1790s in archaeology

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The decade of the 1790s in archaeology involved some significant events.

Explorations

  • 1799: Napoleon in Egypt: French troops occupy Egyptian territory.

Excavations

Finds

Publications

  • 1793: James Douglas - Nenia Britannica, or, A Sepulchral History of Great Britain, from the earliest period to its general conversion to Christianity (published complete), the first account of the excavation of an Anglo-Saxon site (in Kent)[1] with artefacts systematically described and illustrated.[2]
  • 1797: James Hutton, a Scotsman who has been called "the Father of Geology," publishes theories describing the earth as destroying and renewing itself in a never-ending cycle.
  • 1799: Vice President of the United States Thomas Jefferson, writing in Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 4, describes the bones of Megalonyx jeffersonii, an extinct ground sloth.

Other events

  • 1797: January 3 - Three of the stones making up Stonehenge fall due to heavy frosts.
  • 1798: December 10 - Some antiquities being shipped to England by Sir William Hamilton are lost in the wreck of HMS Colossus.

Births

Deaths

References

  1. Webster, Leslie (1986). "Anglo-Saxon England AD 4001100". In Longworth, Ian & Cherry, John (ed). Archaeology in Britain since 1945. London: British Museum. p. 121. ISBN 0-7141-2035-9. 
  2. Royal Academy of Arts (2007). Making History: Antiquarians in Britain 1707-2007. London. p. 99. 
Preceded by
1780s in archaeology
Archaeology timeline
1790s
Succeeded by
1800 in archaeology
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