SURVEY OF PAPYRI 171
The texts groYiped under C. Reports and D. Rolls and Rosters
are concerned with purely military matters. Their understanding
is much facilitated by the chapter IV of the Introduction (see
especially D.E.F. by R. O. Fink). The documents published for
the first time are Nos. 84—87 (morning reports), 90—92 (tabulations),
95 (strength report), 96 (list of names with ranks), 98, 100—102,
1 0 5 - 1 1 0 , 112 (rosters), 99, 103, 104, 1 1 3 - 1 2 0 , 1 2 2 - 1 2 4 (lists
of names and soldiers), 121 (record of accessions by transfer) and
111 (uncertain fragment).
In section E. Judical Busines we have editio princeps of
four texts published here. No. 125, of 235, is a piece of papyrus
out from a roll, perhaps from an original sententia, from a liber
sententiarum or from a copy of an entry in the commentarii of
the tribune Laronius Secundianus. No. 126, of 235, written in
Greek, is the last column of a sententia-aTOcpocaię of the same tribune.
A division of property is mentioned repeatedly. No. 127, is a very
small Greek fragment, probably also of a decision of the tribune.
No. 128, dated about A.D. 245, are probably fragments of an official
journal. It combines the Greek protocol form and the Latin
authentic-ation: legi, placed, seemingly, after every statement.
No. 129, of 225, is a receipt of money for the purchase of barley,
given by two members of the Cohors X X Palmyrenorum, a
decu-rion and an eques.
In the part H. there are published miscellaneous very small
Greek (Nos. 132, 140, 141, 144, 1 4 6 - 1 5 0 ) and Latin (Nos. 1 3 3 - 1 3 8 ,
142, 143, 145) fragments.
At the end of the volume, among the Aramaic and Iranian
documents, (Nos. 151 —155) we find one description of an unpublished
Aramaic document, probably a lease, of the third century (No.
152).
The publication is completed by the very exhaustive indices
(by C . B . W e l l e s ) and by 71 very good plates, invaluable for
the Greek and Latin palaeography as showing in many examples
the development of writing outside Egypt. [A.Ś.]
A. G i a n f o r m a g i o — M. Y a n d o n i — C. M. B u r r i —
G. R. C a r r a r a — D. M a n f r e d i, Dai papiri inediti del,
Uni-versita di Milano (Acme 9 (1956) pp. 75 — 90).
The first editor publishes some Homeric fragments from the
I or II cent. A.D. (Pap. No inv. 216 contains A, 28 — 38; 58—68;
172 С. KUNDEREWICZ —H. KUPISZEWSKI — A. ŚWIDEREK
Pap. No inv. 415 — Δ, 3 2 8 - 3 4 0 ; 3 6 3 - 3 6 7 ; Pap.-No inv. 4 1 2 - 4 1 3
Y, 3 7 7 - 3 8 7 ; 4 1 8 - 4 5 0 ; Pap. No inv. 417 - Χ 1 2 4 - 1 5 8 ; Pap. No
inv. 425 — Ψ, 95—107). M. V a n d o n i edits a very interesting
document which concerns divorce .As in other documents of this
kind (cf. Ε r d m a η, Sav. Zeitschr. 61 (1944) 44 ff.; F l o r e ,
Studi in onore di P. de Francisci 1 (1956) 395 ff.) the form reads:
όμολογοϋσιν συνήρσβχι τήν προς αλλήλων συμβίωσιν, ήτις
αύτοΐς συνεστήκεν άπό συγγραρής ομολογίας γαμοΰ κ.τ.λ. Further on
there follow the clauses concerning: the restitution of φερνή and
παράφερνη and the mutual obligation not to bring any action which
could be grounded on the fact of the foregoing cahabitation, or on
the consequence of this fact. Curious is the clause according to
which the divorced woman is permitted σύν έτέρω άνδρί συνβιοΐν
άσοικοφαντήτω. The same editor publishes the following two
do-cuments: Pap. Mil. No. inv. 57 148/49 A.D.; they are receipts for
some payment in corn. C. Μ. В u r r i edits the receipts given by
sitologi (Pap. Mil. No. inv. 154 127 A.D.). Pap. Mil. No. inv. 105
( 1 6 6 - 1 6 7 A.D.) and 242 (III cent. A.D.) published by C. R.
C a r r a r a contain accounts. The P. Mil. No inv. 146 (II — III
cent. A.D.) edited by D. M a n f r e d i is a private letter. [H.K.]
L a d i s l a v V a r e l , Aus den Archiven von Theadelphia.
Pa-pyri Wessely Pragenses (Listy Filologické vol. VI (1958) 2 pp.
6 9 - 7 7 ; vol. VII (1959) 1 pp. 3 - 1 8 ; 2 pp. 8 1 - 8 6 ) .
The editor publihes 23 further papyri from the archives from
Theadelphia. Nos 9 (250—255) and 16 (undated) contain the
frag-ments of some λόγος άργυρικός. No. 10 recto (252 — 253 A.D.) gives
seven columns of accounts concerning the economic activity of
a certain Heroneinos as a φροντιστής. Nos 11 and 12 (251/52 A.D.)
are the fragments of some λόγος γενικός of Heroneinos. No 12
(un-dated) is a receipt for the performed work. No 17 (verso of the
No. 10) contains a long account (148 vv.) of hay given as fodder to
the cattle in time of various field works λόγος άπεργ&σίας. No. 18
is a fragment of λόγου χόρτου. No. 19 verso gives two columns of
an accounts of crops obtained in the month Epeiph — Mesore and
in the month Mecheir of the following year. This account originates
from Theadelphia or its neighbourhood. No 21 (251 — 252) contains
an account of the wine delivered from' the property of Pontikos,
friend of Heroneinos.