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Index 145.4 364 Medicorum Scripta
Index bis 145.4 P. Athen. Univ. Inv. 2780; 2781
Titre Nicola Reggiani, Greek Medicine in Hellenistic Egypt: SB VIII 9860, One of the Earliest Greek Collections of Medical Recipes on Papyrus.
Publication Lucio Del Corso & Antonio Ricciardetto (edd.), Greek Culture in Hellenistic Egypt. Persistence and Evolutions = Trends in Classics. Supplementary Volumes. 169 (Berlin - Boston, 2024) pp. 337-350, fig.
Résumé Deals with papyrus S.B. VIII, 9860 (University of Athens, Classical Seminar inv. 2780 + 2781), which preserves one of the earliest known collections of Greek medical recipes on papyrus, dating back to the 3rd c. BC.
2024-0123
  

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Index 230
Titre Sofie Remijsen, Living by the Clock II: The Diffusion of Clock Time in the Early Hellenistic Period.
Publication Klio 106 (2024) pp. 569-593.
Résumé Suite de: Sofie Remijsen, Living by the Clock. The Introduction of Clock Time in the Greek World, Klio 103 (2021) pp. 1-29. - Introduction. - The spread of clock time as a process of diffusion. - The scholars of Athens and Alexandria as innovators. - Urban elites as drivers of geographical spread. - Towards an early majority via the army and the gymnasium.
2024-0124
  

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Index 141.4 364 Medicorum Scripta
Index bis 141.4 P. I.F.A.O. Inv. 520
Titre Antonio Ricciardetto & Nathan Carlig, Fragments of a Medical Treatise on a Greek Papyrus Roll Dated to the Mid-3rd c. BC: P.IFAO grec inv. 520.
Publication Lucio Del Corso & Antonio Ricciardetto (edd.), Greek Culture in Hellenistic Egypt. Persistence and Evolutions = Trends in Classics. Supplementary Volumes. 169 (Berlin - Boston, 2024) pp. 311-336, figg.
Résumé Preliminary presentation of a papyrus dated to the mid-III century BC, and kept at the French Institute for Oriental Archaeology in Cairo (P.IFAO grec inv. 520). A brief description of its material characteristics is followed by a study of its provenance and content, which is medical, and probably nosological. In appendix it is offered the first edition of the best preserved fragments (frr. 1A-B sup. + fr. 1C + fr. 3, col. II), with translation and critical notes.
2024-0125
  

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Index 241 Nome Arsinoïte 750
Titre Cornelia Römer, Life in the Villages of the Ptolemaic Period: Ray Oldenburg's "Third Places" Revisited in the Fayum Oasis.
Publication Lucio Del Corso & Antonio Ricciardetto (edd.), Greek Culture in Hellenistic Egypt. Persistence and Evolutions = Trends in Classics. Supplementary Volumes. 169 (Berlin - Boston, 2024) pp. 49-66, figg.
Résumé In 2001 the American urban sociologist Ray Oldenburg formed the theory of the "Third Place". Oldenburg suggests that "Third Places" are the heart of a community's social vitality, and even the foundation of a functioning democracy. For him, the "First Places" are the homes of the individuals, the "Second Places", the areas in which the individuals work. Between the two, people move nearly every day. In addition to the two first places, Oldenburg argues that there should be a Third Place "Where one may go alone at almost any time of the day or evening with assurance that acquaintances will be there". Traces the "Third Places" of the people living in the villages of Graeco-Roman Fayum.
2024-0126
  

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Index 145.4 230
Index bis 145.4 P. Trier II, 15
Titre Sandra Scheuble-Reiter & Marius Gerhardt, Bemerkungen zu zwei Datierungen in P.Trier II 15.
Publication ZPE 230 (2024) pp. 179-183, figg.
2024-0127
  

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Index 145.4
Index bis 145.4 P.S.I. I, 41
Titre Marianna Thoma & Amphilochios Papathomas, Rhetoric and Literary Elements in a Fourth Century Affidavit of a Woman against her Husband. A New Edition of PSI I 41 with Commentary.
Publication ZPE 230 (2024) pp. 199-209.
Résumé I. New edition of the text with textual corrections and restoration of missing parts of the text. - II. Translation of the text. - III. New insights on the type of the text. - IV. Remarks on the literary style of the text. - V. Concluding remarks on the author and the content of the text.
2024-0128
  

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Index 214 610 880
Titre Mikhail Treister, Ptolemaic Finger Rings in North Pontic Area: New Finds and Hypotheses.
Publication Vessela Atanassova & Laurent Bricault (edd.), Egyptian Cults on the Black Sea Coast = Études méditerranéennes. 6 (Athènes - Sofia, 2024) pp. 52-75, figg.
Résumé General information. - Attribution of the portraits on the finger rings. - The portraits of Arsinoe II and Berenice II. - Portraits of Arsinoe III. - Geographical distribution of the finger rings. - Contexts of finds. Who were the recipients of the "Ptolemaic" rings in the Northern Black Sea region? - The chronology of the find contexts. - Interpretation.
2024-0129
  

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Index 145.4
Index bis 145.4 B.G.U. I, 231    O. Brit. Mus. Abydos 4    O. Wilcken II, 1012    P. Athen. Soc. Arch. 16    P. Berol. Inv. 13301    P. Fuad I Univ. 20    P. Mich. XII, 634    P. Mich. Inv. 256    P. Petrie II, 30B = III, 103    P. Van Minnen 23    S.P.P. XX, 13
Titre Peter van Minnen, Notes on Miscellaneous Documents.
Publication ZPE 230 (2024) pp. 187-190.
Résumé BGU I 231. - O.Brit.Mus.Abydos 4. - O.Wilcken 1012. - P.Athen. 16. - P.Fuad I Univ. 20. - P.Mich. XII 634. - P.Petr. II 30B = III 103. - P.Van Minnen 23. - S.B. XIV, 11652 [= P. Berol. Inv. 13301]. - S.B. XVI, 13030 [= P. Mich. Inv. 256]. - SPP XX 13.
2024-0130
  

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Index 145.4 214 411
Index bis 145.4 P. Enteuxeis 86
Titre Anne-Emmanuelle Veïsse, Greek Petitions by Egyptians in 3rd-century BC Egypt.
Publication Lucio Del Corso & Antonio Ricciardetto (edd.), Greek Culture in Hellenistic Egypt. Persistence and Evolutions = Trends in Classics. Supplementary Volumes. 169 (Berlin - Boston, 2024) pp. 141-156, figg.
Résumé Aims to investigate the way the Egyptians adopted the practice of addressing the authorities by means of petitions written in Greek (enteuxeis and hypomnemata). Examines some general features relating to the use of petitions by Greeks and Egyptians in 3rd c. BC Egypt. Then compares the above observations with a case study, P.Enteux. 86, which pits an Egyptian woman against a Greek man.
2024-0131
  

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Index 214 411
Titre Stéphanie Wackenier, Bilingualism and Translation in the Early Ptolemaic Administration.
Publication Lucio Del Corso & Antonio Ricciardetto (edd.), Greek Culture in Hellenistic Egypt. Persistence and Evolutions = Trends in Classics. Supplementary Volumes. 169 (Berlin - Boston, 2024) pp. 113-130.
Résumé Bilingualism has been often studied in private contexts, as a marker of the multiculturalism of an individual or a family. Such view has been extended to the study of administrative practices in Hellenistic Egypt, where officials needed to use two languages. But if a 'family' bilingualism can be assumed for the last two last centuries of the Ptolemaic rule, it is not obvious that the same might happen during the third century BC, when bilingual families were not so many. Examines the issue of administrators' bilingualism during the first part of Ptolemaic bilingualism from a new perspective, starting from new or neglected documents.
2024-0132
  

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