BRIDWELL LIBRARY
SPECIAL COLLECTIONS
 

Oxyrhychus Papyrus 1354, p-26
Paul's Epistle to the Romans 1:1-16
Papyri at Bridwell Library

 

In 1922 A. V. Lane secured the permanent deposit of twelve ancient papyrus fragments from the British Museum through his connections with the Egypt Exploration Society of London . These texts, all from Oxyrhynchus, Egypt, are among the few early papyri collections in Texas.

Oxyrhynchus (modern el-Bahnasa), an ancient provincial capital along a minor branch of the Nile River in Lower Egypt (Bahr Yussuf), derived its ancient name from a type of Nile sturgeon that was venerated locally. The site of ancient archives and monastic libraries, Oxyrhynchus flourished principally during the Roman era, although earlier and later remains have been found there. The fame of Oxyrhynchus today rests upon the discovery by the eminent British Bernard P. Grenfell (1869-1926) and Arthur S. Hunt (1871-1934) of local deep rubbish mounds containing thousands of ancient papyrus fragments. Excavated between 1897 and 1907 (and now published in 65 scholarly volumes), the papyri preserve Greek literary texts, private letters, legal documents, and a few scraps of Christian scriptures, among which is the Bridwell Library fragment recording Paul’s Epistle to the Romans, dating from around the 6th century CE.
 

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