Hilda Petrie Historical records and family trees related to Hilda Petrie. A 'signal woman pulling over the leavers in a signal box' during the First World War, British Official Photograph, Crown copyright reserved. Die Radiokarbondatierung wird genauer als je zuvor: Als Teil eines internationales Forschungsteam trug die Universität Hohenheim dazu bei die Technik... Langer Hals half Saurier bei Unterwasserjagd. Another of her childhood friends was Philippa Fawcett whose mother, Dame Millicent Fawcett, was a leader in the women's suffrage movement. Hilda travelled and worked with Flinders Petrie to excavate and record numerous sites in Egypt, and later in Palestine. Sein Hals bestand aus dreizehn extrem verlängerten Wirbeln und war dreimal so lang wie sein Rumpf: Der Giraffenhalssaurier Tanystropheus lebte vor 24... Forschungsteam beschreibt rund elf Millionen Jahre alten Vogelschädel von der Fundstelle Hammerschmiede als frühesten Nachweis eines großen Kranich... Jonah’s Mausmaki: Internationales Forscherteam entdeckt in Madagaskar neue Primatenart.
The Women’s Collection at LSE Library. [4] Some of these were in a hitherto unknown script, which was dubbed Sinaitic, and her work as a copyist was welcomed. Zurück in Großbritannien hielt Petrie im Jahr darauf um Hilda Urlins Hand an. Sie unterstützte ihn als Zeichnerin und Fotografin wie auch später als Ausgräberin. Another of her childhood friends was Philippa Fawcett whose mother, Dame Millicent Fawcett, was a leader in the women's suffrage movement. [4] In particular she wrote to the prominent and the wealthy to canvass support for Flinders Petrie's work, and oversaw its publication, and gave public lectures in London and elsewhere in the UK. Hilda Mary Isabel Petrie (née Urlin; 1871–1957) was an Irish-born British Egyptologist and wife of Flinders Petrie, the father of scientific archaeology.

November 2016. November 1956 in London) war eine britische Ägyptologin und langjährige Mitarbeiterin ihres Ehemannes Flinders Petrie. This included directing some excavations herself, and working in often difficult and dangerous conditions to produce copies of tomb hieroglyphs and plans, and to record the work for reports to the Egypt Exploration Fund. When Petrie was four years old her family moved back to London and she was educated by a governess along with other children of similar age. "[5] Her work at the site continued into 1898-9, and she drew almost all of the pottery marks and arranged the plates, as well as undertaking the continual work to register and attend to the pottery, and to number the skeletons.
When she wasn’t raising money, children, or pots out of the ground, Hilda was working with a vast array of TrowelBlazing women – she was part of a crowd that included Tessa Wheeler, Margaret Murray, Grace Crowfoot and others.