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GIOVANNI BATTISTA BELZONI (1778–1823)

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Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 713 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GIOVANNI BATTISTA

BELZONI (1778–1823)  ,
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Italian explorer of
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Egyptian antiquities, was born at Padua in 1778 . His
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family was from Rome, and in that city he spent his youth . He intended taking monastic orders, but in 1798 the occupation of the city by the French troops drove him from Rome and changed his proposed career . He went back to Padua, where he studied hydraulics, removed in 1800 to Holland, and in 1803 went to England, where he married an Englishwoman . He was 6 ft . 7 in. in height, broad in proportion, and his wife was of equally generous build . They were for some time compelled to find subsistence by exhibitions of feats of strength and agility at fairs and on the streets of
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London . Through the kindness of Henry Salt, the traveller and antiquarian, who was ever afterwards his
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patron, he was engaged at Astley's amphitheatre, and his circumstances soon began to improve . In 1812 he
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left England, and after travelling in Spain and
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Portugal reached
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Egypt in 1815, where Salt was then
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British consul-general . Belzoni was desirous of laying before Mehemet
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Ali a
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hydraulic machine of his own invention for raising the waters of the Nile . Though the experiment with this engine was successful, the design was abandoned by the
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pasha, and Belzoni resolved to continue his travels . On the recommendation of the orientalist, J .

L .

Burckhardt, he was sent at Salt's charges to Thebes, whence he removed with
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great skill the
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colossal bust of Rameses II., commonly called Young
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Memnon, which he shipped for England, where it is in the British Museum . He also pushed his investigations into the great temple of
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Edfu, visited Elephantine and
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Philae, cleared the great temple at
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Abu Simbel of sand (1817), made excavations at
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Karnak, and opened up the sepulchre of Seti I . (" Belzoni's Tomb ") . He was the first to penetrate into the second
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pyramid of Giza, and the first
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European in
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modern times to visit the oasis of Baharia, which he supposed to be that of
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Siwa . He also identified the ruins of Berenice on the Red Sea . In 1819 he returned to England, and published in the following
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year an account of his travels and discoveries entitled Narrative of the Operations and
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Recent Discoveries within the Pyramids, Temples, Tombs and Excavations in Egypt and
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Nubia, &'c . He also exhibited during 1820–1821 facsimiles of the tomb of Seti I . The
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exhibition was held at the Egyptian Hall, Piccadilly, London . In 1822 Belzoni showed his model in Paris . In 1823 he set out for West Africa, intending to penetrate to Timbuktu . Having been refused permission to pass through
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Morocco, he chose the
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Guinea Coast route .

He reached

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Benin, but was seized with dysentery at a
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village called Gwato, and died there on the 3rd of December 1823 . In 1829 his widow published his drawings of the royal tombs at Thebes .

End of Article: GIOVANNI BATTISTA BELZONI (1778–1823)
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