About: Indiana Jones' journal   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : dbkwik:resource/COCtJGRxxvPcVVBGu1hR9w==, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

Jones was given a journal by his father Henry Jones, Sr., after the Jones family had arrived in Egypt in 1908. He used it to document all of his childhood and teen adventures. It served as a record of places he had been, things he had learned, and people he had met. However, he used a different and smaller journal during his search for the Ark of the Covenant in 1936. → This article is a stub. You can help us by adding to it. Check out the talk page for hints on what needs to be done.

AttributesValues
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Indiana Jones' journal
rdfs:comment
  • Jones was given a journal by his father Henry Jones, Sr., after the Jones family had arrived in Egypt in 1908. He used it to document all of his childhood and teen adventures. It served as a record of places he had been, things he had learned, and people he had met. However, he used a different and smaller journal during his search for the Ark of the Covenant in 1936. → This article is a stub. You can help us by adding to it. Check out the talk page for hints on what needs to be done.
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:indiana-jon...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:indianajone...iPageUsesTemplate
discoverer
Discovery date
  • November 1957
collector
Artifact Name
  • Indiana Jones' journal
abstract
  • Jones was given a journal by his father Henry Jones, Sr., after the Jones family had arrived in Egypt in 1908. He used it to document all of his childhood and teen adventures. It served as a record of places he had been, things he had learned, and people he had met. However, he used a different and smaller journal during his search for the Ark of the Covenant in 1936. The cover featured an ibis, the symbol of the Egyptian god Thoth (the scribe of the gods) until age forced it to be replaced with a leather cover inscribed with Jones' signature. Though it fell into KGB possession for a time, it was eventually returned to Jones, and he carried it with him well into his 90s. While in KGB possession, it was given the item number 71-8313-HJJ. The Federal Security Service of the Russian Federation circulated the journal, with notations to intelligence agents for other countries, code-named "Mad Dog", "Monkey", and "Grey Wolf" as well as publishing it when huge public demand called for the information inside. The release was covered inside Daily News. → This article is a stub. You can help us by adding to it. Check out the talk page for hints on what needs to be done.
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