M
Mike_D30
Guest
mormon fool:
*"The papyri were thought to have been completely destroyed in a fire in Chicago in 1871. However, eleven fragments of the scroll Joseph Smith was handling were rediscovered in 1967 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City (The Deseret News, Salt Lake City, November 27, 1967). Dr. Aziz S. Atiya, a professor of Arabic Studies from the University of Utah, made the identification, which was quite secure, since the back of the papyrus fragments were pasted down to paper with “drawings of a temple and maps of the Kirtland, Ohio area.” There was an affidavit from Emma Smith that these papyri had been in the possession of Joseph Smith. With the rediscovery of the papyri, not only were fragments of the original Egyptian text recovered, from which Joseph Smith was translating to create the Book of Abraham, but the original illustrations of the three facsimilies were now available to professional Egyptologists.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art de-accessioned the papyri, which were fragmentary, late (Ptolemaic period) and of very familiar Egyptian texts, thus of little value to a museum, and presented them to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."*
They were found, and deciphered, and they didn’t come close to meaning what Joseph Smith said they did.
You smoke screen some more:Champollian deciphered the Rosseta stone in 1822, way before 1836.
Since the manuscript is lost, we don’t know it was a funerary text now do we?.
*"The papyri were thought to have been completely destroyed in a fire in Chicago in 1871. However, eleven fragments of the scroll Joseph Smith was handling were rediscovered in 1967 in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City (The Deseret News, Salt Lake City, November 27, 1967). Dr. Aziz S. Atiya, a professor of Arabic Studies from the University of Utah, made the identification, which was quite secure, since the back of the papyrus fragments were pasted down to paper with “drawings of a temple and maps of the Kirtland, Ohio area.” There was an affidavit from Emma Smith that these papyri had been in the possession of Joseph Smith. With the rediscovery of the papyri, not only were fragments of the original Egyptian text recovered, from which Joseph Smith was translating to create the Book of Abraham, but the original illustrations of the three facsimilies were now available to professional Egyptologists.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art de-accessioned the papyri, which were fragmentary, late (Ptolemaic period) and of very familiar Egyptian texts, thus of little value to a museum, and presented them to The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints."*
They were found, and deciphered, and they didn’t come close to meaning what Joseph Smith said they did.