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OverviewThe Hay archive of Coptic manuscripts consists of seven fragmentary sheets of leather bearing spells for divination, protection, healing, personal advancement, cursing and the satisfaction of sexual desire. Purchased from the heir of the Scottish Egyptologist and draughtsman, Robert Hay (1799–1863), the manuscripts arrived at the British Museum in 1868. Since they were first published in the 1930s, they were understood to be the work of a single copyist writing around AD 600 in the Theban region of Upper Egypt. The present volume has confirmed, nuanced or challenged these assessments on the basis of scientific analysis and close study of the manuscripts. Prompted by the urgent conservation needs of the corpus, this study seeks to provide a model, integrated approach to the publication of ancient texts as archaeological objects by providing a full record of provenance and collection history; scientific analysis; conservation approach and treatment; a new complete edition and translation of the Coptic texts; and an extended discussion of the cultural context of production. Written on poorly processed calf, sheep and goat skin, the manuscripts were copied by multiple non-professional writers in the 8th–9th centuries. Employing a striking combination of ancient Egyptian, Graeco-Roman, biblical and extra-biblical motifs, their contents represent a Christian milieu making use of the mechanics of earlier ‘magical’ practice in a period well after the arrival of Islam. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Elisabeth O'ConnellPublisher: British Museum Press Imprint: British Museum Press Volume: 233 ISBN: 9780861592333ISBN 10: 0861592336 Pages: 192 Publication Date: 31 January 2023 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Magic in Late Antique Egypt: an introduction 2. Provenance and history of the collection 3. Producing texts on leather: scientific analyses 4. Preserving texts on leather: conservation and mounting 5. Catalogue: Hay 1-7 6. The Hay manuscripts as an ancient archive 7. From ancient to medieval magical practice: the historical position of the Hay texts 8. Epilogue: the benefits and challenges of multi-disciplinary working Bibliography Contributors General index Coptic and Greek indexesReviewsAuthor InformationElisabeth R. O’Connell is Byzantine World Curator at The British Museum. Her research focuses on aspects of social history and archaeology in Late Antique Egypt. She is editor of Egypt in the First Millennium AD (2014), Abydos in the First Millennium AD (2020), Egypt and empire: The formation of religious identity after Rome (2022) and co-editor of Egypt: Faith after the pharaohs (2015), which accompanied the BM exhibition of the same title (2015–2016). She has excavated in Tunisia, Sudan and Egypt, where she co-directed the British Museum Expedition to Hagr Edfu (2009-2013). She received her PhD from the University of California, Berkeley (2007). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |