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Published 2016
A castration story from the Tebtunis temple library /

: xiv, 85 pages, 13 pages of plates : illustrations (chiefy color) ; 31 cm. : 9788763544320

Published 2016
Papyrus de la Sorbonne : (P. Sorb. IV no 145-160) /

: Volume follows p.Sorb I(nos.1 to 68)published by presses universitaires de France in 1966(Helen Cadell),p.Sorb.II(no.69)published by scholars press in 1994(Jean Gascou),and P.Sorb III(nos.70 to 144)published by Presses universitaires de France in 2011(Helen Cadell,Willy Clarysse,and Kennokka Robic) : 104 pages, 23 pages of plates : color illustrations ; 29 cm. : Includes bibliographical references (pages 19-23) and index. : 9791023105193

Petese stories II (P. Petese II) /

: xiv, 210 pages, 22 pages of plates : illustrations ; 31 cm. : Includes bibliographical references. : 8763504049

The demotic magical papyrus of London and Leiden /

: 3 volumes ; 31-46 cm. : Includes bibliographical references.

Published 1993
The liturgy of opening the mouth for breathing /

: Includes text of Book of opening the mouth (transliteration and translation): p. 23-34. : x, 129 p., 11 leaves of plates : ill. ; 32 cm. : Includes bibliographical references (p. 81-90). : 0900416629
9780900416620

Published 2021
The Ancient Egyptian Book of Thoth II : revised transliteration and translation, new fragments, and material for future study /

: Folded plates in pocket at end of volume 2. : 2 volumes : illustrations (some color) ; 31 cm + 11 folded pages of plates. : Includes bibliographical references (v. 1, pages [592]-613) and index. : 3447117176
9783447117173

Published 2019
Between temple and tomb : the demotic ritual texts of Bodl. MS. Egypt. a. 3(P) /

: The ancient Egyptians believed that rites performed for Osiris, the god of the dead, played a critical role in maintaining Egypt?s well-being and prosperity. Not only did they ensure the renewed fertility of the country?s arable land, they also guaranteed the political and social cohesion of the Egyptian state. However, it was not only at the national level, but at the individual level as well, that the Egyptians deemed such rites to be beneficial. Ritual texts intended to restore Osiris to life, suitably adapted, could also be recited for deceased individuals. Thus they could benefit from them in the same way that Osiris did. In the Graeco-Roman Period, adapted ritual texts of this sort were employed alongside texts originally composed for use in the funerary cult of ordinary deceased people. A number of ritual texts which are first attested in the private sphere subsequently appear in the temple sphere as well. Some ritual texts appear to have moved back and forth from one sphere to another, which suggests that the boundaries between the Osirian temple cult and the private funerary cult may have been more fluid than we usually imagine.0The ritual texts edited in this volume offer an excellent opportunity to explore these and related issues. Most of them are known to have been employed both for the benefit of the god Osiris and for ordinary deceased people, in certain cases, during one and the same period of Egypt?s history. This is one of their most interesting and striking features. They stand at the interface between temple cult and cult of the dead and allow us to trace the transmission of beliefs and practices from one sphere to the other.
: 205 pages, 14 pages of plates : illustrations (some color), facsimiles ; 31 cm. : Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-172). : 9783447113311
3447113316 : 2190-3646 ;