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Description
Witness the intense intellectual race between two rival geniuses to read the lost language of the pharaohs. For over a millennium, the majestic temples and tombs of ancient Egypt stood silent. The intricate hieroglyphs carved into their walls were considered magical symbols, completely unreadable by modern man. The key to this lost world emerged from the sands of the Nile in 1799 with the discovery of a heavy, dark slab of granodiorite: the Rosetta Stone. But finding the stone was only the beginning. What followed was one of the most intense, bitter, and brilliant intellectual rivalries in the history of science.This gripping historical narrative chronicles the race to decipher the phonetic secrets of the pharaohs. The author brings to life the two brilliant minds at the center of the storm: the English polymath Thomas Young, whose logical deductions laid the groundwork, and the obsessive, brilliant French linguist Jean-François Champollion, who ultimately cracked the code. You will dive into the complex politics of post-Napoleonic Europe, where decoding an ancient language became a matter of fierce national pride.Beyond the biographical drama, the book offers a fascinating look at the actual mechanics of linguistic decipherment. It demystifies the structure of hieroglyphs and explains exactly how Champollion used Coptic to bridge a gap across thousands of years. Uncover the dramatic story of how the voices of Ramses, Hatshepsut, and Cleopatra were finally rescued from the silence of antiquity.



