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Jacques Joseph Champollion Figeac

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Nationality
  
French

Books
  
The Egyptians

Fields
  
Archaeology


Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Institutions
  
Chateau de Fontainebleau

Known for
  
Brother of Jean-Francois Champollion

Influences
  
Jean-Francois Champollion

Name
  
Jacques Champollion-Figeac

Role
  
Jean-Francois Champollion's brother

Died
  
May 9, 1867, Fontainebleau, France

People also search for
  
Jean-Francois Champollion, Jacques Champollion, Jeanne Francoise Champollion

Influenced by
  
Jean-Francois Champollion

Siblings
  
Jean-Francois Champollion

Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac (5 October 1778 – 9 May 1867) was a French archaeologist, elder brother of Jean-François Champollion (decipherer of the Rosetta Stone).

Contents

Biography

He was born at Figeac in the département of Lot. He became professor of Greek and librarian at Grenoble. His research in Grenoble in 1803 revealed the existence of a Merovingian crypt under the church of St. Laurent. He was compelled to retire in 1816 on account of the part he had taken during the Hundred Days. He afterwards became keeper of manuscripts at the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris, and professor of palaeography at the École des Chartes. In 1850 he became librarian of the Château de Fontainebleau.

He was a correspondent, living abroad, of the Royal Institute of the Netherlands from 1832 to 1851.

Works

He edited several of his brother's works, and was also author of original works on philological and historical subjects, among which may be mentioned:

  • Antiquités de Grenoble (1807)
  • Nouvelles recherches sur les patois ou idiomes vulgaires de la France (1809)
  • Nouveaux éclaireissements sur la ville de Cataro, aujourd'hui Grenoble (1814)
  • Annales de Lagides (1819; supplement, 1821)
  • Chartes latines sur papyrus du VIe siècle de l'ère chrétienne.
  • L'Egypt ancienne et moderne (1840) Based on his brother's manuscript collections.
  • L'écriture démotique égyptienne (1843) Based on his brother's manuscript collections.
  • Traité élémentaire d'archeologie (2d ed. 1843)
  • Histoire des peuples anciens et modernes, l'Asie centrale, l'Inde et la Chine (1857)
  • Monographie du palais de Fontainebleau (1859–64)
  • Documents paléographiques relatifs à l'histoire des beaux-arts et des belles-lettres pendant le moyen âge (1868)
  • Son

    His son Aimé-Louis (1812-1894) became his father's assistant at the Bibliothèque Nationale, and besides a number of works on historical subjects wrote a biographical and bibliographical study of his family in Les Deux Champollion (Grenoble, 1887).

    Champollion was portrayed by Stuart Bunce in the 2005 BBC docudrama Egypt.

    References

    Jacques Joseph Champollion-Figeac Wikipedia


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