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  1. These included the granite head of Senwosret III (E.37.1930), who reigned in Dynasty 12, which Green presented to the Fitzwilliam Museum in 1930, and is now one of the key pieces of Middle Kingdom art held by the museum.

  2. Fredrick William Green. Dates: 1869 - 1949. British Egyptologist and excavator; he was born in London, 21 March 1869, son of Frederick G., solicitor, and Sophia Rose; he studied at Jesus College, Cambridge; BA, 1898; MA, 1901; he became interested in Egyptology at an early age and studied it under Sethe at Göttingen and later at Strasbourg; he ...

  3. Frederick Green was born in London, 1869. He was educated at Jesus College, Cambridge, BA, 1898, MA, 1901. He studied Egyptology under Kurt Sethe at Göttingen and Strasbourg and excavated sites in Egypt with Flinders Petrie and Somers Clarke, including El Kab, 1895-7.

  4. Born in 100 Fenchurch Street, London, England, UK on 8 September 1834 to William Green and Ann Elizabeth Tite. Sir Frederick Green had 1 child . He passed away on 1927 in England .

    • Male
    • September 8, 1834
    • 100 Fenchurch Street, London, England, UK
  5. The experience of working at these early Egyptian sites equipped Quibell for his own excavations at Hierakonpolis in 1897–8 where, with F.W. Green, he made the remarkable discovery of a cache of archaic objects in an archaeological context that was named 'the Main Deposit'.

  6. Key points. Most people in medieval society lived in villages, there were few large towns. The majority of people were peasants, who worked on the land. There were a range of jobs and trades in...

  7. Jun 17, 2011 · Throughout England much that we recognise today was established and survives: the parish churches with their towers, now fossilised in their late medieval form by the Reformation; oak-framed ...