406 HieroglypMcal Fragments, 



tivated, and within the city? * occupied by a house? 13|- 

 rods (16) * within the city ?? 3J rods of ground [a] 334- ? 3J 

 rods of ground not cultivated (17), the price was paid and 

 received in silver, II talents . . . (18 . .22) (Nearly as in A 

 and B). (22) Written by ** Pathecis the son of Thalubis ?? 

 clerk to the chief priests of Amonrasonther^ and the contem- 

 plar gods, (23) the 'Beneficent? gods, the Father loving 

 gods, the Illustrious gods, the god Defender of his father, 

 and the Mother loving gods. Amen. 



Greek Registry, 

 In the year XXXV; Pharmuthi (viii) 20. Registered 

 at the Table in Diospolis the Great, at which Lysim[achus] 

 is collector ; in the account of Sarapion and his partners, 

 [contractors for the duties] on sales, for which the subscrib- 

 ing clerks are Hermophilus and Sar[apion] the counter- 

 signers : the purchaser being Pechytes the son of Arsiesis : 

 one fourth part of a piece of uncultivated ground, 3^ rods, 

 in the southern part of Diospolis the Great, to the west of 

 the Course of Juno, leading to the river, of which the boun- 

 daries are shown by the annexed deed ; which he bought of 

 Ammonius the son of Pyrrhius, and Psenamunis the son of 

 Pyrrhius. Two talents of brass, the duty on which is 600 

 drachmae ; 600. Lysimachus, collector. 



ii. Part of the Registry o/Mr. Salt'.? Papyrus. Hier. 36. 



(1) In the year XLVII; Tybi [v] 5. Registered at the table 

 inHermapolis, at which Dionysiusis collector of the circular 

 Twentieth, in the account of * Hermias ? for which (2) Isidorus 

 is the subscribing clerk . . . rods 27 | 35 . . A house, being 

 part of the property belonging to ' them? . . . [bought of] 

 (3) ' Anepies P son of Ach . . and ' Spoites ? son of Teephibis. 

 Eight talents ; the duty " drachmi" two thousand 400. 



Dionysius. ' Apollonius ?. 



iii. Note on Plate 49. The Enchorial name over the 

 suppliant is Bernice, written as usual from right to left, 

 though the figure looks to the left. This is a singular con- 

 firmation of the remark in p. 43 of the last number of this 

 Journal, with respect to the Enchorial character, although 

 the " question" is there made too general as relating to writing 



