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Champollion: A Scribe for Egypt

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Wikipedia article




{{Infobox television

| image = Champollion, un scribe pour l'gypte (documentary).jpg

| alt =

| caption = Title card

| native_name =

| genre = Documentary

| director = Jean-Claude Lubtchansky

| producer = Jean-Pierre Gibrat

| writer = Michel Dewachter

| screenplay = Jean-Claude and Carole Lubtchansky

| story = Michel Dewachter

| based_on =

| starring =

| voices =

| music =

| cinematography = Mikal Lubtchansky

| editor = Jean-Claude Lubtchansky

| company =

| network = Arte

| first_aired =

| runtime = 52 minutes

| country = France

| language = French

}}

'Champollion: A Scribe for Egypt' (; ) is a 2000 documentary film adapted from French Egyptologist 's nonfiction book of the same name. Directed by Jean-Claude Lubtchansky, and co-produced by Trans Europe Film, La Sept-Arte, ditions Gallimard and Louvre Museum, with voice-over narration by French actors Franoise Fabian and Jean-Hugues Anglade, the film retraces step by step the passionate journey which led Jean-Franois Champollion to decipher Egyptian hieroglyphs.

The documentary was broadcast on Arte on 18 November 2000, as part of the channel's television programme 'The Human Adventure', and released on DVD by Centre national du cinma et de l'image anime (CNC). In addition to German dubbing, it has been subtitled into English and Spanish.

Synopsis



The film begins with the historical context: Egyptian Expedition of Napoleon Bonaparte, origin of Egyptology and passion of Jean-Franois Champollion. An archaeologist, historian and philologist, Champollion was extraordinarily gifted with linguistic talent. As an Egyptologist he broke new ground and gave the world access to the chronicles of the pharaohs. Champollion succeeded in deciphering the hieroglyphs via his deep knowledge of Coptic, and opened up new dimensions to imagination: by deciphering infinitely small characters, the immeasurably large world of ancient Egypt opened up its gate, a world that had been silent for two millennia, which fascinated all of Europe.

With the Nile valley as background, and based on Champollion's own writings, the sites he explored, as well as artefacts preserved in the biggest museumsLouvre, British Museum, Museo Egizioand those in Egypt remained on sites, the film follows his footstepsfrom the north to the south of Egyptfrom Alexandria to Cairo, Luxor, Karnak, Aswan and Abu Simbel, to make viewers discover the personality of the scientist, decipherer of hieroglyphics and founder of Egyptology, who launched the 19th-century vogue for Egyptomania.

The book



found in a tomb at Thebes, discovered by the Earl of Belmore. Lithograph made by Charles Joseph Hullmandel (1818), reproduced on the back cover.

The book , on which the film is based, is an illustrated biography of the decipherer of hieroglyphs, published in pocket format by ditions Gallimard on 23 November 1990. Written by the French Egyptologist and CNRS researcher , this work is the volume in the encyclopaedic collection 'Dcouvertes Gallimard', and part of the collection's series.

According to the tradition of 'Dcouvertes', which is based on an abundant pictorial documentation and a way of bringing together visual documents and texts, enhanced by printing on coated paper; in other words, 'genuine monographs, published like art books'.

While many of the French titles from the collection make it into English, this book has never been translated.

See also



* In the 'Dcouvertes Gallimard' collection:

** 'The Search for Ancient Egypt' by Jean Vercoutter

** 'Mummies: A Voyage Through Eternity' by Franoise Dunand

** 'The Pyramids of Giza: Facts, Legends and Mysteries' by Jean-Pierre Corteggiani

** 'Coptic Egypt: The Christians of the Nile' by Christian Cannuyer

References




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