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Cyril Aldred |
| Cyril Aldred | |
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Cyril Aldred in 1969 |
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| Born | February 19, 1914 Fulham, London |
| Died | June 23, 1991 (aged 77) Edinburgh |
| Occupation | Egyptologist and art historian |
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Cyril Aldred (23 June 1914 - 19 February 1991) was a noted English Egyptologist and art historian
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He was born in Fulham, London, the son of Frederick Aldred and Lilian Ethel Underwood (Aldred).
Aldred attended Sloane School, in Chelsea, and studied English at King's College London, and then art history at the Courtauld Institute of Art. While a student, he met Howard Carter, the archaeologist who discovered the Tutankhamen tomb, in 1933, and this meeting was to determine the future direction of his career. He graduated from the Courtauld in 1936. In 1937, he became an assistant curator at the Royal Scottish Museum, Edinburgh where he worked for the remainder of his professional life.
In 1938 he married Jessie Kennedy Morton (b. 1909), a physiotherapist. During World War II, Aldred served in the RAF, returning to Edinburgh in 1946, to undertake a serious study of Egyptology.
In 1949, his book Old Kingdom Art in Ancient Egypt and was followed by volumes on the middle and new kingdoms in 1950 and 1952. These publications established his career as an Egyptologist and art historian. He also contributed essays on Egyptian woodwork and furniture as a part of the Oxford History of Technology in 1954 and 1956. In 1955, he worked as an associate curator for a year in the department of Egyptian art in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, with the curator, William C. Hayes. Aldred returned to Scotland in 1956. In 1961 he was promoted to keeper of art and archaeology, which post he held until his retirement. Aldred's book "Akhenaten, Pharaoh of Egypt", was published in 1968. "Jewels of the Pharaohs" appeared in 1971 published by Thames and Hudson. His most significant art-historical writing of the period was the catalog he wrote for the Brooklyn Museum exhibition, "Akhenaten and Nefertiti" in 1973.
Aldred retired in 1974, but his writing continued. Beginning in 1978, Aldred wrote studies for the French "L'univers des formes" surveys of Egyptian art (other volumes appearing in 1979 and 1980). In 1980, Aldred published "Egyptian Art", althgough another intended book on Egyptian sculpture was never published. The Times Educational Supplement said of Egyptian Art "His eloquent ability to weave facts, insights and interpretations into a compulsively readable account sets his book far above the clogged texts that too often pass for art history". In 1988 he enlarged his 1968 text in "Akhenaten, King of Egypt",with later findings.
He died at his home in Edinburgh in 1991.