Unsolved:Ashmolean Parchment AN 1981.940

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Ashmolean Parchment
AN 1981.940
Ashmolean Parchment AN 1981.940.jpg
Created6th or 7th century
LocationAshmolean Museum,
Oxford, England
Author(s)Apapolo
Media typeVellum
SubjectLove spell
PurposeConjuring romantic love and sexual passion

The manuscript designated Ashmolean Parchment AN 1981.940 contains a Coptic male homosexual love spell written in Hermopolitan dialect,[1] which is held and preserved at the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, England.

Description

This vellum leaf was obtained by the British Egyptologist Francis Llewellyn Griffith from an Egyptian avocat named Fanous.[2] It dates back to 6th or 7th century, and measures 10.5 cm wide and 8 cm high.[3] The creases in the manuscript show that it was originally folded to 2.5 × 1.3 cm.[4] Its provenance is unknown, but the dialect suggests somewhere in middle Egypt, perhaps Hermopolis and its surrounding areas.[1]

The text is an incantation by a man named Apapolo (Papapōlō), the son of Nooe (Noah), to compel the love of another man Phello (Phlo), the son of Maure. Phello will be restless until he finds Apapolo and satisfies the latter's desire. The text provides the only example in Coptic language of a love spell between men.[1]

The English translation from the Kyprianos Database of Ancient Ritual Texts and Objects of the University of Würzburg:[3][1]

See also

References