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  3. The Greco-Egyptian Magical Formularies: Libraries, Books, and Individual Recipes

The Greco-Egyptian Magical Formularies: Libraries, Books, and Individual Recipes

Edited by Christopher A. Faraone and Sofía Torallas Tovar
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  • Overview

  • Contents

In Greco-Roman Egypt, recipes for magical undertaking, called magical formularies, commonly existed for love potions, curses, attempts to best business rivals—many of the same challenges that modern people might face. In The Greco-Egyptian Magical Formularies: Libraries, Books, and Individual Recipes , volume editors Christopher Faraone and Sofia Torallas Tovar present a series of essays by scholars involved in a multiyear project to reedit and translate the various magical handbooks that were inscribed in the Roman period in the Greek or Egyptian languages.  For the first time, the material remains of these papyrus rolls and codices are closely examined, revealing important information about the production of books in Egypt, the scribal culture in which they were produced, and the traffic in single recipes copied from them.  Especially important for historians of the book and the Christian Bible are new insights in the historical shift from roll to codex, complicated methods of inscribing the bilingual papyri (in which the Greek script is written left to right and the demotic script right to left), and the new realization that several of the longest extant handbooks are clearly compilations of two or more shorter handbooks, which may have come from different places.  The essays also reexamine and rethink the idea that these handbooks came from the personal libraries of practicing magicians or temple scriptoria, in one case going so far as to suggest that two of the handbooks had literary pretensions of a sort and were designed to be read for pleasure rather than for quotidian use in making magical recipes.
  • Cover
  • Half Title
  • Series Information
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Preface
  • Table of Contents
  • Concordances
  • List of Contributors
  • List of Figures
  • List of Tables
  • Introduction
  • I Libraries, Codices, and Rolls
  • Chapter 1 Anatomy of the Magical Archive
    • 1. Defining a Magical Archive
      • 1.2 Archives, Manuscripts, and the Lives of Texts
    • 2. The Theban Magical Library
    • 3. The Hermonthis Magical Archive
    • 4. The Kellis Area A, House 3 Archive
    • 5. Conclusions
    • 6. Appendix: A Provisional Checklist of Possible Archives and Dossiers with Demotic, Greek, and Coptic Magical Material from Roman and Early Islamic Egypt
  • Chapter 2 Roll vs. CodexThe Format of the Magical Handbook
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The Corpus of Magical Formularies
    • 3. Formats of Magical Handbooks
    • 4. Magical Handbooks within the Landscape of Book Production
      • 4.1. Copyists and Models
      • 4.2. Rolls, Codices, and Genres
    • 5. Notes on Formats
      • 5.1. Rolls
      • 5.2. Rotuli (Vertical Rolls)
      • 5.3. Codices
        • Papyrus Codices
        • Parchment and Paper Codices
      • 5.4. Sheets, Ostraca, and Series
        • Trends in Sheet Formats
        • The Hermonthis Magical Archive
        • The Berlin Magical Library
        • The Heidelberg Magical Library
        • Ostraca
        • Manuscript Series
    • 6. Reuse and Use of the Verso
      • 6.1. Opisthograph and Amphigraph Rolls
        • Reuse
        • Coptic Parchment Palimpsests
    • 7. Conclusions
  • Chapter 3 The Paleography and Dating of the Magical Formularies from Roman Egypt
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Identifying a Single Hand
    • 3. Providing Parallels for GEMF Hands: Bookhands or Documentary Hands?
    • 4. Higher and Lower Standards of Production
    • 5. “Nondescript” Hands
    • 6. By Way of Conclusion
  • II Compositional and Redactional Patterns
  • Chapter 4 Compositional Patterns in the Paris Magical Codex (GEMF 57 = PGM IV)
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Physical Features of GEMF 57 (= PGM IV)
    • 3. Block I: 1–153
    • 4. Block 2: 154–1389
    • 5. Block 2 Section A: 154–466
    • 6. Block 2 Section B: 467–849
    • 7. Block 2 Section C: 850–1226 or 1264
    • 8. Block 2 Section D: 1227 or 1265–1389
    • 9. Block 3: 1390–1927
    • 10. Block 4: 1928–2240
    • 11. Block 5: 2241–2942
    • 12. Block 5 Section A: 2241–2440
    • 13. Block 5 Section B: 2441–2891 or 2942
    • 14. The End of the Manuscript: 2943–3274
    • 15. Conclusions, Possibilities, Desiderata
  • Chapter 5 The Composition of the Demotic Magical Papyrus of London and Leiden (GEMF 16 = PDM/PGM XIV)
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. The Initial Blocks: The Original Sections, Their Additions, and Annotations
    • Block 1: Divinatory Rituals of Apparition
      • Contents
      • Annotations and Additions
    • Block 2: Manipulation of Relationships
      • Contents
      • Annotations and Additions
    • Block 3: Vessel Inquiry
      • Contents
    • Block 4: Love and Favor Rituals
      • Contents
      • Additions
    • Block 5: Lamp Divination Rituals
      • Contents
      • Additions and Annotations
    • Block 6: Healing Rituals
      • Contents
    • Block 7: Vessel Inquiry
      • Contents
      • Annotation
    • Block 8: Cursing and Poisoning
      • Contents
    • Annotations
    • Blocks 9 and 10: Divinatory Rituals of Apparition
      • Contents (Block 9)
      • Contents (Block 10)
    • 3. The Later Blocks (α–θ)
    • Blocks α and β: Isolated Blocks; Love Spell and Divination before the Moon
      • Contents (Block α)
      • Contents (Block β)
    • Block γ: Love Spells
      • Contents
    • Block δ: Ingredients
      • Contents
    • Block ε: Healing Prescriptions
      • Contents
    • Block ζ: Miscellaneous Recipes
      • Contents
    • Block η: Recipes concerning Women
      • Contents
    • Block θ: Cipher Alphabets
      • Contents
    • 4. Conclusions
  • Chapter 6 GEMF 60 (= PGM XIII): A Study of Material, Scribal, and Compositional Issues
    • 1. The Codex and Its Scribes
      • 1.1. Scribal Practice at the Frontiers of Format
      • 1.2. The Construction of GEMF 60
      • 1.3. Framing the Text: Facing Pages, Paragraphoi, Indentations, and the Use of Spacing
      • 1.4. Independence of the Scribal Habits of Scribe 1 and 2
        • i) Treatment of Magical Words
        • ii) Orthographic Habits
      • 1.5. The Influence of the Model and the Influence of the Scribe
    • 2. “Books of Moses”: Acquiring Authoritative Knowledge
      • 2.1. Interpretations of GEMF 60: Frames and Contexts
        • i) From Leemans to Smith
        • ii) From Merkelbach to Suárez de la Torre
      • 2.2. Some Preliminary Issues
        • i) How Many Versions of the Ritual are there in GEMF 60?
        • ii) Which of the Two Versions is Earlier?
      • 2.3. The Organization of the Text as We Have It
        • i) The Comparative List
        • ii) Maximal Fidelity
        • iii) Compromise Solutions: Commented Parallel Columns
      • 2.4. The Titles of the Books Copied in GEMF 60
    • 3. Conclusion
  • III Distribution of Texts and Their History
  • Chapter 7 GEMF 74 (= PGM VII)Reconstructing the Textual Tradition
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Codicological Format and Hands
    • 3. The Structure and Internal Disposition of the Text
    • 4. Content of the Ritual Procedures
    • 5. GEMF 74 and the “Hermonthis Archive”: A Survey of Possible Interrelations
      • 5.1. Format and Handwriting
      • 5.2. Content of the Formularies
    • 6. Conclusion
  • Chapter 8 GEMF 15 (= PDM/PGM XII): Production and Use of a Bilingual Magical Formulary
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Sections and Blocks: Content Patterns and Scribal Conventions
      • 2.1. Section A, Block 1: col. i (frags. a–f)
      • 2.2. Section A, Block 2: cols. ii 1–iii 29
      • 2.3. Section B, Block 1: cols. iv 1–vi 22
      • 2.4. Section B, Block 2: cols. vi 23–viii 3
      • 2.5. Section B, Block 3: cols. viii 4–ix 26
      • 2.6. Section B, Block 4: cols. ix 26–xiii 38
      • 2.7. Section B, Block 5: col. xiv 1–14
      • 2.8. Section B, Block 6: cols. xiv 15–xv 16
      • 2.9. Section B, Block 7: cols. xv 17–xvi 30
      • 2.10. Section C, Block 1: cols. xvii 1–xix 27
      • 2.11. Section C, Block 2: cols. xx 1–30
    • 3. Differences and Similarities between the Three Sections of the Handbook
    • 4. Detecting Different Sources in the Greek Section of the Handbook
    • 5. Conclusions
  • IV. Individual Recipes
  • Chapter 9 The Composite Recipes in GEMF 57 (= PGM IV) and How They Grew: From Practical Instructions to Literary Narratives
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Some Special Features of the Paris Codex and its Recipes
    • 3: Case Study 1: Bread for the Violently Killed
    • 4: Case Study 2: The “Sword of Dardanos”
    • 5. Conclusion
  • Chapter 10 The Rationale of Multi-Purpose Praxeis in the Formulary Tradition
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Multi-Purpose Praxeis: Fundamental Data
    • 3. The Larger Context
    • 4. More Ambitious Texts
      • 4.1. Attribution by Editor or Compiler
      • 4.2. Re-Compilation by One or More Editors/Copyists
      • 4.3. Procedures for Obtaining a Paredros (“Spirit-assistant”)
      • 4.4. Deliberate Experimentation Within a Tradition of Practice
      • 4.5. Triumphant Textual Skill
    • 5. Conclusion
  • Chapter 11 The Traffic in Magical Recipes: Single-Sheet Formularies as Prompts for Oral Performance
    • 1. Introduction
    • 2. Galen’s Traffic in Parchment Recipes for Compound Drugs
    • 3. Recipes for Erotic Conquest
    • 4. Dream Oracles and Epiphanies
    • 5. Curative and Protective Recipes
    • 6. Anger-Restraint Procedures
    • 7. Single-Sheet Formularies on Metal
    • 8. Some Conclusions
  • Bibliography
  • Subject Index
  • Index Locorum
  • Papyri and Manuscripts Index
Citable Link
Published: 2022
Publisher: University of Michigan Press
ISBN(s)
  • 978-0-472-13327-7 (hardcover)
  • 978-0-472-22078-6 (ebook)
Series
  • New Texts from Ancient Cultures
Subject
  • Classical Studies:Roman
  • Classical Studies:Greek
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