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Margaret Benson

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Margaret Benson (16 June 1865 – May 1916) was an English author and amateur Egyptologist, one of the six children of Edward White Benson, an Anglican clergyman (later Archbishop of Canterbury). She was one of the first women to be admitted to Oxford University and she attended Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford.

She was the first woman to be granted a concession to excavate in Egypt. With her companion Janet Gourlay she excavated for three seasons (1895-97) in the Temple of the Goddess Mut, Mut Complex, a part of Karnak, Thebes, Egypt.

She suffered from frail health most of her life, was not able to continue the excavation after 1897, and in 1907 she suffered a severe mental breakdown and died in 1916 (in the Priory, Roehampton) at the age of 51.

Publications

  • Benson, Margaret and Gourlay, Janet. The Temple of Mut in Asher: An account of the excavation of the temple and of the religious representations and objects found therein, as illustrating the history of Egypt and the main religious ideas of the Egyptians, London, John Murray, 1899