Janet Gourlay Explained

Janet A. Gourlay
Birth Date:30 January 1863
Birth Place:Dundee, Scotland
Death Place:Kempshot Park, Basingstoke
Education:University College, London
Partner:Margaret Benson

Janet A. Gourlay (1863 - 1912) was a Scottish Egyptologist,[1] known for her excavation of and publication on the Mut Complex in Egypt. Gourlay was born on 30 January 1863 in Dundee, Scotland, to Henry G. Gourlay and Agnes Christine Burell. Later in life, she briefly studied at University College, London in 1893, with William Matthew Flinders Petrie, the pioneering archaeologist, and Margaret Murray.[2]

Personal life

Gourlay would meet her lifelong partner Margaret Benson in 1896 during the second excavation of the Mut Complex.[3] The pair were introduced by Lady Jane Lindsay.[4] In conjunction with their social relationship, they formed a scientific partnership that benefitted the pair and allowed them to continue their work in Egypt.[5] This partnership ensured their ability to complete their work without a man and receive the funding they needed complete said work. Upon completion of their excavations, Benson’s health began deteriorating, so the two women returned to their respective homes. They kept in close contact via letters.[6] In these, they expressed their devotion, emotions, and happenings to one another.[7] Benson’s health never made a recovery so plans made by the pair to return to Egypt for more excavations were never continued.

On 3 March 1912, Gourlay died in Kempshot Park, Basingstoke. She never married.

Professional endeavors

Gourlay joined Benson in 1896 in the second season of excavation at the Mut Complex in Karnak, Thebes, in Egypt.[8] The pair stayed at the Luxor Hotel for the duration of these digging seasons.[9] Gourlay and Benson are credited with this excavation of the Temple of Mut, which they would later publish an account of in 1899.[10] It was published as an incomplete work, so that the information could be available to others and it would not be forgotten as it previously had been, which they explained in the preface. Gourlay and Benson were the first women to undertake an excavation of this nature and is acknowledged in their preface, which reads "we have to thank M. de Morgan’s liberality for the first permission to excavate given to women in Egypt".[11]

Their excavation would go on to span two digging seasons, resulting in three digging seasons total for the Mut Complex. The two women restored and uncovered various pieces of sculptures, heads, figures, and architecture. Notable statuary includes the head of Amun (or Amun-re), the head of Ramesses III, a statue of Ramesses II, the figure of priest Sur, Senenmut, and Bak-en-Khonsu, and various other figures.[12] One of the most well known figures recovered by Gourlay and Benson was the head of a figure, commonly referred to as the Benson Head. After identifying the items, the pair made an effort to account for religious representations associated with the pieces.

Gourlay later worked with Percy E. Newberry in 1900 and 1901.[13] The two would publish a journal describing the excavation of Mentu-Em-Hat.[14]

Publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Women in Old World Archaeology . 2022-04-15 . www.brown.edu.
  2. Sheppard . Kathleen . 2021-07-06 . British Egyptology (1882-1914) . UCLA Encyclopedia of Egyptology . en . 1 . 1.
  3. Book: Bierbrier, M.L. . Who Was Who in Egyptology . The Egypt Exploration Society . 2012 . 978-0-85698-207-1 . 219 . English.
  4. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 150 . 1287920922.
  5. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 153 . 1287920922.
  6. Book: Benson, Arthur Christopher . Life and letters of Maggie Benson . 1917 . London : J. Murray . University of California Libraries.
  7. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 152, 153 . 1287920922.
  8. Web site: Janet A. Gourlay. Peck. William H.. Breaking Ground: Women in Old World Archaeology. Brown University. 26 February 2016.
  9. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 148 . 1287920922.
  10. Web site: sculpture British Museum . 2022-03-11 . The British Museum . en.
  11. Book: Benson . Margaret . Temple of Mut in Asher; an account of the excavation of the temple and of the religious representations and objects found therein, as illustrating the . Gourlay . Janet A. . Newberry . Percy Edward . 1899 . London, J. Murray . Princeton Theological Seminary Library.
  12. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 151 . 1287920922.
  13. Book: SHEPPARD, KATHLEEN . TEA ON THE TERRACE : hotels and egyptologists' social networks, 1885-1925. . 2022 . MANCHESTER UNIV PRESS . 978-1-5261-6620-3 . [S.l.] . 198 . 1287920922.
  14. Web site: Women in Old World Archaeology . 2022-03-11 . www.brown.edu.
  15. Book: Benson. Margaret. Temple of Mut in Asher; an account of the excavation of the temple and of the religious representations and objects found therein, as illustrating the. Gourlay. Janet A.. Newberry. Percy Edward. 1899. London, J. Murray. Princeton Theological Seminary Library.