This paper offers corrections and new readings to names found in eleven inscriptions originating from Faras. Inscriptions were discovered at different periods, ranging from the visit of Karl Richard Lepsius in 1844 to the rescue excavation by the Polish archaeological mission of Kazimierz Michałowski in 1961–1964. The material covers different types of sources (epitaphs, visitors’ inscriptions, subscriptions, and an owner’s inscription) in three languages (Greek, Coptic, and Old Nubian) and spans roughly the whole Christian period in Nubia, from the seventh to the fourteenth or even fifteenth centuries. The corrections include both ‘cosmetic’ improvements in reading (e.g. from the form ⲁⲛⲁⲛⲉ to ⲁⲛⲁⲛⲏ) as well as identification of ghost-name...
The present paper discusses a monogram of the name Abraham carved on the walls of an ancient monumen...
Thebes during the early Islamic period provides an excellent opportunity to study the work of Coptic...
This article re-opens the discussion about the linguistic situation in the southernmost kingdom of M...
This paper offers corrections and new readings to names found in eleven inscriptions originating fro...
Unlike previous instalments of the ‘Nubica onomastica miscellanea’-series which focused on correctin...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
Re-edition of a twelfth-century epitaph in Greek (Turin, Museo Egizio, Cat. 7142), formerly attribut...
The present paper analyses the rubrication patterns in two Old Nubian manuscripts (known under the s...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
The discovery of a complete codex in Coptic at the Nubian monastery of Qasr el Wizz has attracted th...
This book offers a comprehensive linguistic evaluation of the 376 personal names attested in the rou...
This article does two things. First, it corrects things in the book, Identifying Biblical Persons i...
The author presents 71 unpublished pagan epitaphs kept in the Bardo national Museum (Tunis) and whos...
The third paper of this series shifts focus to a special category of artistic and epigraphic product...
The present paper discusses a monogram of the name Abraham carved on the walls of an ancient monumen...
Thebes during the early Islamic period provides an excellent opportunity to study the work of Coptic...
This article re-opens the discussion about the linguistic situation in the southernmost kingdom of M...
This paper offers corrections and new readings to names found in eleven inscriptions originating fro...
Unlike previous instalments of the ‘Nubica onomastica miscellanea’-series which focused on correctin...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
Re-edition of a twelfth-century epitaph in Greek (Turin, Museo Egizio, Cat. 7142), formerly attribut...
The present paper analyses the rubrication patterns in two Old Nubian manuscripts (known under the s...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
The discovery of a complete codex in Coptic at the Nubian monastery of Qasr el Wizz has attracted th...
This book offers a comprehensive linguistic evaluation of the 376 personal names attested in the rou...
This article does two things. First, it corrects things in the book, Identifying Biblical Persons i...
The author presents 71 unpublished pagan epitaphs kept in the Bardo national Museum (Tunis) and whos...
The third paper of this series shifts focus to a special category of artistic and epigraphic product...
The present paper discusses a monogram of the name Abraham carved on the walls of an ancient monumen...
Thebes during the early Islamic period provides an excellent opportunity to study the work of Coptic...
This article re-opens the discussion about the linguistic situation in the southernmost kingdom of M...