Leipziger Weltchronik

The Leipziger Weltchronik (German for World chronicle of Leipzig) is preserved in five papyrus fragments in the Papyrus Collection in Leipzig. The fragments were bought in 1913, but were only published in 2010. The chronicle dates to the first half of the 2nd century AD. These are the earliest known fragments of a world chronicle. On the badly preserved fragments events on the founding of Thebes (Boeotia) and a list of Babylonian and Egyptian kings are preserved. Hesiod is named. The chronicle is perhaps Christian.[1]

The following events are preserved in the four remaining columns:

Smende[s ...],
[...]mompsames: 51 years [...]
[..., x years], Amenophris: [x] years [...]
Ous[e]rthos: 11 years ,
Psossam[m]eos: [x years ],
S[...]ites: 1 year, Ouse[r]tho[s]: [x years (?)],
one further S[...]tes [: x years ...].
[...]os:35[x Jahre. ..]
his son: 75 (?) years.
Ous[er]th[os]: 24 years.
Se[s]yngkheis: 14 years.
So[k]ophtheis: 3 years.
Amendesis: 11 years.
Sesongchis: 41 <years>.
Ousorthos: 40[+x] years.
Medes 48 years,
Psonsame[s] [x+]1 years,
Amoses 14 years,
Amenophis 9 years,
Ouertho[...] 20 (years?)
Ou[e]rtho[s ...] [x] years,
Sesyngch[eis x yea]rs,
Syphois [x yea]rs,
Zmendas [x yea]rs,
Ouserthos [x yea]rs,
Psonsame[s] [x yea]rs

Literature

References

  1. Weiß: Archiv für Papyrusforschung 56/1, 2010, p. 26-37
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