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 Important find sites are Egypt’s desert oases such as Oxyrhynchos,   Further reading and images:
 and the towns and villages of the Fayum and the Nile valley. Under   Bülow-Jacobsen 2009, 4–9, 19–25; Sarri 2008, 60–64; Turner 1980; a useful
 certain circumstances it has survived outside these areas. Important   resource is the Duke Checklist of editions
 finds illustrate the variety of purposes papyri were used for. In the
 so-called Villa dei Papiri in Herculaneum, the eruption of Vesuvius   Also see: fig. 2 (Pompeii still lifes); fig. 14 (baker and wife).
 preserved more than 1800 papyri from a private library that are
 entirely scorched but can be unrolled and read with the appropriate
 technology. They contain literary and philosophical texts (Sider 2010).   Selected ancient literary evidence:
 Another important find is the Babatha cache, a bundle of 35 legal   The earliest Roman reference to papyrus might be a fragment of Ennius
 documents found in a cave in the Judean Desert, all related to the   cited by Servius (Aen. 8.361). Pliny the Elder (NH 13.74–82) desccribes the
 life and finances of Babatha, a woman who lived in Roman Iudaea   production of papyrus. Cicero (Q. fr. 2.14 [15b].1) mentions fine paper (charta).
 in the 2nd century CE and possibly died during Bar Kokhba’s revolt   Martial has papyrus as gifts twice: Mart. 14.10 (large sheets); Mart. 14.11
 (Lewis et al. 1989). The use of papyrus (amongst other things) in   (for letters). Horace (Epist. 2.1.111–113) notes how everyone in Rome who
 the Roman military is demostrated by finds in Dura Europos on   writes poetry, including himself, asks for calamus, charta and scrinia first
 the Euphrates (Syria) from the Roman occupation dating to the   thing in the morning.
 mid-2nd to mid-3rd century CE with the documents of the Cohors
 XX Palmyrenorum (Welles et al. 1959).
 Outside Egypt, papyrus was always imported and may not have been   Parchment/vellum (membrana/pergamena)
 the most readily available writing material. That it was nevertheless
 used in places as far from Egypt as Hadrian’s Wall is shown by   The word parchment derives from the name of the Greek city
 fragments of papyrus found with the Corbridge hoard dating to   Pergamon. In antiquity it was believed that parchment was invented
 the period between 122–138 CE (Häussler and Pearce 2007, 225).  there in the first half of the 2nd century BCE, as related by Pliny
           (NH 13.70). However, Aramaic parchment documents have been
           dated to the 4th century BCE and animal skin was already used in
           Pharaonic Egypt (Bülow-Jacobsen 2009, 11).

           Parchment is different from leather in that it is untanned. The skin
           of calves, goats or sheep was cleaned, freed from hair and treated
           with chalk, then stretched and dried, thinned and the surface
           smoothed. Parchment was first referred to as membrana which
           was also used for leather. The word pergamena is first attested in
 Fig. 35: Relief on a sarcophagus from Neumagen (Germany)   Diocletian’s Edict on Prices (301 CE).
 showing a school setting and pupils using papyrus scrolls, late   Parchment was written on with ink. Apart from papyrus, it was one
 2nd century CE. Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier, inv. 9921. ©   of the main materials used for books in antiquity. A few examples
 GDKE/Rheinisches Landesmuseum Trier, photo by Th. Zühmer.  of parchment volumina are known, with pages sewn together and

           then rolled (Bülow-Jacobsen 2009, 23–25). They contain parts of
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