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GEORGE SMITH (184o-1876)

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Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 261 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GEORGE SMITH (184o-1876)  ,
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English Assyriologist, was born on the 26th of March 184o at
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Chelsea,
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London . His
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father was a working man, and at fourteen the boy was apprenticed to Messrs Bradbury and Evans to learn
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bank-note
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engraving . He had already shown a keen
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interest in the explorations of Layard and Rawlinson, and during the next few years he devoted all his spare time to studying the cuneiform inscriptions at the
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British Museum . His earnestness attracted the attention of
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Sir Henry Rawlinson, who permitted him the use of his
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room at the museum and placed the many casts and squeezes of the inscriptions at his disposal . Smith was thus enabled to make his first
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discovery (the date of the payment of the tribute by
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Jehu to Shalmanezer). and Sir Henry suggested to the trustees of the Museum that he should be associated with himself in the preparation of the third
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volume of Cuneiform Inscriptions of Western
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Asia . Accordingly, in 1867, Smith was appointed assistant in the Assyriology department, and the earliest of his successes was the discovery of two inscriptions, one fixing the date of the
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total eclipse of the sun in the month Sivan in May 763 B.C., and the other the date of an invasion of Babylonia by the Elamites in 2280 B.C . In 1871 he published Annals of Assur-bani-pal, transliterated and translated, and communicated to the newly-founded Society of Biblical Archaeology a paper on " The Early
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History of Babylonia," and an account of his decipherment of the Cypriote inscriptions . In 1872 Smith achieved
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world-wide fame by his
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translation of the Chaldaean account of the Deluge, which was read before the Society of Biblical Archaeology on the 3rd of December . In the following
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January Sir Edwin Arnold, the editor of the Daily Telegraph, arranged with Smith that he should go to Nineveh at the expense of that journal, and carry out excavations with a view to finding the missing fragments of the Deluge story . This journey resulted not only in the discovery of the missing tablets, but of fragments which recorded the succession and duration of the Babylonian dynasties . In 1874 Smith again
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left England for Nineveh, this time at the expense of the Museum, and continued his excavations at Kouyunjik . An account of his
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work is given in
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Assyrian Discoveries, published early in 1875 .

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rest of the
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year was spent in fixing together and translating the fragments
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relating to the Creation, the results of which work were embodied in The Chaldaean Account of Genesis . In . March 1876 the trustees of the British Museum despatched Smith once more to excavate the rest of Assur-banipal's library . At Ikisji, a small
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village about 6o m . N.E. of Aleppo, he was prostrated by fever, and finally died at Aleppo on the 19th of August . He left a wife and children, on whose behalf a public subscription was made .

End of Article: GEORGE SMITH (184o-1876)
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