The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns?
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns?
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns?
1 The earliest use of the word ‘ostracon’ in Egyptological publications was in the 1880s, for textual
ostraca, and from the start these were specified as being either limestone or pottery; see Černý/Gar-
diner 1957, v, note 1.
2 ‘Writing’ is here understood in a strict linguistic sense, the visual and/or material notation of hu-
man language as different from other notation systems.
I wish to thank Rob Demarée and Koen Donker van Heel for reading a draft of this paper and for supply-
ing me with additional references. Helen Richardson-Hewitt has kindly corrected my English.
Open Access. © 2020 Ben Haring, published by De Gruyter This work is licensed under the Creative
Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
https://doi.org/10.1515/9783110712902-005
90 Ben Haring
Fig. 1: Reverse of
ostracon Ashmolean
Museum 1933.810.
Lines 1–5 were written
in the regnal year 31 of
Ramesses III, on the
first month of peret,
day 24; lines 6–8 four
months later, on day
1 of the 2nd month of
shemu, year 31. See also
Allam 1968, 126–127.
fragments are many (especially in the case of New Kingdom ostraca from Thebes), and
sometimes difficult to classify. Indeed, the range of textual and pictorial modes used
on these fragments makes it difficult even to define the very notion of ‘ostracon’. Dic-
tionaries define ostraca as inscribed potsherds, sometimes mentioning their specific
use in the ancient Greek voting procedure called ostracism. Such definitions imply
that ostraca were always textual, and that the texts were of a casual nature or of short-
term importance only. But in Ancient Egypt, pottery and limestone fragments were
often inscribed or decorated for long-term use: well-documented examples include
legal records with additional entries made months after their initial text was written
(Fig. 1), excerpts from literary texts on large chunks of limestone deposited in tombs
as burial gifts (Fig. 2), and miniature stelae, sometimes crudely made, and kept as
votive monuments in houses and huts (Fig. 3). These very different objects are all com-
monly classified as ostraca by Egyptologists, and published together in catalogues,3
although usually subdivided by genre: textual and pictorial ostraca tend to be in sep-
arate publications, and textual ostraca are further subdivided into hieroglyphic, hier-
atic and Demotic (and Aramaic, Greek, etc.).
The same catalogues may include inscriptions once made on intact pottery vessels
and bowls, which were broken afterwards, leaving only inscribed or decorated frag-
ments. On the one hand, there are jar inscriptions, such as hieratic texts mentioning
the content of vessels, with date and provenance. On the other hand, execration texts,
letters to the dead, and literary compositions were written on intact vessels of which
3 The ‘ostraca’ depicted in Figures 2 and 3 have been given that name in their editions.
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns? 91
Fig. 2: Excerpt from the story of Sinuhe on limestone ostracon Cairo CG 25216, found among the tomb
equipment of the workman Sennedjem at Deir el-Medina, early Nineteenth Dynasty. The ostracon
consists of two joining fragments, together having a width of 106 cm.
92 Ben Haring
Fig. 3: Ramesside ‘ostracon’ (in fact, miniature stela) Louvre E 25320 dedicated to the cobra goddess
Meresger.
we now only have fragments.4 Whereas the former are more properly designated as
‘dockets’ by Egyptologists, and usually catalogued as such, the latter are sometimes
called ‘ostraca’. What all the above examples of ostraca do seem to have in common,
then, is the secondary use of the support. Including secondary use of a medium in the
definition of ostraca, we can exclude dockets (which are related to the initial use of
a pottery vessel), but can include inscribed vessels when the texts are not connected
with the vessels themselves or their contents. However, the notion of secondary use
may be problematic in cases where sherds or stone fragments have been (re)shaped
for the very purpose of being inscribed. Recent lithic analysis indicates that this was
sometimes the case with Ramesside limestone ostraca.5
In addition to the problems of definition, the modern classifications of ostraca
and their publication in separate catalogues tend to obscure the fact that different
types of ostraca were once part of the same archaeological deposits, hence possibly
(though not necessarily) came from the same context of original production and use.6
Excavation reports and find publications from before the mid-twentieth century often
4 For letters to the dead and execration texts see note 10 below.
5 Pelegrin/Andreu-Lanoë/Pariselle 2015. Ceramic ostraca could also be reshaped into neat rectan-
gular forms but as such they would still, of course, represent reuse of the material. See note 11 below
for an example from the Predynastic Period. The same is the case with some types of ceramic ostraca
from Hellenistic Egypt and fourth-century CE Carthage; see the contribution by Clementina Caputo to
this volume.
6 As Paola Davoli points out in her paper, the context of primary deposit is not the same as the context
of primary use.
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns? 93
leave out information on archaeological context; sometimes it was not even recorded
in the field. Recent excavations, however, present much better documentation. An
excellent example for the purpose of the present paper is the work of the ‘Mission Sip-
tah-Ramses X’ of the University of Basel in the Valley of the Kings. Among the remains
of necropolis workmen’s huts of the mid-Twentieth Dynasty (ca. 1150–1130 BCE) were
found 831 ostraca of various types, textual and pictorial, together with many pot-
tery items and other objects. The catalogue of ostraca neatly distinguishes pictorial
ostraca (arranged by subject matter, such as sketches of human beings, deities, ani-
mals, flowers, architectural and decorative elements) and textual ones (subdivided
into hieroglyphic texts, tallies, identity marks, and hieratic ostraca arranged by sub-
ject matter).7 At the same time, it is made clear which ostraca were found together, and
the deposits in individual huts typically show a mixture of different types.8 Inscribed
objects even enable to identify the users of some of the huts, who in some cases were
also the producers of the ostraca.9
The Old Kingdom (ca. 2600–2200 BCE) has left several limestone ostraca bearing
hieratic text; some were found at Helwan, others are thought to be either from there
or from Saqqara.12 Eight Helwan ostraca were found in tombs, near the legs of the
deceased or among fragments of pottery jars, and the same may be true for the others.
All of the better preserved pieces seem to mention deceased persons with filiation,
and in some cases with their titles and the names of their superiors, and may well
have served as labels identifying the deceased, perhaps even as ‘burial licenses’.13
The depiction of a curve with measurements on a limestone flake from Saqqara, Third
Dynasty, was probably for architectural purposes.14 Remarkably, ostraca surviving
from this remote period are scarcer than the more fragile papyrus documents, quite
substantial (though in fact chance) finds of which were made in Abusir, Gebelein and
Wadi al-Jarf.
Finds of ostraca from the First Intermediate Period and Middle Kingdom (ca. 2100–
1650 BCE) include a group of ceramic drinking bowls inscribed with ration lists in
hieratic, which are possibly connected with the administration of an Upper-Egyptian
province.15 Another account of rations is preserved on a chunk of limestone from Deir
el-Bahri.16 A sherd with only a personal name is perhaps from Elephantine.17 A group
of over twenty ceramic ostraca inscribed in hieratic, chiefly accounts, was found at
Wadi Gawasis at the Red Sea coast; it is to be connected with an expedition sent by
Senusert III to faraway Punt.18 Lahun, where an exceptionally large number of papyri
from the same reign were excavated, has yielded only a few Middle Kingdom hieratic
ostraca, both pottery and limestone.19 Three textual ostraca from the Second Inter-
mediate Period were found at Buhen (Nubia),20 and “a large corpus of administrative
ostraca” from the same period and the beginning of the New Kingdom are reported to
have been excavated at Tell Edfu.21
Thousands of ostraca survive from the New Kingdom (ca. 1550–1070 BCE), but
almost all of them come from the Theban necropolis and will be discussed in the
next section. Outside Thebes, the most substantial finds of New Kingdom ostraca, all
limestone flakes, were made at Abydos. Four were discovered in the sloping passage
of the Osireion; three of them are hieratic texts related to local construction work; the
fourth has cursive hieroglyphs in columns.22 A Ramesside hieratic ostracon was found
among the remains of a workmen’s village of the early Eighteenth Dynasty. 23 Workmen
of that early period already were accustomed to leave limestone flakes with rows of
dots (presumably tallies) and some with hieratic notes.24 The Pennsylvania-Yale exca-
vations at the Osiris temple enclosure (Kom es-Sultan) yielded another twenty-three
hieratic ostraca (literary texts and building accounts) and a pictorial one of satirical/
erotic nature, with hieratic captions.25 Literary ostraca include excerpts from famous
compositions such as the Satire of the Trades and the Teaching of Amenemhet.
Although these texts are of Middle Kingdom origin and known from Middle Kingdom
papyri, excerpts on ostraca all seem to date from the New Kingdom— as do several
copies on papyrus. The types and contents of Abydos ostraca are remarkably similar to
Theban ones. A prime topic of documentary ostraca from both places is monumental
construction work, which was carried out by very similar workforces divided in ‘right’
and ‘left’ sides. It comes as no surprise that, in the absence of reliable archaeological
documentation, the two provenances are sometimes mixed up.26
Stray finds from other sites include documentary ostraca from El-Amarna,27
excerpts from the Teaching of Amenemhet found at El-Lisht28 and Amara West
(Nubia),29 a section of the didactic text known as Kemit from the tomb of Horemheb
at Saqqara,30 two accounts from the Old Kingdom pyramid complex of Pepi II,31 and
a potsherd from the Fayum mentioning a “chief of the workshop Panakht” and the
number 100.32
Finds of hieratic ostraca of the Third Intermediate Period (ca. 1070–664 BCE)33
include one in uncial hieratic from a Saqqara tomb34 and one from Dra Abu el-Naga.35
Uncial hieratic came to be reserved for religious and literary texts in this and later peri-
ods (an excerpt from the Satire of the Trades is found on an ostracon of the Saite Peri-
od);36 its cursive counterpart in the Third Intermediate Period is known as cursive or
abnormal hieratic. This script, which was replaced by Demotic in the subsequent Late
Period, is mostly preserved on papyri, but also on several complete jars and dishes, as
well as on fragments of pottery and (lime)stone.37
The Late Period (i. e. Saite and Persian periods and the Thirtieth Dynasty) has left
groups of Demotic documentary ostraca (pottery and limestone), but at the majority
of sites they are vastly outnumbered by Demotic and Greek ostraca from the Greco-Ro-
man Period.38 Apart from considerable groups of ostraca from the Kharga and Dakhla
Oases,39 published finds are rather modest, including two from the Valley of the Kings
at Thebes40 and one from Karnak.41 Several ostraca from the Thirtieth Dynasty were
found at Tanis together with charred papyri among the remains of a building that
must have housed an archive.42
For Late Period pictorial ostraca we have to turn to Thebes. The Saite tomb of
Nespakashuty at Deir el-Bahri (TT 312) is the findspot of groups of limestone pictorial
ostraca, the dates of which range from the Ramesside through the Ptolemaic peri-
ods. One group, which is probably connected with the construction of the tomb itself,
includes drawings of a calf, a harpist, and architectural sketches of liliform capitals
possibly envisaged for the (now destroyed) tomb.43
The above survey is certainly not exhaustive. It concentrates on published cor-
pora with known provenance and aims merely to give an impression of the quantity
and variety of preserved material. Yet, one is struck by the modest numbers of ostraca
found at most sites, from any period, even when taking into account that relatively few
of the texts produced in antiquity were preserved, many fewer have been found, and
fewer still have been published or mentioned by Egyptologists. Moreover, contrary to
what one might expect, ostraca seem to be less numerous than the papyri preserved
from the same periods—with the single exception of New Kingdom Thebes. A con-
siderable number of Old Kingdom papyri comes from Abusir, but no ostraca of that
period are known from there, and Old Kingdom ostraca from any site are rare. Only
a few Middle Kingdom ostraca are reported from Lahun, where substantial finds of
papyri were made. And abnormal hieratic papyri from the Third Intermediate Period
seem to have survived in greater numbers than ostraca.
Much smaller numbers of ostraca are associated with the New Kingdom temples
constructed on the desert edge (the so-called mortuary, funerary, or memorial tem-
ples). Most substantial of these is the corpus produced by the scribes of the Eigh-
teenth-Dynasty building projects at Deir el-Bahri (the temples of Hatshepsut and
Thutmosis III and the nearby tomb of Senmut).45 Smaller numbers come from other
temples, such as that of Ramesses II (the Ramesseum). The ostraca found there nota-
bly include literary pieces from a location now thought to have been a temple school. 46
The site of this temple is also the provenance of numerous jar dockets.47 Ostraca and
dockets have been found, and continue to be found, even if in smaller amounts, at
other temple sites. Considerable numbers of dockets also come from Deir el-Medina,48
and from the site of the palace of Amenhotep III (Malkata).49 Theban private tombs
are also among the recorded findspots of many different types of ostraca, which range
from copies or drafts of tomb inscriptions and decorations50 to literary texts, the latter
including the world’s earliest known alphabetic word list.51
The following paragraphs concentrate on the ostraca produced in the context of
royal tomb construction. On several occasions I have argued that the numbers of doc-
umentary texts preserved, and especially the changes in these numbers throughout
the New Kingdom, have important implications.52 The following trends are particu-
larly striking. (1) Textual ostraca connected with royal tomb construction are known
only for the Ramesside period, not for the Eighteenth Dynasty, whereas hundreds
of hieratic ostraca can be connected to West-Theban temple building of that earlier
period. (2) The number of documentary ostraca produced by the royal necropolis
administration appears first to rise gradually and then explosively, in the course of the
ostraca. The classifications into documentary and literary are not always quite precise, however, and
include some diverse material. Most Deir el-Medina papyri are in the Museo Egizio, Turin, and are
currently being processed for online publication under the supervision of Susanne Töpfer. Data on
a significant part of the documentary texts can be found in The Deir el-Medina Database http://dmd.
wepwawet.nl (last accessed: 17. 1. 2020). Sections C–F in the Systematic Bibliography of that database
include titles on documentary practice and on individual ostraca and papyri, both documentary and
literary. Section X is on pictorial ostraca.
45 Much of which, again, is unpublished. Principal editions: Hayes 1942, 1960. Current work on the
unpublished ostraca by Malte Römer; see most recently Römer 2017.
46 Barbotin 2013.
47 Ostraca and dockets together amount to some 3,000 items, by far the most of which are dockets.
The majority of these are now in the Institute of Egyptology of the University of Strasbourg, and have
been edited by Guillaume Bouvier; see the synthesis in Bouvier 2003. Many other dockets, as well as
ostraca, have already been published by Spiegelberg 1898.
48 For which see, in general, Tallet 2003.
49 Hayes 1951.
50 See Haring 2015a for the problems of interpretating ostraca as drafts or copies, and Lüscher 2015
for the spectacular case of a complete Vorlage of a tomb inscription on ostraca.
51 Haring 2015b.
52 Haring 2003, 2006, 2018b.
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns? 99
late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Dynasties. (3) The production of hieratic ostraca
apparently declined after the early Twentieth Dynasty, while the production of docu-
mentary papyri seems to have been rising.
The words ‘appear’ and ‘seem’ are in order because observation of these trends
largely depends on the material preserved, nevertheless the corpus of documents
available shows meaningful patterns. Thus, the contrast between the absence of hier-
atic documentary ostraca associated with royal tomb construction of the Eighteenth
Dynasty, on the one hand, and the considerable production of such ostraca in connec-
tion with temple building at Deir el-Bahri in the same period, as well as the massive
production of ostraca related to royal tomb building in the Nineteenth and Twentieth
Dynasties, on the other, can probably be accounted for by differences in adminis-
trative practices in these periods and contexts.53 The beginning of the production of
hieratic ostraca and the gradual increase in their output in the community of royal
necropolis workmen in the Nineteenth Dynasty could be explained by the permanent
presence of scribes in the workmen’s settlement (the present site of Deir el-Medina)
and in their work spots (the Valley of the Kings and the Valley of the Queens).54 Scribes
may not have been permanently based there during the Eighteenth Dynasty or at least
their hieratic documents were not kept or discarded locally.
What we find instead is a considerable number of ostraca inscribed, not in hier-
atic, but with a series of identity marks representing individual workmen, sometimes
with the addition of strokes or dots, perhaps representing days of presence or absence
(Fig. 4). The same marks appear in graffiti and as ownership marks on pottery and
other objects.55 Ostraca inscribed with marks appear to be administrative records in a
semi-literate mode, probably lists of workmen present or absent, and accounts of tools
or supplies. The style of many of these pieces betrays hands unfamiliar with hieratic
writing, so that their producers may very well have been the workmen themselves
or their semi-literate superiors, rather than scribes. This type of ostracon, of which
more than a thousand survive, continued to be produced during the entire Ramesside
Period, together with the written ostraca and papyri of that period.56 The growth in the
production of hieratic documentary ostraca in the late Nineteenth, and especially in
the early Twentieth Dynasty, is paralleled by the growing numbers of ostraca inscribed
with marks. Many of such ostraca show combinations of marks, hieratic numbers, and
pictograms referring to supplies. Together, these notations make up a pseudo-script
that gives information similar to administrative hieratic records. Indeed, many exam-
ples can be given of matches between hieratic texts and pseudo-script ostraca, both
referring to the same deliveries on the same days.57
Fig. 4: Limestone ostracon Cairo CG 24105 bearing workmen’s identity marks, strokes and dots,
Eighteenth Dynasty.
There seems to have been an increasing tendency to have things written down, both in
connection with royal tomb construction and with the personal and community life of
the workmen and their families.58 Exactly who or what stimulated this development is
difficult to say. Literacy appears to increase in the community in the early Twentieth
Dynasty.59 Furthermore, this period saw the appearance, for the first time, of a local
dynasty of scribes: Amennakht son of Ipuy and his descendants, who would be the
senior administrators of the royal necropolis workforce until the end of the New King-
dom, and even some time beyond it.60 These ‘inside’ administrators appear to have
had, or to have aspired to have, a firm grip on the local community.
The quite sudden decrease in the production of documentary ostraca after the
reign of Ramesses IV remains somewhat of a mystery. The fact that a considerable
number of documentary papyri survive from the following period, especially from
the late Twentieth Dynasty, has been seen as related to the decrease in ostraca. The
hypothetical emerging preference for papyri over ostraca has been explained in dif-
ferent ways, mainly by the (equally hypothetical) resettlement of the workmen from
Deir el-Medina to the temple precinct of Medinet Habu, where papyri would be more
readily available than ostraca,61 and also by the increasing need for authenticated
legal documents, that is, sealed papyri.62 In a recent assessment, I argue that the sud-
den increase of documentary papyri in the late Twentieth Dynasty is in fact illusory,
an impression created by the loss and reuse of earlier papyrus documents.63 Notwith-
standing loss and reuse, almost every individual regnal year of the Twentieth Dynasty
is attested in one or more documentary papyri. And while the number of documentary
58 Haring 2003.
59 Haring 2003, 250, 259–264.
60 Haring 2018a, 141–145. For Amennakht himself, see Dorn/Polis 2016. Before Amennakht, the local
senior scribes for whom we have sufficient background information were not fathers and sons and
some of them were appointed from outside.
61 Eyre 2013, 249.
62 Haring 2003, 264–266.
63 Haring 2018b.
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns? 101
hieratic ostraca declined after Ramesses IV, their production did not cease altogether:
some were still produced at the very end of the Twentieth Dynasty, and even beyond.
Two important groups of ostraca have been identified as products of the late Twenti-
eth and early Twenty-first Dynasty. One group of approximately a hundred ostraca is
related to the Deir el-Medina workforce, and does not seem to be about the construc-
tion of royal tombs, but rather about emptying them and reburying the royal mum-
mies.64 The other is a group of over seventy ostraca mentioning an entirely different
group of workmen, who constructed the tomb of the Theban high priest Amenhotep in
the late Twentieth Dynasty.65 The same late years have left us several ostraca inscribed
with marks and discarded at Deir el-Medina, the site of the workmen’s settlement.66
Although a chronological pattern of increase and subsequent decrease in the pro-
duction of Ramesside documentary ostraca seems clear, the explanations offered for
this pattern remain hypothetical. It would help if the pattern, so far clear only for doc-
umentary hieratic ostraca and for those bearing pseudo-script, would also be detect-
able in other types of ostraca. Apart from documentary ostraca, the most substantial
corpora are those of literary hieratic and of pictorial ostraca. If the growth of docu-
mentary ostraca in the late Nineteenth and early Twentieth Dynasty were the result
of increasing literacy in the workmen’s community, one would expect the same pat-
tern to emerge in the corpus of literary ostraca. Dating literary ostraca more precisely
than to the Ramesside Period, however, is extremely difficult. Whereas documentary
texts often mention regnal years, calendar dates and (most importantly) real-world
persons, literary texts do so very rarely. Literary excerpts on ostraca seldom have col-
ophons mentioning dates and/or scribes.67 Unless other historical data are provided,68
nothing but paleography remains to help date an ostracon.69 Specialists of hieratic
are commonly of the opinion that paleographic dating to specific reigns or genera-
tions is extremely tricky. For this reason, editions of literary ostraca rarely give precise
dates.70 The available research of individual scribal hands in Deir el-Medina ostraca
64 Demarée 2003.
65 Burkard 2018, 44–84. These ostraca, most of which mention only single names, were actually part
of the fill of the pyramidion crowning the high priest’s tomb (K93.12 at Dra Abu el-Naga). Burkard 2018
also includes other ostraca from the tomb and its surroundings, with datings from the Second to Third
Intermediate Period.
66 Haring 2018a, 202–203.
67 O. DeM 1721 (Gasse 1990) mentions a chief workman Nekhemmut and a scribe Wennefer, and can
therefore be assigned to the reign of Ramesses III (Fischer-Elfert 1993, 128). O. DeM 1782 mentions the
chief workman Qaha and is therefore dated to Ramesses II in Gasse 2005, 19.
68 ‘Literary’ O. DeM 1725 (Gasse 1990) bears no text except the names of three kings, the latest of
which is Seti II, whose reign must then be the terminus a quo. O. DeM 1787 (Gasse 2005, 25) also has
royal names; the name of the latest king (Ramesses IV) provides the earliest possible dating.
69 Three ostraca are dated by their paleography in terms of (early or late) Dynasty XIX or XX, and one
to the reign of Ramesses II, in Gasse 2005, 17, 20, 23, 43 (O. DeM 1781, 1783, 1785, 1796).
70 No dates are offered in Posener 1938, 1972, 1980; Fischer-Elfert 1997. This survey is limited to the
main catalogues; for the publication of smaller groups and individual ostraca see the Systematic Bib-
102 Ben Haring
and papyri is still limited; the best case study as far as literary ostraca are concerned
is that of the senior necropolis scribe Amennakht of the Twentieth Dynasty.71
With pictorial ostraca (also called figured ostraca by Egyptologists), the situa-
tion is no better. When the principal catalogues of pictorial ostraca from the Theban
necropolis assign any dates at all,72 these are often no more precise than New Kingdom
or Ramesside. Slightly more precise datings to either Nineteenth or Twentieth Dynasty
may sound more promising, but must be regarded with caution if not distrust. Editions
assigning such dates suggest that there is (slightly) more material from the Nineteenth
than from the Twentieth Dynasty.73 Although some of the ostraca in these groups bear
hieratic or hieroglyphic texts that help to date them even more precisely (such as the
names of kings or other known individuals), most of the datings are based on style
and on the subject matter represented. That basis, in turn, depends on comparison
with similar imagery on monuments (tomb and temple walls). The fact that actual
monumental imagery is better represented for the Nineteenth than for the Twentieth
Dynasty may very well account for some of the attributions to the former. While there
can be no doubt that the production of pictorial ostraca in the Twentieth Dynasty
was considerable,74 the true chronological distribution of most Ramesside pictorial
ostraca from the Theban necropolis still escapes Egyptologists. It may, of course, be
entirely different from the distribution of hieratic ostraca, since pictorial ostraca are
not necessarily dependent on the extent and historical development of local literacy.
Moreover, the corpus we call pictorial (or figured) ostraca is typologically speak-
ing a mixed lot that includes pieces with very different functions and backgrounds,
ranging from finely decorated miniature stelae to very rough sketches, and some cat-
alogues even add ostraca bearing identity marks and tallies of strokes or dots. This
means that our perceived genre of pictorial ostraca, if a genre at all, should be broken
down in typological and functional subtypes, whose production and use had different
reasons (although in the end they were often deposited together with other types of
ostraca) and whose chronological distribution might therefore theoretically be differ-
ent as well.
liography of The Deir el-Medina Database, http://dmd.wepwawet.nl, sections D and E (last accessed:
17. 1. 2020).
71 See most recently Dorn/Polis 2016.
72 No dates are given in Vandier d’Abbadie 1936, 1937, 1946, 1959; Peterson 1973; Gasse 1986. For the
publication of smaller groups and individual ostraca see the Systematic Bibliography of The Deir
el-Medina Database, http://dmd.wepwawet.nl, section X (last accessed: 17. 1. 2020).
73 Brunner-Traut 1956: 39 from Dynasty XIX and 34 from Dynasty XX; Brunner-Traut 1979: 7 from
Dynasty XIX and 1 from Dynasty XX; Page 1983: 5 from Dynasty XIX and 5 from Dynasty XX. Brun-
ner-Traut’s suggestion (1956, 12–13) that most material is from the reigns of Ramesses III and IV is not
supported by the catalogue in the same publication. Larger groups in the catalogues here referred to
are dated more broadly, to the New Kingdom or the Ramesside Period.
74 A well-presented case is that of the draftsman Amenhotep, son of the senior scribe Amennakht;
see Keller 2003.
The Survival of Pharaonic Ostraca: Coincidence or Meaningful Patterns? 103
4 Conclusion
The previous sections have provided a rough outline of the different types of ostraca
preserved and their chronological distribution, from pre-Hellenistic Egypt in gen-
eral and from New Kingdom Thebes in particular. Finds of ostraca from Egypt’s long
Pharaonic history are surprisingly modest. Notwithstanding their supposedly more
durable support, fewer hieratic texts on ostraca than on papyrus survive from the
Old and Middle Kingdoms, Third Intermediate and Late Periods. The mass of New
Kingdom ostraca from the Theban necropolis dwarfs the finds made at other sites
from the same period as well as those of other periods at any other site. This state of
affairs allows little more by way of conclusion than that “(Western) Thebes was excep-
tional”. It remains to be investigated, therefore, why Thebes was so exceptional. The
enormous tomb and temple construction activity in the Theban mountains and the
ensuing production of limestone flakes must be among the important factors; local
literacy in the Ramesside Period may well have been another. Within the Ramesside
Period itself, a chronological development of increasing and decreasing production
can be discerned, at least as far as the documentary ostraca bearing hieratic text and
identity marks are concerned. It remains to be seen if and to what extent the produc-
tion of other types of ostraca can be linked with this development.
Postscript
After submitting the manuscript of this contribution, my attention was drawn, by
Matthias Müller, to a largely unpublished group of ostraca from Deir el-Ballas, Upper
Egypt. In a paper presented at the conference ‘Ägyptische Binsen-Weisheiten IV’
(Mainz, 9–12 December 2019), Müller identified approximately 110 ostraca (all pot-
tery) from the late Second Intermediate Period and/or early New Kingdom in several
European and American collections, including Berlin, Strasbourg, Boston, and New
York. Many were acquired on the art market, but the whole lot probably came to light
during or after excavations by W. M. F. Petrie and/or G. A. Reisner at Deir el-Ballas.75
The entire group is currently being prepared for publication by Niv Allon, Matthias
Müller, and Stephen Quirke. Rob Demarée informs me that the Deir el-Ballas ostraca
are very similar to those found at Tell Edfu (see section 2 above).
75 Brief references to these ostraca, including an excerpt of Sinuhe, can be found in Quirke 1996, 392;
Parkinson 2009, 174–175 (with photo fig. 7.1).
104 Ben Haring
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Photo Credits
Fig. 1: Černý/Gardiner 1957, pl. LXXIa.
Fig. 2: Daressy 1901, pl. XLI.
Fig. 3: Vandier d’Abbadie 1959, pl. CLII.
Fig. 4: Daressy 1902, pl. XVIII.