Direkt zum Inhalt
  1. Publizieren |
  2. Suche |
  3. Browsen |
  4. Neuzugänge rss |
  5. Open Access |
  6. Rechtsfragen |
  7. EnglishCookie löschen - von nun an wird die Spracheinstellung Ihres Browsers verwendet.

Communication and the circulation of letters in the Eastern Desert of Egypt during the Roman Period

Hamouda, Fatma E.

[thumbnail of F_E_Hamouda_ Dissertation.pdf]
Vorschau
PDF, Englisch
Download (23MB) | Nutzungsbedingungen

Zitieren von Dokumenten: Bitte verwenden Sie für Zitate nicht die URL in der Adresszeile Ihres Webbrowsers, sondern entweder die angegebene DOI, URN oder die persistente URL, deren langfristige Verfügbarkeit wir garantieren. [mehr ...]

Abstract

Over the past thirty years, excavations in Egypt’s Eastern Desert, which was home to important mining sites and the hub for long-distance trade between Rome and the Near and Far East, have turned up thousands of potsherds inscribed with Greek and much fewer with Latin. Most of these texts are private and official letters and they tend to date to the first three centuries of the current era. Studying this large corpus of material, which has not been studied in a synthetic manner before, reveals multiple aspects of life in Roman Egypt: for example, we see how letters were exchanged, who handled and delivered them, whence and to where they were delivered, what obstacles could prevent their delivery, and who communicated with whom, namely, the networks that were formed through epistolary communication. The Eastern Desert brought people of different cultures together, who came to this hardly habitable area generally for reasons of work and commercial interest. It was important to the Romans because of its mines of precious metals and stones, and for its access to the Red Sea trade route, which connected the Mediterranean to South Arabia, Southern Africa, and India. People stationed in the Eastern Desert needed to communicate, and communication required infrastructure. The present work has thus been conducted with particular focus on the circumstances that surrounded the process of the circulation of letters and goods in the Eastern Desert. Overall, this study attempts to reveal how epistolary communication was the underpinning of Roman commercial and military operations in a critical part of the Roman empire.

Dokumententyp: Dissertation
Erstgutachter: Jördens, Prof. Dr. Andrea
Ort der Veröffentlichung: Heidelberg
Tag der Prüfung: 20 Mai 2019
Erstellungsdatum: 04 Mai 2020 05:15
Erscheinungsjahr: 2020
Institute/Einrichtungen: Philosophische Fakultät > Institut für Papyrologie und antike Paläographie
DDC-Sachgruppe: 090 Handschriften, seltene Bücher
480 Griechisch
930 Alte Geschichte, Archäologie
Normierte Schlagwörter: Papyrologie, Egypt, östliche Wüste, Ostrakon, Network, Graeco-Roman, Alte Geschichte, Papyrus, Kommunikation, Brief, Verkehr, Arabische Wüste, Historischer Roman, Post
Leitlinien | Häufige Fragen | Kontakt | Impressum |
OA-LogoDINI-Zertifikat 2013Logo der Open-Archives-Initiative