Posted on 08/18/2018 10:37:29 AM PDT by SunkenCiv
Oxyrhynchus (Papyrus 2105) -- Origin: Egypt.Provenance: Egypt. Purchased with a lot comprising Papyri 2103-2239 from Bernard Pyne Grenfell (b. 1869, d. 1926) in May 1920. (London: British Museum 1933)
Expensive effort to insult someone. Papyrus wasn’t cheap.
“...Expensive effort...”
He was pissed off... Anger has a deep wallet...
Most people wrote their correspondence on ostraca (broken pieces of pottery) then found someone who was heading in the right general direction to carry the message to their distant beloved or whomever. Probably this Oxyrhynchus papyrus heap came from the Byzantine era version of the NSA. :^)
Koine.
Hmm...one of those lines translates as “Ash Alert”. Is this the first FR post?
He was writing about the first democrat politician.
We had to start somewhere.
“...then found someone who was heading in the right general direction to carry the message...”
And thus was born the subpoena delivery!!!!!!!!!
Cleopatra VII, better known as Cleopatra (heh), wrote ‘ginesthoi’ on a proclamation, and I’d make a wild guess that the surviving papyrus fragment contains the only sample we have of the handwriting of, well, pretty much any famous ancient person. Maybe someone here has some other ideas about that, love to hear about it.
Make It So! Sayeth Cleopatra
Archaeology, Volume 54 Number 1 | January/February 2001 | Angela M. H. Schuster
Posted on 06/21/2016 6:35:29 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/chat/3442476/posts
(graphic link appears to be broken in that topic, here’s a search link)
http://www.google.com/search?q=ginesthoi&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&tbm=isch
The truth is, the original messages were written on complete pots, which are pretty heavy after ya lug 'em for 2000 miles -- delivery consisted of the carrier smashing it over the head of the addressee. Plus, the use of 6.6 foot street addresses is very recent.
“...which are pretty heavy after ya lug ‘em for 2000 miles...”
That’s why they had REALLY large lawyers back then...
Not just the first one, as it turns out..
They had to watch out for Grammar Romans.
Which reminds me, did ancient Greek have apostrophes?
When you have no basis for an argument, abuse the plaintiff. -- Cicero
Apostrophes sounds like a good solid Greek name, so, probably lots of 'em. :^)
That’s what I figured: their contemporary version of Greek, not Attic.
LOL — true.
‘Apostrophes’ sounds like the name of a classical Greek hero.
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