Ptolemaic and Early Roman Egypt

Private associations organized around a common cult, occupation, ethnic identity, neighborhood or family were among the principal means of organizing social and economic life in the ancient Mediterranean. They offered opportunities for sociability, cultic activities, mutual support and contexts in which to display and recognize virtuous achievement. This volume collects 140 inscriptions and papyri from Ptolemaic and early Roman Egypt, along with translations, notes, commentary, and analytic indices. The dossier of association-related documents substantially enhances our knowledge of the extent, activities, and importance of private associations in the ancient Mediterranean, since papyri, unavailable from most other locations in the Mediterranean, preserve a much wider range of data than epigraphical monuments. The dossier from Egypt includes not only honorific decrees, membership lists, bylaws, dedications, and funerary monuments, but monthly accounts of expenditures and income, correspondence between guild secretaries and local officials, price and tax declarations, records of legal actions concerning associations, loan documents, petitions to local authorities about associations, letters of resignation, and many other papyrological genres. These documents provide a highly variegated picture of the governance structures and practices of associations, membership sizes and profiles, and forms of interaction with the State.

John S. Kloppenborg, Universität Toronto, Kanada.

Weitere Produkte vom selben Autor

Download
PDF
Synoptic Problems John S. Kloppenborg

229,00 €*
Download
PDF
The Tenants in the Vineyard John S. Kloppenborg

209,00 €*
Download
PDF
The Gospels and Their Stories in Anthropological Perspective Joseph Verheyden, John S. Kloppenborg

159,00 €*
Download
PDF
Apocalypticism, Anti-Semitism and the Historical Jesus John S. Kloppenborg, John Marshall

27,29 €*