Delphine Menant | |
Nationality: | French |
Occupation: | Ethnologist |
Father: | Joachim Menant |
Delphine Menant (1850–unknown) was a French explorer and ethnologist.
Delphine Menant was born in 1850. She was the daughter of the famous orientalist Joachim Menant and a pupil of James Darmesteter.[1]
In 1900, she was sent as an attaché at the Guimet Museum to india to study the Parsis.She left with both her mother and a servant and arrived in Bombay in October 1900. She then studied the Parsis, their familial and political life, their education, hospitals, religion, and funerary rites. Then on 18 December, she travelled by train to visit Gujarat and study the Parsi communities there. She stayed in Umargam and Nargol as well as Sanjan and Navsari.
At the beginning of January 1901, she visited Bharuch before leaving for Baroda, where she stayed with the Maharaja of Baroda. Injured in a car accident, she spent three weeks recovering in hospital in Surat. In Surat she also met the family that housed Anquetil-Duperron (from 1758 to 1761), the first European translator of the sacred book of Parsis, the Zend-Avesta.