June 29th, 2010 by Tom Hardwick
The first part of this story showed the American Egyptologist Charles Edwin Wilbour discovering and translating a long rock-cut text on the island of Sehel. Wilbour was very excited by the text. It described a seven year long famine in Egypt which was only brought to the end by the intervention of...
Read morePosted in Egyptian Art, Libraries & Archives | 2 comments
June 24th, 2010 by Tom Hardwick
Wilbour’s letters to his family, kept in the Museum Archives, give a vivid picture of his travels in Egypt and the research he carried out there. Much of this work consisted of his checking earlier publications of Egyptian monuments against the originals themselves, but sometimes he was the...
Read morePosted in Egyptian Art, Libraries & Archives | 2 comments
April 14th, 2010 by Tom Hardwick
In her introductory blog Deirdre discussed Charles Edwin Wilbour, the American Egyptologist whose collections form the backbone of the Museum’s Egyptian holdings. This post is about Wilbour’s interest in Egypt. Some of the photographs and documents illustrated here are in the Library Display...
Read morePosted in Libraries & Archives | 7 comments
March 22nd, 2010 by Deirdre Lawrence
It’s a well known fact that the Brooklyn Museum has a great Egyptian collection but did you know that we have one of the best libraries devoted to the study of Ancient Egypt that is open to the public? We work to get the word out through public programs, Library displays and several online...
Read morePosted in Libraries & Archives | 6 comments
February 24th, 2010 by Tom Hardwick
My work in the Wilbour Library involves keeping an eye out for books the Library needs, and carrying out archival research into the history of the Egyptian collections in support of the Library’s educational mission. In the Library’s Special Collections I’ve been particularly...
Read morePosted in Libraries & Archives | 7 comments