Derived from authentic papyri, these captivating stories include "The King of Joppa," recounting the capture of an enemy fortress; the ill-fated pursuit of a fair lady in "The Doomed Prince"; a quest for supernatural powers in "Setna and the Magic Book"; and others. Offers fascinating insights on each story's historical significance.
Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie FRS, known as Flinders Petrie, was an English Egyptologist and a pioneer of systematic methodology in archaeology. He held the first chair of Egyptology in the United Kingdom, and excavated at many of the most important archaeological sites in Egypt, such as Naukratis, Tanis, Abydos and Amarna. Some consider his most famous discovery to be that of the Merneptah Stele. Petrie developed the system of dating layers based on pottery and ceramic findings.
A lot of the stories are incomplete and it would be really hard to appreciate them without the commentary afterwards. He does a good job analyzing and explaining what these stories teach us about the people of ancient times.
My favorite story was the one where the guy goes to this enchanted island and meets the great serpent who insists the man tell him something he's never heard before.
My favorite of the notes/commentary portion was after the first story. This is partly because the story itself seemed so random: it's actually just a fragment of a story about this king guy and his sons who are telling him a bunch of stories at a party or something. The author did a great job setting up the historical and cultural context behind the story. And you get a glimpse of how these people moved as a culture and how they thought about the world.
Sir William Matthew Flinders Petrie compiles an anthology of stories from early ancient Egyptian papyri (4th to 12th dynasties [or 2613BCE to 1802BCE]). In the first series, each of the four chapters ("Tales of the Magicians", "The Peasant and the Workman", "The Shipwrecked Sailor", and "The Adventures of Sanhat") begins with the core story, and each is concluded with remarks that outline a brief historical context of the tale's historical era and recent scholarship on extant copies of the story. I listened to the Livrivox reading by Timothy Ferguson. Some readers unfamiliar with Ancient Egyptian history might find the historical detail overwhelming, while other more familiar readers should be satisfied. Most memorable for me was relative sophistication of the stories, all of which vary in completion, which may evidence an even longer history of storytelling in world cultures.
The importance of this was a very old story of ancient Egyptian Pharaonic era stage and history, which are numerous stories of a social life in Egypt at that time
My first and biggest complaint is that there just aren’t enough tails in this book, but that is the falt of the pitiless deserts of Egypt, and not of the translator. This book is very fun and informative, but the copy I read had some irregularities in the printing that made it a bit confusing at times.
This was a fascinating read on the popular stories during the 5th dynasty of the Egyptian empire. Their fascination with all things magic made me think of Moses and his adventures with the Egyptian magicians.
The book is very short it starts with ancient Egyptian tales that talks about mainly legends, then tales that describes adventures and lastly the most advanced form of literature which is literature that talks about characters. the writer saved the best for the end which was the story of Senhu which describes in great details the life of Senhu who left Egypt during troubling times to Palestine where was welcomed from the rolyals there and received important posts afterwards he grew very old and he wanted to get buried in his home country he returned to Egypt and was welcomed by the royals also at that time...the book is also beneficial because the writer gives after each tale a note that explains the tale and its context
“Egyptian Tales” A glimpse into the social structure and belief system of people who lived thousands of years ago in one of the most advanced civilizations on this planet (at that time) through stories of myths and magic. The commentaries presented in this book are essential for a deeper understanding of these tales because they put everything in context. Who could imagine that at one time Egypt was a matriarchal society or that certain customs over time became law of the land and are practiced to this day in many countries in Africa? The reader learns all of this while being awed by stories of magic. Toy crocodiles become real, devouring your enemies and turning into toys again. Fascinating.
Written towards those with more than your average history of ancient Egypt in mind, nonetheless appears to be faithful translations of some truly ancient stories. Commentaries do a great job pointing out historical trends in Egyptian storytelling, and applying these thoughts to storytelling in general. Would have preferred a little more historical context and background to the stories, and many translated passages may be too literal, and some modern interpretation to the translations (even as sides) may have made the narratives a little more palatable for discussion.
These 3 tales with long commentaries by the author gives the reader a glimpse into the distant past of ancient Egypt. The writing style is simple but deeply symbolic detailing a belief in magic and many the gods they believed in then. One story is a rags to riches account of a man who started out with nothing but got connected to a generous benefactor who gave him lands and riches and all because he was a good person. I found Petries commentaries a bit stuffy and long rambling on about the background information too much. But okay for this anyway.
🔻 Genre: Short Ancient Egyptian tales (fiction). ✔️Published in 1913 (second edition) . 👁 Point of view: First and third persons. 🔺My review: An interesting collection of very short and authentic ancient Egyptian stories of bravery, magic, love, et cetera.
🖋 The writing style: Very formal in the analyses. 🗝 What I learned: The ancient Egyptians had some good myth-type stories, some written with true events as the inspiration.
📌 Would I read this again? Maybe not. 🤔 My rating 🌟🌟🌟 🟣 Media form: Kindle version.