Egypt
Hieroglyphs: Egypt Unlocked
Times Online (Richard Morrison)
What explains our fascination with hieroglyphs? In part, surely, it is their sheer expressive beauty. We in newspapers are always looking for more elegant typefaces to catch your eye and enhance our limping prose. But however pretty the chosen font, our words — and the alphabetical symbols that they contain — remain intractably abstract. You may look at the word “bird” or “custard” and conjure in your mind’s eye a beautiful plumed creature or a tub of the gooey yellow stuff. But you don’t see them on the page. Whereas with hieroglyphs, you do. Or at least, you think you do — though that impression can be mightily deceptive, as we shall see.
So, as with Mandarin, there is pleasure to be derived from looking at the exquisite pictographs of the Ancient Egyptians, irrespective of whether one has the foggiest notion of what they mean. But there’s an even more thrilling quality about hieroglyphs. It’s that they look less like a dead language than a secret code, full of oddly familiar yet inscrutable signs which, we feel sure, hold the answers to centuries of riddles.
This code-like quality isn’t surprising. For about 1,200 years, from when Egyptians stopped writing hieroglyphs in the 6th century to the deciphering of the Rosetta Stone in 1822, a secret code is exactly what they were — and one, moreover, that had resisted countless attempts to break it.
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Resource: Hieroglyphs On Your Iphone
Heritage Key (Ann Wuyts) Jean-François Dumon and Alamanga have developed 'Aaou', an application for iPhone and iPodTouch which allows a quick translation of hieroglyphs. The iPhone app over 10,000 words or symbols to - depending on your iPhone...
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More From George Hart On Hieroglyphs
Why a tadpole means a great deal Times Online No prizes to those of you who have studied hieroglyphs at even the most basic level for guessing that this title refers to ancient Egyptian numbering! George Hart is taking a look at the subject in this short...
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Why We Still Dig In Egypt - The Enduring Fascination Of Egypt
Times Online (Neil MacGregor, Director of the British Museum) The British Museum’s collections span almost every corner of the globe and every period of human history, but, for many, the images conjured up by the words “British Museum” are of mummies...
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Eloquent Peasant Blog - Word Of The Week
The Eloquent Peasant Margaret Maitland has updated her excellent blog with two articles which may be of interest: Egyptian word of the week (new slot in which Margaret takes one of her favourite ancient Egyptian words and discusses it):I’ve decided...
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Rosetta Stone First Translated By Mediaeval Arabic Scholars
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/770/he2.htm "Since 1822 it had been thought that Champollion was the first person to break the hieroglyphic code, but a recent analysis made by an Egyptian Egyptologist based in London, Okasha El-Dali, on some mediaeval...
Egypt