books:
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How to Read Egyptian Hieropglyphs: A Step-By-Step Guide to Teach Yourself
Mark Collier
British Museum Press
, 1998 - 179 pages
average customer review:
based on 70 reviews
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highly recommended
Worth the money
I've always been interested in this area but baulked at trying to learn Heiroglyphs as a hobby. No book can do the learning for you but the exercise based system in this book certainly makes it easier.
Do the exercises, follow the lessons and practice. You'll be amazed at how quickly you will be able to recognise the individual glyphs in an inscription.
If you want to learn heiroglyphs, then a well thumbed version of this book is a must for your bookshelf.
An amazing book.
This book was absolutely worth it. I've studied Ogham as well as Mayan Hieroglyphs, and as an archaeologist I can say this this book is great for beginners.
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Great for a Fast Study and Enhances Egypt Tours
This is a great book if you're going on a tour of Egypt and want to learn a little about hieroglyphics so you won't be completely illiterate while exploring the tombs - your
guide
on any official tour should be able to
read them
, but won't have time to explain everything. You won't get bogged down for months - it's geared for words and phrases you are likely to find in tombs.
I studied the first three chapters then scanned and combined the tables in the back of the book into a two-sided, one-page cheat sheet to carry with me into the tombs. It made my trip much more enjoyable and people on our tour were always asking me what it said next to an interesting drawing - I could usually get at least the gist of it: "He's making an offering of beer and other things to a god...", etc.
A great example is when our tour was at Luxor, in the Temple of Karnak, and I noticed that on many of those large pillars (it's a "forest" of pillars without a roof) the hieroglyphics for "life" (the ankh) and "give" (a tiny triangle in an isosceles triangle) were repeated over and over at ever higher places as you walked around the pillar. The temple was dedicated to the god Amun Re. Suddenly, I realized the meaning: while following those words, your eyes were being lifted to Amun Re, the Sun god, who "gave life" - it was as if someone from over 3000 years ago suddenly reached out and talked to me.
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Reading the Right way
If you have real interest, this is your book. If you are going
to Egypt, not just to sightsee, this is your book. The book
concentrates on
reading inscriptions
on stelae and coffins from the
Middle Kingdom. You can
teach
yourself
with this book. It helps to
get as many pictures of the places you're going to visit so you can
translate them before you go. It helps to have a list of pharaohs an
their individual cartouches.
Lots of Fun
If you are interested in
reading
Egyptian
hieroglyphs, this is really a good book to study. There is complete information about the nature of this kind of writing - a mixture of symbolic and phonetic writing - with a dictionary and exercises to test your newly acquired knowledge in deciphering coded message. Lots of fun.
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Hieroglyphs are pictures used as signs in writing. When standing before an ancient tablet in a museum or visiting an
Egyptian monument
, we marvel at this unique writing and puzzle over its meaning. Now, with the help of Egyptologists Mark Collier and Bill Manley, museum-goers, tourists, and armchair travelers alike can gain a basic knowledge of the language and culture of ancient Egypt.
Collier and Manley's novel approach is informed by years of experience
teaching Egyptian
hieroglyphs to non-specialists. Using attractive drawings of actual inscriptions displayed in the British Museum, they concentrate on the kind of hieroglyphs
readers might
encounter in other collections, especially funerary writings and tomb scenes. Each chapter introduces a new aspect of hieroglyphic script or Middle Egyptian grammar and encourages acquisition of reading skills with practical exercises.
The texts offer insights into the daily experiences of their ancient authors and touch on topics ranging from pharaonic administration to family life to the Egyptian way of death. With this book as a
guide
, one can enjoy a whole new experience in understanding Egyptian art and artifacts around the world.
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