The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Christian Nubia, based on the study of two funerary steles inscribed with the ‘Euchologion Mega’, a type of prayer for the dead. The article focuses on five remarks derived from the examination of the aforementioned material. The conclusion drawn underlines the need for a study of the individual variants of the prayer’s formula and pleads for the continuation of similar research.Este artículo busca ofrecer algunas observaciones sobre el uso del griego en la Nubia cristiana, basándose para ello en el estudio de dos estelas funerarias inscritas con el ‘Euchologion Mega’, un tipo de oración para los muertos. El artículo se centra en cinco considera...
International audienceThis paper deals with the question of the egyptianisation of Nubia during the ...
Edition of 80 Greek inscriptions and a Latin one from Kertassi in Nubia, where two local deities (Sr...
This study revisits the longest known text in Old Nubian to date, the pseudo- Chrysostomian “Sermon ...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
The three bilingual Greek–Old Nubian psalms published in this paper have been preserved to us in for...
Re-edition of a twelfth-century epitaph in Greek (Turin, Museo Egizio, Cat. 7142), formerly attribut...
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...
The study of Christian popular piety in Nubia is very difficult, because after the old Christian com...
In this paper, I pursue to study the Greek version of the bilingual (Greek and Demotic) mummy labels...
Although archaeological evidence shows that Christianity existed in Nubia before the official missio...
This article is an attempt to define the relationship between Christianity in Nubia and the local cu...
This paper offers corrections and new readings to names found in eleven inscriptions originating fro...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
International audienceThis paper deals with the question of the egyptianisation of Nubia during the ...
Edition of 80 Greek inscriptions and a Latin one from Kertassi in Nubia, where two local deities (Sr...
This study revisits the longest known text in Old Nubian to date, the pseudo- Chrysostomian “Sermon ...
The aim of this article is to make some observations concerning the use of the Greek language in Chr...
The present paper analyses two Old Nubian inscriptions found at a church in Akasha West in 1969. The...
The three bilingual Greek–Old Nubian psalms published in this paper have been preserved to us in for...
Re-edition of a twelfth-century epitaph in Greek (Turin, Museo Egizio, Cat. 7142), formerly attribut...
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...
The study of Christian popular piety in Nubia is very difficult, because after the old Christian com...
In this paper, I pursue to study the Greek version of the bilingual (Greek and Demotic) mummy labels...
Although archaeological evidence shows that Christianity existed in Nubia before the official missio...
This article is an attempt to define the relationship between Christianity in Nubia and the local cu...
This paper offers corrections and new readings to names found in eleven inscriptions originating fro...
The fifth paper in the series brings the focus onto the inscriptions accompanying the famous wall pa...
International audienceThis paper deals with the question of the egyptianisation of Nubia during the ...
Edition of 80 Greek inscriptions and a Latin one from Kertassi in Nubia, where two local deities (Sr...
This study revisits the longest known text in Old Nubian to date, the pseudo- Chrysostomian “Sermon ...