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Giovanni Kminek-Szedlo, née Jan Kmínek-Szedlo (April 22, 1828 – November 24, 1896) was a Czech–Italian Egyptologist. He is usually remembered as the first Egyptologist from what nowadays is the Czech Republic〔Dawson, W. R. & Uphill, E. T., ''Who was who in Egyptology'', London, Harrison and sons, 1951, p. 159.〕 but since he spent most of his life and fulfilled his whole career in Italy, he is usually not seen as the founder of Czech Egyptology, a figure rather identified in the later František Lexa.〔Ladislav Bareš, “Czech Egyptology – Past and Present”, ''Šwiatowit 2'' 43-A (2000), pp. 17-19.〕 ==Biography== Born in Prague in 1828, he graduated from high school in 1846 in Plzeň and in the next two years he attended the Faculty of Arts of the Charles-Ferdinand University in Prague. A sympathizer of the revolutionary events of 1848, in this year Kminek-Szedlo was forced to join the Austrian army and was later dispatched in Northern Italy. After leaving the army he remained in Italy to continue his studies, Italianizing his given name in ''Giovanni''. He got a job in the newly founded (1871) Archaeological Civic Museum of Bologna〔 initially as a demonstrator, but later he managed to became the curator of the Egyptian collection. Since 1878 he was appointed lecturer in Egyptology at the University of Bologna, and around this period he extensively published works mainly regarding the Egyptian collection of Bologna. His best remembered work is a catalogue of the entire collection, published in 1895 and still in use nowadays; almost all of the artifacts has a code name ''KS'' (followed by a number) after the two initials of his last name. Giovanni Kminek-Szedlo died in Bologna in November 24, 1896. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Giovanni Kminek-Szedlo」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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