Ernesto Schiaparelli Explained

Ernesto Schiaparelli
Birth Date:1856 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Occhieppo Inferiore, Italy
Field:Egyptology
Known For:Discovery of the tomb of Nefertari (QV66)
Discovery of TT8

Ernesto Schiaparelli (pronounced as /it/; 12 July 1856  - 14 February 1928) was an Italian Egyptologist.[1]

Biography

Schiaparelli was born on 12 July 1856, in Biella. He found Queen Nefertari's tomb in Deir el-Medina in the Valley of the Queens (1904) and excavated the TT8 tomb of the royal architect Kha (1906), found intact and displayed in toto in Turin.[2] [3] He was appointed director of the Egyptian Museum in Florence,[4] where he professionally reorganized the collection in new quarters in 1880, then at the peak of his career was made director of the Museo Egizio di Torino, which became with him and his many seasons of excavating, the second biggest Egyptian museum in the world. He was the author of famous scholarly works and a Senator of the Kingdom of Italy. At the same time, he was deeply involved, from his first stay with Franciscan missionaries at Luxor in 1884, with relieving the poverty he saw among the missionaries of Upper Egypt, for whom he founded the Association to Succour Italian Missionaries (ANSMI), which expanded its work to care for Italian emigrants throughout the Near East. Schiaparelli was from a distinguished family of scholars. His father Luigi Schiaparelli taught history at the University of Turin. Giovanni Virginio Schiaparelli, the famous astronomer,, the Arabist, Cesare, the pioneer of photography, Carlo Felice, the agronomist,, a pioneer of industrial chemistry and Elsa Schiaparelli, one of the most prominent figures in fashion between the two World Wars were among his kin.

In 1902, permission to excavate the Western cemetery in Giza was granted by Gaston Maspero, director of the Egyptian Antiquities Service. The area was divided into three sections, and chosen by lot. The southern section was given to the Italians under Ernesto Schiaparelli, the northern strip to the Germans under Ludwig Borchardt, and the middle section to Andrew Reisner.[5]

Between 1903 and 1920, Schiaparelli undertook twelve archaeological campaigns, opening sites in Heliopolis, the cemeteries of Giza, Hermopolis, Assiut, Qaw el-Kebir, Gebelein and Aswan (the tomb of Harkhuf).[6] [7]

Main publications

References

  1. Web site: Ernesto Schiaparelli (EN) . 2024-09-11 . MyWoWo . en.
  2. Web site: Author . No . Popular Archeology - Nefertari's Tomb . 2024-09-16 . Popular Archeology . en-US.
  3. Web site: 2021-12-01 . The tomb of queen Nefertari . 2024-09-16 . Historicaleve . en.
  4. Web site: Schiaparelli, Ernesto .
  5. Markowitz, Yvonne J., Joyce L. Haynes, and Rita E. Freed. Egypt in the Age of the Pyramids: Highlights from the Harvard University-Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Expedition. Boston, Mass: MFA Publications, 2002. Page 33.
  6. Dietze . Klara . Ugliano . Federica . 2022-04-15 . A Dialogue Between Past and Current Excavations at Heliopolis: The Case Study of Schiaparelli's "Tempio del Sole" and Area 232 . Rivista del Museo Egizio . 6 . 10.29353/rime.2022.4046 . 2611-3295. free .
  7. Web site: Languages . Near Eastern . Angeles . Cultures is part of the Humanities Division within UCLA College 361 Kaplan Hall Los . The Archaeological Adventure of Museo Egizio (1903-1920) . 2024-09-14 . Near Eastern Languages & Cultures - UCLA . en-US.

External links