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VOLUME 4 - National Museums and Galleries on Merseyside Liverpool
1500 objects with detailed information and many full color images.
This CD-ROM presents quite a lot of unpublished objects as well as many objects that have been lost during the last World War.
Price: sold out
Liverpool Museum was founded in 1851 through the bequest of the
13th Earl of Derby who left the city his fine collections of vertebrate
animals. In 1867 Joseph Mayer, a Liverpool goldsmith, gave the
museum a magnificent collection of antiquities. With these two
collections the museum was established as one of the finest in the
country. Today the collections number some one-and-a-quarter
million specimens from all parts of the world and even from the
moon and beyond.
The largest single group of antiquities is the Egyptian collection
which, despite severe losses caused by the bombing of the museum
in 1941, still contains 15,000 objects, many from the Mayer
collection. His collection was added to during the late nineteenth
and early twentieth centuries when Liverpool Museum subscribed to
various excavations undertaken in Egypt, including the very first
properly recorded excavations by W.M.F. Petrie. Many objects came
also through cooperation with the excavations of the University of
Liverpool in Egypt and the Sudan, particularly by Professor John
Garstang. The Egyptian collection covers all types and periods of
Egyptian antiquities, ranging from fine art items to representative
objects from excavations.
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EURO 25,-
ISBN 9039321299
Description CD-ROM
Edited by Dirk van der Plas
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Centre for Computer-aided Egyptological Research, Bikkeldam 11, 6631 BL in Horssen, The Netherlands, Tel: +31-487-541783, Fax: +31-487-541916, E-mail: ccer@ccer.nl
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