SlideShare ist ein Scribd-Unternehmen logo
1 von 39
 
Terms to Remember: Logogram ,  Ideogram, letter, alphabet Syllable, Syllabogram, syllabary Abjad, abugida
 
Cleopatra (VII) and her son, ptolemy xv (caesarion) were the last rulers of the ptolemaic dynasty of egypt. They were not Egyptian, however, but were of greek and macedonian descent. Cleopatra was supposedly the only member of the dynasty who could speak egyptian.
 
The lateran obelisk, the largest obelisk of the ancient world. Quarried by thutmose iii and carved and erected in thebes by his grandson, thutmose iv, it was taken to rome by emperor constantius ii and erected in the circus maximus in 357.
Rome’s circus maximus, the stadium for racing chariots, the nascar track of its day.
Down the spine of the circus maximus the greatest works of art of the ancient world were arrayed, trophies of rome’s conquests.
The ruins of rome
During the renaissance rome was renovated and numerous obelisks were reset as the pope’s set about beautifying the expanding city.
Title page of Athanasius Kircher's  Obeliscus Pamphilius (Rome, 1650) Athanius Kircher (1601-1680) was a polymath and humanist who published the first European treatise on the Coptic language.  Unfortunately, Kircher never wavered from his view that Egyptian hieroglyphs were esoteric symbols and ideographs;  a belief which influenced more than a century of subsequent scholarship.
Herodotus of Halicarnassus   Regarded as the ‘Father of History,’ Herodotus lived in the 5th century  BC  (c. 484-425).  He is perhaps best known for  The Histories , which details the conflict between Greece and Persia, and for his list of the ‘Seven Wonders of the Ancient World’. (Bust from the Museum of Naples.)
“ When they write or calculate, instead of going, like the Greeks, from left to right, they move their hand from right to left; and they insist, notwithstanding, that it is they who go to the right, and the Greeks who go to the left. They have two quite different kinds of writing, one of which is called sacred, the other common.”  Clement of alexandria (late 2 nd  century a.d.) says that there are three scripts in egypt: hieroglyphic, hieratic, and “epistolographic”.
Diodorus siculus (first century b.c.) traveled in egypt and wrote:  “ the signs are like various animals, or the extremities of the human body, or tools – particularly carpenters’ tools. For their script does not work by putting syllables together to render an underlying sense, but by drawing objects whose metaphorical meaning is impressed on the memory …” Eg// Falcon = ‘anything that happens suddenly’ crocodile = ‘evil’ eye = ‘the body’s watchman, guardian of justice’
South of ptolemaic and roman egypt was the kingdom of meroe, anciently known as ethiopia. This african kingdom had inherited ancient egyptian writing and religion, and had never been conquered by the greeks or romans.
Chairemon, a priest from alexandria who supposedly lived in the first century A.d., wrote: “ the ethiopians do not use letters, only various animals, their limbs, and organs. Earlier priests, in their desire to keep secret their knowledge of natural theology, taught these signs to their own children as an allegorical or symbolic way of writing – a woman beating a drum for ‘joy’, a man holding his chin and looking down at the ground for ‘grief’, a tear-filled eye for ‘misfortune’ … “
Plutarch (A.D. 46-120) refers a few times to egyptian hieroglyphs. He says that the glyph for osiris is written with an eye and a scepter, while a rush signified ‘king’ or ‘southern lands’. These are correct. However, other of his ideas were not, and he was clearly not very familiar with how egyptian writing worked.
Horapollo was supposedly an egyptian priest living in the late 5 th  century. His treatise, hieroglyphica, was translated into greek. A copy of this manuscript was found on the greek island of andros in 1419. much of the text provides nonsensical explanations of the significance of certain egyptian hieroglyphs. Some ring true, though.
‘ to denote hieroglyphs, or a scribe, they draw a reed, ink, and a sieve … because the first instrument used in making bread is a sieve … and the egyptian for education is sbo, which means adequate nourishment.” the ancient egyptian words for scribe and food were indeed very similar.
Plotinus, 3 rd  century philosopher, writes: “ this is what the wise men of egypt realized, either by science or by instinct. When they wanted to express their meaning philosophically they did not go through the whole business of letters, words, and sentences. They did not employ devices to copy the sounds of a proposition and how it is pronounced, instead, in their sacred writings they drew signs, a separate sign for each idea, so as to express its whole meaning at once. Each separate sign is in itself a piece of knowledge, a piece of wisdom, a piece of reality, immediately present. There is no process of reasoning involved, no laborious elucidation.”
“sacrifice with your labor ungrudgingly to the god of nature. Gradually you will bring your mind back to be subject to him. In his merciful guidance he will keep firm watch over your life and will preserve you in safety.”
Pierius valerianus wrote “the hieroglyphs, or a commentary on the sacred letters of the egyptians and other peoples”, in 1556, the first book in a thousand years devoted to egyptian hieroglyphs. This illustration is of an obelisk seen by plutarch in front of the temple at sais, in egypt.
‘devotion over selfishness’
 
Kircher's ‘Translation’ of the  Piazza Navona Cartouche: ‘ The beneficent generative force  commanding through supernal and  infernal dominion, augments the  flow of sacred humour emanating  from above.  Saturn, the disposer of fleeing  time, promotes the fecundity of the  soil, commanding humid nature.  For by his influence all things have  life and force.’
Pope alexander vii had this obelisk reset in the piazza minerva in 1667. the elephant base was carved by bernini.
Kircher’s drawing of the minervan obelisk inscription. Some signs are recognizable, but decent drawings were still a while in coming.
 
Kircher’s drawing of part of the bembine tablet.
 
Three different drawings of the same text from a late egyptian funeral stela.
Carsten niebuhr’s drawing of a text on a sarcophagus he saw in the streets of cairo. These glyphs are recognizable and legible.
The coptic alphabet
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfHni7HERqI
 
 
 
 
 

Weitere ähnliche Inhalte

Was ist angesagt?

Sparta wheaton
Sparta wheatonSparta wheaton
Sparta wheatonAllee96
 
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptx
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptxHistorical Development of children and adolescent.pptx
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptxLuna Mera
 
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western CultureMesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western CulturePaulVMcDowell
 
What can art tell us about africans in
What can art tell  us about africans inWhat can art tell  us about africans in
What can art tell us about africans inAixa Rodriguez
 
Rome: history and Literature
Rome: history and LiteratureRome: history and Literature
Rome: history and Literaturecarlo lesula
 
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the NileEgypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the NilePaulVMcDowell
 
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayan
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayanPamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayan
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayanNoemi Marcera
 
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The Empire
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The EmpireRome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The Empire
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The EmpireClaudio Mollo
 
2013 History of Civilization - An Intro
2013 History of Civilization - An Intro2013 History of Civilization - An Intro
2013 History of Civilization - An IntroDimitry Bubis
 
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIAN
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIANEGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIAN
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIANJohn1Lorcan
 
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...Rremy Bi
 
Roman literature kidsversion
Roman literature kidsversion Roman literature kidsversion
Roman literature kidsversion Erin Hogshead
 

Was ist angesagt? (19)

Egyptian Art
Egyptian ArtEgyptian Art
Egyptian Art
 
The Birth of Tragedy
The Birth of TragedyThe Birth of Tragedy
The Birth of Tragedy
 
Sparta wheaton
Sparta wheatonSparta wheaton
Sparta wheaton
 
Greece
GreeceGreece
Greece
 
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptx
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptxHistorical Development of children and adolescent.pptx
Historical Development of children and adolescent.pptx
 
10. greek civilization
10. greek civilization10. greek civilization
10. greek civilization
 
The Book of the Dead
The Book of the DeadThe Book of the Dead
The Book of the Dead
 
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western CultureMesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
Mesopotalia and the Near East: The Roots of Western Culture
 
What can art tell us about africans in
What can art tell  us about africans inWhat can art tell  us about africans in
What can art tell us about africans in
 
Rome: history and Literature
Rome: history and LiteratureRome: history and Literature
Rome: history and Literature
 
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the NileEgypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
Egypt: The Kingdom Along the Nile
 
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayan
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayanPamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayan
Pamana ng kabihasnang greek pilosopiya,kasaysayan
 
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The Empire
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The EmpireRome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The Empire
Rome: the Kingdom, the Republic, The Empire
 
2013 History of Civilization - An Intro
2013 History of Civilization - An Intro2013 History of Civilization - An Intro
2013 History of Civilization - An Intro
 
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIAN
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIANEGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIAN
EGYPTIAN TEMPORALITY IN PHAROS, THE EGYPTIAN
 
The egyptians alma y aida
The egyptians alma y aidaThe egyptians alma y aida
The egyptians alma y aida
 
Unit 12
Unit 12    Unit 12
Unit 12
 
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...
Epirus: 4000 years of greek history and civilization, history written on wron...
 
Roman literature kidsversion
Roman literature kidsversion Roman literature kidsversion
Roman literature kidsversion
 

Andere mochten auch

My visual resume
My visual resumeMy visual resume
My visual resumejalzona
 
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc reportjalzona
 
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentation
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentationSept1 11 kickoff meeting presentation
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentationChristy Strauch
 
Theo Presentation
Theo PresentationTheo Presentation
Theo Presentationjalzona
 
Music evaluation
Music evaluationMusic evaluation
Music evaluation1lang1
 
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 Medivo
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 MedivoPersonalized Medicine World Conference 2011 Medivo
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 MedivoSundeep Bhan
 
Music evaluation
Music evaluationMusic evaluation
Music evaluation1lang1
 
Devuong present-share
Devuong present-shareDevuong present-share
Devuong present-sharemouse23680
 

Andere mochten auch (15)

Class 04 hist ling
Class 04 hist lingClass 04 hist ling
Class 04 hist ling
 
Class 05 champollion
Class 05 champollionClass 05 champollion
Class 05 champollion
 
My visual resume
My visual resumeMy visual resume
My visual resume
 
Class 02 writing systems
Class 02 writing systemsClass 02 writing systems
Class 02 writing systems
 
Class 6 egyptian
Class 6 egyptianClass 6 egyptian
Class 6 egyptian
 
Class 01 intro
Class 01 introClass 01 intro
Class 01 intro
 
Afscheid van Ety
Afscheid van EtyAfscheid van Ety
Afscheid van Ety
 
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report
30 june agenda presentation flow_photo doc report
 
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentation
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentationSept1 11 kickoff meeting presentation
Sept1 11 kickoff meeting presentation
 
Theo Presentation
Theo PresentationTheo Presentation
Theo Presentation
 
Music evaluation
Music evaluationMusic evaluation
Music evaluation
 
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 Medivo
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 MedivoPersonalized Medicine World Conference 2011 Medivo
Personalized Medicine World Conference 2011 Medivo
 
Music evaluation
Music evaluationMusic evaluation
Music evaluation
 
Brand in hand
Brand in handBrand in hand
Brand in hand
 
Devuong present-share
Devuong present-shareDevuong present-share
Devuong present-share
 

Ähnlich wie Class 03 early attempts

Historical Views of Western Art
Historical Views of Western ArtHistorical Views of Western Art
Historical Views of Western ArtSeo Dae Eun
 
Ss greek civilization3
Ss   greek civilization3Ss   greek civilization3
Ss greek civilization3iamkim
 
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptx
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptxIntroduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptx
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptxAbbie Laudato
 
H24h introduction
H24h introductionH24h introduction
H24h introductionmt135054
 
Introduction to Greek Architecture
Introduction to Greek ArchitectureIntroduction to Greek Architecture
Introduction to Greek ArchitectureAmal Shah
 
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism Jim Powers
 
Ancient Greece; Part 2; session iv-- Hellenism
Ancient Greece; Part  2; session iv-- Hellenism Ancient Greece; Part  2; session iv-- Hellenism
Ancient Greece; Part 2; session iv-- Hellenism Jim Powers
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineaagirrebengoa
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelinedunboagizarte
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelinedunboagizarte
 
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptx
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptxWeek 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptx
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptxssuser438f97
 
Classical literature criticism historical and background
Classical literature criticism historical and backgroundClassical literature criticism historical and background
Classical literature criticism historical and backgroundAhmad Sobhy Rakhia
 
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)dneesio
 
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)Egyptian (pp tminimizer)
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)dneesio
 
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01Aixa Rodriguez
 
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)Ian Sumallo
 

Ähnlich wie Class 03 early attempts (20)

Historical Views of Western Art
Historical Views of Western ArtHistorical Views of Western Art
Historical Views of Western Art
 
AH1- Egypt
AH1- Egypt AH1- Egypt
AH1- Egypt
 
Ss greek civilization3
Ss   greek civilization3Ss   greek civilization3
Ss greek civilization3
 
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptx
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptxIntroduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptx
Introduction to Ancient Greece Literature.pptx
 
H24h introduction
H24h introductionH24h introduction
H24h introduction
 
European Lit
European LitEuropean Lit
European Lit
 
Introduction to Greek Architecture
Introduction to Greek ArchitectureIntroduction to Greek Architecture
Introduction to Greek Architecture
 
Egypt Background & Literature
Egypt Background & LiteratureEgypt Background & Literature
Egypt Background & Literature
 
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism
Ancient Greece; session viii Hellenism
 
Ancient Greece; Part 2; session iv-- Hellenism
Ancient Greece; Part  2; session iv-- Hellenism Ancient Greece; Part  2; session iv-- Hellenism
Ancient Greece; Part 2; session iv-- Hellenism
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
 
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timelineP6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
P6 u2 h.1.2._egypt_timeline
 
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptx
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptxWeek 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptx
Week 1- A brief introduction to the world literature.pptx
 
Classical literature criticism historical and background
Classical literature criticism historical and backgroundClassical literature criticism historical and background
Classical literature criticism historical and background
 
Egyptian Mythology
Egyptian MythologyEgyptian Mythology
Egyptian Mythology
 
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)
Egyptian (Pp Tminimizer)
 
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)Egyptian (pp tminimizer)
Egyptian (pp tminimizer)
 
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01
Whatcanarttellusaboutafricansin 101009100638-phpapp01
 
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)
Greek Presentation (Gurrobat)
 

Class 03 early attempts

  • 1.  
  • 2. Terms to Remember: Logogram , Ideogram, letter, alphabet Syllable, Syllabogram, syllabary Abjad, abugida
  • 3.  
  • 4. Cleopatra (VII) and her son, ptolemy xv (caesarion) were the last rulers of the ptolemaic dynasty of egypt. They were not Egyptian, however, but were of greek and macedonian descent. Cleopatra was supposedly the only member of the dynasty who could speak egyptian.
  • 5.  
  • 6. The lateran obelisk, the largest obelisk of the ancient world. Quarried by thutmose iii and carved and erected in thebes by his grandson, thutmose iv, it was taken to rome by emperor constantius ii and erected in the circus maximus in 357.
  • 7. Rome’s circus maximus, the stadium for racing chariots, the nascar track of its day.
  • 8. Down the spine of the circus maximus the greatest works of art of the ancient world were arrayed, trophies of rome’s conquests.
  • 10. During the renaissance rome was renovated and numerous obelisks were reset as the pope’s set about beautifying the expanding city.
  • 11. Title page of Athanasius Kircher's Obeliscus Pamphilius (Rome, 1650) Athanius Kircher (1601-1680) was a polymath and humanist who published the first European treatise on the Coptic language. Unfortunately, Kircher never wavered from his view that Egyptian hieroglyphs were esoteric symbols and ideographs; a belief which influenced more than a century of subsequent scholarship.
  • 12. Herodotus of Halicarnassus Regarded as the ‘Father of History,’ Herodotus lived in the 5th century BC (c. 484-425). He is perhaps best known for The Histories , which details the conflict between Greece and Persia, and for his list of the ‘Seven Wonders of the Ancient World’. (Bust from the Museum of Naples.)
  • 13. “ When they write or calculate, instead of going, like the Greeks, from left to right, they move their hand from right to left; and they insist, notwithstanding, that it is they who go to the right, and the Greeks who go to the left. They have two quite different kinds of writing, one of which is called sacred, the other common.” Clement of alexandria (late 2 nd century a.d.) says that there are three scripts in egypt: hieroglyphic, hieratic, and “epistolographic”.
  • 14. Diodorus siculus (first century b.c.) traveled in egypt and wrote: “ the signs are like various animals, or the extremities of the human body, or tools – particularly carpenters’ tools. For their script does not work by putting syllables together to render an underlying sense, but by drawing objects whose metaphorical meaning is impressed on the memory …” Eg// Falcon = ‘anything that happens suddenly’ crocodile = ‘evil’ eye = ‘the body’s watchman, guardian of justice’
  • 15. South of ptolemaic and roman egypt was the kingdom of meroe, anciently known as ethiopia. This african kingdom had inherited ancient egyptian writing and religion, and had never been conquered by the greeks or romans.
  • 16. Chairemon, a priest from alexandria who supposedly lived in the first century A.d., wrote: “ the ethiopians do not use letters, only various animals, their limbs, and organs. Earlier priests, in their desire to keep secret their knowledge of natural theology, taught these signs to their own children as an allegorical or symbolic way of writing – a woman beating a drum for ‘joy’, a man holding his chin and looking down at the ground for ‘grief’, a tear-filled eye for ‘misfortune’ … “
  • 17. Plutarch (A.D. 46-120) refers a few times to egyptian hieroglyphs. He says that the glyph for osiris is written with an eye and a scepter, while a rush signified ‘king’ or ‘southern lands’. These are correct. However, other of his ideas were not, and he was clearly not very familiar with how egyptian writing worked.
  • 18. Horapollo was supposedly an egyptian priest living in the late 5 th century. His treatise, hieroglyphica, was translated into greek. A copy of this manuscript was found on the greek island of andros in 1419. much of the text provides nonsensical explanations of the significance of certain egyptian hieroglyphs. Some ring true, though.
  • 19. ‘ to denote hieroglyphs, or a scribe, they draw a reed, ink, and a sieve … because the first instrument used in making bread is a sieve … and the egyptian for education is sbo, which means adequate nourishment.” the ancient egyptian words for scribe and food were indeed very similar.
  • 20. Plotinus, 3 rd century philosopher, writes: “ this is what the wise men of egypt realized, either by science or by instinct. When they wanted to express their meaning philosophically they did not go through the whole business of letters, words, and sentences. They did not employ devices to copy the sounds of a proposition and how it is pronounced, instead, in their sacred writings they drew signs, a separate sign for each idea, so as to express its whole meaning at once. Each separate sign is in itself a piece of knowledge, a piece of wisdom, a piece of reality, immediately present. There is no process of reasoning involved, no laborious elucidation.”
  • 21. “sacrifice with your labor ungrudgingly to the god of nature. Gradually you will bring your mind back to be subject to him. In his merciful guidance he will keep firm watch over your life and will preserve you in safety.”
  • 22. Pierius valerianus wrote “the hieroglyphs, or a commentary on the sacred letters of the egyptians and other peoples”, in 1556, the first book in a thousand years devoted to egyptian hieroglyphs. This illustration is of an obelisk seen by plutarch in front of the temple at sais, in egypt.
  • 24.  
  • 25. Kircher's ‘Translation’ of the Piazza Navona Cartouche: ‘ The beneficent generative force commanding through supernal and infernal dominion, augments the flow of sacred humour emanating from above. Saturn, the disposer of fleeing time, promotes the fecundity of the soil, commanding humid nature. For by his influence all things have life and force.’
  • 26. Pope alexander vii had this obelisk reset in the piazza minerva in 1667. the elephant base was carved by bernini.
  • 27. Kircher’s drawing of the minervan obelisk inscription. Some signs are recognizable, but decent drawings were still a while in coming.
  • 28.  
  • 29. Kircher’s drawing of part of the bembine tablet.
  • 30.  
  • 31. Three different drawings of the same text from a late egyptian funeral stela.
  • 32. Carsten niebuhr’s drawing of a text on a sarcophagus he saw in the streets of cairo. These glyphs are recognizable and legible.
  • 35.  
  • 36.  
  • 37.  
  • 38.  
  • 39.  

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Great Pyramid of Giza, Hanging Gardens of Babylon, Statue of Zeus at Olympia, Temple of Artemis at Ephesus, Mausoleum of Maussollos at Halicarnassus, Colossus of Rhodes, Lighthouse of Alexandria.
  2. Titus Flavius Domitianus (24 October 51 – 18 September 96), known as Domitian , was a Roman Emperor who reigned from 14 September 81 until his death in 96 A.D. We'll return to Kircher's ‘translation’ in a little while