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Archival description
English
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Stephen Ranulph Kingdon Glanville Collection

  • Glanville MSS
  • Collection

Various papers and correspondence connected with the obituary written by Dr I.E.S. Edwards and published in JEA 42 (1956), 99-101. Includes a portrait and a distribution list of Glanville's papers.

Glanville, Stephen Ranulph Kingdon

Stereoscopic photographs: 'Discovering TutAnkhAmun' exhibition, Ashmolean, 2014

'Discovering TutAnkhAmun in 3D: Stereoscopic Installation Photographs of the Ashmolean Exhibition, 24 July – 2 November 2014'.

  1. Two enclosures with 43 stereoscopic images of the exhibition + 11 extra images (Ashmolean Museum objects and Griffith Institute) each
  2. One enclosure with 36 hand-mounted stereoscopic images of the exhibition + 11 hand-mounted extra images (Ashmolean Museum objects and Griffith Institute).
  3. 5 loose stereoscopic images of the exhibition (3 of which hand-mounted).
  4. CD with all digital files.

Navratil, Jenni

Stricker, Bruno Hugo - correspondence

13 letters from Stricker, 3 carbon copies of letters from Černý to Stricker.
Professional and personal matters:
-papyrus Leiden I 346

  • other papyri in Leiden
    -Stricker's study trips to Oxford

Studies of feet

Studies of feet:

  • ink and pencil sketches on card
  • loose
  • 8.1 x 15.9 cm
  • [on sketch] '31 Decem 1916' (ink note)

Subject Files

In a letter relating to the accession of Newberry's collection to the Griffith Institute Archive in 1951 Dr I. E. S. Edwards (Keeper of Egyptian Antiquities at the British Museum) lists 'Files containing notes on individual subjects (mainly in filing cabinets)'. This series is made up of files which are all consistent in appearance and contain notes on individual subjects. Each file tab is labelled with a subject heading and contains research notes. Some of the files contain research that has evidently been done at different times but subsequently gathered together. For example files contain pages cut from notebooks.

Some organisation of this material was done during previous archival processing. Unfortunately it is not possible to know whether the contents of the files are as they were when received or whether related material has been added to these files from elsewhere in the collection.

There is evidence in Newberry's correspondence that in the period after the Second World War to the end of his life in 1948 Newberry was organising his research material in preparation for a general publication on ancient Egyptian history and archaeology. It is possible these files were created by Newberry in preparation for this publication and as such form a distinct series within the collection.

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