1821 in archaeology
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Template:Short description Template:Year nav topic4 The year 1821 in archaeology involved some significant events.
Explorations
- October - John Gardner Wilkinson begins a twelve-year stay in Egypt, surveying historical sites.
Excavations
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Publications
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Finds
- 'Gallagh Man', an Iron Age bog body, is found in County Galway, Ireland.[1]
Awards
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Miscellaneous
- "Egyptian Hall" in London displays artifacts from Ancient Egypt brought to the United Kingdom by Giovanni Battista Belzoni. The Philae obelisk is landed in England in December.
- While not specifically the year 1821, this time period is when one of the most significant categorical discoveries of archaeology was named. Christian Thomsen, a Danish archaeologist, developed the three age system to date objects in museums. These three ages were the "Stone Age," "Bronze Age," and "Iron Age."
- While not specifically the year 1821, this time period is when one of the most significant findings regarding time and dating archaeological findings was discovered. Boucher de Perthes established a much deeper sense of time than what James Usher had previously established. Perthes determined that the world was significantly older than 4004 BC and thus gave archaeology a deeper, more realistic time frame to work with.
Births
- June 21, 1821- The birth of Ephraim George Squier, co-author of "Ancient Monuments of the Mississippi Valley" along with Edwin Hamilton Davis. [2]
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Deaths
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See also
References
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