From Apia to Serapias, her mother, mentioning her brother Lukammon, a certain Techoris and a Heraklammon; the purpose of the letter is not clear, but may be an invitation to her mother. Same people are mentioned in the parallel P.Oxy 14, 1679: Apia to Serapias
For grain; "from the secretary of the gymnasiarch to the sitologoi of Seryphis (Oxyrhynchite nome) for a payment fo corn from the crop of the past 7th year of Hadrian [HIB]
Composite roll of property returns; declaration of property to the bibliotheke enkteseon, landshares held individually and in share with others; concluding with an oath to the genius of the emperor; Hypographe; at left and right margins: remains of two other declarations of the same kind; year 21-29 of Kommodus
Two separate documents are recorded on the recto and verso of this papyrus. The recto contains a contract that deals with a loan of grain. The verso contains an account.|This fragment might belong to 257, but does not join directly.
Roman CE ii (ca. 121-124?) [HIB]|Roman CE late 119-early 121[PRR]
Call Number:
YPC
Image Count:
2
Abstract:
End of a petition mentioning the convent of the prefect of Egypt, Haterius Nepos.|The fragment relates to the same matter as a fragment of a petition: P. Mich. Inv. 6629 (= SB V 8001). The Michigan fragment, which also contains 10 lines is addressed to Apollonios, Strategos of the Apollonopolite Heptakomias. P.CtYBR inv. 277 also belongs to the archive of Apollonios, which was excavated in Hermopolis.
Two separate documents are recorded on the recto and verso of this papyrus. The recto may contain an account.| The verso perhaps contains a letter or petition. A date of the 13th year is recorded.
Column i contains information regarding a ?????????? ???????? on oath, from Harpokras son of Orseus|tomos synkollesimos; first sheet of two documents glued together.| Column ii also demonstrates the tomos synkollesimos, and is the second sheet of two documents that have been glued together. The dating of the second text is not as secure, but possibly also dates to 119 C.E.