The Second Archaeological Season2 took place inside the temenos of the
main temple of the town dedicated to the crocodile god Soknopaios, in
the same sector of 2003 season3. It is placed in the middle of the enclosure
(122.30 x 84.37 m ca.), north of the best preserved building in the area.
This structure (32.53 x 18.90 m), labelled ST 18, is preserved to a height
of at least 6 m; it was built with local rough stones and surrounded by
mud-brick walls. The general plan of the building is that of the small
Graeco-Roman temple, but a door was opened at the rear of the naos, on
the same axis as the main entrance (Fig. 1).
The 2003 excavation was concentrated north of this door, in order to clarify when and how it was opened (Fig. 2). North of this door a paved courtyard of about 20 x 7 m was found. In front of the building ST 18 a facade of a monumental temple built with isodomic sandstone blocks was revealed. It was provisionally dated to the Roman Period for its masonry. |
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The wall measures 20 m in length, 1.44 m in width
and it is preserved to a maximum height of 1.53 m, or 7 courses of isodomic
blocks (67-77 x 40 x 20 cm), stuck together with white and pinkish mortar.
Its southern face is quite rough, with blocks showing bosses surrounded
by four chiselled bands. This part of the building was not refined and
some stylised letters of the Greek alphabet are engraved on the bosses
of some blocks as mason’s marks. The masonry, similar to those of other
Fayyum temples, suggests the Roman Period for its construction. The door,
which is halfway down this wall, was 2.40 m wide. It is on the same axis
as a gateway opened in the rear wall of ST 18.
On the eastern and western sides of the courtyard are two mud-brick subsidiary buildings (ST 200, ST 23), only partially excavated in the 2003 season. The whole area turned out to be heavily plundered, probably between the last decades of the XIXth and the beginning of the XXth century, as some modern items found there have demonstrated. The rubble and sand packed originally on the area was removed and deposited on the east side of the courtyard. |
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The
mound (about 13 x 14 m, high 3 m) filled and covered three rooms of ST
200 (rooms A, D and C) and an area immediately to the east. Its stratigraphy
is reversed, with layers rich in objects at the top and sand mixed with
rouble at the bottom. The mound was dug in two seasons and it turn out
to be rich in architectural elements and objects such as amulets, ostraka,
mainly demotic, fragments of papyri in Greek and demotic, objects of daily
use such as sandals, combs and pottery vessels. Some mummy bandages were
also found and they can be interpreted, as the coffin mask found in 2003,
as the results of plundering activities in the entire area. Building ST 200 (6.4 m north-south, 4.6 m east-west) is composed of four rooms, one of which is an underground small cellar (Fig. 3). The building was completely plundered and nothing can be said on its function with certainty. It closed the courtyard on its east side and was built abutted to both temples (Fig. 4).
Two other niches are visible on the west wall: one reaches the floor level and is 1.07 m high and 13 cm deep. The other one is placed in the south-west corner of the room and it is quite articulated. Its poor state of preservation prevents us from any interpretation. The room is now preserved to a height of about 1.80 m and the floor in mud-brick is still partially in place. The walls were originally plastered with mud, partially preserved to a height of about 80 cm on the east wall. |
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A
series of irregular indentations, cut in the wall at the same height from
the floor, suggests the presence of a piece of furniture or of a wooden
shelf (84 cm high and 80 cm large), inclined towards the centre of the
room. In the middle of the floor in the room a small vertical shaft (47
x 42 cm) leads into cellar D (Fig. 6).
An imperial amphora is built within the southern wall at the bottom of the shaft with its mouth toward the interior of the room. The mud-brick floor still exists for 1/3 and it was originally plastered in mud, as were the perimeter walls (Fig. 7). |
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Room A did not communicate with the other two rooms,
i.e., B and C; its entrance, placed in the north-western corner, led directly
into the courtyard. The door to room B is badly damaged and is placed
in its south-western corner. Room B communicated with room C thorough
a door in the south-eastern corner and a shallow space opened at floor
level in the division wall (l. 57 cm, h 37 cm). Room B (Fig. 8) measures
2.90 m north-south and 1.87 m east-west; it is preserved to a maximum
height of 1.70 m. Its western wall was badly damaged by the collapse of
two heavy lintels in local marl stone. The room seems to have been divided
into two minor spaces using some rough stones set vertically in the middle
of the room. The northern area (1.60 m long) was completely plundered
in recent times but the floor made of rough stones, similar to those of
the courtyard, is still extant. Instead, in the southern space, which
is in the worst condition, an original layer of sand and packed organic
materials was found in place in front of the door leading to room C. This
layer (SU 113) was covered by a mud floor (SU 109). They were rich in
organic materials and fragments of papyri, both in Greek and Demotic.
A secondary use of this room as a stable is probable.
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The door between B and C is 58 cm large and it was
originally closed with one leaf door hinged in the south-western corner.
The sandstone pivot is still in place. The room is 2.82 m long, 2 m wide
and 1.93 m high. The mud-brick floor is almost completely lost and the
north wall is partially collapsed. The filling of the room can be considered
part of the rouble mound and consisted of a series of alternate layers
of sand and stones; three different Egyptian style cavetto cornices were
found at the bottom (Fig. 9).
On the other side of the courtyard is building ST 23,
not completely brought to light (Fig. 10) yet. Similarly to ST 200, it
was built abutted to the two temples and closed the courtyard on its western
side. Four rooms were excavated to the floor level and they all seem,
on the basis of their shape and dimensions, to have been used as storerooms.
At least two of them, rooms A and C, were covered with barrel vaults,
of which a portion still survives in the north-western corner of room
A. Rooms B1 and B2 were brought to light during the 2004 season (Fig.
11).
They
were completely plundered and covered with sand and rubble coming from
collapsed walls in stone and mud-brick; a “modern” hearth, with some burnt
papyri, was found in the north-western corner in B2.
Buildings ST 200 and 23 were built following English bond pattern, with mud-bricks of light grey colour4. The range of their sizes is between 24 x 11 x 9 cm and 31 x 16 x 11 cm. The bonding and the sizes of the bricks are common among the whole temenos in Dime. The foundations of the two buildings are very shallow (about 5-20 cm): in some walls the first courses are built with rough stones and a great quantity of mud. ST 200 and 23 seem to have been built at the same time in the Roman Period, but the evidence found till now does not provide a more precise date. |
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On the eastern side of the courtyard and of ST 200
is the dump created by previous diggers. Its excavation began in the 2003
season and was almost completed during the following season; it was necessary,
however, to leave a small portion of the dump intact to preserve the integrity
of a mud-brick wall which was supported by it. The portion of the dump
excavated in 2004 was 10 m long from North to South, 4.80 m from East
to West and 2.30 m high. Its stratigraphy was almost uniformly composed
of mud-brick rubble, sand, unworked stones, fragments of plaster and reeds
and wood from the buildings of the area. Fifty Demotic ostraka,
sixty fragments of Greek and Demotic papyri5, architectural elements, amulets,
mummy wrappings covered with painted stucco and objects of daily use were
found in this dump. Part of a Doric freeze6 with a triglyph and plain metope
was also found in the dump (Fig. 12), together with what seems to be a
piece of a Corinthian capital7. The freeze can be dated to the Hellenistic
period and it suggests the presence of a Classical style building in the
temenos8.
F. Congedo and V. De Santis, of the C.S. Akra Iapygia of Lecce, began the topographical plan of the temenos with a Total Station Leica TC 705XR. The triangulation points were positioned to create the general plan of the visible structures on the site. Each building was drawn in detail at a 1:20 scale. Each wall in the excavated sector was also documented with photogrammetry. |
During the period of this excavation, a total of 71 papyri and 61 ostraka were found. Of the 71 papyri, 47 are Greek; 17 are demotic; 1 has a Greek text on one side and a demotic text on the other; 3 are illustrated with figures of magic; 1 is probably figurative; 1 is hieroglyphic; 1 is possibly hieroglyphic. Of the 61 ostraka, 53 are demotic; 7 are possibly demotic; 1 is possibly demotic with magic text and illustrations. The Greek papyri are in a good state, but generally not entire; for this reason they give mostly incomplete texts. It deals with documents, which can be dated, based on the analysis of the writing, to the period between the 1st and 2nd Century A.D. ST04/100/512 and ST04/100/533 are interesting because discovered in the modern tip positioned on the far eastern point of the courtyard north of the temple of Soknopaios: 2 small pieces of papyrus found rolled up and tied by papyrus fibres: on the inside of both pieces there is a trace, in cursive script, of a Greek expression: it probably deals with two questions to an oracle. Also with the demotic papyri, 1 was found rolled up and tied by a fibre (ST04/106/630).
Magic figurative papyri are certainly ST04/100/639 and ST04/100/666: the first was closed and sealed by clay; the second was closed and tied by a plant fibre; on both there is an outline, made by a large-pointed and soft calamus, of a figura magica, that, given the fragmentary nature of the two papyri, in neither of the two is it possible to reconstruct entirely. One papyrus which illustrates magic is almost certainly ST04/100/714, also this very fragmentary. The three papyri were amulets that people wore for apotropaic reasons; they can be confirming the likely presence of a centre of production and distribution of papyrus amulets close to the temple of Soknopaios.
1 cspapiri@ilenic.unile.it;
paola.davoli@unile.it.
2 The
Second Season was carried out from 23rd November to 12th December 2004. The
team was composed of Mario Capasso (director), Paola Davoli (director), Angela
Cervi (recorder), Fabio Congedo (topographer), Valentino Desantis (topographer),
Giuseppe Alvar Minaya (assistant archaeologist), Natascia Pellé (papyrologist),
Timothy Pepper (papyrologist), Patrizia Piccione (recorder), Anna Maria Toma
(recorder) and Ashraf Senussi (drawer). The Supreme Council of Antiquities
was represented by Inspector Sayed Awad Mohammed. The Mission sincerely thanks
Magdy El Ghandour, General Director of Foreign Missions affairs and P. Committees
of the Supreme Council and Dr. Abdul Rahman al-Ayedi, General Director of
the Fayyum Inspectorate Antiquities for facilitating the archaeological work.
We are also very grateful to Mr. Luca Trombi of Baker Hughes in Cairo, who
provided precious and generous help. Many thanks also to Dr. Maria Casini
of the Italian Institute of Culture in Cairo, who took care of official relations
with the Supreme Council of Antiquities.
3 P.
Davoli, New Excavations at Soknopaiou Nesos: the 2003 Season, in S. Lippert-M.
Schentuleit (eds.), Tebtynis und Soknopaiu Nesos. Leben im römerzeitlichen
Fajum. Akten des Internationalen Symposions vom 11. bis 13. Dezember 2003
in Sommerhausen bei Würzburg, pp. 29-39.
4 Munsell
Soil Color Charts 10YR 8/2.
5 Demotic
papyri and ostraka will be studied by dr. Martin Stadler of Würzburg University.
6 P.
Pensabene, Elementi architettonici di Alessandria e di altri siti egiziani,
Roma 1993, pp. 79-83, cat. nr 946 Tav. 99.
7 Inv.
nr ST04/100/517; cm 35 x 65, th. 13-16.5. Inv. nr ST04/100/699; cm 10 x 11,5
x 11.
8 A
cornice in Ionian-Corinthian style with alternate different rosettes, possibly
dated to the 1st century BC, was found in 2003. Inv. nr ST03/42/344. Cf. Pensabene,
Elementi cit., cat. nr 924 Tav. 97 (from Theadelphia). We cannot rule out
the possibility that the three pieces belonged to the same building, since
it is well known that in the architecture of Alexandrian style the different
styles could be used at the same time; however, it is also possible that they
are part of different structures. A small chapel, labelled ST 7, with columns
in imperial Attic style, is located on the north side of the temenos: P. Davoli,
The Temple Area of Soknopaiou Nesos, in M. Capasso-P. Davoli (eds.), New Researches
on the Fayyum. Proceedings of the International Meeting of Archaeology and
Papyrology, Lecce, June 8-10 2005 (in press).
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