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Elephantine papyri and ostraca
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==Discovery, excavation, collections and publications== {{multiple image |image1=The archaeological mound at the southern tip of Elephantine, as drawn in the 1809 Description de l'Égypte (cropped).jpg |image2=Assuan Elephantine Chnumtempel 03.JPG |caption1=Map of the mound from the 1809 ''[[Carte de l'Égypte (Description de l'Égypte)|Carte de l'Égypte]]'' |caption2=Modern photo of the main temple on the mound, following excavation |footer=Images of the mound in which the discoveries were located }} Between 1815 and 1904, all discoveries were unprovenanced and came via informal discoveries and antiquities dealers; only later were they understood by scholars to have originated from Elephantine. The first known such papyri were bought by [[Giovanni Belzoni]] and [[Bernardino Drovetti]]; [[Padua Aramaic papyri|a number of Aramaic letters]] and a demotic letter were presented by Belzoni to the [[Musei Civici di Padova]] in 1819 and three hieratic pieces from Drovetti – and the [[Turin Aramaic Papyrus]] – were deposited at the new [[Museo Egizio]] in [[Turin]] in 1824.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} Formal excavation of the mound at Elephantine Island began in 1904, and continued for the next seven years.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} Further finds were discovered through the first half of the 20th century.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} The mode of burial of the documents remains unknown, but they are thought to have been stored laterally and horizontally in close proximity to each other.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} ===Major discoveries=== The major Elephantine collections consist of discoveries from the end of the 19th and start of the 20th century, and these collections are now in museums in Berlin, Brooklyn, Cairo, London, Munich, and Paris.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} The largest collection is in the [[Berlin State Museums]] with texts in each of the languages.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1875–76: The British Museum acquired two Aramaic and one Coptic ostraca from the Rev. Greville John Chester. The two Aramaic ostraca are now known as [[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum|CIS]] II 138 (also known as NSI 74, [[Kanaanäische und Aramäische Inschriften|KAI]] 271 and British Museum E14219)<ref>[https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/W_1875-0517-44 British Museum E14219]: "...two nine line Aramaic inscriptions on different sides..."</ref> and CIS II 139 (British Museum E14420)<ref name=":0">[https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/object/W_1876-0615-60 British Museum E14420]: "...Pottery ostracon with painted Aramaic inscription in four lines..."</ref> * 1890s: From Luxor via the dealer Abd el-Megid was purchased a bilingual family archive which included three Greek legal texts and a demotic matrimonial document * 1893: American collector [[Charles Edwin Wilbour]] acquired a number of papyri, including 12 Aramaic documents from the Anani archive. Wilbour's family passed the documents to the [[Brooklyn Museum]] a few decades after his death, and they were published in 1953. It was at this time that scholars concluded that "Wilbour had acquired the first Elephantine papyri". * 1898–99: [[Richard August Reitzenstein]] and [[Wilhelm Spiegelberg]] acquired the first identifiable Aramaic papyrus from Elephantine in 1898–99. He donated it to what is now the [[National Academic Library (Strasbourg)|National and University Library]] in [[Strasbourg]]. * 1899: The [[:de:Papyrussammlung und Papyrusmuseum Wien|Papyrussammlung und Papyrusmuseum]] of Vienna acquired four demotic documents, probably via [[:de:Jakob Krall|Jakob Krall]] * 1901: [[Archibald Henry Sayce]] acquired a fragmented Aramaic papyrus and three Aramaic ostraca, which he donated to the [[Bodleian Library]] in Oxford * 1901–02: large collection of Greek and demotic papyri, including an IOU of a blacksmith from Syene, were acquired by [[Théodore Reinach]]; this collection is now in the [[University of Paris|Sorbonne]]. * Early 1900s: Over a number of years, [[Mary Cecil, 2nd Baroness Amherst of Hackney|Baroness Mary Cecil]] and [[Robert Mond]] acquired from dealers in Aswan a total of 11 Aramaic papyri from the Mibtahiah archive. These were donated to the [[Egyptian Museum]] in Cairo, which retained nine; one was subsequently acquired by the Bodleian. Their high profile publication in 1906 by Sayce and Cowley catalyzed expeditions for more Aramaic papyri. They were originally thought to have been found in Aswan rather than on the Elephantine island. * 1904: The first (brief) excavation on the Elephantine mound took place, after Sayce encouraged [[Gaston Maspero]] to excavate to search there for more Aramaic texts. No Aramaic texts were found, but a number of Greek and demotic fragments were. * Early 1906 until 1908: the German expedition was assigned to excavate the Western side of the mound; following [[Otto Rubensohn]] having been told by local Egyptians that it was the find spot of the recently discovered Aramaic papyri. The expedition worked for three seasons, two under the direction of Rubensohn and the third under Friedrich Zucker. The daily logs reported the discovery of papyri and ostraca, but made no record of their find-spots; the report was published by [[:de:Hans Wolfgang Müller|Hans Wolfgang Müller]] in 1980–82. The Aramaic, and some Greek, papyri were well published, but most of the demotic, hieratic, and Coptic texts were not. The Demotic and Greek papyri were found early on. The first Aramaic papyri were discovered on New Years day, 1907 in the rubble of a room at the northern edge of the mound, 0.5m beneath the surface; this was found to be part of an "Aramaic quarter”, a housing complex which yielded numerous Aramaic papyri. The three most significant of these Aramaic documents were published in 1907 by [[Eduard Sachau]]. Many of these discoveries are now in the [[Berlin State Museums]]; however, between 1907–12 ten Greek and demotic pieces, and many further Aramaic papyri, were transferred to the [[Egyptian Museum]] in Cairo. * Late 1906 until 1911: following the German successes, the French were assigned to excavate the eastern side of the mound. There were four campaigns, the first two under [[Charles Clermont-Ganneau]], the third under [[Joseph Étienne Gautier]], and the fourth under [[Jean Clédat]]. Daily records were kept; these were deposited in the [[Académie de Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres]] in the [[Institut de France]] in Paris and some parts have been published. The excavations discovered hundreds of Aramaic, demotic, Greek, Coptic and Arabic ostraca; these are now held at the [[Egyptian Museum]] in Cairo and the Académie des Inscriptions et Belles-Lettres in Paris. It also discovered five Greek papyri, and a hieratic papyrus now at the [[Louvre]]. * 1907: The Byzantine "Patermouthis archive" of approximately 30 documents was acquired in two halves: Robert de Rustafjaell acquired half in Luxor for the [[British Museum]] in 1907, and [[:de:Friedrich Zucker|Friedrich Zucker]] acquired half in Cairo for the [[Bavarian State Library]] in Munich in 1908. Coptic papyri acquired by Rustafjaell at the same time are now in the [[British Library]]. * 1910–11: A batch of Arabic papyri were acquired by the [[:de: Staats- und Universitätsbibliothek Hamburg|State Library of Hamburg]] * 1926: Bernard P. Grenfell and Francis W. Kelsey acquired seventy-seven Greek papyri, including one from Elephantine, for the University of Wisconsin, Madison. * 1945: Sami Gabri discovered the [[Hermopolis Aramaic papyri]] in Tuna el-Gebel (Hermopolis West): eight Aramaic letters which were deposited in the Department of Archaeology of the University of Cairo. ===Individual finds attributed to Elephantine=== Numerous smaller finds have been attributed to Elephantine:{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1815–1819: [[Padua Aramaic papyri|a number of Aramaic letters]] and a demotic letter were presented by [[Giovanni Belzoni]] to the [[Musei Civici di Padova]] in 1819. * 1817–1818: ''Papyrus Bibliothèque Nationale'': Bibliothèque Nationale, Butehamun correspondence letter bought by Frédéric Cailliaud. * 1819 ''Papyrus Edmonstone'': A Greek manumission document was acquired in 1819 by Sir Archibald Edmonstone and is still in the hands of a private collector. * 1821: ''Papyrus Paris'': Bibliothèque Nationale, a Greek conveyance document from a traveler named Casati. * 1824: ''[[Turin Aramaic Papyrus]]'': acquired by [[Bernardino Drovetti]] and donated to the new [[Museo Egizio]] in [[Turin]] in 1824, a hieratic charge sheet against the Elephantine Khnum priests. Donated together with two other hieratic letters from the Butehamun correspondence probably sent from Elephantine. * 1828: ''Papyrus Leiden'': [[Giovanni Anastasi (merchant)|Giovanni Anastasi]] acquired, allegedly at Philae but presumably at Elephantine, on behalf of the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden, a 5th century Greek petition to Emperor Theodosius. * 1862: ''Papyrus Valençay'': A Ramesside hieratic letter from the collection of the Duke of Valençay, now in the private collection of Jean Morel in the Château de Fins, [[Dun-le-Poëlier]]. It may have been originally purchased in 1862–63 by Count [[Eustachy Tyszkiewicz]]. * 1881: ''Papyrus Dodgson'': In January, 1881 Elkanah Armitage acquired a demotic papyrus on Elephantine which he presented to Aquila Dodgson; it was subsequently passed in 1932 to the [[Ashmolean Museum]] in Oxford. * 1887: The ''Dream ostracon'' ([[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum|CIS]] II 137, also known as NSI 73 and [[Kanaanäische und Aramäische Inschriften|KAI]] 270) is brought back from Elephantine by [[Adolf Erman]]. * 1896: three 6th dynasty hieratic papyri were acquired at Luxor for the [[Berlin State Museums]]. * 1898: The hieratic [[Semna Despatches]] discovered by [[James Quibell]] in Thebes included one sent from Elephantine. * 1909: The [[Pushkin Museum]] acquired a demotic papyrus from the collection of [[Vladimir Golenishchev]]. * 1914: Sayce gave the Bodleian Library a Coptic ostracon. * 1920: James Henry Breasted purchased from Mohareb Todrous at Luxor for the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago an Arabic reddish brown leather parchment. * 1927: ''Papyrus Lob'': Spiegelberg acquired for the Staatliche Sammlung Agyptischer Kunst in Munich a demotic papyrus which became known by the name of the benefactor Dr. James Lob. * 1930: The Bristol Museum and Art Gallery acquired a Coptic ostracon from [[Francis Fox Tuckett]]. * Early 1930s: [[Berlin State Museums]] acquired a unique hieratic leather document. ===Publication history=== [[File:Elephantinetemple.png|thumb|Elephantine temple environs layout. From major work, Arthur Cowley's 1923 "Aramaic Papyri." ]] The publication of the documents from Elephantine discovered in the 19th and early 20th centuries, took many years, and is still ongoing.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} The Aramaic and Demotic texts have received the greatest and most complete focus from scholars.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} Aramaic{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1824–1828: [[Turin Aramaic Papyrus]] * 1887: [[Julius Euting]] publishes the ''Dream ostracon'' (later known as [[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum|CIS]] II 137)<ref>Euting, 1887, [https://archive.org/details/sitzungsberichte1887deut/page/407/mode/1up Epigraphische Miscellen], Sitzungsberichte der Königlich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin: "...erster Vertreter dieser Gattung hervorzuheben ist..."</ref><ref>Levine, Baruch A. “Notes on an Aramaic Dream Text from Egypt.” Journal of the American Oriental Society, vol. 84, no. 1, American Oriental Society, 1964, pp. 18–22, https://doi.org/10.2307/597058.</ref> * 1889: The [[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum]] publishes the Greville Chester ostraca as [[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum|CIS]] II 138–139 and the Golenishchev ostraca as [[Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum|CIS]] II 154–155 * 1903: [[Arthur Cowley (librarian)|Arthur Cowley]] published the papyrus and ostraca found by Sayce in 1901<ref>Three publications in the ''Proceedings of the Society of Biblical Archæology'', 1903: [https://archive.org/details/proceedings25soci/page/202/mode/1up p. 202 et seq], [https://archive.org/details/proceedings25soci/page/259/mode/1up p. 259 et seq] and [https://archive.org/details/proceedings25soci/page/311/mode/1up p. 311 et seq]</ref> * 1903: [[Julius Euting]] published the Strasbourg Aramaic papyrus which had been discovered in 1898–1899<ref>Euting Julius. Notice sur un papyrus égypto-araméen de la Bibliothèque impériale de Strasbourg. In: Mémoires présentés par divers savants à l'Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres de l'Institut de France. Première série, Sujets divers d'érudition. Tome 11, 2e partie, 1904. pp. 297–312. DOI : https://doi.org/10.3406/mesav.1904.1089 www.persee.fr/doc/mesav_0398-3587_1904_num_11_2_1089</ref> * 1906: Sayce and Cowley published the Cecil-Mond documents in the high profile ''Aramaic Papyri Discovered at Assuan''. A sensation was caused; as they summarized in the introduction to the work: "Perhaps one of the most remarkable results of the discovery is the proof it affords us that within a century after the death of Jeremiah a colony of Jews had found their way to Assuan, at the southern limit of Egypt, where they had acquired houses and other property and were engaged in trade as bankers or money-lenders"<ref>* Sayce and Cowley, [https://archive.org/details/233-urn-nbn-de-hebis-30-1-173784 Aramaic Papyri Discovered at Assuan], (London, 1906), page 10</ref> * 1911: [[Eduard Sachau]] published all the Rubensohn Aramaic finds which had been discovered in 1907 * 1923: [[Arthur Cowley (librarian)|Arthur Cowley]] published 87 Aramaic papyri, all that were then known, in his ''Aramaic Papyri of the fifth century'' * 1953: [[Emil Kraeling]] published the Brooklyn Museum papyri, which had been discovered in 1893 * 1960: [[Edda Bresciani]] published the [[Padua Aramaic papyri]] which had been found in 1815–1819 * 1966: Bresciani and Murad Kamil published the [[Hermopolis Aramaic papyri]] discovered in 1945 Demotic{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1883: ''P. Dodgson'' was published by [[Eugène Revillout]] * 1908: [[Wilhelm Spiegelberg]] published 13 Rubensohn papyri found in 1906-07 * 1926–1928: Wilhelm Spiegelberg published ''P. Lob'' and three further Berlin demotic papyri * 1939–1957: Wolja Erichsen published six Berlin demotic papyri * 1962 Edda Bresciani published the Padua demotic papyrus found in 1819 * 1963–1965: Wolja Erichsen and [[:de:Erich Lüddeckens|Erich Lüddeckens]] published the two Vienna papyri found in 1899 * 1971–1978: [[:de: Karl-Theodor Zauzich|Karl-Theodor Zauzich]] catalogued 333 Berlin demotic papyri, publishing 20 in 1978 and 29 in 1993 * 1974: [[:fr: Michel Malinine|Michel Malinine]] published the Moscow papyrus found in 1909 Greek{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1828: [[Thomas Young (scientist)|Thomas Young]] published ''P. Edmonstone'', found in 1819 * 1822: [[Antoine-Jean Saint-Martin]] published a Greek fragment found in 1821, now in the Bibliothèque Nationale * 1828: The Leiden papyrus was published shortly after its discovery * 1907: The two major Greek papyri found by Rubensohn were published a year after their discovery * 1911: Sachau published another Greek Rubensohn fragment * 1912: [[Friedrich Preisigke]] published the Strasbourg papyrus * 1914: [[Kaspar Ernst August Heisenberg]] and [[Leopold Wenger]] published the part of the Patermouthis archive acquired by the Munich museum in 1908 * 1917: [[Idris Bell]] published the part of the Patermouthis archive acquired by the British museum * 1922: [[Wilhelm Schubart]] and Ernst Kühn published the three Abd el-Megid papyri in Berlin * 1940: [[:fr: Paul Collart|Paul Collart]] published the Greek fragment from the 1901–1902 Reinach collection in the Sorbonne * 1950: André Bataille published two of the Clermont-Ganneau Greek papyri donated to the Académie des Inscriptions in 1907–1908 * 1967: [[:nl: Pieter Johannes Sijpesteijn|Pieter Johannes Sijpesteijn]] published the Wisconsin papyrus discovered in 1926 * 1980: William Brasher published two fragments from the 1907–1908 Zucker excavations Hieratic{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1895: Spiegelberg published the Butehamun letters, first acquired in 1817–18 * 1911: [[Georg Möller]] transcribed a letter from the Berlin museum purchased in 1896 * 1924: [[T. Eric Peet]] published one of the Turin hieratic pieces from the Drovetti Collection found in 1824 * 1939: [[Jaroslav Černý (Egyptologist)|Jaroslav Černý]] published two of the Turin hieratic pieces from the Drovetti Collection found in 1824 * 1945: Paul C. Smither published the "Semna Despatches", discovered in 1898 * 1948: A Berlin leather piece discovered in 1930 was published * 1951: [[Alan Gardiner]] published P. Valençay, which had been discovered in 1862–63 * 1974: [[Wolfhart Westendorf]] published the Berlin medical papyrus fragment, discovered 1906–1908 * 1978: [[Paule Posener-Kriéger]] published the Clermont-Ganneau papyrus, found in 1907 Another forty catalogued hieratic fragments in the Berlin Museum await publication.{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} Coptic{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1905: [[Henry Hall (Egyptologist)|Henry Hall]] published a Coptic ostracon donated to the British Museum after 1877 * 1921 and 1995: [[Walter Ewing Crum]] (transcription) and [[Sarah Clackson]] (translation and commentary) published three Coptic fragments acquired by Rusafjaell * 1938: [[Reginald Engelbach]] published a Coptic ostraca discovered by Clermont-Ganneau and Clédat * 1939: Ewing Crum published a Coptic fragment donated to the Bristol Museum in 1930 * 1977: [[Fritz Hintze]] published the Coptic ostraca unearthed in the 1907–08 German excavations Arabic{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1937: A fragment given to the Hamburg museum in 1911 was published in 1937 * 1941: A fragment given to the Chicago museum in 1920 was published in 1941 Latin{{sfn|Porten|1996|pp=7–11}} * 1979: Two Latin fragments discovered by Rubensohn in 1907 were published in 1979
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