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It is not possible to neatly
distinguish the terms "religion," "magic," and "medicine" in
antiquity. They all point to means by which people tried to
understand and influence their natural, supernatural and social
environments. If we cannot determine where one category shades into the
next, neither can we locate the center of each term. A demonstration: a
third century woman attempts to avert fever by appealing to a
supernatural intermediary to protect her (see P.Tebt. II 275).
Would you characterize this as religion, magic or medicine?
The objects and texts
excavated from the temple, town and cemeteries of Tebtunis in 1899/1900
offer a glimpse into the system of belief and practice of the town's
ancient inhabitants.
When the Romans took formal
control of Egypt after the death of Antony and Cleopatra VII in 30 BCE,
they inherited a land that had been ruled by Greek-speaking monarchs
(the Ptolemies) for 300 years. In general, Greeks in Egypt formed an
economically privileged class, which remained parallel and distinct
from that of the Egyptians in many ways. Roman citizens became the new
elite in the first century BCE, but they did not settle in Egypt in
large numbers, and Greek remained the administrative language of Egypt
as it had in other Roman provinces in the East. Our subject affords the
opportunity to explore ways in which Greek and Egyptian life functioned
under the Roman Empire–that is, in a multi-cultural society not so
unlike our own.
Next Page – The Temple of Soknebtunis
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