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The Obelisk and the Englishman

The Pioneering Discoveries of Egyptologist William Bankes

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
William John Bankes (1786--1855) was a pioneer in the nascent study of the language, history, and civilization of ancient Egypt. At the Abydos Temple he discovered the King List -- a wall of cartouches listing Egyptian kings in chronological order -- which was vital to the decoding of Egyptian hieroglyphs. At Philae he uncovered a fallen obelisk, which he arranged to be transported back to England. And in modern-day Jordan he was the first European to make sketches and site plans of the "lost" city of Petra.

Bankes's life was rich and full, and his discoveries have proven to be quite valuable and influential. But, living in an era when homosexuality was a capital offense, he was persecuted for being gay and threatened with imprisonment and execution. His decision to travel and pursue his love of art and architecture went against his father's wishes that he follow in his footsteps and become a politician. Despite such obstacles, Bankes's pioneering work on ancient temples and artifacts now enriches the knowledge of modern Egyptologists, and his art collection and decorative talents can be enjoyed by those who visit his home, a National Trust estate -- with the obelisk from Philae still raised on the south lawn.

Enhanced by many of Bankes's drawings and paintings, this engaging story is full of vivid detail about the beginnings of Egyptology, Regency England, and a fascinating individual, and it sets the record straight about Bankes's crucial role in setting the stage for the work of later scholars.

From the Hardcover edition.
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    • Kirkus

      February 15, 2015
      Seyler (Emerita, English/Northern Virginia Community Coll.) delivers a biography of William Bankes (1786-1855), one of the first Europeans to document the ruins of ancient Egypt.A college friend of Lord Byron, a gifted painter and avid art collector, Bankes was a pioneer of archaeology. Handsome and witty, he was also gay in an era when that was a capital offense in Britain. He attended Cambridge, served a term in Commons, and in 1813, decided to see life outside England. He headed first to Spain and Portugal and began collecting art, much of it still on display in his Dorsetshire home, Kingston Lacy. In 1815, he decided on a voyage up the Nile. There, he copied art and inscriptions in tombs and temples and made careful notes of their layouts. With a few companions from his Nile trip, Bankes traveled to Palestine, disguising himself as an Arab to gain entry to sites where Europeans were unwelcome. Returning to Egypt, he made an even longer journey up the Nile, visiting numerous sites and copying inscriptions, including an important list of kings from a temple in Abydos. His careful documentation facilitated the eventual decoding of hieroglyphics. In 1820, he returned to England, where his travels brought him brief fame-but his failure to write up his discoveries denied him real recognition. In 1833, he was caught in a compromising position with a soldier. With the help of influential friends, he was acquitted, and he managed to keep a low profile until 1841, when he was arrested a second time. He fled the country and spent his final years in Italy, still buying art to send back home. Though Seyler is sometimes hazy on chronology, she provides a solid account of her subject, who was in the right place when there was important work to be done on Egypt. The fascinating story of a figure who deserves to be much better known.

    • Library Journal

      April 15, 2015

      This narrative has all of the makings of a fictional account--adventures in ancient Egypt, hobnobbing with the British upper crust, a little bit of archaeology, and even a complex hero. But Seyler (emerita, English, Northern Virginia Community Coll.) details the real life of the relatively unknown explorer William John Bankes (1786-1855). The author weaves a fascinating tale of Bankes's archaeological discoveries in Europe, Egypt, Jordan, and Syria; adventures with famous friends such as Lord Byron and the Duke of Wellington; days as a member of Parliament; and even his subject's various sex scandals. Bankes was clearly a product of his time and social background, but one wonders if there are more psychological aspects than Seyler lets on (she does not gossip). Readers are left wondering why Bankes didn't publish more of his scholarly work, why he disregarded England's draconian sex laws only to have dalliances with men in public places (with the second offence forcing him to flee England because the punishment was death by hanging), why he returned to England to visit his house, and why he engaged in unexplained shopping sprees toward the end of his life. VERDICT An intriguing biography that has enough history, archaeology, and scandal for everyone.--Melissa Aho, Univ. of Minnesota Bio-Medical Lib., Minneapolis

      Copyright 2015 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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