the armarna era of ancient egypt will forever be of interest of me. i love that fucked up family
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the armarna era of ancient egypt will forever be of interest of me. i love that fucked up family
Hi! I am Jessica Patey and I am a 3rd year student at the University of Lethbridge in Alberta. I am currently working on a BA in Ancient Mediterranean Studies. This summer, from June 10th - July 14th, I have an amazing opportunity to join an archaeological team working on Tel Beth-Shemesh in the...
Hi loving followers!! I have an amazing opportunity this summer to go to Israel and be part of an archaeological dig! I love history! The older the better and I loooooove the ancient mediterranean! I know all you ancient historians and classicists can appreciate how awesome this is and I know that Tumblr understands GoFundMe so if you guys helped me out I would really appreciate it and for all who have donated so far thank you so much!!! This link is below so give it a read (actually read it!) and message me with questions! Love you all and thanks so much!
Mary Chubb: Accidental Archaeologist
Mary Chubb in the field; image provisionally sourced to The Egypt Exploration Society, and used with kind permission.
Mary Chubb was an accidental archaeologist, becoming under-secretary at the Egypt Exploration Society to pay for a sculpture course. Typing and book-keeping were arcane arts in the excavations of 1920s: reports appeared to have been “typed on camel back in a sandstorm”; accounts never balanced.
Mary describes in her book "Nefertiti Lived Here" how one rainy morning in London, while searching for an artefact in the basement, she came across a beautiful turquoise fragment of tile, still with desert sands on it. In her words:
"Suddenly I was invaded by a great longing; I wanted to know all I could about the place where the tile had come from"
And so it was that Mary became the first professional excavation administrator.
Administration might not sound like the stuff of adventures, but this isn't your bog-standard office job we are talking here. Mary Chubb worked on site, a key part of the excavation team. Egyptology expert Peter Lacovara has even said that Mary's careful work at Amarna and Eshnunna helped to set new standards in archaeological publication.
On top of all of this, her charming books helped to explained the attraction and importance of archaeology to a wide readership.
You can read extracts from Nefertiti Lived Here using the Look Inside function on Amazon; it is still available to buy from many book retailers.
The Amarna website has a photo of the old excavation site hut that Mary and the team used, now in ruins.
Mary Chubb's obituary in The Times [£]
Written by @RachelandDesign
Edited by Tori & Becky