Blackman, Aylward Manley

حقل المعرف الفريد

نوع المدخل

Person

شكل معتمد من الاسم

Blackman, Aylward Manley

شكل (أشكال) متوازية من الاسم

    صيغ موحدة للاسم وفقًا لقواعد أخرى

      أشكال أخرى من الاسم

        المُعرِّفات الخاصة بالهيئات الاعتبارية

        منطقة بيانات التسجيلة الوصفية

        تواريخ الوجود

        1883-1956

        التاريخ

        British Egyptologist; he was born in Dawlish, S. Devon, 30 Jan. 1883, son of the Revd James Henry Blackman and Anne Mary Jacob; he was educated at St. Paul's School and The Queen's College, Oxford, where he read Arabic, and Egyptian and Coptic under Griffith; he graduated in Oriental Studies, 1906; he spent the next few years working in Nubia, and acted as one of Reisner's assistants on the Archaeological Survey of Nubia, 1907-8; he was a member of the excavation team and published the inscriptions for the University of Pennsylvania expedition at Buhen, Wadi Haifa, 1909¬10; he now performed the enormous task of completely recording the temples of Biga, Dendur, and Derr, 1911¬15, and also began work on a fourth, Gerf Hussein, but had to desist owing to an attack of typhoid; he was elected Oxford Nubian Research Fellow and joined Griffith's staff at Faras; in 1912 he was elected Laycock Fellow of Egyptology at Worcester College, Oxford; MA, DLitt., FBA; after 1918 he assisted Griffith in teaching Egyptian at Oxford; he was appointed Brunner Professor of Egyptology at the University of Liverpool, 1934¬48; Emeritus Professor at Liverpool, 1948-56; he was also special Lecturer in Egyptology in the University of Manchester, 1936-48; he was a member of the EES Committee for many years, and a member of the council of the Royal Asiatic Soc., 1922-35; joint editor of the Annals of Archaeology and Anthropology; for the EES Blackman recorded the complete series of tombs at Meir in Middle Egypt, producing six vols., working at this site 1912-14, 1921, and 1949-50; in 1936 he visited Berlin in order to collate the Middle Egyptian papyri intended for his Middle Egyptian Stories; at this period he also directed the EES excavations at Sesebi, 1936-7, and was invited to act as tutor to the Crown Prince of Ethiopia, 1937-9; he combined the ability of a field worker and a great archaeological interest with a remarkable philological insight which was particularly apparent in his work on Ptolemaic texts; but his speciality was Egyptian Religion, a subject on which he wrote many studies and articles; his list of works is a long one; the following may be cited, The Temple of Dendar, 1911; The Temple of Derr, 1913; The Temple of Bigeh, 1915; The Rock Tombs of Meir, 6 vols. 1914-53; Luxor and its Temples, 1923; The Psalms in the Light of Egyptian Research, in The Psalmists, 1926; Middle-Egyptian Stories, pt. I of Bibl. Aeg 1932; Egyptian Myth and Ritual 1932; The Value of Egyptology in the Modern World, 1935; he also contributed important studies to Hastings, Encyclopaedia of Religion and Ethics, and articles to JEA and other journals; his letters from Egypt are preserved in the archives of the University of Liverpool; he died in Abergele, N. Wales, 9 March 1956.

        أماكنالأماكن

        الوضع القانوني

        وظائف، مهن، وأنشطة

        التفويضات / مصادر السلطة

        البنية الداخلية / شجرة النسب

        السياق العام

        نطاق حقول بيانات العلاقات

        نطاق حقول نقاط الوصول

        نقاط الوصول الموضوعية

        مداخل الوصول (أماكن)

        مِهن

        حقل الضبط

        معرف ملف الضبط الاستنادي

        معرف المؤسسة

        القواعد و/أو الاتفاقيات المستخدمة

        الحالة

        حالة الوصف

        تواريخ الإنشاء والمراجعة والحذف

        اللغة (اللغات)

          الملفات النصية

            المصادر

            • Who Was Who in Egyptology (4th ed. 2012), 62-3 fig. (portrait).

            ملاحظات الصيانة