František Lexa (1876-1960) was a Czechoslovakian Egyptologist. Lexa began his career as a secondary school teacher.[1] Having learnt the Egyptian language by himself,[1] he became the first person to translate and publish Egyptian texts into Czech in 1905.[2] Lexa spent the rest of his career at Charles University in Prague, first as a private senior lecturer of Egyptology in 1919, then an associate professor in 1922, then Czechoslovakia's first Professor for Egyptology in 1927, and finally the first director of the Czechoslovak Institute of Egyptology in 1958.[2][3] Lexa's students included Jaroslav Černý and Zbyněk Žába.[3]

Portrait of Frantisek Lexa

Works

edit
  • Papyrus Insinger (in French, Librairie orientaliste: P. Geuthner, Paris; 1926)
  • Výbor z mladší a starší literatury staroegyptské
  • Náboženská literatura staroegyptská
  • Staroegyptské čarodějnictví
  • Obecné mravní nauky staroegyptské
  • Grammaire démotique
  • Veřejný život ve starém Egyptě

Further reading

edit
  • František Lexa: The Founder of Czech Egyptology. Prague: Charles University. 1989.

References

edit
  1. ^ a b "The Czech Institute of Egyptology Celebrates its 50th Anniversary". Portal of Prague. Archived from the original on 2009-02-12. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
  2. ^ a b "Significant dates in the history of Czech egyptology". Czech Institute of Egyptology. 2005-06-20. Retrieved 2009-02-24.
  3. ^ a b "Unearthing Ancient Egypt" (PDF). Czech Institute of Egyptology, Charles University. Retrieved 2009-02-24.