Chicago on the Nile

A Special Exhibition at the ISAC Museum

September 17, 2024 – March 23, 2025

In 1924, an Egyptologist, an artist, and a photographer—the staff of the University of Chicago’s new Epigraphic Survey—began the task of recording the scenes and inscriptions carved on the walls of the enormous, 3,000-year-old temple of Pharaoh Ramesses III at Medinet Habu near Luxor. It was the culmination of a long-standing dream of James Henry Breasted, the first American Egyptologist and founder of ISAC (then the Oriental Institute), to both copy and publish all the historical texts in the Nile Valley. The Epigraphic Survey was established to undertake this unimaginably ambitious program of field research.

A century later, the Epigraphic Survey continues to fulfill Breasted’s mission. Housed at Chicago House in Luxor, the expedition has documented some of the most important—and endangered—records to survive from ancient Egypt, using a well-established and tested method to create highly accurate facsimiles of the carvings and texts and to publish them as a permanent archive.

The special exhibition Chicago on the Nile features photographs, artifacts, original artworks, and publications that illuminate a century of endeavor to preserve the records of Egypt’s ancient past, along with engaging accounts of life and work at Chicago House in Luxor over the past 100 years.

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    FROM THE EXHIBITION

    I am now laying plans to copy not merely the historical, but all the inscriptions of Egypt and publish them…

    James Henry Breasted

    Epigraphic SurveyEpigraphic Survey team members, including epigraphers, artists, and their assistants, documenting scenes on the north wall of the temple of Ramesses III at Medinet Habu, 1927 (ISAC Museum Archives P. 14686/N. 10883).

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