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Archaeologists Born Before 1800

While not properly archaeologists at all, several scientists and scholars born before 1800 made substantial contributions to what was to become the science of archaeology.

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Bernabé Cobo [1582-1687]
17th century Spanish priest Bernabe Cobo lived 61 years in Mexico and South America, and did his level best to convert the Inca to Christianity.

Caleb Atwater [1778-1867]
Adventurer and traveler Caleb Atwater spent a great deal of the mid-nineteenth century wandering around the American continent and recording archaeological sites.

Charles Lyell [1797-1875]
Charles Lyell was a British geologist, whose "Principles of Geology" (1830-1833) gave wide public support to the principle of uniformitarianism

Diego de Landa [1524-1579]
Bishop de Landa is known as both the zealot Franciscan friar who came to the New World in 1549 and burned as many Maya codices as he could get his hands on.

Father John MacEnery [1796-1841]
Father John MacEnery was a Roman Catholic priest in the early 19th century, who excavated in the ancient cave site called Kent's Cavern.

9 more Articles & Resources below

Articles & Resources

more from your guide

Ferdinand Keller [1800-1881]
Swiss archaeologist who during the 1850s conducted the first excavations of an Alpine lake dwelling at Obermeilen.

Fray Diego Duran [ca. 1537-1588]
Spanish clergyman Diego DUran was a terrific ethnographer, particularly considering his time and purpose, and his books and records are considered an irreplaceable record of pre-Conquest and early Colonial Mexico.

Frederick Catherwood [1799-1854]
English explorer and artist Frederick Catherwood is perhaps best known for his travels with John Lloyd Stephens through central America, and the books they wrote on what they found there.

Giovanni Belzoni [1778-1821]
Legendary Italian pot hunter and early archaeologist Giovanni Belzoni is best known for his work at Abu Simbel.

Jean-Francois Champollion [1790-1832]
French linguist Champollion is known for his translation of the ancient scripts of Egypt.

John Aubrey [1626-1697]
The seventeenth century British adventurer and scientist, John Aubrey, had his own ideas about Stonehenge.

Thomas Jefferson [1743-1826]
The third president of the United States was an avid--well, actually Jefferson was avid about a lot of things, but one of the things he experimented with was archaeology.

Thomas Robert Malthus [1766-1834]
18th century Englishman Thomas Malthus, while not by any stretch of the imagination an archaeologist, nevertheless affected and still affects archaeological theory

William Camden [1551-1623]
British antiquarian William Camden is best known for Britannia, a history of the country written in Latin for Queen Elizabeth I.

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