Romancing the Stone
An Egyptologist explains the Rosetta stone's lasting allure
- By Beth Py-Lieberman
- Smithsonian.com, November 05, 2007, Subscribe
Nearly two centuries after a Frenchman decoded hieroglyphs on an ancient granite stone, opening the proverbial door into the arts, language and literature of Egypt's 3,000-year-old civilization, the allure of the Rosetta stone has yet to fade. Egyptologist John Ray of Cambridge University, the author of a new book, The Rosetta Stone and the Rebirth of Ancient Egypt, explains why.
Today, many people regard the Rosetta stone as little more than a metaphor. How is it that the actual artifact retains its significance?
I think the Rosetta stone is really the key, not simply to ancient Egypt; it's the key to decipherment itself. You've got to think back to before it was discovered. All we knew about the ancient world was Greece, Rome and the Bible.
We knew there were big civilizations, like Egypt, but they'd fallen silent. With the cracking of the Rosetta stone, they could speak with their own voice and suddenly whole areas of history were revealed.
The stone was discovered by the French during a battle with the British in Egypt in 1799 and taken to the tent of General Jacques Menou. When was the stone's significance fully understood?
Even Menou, and some of the people with him, understood it. Napoleon took with him not only soldiers and engineers, but a whole team of scholars.
Now some of the scholars were in the tent with Menou and they could read the Greek. The Greek text is at the bottom of the Rosetta stone. At the very end of the Greek text, it says copies of this decree are written in hieroglyphs and in demotic—which is the language of ordinary Egyptians of that time—and in Greek, and will be placed in every temple.
So that was the "eureka" moment? If you could read the Greek, you could decipher the other two languages?
The Greek text was saying that the funny hieroglyphs at the top of the Rosetta stone said the exact same thing as the Greek text. Suddenly there was a very strong hint that the Rosetta stone was the key.
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Comments (4)
In short, it's an ancient Egyptian artifact that had the same text written in 3 languages (Greek & 2 Egyptian forms). Because there was an understanding of Greek, it provided a means to deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphic writing which had previously been a language no living person could understand. For more/better detail, I'm a big fan of wikipedia :) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rosetta_stone
Posted by J Winter on December 5,2007 | 02:09 PM
Page 2, 2nd paragraph, NOT the first world war. There was no World War until the 20th century; Champollion lived in the 19th century.
Posted by Marie D. Clarke on December 4,2007 | 08:27 PM
I'm fasicinated by this story. If you may, please inlighten me and explain what the Rosetta Stone truely means and stands for. I've heard of myths, but I'm not exactly sure what or who to beleive. Thank you in advance
Posted by Shantel L on December 1,2007 | 06:01 PM
the egyption language is written in two ways not just one that came from the stone and the other is a form of indian that uses the eye as a place to look next for the rest of the text. This is how the indian wrote on points and is very hard to see with very small detail. It takes me 6 to eight hour with the use of a maginify glass power 10 to read the symbols of a point using the same symbols in egyption to translate the indian hyrogyphs. The lost laugages are right under our nose.
Posted by Michael Cline on November 17,2007 | 03:02 PM