Archive of Thotsutmis, Son of Panouphis : Early Ptolemaic Ostraca from Deir el Bahari (O. Edgerton)
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
Book Series
Oriental Institute Publications
ISBN-10
1614910677
ISBN-13
9781614910671
Publisher
Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures
Imprint
Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jan 28th, 2022
Print length
228 Pages
Weight
1,274 grams
Dimensions
30.60 x 23.80 x 2.30 cms
Product Classification:
Ancient history: to c 500 CEArchaeology by period / regionEgyptian archaeology / Egyptology
Ksh 15,700.00
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The Archive of Thotsutmis, Son of Panouphis presents for the first time one of the largest collections of Demotic ostraca to have been discovered intact by archaeologists in the twentieth century. They were excavated at the site of Deir el-Bahari, on the west bank of the Nile, opposite the city of Luxor, Egypt.
The Archive of Thotsutmis, Son of Panouphis presents for the first time one of the largest collections of Demotic ostraca to have been discovered intact by archaeologists in the twentieth century. Rarely have such deposits been found in situ. Excavated by Ambrose Lansing on behalf of the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 1915-16 at the site of Deir el-Bahari, the integrity and context of this find are critical to the proper understanding of the texts it contained. Through the publication and analysis of this archive of Demotic and Greek texts recorded on ostraca, Muhs, Scalf, and Jay reconstruct the microhistory of Thotsutmis, son of Panouphis, and his family, who worked in Egypt on the west bank of Thebes as priests in the mortuary industry during the early Ptolemaic Period in the third century BC. The forty-two ostraca published in this volume provide a rare opportunity to explore the intersections between an intact ancient archive of private administrative documents and the larger social and legal contexts into which they fit. What the reconstructed microhistory reveals is an ancient family striving to make it among the wealthy and connected social network of Theban choachytes and pastophoroi, while they simultaneously navigated the bureaucratic maze of taxes, fees, receipts, and legal procedures of the Ptolemaic state.
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