Amelia Edwards
(1831-1892), Novelist and egyptologistAmelia Ann Blanford Edwards
Later Victorian Portraits Catalogue Entry
Sitter in 6 portraits
Unusually for Victorian women travel writers, Amelia Edwards was already a successful novelist before she started travelling. In the 1860s she embarked on a series of expeditions, to Europe and Egypt. Her account of this latter trip, A Thousand Miles up the Nile, was the first general archaeological survey of Egypt's ruins. It made her name and changed the direction of her life. Edwards was central in founding the discipline of Egyptology, setting up the Egypt Exploration Fund in 1882. She left her library and collection of antiquities to University College, London, as well as a bequest that established the first English chair in Egyptology.
by Herbert Watkins
albumen print, arched top, late 1850s
NPG P301(23)
by Percival Ball
marble bust, 1873
NPG 929
by Frederick Richard Window
albumen carte-de-visite, 1860s
NPG x14331
by Window & Grove
albumen cabinet card, 1860s
NPG x197305
Various writers, historians and philanthropists
by and after Elliott & Fry
bromide print, 1890s
NPG Ax139908
by August Weger, after Elliott & Fry
line and stipple engraving, after 1876
NPG D7713
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