DAVID  GANGE ’s research while affiliated with Trinity College and other places

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Publications (1)


Religion and science in late nineteenth-century British Egyptology
  • Article

December 2006

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30 Reads

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32 Citations

The Historical Journal

DAVID  GANGE 

The late nineteenth century is generally considered to be the period of Egyptology’s development into a scientific discipline. The names of Egyptologists of the last decades of the century, including William Flinders Petrie, are associated with scientific technique and objective interpretation as well as colonialist agendas. This article’s thesis is that rapid developments in scientific technique were largely driven by spiritual objectives rather than any other ideologies. Egypt – after being derided and ignored during the mid-century – became of great significance to the British when spectacular finds suggested that Egyptology might offer conclusive evidence against Darwinism and the higher criticism while proving events of the Old Testament to be historically true. Other groups used ancient Egypt – professing Darwin, Spencer, and Huxley as inspirations – but the teleologies they invariably produced owe more to spiritualism than to scientific naturalism, blurring boundaries between science, the occult, and religion. In terms of popularity traditional Christian approaches to ancient Egypt eclipsed all rivals, every major practising Egyptologist of the 1880s employing them and publications receiving large, demonstrably enthusiastic, audiences. Support for biblical Egyptologists demonstrates that, in Egyptology, the fin de siècle enjoyed a little-noticed but widely supported revival of Old-Testament-based Christianity amidst a flowering of diverse beliefs.

Citations (1)


... In the summer of 1882, when British forces descended onto Alexandria, Edwards co-founded the Egypt Exploration Fund (EEF) in London, with Poole as co-founder and Wilson as the first president. The ensuing imperial protectorate in Egypt facilitated British access to Delta sites, while Victorian interests in the Bible and classics drove further archaeological advancements (Gange 2006;2013: 151-196). The EEF gradually, yet irrevocably, transformed archaeological fieldwork in Egypt following the British Occupation and shaped the discipline's institutionalization in Britain (see Sheppard 2021). ...

Reference:

British Egyptology (1822-1882)
Religion and science in late nineteenth-century British Egyptology
  • Citing Article
  • December 2006

The Historical Journal