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  1. 1. Juni 1995 · Flinders Petrie. : Flinders Petrie has been called the “Father of Modern Egyptology”—and indeed he is one of the pioneers of modern archaeological methods. This fascinating biography of Petrie was first published to high acclaim in England in 1985. Margaret S. Drower, a student of Petrie’s in the early 1930s, traces his life from his ...

  2. Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie, FRS (Charlton, 3 de junio de 1853 – Jerusalén, 28 de julio de 1942) fue un importante egiptólogo británico, pionero en la utilización de un método sistemático en el estudio arqueológico. Ocupó la primera cátedra de Egiptología en el Reino Unido, y realizó excavaciones en muchos de los puntos arqueológicos más importantes de Egipto, como ...

  3. 16. Mai 2010 · From the remains in Naqada, Petrie measured skeletons and skulls and reported back to the Anthropometric Laboratory that he had found 'peculiarities' such as 'small hook noses, & strong bones' and 'not a single object in their cemetery or town is in the least like any Egyptian product' (Flinders Petrie, Nagada Upper Egypt, to Karl Pearson, London, 1 February 1895, transcript in the hand of ...

  4. Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie, FRS [1] ( 3 de juny del 1853 – 28 de juliol del 1942 ), habitualment conegut com a Flinders Petrie, fou un egiptòleg britànic, pioner en la utilització d'un mètode sistemàtic en l'estudi arqueològic i en la preservació dels artefactes. Fou titular de la primera càtedra d' egiptologia al Regne Unit ...

  5. www.world-archaeology.com › great-discoveries › petrie-at-naqadaPetrie at Naqada - World Archaeology

    28. Mai 2012 · Flinders Petrie, an established Egyptologist, excavated three prehistoric sites in Egypt for the Egypt Exploration Fund during the 1890s: Naqada and Ballos (or Abadiya) in 1894-1895 and Diospolis Parva (or Hu) in 1898-1899. All three contributed to Petrie’s revolutionary breakthrough in prehistoric dating, but the most important was Naqada ...

  6. complexities." Sir R. E. M. Wheeler, "Adventure and Flinders Petrie," in Antiquity 27 (1953.) Petrie died during the Second World War so that although his passing was recorded by both learned journals and the press, it did not receive the attention that would un-doubtedly have been accorded it in peaceful and less difficult times. Much has been

  7. William Matthew Flinders Petrie, commonly known as Flinders Petrie, was a British Egyptologist and Archaeologist. Born in 1853 and educated privately at home, he first travelled to Egypt in 1880 and gained prominence for pioneering multiple revolutionary techniques in his field (Stewart-Peters, 2014, 5908).