Painting of a relief made by the painter Bertin in the tomb of Ramesses
III (Valley of the Kings) during Champollion's expedition. The reliefs
and drawings executed during Champollion's only trip to Egypt were published
under the title Monuments de I'Egypte et de la Nubie, from 1835 to 1845.
(Paris, Bibliotheque Nationale)
Champollion's notes of his study of the cartouche of Cleopatra, inscribed
on an obelisk found at Philae by Belzoni, The names of Cleopatra and Ptolemy
were the first words deciphered by Champollion. By analyzing the texts
of the Rosetta Stone and comparing them with those on the obelisk of Philae,
Champollion had the brilliant intuition that the names of the pharaohs
in cartouches were in hieroglyphs with a phonetic value, and that it was
therefore possible to establish an equivalence between hieroglyphic and
alphabetic
signs.
A page from Champollion's notes for his
work Grammaire egyptienne, published between 1836 and 1841. (Paris, National
Library)
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