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George Gliddon : ウィキペディア英語版
George Gliddon
George Robbins Gliddon (1809–1857) was an English-born American Egyptologist. He was born in Devonshire, England. His father, a merchant, was United States consul at Alexandria where Gliddon was taken at an early age.〔The Gliddons and the Beginning of American-Egyptian Relations: Chapter 8, pp.95-111 of Cassandra Vivian (2012) Americans in Egypt〕
==Biography==

Gliddon became United States vice-consul and took a great interest in Egyptian antiquities. Subsequently he lectured in the United States and succeeded in attracting attention to the subject of Egyptology. His chief work was ''Ancient Egypt'' (1850, ed. 1853). He wrote also ''Memoir on the Cotton of Egypt'' (1841); ''Appeal to the Antiquaries of Europe on the Destruction of the Monuments of Egypt'' (1841); ''Discourses on Egyptian Archaeology'' (1841); ''Types of Mankind'' (1854), in conjunction with J. C. Nott; and ''Indigenous Races of the Earth'' (1857), also in conjunction with Nott and others.
Gliddon was influenced by Samuel George Morton's craniometry and polygenist theory of human origins. Morton collected hundreds of human skulls from around the world and tried to classify them. Morton claimed that he could judge the intellectual capacity of a race by the cranial capacity (the measure of the volume of the interior of the skull). In Morton's theory, a large skull meant a large brain and high intellectual capacity, and a small skull indicated a small brain and decreased intellectual capacity. By studying these skulls he claimed that the evidence supported polygenism, that each race had a separate origin. Morton had many skulls from Ancient Egypt, and concluded that the ancient Egyptians were not African, but were instead Caucasians.
Morton's followers, particularly Gliddon and Josiah Nott in their monumental tribute to Morton's work, ''Types of Mankind'' (1854), carried Morton's ideas further and backed up Morton's findings which supported the notion of polygenism, which contends that humanity originates from different lineages and is the ancestor of the multiregional hypothesis.
Gliddon collaborated with Morton on several published works; they shared many views on human races. Morton had sent Gliddon over 100 Egyptian crania specimens. Gliddon was a popular lecturer and researcher on Egyptology and from his studies of ancient Egyptian monuments and hieroglyphics, he concluded that the Egyptians had been white, and that even in the ancient world there had been distinctly different races. He posited that Whites and Negroes had never changed their racial appearance and features.He believed that neither environment or climate could change a race into another. He rejected Monogenesis, and claimed that the Bible supported Polygenisis. Gliddon believed the differences of the races had been impressed upon them by the Creator himself since the beginning.〔John P. Jackson, Nadine M. Weidman, Race, racism, and science: social impact and interaction, 2005 p. 48〕
George Robbins Gliddon died of Yellow Fever on November 16, 1857 in Panama. He was buried in Panama but later re-interred in Philadelphia at the instigation of his friend, archaeologist E. G. Squier.〔Squier,E.G. (1877) Peru: Incidents and Explorations in the Land of the Incas, pp.17-19〕

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