ANNUAL KORSYN LECTURE IN-Person LECTURE SATURDAY, March 29 at 3:30 pm
EST PENN MUSEUM, Classroom L2 Speaker: Dr. Kathleen Sheppard LECTURE
TOPIC: AMELIA EDWARDS’ UNITED STATES LECTURE TOUR AND THE BEGINNINGS
OF AMERICAN EGYPTOLOGY ABSTRACT: On a cold November evening in 1889,
AMELIA EDWARDS TOOK THE STAGE AT THE BROOKLYN ACADEMY OF MUSIC IN
BROOKLYN, New York. The LECTURE SHE GAVE TO 2,400 people that night,
entitled “The buried cities of Ancient Egypt,” was a success. Over
the next four months, EDWARDS GAVE OVER 100 LECTURES ALL OVER THE
NORTHEASTERN US, and as far West as Chicago and Minneapolis, exciting
interest in Egypt everywhere she went. Alongside her every step of the
way was her secretary, assistant, hair and makeup artist, and friend,
Kate Bradbury. Often we talk about EGYPTOLOGY IN THE US BEGINNING IN
CHICAGO WITH THE CAIRO EXHIBIT ON THE MIDWAY AT THE WORLD COLUMBIAN
EXHIBITION IN 1892. Or we say interest in Egypt began when the
University of Chicago was founded, with a department and a museum
dedicated to the subject, in 1895. Others place importance in the
earlier collections, like the Abbott Collection in New York as early
as the 1860s. However, using Bradbury’s letters home during the
tour, newspaper reports, EDWARDS’ LECTURES, and other
contemporaneous materials, I argue that it wasn’t wealthy men who
started building Egyptological institutions in the US. Instead, the
catalyst for widespread public interest in EGYPTOLOGY IN THE UNITED
STATES WAS THE INITIAL ENCOUNTERS WITH ANCIENT EGYPT MADE POSSIBLE BY
A WOMEN-led LECTURE TOUR IN THE WINTER OF 1889-90. Obviously these
women did not travel a thousand miles on the Hudson River, but they
easily traversed that distance in the time they were in the US,
speaking to and meeting with influential people across the country.
This presentation will outline the journey of AMELIA EDWARDS AND KATE
BRADBURY AND THE IMPACT THEY HAD ON THE EGYPTOLOGY IN THE US. Speaker
Bio: Dr. Kathleen Sheppard is a Professor in the History and Political
Science department at Missouri S&T in Rolla, Missouri. She earned her
MA in Egyptian Archaeology at University College London in 2002, and
her PhD in History of Science from the University of Oklahoma in 2010.
Her first book was a scientific biography of Margaret Alice Murray
(2013) that focused on Murray’s life and career, both in and out of
EGYPTOLOGY. She has spent her whole career telling the stories of
women in EGYPTOLOGY. Her most recent book, Women in the Valley of the
Kings: The Untold Story of Women Egyptologists in the Gilded Age (St.
Martins Press, 2024) is a grand retelling of the history of EGYPTOLOGY
THROUGH THE WORK THAT WOMEN DID. ****************** LECTURES ARE FREE
TO ARCE MEMBERS, $7 for University of Pennsylvania Museum Members and
UPenn Staff and Faculty, $5 for Students with ID, and $10 for the
general public. Light refreshments served starting at 3pm.
****************** The AMERICAN RESEARCH CENTER IN EGYPT (ARCE) is a
private, nonprofit organization founded in 1948 by a consortium of
educational and cultural institutions to support research on all
aspects of Egyptian history and culture, foster broader knowledge
among the general public, and strengthen AMERICAN-Egyptian cultural
ties. The ARCE Pennsylvania Chapter (ARCE-PA) is the local branch of
the national institution. We host monthly events including scholarly
LECTURES, Egyptian-themed workshops, social events, and guided tours
of the PENN MUSEUM’s Egyptian galleries. For more information or to
learn about the perks of membership, please send an e-mail to
info@arce-pa.org, or visit our website at www.arce-pa.org.
music
95
Views
30/03/2025 Last update