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Ancient Greek public official and scribe From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Zenon or Zeno (Greek: Ζήνων; 3rd century BC), son of Agreophon, was a public official in Ptolemaic Egypt around the 250s-230s BC. He is known from a cache of his papyrus documents which was discovered by archaeologists in the Nile Valley in 1914.
Zenon of Kaunos | |
---|---|
Ζήνων | |
Born | |
Nationality | Greek |
Other names | Zeno |
Occupation(s) | Financial private secretary and scribe |
Era | Hellenistic period |
Employer | Apollonius |
Organization | Ptolemaic Kingdom of Egypt |
Known for | Zenon Papyri |
Father | Agreophon |
Zeno was a native of the Greek town of Kaunos in Caria in southwestern Asia Minor. He moved to the town of Philadelphia in Egypt, a busy market town that had been founded on the edge of the Faiyum by Ptolemy II Philadelphus in honour of his sister Arsinoe II. From the 3rd century BC until the 5th century CE, Philadelphia was a thriving settlement that relied on agriculture for its economic success.[1][2] At Philadelphia, Zeno became a private secretary to Apollonius, the finance minister to Ptolemy II Philadelphus and Ptolemy III Euergetes.[3]
Drimylus and Dionysius, two Greek employees under Zeno, were reported to him for selling women as sex-slaves.[4]
During the winter of 1914–1915, Egyptian peasants were digging near the modern settlement of Kom el-Kharaba for sebakh (decayed mudbricks that were often plundered from ancient sites as they could be used as fertiliser). There they uncovered a cache of over 2,000 papyrus documents. Upon examination by Egyptologists, they were found to be records written by Zeno in Greek and Demotic, and the site (whose precise location is now unknown) was identified as the location of the ancient town of Philadelphia.[2] Most of the papyri, now referred to as the Zenon Archive or the Zenon Papyri,[5] were edited and published by the British papyrologists Campbell Cowan Edgar and Arthur Surridge Hunt.[6][7][8]
The Zenon Archive has since been divided among several museum collections and academic institutions around the world, and papyri are now held in the collections of the University of Michigan, Columbia University, the Società Italiana per la Ricerca dei Papiri Greci e Latini in Egitto, the British Museum in London and the Egyptian Museum in Cairo.[9] A substantial part of the Zenon Papyri are now online and grammatically tagged at the Perseus Project hosted at Tufts University.[10]
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