Skip to main content
Diary Transcription:

microfilm: begin page 269

Sunday, March 1, 1925 (continued)

(3) Street G 7500 (continued)

[ILLUSTRATION]

(4) Tops of mastabas
The tops of several of the large mastabas are now being cleared. Especially G 7510 and G 7320, also at south end of street G 7200. There is no especially important event to record. Search continues for the second pit of G 7510 especially to the west of the niche newly discovered today (see in above plan).

microfilm: end page 269

Details

  • Classification
    Documentation-Expedition diary pages
  • Department
    Harvard University-Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition
  • Credit Line
    Harvard University–Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition
  • Display Page Dates
    03/01/1925
  • Author
    Thomas Richard Duncan Greenlees, British, 1899–

Tombs and Monuments 11

People 1

Modern People

  • Thomas Richard Duncan Greenlees

    • Type Author
    • Nationality & Dates British, 1899–
    • Remarks Thomas Richard Duncan Greenlees, born South Africa, Sivaratri, March 10, 1899. British subject with a Scottish father and an English mother. For a brief period during 1925 he was a staff member of Harvard University--Boston Museum of Fine Arts Expedition, who later joined the Theosophist movement in India. Greenlees received his MA degree in 1922 from Oxford, where he studied Egyptian, Coptic and Arabic. April 2,1925, Greenlees appointed Assistant Curator of Egyptian Art at MFA.