About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 55. Chapters: English Egyptologists, Scottish Egyptologists, Howard Carter, Thomas Young, Margaret Murray, Flinders Petrie, Battiscombe Gunn, E. A. Wallis Budge, David Roberts, David Rohl, Richard William Howard Vyse, Peter Ucko, Kenneth Kitchen, John Pendlebury, Henry Hall, Samuel Sharpe, Joann Fletcher, J. Gwyn Griffiths, Amelia Edwards, Richard B. Parkinson, Arthur Weigall, Joseph Bonomi the Younger, Henry Salt, Raymond O. Faulkner, Flaxman Charles John Spurrell, Dorothy Eady, Stephen Glanville, John Gardner Wilkinson, Walter Bryan Emery, William J. Field, Dominic Montserrat, John Romer, A. J. Arkell, Peter le Page Renouf, Nicholas Reeves, Harry Burton, Alexander Henry Rhind, James Burton, Alan Gardiner, Samuel Birch, Edward R. Ayrton, Geoffrey Thorndike Martin, Percy Newberry, T. G. H. James, Stanley Lane-Poole, Warren Royal Dawson, Robert Partridge, Margaret Benson, Francis Llewellyn Griffith, Barry Kemp, James E. Quibell, Idris Bell, I. E. S. Edwards, Thomas Pettigrew, Delia Pemberton, John Shae Perring, Geraldine Harris, Aylward M. Blackman, Bernard Pyne Grenfell, Paul Sussman, Frederick W. Green, Thomas Eric Peet, Charles Allberry, John Baines, Robert Hay, Barbara G. Adams, John D. Ray, N. de Garis Davies, Arthur Surridge Hunt, Toby Wilkinson, Charles Wycliffe Goodwin, Ian Shaw, John W. Tait, Penelope Wilson, Guy Brunton, Dunbar Isidore Heath, Cecil Mallaby Firth, Janet Gourlay, Somers Clarke, Henry Francis Herbert Thompson. Excerpt: Margaret Alice Murray (13 July 1863 - 13 November 1963) was a prominent British Egyptologist and anthropologist. Primarily known for her work in Egyptology, which was "the core of her academic career," she is also known for her propagation of the Witch-cult hypothesis, the theory that the witch trials in the Early Modern period of Christianized Europe and North America were an attempt to exti...