5 letters from Sander-Hansen, 6 carbon copies of letters from Černý to Sander-Hansen. Setting up of the International Association of Egyptologists; membership of the organisation; publications. Černý recommending R. Haardt as Coptologist to Sander-Hansen.
27 letters from Sauneron to Černý. 2 letters from Sauneron to Marie Černý, 1 letter (with multiple drafts) from Marie Černý to Sauneron. Professional and personal matters:
Sauneron's research and news of research-based travelling
Egyptian philology, palaeography
studies in hieratic
book exchange and purchases
occasional news of family Marie Černý consulting Sauneron regarding posthumous publications of J. Černý, as well as the use of Černý's notebooks.
6 letters from Scott, 2 carbon copies of letters from Černý to Scott.
Deir el-Medîna material in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, finds relating to the workman Khabekhnet and his family (Thebes, TT 2, TopBib i2.6-9)
1 letter from Spicer. Clarendon Press interested in publishing a comprehensive introduction to Egyptian studies and approaching Černý as a prospective author.
48 groups of documents, handwritten and typewritten manuscripts. Drafts and preparatory notes for both published and unpublished articles. Texts of lectures.
Manuscript, 3 drafts, probably intended for a paper(s) or publication chapters. New Kingdom history: -Beginnings of the XIXth Dynasty, Ramesses I and Sety I, Ramesses II, Merenptah and the Libyan invasion -End of the Nineteenth Dynasty. Setnakhte and Ramesses III -From the death of Ramesses III to the end of the XXth Dynasty
1 inked tracing, 7 lines of a hieratic graffito from KV 9, tomb of Ramesses VI, Thebes, visited by scribes in year 9 of Ramesses IX. Scribe Amenhotep and his entourage, visiting the tomb (see TopBib i2.517). Reference to a previous record made by Champollion, J. F., Notices descriptives ii (1889), 635 (OEB 136960).
1 photograph, positive print, annotated on the back. Photograph of a hieratic graffito of year 50 (probably of Ramesses II) of the scribe Ptahemwia and father Yupa, concerning their visit to Pyramid of Sahure and paying homage to the goddess Sekhmet. Graffito from room II (Second Portico) in the mastaba-tomb of Ptahshepses, Middle of Dyn. V, at Abusir. See TopBib iii2.342(8) and (9).
29 handwritten pages with notes in Egyptian hieratic and English. List and copies of graffiti predominantly from the Valley of the Kings, some with concordances to earlier lists of graffiti recorded by W. Spiegelberg and H. Carter.
6 pages of typescript with handwritten additions. Typescript from the Graffiti de la montagne thébaine project, listing graffiti already published by Wilhelm Spiegelberg with their GMT area (section) allocations.
Material relating to Černý's publication Late Ramesside Letters. English translation of Letters 1, 5, 7-12, 14-16, 18-21. Read with A. H. Gardiner in 1949 and 1950.
1 carbon copy of a letter from Černý to Varille. 1 thank you note from Černý to Varille for Loret's obituary and for arranging a posthumous publication of Loret's book, see Loret, V., La résine de Térébinthe (SONTER) chez les anciens Égyptiens (1949) (OEB 2073).
1 letter from Werblowsky, 1 carbon copy of a letter from Černý to Werblowsky, 1 carbon copy of a letter from Fiona Strachan (Griffith Institute secretary) to Werblowsky, sent in Černý's absence. Professional references for S. I. Groll. Černý providing a strong recommendation.
1 letter from Wieck, 1 carbon copy of a letter from Černý to Wieck. Černý reviewing a manuscript by J. Yoyotte for Harper Inc. providing a positive assessment.
1 carbon copy of a letter from Williams to J. R. Harris, sent to Černý for reference. A. A. Williams, Bursar of Queen's College, informing J. R. Harris, who had been recommended by Černý for a UNESCO project in Nubia, that the College supported Harris' participation in the project.
2 letters from E. M. Williams, 1 carbon copy of a letter from Černý to E. M. Williams. Ostraca and other objects from collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, in particular objects from the Theodore M. Davis excavations in the Valley of the Kings.