Book contents
- The Great Oasis of Egypt
- The Great Oasis of Egypt
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Living in the Oasis: Humans and the Environment
- Part II Managing the Oasis
- 5 The Great Oasis: An Administrative Entity from Pharaonic Times to Roman Times
- 6 Land and Resource Administration: Farmers, Managers, and Soldiers in the Great Oasis
- 7 What Remains in the Hands of the Gods: Taxation in Kharga Oasis through the Demotic Ostraca (Fifth Century BC to First Century AD)
- Part III Trade and Mobility in a Connected Environment
- Part IV An Oasis Culture?
- Bibliography
- Index of ancient people
- Index of places
- General index
5 - The Great Oasis: An Administrative Entity from Pharaonic Times to Roman Times
from Part II - Managing the Oasis
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 July 2019
- The Great Oasis of Egypt
- The Great Oasis of Egypt
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Living in the Oasis: Humans and the Environment
- Part II Managing the Oasis
- 5 The Great Oasis: An Administrative Entity from Pharaonic Times to Roman Times
- 6 Land and Resource Administration: Farmers, Managers, and Soldiers in the Great Oasis
- 7 What Remains in the Hands of the Gods: Taxation in Kharga Oasis through the Demotic Ostraca (Fifth Century BC to First Century AD)
- Part III Trade and Mobility in a Connected Environment
- Part IV An Oasis Culture?
- Bibliography
- Index of ancient people
- Index of places
- General index
Summary
In the scholarly literature on the oases, we find a variety of assertions about the cities of the Kharga and Dakhla oases: that one was the capital at a particular period, that one did or did not have civic status at some date. On close examination, most of these statements turn out to be based on slender or no evidence, and in many cases we find that we know much less than has been supposed about the administrative organization of the Great Oasis. In what follows, we look more closely at the available evidence for both Kharga and Dakhla, tracing the history of Hibis – often supposed to be the capital of the whole oasis – and then of the two major towns of the Dakhla Oasis, Mothis (modern-day Mut) and Trimithis. We will try as well to see what we can of their interrelationship and of the overall administrative structure.
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- The Great Oasis of EgyptThe Kharga and Dakhla Oases in Antiquity, pp. 83 - 104Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019
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