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Joseph Hekekyan

Joseph Hekekyan Bey (1807, Istanbul – 1875), was an Armenian administrator, archaeologist and civil engineer, who lived most of his life in Egypt.[1][2]

Portrait of Joseph Hekekyan

Early life and education edit

Joseph Hekekyan was born in 1807 in Constantinople and raised in an Armenian Catholic family.[3] His father, Michirdiz H., was an interpreter for Mohamed Ali Pasha, and in 1817 was able to get him a state-sponsored scholarship to Stonyhurst College in Lancashire, England where he did various technical trades.[3] There he studied English and Latin, after which he studied civil engineering and hydraulics.[4][5] He also studied steam engines, machinery, hydraulics, surveying, and irrigation at Bramah's Engineering Factory in Pimlico as well as spinning and weaving techniques at some factories until being called back to Egypt in 1830.[6] After returning to Egypt, Hekekyan became active in the educational and industrial reform.[7] He was appointed Chief Overseer, trained students, traveled to the new Polytechnic engineering school in Bulaq, and contributed to the establishment of the Egyptian School in Paris.[8]

Early career edit

Between 1834 and 1837 he was the director of the Polytechnic School in Cairo.[3] There, he became technical advisor for the government and then a member of Egypt's bureaucratic elite during Muhammad Ali's reign.[3][9] This position mostly included being a translator in education and government foreign affairs, as well as having close relations with European consuls.[10] With being involved in Europe so much, Hekekyan adopted the European stereotype and forgot his native Turkish culture.[11] He started wearing gloves, stockings, and grew a large moustache.[11] These changes led to him being called an "English infidel" by his Egyptian colleagues but an "exceptional Europeanized Oriental" by westerners.[12] In 1836, Hekekyan co founded the Egyptian Society in Cairo which replaced the Institut d’Égypte.[13] It was used as a meeting place for Europeans, particularly British, traveling through Egypt.[13][14]

In the 1840s, he was tasked by the government with designing and building a number of model villages on the estates of the royal family which like the example of the village of Gezayye were arranged on a street grid by order of importance, starting with the owner’s Manor house and diwan/duwwar overlooking the road, and then rows of “well to do” sheikhs and merchants’ houses, followed by rows of “middling fellahs’” houses, and then huts for a “low class” of fellahs. In between the Manor house and the other houses, was a row of commercial buildings; shops, a mosque, an inn, and a house of prostitution.[15] Hekekyan imported the concept of model villages from Britain where he was educated, to Egypt, and it became widely established by the late nineteenth century. These model villages launched the paradigm of patronizing top-down housing for the masses knows as 'izbas.[15] When Muhammad Ali's reign in Egypt ended, he was concerned for his family's safety as well as having problems from severe ophthalmia which led him to retire in 1850.[16][2]

Archaeology career edit

Hekekyan directed excavations at the ruins of Memphis in Mit Rahina, Giza in 1852 and 1854, financed by the Egyptian government. He additionally directed excavations at Heliopolis which took four years of excavation, and was abandoned in 1852.[17] This excavation financed by the Royal Society of London and the Ottoman-Egyptian government of Abbas Pasha.[17][2] The primary focus of these excavations were to measure the rise of the Nile river and its water table.[18] Although this was the primary focus, Hekekyan was very ambitious and this led to him discovering parts of at least thirteen colossal statues and segments of in-situ buildings.[18] He composed all of his findings and observations at these sites into letters, reports, sketches, and maps which he sent to his colleague Leonard Horner, the president of the Geological Society of London and a pioneer of the study of soil stratification.[19][2] In these objects sent to Horner, Hekekyan included his daily observations, work progress, soil information, and water levels of the Nile river.[20] Leonard Horner would then use Hekekyan's findings to analyze the annual increase Nile flood sediments.[21][22] Even though Hekekyan's research got little support, his work for Horner was substantial.[23] Leonard Horner eventually was able to predict that civilized humans had lived in Egypt for 13,371 years due to all of Hekekyan's findings.[24]Their excavations were the first to use geological stratigraphy in Egypt or elsewhere. [25][26] The idea of stratigraphy was entirely new to Egyptology, where it was used to date artefacts, historical records, and inscriptions from the past.[27] In 1863, Hekekyan wrote a book titled A Treatise on the Chronology of Siriadic Monuments.[28] His book introduced geo-astronomy and suggested that Ancient Egyptian monuments were built with measurements related to the movement of the star Sirius.[28] Also in the book, Hekekyan adopted the French view that the Egyptians who built their ancient monuments were far more skilled than their modern descendants.[28] Hekekyan's excavations were more geological than archaeological, but they were crucial for the history of Memphis and Heliopolis, and were without doubt the first "stratified" excavations carried out in Egypt thanks to Hekekyan's detailed journals and sketches.[29][2] His methods can be compared to what is used in archaeology today in the UK and elsewhere.[2]

Writings edit

  • Notes on the Eastern desert of Egypt, from Gebel Afret, by the ancient porphyry quarries of Gebel Khan, Near to the old station of Gebel Gir - with a brief account of the ruins at Gebel Khan - by Hekekyan bey - Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, November 1848, pp 584–587
  • A treatise on the chronology of siriardic monuments demonstrated that the Egyptian dynasties of Manetho are records of astrological Nile observations which have been continued to the present time, by Hekekyan Bey C.E. of Constantinople - formely in the Egyptian service (for private circulation) London, printed by Taglar and Francis 1863, I vol, 160 pp
  • Hekekyan, “Journals 1851 - 1854, Folio 355, British Library Add Ms. 37448-71.
  • Joseph Hekekyan Bey, Collections. The British Museum.

Further reading edit

  • Ahmed Abdelrehim Moustafa, "'Asr Hekekyan".Cairo: General Egyptian Book Organisation. 1990.
  • Darrell I. Dykstra, Joseph Hekekyan and the Egyptian School in Paris, The Armenian Review (Boston, USA), 1982 N#35, pp 165–182
  • List of Egyptian Architects

References edit

  1. ^ "Joseph Hekekyan Bey". British Museum. Retrieved 2023-01-07.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Egyptian Archaeology 37 by TheEES - Issuu". issuu.com. Retrieved 2023-04-22.
  3. ^ a b c d Bierbrier, Morris L. (2012). Who Was Who in Egyptology (4th ed.). 3 Doughty Mews, London: The Egypt Exploration Society. p. 251. ISBN 978-0-85698-207-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  4. ^ Moustafa, Ahmed Abdelrehim (1990). 'Asr Hekekyan (Hekekyan's Era) (in Arabic). Cairo: General Egyptian Book Organistaion. pp. 74–75.
  5. ^ Naunton, Chris (2020). Egyptologists' Notebook. Los Angeles: Getty Publications. p. 150. ISBN 978-1-60606-676-8.
  6. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 203. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  7. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 203. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  8. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 203–204. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  9. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 204. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  10. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 204. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  11. ^ a b Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 204. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  12. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 205. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  13. ^ a b Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 205. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  14. ^ Gold, Meira (2022). "British Egyptology (1822-1882)". UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology: 8.
  15. ^ a b Shawkat, Yahia (2020). Egypt's Housing Crisis: The Shaping of Urban Space. Cairo and New York: AUC Press. pp. 87–88.
  16. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 205. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  17. ^ a b Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 198, 206. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  18. ^ a b Smith, H. S.; Jeffreys, D. G. (1985). "The Survey of Memphis, 1983". The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 71: 8. doi:10.2307/3821707. ISSN 0307-5133.
  19. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 198, 206. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  20. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 208. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  21. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 198, 206. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  22. ^ Gold, Meira (2022). "British Egyptology (1822-1882)". UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology: 7.
  23. ^ Gold, Meira (2022). "British Egyptology (1822-1882)". UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology: 7.
  24. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 198, 206. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  25. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 198, 206. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  26. ^ Gold, Meira (2022). "British Egyptology (1822-1882)". UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology: 7.
  27. ^ Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 208. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  28. ^ a b c Gold, Meira (2019). "Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man, 1847–1863". History of Science. 57 (2): 213. doi:10.1177/0073275318795944. ISSN 0073-2753.
  29. ^ Pasquali, Stéphane (January 2012). "The Survey of Memphis, VII: The Hekekyan Papers and other Sources for the Survey of Memphis". The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. 98 (1): 328–331. doi:10.1177/030751331209800127. ISSN 0307-5133. S2CID 220269407.

joseph, hekekyan, 1807, istanbul, 1875, armenian, administrator, archaeologist, civil, engineer, lived, most, life, egypt, portrait, contents, early, life, education, early, career, archaeology, career, writings, further, reading, referencesearly, life, educat. Joseph Hekekyan Bey 1807 Istanbul 1875 was an Armenian administrator archaeologist and civil engineer who lived most of his life in Egypt 1 2 Portrait of Joseph Hekekyan Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Early career 3 Archaeology career 4 Writings 5 Further reading 6 ReferencesEarly life and education editJoseph Hekekyan was born in 1807 in Constantinople and raised in an Armenian Catholic family 3 His father Michirdiz H was an interpreter for Mohamed Ali Pasha and in 1817 was able to get him a state sponsored scholarship to Stonyhurst College in Lancashire England where he did various technical trades 3 There he studied English and Latin after which he studied civil engineering and hydraulics 4 5 He also studied steam engines machinery hydraulics surveying and irrigation at Bramah s Engineering Factory in Pimlico as well as spinning and weaving techniques at some factories until being called back to Egypt in 1830 6 After returning to Egypt Hekekyan became active in the educational and industrial reform 7 He was appointed Chief Overseer trained students traveled to the new Polytechnic engineering school in Bulaq and contributed to the establishment of the Egyptian School in Paris 8 Early career editBetween 1834 and 1837 he was the director of the Polytechnic School in Cairo 3 There he became technical advisor for the government and then a member of Egypt s bureaucratic elite during Muhammad Ali s reign 3 9 This position mostly included being a translator in education and government foreign affairs as well as having close relations with European consuls 10 With being involved in Europe so much Hekekyan adopted the European stereotype and forgot his native Turkish culture 11 He started wearing gloves stockings and grew a large moustache 11 These changes led to him being called an English infidel by his Egyptian colleagues but an exceptional Europeanized Oriental by westerners 12 In 1836 Hekekyan co founded the Egyptian Society in Cairo which replaced the Institut d Egypte 13 It was used as a meeting place for Europeans particularly British traveling through Egypt 13 14 In the 1840s he was tasked by the government with designing and building a number of model villages on the estates of the royal family which like the example of the village of Gezayye were arranged on a street grid by order of importance starting with the owner s Manor house and diwan duwwar overlooking the road and then rows of well to do sheikhs and merchants houses followed by rows of middling fellahs houses and then huts for a low class of fellahs In between the Manor house and the other houses was a row of commercial buildings shops a mosque an inn and a house of prostitution 15 Hekekyan imported the concept of model villages from Britain where he was educated to Egypt and it became widely established by the late nineteenth century These model villages launched the paradigm of patronizing top down housing for the masses knows as izbas 15 When Muhammad Ali s reign in Egypt ended he was concerned for his family s safety as well as having problems from severe ophthalmia which led him to retire in 1850 16 2 Archaeology career editHekekyan directed excavations at the ruins of Memphis in Mit Rahina Giza in 1852 and 1854 financed by the Egyptian government He additionally directed excavations at Heliopolis which took four years of excavation and was abandoned in 1852 17 This excavation financed by the Royal Society of London and the Ottoman Egyptian government of Abbas Pasha 17 2 The primary focus of these excavations were to measure the rise of the Nile river and its water table 18 Although this was the primary focus Hekekyan was very ambitious and this led to him discovering parts of at least thirteen colossal statues and segments of in situ buildings 18 He composed all of his findings and observations at these sites into letters reports sketches and maps which he sent to his colleague Leonard Horner the president of the Geological Society of London and a pioneer of the study of soil stratification 19 2 In these objects sent to Horner Hekekyan included his daily observations work progress soil information and water levels of the Nile river 20 Leonard Horner would then use Hekekyan s findings to analyze the annual increase Nile flood sediments 21 22 Even though Hekekyan s research got little support his work for Horner was substantial 23 Leonard Horner eventually was able to predict that civilized humans had lived in Egypt for 13 371 years due to all of Hekekyan s findings 24 Their excavations were the first to use geological stratigraphy in Egypt or elsewhere 25 26 The idea of stratigraphy was entirely new to Egyptology where it was used to date artefacts historical records and inscriptions from the past 27 In 1863 Hekekyan wrote a book titled A Treatise on the Chronology of Siriadic Monuments 28 His book introduced geo astronomy and suggested that Ancient Egyptian monuments were built with measurements related to the movement of the star Sirius 28 Also in the book Hekekyan adopted the French view that the Egyptians who built their ancient monuments were far more skilled than their modern descendants 28 Hekekyan s excavations were more geological than archaeological but they were crucial for the history of Memphis and Heliopolis and were without doubt the first stratified excavations carried out in Egypt thanks to Hekekyan s detailed journals and sketches 29 2 His methods can be compared to what is used in archaeology today in the UK and elsewhere 2 Writings editNotes on the Eastern desert of Egypt from Gebel Afret by the ancient porphyry quarries of Gebel Khan Near to the old station of Gebel Gir with a brief account of the ruins at Gebel Khan by Hekekyan bey Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal November 1848 pp 584 587 A treatise on the chronology of siriardic monuments demonstrated that the Egyptian dynasties of Manetho are records of astrological Nile observations which have been continued to the present time by Hekekyan Bey C E of Constantinople formely in the Egyptian service for private circulation London printed by Taglar and Francis 1863 I vol 160 pp Hekekyan Journals 1851 1854 Folio 355 British Library Add Ms 37448 71 Joseph Hekekyan Bey Collections The British Museum Further reading editAhmed Abdelrehim Moustafa Asr Hekekyan Cairo General Egyptian Book Organisation 1990 Darrell I Dykstra Joseph Hekekyan and the Egyptian School in Paris The Armenian Review Boston USA 1982 N 35 pp 165 182 List of Egyptian ArchitectsReferences edit Joseph Hekekyan Bey British Museum Retrieved 2023 01 07 a b c d e f Egyptian Archaeology 37 by TheEES Issuu issuu com Retrieved 2023 04 22 a b c d Bierbrier Morris L 2012 Who Was Who in Egyptology 4th ed 3 Doughty Mews London The Egypt Exploration Society p 251 ISBN 978 0 85698 207 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location link Moustafa Ahmed Abdelrehim 1990 Asr Hekekyan Hekekyan s Era in Arabic Cairo General Egyptian Book Organistaion pp 74 75 Naunton Chris 2020 Egyptologists Notebook Los Angeles Getty Publications p 150 ISBN 978 1 60606 676 8 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 203 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 203 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 203 204 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 204 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 204 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 a b Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 204 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 205 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 a b Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 205 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2022 British Egyptology 1822 1882 UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 8 a b Shawkat Yahia 2020 Egypt s Housing Crisis The Shaping of Urban Space Cairo and New York AUC Press pp 87 88 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 205 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 a b Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 198 206 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 a b Smith H S Jeffreys D G 1985 The Survey of Memphis 1983 The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 71 8 doi 10 2307 3821707 ISSN 0307 5133 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 198 206 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 208 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 198 206 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2022 British Egyptology 1822 1882 UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 7 Gold Meira 2022 British Egyptology 1822 1882 UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 7 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 198 206 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 198 206 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Gold Meira 2022 British Egyptology 1822 1882 UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology 7 Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 208 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 a b c Gold Meira 2019 Ancient Egypt and the geological antiquity of man 1847 1863 History of Science 57 2 213 doi 10 1177 0073275318795944 ISSN 0073 2753 Pasquali Stephane January 2012 The Survey of Memphis VII The Hekekyan Papers and other Sources for the Survey of Memphis The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology 98 1 328 331 doi 10 1177 030751331209800127 ISSN 0307 5133 S2CID 220269407 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Hekekyan amp oldid 1197821866, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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