From a mummy on board the Titanic to the pyramids’ alignment with the stars, from psychoactive mushrooms to the lost realm of Atlantis: alternative interpretations of ancient Egypt, often summarised as ‘alternative Egyptology’, have always focused on subjects that others shunned. Ever since the birth of scholarly Egyptology with the decipherment of the hieroglyphic script two hundred years ago, alternative interpretations and imaginative theories have flourished alongside it. They intertwined with egalitarian and spiritual tendencies in society during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, when ancient Egypt inspired countless mediums, artists, and movements from freemasonry to the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn. More recently alternative interpretations have inspired comic-book authors and nationalist Chinese bloggers.
It would be a mistake, however, for academics to simply view these alternative theories as fantasies that are best ignored. Their lasting popular impact needs to be assessed and (publicly) addressed by Egyptology, but they may in fact also open up fresh perspectives for research. The contributors to this volume critically explore various aspects of ‘alternative Egyptology’, assessing its impact on society and scholarship, and finding ways for Egyptology to relate to it.
Paperback ISBN: 9789464261615 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464261622 | Imprint: Sidestone Press | Format: 182x257mm | 182 pp. | Language: English | 20 illus. (bw) | 50 illus. (fc) | Keywords: early Egyptology; Egyptosophy; Egyptomania; Orion correlation theory; psychoactive plants, Egypt in comic books and science fiction; Sino-Egyptian alternative history; freemasonry | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/rho5a4ij
ntroduction
Ben van den BerckenLifting the Veil of Isis: Egyptian Reception and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
Caroline Tully‘Someone Who Has Power and Who Understands’: Egyptology, Egyptosophy and the ‘Truth’ about Ancient Egypt
Jasmine DayAleister Crowley’s Egypt: The Stele of Revealing
Maiken Mosleth KingMeasurement Standards and Double Standards: Reassessing Charles Piazzi Smyth’s Egyptological Reputation
Daniel PotterThe Orion Correlation Theory: Past, Present, and Future?
Willem van HaarlemHigh Times in Ancient Egypt
Andrea SinclairBatman and the Book of the Dead: Alternative Egyptology or ‘Just for Fun’?
Arnaud QuertinmontSphinxes of Mars: Science, Fiction, and Nineteenth-Century Ancient Aliens
Eleanor DobsonDr Paul Schliemann: Reality or Fake News?
Jean-Pierre PätznickWas Narmer a Chinese emperor? Alternative History of Ancient Egypt in China
Tian TianThe Occult Egyptian Mural Discovered in a Brazilian Freemasons’ Temple
Thomas Henrique de Toledo StellaThe Royal Son of the Sun: Christian Egyptosophy and Victorian Egyptology in the Egyptian Romances of H. Rider Haggard
Simon MagusThe Pillar of Fire and the Sea of Reeds: Identifying the Locations along the Route of the Exodus
Huub PragtEpilogue
Willem van Haarlem
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