanu-v also the
phcmedc value to the
first
m
to try, hut
hierogjlyplu
Hgypt
m
me
on the
his ideas
uhu h would
of the existence of seven! sDinui-sicns,
M.Young was
some
of these writings, by decermining,
even recognise that he jMiMished before
I
in 1M24;
ideas about the
have been
hieroglyphs; finally that
w ithout complete
success, to give a
making up the two names Ptolemy and
Berenice.^
Even
if one
allows that Champollion was
more
work
familiar with Young's initial
than he subsequentis claimed, he remains the decipherer of the hieroglyphic script: as Peter
Young
1
)aniels states, nr.
dLCiplurincnt has to stand or
discovered parts of an alpiiabet - a key
entire lai^uage.
reader should
tall as
a
whole'.
^*
- but Cdiampollion unlocked an
Rather than dwelling on competing national daims, the modern
remember the achievements of die scholars, which rehed on
inter-
national dialogue and cooperation in difficult circumstances.
The
period of decipherment also witnessed the foundation of the great Egy pt-
ian collections outside Egypt.
and collecting
in
m
Egypt
On
1X30
-
Champollion's return to Paris a trip that
contirmed,
'our idphabet is vafid' fnotre alphabet est bonne*) the Louvre.
He died fiom a stroke on 4 IMaich
and three years
He
after
- he was installed as curator at
1832, in the same year as Goethe
Young. His death was probably due
had already completed the sheets of
entrusted to his brother
as his 'c.illing
his
in part to exhaustion.
C.uiiiiiiitiin'
card to posteritv".
I
(;>j)7'.'(ii(.
lis
de.iih
age of tbrty-one has aiided (o the romanticism of his
tively early
travelling
troiii
he wrote to Uacicr.
as
wdi.h he .it
tiie
rela-
role. iJe Sacy,
fuUy reconciled to his former pupil's genius, spoke the funerary eulogy in the
Acaddnie des
inscriptions ct
Bdles
him
Lettres, raising
decipherer of the Sphinx's riddle, the 'new Oedipus'
made which
for himself has'e
):
'few
men
dedicated the
(a
to mythical status as the
claim that Kircher had
have rendered to scholarship services equal to those
name
inan Wilkinson's comments, in
oi C'hampollioii to iniin'pt. While ogy,
it
was not the
Mormon
its
democratic it
taidu
is
now
the oldest
V
shows the
account of the reign of Ptolemy ideals,
continiung an Lnlightenment view of
among the first puUicatiom ofAmerican
first influential
attempt to
'translate*
Egyptian
Egyptol-
texts, since
prophet Joseph Smith Jr had in 1835-44 woiked on three
the
Roman
period funerary papyri, one of which he translated by direct inspiration as the
now III
canonical
.Mormon
scripture. The
Bivk
of Ahriiluini:'^
the decades following Chainpollions death, the Irish cleric
who had
dc-
dpheted Mesopoiamian cuneiftnm, Edward Hincks, continued to advance the decipherment.
and published Letters
He argued correcdy that hieia^^yphs do not contain any vowds, 1847 Ah Attempt toAsartaiH du Number, Namet md Pawea t$ the
in
of the Hk-rofilyphk orAiiciait Egyptum Alpiuibcf Grounded on the
^ a New Priiuiple
in the
Use
(^'Pltrnietic
Ctuuacters.The paper reveals
EsudMshmeM
how
uncertain
Copyrighted material
42
CRACKINC CODES
the exact luuun- oi chc l)K a>glyphic script
Ricfaaid Lepsius (1810-84), MMinr, acceptit^t,
werf bi- and
He
signs.
also
who
still
was
at that
learnt
fiom Champoliion^ posdinmous Ctaiw-
conecting and expanding his system.
rriconsoii.iiual signs,
produced
He
established that dieie
and not metely a multiplicity of alphabetic
seventeen-voliuno
ilu' i;rv,U
period. In general, the
Gennany diou^ the achievements of Cad
lead in £g>'ptolog>' quickly passed to
Ac\;yp(cn
Dt'itkiiiiicler ini
bc:),
cm
and
now
is
liii;h, h.is
in the EgN-ptian
underneath a lunette with a winged sun-disk, but with-
out a figured scene.The demotic text is on the left tldcloieis of the
remained unnoticed
Museum,
the hieniglvphic text and the
at first."
With
this discovery,
stela,
ChampoUion^
where it
faypodieses
could be checked using a hieroglyphic text that had a certainly identified ancient translation; the Tanis stela
better
known
become
is
thus as important
Rosetta Stone; only
now
milestone in E£j\'ptolog\' as the
a
did ChampoUion's decipherment
noc liypothesis.
certainty,
The Berlin school shaped Egyptian centuries, in particular through the
philology for the nineteenth and twendedi
work of
scholars such as
Adolf Erman
(1854-1937) and Kurt Sedie (1869-1934), They laid die systemadc study of the language, together with Francis Battisconibe
The
Gunn
flKK3
" 1
-llyn Griffith
•
basis for die
(1862-1934),
1950) and Sir Al.ui (...ranur i:iS7M-|W>3) in England.
publication of Gardiiier s Ugyplian Gmiimur: baiiji an hUrodtutioii
of Hicn\^lypbs
was a major
1927, and the third and
step in codificadon, the first
last
lo llw
Study
edidon appearing
in 1957. In terms of language the
in
work of Hans
Jacob Ptdotsky (1905-91) established die ^standard dieory' of Egyptian grammar,
which has aspects
of
recent! classical
.
been modified extensivriy by approaches that Egyptian syntax."" Chamfvollion
ing point of a study which
is still
s
stress
the verbal
achievement was the turn-
prc^rcssing. Eg)ptolog)' has developed into a
Copyrighted material
DECIPHERINC; THE HOSETTA STONE
truly international arena
of collaboration, continuing the
copies of the Kosctta Stone
wxK
which the
spirit in
and has tran&ccnded
circulated,
4J
nationalistic
concerns.
huge range of material, the Rosetta Stone
Althouj;;h Eg>ptolog>' offers a
remains outstanding.
It
is
among
the bcst-know-n inscriptions in the world,
although, given the sacerdotal nature of generally read.
Stone
'tails
The
to fiirnish the student
low of ancient
lore
contents,
its
also
is
it
one of the
least
Philoinatheaii Societ\' report candidly remarked th,u the
had
of history with that amount of information his
anticipated'."*'
tion, to the extent that the
Museum
The Stone
the subject of much fascina-
is
receives occasional letters
still
claiming to have cracked
even
become
has
It
ments;
language
on the (uninscribed) back
inscribed Stone.
from people
code, or to have
unknown
an
discovered
its
ot the
the icon of all decipher-
European
the
Agency
Space
has
planned a mission for 20(J3 to investigate the origin and composition of comets in order to
decipher something of the history of the solar
named
system; this has been
the International
Rosetta Mission. Although the Rosett.i Stone fascinates as a concept,
has feaaired visually
it
few pieces of Eg^ptomania;
in surprisingly
souvenirs, including mouse-mats, T-shirts
paper weights,
nation. The grandest orative
pavement
Fige.ic (fig. 17).
reproduced
at
media of visual dissemi-
monumental
its
artefact
Musce ChampoUion, almost always
is
concept of
and
tcatiircd
in
such Fi(j-
17
The
courtv'anl
of the
Mmce
Ch;inipollion, Fij;cjc. ilrcor^trd uith » rrplica
exhibited in the British ^unt
of the KosctU Skonc. Courcny chr Musec
ChjnipoUioii. Pijscac (jU righc
photaj^nph
b\'
tion."^ in
Museum
its
writing,
in
as
artist
it
it
into
fascination
form but from the
m
the history of
has
occasionally
an etched zinc plate by David Hiscock
1994
commented,
visual
such
Its
more conceptual works of an.
.is
part
which the Stone was transformed into
Uar Code". As the
its
surface, as
and subsuming
importance as
flat
existence as an ancient
the world of Western printing.
comes not from
commem-
perhaps the
The Stone
ignoring
if silently
is
the
black and white
as a
and
of various
as well as replicas
sizes, are its principal
"the
of a contemporary 'a
art
exhibi-
contemporary liiemglyph,
a
connection between our world today
mcrwd:
ChoutilVaucur).
and the ancient Egyptian seems too Stone bridges
this divide.'
It
v.ist
a
gulf to contemplate.
The Rosetta
remains, however, a fragile and uncertain bridge.
laterial
CRACKING CODES
NOTES
16 See H. Lauiem
(New York. 2
l>ilt
rpn
^ClAlUtt
l,tlioil
412-^3.
I''73:.
and Uic
dedhiH el df.
oj
SmmI HtcMuity
,iiul l\ew;Khter
Gillispie
XUmumeuis oj
df
Danick
IVorld's ll 'riiing
.uid
W Uright
Sysiaiu
19
(cds). 77m-
(New York and
n'm"'' (Princeton.
C
feds),
"Description"
.
Ia DeKt^tiffn
19K7). 1-38.
Ti.iiHUTker,'rFi;vpre
de
.intiijiie
in Ljiirci» u< C\'riii;nV< of
Huropt; Asia Mid Africa, n.2: Greta, Egypt and Ihr Htfjy
CimiiimnitalieH (Stanford. 1994], 15-31;
LMif (London. 1814). 239; abo
27 Anhaedogia: or XfiscelUineous Traeis 10 See, t.^,G.Br,t;.,./f..
(Princetot). V)')} [1st edii
BUd sum
I9=;(i|):
Buthsiabcii
-
Hor4ifn>lly);/j'p/jifc,/
Rektiag
to Antiquity
(The Society of
(Abhandliiiijjei) dcr
2K For the other
uitiquiiies,
including the
sarcophagus of Ncctanebo (BA 23), tec J.-J.
nechter,'La pierie de Rosette et
11
1
998. na 3, Stuttgart, 199^.
Dedplicrmeiii:
ri^iii
B (Loudon.
y> A.E.Astin
d al. (cds),
Aucieni History
,
77ic
Camhridgt
vni (2nd edn; Cambridge.
I9e9).25-1.
40 Thompson. Meutphb, 118-19: cf. S-QuifioeiinC^ndRus and S. QuirkcTltf 198^.8,24 n. 30.
antiquitis
{gypdennes pnses par
les auties les
ang^
en 180r, JUE 48 (1997), 283-9; M.
41 For a lecemlisiofdeniotic copies see Simpson. Demolk Gn*mimr(C>xfiNd, 1996), 4-5.
42 InAndiewsandQuiikcTlkeAMffM
Bietbrier."nw acquhition by the %itish
.a'ter
Uutai
iil'icr
SlHir,IO.
SeeChap«er2.
12 Tiansiation I
H^ypl
JJ2 bo-.id 642: From Ale.\Mider
iheAttA Con^uea (London, 1986).
Rcfetta Stone: Facsimile Drawii^ (London,
Antiquaries ofLondon) 16 (1812), 212-14.
Sozialwisscmchafdichen Klasse
GetitcrN- iind
JahrgAng
to
twi
sum BM: von dnAfbal an
fihffb'Mkfr
die llianiolis
Bowman,
27f)-9. cited below.
quuution fiom 26.
H.-J.TIiifien,
see, c.g.,
DJ.Tboinpson, Memplm imder iht Piokmia (Princeton. I*)«8);A.K.
Aitthwei:em fmHmeMimr Edhim (Munich,
^
Audeni Egypt (London and New%tfc,
38 For 24 Gi]]iipieandDewadner.MHH«imii^
Dorch.Hii. Lf Awiierolv'fc/i/r iHn^sels,
1987); A.
18^. VI, 434-5; quoted: C Lagiei; yteftwr dir la pfant
tfRme (Copenlugen, 1968), 161-73;
(Paris,
M.
Pope. Tlic SlorYof
l^i;ypiuiii I
licro^lyftm le
Museum of antiquities discu\'eted during
43 Sce,e.g.,R.
the French invasion of Eg)'pt" (in press).
Amiquilr ^Vinceton, 1993);J.H. Juhnsun
B.l.mi.lll. /:\i)7'r
rrr
L^ina Midtiadtimt Sedetf: ^gypifitm c.jtuhy.fi CoittlMttiiK Md Btyond ,SAOC
(ed.),
l975).3l-2.
29 H.Whi(ehouse.in K. Eusucc
(ed.),
i,
ind oHuial cotitexts
\v,is
,itin
I
law. dlthougii
possibly forty languages
tli.it
New Kmgdoni and
use increased in the tourth century ad, while Aramaic had been
Its
the official language of the foreign administration during the period of Persian
domination (525-404 bc). Otfaen such as Carian weie limited to specific ethnic groups.
Of the
on the Rosetti Stone, demotic
three scripts
and the one
smallest proportion of Eg\'ptologi5ts
die extent that
it
was consiscendy referred to
documentary), although
of decipherment Here lies
the one studied by the
concentrate
on the
puhiic (to
'demonic' in a recent television
provided ttaat of die eaiSest toccettes
it
I
as
is
least familiar to the
m the pmcess
hieniig^yphic system since
uoder-
it
the demotic.^
THE The
ECJYl'TIAN LANCUACIE
pictorial nature
of the hieroglyphic
script tends to stand in the
izing that the script writes a language. Just as
ment
until
Champdlion
himself.
Even
after
it
way
ot real-
obscured the way to decipher-
1824 eady scholars were
initially
uncertain whether a 'hieroglyphic dicdonary' should be ordered by sign or by
phonetic value, whereas needed,
a
ut sii^ns
list
by the signs, .md
The
Roseiia
tl-K-n
.Sioiu-
is
it
.1
is
iln ,i
now
.iiiows
tii.u
obvious that two different reference works are
one to read and (ranslitente die woids written
tunKirv ot the l.inguage.
moiiumeiital vestige of the
of the Egyptian language
diat can
later stages
earlier.^
The Egyptian language belongs to
known
a
long history
as
years
the Afio-Asiatic language fiunily (abo
Hamito-Semitic), which spreads geographically over northern
the eastern Mediterranean and western Asia. Brant In Eg\'ptian. Semitic. C ushitic. Oinotic. lierber closest
m
be traced back up to duee thousand
and
s
nf
tlie
Afirica,
family include
C hadic. Lin.ptian
shows the
connections with Beja (Northern C'ushitic), Semitic and lierber. Attempts
to trace underlying 'super-^milies' of languages that would, for example, link Afio-Asiatic
and Indo-Euiopean are highly speculatne, because they uwohre a
vast time-depth cive
method
be pro\eii
and a paucity of nmilar leacnies to
(referred to earlier) breaks
in the
Egyptian
attested in written
form around 330U bc, and survived
spoken language until the fifieenth century ad;
giiage can
be
compaia-
same way.
is first
language in die
that die cttabMshcd
down and 'genetic' idationships cannot
it is still
as a
used as a liturgical
Copdc chuich. In this recorded spm two major st^es of die lan-
identified: Early
(down
to the
known
to Egyptologists as
^yptian (down to 1300 bc) and Later Egyptian
Middle Ages). Early Egyptian comprises the consecutive
Old Egyptian and Middle
stages
(or classical) Egyptian.
Copyrighted matsrial
48 CRACKING CODES
New
Later Egyptian comprises
(or Late) Egyptian,
then demotic, and
tinally
Coptic, which was the key to the decipherment of die eazlier stages of die hagfisige,
although
idadonship to the language of hieio^yphs was long
its
unvecogfiized. 'Copdc* is a
bom
mately
modem tenn, derived fiom the Arabic qiAti, and uhi-
the Greek aiguptm.
of Christian
Ein, pt; in this
Hi^. [ni.m'. It
lefen to die language and cultine
period the language was written in a modified form
of the Ga-ck alphabet. All iheie stages ci the language are, of course, attested only in writing, so that its
development must be traced, as
it
were, at second hand. Demotic and
aie terms tea die scrq>ts used in specific periods
language which used diose evident if one
Anglo l
S.ixoii
i!ip;ires
it".
AD
ader urer diiu
of die
Spoken languages change concinunusly,
scripts.
and
as
is
in nnxicrti English:
heofnum
Our I^itfaer who u in heawen Similariy, diflbcences
Copdc
for die stages
vcrMons nf tlic beginning of the English Lords Prayer in
'>3i>j
bist in
more than
.
.
. .
have developed between British and American En^ish in
the three and a half centuries since English colonies were established in the Aniericiis, including differences in prxituinci.uii)ii (e.g. 'vase'),
gratnnur
("got"
and
'gotten') .ind vdcalniLirv {including ditFcrent terms for the s.iine object, such as
'pavement' and sidewalk', and different meanings for the same word, such
imponiUe
to be sure
how
It is
related to the
spoken language in any period, but
the
Old Kingdom
divn^ed
The
new
it is
certain diat
by die end of
2100 bc) the q>oken and written languages had aheady
(f.
strongly.
subseqiK-iit
change fnwt
F.irly to
1
.iter
can be obsiTviul
Fgs-pti.in
in a
phase of the language whicli became the standard used for written records
in the 19th Dynasty. However, daisical
Middle Egyptian, and
some
official texts
continued to bc written in
New Egyptian texts are not linguisticaUy homoge-
neous^The change in written language did not leiect
and developments towards occurred over
complex
many
New
cultural factors: the introduction
1335 bc), whidi a£Eected culture. It
is
linguistic
change direcdy,
Egyptian in the spoken langu.ige pr
cenniries.The changes in the written
influenced by the reforms of the
it is
as
the written Egyptian language was
'suspraden').
of
Amama
religion, art
New
l.uigii.ige
£g)'ptian into
te.\ts
is,
iM to
was heavily
Period under Akhenaten
and administration, dut
!
wen- due
(c.
1353-
the endre ehte
impossiUe to say what people were actually speaking at the time, but
unlikely that the
Amama
reforms brought about a fiuidamental change in
the spoken language ot the population.
Varioas models have been proposed for the linguistic changes that can bc seen in
te.\ts.
In
and evolved
one model, the spoken language was considered to have devdiqwd at a steady rate,
while die written language was thought to be taken
direcdy fiom the spoken language at die
have remained fixed settled period a
new
until there
was a
w-ritten language
spoken language. This
simplistic
start
politii
,il
of a period of political unity and to breakdown;
would have been
model was moditicd
at
the start of the next
adoptecl from the then
in the 194Us by
Bruno
uopy iiyhioo
inaiuiial
REAOINt;
3
TtXT
V
\
\
OLP KINOIX-IM .Mil
-
J-ll)
IIIIHO Nf.W
MSiilHIM
^
-
« 1
1
ST
y
1
;
IMIKMIlntll
kl
A
TKXr
HYMMINh
.Mr l-l
UK Ml
IA1l'l:Ht
_1_
1
MuUc
IM1n«nwntjl Mgii
of
in 1 \rrtical
many,
this
indicated in Semitic languages by ditTerent patterns in the vowels around a
is
core of topically three consonants (that
Fig.
in his
a revised transhtcration alphabet that
acceptance." In transliterated texts, a point
tion
modern
nineteenth century; previous Eg\ptological systems
should be closer to the actual ancient sounds, but
stands
represented by
is
and then the Coptic alphabet
had included an alphabet used by Wallis Budge
:
which
the sounds of the
current system of transliteration presented above was proposed
by Adolf Erinan
and
/.
all
for this reason, in part, ('hampollion used f Ireek letters for his
transliterations in the
cations,''
as
including scniiconsonantal or scmivocalic glides that were recorded in
the script; they comprise the basic phonological units of the script, into which
it
is
also
are tiaee*
Ptovenjnce
true of standard written English,
systems
th.it .ire
which smooths out much
ronipU-teiy phonologit-ai
variation.
not nfccss.irily the
.in-
for native readers of the language. For example, in the English
graph*, 'photography' and "photographic", the in
stress
is
nitist efticient
words "photo-
in a different position
each word and the vowels are pronounced differently; the spelling does not
represent the pronunciation, but on
a different level
would
the wc^nls derive from the same stem, as
The
and
(/,
langtiage.
writing only
and the demotic but
t,
glyphic writing. Thus,
now
transliteration
The sound system of demotic
of the
Stages
modern
history of the
clearly.'"
/
main
Writing
used for demotic.
it
the older
a
script
does distinguish
a different,
Two
does make clear that
earlier systems
of demotic exemplifies these developed
far
from
that
/
and
r,
in contrast to earlier hiero-
Francis Llewellyn Griffith (1X62-1934).
based on historical etymologs; and was the same as
prehensive dictionary of demotic, includes
bet'
is
as follows:
c.
is
included the English or phonetic
ihe Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago,
vowel marker
issues
earlier
does not distinguish the phonemes
that used for classical Eg\-ptian.The transliteration system preferred
a
of
reconstructed pronunciation, derived largely from Coptic;
German system was
and
all
purely consonantal spelling.
only recently standardized, transliteration
system, employed by scholars such as
which was based on
h.id
a
it
a fifth
who
/i. (Ij);
by scholars
are preparing a
a third
/
(/) is also
at
comused,
Thus, the demotic equivalent for the hieroglyphic 'alpha-
READING
Jcnv.uioii
sign
? or 2J>
P
tran>IitcnUK)ii
(.k-riv.itR)!)
i
•
/
TEXT 53
tniiislitcnitioii
•
i
if
c
II
> or
A
I -
& it
or
a.
p
/
or
D
m d or li>
t
i
1 *^'jj dj^jj " HJu^Hfai' m medu netdur seek ni duy sMuy
mdj em sech
Hi Hmt-nebu
upon
Literal gloss:
stela
which stone hard
in writing
of gpd's words
writing of letter script ot Aegcins
upon
Translation:
a stela ot hard stone in hieroglyphic writing, in demotic
writing, and in the scr^t of the Acgcans
The
paralld phrase in demotic, a diflfoent stage of the language and a difiisent
transliteration system,
n
wouM be tianditented as follows:
tny iry n sb nd-uit s^fl^
ivyjl
Wym
and pronounced:
mytj
The
iiny djery ni ict/i mcd-iietchet
difierence
secit
shat
seilt
IVcyncii.
between die phonemes recorded in die
script
and contem-
poraneous pronunciation can be glimpsed in occasional words that are also preserved in other writiiig systems, such as die Eg>'ptian won! for headrest, Iitmr ('Meliopc^lis')
NibiHuana. texts as
is
Atui.
/iMii-r'-ry^ii'i-ii/nc,
urf,
is
AHtadian cune^nn. For
rendered umUfa, the
"Aniun-Re
k.nig
of the gods',
example,
Eg\'ptiaii place
and the pren .ffil
written on the papyrus seh lunit
as:
iiitfr
chejt notisr cimteniiii
Copy iiyhiuo
inaiuiial
R
This
the closest
is
one now has
how
she was spoken", or
'as
E
A
I)
1
N
A T
C;
E
X
I
of Middle Eg>'ptian
to a phonetic transcription
in post-pharaonic antiquity* she
was bcheved to be
spoken.
Other sources
is tlie
of Egyptian phonolog\- inchide comparative Afro-
for the study
Asiatic linguistics
and the Egyptian versions of foreign W'ords.The most extensive
continuation of Egyptian in Coptic, wlien the language
which records vowels
adaptation of the Creek alphabet is
word
the Middle Eg\'ptian
this
for 'cat',
which
would be conventionally pronounced
eMOY
an
(cff^'iO-This preserves
initial
is
written with an
(see p. 102).
An example
R-corded in hieroglyphs
is
win, but in Coptic the
word
is
as
iiiju':
written
vowel that may always have been present
but was unrecorded in the hierogK-phic script, allowing Werner Vycichl to recon-
form of the word
struct a h>'pothetical original
as *hv>wuiya.^-
an agentivc noim from a verb *Hfy, to 'mew'; the IS
a
final u> in
He
analysed
the hieroglyphic
it
as
word
grammatical ending, and not part of the stem. Coptic voweK also reveal the
Middle Egyptian the adjective 'priest'
(lit.
o\xxR
m
patterns underlying the standardized consonantal orthography:
linguistic
'purified one*) are
(H«i/i),'to
The changes between
written
oyon
be pure'as
be pure' and the noun
'pure', the infinitive 'to
all
u>'h,
(cho/O
while Coptic records 'pure/holy'
and
oyhhb
priest as
as
(ohc?)).''
Early and Later Egyptian affected vocabulary,
word
order and grammar. Their nature can be exemplified for the important category
of non-verbal sentences by two hypothetical sentences proposed by Friedrich Junge:'^ *slj.hi' njsu'l tifr in Fig. 21
A second-i'cmur>' ad
pjp>'rus widi i
MiiUlle H}c>pi>4i) iiutpijl i«xi writlfii in Jiid driiiotu iigm.
H. 2^.2 an.
EA
pr:f
scribe king perfect in house-his
the perfect scribe of the king
lOHitK
In Later Egyptian this *l>.i
.ilj
nfr
It
would
pr-'3 iii-ljmi'
is
in his house.
be:
I.
If:ft
the scribe perfect of Pharaoh in his house. In Early Egyptian sh can
and indefinite subject yvife").
articles.
+ object
be
The
('hears
'a'
or 'the scribe', while Later Egyptian uses definite
he
yvord order in verbal sentences changes his yvifc") to subject
In verb forms, functions th.u are indicated
(e.g. sijiii.trf.'hc heard",
yvhere stjm
is
+
+
verb
by
the stem 'hear',
finoin
suffixes in Earlier ii
marks the
past,
person and number) are replaced by periphrastic constructions, such
(lit.
'he
betyveen Latin
made {
fed,
a hearing'). 'I
Similar changes occur in
have done') and French
{j'ai fait,
'I
+
Egyptian
and as
'he heard", yvhere the grammatical functions are indicated by the yvord
made'
verb
object ('he hears his
Romance
.'/"the
/>.;/
/>./
sdiii
'he
languages
have done'), and are
described in linguistic terminology' as developments from a 'synthetic' to an 'analytic' type. In Cloptic the
heard"
is
AqcttJTM
(qfsotm)
/>.;/
(
;>:/
has
become
becoming
a prefi.xed qf,
and
sijm
tense-marker, so that 'he
becoming
has therefore re-synthesized the analytic t>pe of Neyv Egyptian.
sotiit).
C^optic
THE CLASSICAL EGYPTIAN WRITING SYSTEM The number of hieroglyphic die
in the
Greco-Roman
can seem bouruiless. but in ditVcrcnt t>pcs
tln>
sign depicts.
althou^ srane and
is
a
modem
picture",
ance, and
of some 750
staring
semiotidans such
signs
categorized according to
of creatures and
objects,
&w are abstract
tli.it
ul
in strncturalist
u'riHi
.1
many
full
'lized
when
it
fbigottcn what the\' represented. Another dc\x loptiient was the crcitioii of posite signs such as
60m
5th
et]uipment while the hiero^yphic capdon above
the hieroglyph based
executed s^ps showing
By the
scribal palette
misunderstood and the bag of pigments ceinter-
reptesented was not di^iuised: in the
sented as writing with the
torni!.
old equipmciit were retained, such as the
pieted as a water pot. The dichotomy between the signs and the
what
Sign
scribal kit including
and a tubular brush
equipment had been replaced by the
Onlv elements of the
holders whicli were
was so archaic
reliefs.
although minor changes con-
^
(ic)
^
—
'
{'),
writing
ic'."
was
com-
Completely new
Uopy iiyhiuo
inaiuiial
KFAOINt;
MgiK
wxTL" occ.isioii.illy introduced, such
piece
ot'
equipment
that
Sign forms incorporate .m
elite
and related words shows
'sleep'
the hieroglyph showinjj
.is
was introduced into £:y>pt
flat
on
wooden
a
mentioned
in
some
literary texts.
show
a
sign w.is altered to state
a
is
Fi^ 22
A
IrupiK-iii iif liiiieuuiie iincripcion
TMttd rcKcf, prrtup^ (n>m (be tomb ot'ScU-
in thcVjIln- ot'ihc Kiiip in
which ihc
bird^
(cf. cjt.
Unt Uimvs
>).Thc direction
ih.ii
the
part ofjL loi^prr iiutriiHioii in vertical
reading tioni
Irti
to
rig)tt. II.
which
t left, jtist
on the
usually
it
a bier
the Middle
way
also reveals
in
Kingdom
(P^). representing
for
which beds
oinv.irxis,
a still
more
the
elite
which objects the inventors
be read
signs are to
most
is
clearly indicated by the
face towards the beginning of the text
(fig.
22). There
general preference for rightward orientation in which the writing
explained
-
in
which almost always
from right
in
From
on
.i
script regarded as prototypic.il.
The order birds, is
mummy
of affairs. The choice of sign forms
of the
ch.iriot,
bed. which was proba-
bly a fairly prestigious piece of furniture, to judge troni the are
.1
Kinj;doni.
view of the worid.The determinative used
body
a
New
in the
TtXT
A
is
this
as there
of
left
preference
in F.g\-pti.in visual art,
figure
Henry Cieorge Fischer
scene, facing right.
as reflecting
read
is
where the main
has
humans
the general right-handedness of
WTiting on the side where the hand holding the writing
easiest to start
- and
a
is
implement
is
uppermost
signs are read
been confirmed by experimental
this has
studies.-'
The
l'rjL)piiciit it
coluuuu
14/>7 an.
EA
65324.
horizontal lines. There are entation,
hieroglyphs can also be written in vertical or
first;
some exceptions
due to the physical context of
of ori-
to these general principles
a text
on
a wall or statue.-' especially
with hieroglyphs; the cursive forms ot signs almost invariably tace right. Retrograde hieroglyphs, usually in vertical
become commoner
dom Books
in the
of the Dead which were written
they are read
as
it
backwards system cursive script,
found
lines, are
in the
Middle Kingdom and very
Old Kingdom, but
common
in
were from the backs of the birds and human
ni.iy h.ive arisen in
where
part in cases
where
texts
signs normally face to the right, but
iconographic context where the lines had to be read fixim
was subsequently adopted
means of
as a
nature of a text.-' There are
New
in cursive hieroglyphs
on
figures.
Middle Kingdom
left
to right; this
signalling the arcane
bottom
Tin:
The
even have horizontal
and specialized writing,
Ushs
Ira^iiii'iit i>f
liHH-slonc invcription in
ratted rehel. perh.ipt t'mni the
The
an i^ii nun. reads
EA
tUd
larefully executed hicro};lyph.
f.5453.
j
ld a|ce'.
Kini;di>iii
which shows
by
reail
some from
; .S/:ample,
signs are often
accompanied
atvhitcctiiral tlcnifnt.
tragiiicncary inwriptioi) conusis
bic(»iiM>fianul ugii ins unK'oiiMiiiant.il
ivading
iii
or Ni-w Kuij;iloiii 0).
tvlicl, rn>iii thi- Midilli-
|ij'/iifij
a ni>:al epithet.
MUrwvd by
\ipn irand
iif,°repra(rr ol'tiunil'eiucions',
H. 7.2 cm.
by additional
uniconsonantal ones, which act
signs, usually
as
'phonetic comple-
ments', helping the reader to determine between possible alternative readings, for
the
e.vample,
^ll^
:
htp
+
/
+
/>.
roots in Egv'ptian. there
is
Because the m.ijority
no sharp
distinction
t>f Egv'pti.in
bcrwccn
words
h,ive triliteral
a triconsonantal sign
and
EA 90422. a
logogram.
From be used
the use of signs as logograms another function
setnograms
as
wx)rds). These
(that
were used
is,
signs
trspecially as'determinatis'cs'.to
Chainpollion. which are placed
belonging to as a picture
a lexical or
seated
word
to
derived: the signs can
the
use the term dcsiscd by
end of vvorIs and mark them off
as
semantic gnuip (taxograms), They can be specific (such
of a pig to determine the word
ized tree for any
^
at
is
conveying meaning, rather than sounds or
do with
man
trees).
"pig
)
or general (such
Some examples
as a
general-
are:
personal names, and words to
do with man.
man's relationships and occupations
S
man
*—t
ijrHJ
tea
hill-country
^
bookroll
with hand to mouth
words to do with eating, drinking, speaking, thinking and feeling
hohiitig sii(k
w ords
to
do with
physical force, effort
and
strength
words for hill-country and desert or foreign lands; also foreign place
names
words for book, writing and written things;
hence for
abstract notions
Cc
E$
have been present in the spoken language, except by context. For example, ('catcher') specil^'
could be someone
whether
fish
who
caught either
determinatives of categories of animal:
Determinatives assign words to recording
is
tish
a wh'
or fowl, but wTiting can
or fowl, or both, are being hunted by the use of one or two .
classes
and
arc not just dccoratiw. This lexical
central to writing as an institution that docs not
merely transcribe
hnguistic utterances but rather incorporates classification and cultural mcmor>'.
The
Eg^'ptians indicated their awareness of the distinctive use of signs as deter-
minatives in
many
w.iys.
Even funerary
stelae that
list
names
the names in columns, with the determinative of each
One example (fig.
Fig.
is
a
name
occasiotially arrange set in a
Middle Kingdom round-topped limestone
25); after the standard funerary' invocation,
which
is
sub-column.
stela
(ea 253)
written in vertical lines
25 Thr limrttonf fiiiwiary \leh of Intef, with
intcripaom
in
sunk
relief.
Lne Middle Kingdom.
H.51 cm. EA253.
^Taterial
RLAlHNc; A TtXT
at the
top of the
stela,
the names of the recipients of the invocation are written in
sixteen hori2ontal lines.
The
right
the tieterminative
man
seated
(a
sub-column:
gious), arranged in a
but the
in all
^
native stela.
The
first
figure
(a
te.xt
line
column on
gives the
a chair,
name of the
showing
recipient,
that the person
with
presti-
is
comes the phrase 'born of followed
after this
by the name of the recipients mother, with the determi-
of a woman), arranged
in a
sub-column
edge of the
at the left
begins:
Blessedness before Ptahsokar, invocation otl'ering of bread and beer, flesh and fowl, incense
and
oil,
and
ever\'
good and pure thing on which
a
god
for
lives,
the spirit of Intcf
born of Khety
Horcnihat
born of Rcnesankh
M;«hsehetep
born of Aset
The importance of lexical
known these
as
lists
truc-of-vx»icc
.
which words
the t)nomastica, in
The words
sub-column,
onomasticon of
A more
P.
is
as in
P bm
less
taining a copy e.\tensive
of
Hood)
hieratic
first
composed
column
This
eight other
in the late
New
reads:
Beginning of the Teaching for making instructing the ignorant,
nil
of an 26), a
manuscript con-
known from
is
manuscripts, was probably
»ir
(fig.
Tlie Oiwiiioiikon i>/"/I»hwmiiyx'.
work, which
Kingdom. The
Berlin 10495).
(P.
tabulated, exaniple
ha 1(I2(»2 (P
Third Intermediate Period
I
Kingdom
the Middle
Ramesseum o
developed, but
onomasticon
are
columns with the determin-
sometitiies arranged in atives in a
now
are listed accorchng to category. In
the determinatives coincide with the categorization.
;
of text
categoriziition can also be seen in a type
and knowing
intelligent, all
that
-
is
what Ptah fashioned andThoth copied down: heaven in all it^ constellations, earth
/.I
the mountains extrude, things
made •
6
-i-
»v
-'^r.^^*-
Life,
grow on the
Amenemope
tint
column of
P.
Hood
contjinint;
Tlie f>ioini«nri>'iui(y.
H.38.t un.£A(>44.
30).^"
This posture, however,
votive statuette
(fig.
animal takes
Egyptian representations.
cat
(fig.
in
2S) from a Middle
A
is
not the only one that the
blue glazed composition figure of a
Kingdom tomb
at
Qurna
in Thebes'"'
shows the
rial
READING
Fig.
29 The
the
Dead of Hunefcr.from
1
viuncnc
killirin;
fiiul lection
fjt
of the the
illustntrd l*>(h
Book of
Dytuirv; with
the rightl shouinn the Great Cat
animal crouching on
a rectangular base
the posture relates to the
the deceased: both
tlie
symbobc
with the
A
TEXT
painted in black. Here
details
aspect of the cat as a hunter and protector
sun-god and
his
of
daughter could take the form of a cat to
i M-rpciU.Tl)c uxird hti Vat', wrutcii in
cursive hieroglyphs, ftoin the
left.
occun
in the
H. 46,3 cm. H
Kcond hne
BM EA WiM
.«.
destroy his enemies. The ladyTamyt was not
modern
named
for a
domestic 'pussycat',
who
reader might assume, but rather for the fehne goddess
as a
protected
the cosnms.
Although the word wjw Fig. 3f>
A Uic
Period
vDtux! bronze iipinr
of a leated
cit
uvarmj; an
around H.
2(1.3
its
cat's religious
clearly
is
for cat
-
a
onomatopoeic -
example
as for
the
is
sursiving Eg^'ptian et)'molog\' relies on the
who
significance as a solar animal
destroys the enemies of daylight
and order, rather than on the sound of its mewing. The 'Great Cat'
is
mentioned
.iniulel
neck.
cm.
EA 47547.
Mandarin Crhincsc word
in Spell 17
of the collection of funerary-
Dead. In the copy preserved scribe, an etymological gloss
Hunefer declares
texts, as
tree
was
is
(fig.
Heliopolis
split in
Great Cat, he
19th
in the is
2^):'!
on
l^yn.ist>'
given, in a
am
as the
of
who was
called is
in
Cat beside
conflict
Perception spoke (of him) "Truly (»MJ')!"'This
Book of the
Papyrus of Hunefer,
manner common
that Great
that night
the sun-god himself,
now known
spells
.
.
.
"Cat"
many
whom
a royal
religious
the Ished
THAT? The
Wlio
is
(injw)
when
not etymolog\' as
the
god
a linguistic
science but as an expression of belief, a mythopocic and aetiological approach that relates the
sound of the word to an exclamation uttered
in the
course of an
obscure mythical event. Such mythological etymologies, which explain things
through word-play, arc not cat
and
the
modern
'truly' arc
historical:
it is
virtually impossible that the
derived from a single root.
sttident that language
It is,
however,
a useful
word
for
reminder to
cannot be disassociated from cultural context.
CK AC- KING COI>ES
Tite
uvrd
for 'luw', stjm
The word cow's ear
for 'hear' (fig.
wTicten
is sdtii,
word
scmantically related s^in ('to hear"),
.
The
first sigii is
when
(im^r).
('to
/(//
of a
a representation
31) and occurs as a logogram or determinative in the
both human and animal ears
word
for
also acted as the determinative in the
It
be deaP) and most frequently
as a
logogram
for
followed by the uniconsonantal sign for m, which acts
it is
as a
phonetic complement and shows the reader which phonetic reading of the
sign
is
to be adopted. In Coptic the
word
ccjtm.
is
ing of the word survives in HorapoUo's HiiToglyphka
The
sol i».
(i.47).
hieroglyphic writ-
which comments
that
'they paint a bulls car to indicate hearing', but provides an erroneous gloss,
saying that this
because the bull
is
is
summoned
mooing of the cow. Many hieroglyphs show
a
mating by hearing the
to
tendency to use the body parts of
animals rather than of humans, possibly due to an early taboo against depicting parts
of the human body
as separate entities.
hierogl)^!! only in occurrences Fig.
31
A
I'lili
I))-rmcy wixKirn tcrniitui ftum j
imil liincwn- bed cuvcreit ullh black
vnth
\wm\ jnd
Kinffs.
in the rtniti,
form of j cow's head, jnJ
uin-ili>k
H. 20.3 cm.
human;
ori^iiully
Fn>m
liltcil
The
in those cases
car usually occurs as a specifically
probably a self-consciously witty. 'sportive' writing.
it is
idea of 'hearing'
mous with being
The human
of the won! for 'ear" where the ear was
is
important in Eg^'ptian culture, often being synony-
responsive to people's needs, and
is
expressed in both language
jhcValley of the
and iconography. The complementary but
EA 61610.
between the
distinct relationship
hieroglyphic script and pictorial representation can be seen in the difierent treat-
ments of hearing. is
in ro^-al statuarv'
A
three-dimensional example of the representation of hearing
of the Middle Kingdom.
EA
36298
(pi.
9)
shows the head and
upper body of a green mudstone figure of a king wearing the uemes crown and an amulet (of
unknown
The
provenance).
but the features are those of Senwosret ears almost certainly
do not represent
surs'iving fragment
a feature
men and
the gods,
who
were
kmg
also characterized
and respond to the prayers of men. Private
not inscribed, statue's
huge
of personal physiognomy but the
king's capacitv' to hear his subjects' petitions; the
between
is
(1878-1841 BC^.^'The
III
statues that
was an intermediary
by the capacity to hear
were dedicated
in temples
sonietimes carry inscriptions stating that they would act as intermediaries
between worshippers and the gods. The same may ues,
which could have represented the king
more
representation of hearing inhabits the
same world of
The same wooden
Deir el-Bahri 32
A
wiKwIcn vodvc
cjir
fioni
Dcir «I-B>hri.
and
Ls
lacks
invocation of hearing (fig.
human
ear.
in d>e laic
32),
is
which
abstract characteristic.
This pictorial
ideas as the use
of the ear
is
even more graphically expressed a
in a large
three-dimensional version of the hiero-
This was placed in the shrine of the goddess Hathor at
New
Kingdom.
any holes for attaching
message without
royal stat-
iconographic and not written.
votive ear
glyph of the
H. 12.'stem, since they record
a step
and discanling
to us so obvious",
would have
sacrificed
both
much
but their uniliteral signs'.
all
ease
of reading and much
cultural
information.
The commonly
.issumed simplicity' of alph.ibetic writing systenis
is
based on
the implicit notion that they represent the sounds of languages in a direct
manner. This
is
niistiken: reading the English alphabetic script involves
complex encodings of sound and
The to
alphabet
is
not
someone used
sounds
tliat
letter
T
with
a
letter,
such
as precise a representation
is
as
many
'enough'.
can appear
can represent a range of
Welsh reading of the
hetes noira
of spelling reformers
sound values
for the
not unique in
this respect:
is
(e.g.
'plough', 'enough',
group 'ough'). but the non-
more
extensive
still;
moreover,
few writing systems are not mixed systems
extent.^'
Despite
clement
'1'
in
sounds very different from an English one). Most people are familiar
phonctic nature of the English writing system
some
/
of phonetic sounds
to reading automatically: the letter
'thought', with three different
to
pronounced
different cultures will read ditferently (thus, a
range of the
English
as 'gh'
its
supposedly purely alphabetic sy-stcm, there
in the
is
a sizable logographic
writing of English, the numerals being the most obvious example.
61
6S
CRACKING cooes
vvlucli derive iroin India
'Street').
on
because
it is
has to be based
place, so (hat
trast,
or
it
is
i(
now. Phonecic spelling
is
The
how
number
small
is
and
as *Hug^', 'hew'
supposedly the
it
The
'hue'.
fact that the hieroglyphic
make it inefficient.
writing svstem to learn because of the
do not prevent high
scripts has rarely
literacy rates,
much
si91S.Thc one undciu.iblc
.is
a
.uivant.igc possessed
are technically easier to
not conceptually
literacy
even
number of groups of signs
it
well
\ ;)liies.
and
been democratic. Moreover, the small number
variation in the values
is
'democratic'
talsely called a
with special snuntl
system
be equally easy
can distinguish between
of signs to be learned can bring with
them
time
By con-
allowing universal Uteracy. In practice, non-alphabetic
scripts (such as Japanese)
with alphabetic
easiest
symbols involved, and has thus been
ot
method of wntmg,'
in
produce than
much
sunpler, as
larger
of individual single
bv .liphabetic scripts
m
its
is
that texts
non-alphabctic systems, but the
By con-
readers usually assume.
the hieioglyphic script expresses both lexical eateries in addition to
trast,
phonemic ones and the more metaphoric semantic connotations of words. expressive not only graphically but also visually, as well as being, in cer race.
of for
an advantage
itself
at a particular
atbiccttily based, nvill
times and places;
not a purely phonetic script does not
,ilphabet
not in
is
'St.'
noore prevalent in
not transparent to anyone outside that context.
standanKzed spelling, no matter
script
much
on the pronunciation of a language
difficult for readers in difierent
hOTiophones such
and
alphabetic spdlings (such as *St' for 'Saint'
This use of abbreviations was probably
medieval Europe than
and
by way ot Arabic.^" Even withm the use ot the aipliabec
theie aie systematic departuKS fiom phonetic spelling, such at the use
itself
abbreviations based
f
iiti
Its
.
ontexts.
one of the most
boatitifu! scripts ever
poieniial for varuuion rendered
cultural toles, including
many where
It is
when executed human
devised hv the
an etlicient tool for a wide range of
it
easy reading was not the prime concern,
during more than three millennia, as will be examined in the next diapter.
NO
I
1
Aficr P.W. Patmaa. The New I'upywIonUal
kS
flMJM in2'W)\CJlf 127(l992).44-7.0n
Aimer O-eiden. 1990). 7. 2
cM cIIent
Ai:
(Aim^uiiiofi
fii
survcv
OemoiK
is
liijiu
M. Dcpauw. A
Siuiiici,
Fa[>)Talogica
..
i
SCO
.A
Lciprioii(>,"Liiiuiiisnc variccjr
and Egyptian literanue'.in A. Loprieno (ed.),
AmieHt EgypdoH LiUmhue: IBslory md
Fonus (Leiden, 1996), SlS-29, and RWnuis,
Bnudleiuia 28 (Brasceb. 1997).
'Langue litteniie tt digloaie', in
ibid.,
3 See,ingaietal,A.Loprieno.i4jMtaitf 555-64. RgYplian:A Unguiftic InUaAiclhll
6
(Cambridge, l'W5).
4 See
F. Junge, 'Sprache*,
LA v (Wietbaden.
MiibriiUipae. 1939). 7
1984). 1176-1211.
'
5
R.
(":iiin:i
12
SkUmges
I'otfivK:
.
III.
koni^chen RundpListik derspaien R.lMhin.'Les yeux et let oiriOes du
KainnicRcll,'Zur Umsducibung und
T'li
I\>lz,'l>ic Uildnisse Sesostris
Dynastic, AiU4/K 51 (1995). 227-54. and
Analccu 39 (Uuwn, 1991), 29-46.
2"
F.
und Amenemhets
McDonald.
W.E. Cnun.'An %yptian ten in Gfcck
da fhftib miJ Hlfpliatituir: AvMiuAeil^iw im MitHem Vm\. (> n I'O. In
HciliguiiH
general, see
im
TEXT 69
Gadtkiite eina
41
1991). 2-5. II
1
Verhoe\Tn and
26
Gtammar of Demolk (Chkagix
1
the symbolic context
Reidi (Heidelberg.
2-t Jiili
Unification dcs niethodcs dc
Hicroglyphcn',
ischcr.
the principal hit roidyph for "God*", in U.
I'hiloiopfiie
CeiiivaJ/Rjppori sur la
cnmliueniion'. Enchoria lU (198U). 1-13.
The
[
J. Bainei. 'On
A
(Copenhagen, 1956).
of
H.R.
37 coinpoMte
1
M.wih'lii.iii .\/iiMi«M
925),
12 (r>77).rl-1'>.
/,'((rijj/
i» the 2*'
t iolJsvavsiT. /
21
H.G.
ri'fi)
/u'u
i'.>
Mt
i.tphor,
Fischer, Tlw UiiaiutMii
IVat^ffhs,
1:
33.
tj/'
AnnoMlt, Egyptian Studies 2
(Ne^vYork, 1977). 6-8;
'Where writing
starts:
P.
v.in Soinnu-rs.
the aiiaiyMs of action
applied to the historical development of writinv:'
IjII.
I
Hunylyi'hu lixts 7 (London,
hieroj;]yph.s in ancient Egypt".
ll'.ipt-r
pn-^fiHL-ii .u tin-
pl.
ihe Uriliih
no.
1
1
G. Robins. Kc/krnwji
4;
it/
Hbrnra
Nm Kk^gdm:Attatnl ^jfpdmAnfim
1.
Miiu
uw
m
The name couid
,^l>t(>Ili(l,TX.
also
1995),
mean 'She of
die Cat*. 3H
See. in gencrai.J. M.ilik. 'Hir
Aihiail Lv)7'/ (London,
39 A
sintilar
PoNItb
provenance Iiucrn.uional Cirapliononuo Society
Cat in
1>'>'3).
cxaniplc with a
more secure
b published byJ.BouTtiau,
Phuuoks and
Maruils: r.xyptumArt in
ilic
ConferenccTfondheim, 1989).
MUtOt Kingdom (Cambridge, 22 See Chapter 3. 23 H.G. FischL-r.
L'cailuH'
1988), no.
I
OH.
dated to die 12th to 13th Dynasty. i
l
V.irl
cmeimiir (Paris. 1986). lO>-3isH' ' label for j pair
from the tomb of King
The
number, suggesting
presumably also used in administration. This period ization
and Co..
Puii'lijM-d thiou{;h Soihcb\"4
from William .Macprcgor: acquired
captive befon; the \unilird
.i
the god Wepwavvei. caption, facing the
The
same direction
On
king, read^'Horus; l>en'.
could be an
between
small caption
the
/nH
the label a caption writes signs; this
edge of
left
with phonetic
name, The
official s tlie
the
as
two nuin
tigutxrs
The
has not been successfully read as yet.
on the
caption
and
reads:
pint occasion of Smiling the
The motif rtyyal
East'.
of Egs'ptian
a standard icon
is
same
right edge faces the
direction as the capnvxr.
power subduing
of
niain hierc^ypliic
foreign reprcsentatix'cs
of chaos and disorder, although many of the details are unparalleled.
The back of a
atically
bears an incised lepresenution
of sandals: the
pair
since
reles-ant,
scene
ro>'al
is
them-
from
sandals
later
periods are sometimes painted with figures
of enemies, so that the wcirer would trample on them widi every
step.
lower corners have been cut lower cslge for
danuged; there
is
attachment
BlBllocRAPHY: ssxjoden
V. HA.
I'.E.
(1912). 278-«'*;
'Miscellanea
14 (l'}28),
1
iv:
First
D>-naMy',
RE. Newberr>-.
of the
a label
First
Dvnisn' .JEA
10; A.J. Spencer, ('.Malofiue
Antiquincs in ihf Btiiifh Mu.vum. Of.riiiKl, and lett:
Words spoken by
time and with contexts, but also between groups of scholar, an incidental value
3.
Dytuiry
End of J wooden cial,
face
meaning and the
Ith
As)-ut
the sun-god:
I
have
placed Ncphthys for you under yx)ur that she
f5?ct.
may bcwccp you and mourn
you. An otfering which eartli and the Sky [goddess]
haw given
which the
The foot
text
|.
,
.),
end of the
th.it
this
Isis
giwn
|.
.
.].
was originally the
coffin, aiid relates to
ing practices. The mythical
goddesses
an offering
eiu|ire| earth his
shows
mourn-
mourning of the
and Nephthys
at
the head and
foot of the dead Osiris was rccnacted in rituals for the deceased.
such
.xs
this
Other
texts
on
coffins
would include protecnve
to ensure a successt\il afterlife,
and the
sjh-IU titles
and name of the deceased owner,
mm icii;kai>iiv: hithrrto iinptihlivhrd
material
CRACKING CODES
3 Funerary
stela
of Renefseneb
(pi.
lo)
EA f>3f> H. 33.7 cm.W. 31 .5
cni, D.
•)
cm
MidiQc Kingikiin
From Thcb« I'un
li.Ln-tn
ihow*
the north
of the corri-
hieroglyphs are painted in
colour and carvvd in raised relief on
The fragment
background.
the Middle
E)>>'pti.in
as Tlic LifiJH)'
The iugh tombs
ro>'al
ofTenng
Uyf
llic
full
white
a
contains parts of
wrtical lines of hieroglyphic
five
.iiul
thjt this ftig-
\v.ill
te.\t.
liturgv'
from
known
Honts.
standard of workniaiuhip in the reflects the ccntralitx'
of the king
material as well as political culture. In
in
terms of decorum, certain texts and scenes such
3i this
were
restricted to n>>-al
monu-
ments.
mm |ciiiv:W.V. Dasies. l-gfptiM llxm/^yphs. Ri.-adiii|{
the IVsi (Luiidoii. l9K7),fn>iii cover;
Hornuiig and E. Stachelin, Salnv. Bin
E.
PtMraimaixmh (Basel.
A
6
royal
I91>. 56. fig. 39.
temple
inscription
(pi.
13)
EA 7H2
H
.
5 1 a cin.W. 16 cm. D. .
llkli l^yiiasts;
Emm
1(1,5
cm
tempt Hanhrpsut (1473-1458 sc)
Oeir el-H.ihn. prrsunuHy the tcniple of
Hauhepsuc
(c.\act
provrnancc uiirccoidcd)
Donated by the Egypt Exploration Fund: c.xcasMtcd by H.ll. Hall
Navillr: acquired in
and Henri Edouard
1'>II6
Fragnienl of painted liincicone rvUcf, show-
ing part of an otlering table, svith meat, grapes and bread, against a pale blue back-
ground. The scene and text are carwd. with details
being added
of the bunch of
in paint (such as the stalk
grapes).
The
hieroglyphic
caption in a vertical line reads 'giving wine'; the signs face royal figure
whose
kilt
left,
the
same direction
making the
as the
offering, remains
and hands holding
of
a vessel sur-
vive.
Above
the ottering table are traces of
nuiiibeni. in a tabulated offerings.
list,
recording the
Such scenes on temple
walls repre-
senting the temple ritual enacted the reciprocity of divine and
human embodied
in
the king that was essential to maintaining the cosmos. Cultic service wis the sviiibolic prerogative of the king, such, but
tlie
and was shown
daily practice
BlBtlOGKAPHY:
was
m
diDereiit.
lutlicrtu utipubli^licd.
^
aterial
78
cR
A
c:
K
I
codes
N c;
7 (innrr miIc)
7 Fart of a coffin
desh and fowl for the lady of the house
of Tanetaa
Tanetaa, the wife of Pasenhor truc-of-
{.IS
voicc.
the period and
EA
(pk 14-15)
3036r»
On cm
H. 39 cm. L. 190 cm. I> 4.5
twenty -eight
Intrrmniucc Penod. end of eighth
Thirvl
ceijtur>'
to
BL
Puivhjscd rmiii sicic
R J. Mi>v. A:
Co.: acquircd in 1898
of the jnthmpoid outer coffin of
Taiietaa. painted
wx>uden
left,
the
the
text
arranged in
verticil lines reading
start
of the
from right
text being placed next
ning of the
of the West
'enemies'
(
decapiuted
^
)
(e.g.
who
Justified Osiris
The determinate
painted,
it
for
shows the captive enemy ninth line finn)
as
name
is
te.xt. is
topped by
At the end of the text gosf.
now
lost,
is
and
»
at
show-
husband
The nuiminy is
case
of Tanetaa's
Museum (ea mummy, mummy cose and case arc in the Field Museum of also in the British
24906); her
cartonnage
Natural History, C'hicago.
bibiiocraphy: hitherto unpubluhed:seeJ.Tjylor.
left).
Although the Middle Egyptian text f'incly
Tanetaa,
.
follows, the deceased
of the
work-
ing a god performing libations to purify
.' .
frie/e.
typical for
is
lady's
outer side of the cofKn
decoratiw
the head was another scene,
mother being Tanetamcn: 'Hail
Osiris, bull
hymn which
against his enemies'.
chat
!dl(
Son of the
beloved of Aniun
are placed in rings,
elsewhere «>nictiincs
from which emerge
the same diR'ction
.is
|.
which
are
with distinctively
which
face in
the hientglyphs. have
hands lH>uiid behind their backs and
are tied together at the neck.
The names
Lil>v-an
ethnic group; KJki. Gasga in
northern ,\njtolij on the southern coast of the Black Sea. The representation of foreign-
.
slijjH'il like city walls,
torst»s
foreign beards. These figures,
their
tu north, and comprise In. a place in Nubia;
XUufl a
chosen of the
are
arranged in geographical order from south
ers
was generally limited to such depictions
in pluraonic ideology. The red is
pigment
infill
modern.
niRi
locRArHv:
I'.M iv, 3\
Hicnxford.
K.A.
1'I7'»).
1*M: K.A. Kiu'heii, RatmsstJc hiuripliimf TrjmUli'J
MiJ AaaitMird:'rmifliitiims 2 (Oxibid, 14%). SH.
79
iO CRACKING COOBS
FIGURATIVE H The term
'c
r\
1
KOG LY
H
jn()gmphy',
OR
H S,
1'
'
C RY PT(K; R A P H Y
used in Egjptolog)''. does not refer to
,is
sending message!* so that they cannot be intercepted; rather, 'ludic'
or 'sportive' writing.'*
discussed here in
glyphic script
is
some
sign,
of the
for
is
idea that the hiero-
were used with new were devised, such
also created; ortliographic pirns
can be seen on the Rosetta ijtonc
phonemic
code
a symbolic system.
were
signs
a
'figurative',
a subsystem of the hieroglyphic script and
It is
detail since it is the origin
In the fii^urative hieroglyphic system old signs
now
it is
signs
w
and
(j5)
(1.
^
8);
In this,
.
(J) were combined into a
showing a snake leaving a hole;
this
vakies. but as
one
that
the two
does not read
single
or j^f,
but writes the verb to 'go forth' (p^JTiK CaOy devdoped figurative system was created mainly through
tin-
of what has
ipiilication
been tenneil the 'consonantal prmciplc", whereby
and
bi-
tri-
consonantal signs could stand tor the strongest consonant of the signs original meaning, and the 'acrophonic principle', sign could stand for the rqsardless
first
whereby
a
consonant of the sign^ cniginal value,
of whether the second and
third consonants
weie strong
or weak. In general, these transfonn.uions of existing signs centred
around making the 'dead' significant. Figurative
metaphors of the sign
orthography occurs inanily
which the
in a style in
pictorial
alive
and
written
in texts
representational character of the signs
is
apparent (unlike in cursive hieratic).
Figuiatne hiero|^yphs occur as eaily as the
whicb
it is
attested
tomb owner's
titles,
on
Old Kingdom,
flineiaiy moinunieiiti, often in
where
was apparently intended
it
lists
m
fix>m
of the
intrigue
the passer-by and encourage him to read an otherwise standard formulaic inscription. text.
On
a
It
was
also used to impart
Middle Kingdom
fiinetaty stela
emblematic significance to
now
a
in the Louvre," a standard
Fig.
34 The wonl
tavxjuritc nmkicii ti(;uMuvcly.
Dta«vnbyR.PiuidiiKid.
sequence of epithets becomes a tow of figutes bearing divine emUems, comple-
menting the owner,
The
of gods elsewhere on the
list
well as inrriguing
as
great t.n oiinte o( the sovereign,
The
first
word.'tavourite". reads
ures
(fig.
34). The
first
two
Such writing was described
a tlgur
which
the tield
I
(i.e.
lis
and
stela,
assisting the
deceased
stela
epithets begin:
pLu ed
(normally
at
the head ot the Friends
^i')
and
is
>
figures carry a 'hyena' {hit
of*Sekhmet' (^mt >s):k+
sign
The
reader
rlie
.
.
written with several figIt),
and the
diiid a figure
s.
virtuosic: die
high
official
of Hatshepsut, Senenmut,
itne image as a
made according as
my ow n
to
labour),
in\-
and
heart's
w hich
thought, is
as a
not tound
man who works
in
m the writings of the
ancestors.™
The virtuosic nature meant that cryptography was not a consistent or find tradition (see cat 12).
Uopy iiyhica
inaiuiial
TOWARDS HEADING
(Ireco-Koman Period
In the
was
A
CULTURAL CODE
figurative writing
also used to refashion the hieroglyphic systen)
wholesale, especially for temple inscriptions, produc-
ing a sort of graphic alchemy and poetry running parallel with,
the texts.
and enriching, the verbal meaning of
The immediate
decreased,
one person
as
of such
intelligibility
texts
making the system the preserve of an
community of perhaps
exclusive intellectual
few
as
development was
in a thousand. This
enabled by the use of demotic for everyday writing
The number of
and for more
practical purposes.
signs increased,
and the system became 'more perfect
as a pictorial-linguistic form'-'
which mobihzed
reli-
gious knowledge; this was part of a general sacraliza-
n
tion of Egyptian high culture.
One example of such orthographic be seen in a Roman Period papyrus hieratic
copy of the
wonun named word
|.
(;).
Book
containing a
(fig.
of
snake
a
and
((/)
a loaf
for 'statue'
representing a
35).
The
could be written with
{tu't)
niummifonn
acrophonic principle,
statue.
a
/.
a sign
Following the
reading twt could be
this sign
used to write a simple
with signs showing
of bread
l^.The
followed by a phonetic determinative:
word
of a
of Brt\uliiii^
10303)
(e.'\
was standardly written with the
d( 'eternity'
'alphabetic' signs
fijnerary
.jtasheret
.
theology can
Thus
dt
could be written
serpent and a
mummy,
with
the serpent sign adapted to curl around the iiUHumy:
^>.This the
writing presents an image of the myth of
end of the world, known
spells, in
which the cosmos
only two gods survive for eternity: the
god
Osiris
and the sun-god
>^
finom earlier funerarv'
sinks into chaos,
who
and
mummiform
takes the
form of a
primev,il serpent.
Another e.vample
name of
write the
is
provided by writings of the
the gud Pcah. This was usually written with three alphabetic signs for
the consonants: ° j /),
.
However, the logograni
for the sky (=i (in Egyptian pi) can
while the logogram for the earth
be supplied by the logogram (/)/i).The signs for
^
(f J)
can write the
f;
the
Ij
can
which writes the name of in
a
deity called
Heh
phonetic order, but
according to the heraldic framing of scenes in temples, where the sky covers and
who
supports the sky,
is
placed between the p
and /.Thus, the name of the creator god could be written with an iconic scene
showing the cosmos he created:
35 Detail of
.
.1
ltii
jn 1 Vriotl papyrut
,
of the tunc raiA-
lumcd
heaven and earth arc then arranged, not
the earth supports a scene. Heh,
Fig.
wriiicii in hicrjiu i.i>iiuiiiiitg ilir fiiul
\mv\
od woaun
hu Mhiig
|...|uUicrci.Thf biKiiiiu line coiiuiiu
J fignrati\ic
H. 27 3
butA- oj
cm
wnting of the worJ P.
UM EA
U)M>i.
rfi
Crtcrnity').
81
82
CRACXINO CODES
These examples
are single words, but
and highly
esoteric ones,
instances aie
two faymns
first
the
cennny Ai>
name and
plidrv'
(fig.
whole
were written
in the hall
texcs, inclticling
figuiativdy.
of die temple
.
.
.\
aie fiillowed
simitar,
ten in crocodile-signs
by
of the ram-god Khnum, Mrtiidb ate wrkten with a multi-
of ram signs." Consequently, only the opening words can
with any certaint\.A
spectactihr
at Esna, decorated in the late
36).The opening words, 'Piaites to you
epithets
both formulaic
The most
is
but slightly more legible,
hymn
to
now
be read
Khnum-Re
writ-
also inscribed in the hall.
Rg. 36 The fignnuwe hieraglyptiic bynm to Khnuni. wrincii with temple ol
riiii
Uiiia. Dr^iwii
S. Saunetoo,
by
hifnwjvphs
in the
CThorne Jttcr
1/ Miyllr if'EiiM n (CttiOb 1963), 204.
Copyrighltxl malenal
TOWARDS KIAOING
Egyptian on the statue « hack
9 Statue of Mcryptah
him H.
1
19th Dyiiawv. temp.
K;iimn
II
the
(12'«>-1224 M.)
I'nni-iiuiK c uiitvcordcd
PurchaM.- J rmiii
A
Fmivuu
Sallicr:
jcquircd in
1
83
small black steatite statue of a kneeling
man The
adoring the cartouche of RaiiiNes inscription
in
Two
Lands,
whom his
Lord of
A
"{
II
Vr-mJW, chosen of
of the goddess Maat
figure
('Truth") wTitcs m.l't: she wears her hiero-
Person loves
emblem on
her head, and holds in
glyphic
her hand the hieroglyph
icsr,
Meryptah.
sents an animal-headed
staff.
He
IS
perhaps the same Meryptah in
Theban Tomb
no. .^7.
who
of
are raised in adoration
s .irnis
the sun-god)
of the Olfering Table of All the Gods.
II.
Middle
Mer^-pt-ih
a cartouche reading
greatly praised of the
because of his character, the King's Scribe
buried right-facing
pillar identities
as:
The one
4 cm, W. .V8 cm, D. 6.4 imi
CULTURAl CODE
A
was
which repreThis icono-
graphic scene embodies the meaning
name, which has
a
consciously chosen (like most names):
Mighty of
tlic
suii-disk; 'year'
a royal
it IS
'One
Truth of the sun-god". As
often, the cartouche
and wears
the
t>f
pn>grammatic sense,
ksk on
a sign for gold,
headdress of plumes and
llanked by
two hieroglyphs
(now bioken). evxiking
a
for
long reign for
the king. niniKx.HiSI'iiY:
(London.
I
M,
UirrbritT,
')82). pi. (>2;
M.
/
10
/irniifl/yite 7r.vf
cnkniiJcr
SchuxMZ (Maiiu. 1970). I73-»I.406.
This
lli>r)f,
.IS
the ritual year.
by
end of the of the
part
House of
of
was intended to be recited
and includes
Life',
description of that institution,
The
temple scriptorium. spells against
was
mum-
festivals
of the chamber which
a 'scribe
the
It
a ritual that
is
at the
mification of Osiris
is
called
symbolic
a
which was the comprises
ritual
enemies of Osiris and con-
chides with the placing of a copy of the
book
an amulet on the neck of a statue of
as
Such divine
Osiris.
rites
were adopted by
who became
private individuals,
in death, for their
identified
invn fiinerary
makes
use, as a gloss in the text
explicit.
Since papyri rarely sursnsT ftom settlement
Hornuni: and
unJ Miictr
acquitrd in 1835
performed probably
with Osiris
Bii>Lio(>iiAPiiv:J. Nlalrk.
Salt:
825 dates from the Ptolemaic
Salt
in dcr
or temple
sites,
came from
a
manuscript probably
this
tomb.
This section of the papyrus consists of
columns 8 and 9 and of cursiw
is
written in a mi.xture
hieratic. hicrogKishs
hieroglyphs.
C'olumii
K
vignette at the
bottom
The nco-Middle power of right to
Shu
the
of
with
shown
a
in a
this section.
Eg>'ptian text invokes the
god of the
air.
Shu (reading
manifests himself as a predator>'
wing; he makes
a
left
is
left):
a bull, to
goil
and figuratiw
o}vcns
description of an amulet that
-
knot from the brisdes of
a
be placed on the neck of this
variant: to
be placed on the neck of
nun. Shu nukes
air for
the nose of his
son Osiris, to drive away those
who rebel
against him. They are intended for
making the protection of this god. to safeguard the king in his pabcc. to
those
who
fell
a-bel against him. wh.vi is
SAID BV Shu. hidden
in the sun-disk:
TOWARDS READINC.
'Hide j'ourscif in your house,
Rebels - that which comes turn TOU
a\v:»y!
faces, tor
I
your souU.
You
back your
haw iiude a knot to destroy' am Shu who burns your
signs 5-7,
(8.
1-5)
show other images designed
vignettes
^
i/r..»
>
.
I
•
|«.}{|
v-ase that
contains an image of the god.
>m
T
M-tf
V
s3b
JT
n >
^
>m su'liil + bsk > sb
On
dj^'^i
figurative hierogl>T>hic signs:
sm3 >
s
{mn > i /•>/ mul >
t
»
t
>
>
?
.'
w >J
jdl
>
tv'U
t
III
The
If
sign for k {no. 4)
is
based on a misread-
ing of the shape of the sign. All he was able to read of the text was:
Um:k
+ bsk >
sutiii
jdliw
fl.
f
>w s3b>s n>r miiw > m
>
miiw
'
4
(for j/ini:t) ??? in-shju'
May you
sh
hasr power
???
over the rebels!
DiiVerent temples used distinct iiguratiw
i
systems, and the errors of the cop>'ist
This can be read s(.hf) .k
to protect Osiris, ittcluding a bucket-sliaped
this is written a text in eleven
and had decoded signs 3—1 and
wrongly, reading them as follows:
I
corpses to cinders!"
The
May you have powder over the rebels! He had failed to decode the crv^ttography of
(Osiris)!
js air will
will turn
of the
jar's
ritual. Ho\ve\'er.
copied
V.
syTiibolic
the ancient
Salt vstote in hieratic to
de dechiifiviiicm'. I'.
Dciv-hain.
jwuf
til
RdE
U papyms
ivrumuriinit
die right of the jar what he understood the
l'Xi5).esp. 140;
interprcunon of (he cryptographic text to be:
du
ifr la
12 (IWiri). 27-31;
&>li
iw
H26
IBM
l>ap> rus Salt 823'.
lOOSIf.rilutt
m Kgyplf (UruncU,
F-R. Hcrbin.'Les BlI-AO 88
(
prciiiicrcs I
V88),
pages
95- 1
1
2.
A
CULTURAL COPE
8i CRACKING CODES
CURSIVE HltROCiLYFHS
AND HIERATIC
MtfOflyphk Fooa to find'
rf^^
Cursive versions ot hieroglyphs, written
Math ink and a
ree\'er
Hieratic
'hieratic',
fiom
.•.It
For the t)ld Kingdom and
normal cursive form of the
Admuiiantivr hutaiic
SccoMl
Eari)'
of a
srj'le
hand
hieratic
only means of dating
often the
is
also relates to the type
Lntr
St.
*«
5]
Mirritic
manuscript, and
a
New Kingdeu
isso-isoonc.
,
The
Oil
as a 'priesdy' script
37).
(fig.
InMmedbM Mod
l700-tS5O BC.
t.
Greco-Roman Period
&\
is
use in the
its
#4*
Middle Kmgid
parallel to
hierarchy of uses ot writing and of texts
that evolved
Kiitgdiyftk CO early
%
New KngdoD
MA
of manuscript. Lnctary bieKUic
of ancient hand-
Plalaeagtapfay (the study
writing), however, can offer only a relative chronolot^N': only a minorin,-
of manuscripts
bear dates. Thus, the Heq.inakht
^^^^
AdmmiMntive hieiatic
Third bMcmiediMe 100-700 ac.
letters, a
Med
fSfl
(.t
group of early Middle Kuigdoiu docu-
now
ments
New 'Vbrk, were
of Aft,
Museum
in the Metropolitan
dated to the
Dynasty by the hand, but have
been
assi;^ned to tlie earlv 12th
By
and
the
1,
evident
onte.vtiiai
HI
(Adnuniiaaiive hieniic) first
lltJi
ologic.il
'Abnonnul hMade*
now
Lste Pcfioci to Plolciiuiv Asnock
700-30
on archae-
BC
/«>
LateUoadc
e.
mid-Middlc Kingdom
9
hieratic
had developed into two variedes, formal and administianve, the
latter
using
l^tuie-fiee form of script with
was
also retained. This, wliicli
is
more
less
(two or more joined
ligatures
signs).
A
abbreviated ffgn forms than fornial hieratic
now known
as cursive hieri>i;lyphs.
was
Fig. 37 it\:L-iH
Three hieiqgjypluc agm and gmupt 111
Ktii);doiii
a careful
N'nrioiB cuisive script*,
hKndc
fmm Old
thiouj^ co dciiKXic.
From R. RwUmoit and S. Qnitlee. flyjnw 'book-hanii" used tor teni(>Ie m.imisi
scriptoria.
thus
CMder
script
moved higher up
ty
i
ipts ni
New
for tunerary manuscripts in the
the Middle Kiiii;don) .uid let.iMicd
Kingdom.
pes were constdeied
It is
a««daa.l99S).25.
temple
characteristic ot
more formal and
prestigious,
and
the scale of decorum, in parallel with the use of older
forms of the language. Hieratic of the
the Middle
New Kingdom
Kingdom, but
aspect of the
sig^is.
there
w
appears tnuch in
more
calligr.iphic tlian that
of
alvo a retbrni to renitroduce the pictorial
Literary and administrative hands also
became more
distinct.
Cursive and ftdly pen-drawn hierogjiyphs were retained for iUustrated and foneiary papyri,
and some
are even painted in foil colour;
a pictorial scene, the hieroglyphic script
is
where a
text
is
part
of
almost always used. Later, at the end
Copyright(xl inalenal
READING
TOWAR.I>S
of
New
ehi'
Kingdom,
i forninl
form of
hier.itic
of the increasing specialization of administrative writing In hieratic, the pictorial aspect
ments.
of the
in
Many
script
fiilly.
with
is
O
C
II
E
took over the role of cursive
hieroglyphs in these texts, becoming the prineip.il prieMly script,
tendency to write words out more
CULTURAL
A
p.irtly
a result
.is
styles.
considcnibly reduced. There
is
a
of phonetic comple-
a greater use
elaborate pictorial hieroglyphs were not standardized: for example,
hieaiglyphs and cursive hieroglyphs
native representing a cat
( 'fg ).
while
'cat'
was written with
in hieratic, the sign
is
a pictorial
determi-
replaced with a
more
generalized and simpler sign of an ammal-skin (?) that acts as the determinative
of many words
for
mammals. Complex determinatives were even replaced by
fmm
simple diagonal stroke (\) that derived tiinerary inscriptions to replace signs that cally
potent contexts (cf
worked
its
way
plicated signs. script,
cat, 53).
By
a stroke
used in Old
were considered dangerous
magi-
in
the 18th Dynasty this cursive sign had
into hieroglyphic inscriptions, occasionally substituting for
Most
texts
and inscriptions were composed and dratted
which was the normal medium
a
Kingdom
com-
in cursive
tor reading.
the
The opening
roll.
The
he.Hling
the great and small herds
all
but the headings to other
roll.
name and
The
d.itc
King
.iftcr
rolls
|.
.
pn-^-rved,
is
provide the
the subject nutter of the
can bc reconstructed
or 2M of Djedkarv years
of
year a|fter| the 14th occasion
counting
In this instance only the dnte
king's
written in
is
delineated hieroglyphs.
careliilly
around
Isesi (i.e.
Nefcrirk.ire
-is
Year 27
si.\ty-tive
Kakai died).
Shortly afterwanls aiK)tlicr scribe added an
account on the margin of the
more
nill, in
cursive hieratic script:
month of Shemu,
1st |.
.
13
.]
gallons
13 EA
P.
Abu
this
MEASURED EVERY Sir:
temple records
|.
cm
Fniiii Abii Sit, (nr-iiiiiU
mniplrx of
ot'
t. Luihvig
gram 5'/^
viits:Titr
issued toT|eseiiiy:
gallons
the
papyrus
in tin- fiiiierjry (t'liiple ik-dicitcJ to
l
omplox
»(
Abu
Sir,
lie j\Y;i tni,.!r
(Camj,
1
''71
K.ii
'
.
.
1
of grain
|wHAT
IS
IMVj.
in ihr Hrtti^ti
Sir /'j/i)/i
K Poscner-Kric]^.
the cult of King Ncfcrirkarc Kakai (2446his pyr.in>iii
Aku
is
Giving the
Pbscncr-KncKcr andJ.L.dc
P.
Cenival, Hicralu Papyri
Htrnri F.Ji>u,inl
Fragment of pjpyrus from
111
ot
Gising the
bibiiouraphy:
Purchased t'mni the fstjtc
242fi Bc)
g>illoiis
(k
MEASURED EVERY
Navillc: ncquinrd in
anhivv
.|
what
d.»y 2:
issued to Tjesemi: THIS IS
Nel'crirkjrr Kikii
Dorchjrdi, pn-vuiui
.
day
5th l>> tu«v.r,23M) m:
day: Ciiving the
is
D.AY.
2nd month of Shenni.
Hi7.VS.IO
H.2r>.5 CI11.W.2I
last
of gram issued toTjescmy
.ind Neferneiiitei:
i
J.
.
',
A
but the
more
cursive hieratic hands
fell
out of use. Demotic could
still
agreement
loan
fur
a
The
text
owr
fortnulaic:
is
be
in dossiers
Modern
it
transcriptions
increasingly
artificial.
was developing
as
of I'tolemaic and
The
later stages
an independent orthographic system.
later
demotic into hieroglyphs become
of the language written
in
demotic
varies with region
and by period, and three phases can be
Roman. The Roman Period
guished: early, Ptolemaic and
alphabetic spellings than earlier periods.
Year 20.
distin-
due
largely to the
reflect the
L
.
use had
become mainly
dominance of Greek
Roman
late first
more cen-
learned. This change was probably
in political
and economic
government's policies disfavouring the native
affairs,
elite.
Month
2 of Shcniu. Day IC of
his
to the
and may
of tlie Valley, Djcdkliy son
libation-priest
of Dismonth. I've
1
its
script
and sonic to
mother being Dimutpaankh. sa>'s
/f>
his
mother being
received from you
of the
tury .\D in both the private and pubhc sphere, and by the second half of the .M)
hieratic,
embahner Hapiu son of Djedher.
si\vcT
second centur\'
abnormal
demotic.
the I'haraoh Wahibre (Apries). The
script uses
Demotic dechnes from the
as
for-
script
are close to Coptic (see chapter 2).
Demotic
known
by
genera-
ses'eral
some of the
mulae belong to the stage of the notionally transcribed into hieratic, and thence into hieroglyphic script, but by
the Ptolemaic Period
si.x
family archive.
Such documents were kept those coneenied, often
of
period
a
months, presumably from
tions.
texts,
570 bc
Fmm Thcb«
1
/
10
1
treasurj'
/2«
1
/GO
Khausisis:
one deben of
of Thebes kite
of the
i.e.
9 2/3
tieasury.
making one deben of silver of the treasury
vou
in
of Thebes.
Year 21
,
I
will give
Month
A
it
back to
of Akhet.
If
I
do
TOWARt>5 KFADINc;
not give
it
A
i:ULIURAL CODE
back in Year 2t Muntll 4 o( .
Akhei.it will bear iiucrt-M
at
I
/3 kite per
deben of silver each month without
month and
interruption for e\rr\' yeit during
which
it is still
with
everx'
nic.
It
can be exacted Iruni any guarantees that
you want from nic serving
girl,
clothing that
I
them
,
-
house, scr\'ant,
son. daughter, silver, copper,
oil,
emnier. any chattels
at all
have - aiiy-whcrc, and you will take in recompense,
without citing any
document. Written by Horkhoas son of
Neithemheb
p:
On
(son of) Iby.
.
,
-
.
the verso are the
names of two wit-
newes:
Djedhor son of Khonsuirdis lhahirdis son
of lirass-u
bidliouiiapmy: .M Malinine. Choix ir juridiijuri
rn
(XXV-XXnr itynasties) (Hiris. K. I>onfcer van
I
Ircl.
Ro(H
WVI»mi>i):
Uif (Leiden,
1
1953). IS-J"*;
Hfrmwimi/ HirrMu and Eatiy
Oem/i)'ri /n'm
993). no. 23.
ihe
in
Li>um EisenMu
23 Fragment of the of Horiraa
Below
stela
tides:
EA Hmh H. 19.5 cm.W 22 till, D. (..3 cm
. .
of Ptah,
Revd Grevilte J. Cheucr; acquired
fragment from the lowrr
limestone hinerary
ranking
of
priest
of the Foremost
in
Tanenet. prie« of Bastct
1886 .
A
White Walls (Memphis). Master of the
Master of the Mysteries of the Temple
From Meniphts
in
.|
Mysteries of the Foremost in Tanenet,
3lkh DyiListy to early I'mleniiut- IVnuil
Purchased from
two horizontal hues of bbck-
this an;
painted cursive script, providing additional
stela
Mcmphite
left
corner of
of Horiraa,
priest.
a
The ends
of three horizontal
a funerary inscription
of incised hieroglyphs, painted
line*
and reading right to
left.
black,
This inscription
contains the deceaseds name,
titles
and
lllia-
tion: .
.
.
.
-I
.
Master of the Mysteries sanctuary
Lord/Lady
at
in
Tanenet
Memphis)
of(?)|
Anklitass^
(north .Memphis), the priest Horiraa. true-of-voice .
.|al{?)
.]
true-of^voicc,
Othcrworld
for
may all
she Uve in the
time!
living for all-time. Year 4,
Month
-4
of Akhct. Day
27(?)
Demotic subscripctons to hien>^yphic are
common, and such
forms of script on
usages
pris^ate
texts
of several
monuments
parallel the state multi-script decree
of the
Kosctta Stone. Here the cursive script written very formally with hieratic
(a
.
a
high-
sur\'ivc
.
of the
is
mixture of late
and early demotic forms; the form
final vvxjrd
the date
a
a very
of the cursive text before
similar to that
of the hiero-
glyphic text.
lUBLiocRAfHY: hitherto unpublished.
100 (:ka'en
yean
(old),
before his time.
BIBI liir.K.SPIIY: A.AhJalla, Ccur- Rpmon runrraq'
StelM from Vpper Bgypi (Lis-erpool. IW2),
na
187.
Cl
TOWARDS HEADING
25 a
including a recitation written in Greek that
London/Leiden:
is
magical papyrus
EA L.
P.
to
be
rx-ad in
the opposite direction to the
followed by two
demotic (4.9-18). This
is
further spells for sisions.
Column
li»>7ii 2
S5 4 cin.H.23.')
CUITURAI. COOf.
A
3 contains
an a spell for 'A
tested gods
arrival', that
is.
for
Konun IVnod. third cimnir>- AD a vision in a dream. Lines fi-X read:
Fmni Thcbo put frankincens« up in front of the
If you
PunhiNctJ fnim Giovanni d'Atbanasi;
lamp and look
the lamp, you sec the
at
K37
acquired in
I
This wrv'
late
god near the lamp;
two
demotic pap\Tus was sold
parts in Thebes, the
London and proved
script,
entire roll arc
the
of Greek and demotic
now known of
it
the
contains
text
as
Old Coptic. The
measured some 5 m.
scries
.1
deciphering
in
since
glosses in a inixttirc
characters
part going to
first
the second to Leiden, where
important
demotic
in
On
spells .ind recipes
the recto
arranged in
twenty-nine columns written between ruled lines.These include spells for di\°inadon. love
of healing.
spells,
poisons and
vcno
are apparently discontinuous
spells
On
the
memo-
randa, prescriptions and short invocations.
The
spells are typical
cietistic culture
products of the syn-
earth,
dream, here
Column
comprises
4 contains a
columns 4-7.
spell for a revelation.
you the
tells
on
a reed
is its
ans\sx"r in a
invocation;
roRMULAE; Here
are the writings
on the wick of the
which
The remainder of the
lamp: liakhukhsikhukh
This
worsl
last
signs,
is
Old Coptic
written in
and means 'Soul of darkness, son of
Then come some
d,irkncss".
untranslatable
hieroglyphic signs to be written
There follows
a
recitation
identifies
iiugiciaii
on
in
the wick.
which the
himself with
various
magical names. .Many of these are written phonetically in demotic characten, but with a gloss
of Late Antiquity.
section
and he
yx>u should write
I
This
\\)u sleep
mat without having spoken to anyone on
above them
lail,
I
ini
iiaii'i,
in
Old Coptic
letters
is
spelLs in this section
77jr Drmi«fc Sta^ual [\ipymi
(London. 1404):
Lif lj.itnion
ImluJiirg ihr DrrnoMr Sprlli
(=
Pjppi
and Ijrtdm
H.D.
in TrjiuUliiHi.
(Chicago and London,
POM .xiv:9pcUs on this section
= HD.V1 xiv4.V2|4);J
Tdit.
Thcban
iiugic'.in
S.I^V'leeininp (cd.). HuniniS-isMrd Th(hrs:Acts
CoHi'i/unHM imntflvs
'ptian.
lemado, the majority of die indig^ous populadon had no way of tecording
Initi
I'
(
was mostly used for
iptic
literan,"
works and private
dialects
became
I
ian.^' It is
Liliutal
letters.
visible in written
uncertain
how
came
it
to
form
for the
and
Bible,
first
this
dard literarv language. Sahidic. which despite the
l.itigu.ige
of the region aniuiul Mempliis,
century. Native Egyptian texts, as
the
opposed
monks Fachomius, Shenuce and Besa
dialect is well attested
of the
centuries
.ifter tlie
its
time
in the history
1
i
K.
k
A
I
M
HI
II
of Eg>'ptis
name
is
tlii>iii:ht
to have
been
Listed Ironi the fourth to the tetitli
to translations, include the writings (fig.
in
O
0
n
p
r
r
c
s
consequently becjinc the stan-
its
39). The Bohairic,
by the ninth century and became die
importance
I
ks
of
economic and
appe.irance of Coptic. Contrary to
otFicial
matters tor several
what
often assumed, the
is
T
t
Y
u
*
ph
X
lA
or 'nordiem',
principal language
C!optic church in the tenth century.
Greek retained
H
be used for Christian
the dialects were located geographically, but what
of the
z
Apart from some minor features of demotic,
now termed the Sahidic. afier the Arabic for Upper Egyptian dialect, was chosen for the otficial translation
t
Z
N
but by the mid-fourth cen-
biblical texts,
event of major proportions'.'"
.1
e
its
own language in writing until the mid-duid century at the earliest.^ tury, in
i
into the lan-
century AO and the dcchne of demotic
first
T
e
necessary tneans of recording
a
b
to the tact that
Coptic was developed in a thorou^ily bi-
uniliceral signs.-"
a
B
i
of niagical
tendencies (o use qpdlii^ foregrounding the phonetic value of words, including
the usage
X
proto-Copiic script
a
phoDologicil
signs
(Bg. 38).
impulse for
original
Coptic
an alphabet that had evolved for
faievitalily
Greek phonology could not be used for a
demotic
letters
ps
5
two languages were not divided bctvseen poor country dwellers speaking Coptic
and sophisticated town dwdlen writing in Greek. The dominance of Gredc in surviving manuscripts
may
earlier scholars
Oxyrhynchus which
is
famous
produced, despite other significant material (such
produce die misleading unpression
that
Egypt in ad 639-41 dut Coptic began istzadve afiairs. first
A hi^
few centuries
sk
well reflect the preservation of manuscripls and the
importance attributed to Greek by desert town-site of
JBB.
it
w.is
and
collectors, as
for the as
fig.
21).*-
^
Such
that
9
factors
afier the
h
X
j
6
c
Greek as a language of admki-
t
0_A
number of Arabic
z
it
only after the Arab conquest of
to replace
f
with the
Greek papyri
psqiyri survive
finm Egypt for the
Muslim conquest. Arab dmiinance over the
native
Fig. 38
Hie Copcie alphabet
Copyright(xl inalenal
TOWARI>S RE.Mil NO A CULT LIRA I CODE
Fig.
y>
A
liiiicMonc
iiKcripnoii
wU with i t^opnr
of tweiity-fijur
Eg>'ptian popiiLition eventually caused Coptic to die out as a spoken language,
liiio >urn.>iiiKWd
probably by the fifteenth century. This marked the end of a language that had a
by 1 bonlci of pLuii inoab. From chc Monaucrv'
of Apj JrmnuvSiiqq.in. H.
EA
continuous WTittcn tradition for over 4,5*H> years. Coptic continues
as a liturgical
an.
language, but
1(^3.
its
e\-idencc of how
A
I •
;
present pronunciation it
was pronounced
in
is
essentially that
!
^,-mx,i :
f
offers little
GNtlrxwxniimn'XA rroXKcblT'^eiN 1
I
V
of Arabic and
medieval and carher periods.
!''\.2vin.W. 13.3 tin
C'opik IVriod. mmviiiIi cciicury ad
Provriunce unnrcotdiN)
M«vi\
Diniatrd by
Kiiiter
Man hatil, fmrn
imi
die Lolltition of John Lcc: jcquircJ
A
1V33
iii
pjp\TU« pjgc dxtm J Coptic codex, dated
by the paljcognpliy to thv seventh AD.
The
text
j entitled
i*
Shemue
the Sahidic dialect.
abbot
White
the
ol"
was
Akhiiiini.
cctitury'
"A IPiscoiirse
Holy Father Shcnutc", jnd
our|
(d,
is
b>'
written in
ad
466), the
Monastery
near
and
a passionate retbrioer
a
persecutor of paganism. His wTitings display a hlj;hly individualistic style:
"
and very powerlul'
the style of the present text, howexrr, later
and only
attributed to Shcnutc. This page
(no. II)
suggests that
was written
it
contains an account of a miraculous supply
of grain: .
.
.
Now when we
look, chat
He
had finished praying,
someone touched
it
said to mc:'Sheniite,
trust in the Lord.
care for you.'
It is
you and he
He
said to
I
thought
he
will
do not
who
fear,
but
will take
newr abandon
me: 'Send the bnither to
bring bread tor the I
inc.
was the hand of the Son of God.
turned Ruitid.but
men 1
so they
may
cat."
did not sec him,
We
prayed and sent the brother. When he
opened the door, \vc found one hundred artabae (a measure uf grain volume,
equivalent to
c.
30 kg) pouring on
us.
We
were very happy and wc blessed Jesus,
who
Wc
IS
always beneficent to his servants.
brought
uhiiooiiai'iiy: c'
thr t-giyf ExplonCion Fund;
jcquinrd in 19ri0
A
mtncon
wiih text on both
sides in Coptic, (rotii
the archives of the
linicsconc
nion.istcr\'
of Apa Phoibanimon.
on
built
the
upper tcFMcc of the temple of Hatshcpsut (leir el-Uahri.
tery
were
iiied for brief notes
Ep ptian
Tiiuh throughout
twenty
and J
Inies in black
a further sixteen
copy of an
at
Such piece* of stone or potand inemo-
history-. There
pigment on the
are
front,
back. The text
on the
is
probably
ecclesiastical letter,
from the monastery "s founding abbot Bishop
Abraham (ad
5'A>-62i)). to
judge
l>y
the
prosrnance and other related documents.
The
letter bs'gnis:
Now
I
have been informed that IVate
is
nultrcating the poor, and they have told
me suying.'He
is
poor and wretched."
leaving!
nultrcais his neighbour
the
feast,
and he
[and
n)altreain)j> us,
is
like
is
I
le
who
excluded from
- he who
Judas
arose from supper with his Lord and
betrayed him, acc
my bread
as is writteii:"l le
who
has lifted his heel ag;)inst
mc..."(ll. 1-7) biiiliochafhy: W.E.
Crum. Coptic
Colltvltimf ej ihr Egypt {ixplanilim
Mustum W.
jiid
iMhcn (London.
GiMllcssski. Dtii ei-BdhiUi.
Osttaaifnim riw
FunJ, iht CiUto
1M()2). no. 71; le
monjslite dt
St /^Jixfummin (Warsaw, 1984bcfed).W. Cu>dlcsvski.'Dayr
Apa
Aop (cd.). Tlir Coptic
Phoibainmon'.
in A.S.
nncyilvpeJu
(Ncvk Vofk and Toronto, IWI),
779-81.
ill
A
CULTURAL CODE
105
106
CRACKING CODES
28 Grammatical ostracon EA H222 H. 13.8 cm.W. 12 cm. D. 0.7
cm
Coptic Feriod I'nu'niJiK e unrtrconled
Uonicrd by Rcvd iC()uin-d in
Red
1
ClrrviUc J. Chctccr:
879
pottery ostracon with
black pigment
te.xt
written in
On
the iront
of graninuiical
OKercises:
on both
arc scvcnieen lines
sides.
the tenses of the verb "to teach' are written first
top
in f Ireck is
and then
the future tense
will teach'), followed ("I
t.iunht");
(the
On
is
arc "Ssvrar to
At the
will teach".
is
'You
rcpe.itcd again
broken away). At the
mc' and
"I
will swear'.
the other side are eleven lines of a
Coptic (a
then the future
Greek version
bottom
in Coptic.
('I
by the perfect tense
name
letter
mentioning one Horsiesious
derived from the Pharaotiic name,
'Horus-son-of-Isis'). giving greetings to a
most holy Itiisi
father.
iiK.KAPilV'
M.K
Hall, Coptic Mid Grrek'lrxli
«ftht ClirisliM n-rii'J (ioiidtm. I'XH). 3K.
WRITING AND ART: CULTURAL ICONS
107
DECORATIVE HIEROGLYPHS Acsthcric considerations were a determining factor in the layout of hieroglyphic inscriptions, in
which
signs
were organized into square spaces
sometimes transposed so they space-filler signs
which
were used.
fitted
One
example
written in cursive scripts as
is
arrangement
as
1^ Many .
tall
follow: thus this
word
,^1
is
m
a pleasing
word
the
and
for lector priest, Ijrj-hht,
for
Ijrj-liht,
to be read
not
is
is
also a preference for it
might otherwise
For decorative reasons
fjJw.
often abbreviation into the single sign i.
0th Dynasty, there
is
a
(mm
I'urcluKii
(IOT7-IH78 Br)
II
tendency to use hieroglyphs
emblematic and iconographic groups. Like cryptography,
the close association of a pictorial shape of a sign and
A wmged scanb of electruin. inlaid blue
cornelian,
lapis
through
fmm
tubes
on the underside of the
\Mngs.
The
Wuc hndy
semantic meaning,
•ixJiit
underside
Icj^, as if
green
have been
a wire or thread passing
with
J
with red
and
lazuli
The ornanKMii would
on
this practice relies
its
MolutnniiNi Moluviib:
jcquin-d in 1'>r>
suspended
Hieroglyphs were not only arranged decoratively, but were a principal vehicle late
cm
IVovciiancc untttorilcd
feldspar.
of decoration. From the in
FA 544WI H. 1.5 cm,W. 3.5 cm. D. 0.3
hieroglyphs in a square
and there
irr/J {'prosperit],'').
29 Pend.mt with the name of Senwosret II (pi. 17)
I2lh tiyiuM>', temp. Sciittxitid
J^^. but in
thin vertical sign before a bird hieroglyph that is
{'quadrants')
manner; occasionally
writing? in hieroglyphic inscriptions arc also abbrevi-
ated for aesthetic reasons, such as
placing a
together
is
not
inlaid.
A
scarab
holds a red suii-disk in
bearing
it
it*
across the sky. Its
wings are formed of bands of red. blue and
which
is
word
it
what the
often very different from
which shows
sign,
writes phonetically,
building the shrines of the
'life'.
ro^'al
sign represents. For example, the
'nlj
green.
or sandal
a penis sheath
strap,
is
used as the enjblem for the
The Rosetta Stone cult
contains instructions for
and decorating them with emblematic
It
green
(/jpr), hill
uraeus should be placed on a basket with a 'sedge' under
it
on the
the side on the top of the shrine, and a uraeus with a basket under
placed on a papyrus
illumined
on the
left,
Upper and Lower
the
meamng of which
Egypt". (Demotic text,
is
right
it
'The King
of
should be
who
has
(/(').
power.
Many
epithets.
all
on
this
spring
rcpresciuing
and sun
the inscriprion
is
The oubpread wings
(f ')
write the
Khakheperre
ihmnc
(H'-ljpr-
exactly syninietrical.
are a prolectiw device.
BIBLlor.RAI>HY:C.Aiuiiew%, Cuilidogur tr
from the
atiribuicd lu
ISZi. tlic
Mu&cv
(aU rights
hy kind pcrrniwion
of M. and Mnie Cbatcauminois.
1
aterial
^7
PUtc 7 The Banket obelisk •
at
Kingston Ljcy;
'
Dorset, in the position facing the house that wa
chosen by Bankes' friend the Duke of Wellington. In fiDnc
of it
lies
a fragment
of another obelisk
from PhiUe: the two originally uooj the
:S^Wii£^^AVSU^\^^-
first
in
from of
pylon of the temple of Isis, flanking the
central doorw.My.
H. 7 m. Courtesy T.C.H. James.
Plate 8
II
.
i'.
SaUier
a iCanicssidc
containing the
copy of the pocin
column of
first
71ie
JeMhhig
King Amenemhal; the notes written on the mouiuiiig sutc that the papyrus was 'stuck onto fourteen squared sheets by
M.
Sallicr's in
iv-turn
fmni
the
l\so
the papsrui-The red dots
of VTt^e,
ChampuUion
month of Febniarv'
E^pt and
van alter
at
H3iif
temple
»phm\
»i Scrabii
fmm
cl-Kludini
in%iTipt]oii% in Ej^^'piuit hii-n>}(lvpli>
Pioto-Sinjitic vrript. L. 23,7 cm.
EA
ilu-
Ktivldk
wnh
uni
in the
4174H.
114
CRACKING CODES
MONUVU The
N
l
CULTURAL DISPLAY
AL ART:
relaciomhip between hieruglyphs and rcpa-scnt.ition.il
both complementary and fundamental to the
which induded a determinative
inscriptions
art
is
script.'' In the
inninatc. and
be suppKed by an
sign diat could
common
adjacent repcesentation omitted the determinatrodlus was espedaUy in texts comprising •supplied (.aptuMi
by the (V
i;.
i
names where the
fiinire
of the person concerned,
to
of a human figure was
which the name was the
By the Middle KniL'ddni the
.Vi,
.It
final deterniinacive
is
Old Kingdom,
generally
c.iptioiis
included the determinatives, and representation and caption were more discrete.
The
giadual lessening of the prestige of representation over text can also be seen
way
in die
in
which
inscriptions
were added to
Old Kingdom
statues. In the
shcHt insci^xions were added to spaces such as a figure's belt, while later longer inscriptions spread
onto spaces such
as
thrones or the back
subsequently also onto areas of ckithing
pillars
y>.
.'^7,
(e.g. cat.
.SI).
of statues, and
From
the l^th
Dynasts' on, even areas ot the statue representing unclothed tlesh were inscribed 37. 46).
(e.g. cat.
Some
types of stelophorous statues
dtsplay a tendency for the statue itself to affecting the text
on
the stela
(e.g. cat.
a certain
Hierogivphs nevertheless ainuist scene coiiiposition.Just
as
with a
stela) also
abbreviated, without
40, 41). This tendency
monumental
gradual increase in die uses of writing apart fiom contimiDiis texts, giving tests
statues
(i.e.
become move
may
reflect a
di^la)^
and for
autonomy.
.liwavs
obev the
rules ot
Kdiiographv and
the most important tigure takes precedence ni a scene,
SO the hieroglyphic signs writing the words for 'king* or 'god' precede the
widi which they are associated, regardless of their 'scribe (ff
sft)
of the king
i//.)
hieroglyphs for the items arc piled
under the olVering 'fowl'
is
repre-
is
written sviih uniconsonantal
logc^am
not the
name (Q).
that generally
a-served for use in royal comexcs.*'
head of
miii iticRAPHY:
a
bird
{
"5
)
is
portra)x-d, rather than
ten in a vertical line in the his figure,
which
is
name
same
is
WTit-
siirection as
the determiiutiw to
liis
wrote
In this period,
such
logographic wxicings of names of gods were
sentation of the hietogl>i>h; usually only the
the body. Betide Niankhre his
point of
name, which means
"Life-Belongs-to-the-sun-god', the element
thousand
of beer.
The
abow).
(sec
decorum
thousand of a
I'M
Hii-iiii;/)7.fciV7fcHi
III'.
58fj;T.C;.H.Jamcs
WaES
35 Royal temple
ofAiucncmhat
lintel
III
elements are arranged according to heraldic
the king worships, or
rather than linguistic principles.
gods
In the ceiitie. the ri|;ht-facini; cartouche
EA
11172
of Amenenihat
H. KH cm. W. I2i]i
2.V».5
From
ctii
this
Fjiyiim.
tfypt
Mjuruc Ndhnun:;icquircd
lintel.
The
relict'
m
temple to Subck
(jnciei)t
exact provenance
is
from
Mcdinct cl-Falyum
at
Shcdet) or from the nearby funer-
ary temple of
famous to
Amenomhat
classical
Lab>Tinth'. cally,
I'J't?
tioin a
iinix'conlcd, but the piece conies either a
flanked by the
who
is
The
111
at
H.iwara.
authors as the Egyptian
text
is
arranged symmetri-
with the central cartouche placed
the axis of the doorsvay.
The
owr
text cannot
be
deciphered nito a single sentence, since the
sign for gold:
name of
in Shcdet'.
similarly to the
MkWIc
rectangular liiimcune niscd
temple door
IS
"Horus
im:)
Purchased liom
A
cm. D. 8
[cnip.Aincii
(ciiip.
Aiiicnriiihji
II
(IW-IK»>2in.) arbiter Provciuticc aitd jcquiuQon dnaib unrrconlcd
A liin«toiio sunk
in at
Middle Kingdom fuiicnry
exemplifies the orienta-
stela
of hieroglyphic
tion
scene
text in relation to the
accoinpanies. The top horizon-
tlial it
of the
line descrihos the dedicitor
tal
sicLi,
probably tiuni the necropolis
relief,
Abydos. The
stela in
Middle E^pcian. reading tium right to
and continuing down the scene in a vertical
The
Ulessed
left
left,
of the
side
line:
One before
the Foremost of
Westerners, the Lonl of Abydos. the
Chamberlain
Senitef,
bom ofRchutankh
tnic-of-voice
The
text,
still
reading right to
continues
left,
above the scene which shows offerings b«ing
made
to a royal statue,
right.
This gives
which
also
faces
brief autobiographical
a
statement:
he
says:"l
who controlled
was one
the
Pint Mansion (= the cult-cliapel) of the
Person of the Dual King: Nubkaure.' Unusually, there
is
no
figure
on the
receiving offerings
represented hy a scene of other fulfilling his cultic role.
speech,
his
The
comprising
thmne name. Nubkaure,
of Senitef but he
stela,
is
indis-iduals
final
words of
Ameneinhat
lis
are cleverly aligned
so that they also tbrm a caption idenrif\-ing the
ro^-al
statue in the scene. The twxj figures
lacing the statue are labelled
His bnnlier
whom
he
as:
loves,
Hetepi born
of Reliutaiikli
statue. Their
and liis
tal
brother
whom
he loves. Seiibebu
face the
same direction
as
Blessed
One Rencfankh.The
One
S.itsebek.The Blessed
Rehutankli true-of- voice
their figures, as does the caption describing
The
their actions:
s'oice.
The
Bringing choice cuts of meat,
Below tives,
the scene
who
is
a
face in the
row of Senitcrs same direction
rela-
as
the
arc written in a horizon-
abow them, subdivided
Blessed
true-of-s-oice.
These hierc^yphs
names
line
The
Blessed
His
into sections:
(his
One Dedsebek
One
mother).
figures
is
winged
sun-siisk,
nf"ten
of
stelae
with
it is
is
ofTerings, representing SenitcFs
hope
for
duty
recompense; a large circular
wittily placed in the position usually
occupied by the sun-disk and other heraldic devices.
Himlikrrxts 2 (l.oiijon. 1'>I2), pi. 10: ro>'al
occupied by a protective but here
of his
loaf
iiibliogiiaphy: PI>. Scott-MoncriefTfrW.,
truc-of-
svile Seiii true-iif-st)Ke.
lunette at the top
pile
and
occupied by a
discussed in:
H.G.
Fischer, 'OiTenng stands liuni
the pyramid ofAiiiciiciiihcl
Museum Joumall
I',
MrlnifnililJti
{I'tJi). l2>-f».
I I 'f
120
trKACKiNt; t:oi)ES
37 Block statue of Tcti
lines
1
5'>
1.
of Middle
Eg>'ptiaii hieroglyphic text
are carved at the front,
EAS«K
and three
line
on
cm. W. 27 cm, D. 39
IHdi Dyimiy. iciiip.TutiitiiaMS
III
(I479-I42.S
pillar: all
read ri^ht to
and one horizontal Unes on the back left.
The
horizontal
Bc:)
te.M at the top
Fmin Kjrnjk
An
Mohamed Molusub;
Purchased from
vertical
offering
of the
front reads:
which the King
givies
to
AnnMi|-ke and] Re-Horakhry. that
the>'
.Mrqiiirexj in
may
A
a\l
i]ii.irt7itc
give iH-atification. power.
block stamc of Ten. Viceroy justification. JO)'
of Kush. Tlic «t3tue
finely carved,
is
Jiiil
of chc
body
sk]UJ(tiiig
•iitd ilu-
vertical line
'Teti
modelled
schcinjiicilly
"itylcs
a series
of titles; each
more
with
contrast
in
then begins
i.s
dreice' at
whose "Tetity").
tail falls
and
over the plinth
In'sidc his right foot,
the
wcm satidils. Around
his
the
pendant formed of the
The bottom
II.
dedi-
the hclep ('peace') sign, which can bc read hip ('Life
and
On
peace!').
his
Hon, born of the Lady of the House,
upper ami
niscribcd the cartouche of his sovereign,
Oil the back the horizontal tattoo, but first
lit; is
a
this
does not represent a
graphic declaration of loyalty
attested in this pcricHi (cf cat. 46).
He
The
a
lotus
tlower
in
his
left
Emblematic hieroglyphs are inscribed on
and Craftsman
on the
left
hand
are signs
showing
(?
red
crown of Lower right
Eg\'pt
hand
giving his
showing the
white crown of Upper Egypt and the sun.
These combine to suggest
tiliatioii,
arranged so
tlie
and the moon,
signs
same
and bottom have (he
sun and
Two
is
moon
all
tlut the
of Amun.Ahnics Pctjena truc-of-
and nine
vertical
M>n of the King's Son and Osrrseer of encircle.
horizoiiial lines
M
K.
H.ill
Hahiilii.'Thc fin* «vs» viicniy* ot'Kinli ami
Kiuh 7
(IMS'*).
44-62; J. Vandicr.
Mauutf J'mlKvlogif i'xy|"imnr ^
(Paris. I')5>le,
\sell
and
prosperous: for the spirit
of the King "s Scribe
Amcnmcs, begotten of Inyt. |.
.
.)
Lord of the Two Great I'lumes,
he may
let
me
daytime to see
that
|his|
beauty without
.j
for the spirit
The
of the Kings Scribe
on the back
pillar
of
I'endjerti: to
him
worm, your corpse
the King's Scribe
of Inyt. weeping
son of the Digiutary IVndjerri.
three vertical lines
with the King's Scribe Amcnmcs, son
belongs the
ccMing:
Amcnmcs,
.]
of the Dignitary
follow his Person in the
Amcnmcs, begotten
for
him who
is
in tlie
Other\vx)rld. ,|
sad for
him who
itiiitiyiu«>-.
lines
of
water. Tile e\v» in this etnbleinatic group are
4\Tnholic of wholeness: the slim sign repa-sents the
of the
totalit\'
wsc and water (^) libations desired
group more
wish for the deceased to
two
eyx-s)
is
The hiemgK-phs tor's
name
because
it
has
'see'
may be
It
literally, as a
(wxitten with
carved on top of the arc unpainted.
The
An
stela.
dedica-
been erased, presumably
contained the
name of
Amun. and was removed of
Aklu'iiatei) as part
reforms
)
of the
the solar cycle and the water.*-
offering table
Q
sun's circuit; the
arc suggestisr
by the dedicator.
possible to read the
(
in the
god
the
reign of
that king's religious
41 and 54); the statue
(cf. cat.
can be dated to the immediately preceding reign from
forms to
a
its style.
The hymn on
the stela
speech of the figure and a-ads (right
left):
Praising tliat
he
he
Ke when
sets in life,
says: 'Mail
Atum at
he
Re at
your perfect
you adorations
at
rises, until
it
luppeiis
by the cup-bearer
to )'ou
your
setting.
I
your perfect
|.
.
.|,
rising,
shall
give
setting.
Re in the Solar )ay-barijue. who rises iit the eastern horizon, who sets in the west, who fcUs enemy.' Exalted be
I
The watue svas
probably pLiced in the owner's
tomb, possibly in abos'c the
tomb
a
niche in a pyxaniidion
chapel, vvhca*
it
would
face
the rising sun. In earlier stitues of this type, the text
is is
inscribed directly
on
the \vY>rshippcr's hands and
the area bctss'ecn
on
his kilt.
dibiiockaphy: (LiMiami, 19.^9),
3: W. Scipel.
no. 124: in the
cf.
I.E.S. pi.
Edwards, HiervglyphK 'lexis
8
32:J.Vuu1ier. M,murl
rgyplirntic
il 'anr Ar-itJinw
(T'ans.
1
(mi Meiiuh PhurM
V5H)
,
•(
7
-4
.
espi
(Vienna, IW2),
H.M. Stesvart,'S(eli>phnH»
Bndsh Mu$eum',JEH 53
1
ttaluettn
(1967). 34-8.
125
126
CRACKING CODES
The
41
of Ineny
shrine-stela
EA4f»7 H.
4-
Froin Thebes Pun.'h.urd from Gim'anni Aaastui: jiijuiiril
A
ill
IHi')
limestone shrinc-stcla of Ineny with a
pynniidion. pmutiubly trom his tomb. each ^ide
i recess, snnilar to
New Kingdom
stelophorous statues such as placed. In each recess
is
a
On
niches in Urge
p^Tjmidioas
which
in
were
cat. 4
43
A
CULTURAL CODE
12'^
Dishasha; Nikheftek himself ss'as buried near
Scribe statue of Nikheftek
by.
EA 2-
the same chamber. I'he statues
show
evidence of deliberate breakage (see
cat.
From Duhjslij 5.V.S). I
>nM7
lyeihMi /X97,M£EF
A
painted litncstuiK'
vtatiic
vliovviiii;
(Ik* pi.
official
Nikhcftck
Icngcd with
a
papyrus unrolled on
Then.- arc rcnuins of red paint
the head
is
lost,
and pan of the
been detached, apparently
lias
repair to
The
arcas
make good
in
his lap.
the body:
left
shoulder
an ancient
a faulrj' area
is
a
of stone.
danuged
of hierogl\-phs, written for die
and not the viewer, to read
The
IS
one of
.
.
a scries
Ni|khcftck.
.
of
at least tisxr
of Nikheftek found by Hinders Petrie serdab
statue,
(riglit to left):
King's Acquaintance, the Osrrseer of
[Connnissionnig. This
on
of "net^itivxr space' under the arms
arc painted black, (^n the mil line
15 (London. IH98). 13(c).
33.*),
as a scribe, sitting cross-
chamber of
his
father's
sutues in the
masuba
at
material
IJO
CRACKING CODES
44 Wooden scribe EA
2331
H. 10.24 chlW. 7 cm. I> 5.4 I
1
cm
ale ISfli l>v-n.wty
PrmciuiK c
jiiii j) iiairy(:)
1*rm*ciuncc uiir«3
terracotta tlaik in the
scribe,
form of a squatting
with a papyrus unrolled over
his lap.
Black paint decorates the wig and the eyes.
He
is
writing with his right hand, while his
originally held the papyrus
left
figure
is
largely hollow, but
il
roll.
The
seems not
to have acted as a container for ink. as
the scribal shape might suggest. Instead belongs to
a
type of dccorati\-e
into figures of servants,
it
\msA shaped
women
most often
nursing chilciren. This eKample
is
unparal-
leled. HI HI ioiiy:
(Cambridge. si-f
J-
E.A.W.
Bud)(t-. 'Pie
Mummy
I"*25 |2nd ednD.pl. 27. In general
IJoorriau.'Pottcrx' figure vases
Kingdom'. Ctliim de
of the
New
h ee
lost) as
learing.^
di\-inities,
the high ofiicials
is
llie
(n.Mdiri{C left
(now
book. Lady of Mieroglyphv
Lady ofWriiings'. H.
temple of Edfu a
l>ynast>'
fenule dgtim
«if j
bonier to
gods; she also lays out foundation plans of temples together with the king. Thoth faculties
Mth
Deir fl-BaIwi The
Jt
pjn
III
(1391-1353
the King's Scribe and Scribe of Elite
nc).
and Imhotep. the Vizier of DJoser
(2630-2611 Bc). These two were associated especially with written wisdom; their cults flourished in the Ptolemaic Period,
the
the Vizier Ptahhotep of the 5th Dynasty,
tomb and
aspects
who
associated with
deified officials included
had a short-lived cult around
featured as the culture hero protagonist in a later literary
TlieTeaclutig of the Lord llzier Ptahhotep.*^ all
when both were
Greek god of healing Asclepius. Other more minor
of scrib.il
life,
from
These heroes and
ofiicial cultic activity' to idle
wisdom
divinities
his
text,
permeated
doodles.
lateria!
KtAltlNb A i:L;tTUK.AL CODE
11>W'AIS
\
47
\ t
{
teacher.
Lansing:
1*.
a scribal
n
On
cjlhgraphic sketches
EA
a
iiii;W. 45.3
I
hcb«
I*
Rcvd Gulun
IS
.1
ibis
Laiislng;
Elsewhere
holding scriKol
as a iigurr
with
sign in front of him.
Donated by Waller this
section
there
Llevscllyn
Nash
(Trustees of):
are acquired in
'Letter- Teaching
made by
tJic
which the apprentice copied
columns of hteriry hientic.
Eg>'ptiaii
and
l'->2ft
palimpsest traces of jottings and doodles by
nakht. for his apprentite the vcribe Wenein-
It
ii
in a
'Miscellany', or antholf^- of
texts, praising the prufe^siun it
aiikli
on
of the scribe,
includct praisci of Wenmediaincn's
Part of a limestone funerary seribal palette
Wenmediamen.
/\>/t)'n in
New
48 Scribal palette showing the goddess Seshat
as
I'roviciuncc unreconlcd
an elongated
liiliuouHAl'HY:
and
at
head, wraring a lunar disk, and with
Aimin-Rc King of the Gods, Ncbmaatrc-
fifteen
a lunar disk,
in his paw.
King's Scribe. Overseer of the Cattle of
didinen'
both
Late IVfiod
an
in IKHfi
l.jii\ing
baboon with
equipment
(on imcrnil oidcncc)
Purclutcd Irom
icquiml
shosvii
H.7ciii.W.7.2aM,D.2cm
cm
Uui- 2(>th |}yiLHCy
From
ofThoth
EA 54H2y
99S»4.7
H. 20.«i
of the manuscript,
this section
the end of the verso, the apprentice drew
manuscript
E.A.W
the Btiliili
\iviifx. Hj^itian Hirralif
(London. l(-
rJ37),
ichtheim,
At the top
(cf. cat. 61)).
inkwell: the slot for pens,
Mustiim, Second Scries
Snv
on the
riglit
The goddess
has oil rosette
side
of the upper sur-
holds a papj rus
statf
and
her head her usual insignia of a
surmounted by upside-down horns,
of uncertain
significance.
miiLluoiiAMlv hitherto iinpnblnhed. :
IJ4
CRACKING CODES
50 Statue of Huy holding tA
baboon
a
I.V»5S
H. 17.2 cm.*'. V cm. D. 10.3
cm
R.«ni'pe
kneohng
baboon on
a
were probably
placed in temples, perhaps with royal permission.
The upper body of the main
.ind the
baboons headdress
back
pillar a
of incised hierogl\-phs .
.
.]
are lost.
sin^e right-facing
figure
On
the
vertical line
reads:
his |IVrson(:)| l.p.h,. a favv>ur to the
Kings Scribe, the Ovvrseer of Elite Troops
I
luy true-of-voice.
uiuiiobKAPiiY: tutherto unpubinhed.
49 Statuette of the baboon of Thoth EA
with a double has
35-Mil
H. 18 cni.W. 5.64 cm. D. 8.03
cm
(iiiiritinled
Hurcluicd from K.J. acquired in
A
curwd
in bronze,
Man and Co. (Alexandria):
of «cp'pc
ttoni a Itinerary or state
was made
head
now somewhat
uncertain whether
RjiiK-uidc Pcrioii(?)
PttiwiMm*
a
paws on
is
a lunar disk
corroded.
It
is
of statue comes
temple context, or
for the private cultic activity
of a
scribe. l'-H)\
BiBLioGiiArHv: hilheno unpublished. steatite
baboon, seated on a high pedestal
1
aterial
TdWMlDS
Kh.ADINi; A (ill cm
Fmni
ui
III
are inscribed
on
tlic
of Aincnhotcp
scitiii-
as a scribe.
I
Iieroglyphic texts
papyrus
tiiirnllcd
Up and on the statue plinth. lis riglit now broken, held a pen, as if writing, I
left
hand holds the papyrus
knee
sits
.in
roll.
on
his
hand,
while
On
ink container, with
his
Daughter, Amenhotep true-of-voice: he
are in
calls
modelled on
is
is
on another
statue
by the
written
On
of the gods,
a fa\T)ur
left)
is
carved
a
wish
to be rx-ad by the
viewer:
the feuivals of A|ii]mun in Ipetsut. for the spirit of the King's Scribe
rather than
statue. The text reads (riglit to left): .IS
the top of the plinth
(reading right to
actual reader standing in fiunt of the
Placed
to you. Ion!
,
Satisfaction ssith the daily prov isions at
text
Amenhotep himself
temple of Amiin
have
.
on the
The Middle Kgyptian roll is
read by
Lands
m vertical lines as if to
Aiiuin".
papyrus Ih"
Anicn-
hnnsclf the 'herald of the god
of the king
in the
in Ipetsut for the
Prince
dnd C'ount.
the King's Scribe. Scribe of the Elite
C'liief of Upper
and Lower
of Favours from
Amenhotep
true-of-voite.
This wish involves wordplay, since
one
F.g\pt, Circat
inscriptiorK indicate that thit
come
Anuin Lord of (the Thrones of the) Two
In style the statue
two
cakes of ink.
The
Troops. Steward of the King's Eldest
the king and
!>>'
Karnak (others
Museum).
hotep
black grjiio-diorile
at
says:'l
pers and the pod:
u)n of Hapu
his left
scaaies given
acted as an iniennediary In'tsveen worship-
)
Kanialc. Thebes
AcqiiiviiKui tlrMiK uiirrccirdnl
A
of
a series
the Egyptian Miiseuin. Cairo, and the Luxor
Middle Kingdom forerunners. The statue
18th IKiuwy. tcmp.Aiiicnhoicp
(1391-1353
of
placed in (he temple
son of Hapu
his Person,
be
satisfied',
face ally
on
but also
"to otTer"; this
on which temple pbee
visitors
their olTerings to
is
lilp is
Amenhotep.
this pivstigiuus statue there
"to
the sur-
could notion-
is
Ewn
a toriiected
ern>r ni the carving: Aimiun for Ainuii.
51 ffKint)
^Taterial
TOWARDS READING
Around
the base
tion, rorincd
the
vvhidi
ot'
at
in
perpetually
from right to
The
out
in
the
god's
left,
cult
whom
the Lord of the
Two
Lands
come
have
perfection. Lord
to see your
of the Gods, Atum Lord
otThcbes, King of the Two Lands, so that
you may place so chat
I
me
in
y^ur temple-estate,
iiuy be nourished by your
and
I
may
the earth in
t"i)r ilii:
(Jlans-illc.
n-tgii
of
I.E.S Edssantls. Him^l)i>lii( texts K
Anienhotep
he
M\2»«;S K.K
oil iiutvrial
I
W). pl
l
2; i(. A.
Suii:Ammhctrp
(corner of the pedestal)
I
unto
kiss
day,
at
line, rini-
triic-of-vioicc, savi:
BiBtioi.HAi'iiv: I'M 'Sniiic
years,
your foliosving and
to
reads:
loves, the Standard-bearer
in
your temple every
Anicm>phis l\V.jr.A 15 (l''2'').2-8.esp.2-5;
Prince and Count, Seal-bearer of the
King,
be
(roiii
Amenhocep
allowing
Karnak.Tlie rtght-liand half of the iiing
you may nuke green niy
of inscrip-
the back. These record the
purpose
partake
a single line
texts spreading;
both parts {'The Prince')
wriKci) only once, and nieetin(; tn
IS
the middle statue's
is
of iwo
worI
iiiitijl
spirit.
I
W2).
'l.j
tit
Kozlotr .1
ami
lii>
,i/ .
\Utuir ti'Aiiicii)it>tep
(1997), 341-55.
la
Iifyi(;R.spiiY:r.. \tKlTvv.^. Amulflf vfAmirni
l^Ypl (London.
I
W4), fig. >ri.
A
CUITURAL CODF
140
CRACKING CODES
MUTILATED HIEROGLYPHS
AND 'DAMNATIO MEMORIAE' The power of hieroglyphs
is
cacy. In the royal burials
of the
human and
also manifest in
measures taken to
restrict their effi-
Old Kingdom, the hieroglyphic
late
signs
of
animal figures in the texts on the walls were omitted or truncated in
order to lessen their potential threat to the deceased. This practice was revived in
Kingdom, when
the late Middle
some
were
cuts
>how dangerous animal
Apep/Apopis speared
common method
signs transfi.xed with knives, as in the
of Ani
fijncrary papyrus
through such signs
also inserted
Another more
funerary- contexts (see cat. 53).
particularly potent written features
erased.
and
his
and were quite frequently
of the reaction
state records as part
reforms (see also
own name was
IP
40.
3S,
cat.
to those
41.
This
54).
'damnatio memoriae'
is
and commemorative
inscriptions, but
on papyrus
w
subse-
monuments and from
quently erased on the
best attested in funerary'
was
also
records. Similar attitudes
underlie the "execration
which
rituals*, in
figures
were inscribed with the names of the
enemies, and
state's
is
King Akheiiaten (1333-1335
Bc) practised systematic erasure as part of his religious reforms,
vessels
Dynasty
where the name of the demon serpent
(ea 10470.22),
written in the unlucky colour red and the determinative sign
is
Names were damaged or
and
in
to
44).
(tig.
carried out
I'Jth
was
were
then
cursed
.ind
destroyed. Images of people could also be a nuitilatcd in a personal vendetta, as
Niankhpepy the
at
is
expressed in the 6th Dynasty
Saqqara, where the relief
tomb owner
in
is
tomb of
erased especially around the head of
Fig. 4-4
DtiM\ from the
pjpy rui
ol'.\j)i.
hirn^lyphic
one scene, and
a text
is
incised near by. in a cruder style than
serpent .^pejv .^pi>pis
the tomb's original inscriptions:
You enchained me! You you do
The
to escape
my
tnmslation here
is
hand?
similar practice
is
who
ture,*^
and occurs
in
Dynasty warns that
many
what
is
Now
will
shall
be
satisfied, for
wh.n can
D\iHst>- fiinrrjr>'
o(thc drtnon
'bv. )
it
seems clear that the
graffito records the
he.id airleJ uniler
hostility,
monuments.
This,
cultures. Nonetheless, a literary text
in Tura!
will
howewr. does
but was a practical measure to save expendi-
ruins,
be done!""*
from the 12th
irs
;i
b vvrincn line
fnnn
serpent l>'ing
b.22.
in die left);
flat
with
traiMfixed
with knives ttn» ii in bUck.W. of coliuiui
P.HM EA
bc what
(
the deterininjlisv diows its
erased the image.
tomb chamber from
done
I
father shall be satisfied!''
reprehensible:
it is
you should hew stone
for
My
father!
monuments of another;
Destroy not the
Build not your
my
the royal usurpation of
not necessarily indicate .my
*Jth
imiiic
unlucky colour red (fourteenth
uncertain, but
sentiments of the person
A
beat
I
written in j line cursive
lumLThr
1.*^
ClU.
TOWARDS RKADINi.
A
t.UlTURAL CODE
53 Shabti of Reiifscneb EA vmi cm
H. 22.6 im.W. 6.B cm. D. 6.-J I
1th
.
r>>-n.i'it\-.
tempi Salic khirtep IV
(I73IK-I720IM;)
Fntm AbyJ
lines
left-facing hieroglyphic te.xt
of heaven, lord of earth
of incised in the
BiBiiOGRAi'HviT.E.
all
is
.Meretaten. and svas originally erected in a
Akhetaten
legs.
for
who
Living Aten, great one
encircles, lord
lower parts and
lis-e
was presumably of Princess jubilee
and
aiv mutilated: the birds
may she
eternity! lost,
Sunshade-of-Re
(a solar
run around the
of tlie King's Uodily Daughter
l9n-IVI >n.MEtf 34 (London. pi. 13.3: l>.
RfiV/i
i:
Chii.
AA
4
I"*H4), iw>. 241;J. l)ourri»i,
A/iwub. UgyiiiiiUiAH hi
r/if
sides,
including the names of Akhenaten's
he
fnnke. ferscnriulaim mis dem Mitilam
120- l6.JMiuiiA-tt
{Wicsbjd*n. iuid
1'>M).57. 113.
MMIe
god, theAien ("sun-disk"), which were
two
in
PlurMhr
KitixtUm
dilVerent
is.sued
losies,
wife great of love, lady of the Two
fornuilations at diftea-nt
Lands. (Neferneteriuten Ncfcnin^
periods of the
ments of the
rcigii as
kiiig"s
programmatic
religious reforms.
state-
may
embody
she liw and be healthy for
They and
(Caiiibruljse. I'>SK),
83.
and
all
time
of Rejoicing
eternity, in the Houst-
the dognutic importance of names,
of the Aten no
shrine)
whom
Meretaten, born of the royal
au* placed in royal cartouches.
The
first
no
later
in
the temple of the Aten
in Akhetaten. is
present here, dating the piece to
miu
i23). I55;J.I).S. Pendlcbur>'. Cily of AkhtiiMtn
New
Egyptian also includes the cartouches
of Akhenaten's queen,
Nefertiti,
MEES
m.
44 (London. 1V51). 1'*3:G. Roeder.
which have AitiiUUii-Riiuls Mii Hrnni>iKilii (Hildcilivim, I969).
been erased
(erasures underlined below). The .1.S2;
I.E.S.
Edwanit HinvglYphK'lexu K (Loiuinn.
reasons for this (and the date) arc uiicciijiii, pi.
and
need not
it
reflect Nefertiti's fall
royal favour, despite
The
first
an ankh .
.
.'.
and
May
is
live
my
as
'May
live
probably a heraldic device, linguistically.
father (Harakhte rejoicing in
his horizon)! is
scholars' theories.
which can be read
not to be read
Kemp
and
S. Garfi.
ilmAniieiii City oJ ei-'Amaiua
cartouche of the Aten open with
sign,
but which is
some
24; B.J.
from
name of Shu who
in the sun-disk) given
life
for
.ill
A
Siinry of
(London, IV93),78.
1
4
142
CRACKING CODES
5d Temple inscription
usurped by Ramses EA H.
II
11(12
5 cm. W.
'>?
cm. 0. 16
I*ii>
cm
I2(h Dyiu^ty, U'm)i. SciiuDsrvl
(l«7»-1841 temp,
Bij),
lUmtn II
111
ffinwribcd in (he
I'ith I>yiij8jy.
(I2«H(-I224 nc)
Prom Tell Bjnu DoiuifU by
ilif
Bgfpt Expluntion Fund:
acquired in 1891
A
temple
red granite
relief,
perhaps an
aR-hitcctunl cicinenc, inscribed with i icxi
cartouche of Ram«:s
cuntaining the
directly stipcninposed
upon an
SIX centuricni
used in
life, as
with the palette of the
Merire (vA 5512) from the reign of
official
Tuthmosis IV (1401-1391 B(:).This shows clear signs of with
An
use,
but
it
was inscribed
funerary invocation in Middle Egyptian for Merire by his scribe Tencti:
a
offering
give
which the King
gives
toThoth
lord
of gods wxmls.
him knowledge of writings and of what comes
forth
that
he may
from him, and
I'ruvctuncc unrecorded
Punrhiscd from R.J. Hay; acquirrd in 1868
Model of
two
ch.
understanding of gods' words, to the Official at the
The
scribe
Head of the
spirit
of the Prince and Count, the
King's Nobles, the
High Stewaul. Merire.
few
a
exatjiples
i*
i.s
a
sample of the
wntmg surl'accs
face w.is papyrus, but
and
tools that
wooden
were employed. The principal writing sur-
ostraca. Leather
lieside
which
was a prestigious and expensive writing
were used occasionally
in particular circumstance*:
ritual reasons (e.g. cat. 63).
such
.IS
in places
mud
Mud
or
textiles
as
was sometimes used for
where there was
a shortage
of papyrus,
an ostentatiously expensive writing surface, for example in the
between Ramses
II
and the
Hittites in
-;
I'linliascd
acquiriMJ
A
m
1907 (Loi -UH, Ru