The Great Belzoni (1778
-1823)

Giovanni Battista
Belzoni — Italian showman, engineer and explorer of Egyptian
antiquities, was born on November 15, 1778 at
Padua
, of northeastern
Italy
.
Padua
is a walled city highly noted as a center for agriculture, the Basilica of
Saint Anthony, and its famous University and is located 27 miles west of
Venice
.
His quest for adventure
brought him to
England
in 1803 and by means of his gigantic physique, earned a living in circuses
in
England
,
Spain
and
Portugal
and where he was billed as “The Great Belzoni.”
In 1815 he went to
Cairo
to offer to Mohammed Ali Pasha, the founder of modern
Egypt
, a hydraulic machine he had invented, which worked extremely well. While
in
Egypt
he met the British Consul General, Henry Salt, who engaged him to travel
to
Thebes
to remove the colossal stone head of Rameses II (The Young Memnon) to be
delivered to the
British
Museum
.
His success prompted
Henry Salt to further Belzoni's expeditions to the
temple
of
Edfu
, Philae and Elephantine, where he cleared the great
temple
of
Rameses II
at Abu Simbel, excavated at Karnak, and in 1817 discovered the tomb of the
Pharaoh Seti I, in the
Valley of the Kings
.
Belzoni was the first person to penetrate into the second pyramid of
Giza
(1818) by using his engineering genius to locate the entrance to the inner
chambers, and the first European to visit the oasis of Siwah, and identify
the ruined city of
Berenice
on the
Red Sea
.
He returned to
England
in 1819 and a year later published his Narrative of the Operations and
Recent Discoveries Within the Pyramids,
Temples
, Tombs and Excavations, in
Egypt
and
Nubia
(2 vol., atlas of plates, 3rd ed., 1822).
In 1823 Belzoni set out
for
Timbuktu
in West Africa, but died at the
village
of
Gwato
, near
Benin
,
Nigeria
December 3, 1823. In 1825 his widow exhibited in
Paris
and
London
his drawings and models of the royal tombs of
Thebes
.
Source: Encyclopedia
Britannica
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