Champollion and the
Rosetta Stone
Born in France in
1790, Jean Francois Champollion saw
Egyptian hieroglyphs for the first time in 1801 at the age of eleven. He was
told that no one knew how to decipher them yet. He made up his mind at that time
that he would do it.
Fortunately, as it
turned out, Champollion was not only a persistent fellow, he was also
brilliant. By age 18 he had learned 12 languages, including Coptic, Hebrew,
Arabic, Syriac, Chaldean, Chinese, Ethiopic, Sanskrit, Zend, Pahlevi, and
Persian. The most important of these was Coptic, for it was the language of
Egypt that was derived from ancient Egyptian.
In 1799 – when Champollion was just
nine years old-- Napoleon Bonaparte of France was trying to conquer all of
Europe. Napoleon’s army was in Egypt. Archaeologists and scientists traveled
with the army because Napoleon was fascinated by Egyptian history. French troops
happened upon a stone tablet that had a lot of writing on it. It was found in
the town of Rosetta and therefore called “the Rosetta Stone.” It had writing in
Greek, in Demotic (a later Egyptian writing) and also in hieroglyphs. Scholars
went crazy with excitement. It was hoped that the Rosetta Stone would be the key
to unlocking the texts of hieroglyphs. But it proved much harder than was hoped
to crack the code.
Everyone was sure that the stone was
saying the same thing in all three languages. The Greek could be translated and
so it was thought that this would open up understanding for the rest. Next, the
Demotic was translated. But still the hieroglyphs remained a mystery. Scholars
knew that it said the same thing as the Greek and Demotic, but what they needed
was a system for interpreting each symbol in order for that knowledge to be used
to translate other hieroglyphs.
Finally, a man named
Thomas Young figured out that whenever a Pharaoh’s name was written in
hieroglyphs, it was always inscribed inside a rectangle with rounded corners –
what the French dubbed a “cartouche” (that’s just French for
cartridge). Now Champollion took that information and focused on the cartouche.
Pharaoh Ptolemy’s name was in the Greek script 5 times and, just as predicted,
there were 5 cartouches in the hieroglyphs. Champollion knew each one must
represent Ptolemy’s name. At last he had a small group of letters to work on and
he knew what they spelled. He just had to figure out which symbol went with
which sound in the Egyptian language. (If ancient Egyptians had not put their
pharaohs names in cartouches, we might still not know anything about the ancient
Egyptians.)
Even still the work
was daunting. Ancient Egyptian turned out to be a highly complex language with
complicated grammar and syntax (languages always simplify over time, so this
ancient one was very difficult). Also, the writing system was not just one
symbol for one sound in the alphabet, but rather literally hundreds of
hieroglyphs which sometimes stood for sounds, sometimes for objects, and
sometimes for abstract ideas. Some hieroglyphs were there just to tell the
reader how to read the hieroglyph beside it! And Egyptian could be read up,
down, or back and forth from either direction. Champollion had to figure out,
for example, that the hieroglyph pictures always faced the the direction in
which the text should be read.
No wonder other scholars had bogged down and given up!
At last Champollion had a major breakthrough. One morning in his study he finally
deciphered some symbols with enough certainty to
read the cartouche. He reportedly ran to find his brother who was working in a
nearby library. Flushed with excitement he flung his papers onto his brother’s desk and cried, “Je tiens
l’affaire! Je tiens l’affaire! (I’ve got it! I’ve got it!) and then promptly
fell to the floor in a faint.
Because of Champollion's
genius, the world of ancient Egyptian writing is open to scholars everywhere and
we now know a great deal about the life and times of the ancient Egyptians, one
of the most fascinating cultures in all of history.

The Rosetta Stone <http://www.earth-history.com/Egypt/rosetta-stone-translation.htm>
www.theshorterword.com
© Laurie J. White