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Reviews for An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary: With an Index of English Words, King List, an Geographical List with Indexes, List of Hieroglyphic Characters,, Vol. 1

 An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary magazine reviews

The average rating for An Egyptian Hieroglyphic Dictionary: With an Index of English Words, King List, an Geographical List with Indexes, List of Hieroglyphic Characters,, Vol. 1 based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.has a rating of 4 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2013-02-06 00:00:00
1978was given a rating of 5 stars Agnes J. Slavinski
The two volume Hieroglyphic Dictionary is still a very useful work. This massive work is well organized. You should buy BOTH volumes 1 and 2 in order to properly use the dictionary. Keep in mind that volume 2 contains the various indexes for both volumes and part of the huge dictionary of ancient Egyptian words and the index of all the English words. So you need both volumes! There are numerous very useful comments and insights into the ancient cultures of the Nile. Budge was an expert in Semitic languages and in Coptic. He was a talented and skilled linguist who could read the ancient Egyptian language as well, if not better than most scholars today. Many points of ancient Egyptian grammar and exact word meanings are unknown and much of what passes for "modern scholarship" is mere guesswork! It is interesting to note that people who can't read a word of ancient Egyptian have the audacity to criticize a profoundly erudite and talented linguist and translator of many ancient Semitic and ancient Egyptian text. After many, many years of study of almost every aspect of ancient Egypt culture, Budge abandoned the pure assertion that ancient Egypt was an "Oriental" or "Eastern culture". Based largely, I imagine, on Hegel's pure assertions that "The History of the World travels from East to West, for Europe is absolutely the end of History, Asia the beginning." These ideas have become part of European intellectual DOGMA. Africa is not a part of human history; Ancient Egypt belongs to Europe. This is pure DOGMA. Hegel's children are still among us. But on the other hand, after years of objective study of the language, religion, society and customs of the ancient Egyptians, Budge was led screaming and kicking, I might add, to the realization that the religion of the Egyptians was BLACK AFRICAN. The concept of the "ka" and the "ba" are found almost everywhere in Black Africa today! The language was a BLACK AFRICAN language and the customs were purely African. The ancient Egyptians were: "African Negroes" or "Nilotic Negroes" wrote Budge in several of his later works. In spite of the anti-African racism that we find in his earlier and even his later works, Budge rose above the strong prejudices of his time and followed the facts. The facts led to the heart of Africa, not to Asia. Budge seems to be thinking out aloud when he writes in the Introduction of Vol. 1 of Hieroglyphic Dictionary (lxviii)these words which led, in part, to his banishment from halls of western ACADEME: "no one who has worked at Egyptian can possibly doubt that there are many Semitic words in the language, or that many of the pronouns, some of the numbers, and some of the grammatical forms resemble those found in the Semitic languages. But even admitting all the similarities that Erman has claimed. it is still impossible to me to believe that Egyptian is a Semitic language fundamentally.There is, it is true, much in the Pyramid Texts that recalls points and details of Semitic Grammar,but after deducting all the triliteral roots, there still remains a very large number of words that are not Semitic, and were never invented by a Semitic people. These words are monosyllabic, and were invented by one of the oldest African(or Hamitic, if that word be preferred),peoples in the Valley of the Nile of whose written language we have any remains.These words are used to express fundamental relationships and feelings, and beliefs which are peculiarly African and are foreign in every particular to Semitic peoples. The primitive home of the people who invented these words lay far to the south of Egypt, and all that we know of the Predynastic Egyptians suggests that it was in the neighborhood of the Great Lakes, probably to the east of them". Even Champollion Le Jeune, the man who first deciphered ancient Egyptian, in his Grammaire Egyptienne(p.xix Introduction) says virtually the same thing. Like Champollion,Budge was a true scholar who followed the facts where ever those facts led. Many modern African scholars have confirmed that the language of ancient Egypt was a "typical" Black African language. For example Dr. Theophile Obenga(ORIGINE COMMUNE DE L'EGYPTIEN ANCIEN DU COPTE ET DES LANGUES NEGRO-AFRICAINES MODERNES) has proven the genetic linguistic relationship between the language spoken by the ancient Egyptians, Coptic and modern Black African languages. No competent linguist can demonstrate that the language of ancient Egypt has any genetic relationship to the Semitic languages....it can not be done!!! In fact, Dr. Theophile Obenga, a native speaker of Mbochi, Lingala and several other African languages, has put forth a new classification of African languages based on modern linguistics. No more "Hamito-Semitic" , "Afro-Asiatic" or "Afrasan" language families. When you study the language of ancient Egypt you study an ancient Black African language...Budge dared follow the truth-even if it led him outside of the Eurocentric white supremacy intellectual paradigm. Most Eurocentric scholars go along with the program-they place tenure,acceptance and prestige above scholarship. The world of Western scholarship can sometimes be too narrow , too petty and too deeply rooted in its religious,cultural and racial dogmas. Ethnocentrism seems to almost always distort scholarship. Budge's two volume dictionary is often slandered because of his system of transliteration and the so-called "advances" made in understanding and translating the language of ancient Nile Valley Egypto-Nubian civilizations. Modern African scholars such as Theophile Obenga, Cheikh Anta Diop, Babacar Sall and a host of others have demonstrated time and time again that the language of "Ancient Egypt" can be only fully understand within its Black African social, religious, ethnic and cultural contexts. The old Greenberg classification of African languages must be rejected in the face of the works of Obenga. It is now understood that the language of ancient Egypt can not be fully understood outside of its Negro African cultural, ethnic, social and religious context. This huge two volume dictionary would be a welcomed addition to any serious student of the ancient language of Kmt(Egypt).
Review # 2 was written on 2020-03-14 00:00:00
1978was given a rating of 3 stars Rocco Racano
My colleague, who is an actual Egyptologist says, this dictionary is very outdated, full of mistakes, and can't be used today in all seriousness. There are other modern dictionaries which are very good. But this one is hilarious to explore, I enjoy it.


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