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Kellis Literary Texts: Volume 1

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Dakhleh Oasis Project Monographs ; 4 | Oxbow Monographs ; 69Publication details: Oxford: Oxbow Books, 1996Description: xvii, 188 p., 24 pl.; 30 cmISBN:
  • 1-900188-10-4
Subject(s): Summary: Ancient Kellis (the modern village of Ismant el-Kharab) lies some four hundred miles to the south-west of Cairo in Egypt's western desert, and its excavation is part of the Dakleh Oasis Project. Foremost among the finds are numerous texts of the late Roman period on papyrus, ostraca and wooden boards. This volume publishes a first selection of Manichaean and other religious texts found so far at Kellis with descriptions, notes, transcriptions, translations and photographs. The introductory chapter discusses the Coptic Manichaean texts as literary and religious products with particular reference to their close links to the codices said to have come from Medinet Madi; the commentaries discuss details of codicology, identification and content. There are 16 Coptic texts, 4 Syriac and 4 Greek.
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Continuing Resources Continuing Resources Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (NVIC) Library First Floor - 1.06 DOP 4 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available DOP 4
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Ancient Kellis (the modern village of Ismant el-Kharab) lies some four hundred miles to the south-west of Cairo in Egypt's western desert, and its excavation is part of the Dakleh Oasis Project. Foremost among the finds are numerous texts of the late Roman period on papyrus, ostraca and wooden boards. This volume publishes a first selection of Manichaean and other religious texts found so far at Kellis with descriptions, notes, transcriptions, translations and photographs. The introductory chapter discusses the Coptic Manichaean texts as literary and religious products with particular reference to their close links to the codices said to have come from Medinet Madi; the commentaries discuss details of codicology, identification and content. There are 16 Coptic texts, 4 Syriac and 4 Greek.

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