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Hermine Hartleben

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hermine Ida Auguste Hartleben (2 June 1846 – 18 July 1919) was a German Egyptologist. She was the daughter of a forest officer in Altenau. Later, she studied in Hanover and became a teacher. She studied Greek archaeology at the Sorbonne, taught in a Greek school in Istanbul, and taught French to the children of a pasha in Egypt. At the suggestion of German Egyptologists, she wrote the first biography of Jean-François Champollion, the decipherer of Egyptian hieroglyphs.[1]

Hartleben died in 1919 and was buried in the cemetery in Templin.

Publications

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  • Champollion : sein Leben und sein Werk : von H. Hartleben., 1906

References

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  1. ^ Thomasson, Fredrik (2013-01-11). The Life of J. D. Åkerblad: Egyptian Decipherment and Orientalism in Revolutionary Times. BRILL. p. 262. ISBN 978-90-04-21116-2.