293:, and Miss Hansard, an artist, as well as Hilda, and attempted a difficult and hazardous excavation after the discovery the previous year of what appeared to be the approach to a huge underground tomb discovered in an area at the back of the temple of Seti I. The deep excavation was in constant danger of caving in and, when the wind blew, loose sand and shifting stone blocks threatened the workers below; the work was ultimately abandoned. The report of that year to the Egypt Exploration fund sums up Hilda Petrie's contributions to the work thus:
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Her record work also included drawing the profiles of the pots, beads, scarabs and other small finds of the excavation, and sometimes writing the daily journal that was sent weekly to report progress to the
Committee, and assisting Flinders Petrie to write the excavation reports. Her role did not include running the domestic side of the expedition, which was undertaken by Flinders Petrie as it had been done for many years, with excavators expected to live on canned food and ship's biscuits.
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that year: "My wife was with me all the time, helping in the surveying, cataloguing, and marking of the objects, and also drawing all the tomb plans here published." Her work at the site continued into 1898–9, and she drew almost all of the pottery marks and arranged the plates, as well as undertaking the continual work to register and attend to the pottery, and to number the skeletons. A plan of a fort was made at this time by both
Petries.
127:. When the British School of Archaeology in Egypt was founded in 1905 in London by Flinders Petrie, she worked as its secretary and fundraiser to secure support for the school and their continued excavations. Hilda took part in archaeological excavations and surveys throughout her married life, except for a period while their two children were young. Her work was published, and she also gave public lectures in London and elsewhere.
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in 1922. Hilda arrived in Gaza on 26 November 1926, where she supervised, registered, and paid the excavation workers, although she spent most of the next three years in
England seeking to raise funds for the work, which, unfortunately, did not have the same appeal to her supporters as had the work
337:
She left for Egypt again in
January 1913 to rejoin Flinders Petrie at Kafr Ammar; three painted Twelfth Dynasty tombs had been found a few miles away at Riqqeh and urgently needed recording. The work was again difficult and dangerous, but it was possible and she published a chapter within the final
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During this expedition, Hilda worked in the deep shafts of the tombs that were being excavated, climbing down a rope ladder to copy the scenes and inscriptions found deep underground. One large sarcophagus had some 20,000 hieroglyphs to record, and Hilda spent days lying on the ground to copy them.
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plates to identify the shape of pots, slates and flints and, once
Flinders had entered these finds onto the plan, Hilda was responsible for writing on each find the number of the grave in which it had been found. Her work was noted by Flinders Petrie in the introduction to the excavation report of
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When the
British School of Archaeology in Egypt was founded in 1905 in London by Flinders Petrie, Hilda worked there as a secretary to raise funds and recruit new subscribers, and it was during this time that both her children were born. In particular she wrote to the prominent and the wealthy to
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By 1933 the
Petries had moved to Jerusalem where, for two seasons between 1935 and 1937, they excavated the mound of Sheikh Zoweyd, which had been a frontier fortress between Egypt and Asia. A planned excavation in 1939 was called off when bandits attacked and looted their camp.
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and she was educated by a governess along with other children of similar age. As she grew older she often went on bicycling expeditions with her friend
Beatrice Orme. Together, they explored the countryside, visiting and sketching ancient churches, and making
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The last of the
Petries' excavation seasons in Gaza was in 1931 with the huge mound called Tell el Ajull anticipated to furnish work for some years. However, this was not to be and tensions over the excavations caused their excavation work to cease.
402:
Flinders Petrie died on 29 July 1942, and Hilda Petrie saw out the rest of the war living at the
American School of Palestine while editing his papers, which she had determined to send to the newly formed library of the Department of Antiquities at
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In 1904, Hilda Petrie was involved in the work at Ehnasya, contributing almost half of the plates of the resultant volume, and visiting Buto. The following year she remained at Saqqara to copy reliefs in some of the Old Kingdom Tombs, as
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Petrie preferred the country life and initially disliked London, but as she grew older she enjoyed visiting its museums and art galleries. During her teens she was regarded as an attractive red-headed girl and she sat for the painter
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In 1947 Hilda returned to Hampstead, England where she wound up the affairs of the British School and was in 1952 at last able to publish the tomb reliefs that she had copied in 1905 at Saqqara, before her death in 1957.
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191:, who needed to employ someone with the accurate copying skills Hilda had by then acquired. This introduction led to their marriage on 26 November 1896, with the couple leaving for Egypt the following day.
429:, Inscriptions by Margaret A Murray. Drawings by F. Hansard, F. Kingsford, and L. Eckenstein. Drawings and plans by H. F. Petrie, British School of Egyptian Archaeology and Quaritch, London 1952
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Hilda left for Egypt for the first time on 25 November 1896, and was thereafter to accompany her husband into the field every year except for a period when their son and daughter were young.
296:“My wife was closely occupied with drawing nearly all of the season; especially on the tedious figuring of nearly 400 flints, and the exact facsimile copies of inscriptions.”
180:'s geology course, and would go on field trips equipped with a notebook and hammer. She also took courses in facsimile drawing, for which she displayed a considerable talent.
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369:, with her plans and drawings of the cave being published in the excavation report for that year, along with her description of the cave and its painted decorations.
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When war broke out in 1914, Hilda turned her attention to several women's organisations, including using her fundraising expertise as Honorary Secretary of the
218:, on the opposite side of the road to where she and her husband had worked to found and to fund what was England's first training school for archaeologists.
108:, she was hired by Flinders Petrie at age 25 as an artist, which led to their marriage and a working partnership that endured for their lifetimes.
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Margaret S. Drower, 'Petrie' Sir (William Matthew) Flinders (1853–1942)', Oxford Dictionary of national Biography, OUP, 2004; online edn, May 2012
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160:, was a leader in the women's suffrage movement. Philippa later went to Cambridge to read mathematics and was to become the first woman
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canvass support for Flinders Petrie's work, and oversaw its publication, and gave public lectures in London and elsewhere in the UK.
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now stands at 5 Cannon Place, where they lived. Their son was John Flinders Petrie, the mathematician, who gave his name to the
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at his studio in Hampstead, modelling for the figure of a young girl in two of his much-exhibited paintings. She studied at
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took a journey across Sinai accompanied by a single guide. Eckenstein was to write several books about her time in Sinai.
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Petrie, W.M.F. (1902) Abydos Part.1., 1902: The Twenty-Second Memoir of the Egypt Exploration Fund, London, UK
350:, which maintained hospital services for the Serbian division of the Russian army; she was later awarded the
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In 1919 Hilda and Flinders resumed excavations in Egypt, and in the season of 1921, Hilda excavated a
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Petrie, W.M.F. (1905) Ehnasya 1904: Twenty-sixth memoir of the Egypt Exploration Fund, London, UK
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report about the tombs and including her plans and her copies of the wall paintings and coffins.
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Hilda travelled and worked with Sir Flinders Petrie to excavate and record numerous sites in
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When she was twenty-five, she was introduced by Henry Holiday to Egyptology Professor
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The focus of the Petries' excavations shifted in 1926 to the frontier fortresses in
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in 1871, the youngest of five daughters of an English couple long resident in
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Letters from the Desert – the Correspondence of Flinders and Hilda Petrie.
289:, Hilda was given control of an excavation of her own. The team comprised
354:. The Petries also at this time surveyed prehistoric carvings cut in the
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had the year before. She went from Saqqara to join Flinders Petrie and
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692:: Special Extra Publication of the Egypt Exploration Fund, London, UK
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The Petrie Museum of Egyptian Archaeology: Characters and Collections
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Side Notes on the Bible: From Flinders Petrie's Discoveries
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In the winter of 1902, the last season spent excavating at
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Diospolis Parva, The Cemeteries of Abadiyeh and Hu 1898-9
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Second World War onwards: editing and final publications
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Egyptian Hieroglyphs of the first and second dynasties
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and plans, and to record the work for reports to the
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The Seventeenth Memoir of the Egypt Exploration Fund
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324:Work at the British School of Archaeology in Egypt
314:hitherto unknown script, which was dubbed Sinaitic
661:'Breaking Ground: Women in Old World Archaeology'
435:, Search Publishing Company Limited, London 1933.
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466:Breaking Grounds. Women in Old World Archaeology
277:, Hilda helped to survey the site. She used the
269:In the 1898 excavation of the cemetery sites of
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198:(1907–1972) and Ann (1909–1989), and lived in
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152:. Another of her childhood friends was
762:Academics of University College London
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672:Petrie, W.M.F. (1900), Dendereh 1898:
454:Flinders Petrie: a life in archaeology
365:hermit's cell in the Western hills at
663:, Sharp, M. S. and Lesko, B. S. (eds)
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135:Hilda Mary Isabel Urlin was born in
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541:Drower, Margaret. "Hilda Petrie".
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308:at a temple site on a hilltop at
797:20th-century Irish women writers
792:19th-century Irish women writers
561:Stevenson, Alice (4 June 2015).
491:Bd. 1). von Zabern, Mainz 2009,
476:Aris & Philips, London 2004
254:in the cemetery area behind the
37:Hilda and Flinders Petrie, 1903.
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589:"Flinders Petrie Blue Plaque"
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61:1957 (aged 85–86)
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427:Seven Memphite tomb chapels
246:, and including a visit to
216:University College Hospital
214:Petrie died of a stroke in
176:, where she took Professor
100:, the father of scientific
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567:. UCL Press. p. 102.
348:Scottish Women's Hospitals
342:During the First World War
242:After a few days spent at
489:Die Berühmten Archäologen
462:Hilda Mary Isabel Petrie.
447:Who was Who in Egyptology
189:University College London
131:Education and family life
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352:Serbian order of St Sava
238:Petrie and Urlin in 1897
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174:King's College for Women
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258:, 70 km north of
252:Egypt Exploration Fund
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125:Egypt Exploration Fund
445:Morris L. Bierbrier:
333:Further work in Egypt
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222:Archaeological career
88:; 1871–1957), was an
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472:Margaret S. Drower:
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452:Margaret S. Drower:
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156:whose mother, Dame
98:Sir Flinders Petrie
74:Sir Flinders Petrie
383:Tutankhamun's tomb
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25:Hilda, Lady Petrie
591:. openplaques.org
574:978-1-910634-04-2
497:978-3-8053-4063-2
487:Andrea Rottloff:
358:chalk in the UK.
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256:temple of Dendera
158:Millicent Fawcett
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84:(née
597:2013
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