Book contents
- A History of World Egyptology
- A History of World Egyptology
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- A Note on Academic Titles
- Abbreviations and Conventions Used in Text
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Prehistory of Egyptology
- Chapter 2 Egypt
- Chapter 3 France
- Chapter 4 The British Isles
- Chapter 5 The Netherlands
- Chapter 6 Belgium
- Chapter 7 The Nordic Countries
- Chapter 8 Prussia and Germany
- Chapter 9 The Empire of Austria-Hungary and the Republic of Austria
- Chapter 10 Switzerland
- Chapter 11 Hungary
- Chapter 12 Czechoslovakia
- Chapter 13 Poland
- Chapter 14 Russia
- Chapter 15 Italy
- Chapter 16 Spain
- Chapter 17 United States of America
- Chapter 18 Canada
- Chapter 19 Japan
- Chapter 20 Australasia
- Chapter 21 Ancient Egypt in the Cinema
- Chapter 22 Past and Future
- Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 12 - Czechoslovakia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2021
- A History of World Egyptology
- A History of World Egyptology
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Notes on Contributors
- Preface
- A Note on Academic Titles
- Abbreviations and Conventions Used in Text
- Maps
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 The Prehistory of Egyptology
- Chapter 2 Egypt
- Chapter 3 France
- Chapter 4 The British Isles
- Chapter 5 The Netherlands
- Chapter 6 Belgium
- Chapter 7 The Nordic Countries
- Chapter 8 Prussia and Germany
- Chapter 9 The Empire of Austria-Hungary and the Republic of Austria
- Chapter 10 Switzerland
- Chapter 11 Hungary
- Chapter 12 Czechoslovakia
- Chapter 13 Poland
- Chapter 14 Russia
- Chapter 15 Italy
- Chapter 16 Spain
- Chapter 17 United States of America
- Chapter 18 Canada
- Chapter 19 Japan
- Chapter 20 Australasia
- Chapter 21 Ancient Egypt in the Cinema
- Chapter 22 Past and Future
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The official birthday of Czechoslovakia was 28 October 1918. The genesis of an Egyptological chair and seminar followed in the 1920s, after a redefinition of the Czech part of the university in Prague as the Charles University (Univerzita Karlova: cf. p. 278). Czechoslovak Egyptology – indeed oriental studies as a whole – was, like many aspects of a state that was a successor to a multinational empire, derived from the Austrian(-Hungarian) school system and educational practices, a system that was, albeit reluctantly at times, multinational and multilingual. Tensions between a multinational state and local national revival (as nations within one state competed for a political recognition) had an impact on the formation of scholarship, particularly in the humanities. On one hand, future Czechoslovak oriental studies had important ties to international scholarship, specifically to German-, French- and English-speaking orientalists; on the other, within regions such as the former Austria-Hungary, history and humanities were confronted with several competing national revivals (and hence national memories and histories), and there was a need to counteract local tendencies towards insularity that might be motivated by narrow nationalism.
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- A History of World Egyptology , pp. 318 - 343Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021