-The Oxford Handbook of Papyrology, ed. by R.S. Bagnall, Oxford University Press 2009
-E.G. Turner, Greek Papyri, Princeton 1968 (trad. it: Papiri Greci, a cura di M. Manfredi, Roma 1984)
Images, transcripts and summary prospects, as well as a specific bibliography on individual topics will be distributed during the lessons. During some lessons PowerPoint presentations will also be shown, and they will be made available to students on Moodle.
Learning Objectives
• Knowledge:
- knowledge of the history and tasks of Papyrology
- knowledge of textual typologies on papyrus.
- knowledge of the interaction between different sources and how a papyrus fragment can be inserted into the historical-cultural context that produced it
- knowledge of the basic development of Greek writing.
- knowledge of the bibliological characteristics of the writing supports from Greco-Roman Egypt.
- knowledge of ecdotics for papyrus texts
• Behaviour
-Encouragement to make intelligent use of the university structure and course, as well as orientation and academic career management tools;
- Encouragement to participate intellectually and benefit from a proper approach to the student-professor relationship;
- Encouragement to share and make responsible use of the study resources provided by the course and faculty.
Prerequisites
Basic knowledge of the Greek language and of the ancient history
Teaching Methods
Taught classes
Type of Assessment
Oral examination.
The exam will be aimed at verifying the training goals. The questions will cover the history of Papirology, the most technical aspects of the discipline, the historical-cultural framing of the analyzed texts. The students will also analyse reproductions of documents addressed during the course and other texts with similar paleographic features
Course program
Introduction to Papirology and framing of discipline. Reading from reproductions , with commentary on paleography and contents, of literary and documentary papyrus written in Greek, examined in chronological order from the 4th century BC Until the first Byzantine era.