at
Cairo Among C.C. Edgar's early archaeological expeditions was an investigation of the temple at
Kynosarges near Athens in 1896–1897, and excavations of the prehistoric
Cycladic burials at Pelos on the island of
Milos in the Cyclades. Already a scholar of
Classical Greece, C.C. Edgar began to specialise in the study of
Hellenistic Egypt. In 1900 the Egyptian Government appointed him to work on the
Catalogue général des antiquités égyptiennes du Musée du Caire of the
Cairo Museum, and Edgar learned to read Egyptian
hieroglyphics. Edgar's career in Egypt advanced, and in 1905 was appointed chief inspector of antiquities in the Nile Delta. Edgar took part in some important archaeological digs, including assisting
David George Hogarth at the ancient city of
Naukratis in 1903, and excavating the Tomb of Khesuwer at
Kom el-Hisn in 1910. In 1914, a hoard of ancient papyrus documents known as the
Zenon Papyri was discovered in the Nile Valley, a cache of financial and legal records from the lost ancient city of
Philadelphia. Together with fellow papyrologist
Arthur Surridge Hunt, Edgar translated the documents from the original
Greek and
Demotic. In 1925, C.C. Edgar was appointed keeper and secretary-general of the Cairo Museum. He retired in 1927 and returned to Britain. ==Death and legacy==