The Greco-Egyptian Magical Formularies: Libraries, Books, and Individual Recipes (New Texts From Ancient Cultures)

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Management number 231929703 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price US$27.57 Model Number 231929703
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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. Read more

ASIN B0BHX87MB7
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-0472220786
Language English
File size 9.8 MB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher University of Michigan Press
Word Wise Not Enabled
Print length 562 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Publication date November 14, 2022
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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