Skip to product information
1 of 1

Niebuhr in Egypt

Regular price $39.95
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $39.95
Sold out
An account of one of Europe's earliest scientific explorations of Egypt, showing how Carsten Niebuhr laid the foundations of modern Egyptology.When Roger H. Guichard Jr. discovered a French transla...
Read More
  • 26 June 2014
View Product Details
An account of one of Europe's earliest scientific explorations of Egypt, showing how Carsten Niebuhr laid the foundations of modern Egyptology.

When Roger H. Guichard Jr. discovered a French translation of the works of Carsten Niebuhr, sole survivor of the 1761-1767 Royal Danish Expedition to the Yemen, he was astounded. 'They were not just another dry account of one man's travels, but represented the record of a serious intellectual enterprise involving Enlightenment science, sacred philology, the Bible as history, 'Orientalism', Egyptology, and discovery'.

Having translated them from French to English, and then cross-referenced his translations with the original German texts, 'Niebuhr in Egypt' is not, as one might expect, simply a presentation of his translation. Instead Guichard offers his readers an account of the expedition's year in Egypt, with lengthy excursions into the several subplots - Enlightenment science, the Bible as history, and Egyptology - that he found so engaging in the original works.

This is not a scholarly work but would appeal to anyone with an interest in any of the areas mentioned or simply to anyone interested in this country's past and present.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $39.95
Pages: 362
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Lutterworth Press
Publication Date: 26 June 2014
Trim Size: 9.02 X 6.02 in
ISBN: 9780718893354
Format: Paperback
REVIEWS Icon
The book gives an accessible insight into the condition of Egypt in the 1760's, still nominally part of the Ottoman Empire, and before the arrival of Napoleon in 1798 and the opening up of the country in the nineteenth century. The author is careful to explain the findings of the team in a variety of fields including biblical and classical studies, history, geography and science.
— Michael Tunnicliffe, Ancient Egypt, vol 15, No. 3, issue 87, Dec 2014/Jan 2015

Guichard highlights Castern Niebuhr's observations and achievements, valuable in themselves and as stepping stones upon which subsequent scholars and travelers were to tread, while offering those interested in the exploration of the middle east an episode heretofore not emphasized.
— Caroline Williams

Roger H. Guichard Jr.'s book adopts a novel perspective, examining in greater detail than previous authors the year during which the expedition was delayed in Cairo. It is thus a study in the history of ideas, touching on issues relevant to the relationship of philology and other areas of inquiry in early-modern Europe. Guichard's book is in large part paraphrase of Niebuhr's Reiseschreibung along with well-informed elaboration on subject after subject broached by Niebuhr, punctuated with citations. Guichard makes a strong case not only for the importance of Niebuhr and his unique perspective for our knowlwdge of pre-napoleonic Cairo, but also for the man's unassuming competence and admirable accomplishment in realizing the potential of an expedition that, at least in the eyes of its sponsors in Copenhagen, was bound to fail (294).
— Robert Lamberton
Preface
1 Introduction
2 The Conceit
3 To the Orient
4 Alexandria
5 To Cairo
6 The Mother of the World
7 Government
8 Inhabitants
9 Commerce
10 The Delta
11 Manners and Customs
12 The Antiquities of Egypt
13 To Suez and Sinai
14 Afterward
15 The Results
Appendices
A Questions
B Keys to the Map of Cairo
Bibliography
Index