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Hermann Ranke Egyptian Section records

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Held at: University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives [Contact Us]3260 South Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19104-6324

This is a finding aid. It is a description of archival material held at the University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives. Unless otherwise noted, the materials described below are physically available in their reading room, and not digitally available through the web.

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Hermann Ranke completed his Ph.D. in Assyriology in Munich then joined H.V. Hilprecht at the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania as his assistant in the Department of Mesopotamia in 1904. Succeeding years took him back to Germany to assist the Berlin Museum in the Department of Egyptology. In 1910, Ranke was appointed Professor of Egyptology at Heidelberg University. He attained full professorship in 1922.

In 1937, Ranke was forced by the Nazi regime to reliquish his professorship due to "un-German activities." He found asylum with his friends at the Penn Museum as curator of the Egyptian Section. He remained here until the United States entered WWII, then returned to Germany where his wife and three youngest children resided. He lost his oldest son in the war.

Following the war Ranke was reinstated as Professor Emeritus at Heidelberg.

Ranke returned to the University Museum, in 1948 as visiting professor and curator. During his tenure, the section experienced several important changes. Ranke prepared the first guide to the Egyptian collection and rearranged the mummy room. He began the publication of the excavation at Dendereh conducted by Clarence S. Fisher. His acquisitions included a painted stela, a kneeling statue from the time of the Persian conquest of Egypt and a Hathor statue from the last century B.C..

Ranke translated James H. Breasted's

History of Egypt and prepared a new edition of Adolf Erman's primary text, Aegypten und aegyprisches Leben in Altertum. Ranke completed his major work a few months before his death in 1953; Die asgyptischen Personennamen.

Hermann Ranke completed his Ph.D. in Assyriology in Munich then joined H.V. Hilprecht at the Museum of the University of Pennsylvania as his Assistant in the Department of Mesopotamia in 1904. Succeeding years took him back to Germany to assist the Berlin Museum in the Department of Egyptology. In 1910, Ranke was appointed Professor of Egyptology at Heidelberg University. He attained full professorship in 1922.

Ranke returned to the University Museum, in 1948 as visiting professor and curator.

The Hermann Ranke Egyptian section records fill one half of an archival box of material. Correspondence comprises almost all of the records with the exception of one file of section reports.

Publisher
University of Pennsylvania: Penn Museum Archives
Finding Aid Author
Finding aid prepared by Jody Rodgers
Finding Aid Date
6/1/2016

Collection Inventory

1935-1936 Curatorial.
Box 1
1937-1949 Curatorial with museums.
Box 1
1937-1946 Curatorial.
Box 1
1947-1948 Curatorial.
Box 1
1942-1951 Re: hieroglyphics (Shadwell).
Box 1
1943-1945 Re: photographs.
Box 1
1938-1941 Ranke with museums.
Box 1
Section Reports 1941-1948.

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