Human history is not such a hopeless affair if this heavy piece of granite from Aswan, endlessly fought over, can become a symbol of our desire to understand each other. Although it has been battered by its long history and is not exactly beautiful, the fact that it still fascinates so many people - including the over six million visitors who see it at the British Museum each year - seems to me utterly wonderful. So it is a surprisingly optimistic thing, reminding us that nationalistic conflicts can sometimes end up producing empathy and understanding. Instead, its messy war-torn history has somehow made it into an icon of our attempts to understand not only Ancient Egypt, but also other languages and other cultures. If it hadn’t been created at a time when Egypt was governed by a Macedonian dynasty, been uncovered by warring nations, been given to Europe and worked on by rival scholars, it would have remained only another duplicate temple inscription. It has moved from the long demolished temple of Sais through European history into outer space. It was then a piece of builders’ rubble, then a block in the walls of a medieval fort at Rosetta/el-Rashid, then an exotic antiquity disputed by French and English factions, then war booty in an official treaty, then the key to 4,000 years of an otherwise lost written culture, and gradually an icon of not only this decipherment, but of any decipherment, giving its name to computer programs, language schools, even to satellites. It was once an inscribed temple stela, one of many, in the shining halls of ancient Sais. The Ptolemaic kings frequently practised incest marrying their sistersĪlthough the Rosetta Stone is a rather heavy stone, it is also a strangely insubstantial and mobile thing.
Demotic Egyptian was the native script used for everyday purposes. Greek was the official language of the court, while hieroglyphs were limited to use by the priests. The Ptolemaic period witnessed a fusion of Greek and Egyptian cultures. His Greek descendents known as the Ptolemies ruled Egypt for the next 300 years. After Alexander's death, his former general Ptolemy I ruled Egypt. In 332 BC, Egypt was conquered by Alexander the Great. Why is the Rosetta Stone written in three different scripts? It was this Greek inscription that allowed modern scholars to begin to decipher hieroglyphs for the first time. The same inscription is written in three different scripts ? Greek, hieroglyphs and demotic Egyptian. The inscription is a decree that affirms the royal cult of the 13-year-old Ptolemy V on the first anniversary of his coronation in 196 BC.
The Rosetta Stone is one of the most famous objects in the British Museum but the actual contents of its inscription is less well-known.