The life of J.D. Åkerblad : Egyptian decipherment and orientalism in revolutionary times
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The life of J.D. Åkerblad : Egyptian decipherment and orientalism in revolutionary times
(Brill's studies in intellectual history, v. 213)
Brill, 2013
- : hardback
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [421]-445) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Johan David Akerblad (1763-1819) contributed to the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs and Demotic and is known as a predecessor of Jean-Francois Champollion. This intellectual biography offers a new and less heroic interpretation of the first reading of the Egyptian scripts. Akerblad, an exceptional linguist, was a diplomat and orientalist who spent several decades living in the Ottoman Empire, France and Italy. Of humble birth, he was a supporter of the French Revolution - something that stymied his career. His life cannot be understood in a purely Swedish national framework, and this study firmly situates him as an international scholar. The book discusses European expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean during the tumultuous decades around the year 1800, and traces Akerblad's momentous life in relation to the debates on 'orientalism,' the tradition of classical studies and the history of science.
Table of Contents
List of Figures, Tables and Plates
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Introduction
Part I - The making of a diplomat and orientalist
1. Family and education
2. Constantinople - city of rumours
3. Diplomacy and intrigue
4. Travel in the East
5. War in Egypt
6. Mixing East and West
7. "The sabre in one hand and the Koran in the other"
Part II - 1789-1801: Revolution and turmoil
8. Return to Europe
9. To Constantinople and back
10. "A dangerous man of Enlightenment"
11. The Roman Republic 1798-99
12. Final year in Sweden
Part III - Reading Egyptian: deciphering the Rosetta inscriptions
13. "I am alive only in Paris"
14. Akerblad's Rosetta Lettre
15. Geographic competition
16. Egyptology and orientalism
Part IV - The Napoleonic wars and Restoration in Italy
17. Book thefts, inkblots and French expropriations
18. Antiquarian in Rome
19. Salons and belle amiche
20. Curses and cabals
21. Oriental Rome
22. Archaeology and art
23. French defeat
24. Digging with the Duchess of Devonshire
25. "Despised by Sweden and by every Swede"
Conclusion
References
Indexes
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