Temples, Tombs, and Hieroglyphs: A Popular History of Ancient Egypt by Barbara Mertz
Author:Barbara Mertz [Mertz, Barbara]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9780061842368
Google: 9oAZEyiyvT0C
Barnesnoble:
Goodreads: 10207937
Publisher: HarperCollins
Published: 2007-03-21T00:00:00+00:00
THE HATSHEPSUT PROBLEM
Scholarly feuds are a lot of fun for laymen, and even for the scholarly world itself, with the possible exception of the combatants. The spectacle of two dignified and learned gentlemen belaboring one another over a misplaced verb form or a piece of broken pottery, with adjectives which should be restricted to political debates, is inherently ridiculous and consequently entertaining. In point of fact there is nothing more absurd about the subjects of âGelehrtenduelleâ than about the causes of many wars, when one considers the stakes involved; but the tragedy of warfare, which removes any possibility of humor unless it be of a macabre variety, is missing in the academic battles. They rarely descend to violence, except that of a verbal nature.
One of the most hard-fought skirmishes on the battlefields of academe was waged around the turn of the last century on the Hatshepsut question. Let not the unwary reader be misled as to the nature of the question. The problem in Egyptological minds was not why Hatshepsut did what she did, or how she got away with it; it was basically a problem of what happened, and when. The historical sequence which I have given above is now the accepted view, but it was not arrived at without a good deal of Sturm und Drang. I mention it primarily because it is a good example of how illogical a scholar can be when he becomes enamoured of a theory. Besides, thereâs a funny story connected with it.
The protagonists in the battle were Kurt Sethe on the one hand and Edouard Naville on the other. Sethe was one of the best Egyptologists Germany ever produced, which is saying a good deal. In appearance Sethe was the popular stereo type of a scholarâsmall in size and solemn of manner, though capable of deep and genuine warmth toward his close friends. The Swiss Naville was Setheâs antithesis, being a big, burly man with a jovial personality. Beneath the joviality, however, was a stubbornness which his opponents might reasonably have termed âbullheadedness.â When the solemn German and the bullheaded Swiss met in conflict, they met head-on.
Setheâs interpretation of the facts was based on the assumption that when King Aâs name is erased from an inscription and replaced by the name of King B then King B must have followed King A. This sounds reasonable. But when Sethe applied the rule to the succession of the Thutmosid kings, he came up with the following sequence:
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