![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
About Us Services DTP Sidebar Glossary Links Precision Marketing Contact Us |
The
Rosetta Stone Fortunately, Napoléon wasn’t just interested in conquest. His soldiers were accompanied by French scholars and artists, charged with preserving artifacts of historical significance. In July of 1799, a squad of soldiers made one of the greatest discoveries in Egyptian history — the famous Rosetta Stone. The officer in charge, recognizing the importance of this magnificent artifact, had the Stone moved to Cairo. In 1899 copies were made and distributed to scholars across Europe for deciphering. The Rosetta Stone is a very large slab that was probably part of a wall in the village of Rashid (Rosetta). It weighed about three-quarters of a ton, but measured just three feet, nine inches tall and two feet, four and a half inches wide. Much of the weight came from its thickness — a whopping eleven inches. On the face of the Stone is an inscription written in three different scripts. Scholars recognized the lower one as Greek and the top one as hieroglyphs. The middle script wasn’t recognized right away, but was later identified as a cursive form of hieroglyphs, known as demotic.; The Significance Scholars looked for repeating characters in the middle demotic script which corresponded with the approximate location of the name Ptolemy in the Greek inscription. As they studied the demotic script, they thought it, like Greek, was written alphabetically. Unfortunately, this was a false assumption and brought the translation to a halt. The First
Breakthrough Young found the cartouches in the hieroglyph section contained royal or religious names and were spelled alphabetically. But, here's where he made his mistake. He continued the assumption that hieroglyphs symbolized concepts but, since Ptolemy was a Greek name, there were no “symbols” to represent, hence the need to spell it alphabetically. Success Champollion assigned sound values to the hieroglyphs and noticed that while both Ptolemy and Cleopatra contained the letter t, different symbols were used to represent the sound. He came to the correct conclusion that the two signs were homophones (different signs with the same sound value, i.e. can and kind). Using other cartouches from the Rosetta Stone and various reliefs and inscriptions from ancient Egyptian temples, he began to build a table of the various symbols and the sounds they represented. The Language
of Hieroglyphs It’s also interesting to note hieroglyphs are not always read from left to right or right to left. They’re read both ways, with the characters flipped when read in the opposite direction. Back
to the Present The original Rosetta Stone eventually ended up in Britain’s hands and is displayed in the British Museum. Small-scale reproductions can be purchased from various museum gift catalogs. We very are pleased to own one of these reproductions. They’re quite accurate, right down to the large chip missing in the Greek inscription. Ours is on display in our Clearwater office. Most of the information for this month's topic was pulled from a fantastic book for anyone interested in writing over the ages. It's The Story of Writing by Andrew Robinson (© 1995 Thames and Hudson Ltd., London) |
|
[ Site Map ]
[ About Us ] [ Services ]
[ DTP Sidebar ]
[ Glossary ]
[ Links ] [ Precision
Marketing ] [ Contact
Us ] Site first created: 05/26/97 Last updated:
01/13/02 |