
Contents
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Bacchylides in 1896 Bacchylides in 1896
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Rescue and recuperation Rescue and recuperation
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Imagining Egypt Imagining Egypt
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Classics, Archaeology, and Egypt's Past: Alternative Connections Classics, Archaeology, and Egypt's Past: Alternative Connections
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Memoirs and disciplinary histories Memoirs and disciplinary histories
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Bacchylides: further recontextualizations Bacchylides: further recontextualizations
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Conclusion Conclusion
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9 9 Visions of Modernity in Revisions of the Past: Altaf Hussain Hali and the ‘Legacy of the Greeks’
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6 6 Imperialist Fragmentation and the Discovery of Bacchylides
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Published:October 2010
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Abstract
On Christmas Eve 1896, The Times heralded the discovery of a large papyrus roll containing works by the Greek lyric poet Bacchylides, while lamenting that ‘unfortunately the manuscript has suffered severely at the hands of its native discoverers, and is torn into many fragments’. This chapter discusses this report, along with the alternative and more lavish account of the discovery made by the collector who brought the papyrus back to London: E. A. T. Wallis Budge of the British Museum. It explores ways in which even a highly technical discipline such as Greek papyrology could be drawn into British imperial discourse, showing how the activities and scholarship of nineteenth‐ and early twentieth‐century British collectors and papyrologists with regard to ownership of the material culture of the Graeco‐Roman world—including papyri—affected their historical, cultural, and imperial attitudes, and vice versa.
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