Finally, after many years of analyses and continuous documentation, we are incredibly proud to present the first volume of our monographic series called The Swedish Expedition to Gebel el-Silsila . The first publication focuses on the Greek inscriptions on the East bank:
For the first time, this book presents the complete collection of Greek inscriptions of Gebel el-Silsila East – Ancient Egypt’s largest and most important sandstone quarry, including lists of names and professions of individuals involved in the quarry expeditions. The inscriptions are described, illustrated and analysed and placed within their archaeological context based on careful documentation in situ with up-to-date methodology. The work makes substantial contributions in the form of novel and improved readings and interpretations of known texts and of the new publication of texts discovered through the fieldwork. It is the first volume of three dealing with Graeco-Roman inscriptions on the east bank, with the following two volumes to cover the demotic texts and quarry marks respectively.
Based on the generous support from the Libraries of the Joint Faculties of Humanities and Theology, we have been able to publish this first volume in open access, available for free download.
The preface reads:
The starting point for the
comprehensive study of Graeco-Roman epigraphy at Gebel el-Silsila was a
spontaneous visit in 2007 as part of a larger research journey, when the
authors were astounded by the enormous amount of engraved symbolic quarry marks
and their textual context. It became evident that the previous canon of
Graeco-Roman graffiti, published by W. Spiegelberg and F. Preisgke in 1915 (Graff. Silsile), was in need of revision
in order to present a complete corpus. Also, R. A. Caminos’ collated material
and any hypotheses based thereon remained unpublished and unavailable for the
public. For this, J. Ward and M. Nilsson made a series of field surveys in the following
years and, at the time of the Egyptian revolution (2011), they had accumulated
more than 3000 quarry marks and nearly 800 Greek and demotic textual graffiti. Following
new regulations in 2012, they were granted the concession to lead a new
epigraphic expedition. The first field season took place in September 2012, where
they were joined by A. Almásy as demotist, Shihat Mohammadin as driver/cook/helper
of all kinds and Mr. Ashraf as the assigned inspector. The documentation
continued during the following three years in the field, followed by
post-processing in the office. The current monograph is the first volume of
three dealing with Graeco-Roman epigraphy on the east bank of Gebel el-Silsila.
The following two volumes will cover the demotic texts and quarry marks respectively.
Demotic texts and quarry marks will be included within the current volume as
contextual documents, but will not receive special commentary, which is
reserved for their respective publications.
The
authors would like to thank the Permanent Committee and the Ministry of Tourism
and Antiquities, Dr. Mostafa Waziri and Dr. Khaled El-Anani, for
granting the concession to work at Gebel el-Silsila. Special gratitude needs to
be offered to Dr. Abdel Moniem, General Director of Aswan and Nubia, who
put at the disposal of the expedition his generosity, understanding, and
efficiency. His official director Mr. Mostafa Bedawi, and all the inspectors,
especially Ashraf Mohamed, Mohamed Ibrahim and Mohamed Mohsen, have been
nothing but supportive and helpful and are considered part of the ‘Silsila
family’. This is true also for the entire Silsila team and our respective families!
We owe special gratitude to Prof. Willy Clarysse, Dr. Michael Zellmann-Rohrer
and Mr. Cary Martin for their valuable comments, advice and proof reading,
without which this volume would not have been completed.
Of course, none of this work would have been possible without financial patrons, for which acknowledgement and thankfulness is due to Vetenskapsrådet (#2015-00291; #2015-00291), Riksbankens Jubileumsfond (P19-0860), Crafoordska Stiftelsen (20140509; 20160607), Gerda Henkel Stiftung (AZ 58-V-15), Vitterhetsakademin (Enboms stiftelse), Magnus Bergvalls stiftelse, Lars Hiertas Minne, HelgeAx:son Johnsons stiftelse, Birgit & Gad Rausings Stiftelse, Gunvor ochJosef Anérs Stiftelse, and Swedish Royal Academy of Sciences.
Table of Contents
PREFACE
ABBREVIATIONS
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION |
|
Gebel el-Silsila – the site |
|
Brief historical outline |
|
Research history |
|
Main objectives |
|
Methodology |
|
Sigla |
|
CHAPTER 2: THE MATERIAL |
|
Introduction |
|
Paleographic commentary |
|
Onomastic and prosopographic commentary |
|
Dates, professions, and religious functions |
|
General commentary on the chronology |
|
Abbreviations |
|
Singular alphabetic letters |
|
Monograms and ligatures |
|
The quandary of literacy |
|
The graffiti dialogue |
|
CHAPTER 3: THE NORTHERN QUARRIES |
|
Introduction |
|
Quarry 11 (Q11) |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry 13 (Q13) |
|
The inscriptions |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry 14 (Q14) |
|
The inscriptions |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry 19 (Q19) |
|
The inscriptions |
|
Corpus |
|
Rock Art Site 11 (RAS11) |
|
Corpus |
|
CHAPTER 4: Q24 – TIBERIUS’ STABLES |
|
Introduction |
|
Tiberius’ Stables and its administration building |
|
The epigraphy |
|
Quarry face ‘E’ |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry face ‘TS’ |
|
Corpus |
|
CHAPTER 5: Q34 - THE MAIN QUARRY |
|
Introduction |
|
Archaeological overview |
|
The Epigraphy |
|
Contents of texts |
|
Dedicators |
|
Name variants and scribes |
|
Dates, professions, and religious functions |
|
Corpus |
|
CHAPTER 6: THE SOUTHERN QUARRIES |
|
Introduction |
|
Quarry 35 (Q35 – ‘the Situla Quarry’) |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry 37 (Q37 – ‘the Naos Quarry’) |
|
The epigraphy |
|
Corpus |
|
Quarry 40 (Q40 and ‘commemoration road’) |
|
Corpus |
|
BIBLIOGRAPHY
APPENDICES
INDICES
Example images (copyright Brill & the Gebel el-Silsila Project - do not share without permit):