The Linguist and the Emperor

by Daniel Meyerson

Paper Book, 2004

Status

Available

Call number

493.1092

Collections

Publication

New York : Ballantine Books, 2004.

Description

The deciphering of the Rosetta stone was one of the great intellectual triumphs of all time, unlocking the secrets of thousands of years of Egypt’s ancient civilization. Yet in the past two centuries, the circumstances surrounding this bravura feat of translation have become shrouded in myth and mystery. Now in his spellbinding new book, Daniel Meyerson recounts the extraordinary true story of how the lives of two geniuses converged in a breakthrough that revolutionized our understanding of the past. The emperor Napoleon and the linguist Jean-Francois Champollion were both blessed with the temperament of artists and damned with ferocious impatience—and both of them were obsessed with Egypt. In fact, it was Napoleon’s dazzling, disastrous Egyptian campaign that caught the attention of the young Champollion and forever changed his life. From the instant Champollion learned of Napoleon’s discovery of a stone inscribed with three sets of characters—Greek, Coptic, and hieroglyphic—he could not rest. He vowed to be the first to crack the mystery of what became known as the Rosetta stone. In Daniel Meyerson’s sweeping narrative, the haunting story of the Rosetta stone—its discovery in a doomed battle, the intrigue to secure it, the agonizing race to unlock its secrets, and the pain it seemed to inflict on all who touched it—reads like the most engrossing fiction. Napoleon, despite his power and glory, suffered repeated betrayals . . . by his Empress Josephine, on the battlefield, and by history itself. Champollion, though he triumphed intellectually, ultimately endured his own terrible tragedy. As background and counterpoint to the stories of the brilliant linguist and the visionary emperor, Meyerson interweaves the ancient tales of love, intrigue, brutal death, and miraculous rebirth that were hidden for centuries on the walls of Egyptian tombs—stories that Champollion finally made accessible to the world. Blending history, politics, intellectual passion, and a deep understanding of the human heart, The Linguist and the Emperor is a stunning tapestry of breakthrough and ambition, grandeur and vanity, power and pain. Carrying on the tradition of The Professor and the Madman and Longitude, Meyerson has fashioned a masterpiece of meticulous history and astonishing storytelling.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member keywestnan
This book is, I'm sorry to say, a mess. It jumps all over the place, in space and time, and offers up a smorgasboard of nuggets, without ever cohering. It appears the linguist and the emperor did meet -- once -- and Napoleon's conquest of Egypt was responsible for dislodging the Rosetta Stone. But
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the book just doesn't add up. And there are WAY too many exclamation points.
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LibraryThing member NielsenGW
Daniel Meyerson's style in this tale about the discovery and translation of the Rosetta Stone is unlike most historical works. Meyerson chooses to tell the tale in two parallel threads, in mostly the future tense, leading the reader through two periods in time--Napoleon's 1798 invasion of Egypt and
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Jean-Francois Champollion's 30-year love affair with ancient languages. Napoleon's actions bring the Stone to Europe, but Champollion's intense scholarship unlock its meaning. It's books like this that prove that even the most mundane parts of history can be made exciting. A delightful read.
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LibraryThing member oldman
Not as good as The Professor and the Madman this story is of the deciphering of the Rosetta stone, opening a whole world previously locked away in antiquity. Tells the story of Champollian's quest to decipher the hieroglyphics of the stone and thus tell the story of the Egyptians and their storied
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empires and dynasties. Two stars
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LibraryThing member jjmcgaffey
Good lord. I was looking for a book about how the Rosetta Stone was deciphered. What I got was a lot of high-flown philosophy about how Napoleon thought he was a mythic hero like Alexander (who thought he was a god), how most of his decisions were based on that, and therefore how/why he had dug up
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a huge stone and took copies of the carvings on its surface. And a weird, obsessed boy who learned all the languages and therefore somehow figured out what the carvings meant - there are brief discussions of what and how he figured out, but the focus of the book is on who (the author imagines) Champollion (the boy) and Napoleon were, and thought they were. Also, the timeline is utterly tangled - Napoleon went to Egypt when Champollion was just a boy, then it talks about his discovery of the meaning of the stone, then a great many details about Napoleon's campaign in Egypt, then what happened after Napoleon was sent into exile, then how Champollion got to see the carvings - back and forth until I have no idea what happened when. This was an utter failure at explaining the how of the Stone's decipherment, and I don't trust the author's declarations about the whys of it; they seem to be pulled largely out of thin air (fact: he did this. A chapter of wild notions about why - because mythic and heroic and stuff. Another fact, or a minor story about a side character, or something - then another long digression into mythic notions. Sheesh!).
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Language

Physical description

x, 271 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

9780345450678

DDC/MDS

493.1092

Rating

½ (31 ratings; 2.7)
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