Results 101 to 110 of about 32,702 (232)

A Letter of Proklos to Asklepiades: P.Lond.inv. 2553 + P.Col. VIII 211

open access: yesGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 2014
The two papyri, conserved and published separately, can be shown to be the two halves of a single letter from the archive of Isidoros of Psophthis (A.D. 5-6).
Antonia Sarri
doaj  

Editorial: Ancient diseases and medical care: Paleopathological insights. [PDF]

open access: yesFront Med (Lausanne), 2023
Saleem S   +3 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Thucydides in the School Rhetoric of the Imperial Period

open access: yesGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 2012
The phenomenon of selective reading and copying of Thucydides’ History, attested to by authors and papyri, reflects the teaching and the practice of rhetoric in the Imperial age.
J. Carlos Iglesias-Zoido
doaj  

Lignin Quantification of Papyri by TGA-Not a Good Idea. [PDF]

open access: yesMolecules, 2021
Bausch F   +8 more
europepmc   +1 more source

Yes Sir! An Analysis of the Superior/Subordinate Relationship in the Late Ramesside Letters [PDF]

open access: yes, 2013
In her 1994 article entitled ‘Idiolects in the Late Ramesside Letters’, Deborah Sweeney hypothesises that all choices made in the construction of personal letters are reflective of individual language variance.
Ridealgh, Kim
core  

Visibility and Violence in Petitions from Roman Egypt

open access: yesGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 2010
The complaints by victims of violence preserved in the papyri emphasize visible physical damage and the loss of dignity; in these narratives about violence, petitioners reveal an unexpectedly complex understanding of local hierarchies.
Ari Z. Bryen
doaj  

‘Die Binnenwanderung’ in Byzantine Egypt

open access: yesGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 2006
The papyri of late ancient Egypt (fourth to seventh centuries A.D.) reveal significant travel within the province by persons of all ranks, suggesting greater freedom of movement than the contemporary law codes imply.
James G. Keenan
doaj  

The Administration of Sasanian Egypt: New Masters and Byzantine Continuity

open access: yesGreek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies, 2011
The papyri and literary testimonia that mention various administrative positions and functions, especially as regards taxation, allow us to trace elements of change and continuity in the period of Persian occupation of Egypt (A.D. 619-629).
Patrick Sänger
doaj  

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