Tebtunis

Tebtunis was a city and later town in Lower Egypt. It was located in what is now the village of Tell Umm el-Baragat in the Faiyum Governorate. The town was known in Latin as Theodosiopolis (from Koinē Greek: Θεοδοσιούπολις Theodosioúpolis). In Coptic, it became Toutōn (Arabic Tuṯun). The present village of Tuṯun is located about 2.5 miles (4.0 km) south of Umm el-Baragat.[1]

Temple of Sobek in Tebtunis, el-Fayyum, Egypt

Tebtunis was founded in approximately 1800 BCE by the Twelfth Dynasty king Amenemhat III. The town flourished during the Ptolemaic Kingdom and is famous for the many papyri in Demotic and Greek found there. These papyri give information about how people in Tebtunis lived from day to day. For example, one papyrus was found that gave 'minutes' of a meeting of a group of priests. On this papyrus were the names of the priests, what the meeting was about, and a date – indicating that it was written during the Ptolemaic period. In Tebtunis there were many Greek and Roman buildings. It was a rich town and was a very important regional center during the Ptolemaic period.

Among the Tebtunis papyri are preserved many Egyptian astronomical and astrological texts, including several copies of what now is called the Book of Nut,[2] which originally was entitled, "The Fundamentals of the Course of the Stars", and it explicates the concept of sunrise as mythological rebirth.[3]

In the Middle Ages, Toutōn was a major centre of Coptic manuscript copying. At least thirteen existing manuscripts were copied there between AD 861 and 940.[1]

Manuscripts

Papyri

Parchments

References

  1. René-Georges Coquin, "Tuṯun", The Coptic Encyclopedia (Macmillan, 1991), 7: 2283a–2283b.
  2. König, Jason; Oikonomopoulou, Katerina; Woolf, Greg (2013). Ancient Libraries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 30. ISBN 9781107012561.
  3. Alexandra von Lieven, Translating the Fundamentals of the Course of the Stars. in Annette Imhausen, Tanja Pommerening, eds, Writings of Early Scholars in the Ancient Near East, Egypt, Rome, and Greece: Translating Ancient Scientific Texts. Volume 286 of Beiträge zur Altertumskunde. Walter de Gruyter, 2010 ISBN 3110229935

Further reading

  • Merola, Marco. "Letters to the Crocodile God". Archeology Magazine, November–December 2007.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.