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The “Fayum Library”

  • Kim Ryholt
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New Approaches in Demotic Studies
Ein Kapitel aus dem Buch New Approaches in Demotic Studies

Abstract

A number of important demotic literary papyri are inscribed in a highly characteristic hand, which is perhaps best known to colleagues from the two copies of Petechons and Sarpot in Vienna (table, nos 1 and 2). The purpose of the present paper is to bring attention to these papyri as a group and to discuss their possible provenance and social context. It will be argued that the bulk of the papyri derive from discoveries at two different sites; the larger in the 1880s, possibly in the area of Medinet el-Fayum, and the second in the early 1930s at Tebtunis. My interest in these papyri is owing to my work on a number of them (nos 3-6, 8, 14), most recently the “Reykjavik Inaros”, to the fact that several are housed in the Papyrus Carlsberg Collection (nos 3, 7-10), and not least to their similarity with the material found in the Tebtunis temple library deposit.

Abstract

A number of important demotic literary papyri are inscribed in a highly characteristic hand, which is perhaps best known to colleagues from the two copies of Petechons and Sarpot in Vienna (table, nos 1 and 2). The purpose of the present paper is to bring attention to these papyri as a group and to discuss their possible provenance and social context. It will be argued that the bulk of the papyri derive from discoveries at two different sites; the larger in the 1880s, possibly in the area of Medinet el-Fayum, and the second in the early 1930s at Tebtunis. My interest in these papyri is owing to my work on a number of them (nos 3-6, 8, 14), most recently the “Reykjavik Inaros”, to the fact that several are housed in the Papyrus Carlsberg Collection (nos 3, 7-10), and not least to their similarity with the material found in the Tebtunis temple library deposit.

Heruntergeladen am 5.12.2025 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9783110664874-012/html
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