Les Momies Royales de Déir El-Bahari

G. MASPERO   |   M.E. BRUGSCH

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Les Momies Royales de Déir El-Bahari
Les Momies Royales de Déir El-Bahari

WITH 27 PHOTOGRAVURE PLATES OF MUMMIES, COFFINS AND OBJECTS FOUND IN THE ROYAL CACHE AT DEIR-EL-BAHARI, 1889

(EGYPT) MASPERO, Gaston. “Les Momies Royales de Déir El-Bahari.” IN: Memoires Publies par les Membres de la Mission Archéologique Française au Caire. Quatrième fascicule, pages 511-[789]. Paris: Ernest Leroux, 1889. Folio (10 by 14 inches), mid-20th-century period-style brown calf, raised bands, elaborately gilt-decorated spine, red morocco spine label, marbled endpapers (original wrappers bound in).

Maspero’s formal scientific account of the discovery of the cache of royal mummies at Deir-el-Bahari, with 27 photogravure plates after Brugsch-Bey of the coffins, mummies and objects found in the cache.

When objects belonging to previously undiscovered pharaohs began to surface on the antiquities market, French Egyptologist Gaston Maspero, Director of the Egyptian Antiquities Service, went to Luxor to investigate. “The burials were being stripped of their small valuable antiquities year by year and it was imperative to discover them as soon as possible before they were completely emptied or destroyed by the villagers to hide the last evidences of their plundering” (Romer, 130). In an attempt to stem this rampant illegal export of Egyptian antiquities, Maspero arrested the Abd al-Russul brothers from the notorious treasure-hunting village of Gorna, who confessed under torture to having found the great cache of royal mummies at Deir el-Bahri in July 1881. The cache was immediately moved to Cairo to keep it safe from future robbers. First published in 1881, Maspero relates the engaging tale of this discovery at Deir-el-Bahari, its plundering, the confession of Muhammad Abd ar-Rassoul, and the entry into the cache by photographer Émile Brugsch-Bey, who “raised his candle over the coffins and read some of the cursive inked inscriptions that ran over the center of the lids. It was like a roll-call of New Kingdom history” (Romer, 136). Text in French.

Scattered spots of foxing, mostly to first and last gatherings. An extremely good copy.

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