You may reach the Duke Papyrus Archive at its original site in the USA or at a mirror site in the UK.
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The Duke Papyrus Archive provides electronic access to texts about and images of nearly 1400 papyri from ancient Egypt. The target audience includes: papyrologists, ancient historians, archaeologists, biblical scholars, classicists, Coptologists, Egyptologists, students of literature and religion and all others interested in ancient Egypt. The project of conserving, interpreting, cataloguing and imaging the largely unpublished Duke papyrus collection was supported by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and is part of the Advanced Papyrological Information System (APIS) Project. Project staff at Duke have included Steven L. Hensen, John F. Oates, Peter van Minnen, Suzanne D. Corr, Paolo Mangiafico, Joshua Sosin, and John Bauschatz.
You may reach the Duke Papyrus Archive at its original site in the USA or at a mirror site in the UK.
[ Browse | Search ]
[ Information about
papyri | Information
about the Duke Papyrus Archive | Links to other sites
]
Please see our page with contact information if you have any comments or questions about the Duke Papyrus Archive.
Last updated May 2001