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Labib Habachi, whose untiring curiosity led him to study wide-ranging fields of Egyptian archaeology and history, was unquestionably Egypt's most productive and internationally recognized Egyptologist of the twentieth century. His bibliography, compiled after his death in 1984 by Egyptologist Mai Trad, shows more than 180 documented excavations, some published posthumously. There are few areas of archaeological activity in Egypt today that do not carry a reference to one aspect or another of his achievements. He had an encyclopedic knowledge of the subject of his specialization, he was an invaluable source concerning the results of fieldwork, and his familiarity with ancient Egyptian monuments, reliefs, paintings, and graffiti—often small, obscure, and hard to reach—was gained largely through his own fieldwork. Habachi struggled relentlessly to carve his way into the annals of a discipline traditionally dominated by western scholars, but many of his most perceptive archaeological observations, based on a deep understanding of ancient history and contemporary society, were rejected out of hand because they cast doubt on earlier, European conclusions. They have only lately been recognized.
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