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This book is an investigation into the sphere of production and use
of two related bilingual magical handbooks found as part of a
larger collection of magical and alchemical manuscripts around 1828
in the hills surrounding Luxor, Egypt. Both handbooks, dating to
the Roman period, contain an assortment of recipes for magical
rites in the Demotic and Greek language. The library which
comprises these two handbooks is nowadays better known as the
Theban Magical Library.
The book traces the social and cultural milieu of the composers,
compilers and users of the extant spells through a combination of
philology, sociolinguistics and cultural analysis. To anybody
working on Greco-Roman Egypt, ancient magic, and bilingualism this
study is of significant importance.
A comprehensive edition and commentary of a late antique codex
Mathematics, Metrology, and Model Contracts is a comprehensive
edition and commentary of a late antique codex. The codex contains
mathematical problems, metrological tables, and model contracts.
Given the nature of the contents, the format, and quality of the
Greek, the editors conclude that the codex most likely belonged to
a student in a school devoted to training business agents and
similar professionals. The editors present here the first full
scholarly edition of the text, with complete discussions of the
provenance, codicology, and philology of the surviving manuscript.
They also provide extensive notes and illustrations for the
mathematical problems and model contracts, as well as historical
commentary on what this text reveals about late antique numeracy,
literacy, education, and vocational training in what we would now
see as business, law, and administration. The book will be of
interest to papyrologists and scholars who are interested in the
history and culture of late antiquity, the history of education,
literacy, the ancient economy, and the history of science and
mathematics.
This book is an investigation into the sphere of production and use
of two related bilingual magical handbooks found as part of a
larger collection of magical and alchemical manuscripts around 1828
in the hills surrounding Luxor, Egypt. Both handbooks, dating to
the Roman period, contain an assortment of recipes for magical
rites in the Demotic and Greek language. The library which
comprises these two handbooks is nowadays better known as the
Theban Magical Library. The book traces the social and cultural
milieu of the composers, compilers and users of the extant spells
through a combination of philology, sociolinguistics and cultural
analysis. To anybody working on Greco-Roman Egypt, ancient magic,
and bilingualism this study is of significant importance.
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