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The Epigraphy of Ptolemaic Egypt

Online ISBN:
9780191890598
Print ISBN:
9780198858225
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Book

The Epigraphy of Ptolemaic Egypt

Alan Bowman (ed.),
Alan Bowman
(ed.)
Camden Professor Emeritus of Ancient History, University of Oxford; former Principal of Brasenose College, Oxford
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Charles Crowther (ed.)
Charles Crowther
(ed.)
Associate Professor of Greek Epigraphy and Associate Director of the Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents, University of Oxford; Fellow of The Queen's College, Oxford
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Published online:
19 November 2020
Published in print:
8 October 2020
Online ISBN:
9780191890598
Print ISBN:
9780198858225
Publisher:
Oxford University Press

Abstract

The book contains twelve chapters, by various authors, discussing aspects of the Greek and Egyptian bilingual and trilingual inscriptions from Egypt during the Ptolemaic period, from the conquest by Alexander the Great (332 bc) to the death of Kleopatra VII (30 bc). It is intended as a complement to the publication of the full texts, with up-to-date commentaries and images, of about 650 inscriptions on stone. These include major decrees of priestly colleges, such as the Rosetta Stone, and a great variety of religious and secular monuments from the whole of Egypt, from Alexandria to Philae. The subjects covered include the latest technologies for digital imaging of stone inscriptions, the character of Egyptian monuments with Greek text, the survival and collection of bilingual monuments in the nineteenth century through excavation and the antiquities trade, religious dedications from Alexandria and elsewhere, the civic government of Greek foundations and public associations, the role of the military in public epigraphy, verse epigrams, onomastics, and palaeography. Overall, the collection offers a comprehensive review of the social, religious, and cultural context of the great inscribed monuments of the Ptolemaic dynasty which are key sources for understanding the coexistence of two different cultures and the impact of Ptolemaic rule and Greek immigration in Egypt.

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