The Egyptian Priests of the Graeco-Roman Period: An Analysis on the Basis of the Egyptian and Graeco-Roman Literary and Paraliterary Sources (Studien zur spätägyptischen Religion, Band 29)

by Marina Escolano-Poveda (Autor)

Hardcover, 2020

Status

Available

Call number

299.31

Collection

Publication

Harrassowitz Verlag (2020), 396 pages

Description

Throughout Egyptian history, high-ranking Egyptian priests were the scholars responsible for the creation of the very material that constituted the core of Egyptian intellectual culture. During the first millennium BCE, and particularly in the Graeco-Roman period (late fourth century BCE-fourth century CE), they were the social group in charge of mediating and negotiating the terms of the relationship between traditional Egyptian culture and the new foreign rulers of the country. As such, they are fundamental figures for our understanding of the greater Mediterranean and Near Eastern world of the time. Marina Escolano-Poveda offers for the first time a detailed analysis of the most relevant Egyptian priestly characters from Egyptian and Graeco-Roman literary and paraliterary sources. The examination of these sources contrasts the self-presentation of Egyptian priests in texts created and circulated within the temple environment with images presented by outside sources, providing a solid base to analyze how these figures were seen in their historical milieu. In the second part of the book, the results of the previous analysis are contrasted with a series of widely-used models employed to understand the historical and intellectual context of Egyptian religion and the Egyptian priesthood in the Graeco-Roman period, questioning the usefulness and applicability of such models. Escolano-Poveda proposes new ways of understanding the role of the Egyptian priests in this context as fundamental actors in the development of the philosophical, scientific, and literary culture of the Hellenistic, Roman, and Late Antique worlds.… (more)

Media reviews

Marina Escolano-Poveda’s The Egyptian Priests of the Graeco-Roman Period, a version of her doctoral thesis defended in 2017, enters academic discourse at a time of unprecedented interest in the principal ritual and technical practitioners of Graeco-Roman Egypt – the “priests” of Egyptian
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temple institutions. In doing so, Escolano-Poveda’s study fills a considerable gap by engaging comprehensively with the literary and paraliterary sources argued to present images of Egyptian priests and their temple milieux during the Graeco-Roman Period, and by analyzing them from an “Egyptological point of view” (327). A treatment of these sources concerns Part One (four-fifths of the monograph), divided between “Demotic narratives”, “Graeco-Egyptian literature”, and “Graeco-Roman literature”, followed by an analysis of the characteristics of the Egyptian priesthood discernible in those sources. Part Two comprises an engagement with and counter-argumentation to the principal models concerning priestly temple milieux during the Roman Period: temple decline, “priest to magician”, and “stereotype appropriation”.
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Language

Physical description

396 p.; 11.9 inches

ISBN

3447114258 / 9783447114257

Local notes

MJW
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