Sweet Oxyrhynchus, Batman!

11 December 2006
So I finally got my first volumes of the published Oxyrhynchus papyri today. This is the last of my birthday presents to roll in.

I got volumes 4 (published 1904) and 12 (published 1916), both for only $9.98 + shipping from here. Prices range from $9.98 to $132. I decided to go for a couple of the cheaper volumes for reasons of personal fiscal responsibility.

So what odd stuff do you find in these? Well, these volumes are published versions of papyri that span the lifetime of Koine/Hellenistic Greek, roughly 300 BC to 300 AD, give or take some years. Oxyrhynchus is a city somewhat close to the Nile in Egypt. Most documents are normal, everyday kinds of documents, like private letters, shopping lists, official declarations, and legal documents. In such cases their provenance is usually Oxyrhynchus, because there would be no reason to disseminate someone's shopping list.

For some documents this is not the case. Volume 4 contains various theological fragments. You can find noncanonical sayings of Jesus, a portion of the Septuagint (POxy 656), a very significant portion of Hebrews (POxy 657, aka P13), and a fragment describing a pagan sacrifice around 250 AD. You will also find fragments of Pindar, Aristotle, Livy (this one in Latin, which is unusual; most everything is in Greek), et al.

And, of course, they all come with handy translations and notes. If this is up your alley, order them from the link above for the seller. They were quite a bit slower than Amazon, even with basic shipping.
Comments:2
Comments
  1. Christopher Sajdakon Thu, 14 Dec 2006 10:00:28 GMT
    Sounds neat. I couldn't find the volume 4 that you mentioned. Maybe you could have included a direct URL to those volumes. On a related matter, I found this neat project using multispectral imaging (MSI) on some Oxyrhynchus texts. POxy: Oxyrhynchus Online http://www.papyrology.ox.ac.uk/POxy/multi/index.html (snip) Below is a Flash-based interactive demonstration of how the multispectral imaging of a papyrus, in this case P.Oxy. XXX 2507, at a series of points on the light spectrum (scaled in nanometers/nm), can give us clearer and better results on some sections of the papyrus compared with photography at normal, human vision. You can move the reading pointer along the scale either by clicking on the red arrows to either increase or decrease the position of the pointer along the scale, or you can use the up(↑)/down(↓) cursor keys on your computer keyboard, but if you are using the keyboard you must click once on the image below for the web browser to get the Flash presentation
  2. Ericon Thu, 14 Dec 2006 14:59:54 GMT
    Yeah. I've seen that demo. That is indeed very cool. And you can get volume 4 here: (http://www.oxbowbooks.com/bookinfo.cfm/ID/15591)
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