Georg Steindorff

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Georg Steindorff (November 12, 1861, Dessau-August 28, 1951, North Hollywood, California) was a German Egyptologist.

[edit] Life

Georg Steindorff was a graduate of the Egyptology seminars of the University of Göttingen. He earned a doctorate in 1884 with a linguistic dissertation on Coptic noun forms. In 1893, the University of Leipzig appointed him to its chair for Egyptology, which had existed since 1870 and had previously been held by Georg Ebers. The Egyptian collection was founded by the archaeologist Gustaf Seyffarth, but Steindorff built the small training collection that was left to him into a true museum. On his research trips to Egypt he acquired household and grave funishings and also small-format artworks. He also brought larger finds from excavations back to Leipzig with him (for example the limestone head of Queen Nefertiti) with the permission of the then French-run Antiquities Service.

Of particular importance are Steindorff's excavations in Giza, Qau, and Aniba between 1903 and 1931. The Egyptian Museum possesses many objects that were discovers on these expeditions. After his retirement in 1934, Steindorff lived another four years in Leipzig before emigrating to the United States in 1939, to avoid persecution as a Jew in Nazi Germany.

Georg Steindorff was married with Elise Oppenheimer, sister of Franz Oppenheimer.

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This article incorporates text translated from the corresponding German Wikipedia article as of 9 July 2006.

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