900 Geschichte und Geografie
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Institute
This thesis provides an edition and commentary of a manuscript discovered by Michael Stolberg in the archives of the central library in Zurich under the title “Mon aprendisage à l'Hôtel Dieu de Paris 1704.” (My apprenticeship at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris 1704). The manuscript contains records of a midwifery student at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris, an old hospital famous among others for its education in midwifery in the maternity ward. We read about managing different births, recipes for common remedies, direct questions answered by the maîtresse sage-femme, the leading midwife at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris and more.
Although other accounts exist of the maternity ward at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris, \(Mon\) \(Aprendisage\) is the first and only account from a midwife’s perspective that gives more than just instructions on obstetrical techniques. It takes us into the day-to-day experience of a woman as she progressed through her training at the Hôtel-Dieu.
The current study presents a new a group of Demotic ostraca in the belongings of the Cairo Museum. A large part of this group stem from Medinet Habu in the western bank of modern Luxor in Upper Egypt and was discovered in the beginning of the thirties of the last century by the Chicago Oriental Institute (recently renamed as Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures ‘ISAC’). A small portion of the collection under consideration come from other Upper Egyptian provenances including Gebelein, Edfu, Kom Ombo, and possibly elsewhere in Thebes. The main goal of the present dissertation is to decipher, translate, and provide a philological, paleographical, and cultural analysis of the group of texts in question. The results of this study are spread over two main parts, the first of which is dedicated to the main and largest part of the collection, i.e. ostraca from Medinet Habu, while the second is concerned with ostraca from other places. The first part comprises of five sections beginning with receipts of money and in-kind payments including some receipts for the payments of the different capitation charges in the Ptolemaic and Roman Periods, a few for land-related payments, as well as others related to different Ptolemaic monopolies or trades such as a receipt for the price of oil, one for the linen tax, in addition to a unique receipt for the rarely attested fish tax. The second section includes accounts and lists of different kinds be it monetary, in-kind, agriculture, or any other type of lists or accounts that record different everyday transactions. The following section presents a relatively different type of lists, namely lists of personal names. The fourth section incorporates a variety of texts of different concerns, e.g. texts of religious nature, letters, temples oaths, or other private documents. Unidentified texts occupy the fifth and final section of the first part. The second part of the study, which comprises texts that originate from different Upper Egyptian localities, includes three sections, i.e. receipts, accounts, and lists of names.