Eirene, daughter of Silvanus, whose mother is Senpnouthis. May her soul rise before Osiris-Sokar, the great god, lord of Abydos, forever.

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CLCIV 456 Egypt after the Pharaohs, 330 bc-ad 641: Life in an Ancient Multicultural Society (R&E, ULWR) Syllabus & Schedule Eirene, daughter of Silvanus, whose mother is Senpnouthis. May her soul rise before Osiris-Sokar, the great god, lord of Abydos, forever. 1

Meeting Times: TTh: 10:00-11:30 am Room: 173 Lorch Professor: Brendan Haug Office: 2124 Angell Hall Phone: (734) 764-4791 Email: bjhaug@umich.edu Office Hours: TBA Description This course will explore the social history of Graeco-Roman Egypt, a period during which the country was ruled not by native pharaohs but by a Graeco-Macedonian dynasty (330-31 BC) and later by the Roman Empire (31 BC-AD 641). Our theme will be the multiethnic, multilingual, and multicultural character of Egyptian society during this period, an era of sustained and intimate contact between Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans. The image on the first page of this syllabus neatly encapsulates the cultural hybridity of this long phase of ancient Egyptian history. This Roman-era painting, although executed in the realistic style of Greek and Roman art, was affixed to the mummified remains of the deceased, who had been embalmed and wrapped in traditional Egyptian fashion. The prayer inscribed below the subject s face is also composed in the Egyptian language and it draws upon Egyptian religious imagery. The deceased s name, however Eirene ( Peace ) is Greek, while her mother and father bear, respectively, the Latin and Egyptian names Silvanus and Senpnouthis ( Daughter of the God ). Despite this ostensibly unproblematic cultural syncretism, Graeco-Roman Egypt remained a conquered land ruled by a non-native minority elite. For this reason, one question will remain central to our investigations throughout the semester: Does the history of Graeco-Roman Egypt furnish a compelling example of racial, ethnic, and/or cultural discrimination from antiquity or do we require alternate terminology in order to make sense of the socio-political character of this pre-modern society? Required Books Naphtali Lewis, Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt (1986) Naphtali Lewis, Life in Egypt Under Roman Rule (1983) ** All other readings will be posted to CTools ** Assessment This course fulfills both the Race & Ethnicity and the Upper Level Writing Requirement. You will write three papers of increasing length through the semester, each of which will be subjected to either peer- or instructor-review, the latter requiring submission of both rough and revised final drafts. There will also be a Final Exam that will draw upon material from the entire semester. Grading Paper 1: 20% Paper 2: 20% Paper 3: 40% Final Exam: 20% 2

Class Schedule Survey Lectures Tuesday, 8 September Thursday, 10 September Tuesday, 15 September Thursday, 17 September Tuesday, 22 September Thursday, 24 September Tuesday, 29 September Introduction: Greece, Egypt, and the Concept of Race in Antiquity Introductory remarks and discussion of course requirements. Topic for First Paper Circulated Egypt during the Graeco-Roman Period Read: 1) J.G. Manning, The Last Pharaohs, 19-28. 2) N. Lewis, Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt, 1-7. 3) N. Lewis, Life in Egypt under Roman Rule, 1-8. 4) R.S. Bagnall, Egypt in Late Antiquity, 15-23. The Evidence: Papyri and Archaeology Read: 1) J. Rowlandson, Women and Society, 18-23. 2) Oxford Handbook of Papyrology, 3-58. Beginnings: Herodotus and Egypt in the 5 th Century BC Read: 1) Selections from Herodotus Histories Book 2. Greek Conquest and Ptolemaic Rule: A Racist Colonial State? Read: 1) N. Lewis, Life in Egypt under Roman Rule, 9-14. 2) J.G. Manning, The Last Pharaohs, 29-54. 3) D. Thompson, Hellenistic Hellenes. 4) D. McCoskey, Race, 81-109. Roman Conquest and Roman Rule: A Race-Conscious Empire? Read: 1) N. Lewis, Life in Egypt under Roman Rule, 9-17. 2) F. Herklotz, Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, 11-21. 3) D. McCoskey, Race, 109-132 Post First Paper to CTools. Read and Comment on Partner s Paper. Peer-Review Session and Discussion of First Paper Copy of Paper One Due in Class. Topics for Second Paper Circulated. The Ptolemaic Period Thursday, 1 October Tuesday, 6 October Law and Justice: Ptolemaic Apartheid? Read: 1) J.G. Manning, Last Pharaohs, 165-201. Response to Peer Comments Due in Class. Elephantine: Cultural Exchange on Egypt s Southern Border Read: 1) Introduction in B. Porten et al., The Elephantine Papyri in English. 3

Thursday, 8 October Tuesday, 13 October Thursday, 15 October Tuesday, 20 October Thursday, 22 October Tuesday, 27 October Thursday, 29 October Tuesday, 3 November Zenon and Kleon: Managing Land and People Read: 1) N. Lewis, Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt, 37-45. Dryton and Apollonia-Senmonthis: Mixed Marriage in the Countryside Read: 1) N. Lewis, Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt, 88-103. 2) K. Vandorpe, Apollonia, A Businesswoman in a Multicultural Society. Menches, Village Scribe of Kerkeosiris: What s in a Name? Read: 1) N. Lewis, Greeks in Ptolemaic Egypt, 104-123. 2) W. Clarysse, Greeks and Egyptians in the Ptolemaic Army and Administration, Aegyptus 65 (1985), 57 66. No Class, Fall Study Break Egyptian Priests and Temples under the Ptolemies Read: 1) D. Thompson, Memphis under the Ptolemies, 99-143. Rough Draft of Paper 2 Due in Class Revolts against the Ptolemies: Economics or Egyptian Nationalism? Read: 1) J.L. O Neil, The Native Revolt against the Ptolemies (206-185 BC): Achievements and Limitations. 2) The Oracle of the Potter Cleopatra VII: The First Egyptian Ptolemy? Read: 1) S.-A. Ashton, Cleopatra and Egypt, 1-24; 190-196. Second Paper Due in Class. Topics for Final Paper Circulated. Discussion: Three Cases of Interethnic Conflict Read: 1) Selection of Translated Papyri (P.Col. Zen. II 66, 256/5 BC+; P. Ent. 79, 218 BC; UPZ I 8, 161 BC). The Roman Period Thursday, 5 November Tuesday, 10 November Thursday, 12 November The Coming of Rome: Reorganizing the State Read: A. Bowman and D.W. Rathbone, Journal of Roman Studies 82 (1992), 107-127. Reclassifying People: Personal Status under Rome Read: 1) Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, 247-276. The New Urban Elite: Greek Identity in the Roman Period Read: 1) P. van Minnen, Αἱ ἀπὸ γυµνασίου. Greek Women and the Greek Elite in the Metropoleis of Roman Egypt. 4

Tuesday, 17 November Egyptian Priests and Temples under the Romans Read: 1) D. Frankfurter, Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, 319-336. 2) M. Minas-Nerpel, Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, 362-82. Jews, Christians, and the End of Egyptian Antiquity Thursday, 19 November Tuesday 24 November Thursday, 26 November Tuesday, 1 December Thursday, 3 December Tuesday, 8 December Thursday 10 December The Jewish Population(s) of Graeco-Roman Egypt Read: 1) E. Gruen, Diaspora, 54-83. The Arrival and Establishment of Christianity Read: 1) M. Choat, Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt, 474-492. No Class, Thanksgiving Recess Christian Monasticism: An Egyptian Invention Read: 1) J.E. Goehring, Monasticism in Byzantine Egypt. Rough Draft of Final Paper Due in Class Native Egyptian Religious Identity after Christianity Readings TBA Arabs and Islam: The End of Antiquity Read: 1) P. Sijpesteijn, The Arab Conquest. Discussion and Debate: Ethnic, Cultural, and Religious Identity in Graeco- Roman Egypt: The Use and Abuse(?) of Race/Racism, Discrimination, Colonialism, etc. Read: 1) B. Isaac, Racism: A Rationalization of Prejudice in Greece and Rome. 2) E.S. Gruen, Rethinking the Other in Antiquity, 76-114. 3) D. McCoskey, Race, 1-80 Final Paper Due at Final Exam. Date TBA 5

Mummy of a child, ca. 100-120 AD. British Museum. 6

http://www.britishmuseum.org/research/collection_online/collection_object_details.aspx? objectid=124344&partid=1 7