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Berkeley and
Regional Partners Database
Help Screen
Searching the Database
To search the
database, click in the appropriate index (box) of the Search
Screen, and then type the name, word, topic, or number by
which you wish to query the database. Next click on
"Search". You may enter text in more than one index (box). For
example, typing "Menches" in the Personal
Name/Author box, and "Kerkeosiris" in the
Geographical Name box, then clicking on "Search,"
will retrieve texts by the village scribe Menches in which
Kerkeosiris is mentioned. Entering "94 A.D" in the
Year/Earliest Year index and "Mecheir" in the
Keyword index would retrieve a text from 94 A.D. written in
the Egyptian month Mecheir. To clear the Search Screen,
click on "Reset".
It is usually
only necessary to enter a key word in any index, for
example, "Pakebkis" not "Pakebkis, Son of
Marsisouchos"; "Ptolemy VIII" not
"Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II". Truncation also
can be used. For example, entering "mam" in the
Personal Name/Author index would retrieve "Mamertinos",
"Mamerteinos," and "Mamertinos
(Perfect)"; "Trajan" would retrieve both
"Trajan" and "Trajanus", facilitating
searching variant word forms. Asterisks should not be
used.
The default
arrangement (sort) of retrieved works is by author/title. By
clicking on "Call Number" or "Year" in
the SORT BY drop-down menu before clicking on "Search," retrieved texts will
be arranged by Call Number (Inventory Number), or by Year.
Transliteration
In transliterating
Greek personal and geographical names, the following rules
have been applied:
- Epsilon and eta
-> e
- Omicron and
omega -> o
- Upsilon ->
y, except in au, eu, and ou, where it has been rendered
as u
- Zeta -> z
- Theta -> th
- Xi -> x
- Phi -> ph
- Chi -> ch
- Psi -> ps
Roman personal
names are given in their Latin transliteration: Flavius (not
Phlaouios); Julius (not Ioulios).
Call Number
An index of
the Call numbers (Inventory/Publication numbers) under which
texts are shelved. It is necessary only to enter the number
in the box, not necessarily the alphabetic designation, for
example "0025" not "P.Tebt.0025".
Entering "25" would retrieve not only 0025 but
also 0125, 0225, etc.
Examples of
complete Bancroft Library Papyri call numbers, with
alphabetic designations:
- O.Berk.01
-> ostrakon not from Tebtunis (always two digits)
- P.Berk.02
-> papyrus not from Tebtunis (always two digits)
- P.Hearst 01
-> The Hearst Medical Papyrus
- O.Tebt.26
-> ostrakon from Tebtunis (always two digits)
- P.Tebt.0591
-> papyrus from Tebtunis (always four digits)
- P.Tebt.Frag.07,846
->papyrus from Tebtunis (always five digits)
- P.Tebt.UC 1604
-> papyrus from Tebtunis (always four digits)
- P.Tebt.Tin 01
-> papyrus from Tebtunis (always two digits)
- Pahlavi.001
-> Pahlavi texts (always three digits)
- T.Tebt.01
-> tablet from Tebtunis (always two digits)
Personal Name/Author
An index of
personal names such as Onnophris, Apollonios, or Sophocles;
authors, and recipients of letters, receipts,
accounts, and other documents. Where there are many names
associated with a text, such as a land survey, not all have
been indexed. Generally, where four or more names are given,
only the first three or names judged prominent because
identified by more than a name (officials, etc.) and persons
that feature in several texts have been indexed. Names,
functions and occupations have been transliterated according
to the rules outlined above (e.g. basilikos grammateus,
komarches, hiereus, etc.); however, well known literary or
historical names are generally given in standard English
form, such as Homer, Virgil, Cleopatra, or Augustus.
It is usually
only necessary to enter a key word, for example "Pakebkis"
not "Pakebkis, Son of Marsisouchos".
Personal names have the following
patterns:
- Aurelius Sarapion
- Ptolemy IX Soter
II, King of Egypt
- Gordian III,
Emperor of Rome
- Dictys, Cretensis
- Petesouchos alias Ammonios
- Harmiysis (Komarches of Kerkeosiris)
- Horion, Son of Apollonios
- Thaubastis, Daughter of Maron
Roman personal names are given in their
Latin transliteration: Flavius (not Phlaouios); Julius (not
Ioulios).
NOTE: All
personal names associated with a text do not appear in the
brief view. Names other than the author, or
first author, appear under "Persons" in the
detailed view.
Geographical Name
An index of
geographical names according to their occurrence in the
text, using the rules of transliteration outlined above
(with the exception of Tebtunis and Alexandria), as listed
in the drop-down menu. The capital of the Arsinoite nome
occurs as Ptolemais Euergetis, Krokodilon polis, Arsinoe,
and Arsinoiton polis; similarly with other variant names for
the same place. Where there are many place names associated
with a text, such as a land survey, not all have been
indexed. Generally, where four or more place names are given
in the text, only the first three or places judged prominent
because featured in several texts have been indexed.
Occasionally, as in land surveys, the larger area has been
given instead of many villages (e.g., Arsinoites nomos,
rather than Kerkeosiris, etc.).
Genre
An index of
forms of texts (such as Accounts, Private letters,
Registers), types of legal documents (such as Contracts,
Leases), literary forms (such as Epic poems, Plays), and
physical characteristics (such as Figure drawings, Ostraka).
See the drop-down menu of genre terms in use.
Subject
Most full
records include one or more topical subject terms. See the
drop-down menu of topical subject terms in use. One can also
search on a subject or topic not in that list by entering it
in the Keyword index. The search can be narrowed
geographically by also entering a place name in the
Geographical Name index, for instance entering "Crown
land" in the Subject index, and "Kerkeosiris"
in the Geographical Name index. Similarly, to search for
multiple subjects, such as land surveys of both Temple land
and Cleruchic land, enter one term in the Subject index from
the pull-down menu, and the other term in the Keyword index.
Context
The Tebtunis
papyri contain several groups of papyri which can either be
traced back to a single archive (collection of papers around
an individual, family, or office assembled in antiquity) or
can be collected to form a dossier (modern artificial
assemblage of papers related to a person or group). This
index allows searching on such groups as listed in the
drop-down menu.
Provenance
The Tebtunis
Papyri, and other holdings, include papyri that are related
by provenance, that is, place of discovery. For
instance, many come from crocodile cartonnage, from houses
in the town of Tebtunis, or from human mummies. This index
allows searching on provenance by groups (such as mummy
cartonnage) as listed in the drop-down menu, and also
individual numbers within each group (last section of
drop-down menu).
Year or Earliest/Latest Year
This
index enables searching by the year or approximate years in
which a papyrus was written. Years are entered according to
the Gregorian calendar designation. For
searching regnal periods or a specific month of the Egyptian
calendar, use the Keyword index, and enter the name of the
ruler (for example, Ptolemy VIII or Augustus) or the name of
the month.
Year or
Earliest Year: Here is entered the specific year or
century period in which a text was written, or earliest
possible year.
Examples of
single years, or specific century periods.
- 138 B.C.
- 239 A.D.
- ca. 56 B.C.
- ca. 187 A.D.
- 3rd century B.C.
- Early 4th
century B.C.
- Mid 2nd century
A.D.
- Late 3rd century
A.D.
Latest
Year: A more advanced search, use of this
index allows searching on varying ranges of years. For
this search, the date is a range of years, the earliest
possible year is entered in Year or Earliest Year index, the
latest possible year in Latest Year index. This
includes specific regnal years For this search do not use
any alphabetic text, and designate B.C. years with a minus
sign (for example, "-140", not "140
B.C.") in both search boxes.
Examples of
ranges of years: the first going in "Earliest
Year", the second in "Latest Year".
- Between 204 and
181 B.C. -> -204 and -181
- Between 126 and
138 A.D. -> 126 and 138
- 140/139 B.C.
-> -140 and -139
- 189/190 A.D.
-> 189 and 190
- 19th year
of King Ptolemy V Epiphanes (187/186 B.C.) ->
-187 and -186
- 3rd year of the
Emperor Domitian (83/84 A.D.) -> 83 and 84
Keyword
This index
can be used for a more general search. It searches on
various text fields in each record, as well as the
translation of texts where provided. Here one can search for
specific Egyptian months, the ruler designating a certain
reign (for example, Ptolemy VIII, or Augustus), for broader
or more specific words than those listed in the Subject
pull-down list, for specific scripts used (such as regular
cursive, small uncial, or unpracticed hand), for physical
properties (such as protokollon or join), etc.
Language
This index
retrieves texts by language, as listed in the pull-down
menu.
UC Inventory Number
This index
retrieves texts by the University of California (UC) four
digit inventory number. These were assigned to individual
vinylite mounts (each containing one or more fragments)
rather than texts in 1940 when part of the collection was
mounted in vinylite, so that a given text may have several
UC numbers (for example, two separate short texts mounted in
one vinylite frame), or the same number may represent
several texts (for example, those on recto and verso of one
papyrus).
APIS ID Number
This index
retrieves texts by the APIS ID number found in the APIS
Union Database at Columbia University. Enter only the
numeric designation; for example "25", not
"berkeley.apis.25".
Holding Institution
Use to
restrict search to texts held only by The Bancroft Library,
or by one of its APIS partners, as listed in the drop-down
menu.
Search
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