Schliemann of Troy: Treasure and Deceit

by David A. Traill

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Using correspondence and diary entries, the author recounts the personal and professional life of the archaeologist and exposes an unscrupulous individual who distorted facts and made false claims about some of his discoveries.

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6 reviews
Victorian archaeology techniques read like vandalism from a modern perspective, and Traill is clearly appalled by this founder of his profession, becoming infuriated by Schliemann's Barnum+Bailey spin, and elaborately catching Schliemann out in a lie. The biographer's rage at his subject makes this unintentionally funny in places.

Aside from the writer/subject conflict, this was a fascinating life, an excellent armchair history read.
Another mendacious hero. Traill tells a great balanced story of one of the greatest archaeologists, setting the facts straight and pointing to the whoppers he told while changing the history of history. From his version of his childhood - that he'd been obsessed with digging up Troy as a boy - to his stuffing his finds with bought, smuggled, and shuffled around goodies - truth played a limited role in his account of himself. He ranks with those great liars - L v d Post, Baron Munchausen, Jonathan Aitken, perhaps T E Lawrence and a recent Prime Minister come to mind - who were also great achievers. Traill is very good at sorting out the blatant from the suspect from the worthy-of-scepticism and generous in pointing to Schliemann's show more genuine achievements. Most important, that he rescued Homer from legend and put Troy back into history. Occasionally the details of which grave or pile of rubble or hunk of sculpture was found where can be hard to follow; nonetheless overall, an intriguing story with several big personalities,especially the central one. show less
½
Traill offers an interesting story, but, seems largely focused on convicting his subject of lying and general dishonesty. He clearly demonstrates that Schliemann was dishonest and self-aggrandizing. If Traill were writing today rather than in 1995, he might draw parallels with the "self-presentation" and "personal branding" of Internet influencers, reality television personalities, and corrupt politicians. At least Schliemann made major contributions to our knowledge of the Aegean Bronze Age.
David A. Traill's scholarly biography Schliemann of Troy: Treasure and Deceit is about Heinrich Schliemann, the 19th-century archaeologist who found the Troy ruins in 1871. The book is detailed and meticulously researched, and some say it's densely informative and readable. Reviews note that the book slowly reveals how Schliemann was self-centered and a myth-maker, and that half of what he said was a lie. The book also discusses how Schliemann concealed artifacts, fabricated details in his diaries, and prioritized his own delusion over analyzing what he discovered.
Just picked up the Penguin '96 edition - Different cover. 50c

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Common Knowledge

Canonical title*
Schliemann de Troie
Original title
Schliemann of Troy. Treasure and Deceit
Original publication date
1995 (1e édition originale américaine, St. Martin's Press) (1e édition originale américaine, St. Martin's Press); 1996 (1e édition originale française ∙ Grandes biographies ∙ Flammarion) (1e édition originale française ∙ Grandes biographies ∙ Flammarion)
People/Characters
Heinrich Schliemann; Frank Calvert; Sophia Schliemann
Important places
Troy; Greece; Athens, Greece
Original language*
Anglais (Etats-Unis) (Etats-Unis)
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.

Classifications

Genres
Anthropology, Nonfiction, Biography & Memoir, History, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
930.1092History & geographyHistory of ancient world (to ca. 499)Ancient History: China, Egypt, Rome, GreeceArchaeology
LCC
DF212 .S4 .T724History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaGreeceHistory of GreeceHistoryGeneral
BISAC

Statistics

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125
Popularity
260,366
Reviews
5
Rating
½ (3.73)
Languages
English, French
Media
Paper
ISBNs
5