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Travel Bug Dog Tag The Rosetta Stone

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Owner:
johnny_kache Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Thursday, December 4, 2003
Origin:
Saskatchewan, Canada
Recently Spotted:
In the hands of Craig da Bruin.

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Current Goal

1. Help the Rosetta stone get to London, England.(Done!) 2. Take it to see the real stone at the British Museum. (Done!) 3. Help it get to the palace of Versailles in France.(Done!) 4. Take it to Rosetta (El-Rashid), Egypt and find the site. 5. Send It back to Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. PLEASE TAKE PICTURES OF THE STONE AT ITS GOALS!!!!!!

07/008/07 UPDATE: Having reached the British Museum, (Thank you elimmen et al.!!) The stone has now made it to The Palace of Versailles in order to pay credence to its French connections!!!!!(A big thanks to oej and all the others who have helped it along the way!!!)Now it's off to Egypt! El Rashid, here we come.

Update: 13/05/28:

The Stone has bee bouncing around Germany for quite some time... Hope some brave soul wants to take it farther! Don't forget about Egypt!

We are coming up on the 10th aniversary of the stone's release!!!!!

Cheers.

Update: 14/03/20

This TB is just shy of traveling the circumference of the earth all on its own! Only 3596 km left to go! Over the past ten years it has seen many places and faces. Thanks to all the intrepid cachers of Germany where it has crisscrossed the country! Hopefully Egypt is on someone's list!

Have Fun!

Johnny_Kache

About This Item

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Soon after the end of the fourth century AD, when hieroglyphs had gone out of use, the knowledge of how to read and write them disappeared. In the early years of the nineteenth century, some 1400 years later, scholars were able to use the Greek inscription on this stone as the key to decipher them. Thomas Young, an English physicist, was the first to show that some of the hieroglyphs on the Rosetta Stone wrote the sounds of a royal name, that of Ptolemy. The French scholar Jean-François Champollion then realized that hieroglyphs recorded the sound of the Egyptian language and laid the foundations of our knowledge of ancient Egyptian language and culture. Soldiers in Napoleon's army discovered the Rosetta Stone in 1799 while digging the foundations of an addition to a fort near the town of El-Rashid (Rosetta). On Napoleon's defeat, the stone became the property of the English under the terms of the Treaty of Alexandria (1801) along with other antiquities that the French had found.

Gallery Images related to The Rosetta Stone

View All 10 Gallery Images

Tracking History (41469.7mi) View Map

Dropped Off 6/11/2017 dani_carriere placed it in Western Pub Night Manitoba, Canada - 1,183.62 miles  Visit Log
Retrieve It from a Cache 6/11/2017 dani_carriere retrieved it from GeoWoodstock XV North Carolina   Visit Log

Picked up at GeoWoodstock XV, will move along.

Dropped Off 5/26/2017 JOSTE placed it in GeoWoodstock XV North Carolina - 21.98 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/25/2017 JOSTE took it to #GW15: Salvaging What's Left of the Day North Carolina - 50.4 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/25/2017 JOSTE took it to "Bringin' up the Rear" North Carolina - 10.62 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/25/2017 JOSTE took it to #GW15: Choo, Choo, Chew - Full Steam Ahead! North Carolina - 58.93 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/24/2017 JOSTE took it to S.N. répond à la vaste français North Carolina - .15 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/24/2017 JOSTE took it to #GW15: Early Bird Hopping! North Carolina - 54.64 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/24/2017 JOSTE took it to Mount Mitchell Summit North Carolina - .01 miles  Visit Log
Visited 5/24/2017 JOSTE took it to High Country North Carolina - 69.39 miles  Visit Log
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