In A century of excavation in the land of the Pharaohs, James Baikie surveys the first hundred years of modern archaeological work in Egypt, tracing the major discoveries, sites, and personalities that transformed the study of Pharaonic civilization. Written in an elegant early twentieth-century prose, the book combines historical narrative with popular exposition, making technical scholarship accessible without sacrificing seriousness. It belongs to that formative moment when Egyptology was emerging as a disciplined field, and it captures both the excitement of discovery and the intellectual effort to reconstruct ancient Egyptian religion, art, and daily life from material remains. Baikie was a Scottish author and popular historian best known for bringing Egyptology to a broad English-speaking readership. Writing at a time when spectacular finds and imperial networks had made Egypt newly visible to European audiences, he drew upon contemporary archaeological reports and the work of leading excavators. His gift lay in synthesizing specialized research into a coherent cultural history, and this volume reflects his sustained interest in the relationship between excavation, historical interpretation, and the modern imagination of antiquity. This book is especially recommended for readers interested in the history of archaeology, the making of Egyptology, and the reception of ancient Egypt in modern scholarship. Baikie offers not merely a catalogue of excavations, but a reflective account of how buried monuments became historical knowledge.




