
James Breasted in Chicago, 1928.
'James Henry Breasted' (
August 27 1865–
December 2,
1935) was born in
Rockford, Illinois and was an
archaeologist and
historian. He was educated at
North Central College (then North-Western College) (
1888), the
Chicago Theological Seminary,
Yale University (MA
1891) and the
University of Berlin (PhD
1894). He was the first American citizen to obtain a PhD in
Egyptology. Breasted was in the forefront of the generation of archeologist-historians who broadened the idea of Western Civilization to include the entire Near East in Europe's cultural roots. Breasted coined the term
Fertile Crescent to describe the area from Egypt to Mesopotamia.
He became an instructor at the
University of Chicago in
1894 and was appointed Professor of Egyptology and Oriental History at in
1905 (the first such chair in the United States). In
1901, he was appointed director of the Haskell Oriental Museum, forerunner of the Oriental Institute, which had opened at the University of Chicago in 1896. Though the Haskell Oriental Museum contained works of art from both the Near East and the Far East, his principal interest was in Egypt; he began to work on a compilation of all the extant
hieroglyphic inscriptions, which was published in
1906 as ''Ancient Records of Egypt'', which remains an important collection of translated texts; as Peter A. Piccione wrote in the preface to its 2001 reprint, it "still contains certain texts and inscriptions that have not been retranslated since that time."
In
1919, funding was obtained from
John D. Rockefeller for the
Oriental Institute of Chicago, under whose auspices Breasted headed the University’s first archaeological survey of Egypt. In
1923 he was elected a member of the
National Academy of Sciences. He died in 1935 from
pneumonia, while returning from a trip to
Egypt. He is buried in Greenwood cemetery,
Rockford, Illinois. His grave site is marked with a large marble
obelisk, which was a gift from the Egyptian government.
Bibliography
★
A History of Egypt from the Earliest Times to the Persian Conquest, , , , Charles Scribner's Sons, 1905,
★
Ancient Records of Egypt: Historical Documents from the Earliest Times to the Persian Conquest, collected, edited, and translated, with Commentary, , , , University of Chicago Press, 1906–1907,
★
Development of Religion and Thought in Ancient Egypt: Lectures delivered on the Morse Foundation at Union Theological Seminary, , , , Charles Scribner's Sons, 1912,
★
Oriental Forerunners of Byzantine Painting (University of Chicago Oriental Institute Publications; 1), , , , University of Chicago Press, 1924,
★
The Conquest of Civilization, , , , Harper and Brothers, 1926,
★
The Dawn of Conscience, , , , Charles Scribner's Sons, 1933,
★
Egyptian Servant Statues (Bollingen Series; XIII), , , , Pantheon Books, 1948,
★
The 1905–1907 Breasted Expeditions to Egypt and the Sudan: A Photographic Study, , , , University of Chicago Press, 1975,
Further reading
★
Pioneer to the Past: The Story of James Henry Breasted, Archaeologist, , Charles, Breasted, University of Chicago Press, 1977, ISBN 0226071863 (paperback)
★