Émile Brugsch
Émile Brugsch (February 24, 1842 – January 14, 1930) was a German-born Egyptologist whose career spanned the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He is known as the official who "evacuated" the mummies from the Deir el-Bahri Cache in 1881, and as being assistant curator of the Bulaq Museum - the core element of what is today's Egyptian Museum.[1]
Brugsch was born in Berlin, and was the brother of the Egyptologist Heinrich Karl Brugsch.
Brugsch also assisted author and occultist Aleister Crowley in 1904 by having the Stele of Revealing translated by his assistant. The Stele, and the translation, became integral parts of Crowley's subsequent writing of The Book of the Law and his founding of the philosophical practice and religion of Thelema. He died in Nice, France, aged 87.
Brugsch is mentioned in The Temple of Heliopolis by Wm. J. Shaw, whom he assisted with translation of hieroglyphics at the temple.[2]
See also
- List of Egyptologists
- The Night of Counting the Years (Egyptian movie, 1969)
- William Joseph Myers
References
- http://www.nicholasreeves.com/item.aspx?category=Writing&id=328
- Overland monthly and Out West, The Temple of Heliopolis [Volume 14, Issue 5, May 1875; pp. 438-444]; http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moajrnl/ahj1472.1-14.005/434
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Emil Brugsch. |
- Giants of Egyptology: 9th of a Series - The Brothers Brugsch, accessed December 28, 2006
- [Overland monthly and Out West, The Temple of Heliopolis [Volume 14, Issue 5, May 1875; pp. 438-444]; http://quod.lib.umich.edu/m/moajrnl/ahj1472.1-14.005/434]