الخميس، 15 أغسطس 2024

Download PDF | Arietta Papaconstantinou - The Multilingual Experience in Egypt, from the Ptolemies to the Abbasids-Routledge (2016).

Download PDF | Arietta Papaconstantinou - The Multilingual Experience in Egypt, from the Ptolemies to the Abbasids-Routledge (2016).

251 Pages 





List of Contributors 

Anne Boud’hors is a research fellow at the Institut de Recherche et d’Histoire des Textes, section Grecque, of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS). With a background in Classics, she works on the cataloguing and editing of Coptic manuscripts and documents. Her main fields of interest are Biblical texts, the sermons of Shenoute, codicology and ostraca. She also teaches Coptic at various institutions.











 Malcolm Choat is a lecturer in the Department of Ancient History, Division of Humanities. He studied Classics (including Ancient Greek and Latin) and Ancient History at the University of Queensland (1989–1993), before undertaking doctoral studies at Macquarie (1994–2000). Subsequently, he taught and researched in the School of Studies in Religion at the University of Sydney (2000–2002), before holding a Macquarie University Research Fellowship (2003–2006). He now teaches at Macquarie in Ptolemaic Egypt, Early Christianity, and Coptic Studies. Sarah J. Clackson was Lady Wallis Budge Research Fellow in Egyptology at Christ’s College, Cambridge until her untimely death in 2003. She is the author of Coptic and Greek texts relating to the Hermopolite monastery of Apa Apollo (2000), and It is our father who writes: Orders from the monastery of Apollo at Bawit (2007). 









Willy Clarysse received his PhD in Leuven in 1975 with the edition of a group of early Ptolemaic papyri, ‘the Petrie Wills’, published in 1991. He received the prix Saintour at the Collège de France in 1996, occupied the Francqui chair at the VUB (Brussels) in 1998/99, and has been a member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium since 1999. 










Jennifer Cromwell is Lady Wallis Budge Junior Research Fellow in Egyptology at University College, Oxford. Her research primarily concerns Coptic documentary texts, palaeography, and the nature of scribal practice and training. Jacco Dieleman received his PhD in 2003 in Egyptology from Leiden University, and is currently Assistant Professor of Egyptology at the University of California, Los Angeles. He works on the literature and religion of ancient Egypt, with an emphasis on the later periods. 










Arietta Papaconstantinou is a lecturer at the Université Paris I – Panthéon-Sorbonne, and currently a research associate at the Oriental Institute, Oxford. She is the author of Le culte des saints en Égypte des Byzantins aux Abbassides (CNRS , 2001) and her interests cover the history and archaeology of the East Mediterranean during the centuries of transition from the Roman empire to the Caliphate. 









Tonio Sebastian Richter, PhD (1999) in Egyptology, is an Oberassistent (senior lecturer) at the Egyptological Institute – Georg Steindor – of the University of Leipzig. He is the author of Rechtssemantik und forensische Rhetorik (Leipzig, 2002; 2nd edn Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 2008), and his research interests include Coptic linguistics, papyrology and epigraphy, and topics in the history of Byzantine and early Islamic Egypt, such as history of law, social and economic history, plurilingualism and language change, pagan and Christian religion, magic, hermetism, alchemy and late antique sciences. He is co-editor of both the Zeitschri für Ägyptische Sprache und Altertumskunde and the Archiv für Papyrusforschung und verwandte Gebiete. 










Petra M. Sijpesteijn is Professor of Arabic Language and Culture at Leiden University. She received her PhD in Near Eastern Studies from Princeton University (2004) and is a former junior research fellow in Oriental Studies at Christ Church, Oxford. She has published widely on early Islamic history and Arabic papyrology. Her forthcoming book is entitled Shaping a Muslim state: e world of an early Muslim administrator. She is currently working on a rural history of Egypt during the first two centuries of Muslim rule. 









Sofía Torallas Tovar gained her PhD in Classical Philology from the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and was formerly a postdoctoral fellow at University College London (1997–2000). She is currently a permanent research fellow at the Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científcas (CSIC) in Madrid and is also the Curator of the papyrus collection at the Abbey of Montserrat, Barcelona.










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