Hieroglyphs is one of the oldest forms of writing in the world.
Depicting objects and living beings from the real world such as humans, animals or plants, this script was used across Egypt for thousands of years. But until 1799, when the chance discovery of an object in an Egyptian fort provided the key to their decipherment, the meaning of this pictorial language remained a mystery.
Follow the story of how hieroglyphs influenced new languages, inspired cultures around the world and, after they were decoded, unlocked many secrets to the ancient Egyptian civilisation.
Hieroglyphs timeline
Around 3250 BC
The invention of writing

This period in world history
Writing emerged independently in at least four different places: Mesopotamia, Egypt, China, and Mesoamerica. Of these original writing systems, Egyptian and Sumerian are the oldest known (from 3300–3250 BC onwards).
3250–332 BC
Sacred carvings

This period in world history
Stonehenge's iconic sarsen stones, which give it its distinctive silhouette, were raised around 2500 BC.
332–30 BC
Greek rule in Egypt

This period in world history
Egypt officially became part of the Roman empire in 30 BC after the death of queen Cleopatra VII, but Greek remained the official administrative language of Egypt until AD 706, when it was replaced by Arabic.
100 BC – AD 394
The rise of Coptic

Greek and Coptic gradually replaced other forms of Egyptian writing, including hieroglyphs. The later spread of Christianity led to ancient religious practices being abandoned, and temples closed. The last known hieroglyphic inscription is a graffito by a priest at Philae temple dated to AD 394. The ability to read ancient Egyptian then vanished.
This period in world history
Following a series of crises from the later 2nd century AD, ancient Rome's decline began. The western empire fragmented rapidly before the final emperor was deposed in AD 476.
AD 900s
Arab endeavours

This period in world history
The Islamic world, which stretched across North Africa and into Central Asia, experienced a golden age of cultural, economic and scientific florescence from the 700s to the 1300s. In AD 970 Al-Azhar University, the oldest surviving university in the world, was founded in Cairo.
1400–1700
Interest in Egypt from Europe

This period in world history
About 1400, the Inca Empire emerged in the highlands of the Central Andes. They built the citadel of Machu Picchu in Peru around 1450.
1799
The key to decipherment

This period in history
The 19th century saw a wave of inventions towards the end of the Industrial Revolution in Britain, Europe and the United States, including the steam locomotive and the photograph.
1822
'Look, I've got it!'

On 14 September 1822, Champollion excitedly visited his brother. Waving his notes in the air, he gasped, 'Je tiens l'affaire, vois!' (Look, I've got it!) before promptly collapsing. The notes formed the basis of a historic letter in which Champollion outlined his findings on the translation of the hieroglyphs in royal names. The public reading of this letter on 27 September 1822 is considered the moment of decipherment.
This period in world history
The final defeat of Napoleon in 1815 restored order to Europe. The progressive (if often ruthless) rule of Ottoman Viceroy Muhammed Ali from 1805–48 led to growing stability in Egypt. Many Europeans began to travel to Egypt from the 1820s onwards.
1824–1825
A chronicle of kings

1836
Unlocking Egypt
