- Egypt (TV series)
Infobox Television
show_name = Egypt
caption = BBC DVD cover
aka = Egypt: Rediscovering A Lost World
genre =Docudrama
creator =
writer =Ferdinand Fairfax
director = nowrap beginTony Mulholland ·wrapJonathan Rich ·wrap Ferdinand Fairfaxnowrap end
creat_director =
developer =
presenter =
starring = nowrap beginStuart Graham·wrapMatthew Kelly ·wrapElliot Cowan nowrap end
voices =
narrated =Andrew Sachs
theme_composer =
opentheme =
endtheme =
composer =Stanislas Syrewicz
country = UK
language = English
num_seasons =
num_episodes = 6
list_episodes =
distributor =BBC
executive_producer =Philip Dolling
co_exec =
producer = Paul Bradshaw
sup_producer =
asst_producer =
cons_producer =
co-producer =
editor = nowrap beginWarren Meneely ·wrapMilena Tasso ·wrapLes Healey nowrap end
story_editor =
location =
cinematography =
camera_setup =
runtime = 60 minutes
channel =BBC One
picture_format =
audio_format =
first_run =
first_aired =October 30
last_aired = nowrap beginDecember 4 , 2005nowrap end
preceded_by =
followed_by =
related = "Egyptian Journeys "
website = http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt.shtml
prod_website =
imdb_id = 0483603
tv_com_id ="Egypt" is the title of a
BBC television drama serial about various archaeological discoveries taking place in that country's history, with the occasional 'flashback' scene involving actors portraying theancient Egypt ians themselves. The hour-long show originally aired on Sunday nights at 9pm onBBC1 in 2005.The first two episodes explored the work of
Howard Carter and his archaeological quest inEgypt in the early part of thetwentieth century . The next two episodes focused on the eccentric explorer 'The Great Belzoni', played byMatthew Kelly . The final two episodes dramatise the discovery and deciphering of theRosetta Stone byJean-François Champollion , who is played byElliot Cowan .Production
The series was a major new docudrama produced by the BBC for the Autumn 2005 schedule.cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt.shtml | title=Egypt - How A Lost Civilisation Was Discovered | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=
BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]In order to create a sense of "seeing the treasures of Ancient Egypt for the first time" Dolling and Bradshaw felt it essential to film at the actual archaeological sites referenced in the series.
Filming at such invaluable and popular sites created new challenges for the film makers.
The co-production between BBC and
The Learning Channel was initially budgeted at around £6.5m but problems filming on location in Egypt, including the weather and illness, meant the producers required another £2million. Post production costs involved in recreating Ancient Egypt meant that the final costs could have resulted in a £5million overspend but the BBC denied this.Several multi-media productions were commissioned to tie-in with the series including interactive drama "BBC Egypt Interactive",cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt_inter.shtml | title=Interactive drama and online adventure experience | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=
BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ] award-winning online-game "Death in Sakkara: An Egyptian Adventure",cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/ancient/egyptians/launch_gms_death_sakkara.shtml | title=Death in Sakkara: An Egyptian Adventure | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC History | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ] and an interactive exhibition atBBC Birmingham .cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/11_november/10/tomb.shtml | title='Tomb' it may concern… Egypt interactive exhibition at BBC Birmingham | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]The companion documentary series "Egyptian Journeys", in which architectural historian
Dan Cruickshank travels the country to explore some of the intriguing stories that have emerged from Ancient Egypt, was broadcast concurrently onBBC Two .cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt_cruik.shtml | title=Egyptian Journeys with Dan Cruickshank on BBC TWO | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]Reception
Reviews
Sam Wollaston writing about episode one in "
The Guardian " announces that he, "“was expecting to hate this show,”" fearing it would be "“narration interspersed with lame reconstruction,”" but he was pleased to discover it was in fact, "“a proper drama, with a very decent script and real actors.”" "“And it's a great story, too,”" he states, however he didn’t enjoy the re-enactments of the life of Tutankhamun which he described as, "“olive-skinned actors with non-speaking parts and an awful lot of eye-liner, wandering around in a semi-darkness lit by flickering candles,”" and claims were not necessary, "“but maybe that will help to sell it to America.”" He concludes that he is "“looking forward to part two.”"cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/oct/31/broadcasting.tvandradio | title=The weekend's TV | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Wollaston | first=Sam | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-31 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]David Liddiment writing in "The Guardian" compliments the cleverly twinning of this docudrama with the more cerebral "
Egyptian Journeys with Dan Cruickshank " on BBC Two but he points out that this was done during the final stages of the BBC’s charter renewal review and insists that the corporation should keep up standards after this process is completed.cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/nov/14/mondaymediasection11 | title=Bravo the BBC, but keep it up after charter renewal | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Liddiment | first=David | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-11-14 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]Ratings
* Episode one (
2005-10-30 ): 7 million viewers (29% audience share).cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/oct/31/overnights | title=BBC's tomb raiders win ratings game | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Deans | first=Jason | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-31 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]
* Episode two (2005-11-06 ): 6 million viewers (24% audience share).cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/nov/07/overnights.football | title=Manchester United score for Sky | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Deans | first=Jason | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-11-07 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]
* Episode three (2005-11-13 ): 5.7 million viewers (23% audience share).cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/nov/14/overnights1 | title=Rings weaves its magic for C4 | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Brook | first=Stephen | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-11-14 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]
* Episode four (2005-11-20 ): 4.8 million viewers.cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/nov/21/overnights | title=I'm a Celebrity makes strong start | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Cozens | first=Claire | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-11-21 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]
* Episode five (2005-11-27 ): 4.5 million viewers (18% audience share).cite web | url=http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2005/nov/28/overnights | title=Royals hold their own against celebrities start | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last=Deans | first=Jason | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-11-28 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=The Guardian | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]Episodes
Part one: "Howard Carter"
These episodes deal with the discovery of the Tomb of Tutankhamun by Howard Carter and the popular belief that the
Curse of the Pharaohs came with its opening. The story of Carter's quest is interrupted at various points with short biographical segments on the life ofTutankhamun and how these account for some of Carter's discoveries.cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt_carter.shtml | title=Howard Carter And The Curse Of Tutankhamun | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ] cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt_carter_eps.shtml | title=Howard Carter - Episode Synopses | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]Episode one: "The Search for Tutankhamun"
Tutankhamun vanished from history in
1324 BC following his hurried burial and the erasure of his name from all monuments. In the winter of 1898 Carter is at the temples ofDeir el Bahri recording wall reliefs threatened by a freak storm when he is thrown from his horse and makes a discovery in the sand. Retired Boston lawyerTheodore M. Davis funds Carter’s excavation of QueenHatshepsut 's tomb but it is found to be empty and Carter denied of further funding is reduced to selling his paintings to tourists on the street.In 1905 Lord Carnarvon arrives in Luxor to convalesce after a road accident and is shown an artefact bearing the cartouche of the mysterious Tutankhamun discovered by Davis on his new dig. Tutankhamun succeeded his heretical father as pharaoh at the age of 8 and was named in honour of
Amun to symbolise his mission to restore the old gods and save the empire from turmoil. An inspired Carnarvon employs Carter but they are denied access to theValley of the Kings for which only Davis has a permit. Amidst the flurry of construction that marked the beginning of Tutankhamun’s reign the most important to the boy Pharaoh would have been that of his tomb. An ailing Davis announces his discovery of this, the final Pharaoh’s tomb, prior to his retirement. Carter doubts the find and convinces Carnarvon to take up the concession. The methodical and meticulous excavation commences in 1914 but is quickly interrupted byWorld War I .The Carnarvons return to Egypt at the end of the war and Carter recommences his excavation but with a continued lack of results leading to doubts that any undiscovered tombs are left in the valley the funding is finally cut in 1922. Tutankhamun’s tomb was well concealed to ensure his undisturbed afterlife. Carter convinces Carnarvon to fund one last season during which the tomb is finally unearthed. When the tomb is opened in the presence of Carnarvon and his daughter it is revealed to be the only un-plundered pharaoh’s tomb in the valley.
Episode two: "The Curse of Tutankhamun"
In 1922 Carter goes to the
Egyptian Antiquities Service inCairo to announce his discovery but disagrees with DirectorPierre Lacau over the clearance and cataloguing of the contents. The discovery revealed a dark time in the history of Egypt and the untimely death of its boy king. Carter assembles an international team of experts to commence the work under the unwelcome scrutiny of Lacau’s inspector and the western press. Canarvon’s cavalier attitude to the finds he considers his property starts to infuriate both Carter and Lacau.As the finds are slowly catalogued and removed Carter becomes close to Canarvon’s daughter Evelyn but his strictness begins to alienate his team. Tutankhamun was married to his own sister but the union failed to produce an heir to secure the future of the kingdom. Stories of the curse begin to circulate as Carter breaks through into the burial chamber to reveal an intact tomb. As Lacau threatens to take over the excavation and several of the experts quit Canarvon questions Carter over his leadership and his relationship with Evelyn. When he came of age Tutakhumen took over control of the kingdom from his military advisor
Ay only to die from unknown causes shortly thereafter. Carter rushes to Canarvon's death-bed where the two make-up. Upon Tutankhamun’s death Ay seized the throne and married the widowed queen. Carter, disappointed by Evelyn’s engagement to another man, returns to continue his work. Tutankhuman’s untimely death came before the royal tomb could be completed so he was hastily buried in the tomb Ay had prepared for himself. Lacau takes over the running of the tomb in 1924 when Carter and his team stop work to protest continued Egyptian interference.The following year Carter is called back by Lacau to reopen the tomb with funding from Lady Canarvon. The team start to extract the nested coffins revealing one of them to be made of pure gold that confirms the presence of a Pharaoh. The team begin to notice evidence that the burial was done in a hurry as the body itself is finally uncovered. When Ay died without heir a new dynasty took to the throne that erased all references to the Boy King. In 1932 with his work complete Carter leaves the tomb for the last time and hands the key to Lacau.
Cast
*Stuart Graham as Howard Carter
*Julian Wadham as Lord Carnarvon
*Caroline Langrishe as Lady Carnarvon
*Alex Weaver as Evelyn Carnarvon
*Valentine Pelka asPierre Lacau
*William Hope asTheodore M. Davis
*Laurence Fox as LeonardPart two: "The Great Belzoni"
These episodes tell the story of Italian engineer and circus strongman
Giovanni Belzoni who became the most unlikely Egyptologist the world has ever seen. Turning up numerous great finds he always found himself travelling in the footsteps of Ramesses the Great and flashbacks to the Pharoah's life are intercut into the story.Episode three: "The Pharaoh and the Showman"
A dissatisfied Belzoni leaves England with his wife, Sarah, and servant, James Curtin, to see the world. Finding themselves destitute in the streets of
Cairo after work on an irrigation project falls through they are rescued by the eccentric John Lewis Bukhardt who introduces them to British Consul Henry Salt. Belzoni is hired to recover the massive "Head of Memnon", later revealed to a statue of the Pharaoh Ramesses the Great, as a gift for theBritish Museum . Arriving inLuxor in 1816 amidst a "gold rush" of black market antiquities dealers Belzoni finds himself unwelcome.At the
Ramesseum Belzoni examines the head and devises a plan for its removal. The local Caimakan, under advice from Belzoni’s French rivalBernardino Drovetti , denies Belzoni’s permit and initially refuses to supply labour until threats bring him around. Ramesses marriage to his true loveNefertari was fruitful and secured the family line and the country too was fertile thanks to the annual flooding of the Nile. The approaching flood season however threatens to strand the head in the heart of the flood plain bringing an abrupt halt to Belzoni’s mission. When the local labourers finally arrive Belzoni immediately sets to work moving the head using the same techniques its builders had used 3,000 years previous. Belzoni sends the ailing Jim back to Cairo to request a bigger boat so that they can collect even more antiquities and with time running out is forced to take greater risks to get the head to the bank of the Nile.With the head secured the Belzonis heads south along the
Nile toAbu Simbal in unchartedNubia to expand the collection of antiquities. Ramesses built two temples at Abu Simbal; one dedicated his beloved wife and the other to his military prowess in the "first victorious campaign". Belzoni locates the entrance to the Great Temple but finds it blocked, and so forced to head back to Cairo he vows to return to excavate the site the following season.Episode four: "The Temple of the Sands"
Belzoni, arriving back in Cairo, is informed by Salt that only the head is to be sent to the British Museum while the rest of the antiquities he has collected are to be kept at the consulate. Salt refuses to fund an excavation at Abu Simbal and Belzoni is sent south again with Salt’s secretary William Beechey and a local dealer called "Yanni". Belzoni, whilst becalmed at
Minya . spots Yenni talking to his French rival Drovetti and hastily rides toLuxor determined to get there first. Arriving to late Belzoni discovers that the entire area licensed to Drovetti and he must dig elsewhere.Belzoni, guided by the image of Ramesses, digs in an unlicenced area and discovers a perfectly preserved bust. An infuriated Drovetti has the local ruler issue an edict against Belzoni. With no other option Belzoni heads south to the Island of Philae to collect the antiquities he has stored there only to discover upon arrival that the French have ransacked them. Funds arrive from Salt to begin evcavation at Abu Simbal and Belzoni heads to the site with two British Royal Navy officers. Work progresses slowly in the shifting dessert until Belzoni devises a plan to build a palisade to hold back the sand. With the entrance uncovered the group cautiously enter to view the magnificent interior. Belzoni records every detail of the temple decorations, which celebrate the capture of
Kadesh that made Ramesses a great warrior king. Back in Luxor Belzoni, reunited with Sarah and Jim, is threatened by Drevetti but undeterred he heads deep into the western hills where he enters theValley of the Kings . Belzoni learns from "Yanni" and Beechey that Salt is selling off the antiquities he collects rather than donating them to the British Museum. Persuaded to go on with his explorations Belzoni constructs a battering ram to break through the thick walls of the valley side and open up an undiscovered tomb. Defying booby-traps Belzoni pushes on into the lavish interior of the tomb where he enters the burial chamber of the PharaohSeti I . It was here upon the death of his father that Ramessess started his reign, which would bring peace and prosperity to Egypt. The discovery of "Belzoni's Tomb" secures the Egyptologist's reputation and makes him a celebrity in his adopted home of London where the British Museum would later honour him.Cast
*
Matthew Kelly as Belzoni
*Lynsey Baxter as Sarah Belzoni
*Nevan Finnigan as James Curtin
*Robert Portal as Henry Salt
*Richard Dempsey asWilliam Beechey
*Thomas Lockyer as John Lewis Bukhardt
*Joseph Long asBernardino Drovetti Part three: "Champollion"
These episodes show how
Jean-François Champollion , used theRosetta Stone to unlock the mysteries of the lost civilisation of Ancient Egypt which had been closed off to Europeans for centuries prior to the invasion ofNapoleon Bonaparte in1798 . The stone, discovered by the French in 1799, had been created as a work of propaganda by the Greek speaking PharaohPtolemy V to establish his place in Egyptian cosmology and flashbacks are included to explain this belief system.Episode five: "The Mystery of the Rosetta Stone"
The young Champollion, encouraged to develop his gift for languages by his elder brother, becomes obsessed with deciphering hieroglyphs as a means to telling the age of the world and revenging France against the British who had confiscated the stone in 1801. When
Alexander the Great had conquered Egypt he had fuelled local resentment by brining in a Greek speaking elite to rule. Their descendent Ptolemy V had commissioned a series of stones written in Greek, common Egyptian and hieroglyphs for temples across the land to extol his virtues and underline his claim to the throne.Champollion’s studies under
Silvestre de Sacy inParis but finds the professor who had himself failed decipher hieroglyphs dismissive of further attempts believing them to be symbolic rather than a true language. English scientistThomas Young uses mathematics to decipher the inscription like a code whilst Champollion believing hieroglyphs to be representative of a spoken language attempts to relate them to theCoptic language of Egypt’s ancient Christian communities. Young makes a number of breakthroughs including the spelling of Ptolomey in hieroglyphs while Champollion finds work as assistant professor at theUniversity of Grenoble . France is thrown into political turmoil in1815 following defeat at theBattle of Waterloo and the republican Champollion is arrested for sedition and exiled toFigeac until 1821. Eccentric EgyptologistGiovanni Belzoni discovers an obelisk inscribed with the name ofCleopatra in Greek and hieroglyphs atPhilae and sends it back to Young in England.Young makes a mistake in translating the obelisk setting back his work whilst Champollion using a copy of the obelisk creates a hieroglyphic alphabet that he uses along with Coptic to translate the name of
Ramesses the Great from sketches ofAbu Simbal . Champollion’s discovery arouses the suspicions of the Catholic Church who fear hieroglyphs might disprove the historical accuracy of the Bible. Young wishes Champillion good luck in proving his theories but Sacy and the Church are determined to stop him.Episode six: "The Secrets of the Hieroglyphs"
Champollion is determined to travel to Egypt to prove his theory but poor and jobless he is reduced to buying up whatever scraps of papyrus he can find and this obsession alienates his wife. The
Dendera zodiac purchased by the French KingCharles X threatens to challenge the biblical chronologies of church scholars, as it is believed by some to date to before theGreat Flood of2349 BC . Champollion is called in to confirm Sacy’s dating of the antiquity to around2000 BC ; he disputes Sacy’s dating but not Church authorities by dating it to some 2,000 years later than that during the Roman period.Champollion is sent to
Turin by the King to value a collection put up for sale by the French Consul to EgyptBernardino Drovetti . Prior to his departure Champollion’s wife announces that she is pregnant and she is not pleased by his new job. Champollion is builds a strong reputation for himself in Italy even being invited for an audience with PopeLeo XII . Returning to Paris with a large collection of antiquities for the King he is put in charge of the Egyptian collection at theLouvre . The King finally agrees to fund Champollion’s expedition to Egypt on the proviso that he does not publish any finds that contradict the teachings of the Church. Champollion, arriving in 1828, starts by studying theGreat Pyramid atGiza discovering it to be a tomb built for the PharaohKhufu around2560 BC . AtSakara he finds the site largely stripped by dealers but in a forgotten tomb he discovers ancient hieroglyphs he translates to prove his theories. Eager to understand the Ancient Egyptians he pushes on to the ancient capital ofThebes where at the sprawling Temple ofKarnak he reads the story ofRamesses the Great and the battle against the Hittites atKadesh .At "Belzoni's Tomb" in the
Valley of the Kings the ailing Champollion reads the story of PharaohSeti I and learns of the burial rites of Pharaohs. He is thus able to comprehend the belief system of the Ancient Epyptians for the first time. Champillion dies back in France 18 months later but his legacy allows Egyptologist to comprehend the meaning behind monuments such as the Great Pyramid of Giza and to decipher papyri that lead to such discoveries as theTomb of Tutankhamun byHoward Carter .Cast
*
Elliot Cowan asJean-François Champollion
*Stuart Bunce asJacques-Joseph Champollion Media information
DVD release
Relesed on Region 2 DVD by BBC Video on
2006-02-06 .cite web | url=http://www.bbcshop.com/History/Egypt-DVD/invt/bbcdvd1751 | title=Egypt | accessdate=2008-07-22 | author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2006-02-06 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Shop | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]Companion book
The 2005 companion book to the series was written by author and archaeologist
Joyce Tyldesley expands on the series to tell the full story of the discoveries and the colourful charecters who made them.cite web | url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pressreleases/stories/2005/10_october/17/egypt_joyce.shtml | title=Egypt - Joyce Tyldesley | accessdate=2008-07-01| author= | last= | first= | authorlink= | coauthors= | date=2005-10-17 | year= | month= | format= | work= | publisher=BBC Press Office | pages= | language=English | doi= | archiveurl= | archivedate= | quote= ]elected editions
* cite book
date =Oct 6 , 2005
title = Egypt, How A Lost Civilization Was Rediscovered
last = Tyldesley
first = Joyce
publisher =BBC Books (hardcover)
id = ISBN 978-0563522577
* cite book
date =Jun 1 , 2006
title = Egypt, How A Lost Civilization Was Rediscovered
last = Tyldesley
first = Joyce
publisher = BBC Books (paperback)
id = ISBN 978-0563493815
* cite book
date =Sep 18 , 2006
title = Egypt, How A Lost Civilization Was Rediscovered
last = Tyldesley
first = Joyce
publisher =UC Press (hardcover)
id = ISBN 978-0520250208ee also
*"
Building the Great Pyramid "References
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