Rosetta Stone Facts
Did the Rosetta Stone have 3 languages?
The Rosetta Stone, a symbol for different things to different people, is a dark-colored granodiorite stela inscribed with the same text in three scripts - Demotic, hieroglyphic and Greek. In July 1799, the stone was found in the city of Rosetta (modern el Rashid) by French soldiers during Napoleon's invasion of Egypt.
The Rosetta Stone: Unlocking the Ancient Egyptian Language
Exactly 218 years ago today, on July 19, 1799, French troops in Rosetta, Egypt, uncovered a striking black stone carved with three ancient texts: two Egyptian texts and a Greek one. So what made the Rosetta Stone so special?
The Mysterious Rosetta Stone Turns 218, Here's Why It's So Cool
What is the Rosetta Stone and why is it important?
The importance of this to Egyptology is immense. When it was discovered, nobody knew how to read ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs. Because the inscriptions say the same thing in three different scripts, and scholars could still read Ancient Greek, the Rosetta Stone became a valuable key to deciphering the hieroglyphs.
Everything you ever wanted to know about the Rosetta Stone
What is the Rosetta stone facts for kids?
The Rosetta Stone is an ancient Egyptian stone slab. It has the same text carved on it in three different writing systems, including ancient Egyptian hieroglyphics. Finding the stone helped modern scholars figure out how to read hieroglyphics. The stone is an irregularly shaped piece of black granite.
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