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	<front>
		<journal-meta>
			
			<journal-title-group>
					<journal-title>Rivista del Museo Egizio</journal-title>
				</journal-title-group>
			
			<publisher>
				<publisher-name>Museo Egizio</publisher-name>
				<publisher-loc>Torino</publisher-loc>
					</publisher>
		</journal-meta>
		<article-meta>
			<article-id pub-id-type="doi">10.29353/rime.2022.4085</article-id>
			<article-categories>
				<subj-group>
					<subject>Volume 6 2022</subject>
				</subj-group>
			</article-categories>
			<title-group>
				<article-title>A List with the Forms of Osiris and the Names of Royal Ancestors (P. Turin Cat. 1877)</article-title>
			</title-group>
			<contrib-group>
				<contrib>
					<name>
						<surname>Lenzo</surname>
						<given-names>Giuseppina</given-names>
					</name>
							<aff><institution>University of Lausanne</institution></aff>
				</contrib>
			</contrib-group>
			<pub-date pub-type="epub">
					<day>14</day>
					<month>09</month>
					<year>2022</year>
				</pub-date>
            <volume>6</volume>
            <permissions>
                <license license-type="open-access" xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">
                    <license-p>This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY 4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. See <uri xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/">http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/</uri>.</license-p>
                </license>
            </permissions>			
			<abstract><p>This article concerns P. Turin Cat. 1877, a papyrus containing a litany to Osiris and royal ancestors on the recto and a set of administrative texts on the verso. The list of Osiris’ names corresponds to spell 142 of the Book of the Dead, to which the scribe added the names of the main pharaohs, some queens, and some princesses of the 18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty and the early 19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty. Most of these royal figures belonged to the family of Ramses II, suggesting that the recto of the papyrus probably dates to the reign of Ramses II, while the verso may date slightly later in the Ramesside Period. The association of names of Osiris with royal names is very rare and the papyrus was probably used in a cultic context, offering an interesting example of a Book of the Dead spell also used in a ritual.</p>
<p><named-content content-type="arabic-title">الملخص</named-content></p>
<p><named-content content-type="arabic-text">تناقش هذه المقالة الـ P. Turin Cat. 1877، وهي بردية تحتوي على أنشودة أوزيريس وأسلاف العائلة المالكة على خلفية مجموعة من النصوص الإدارية. تتوافق قائمة أسماء أوزيريس مع النص 142 من كتاب الموتى، التي أضاف إليها الكاتب أسماء الفراعنة الرئيسيين وأسماء الملكات وبعض أسماء لأميرات الأسرة الثامنة عشرة وبداية الأسرة التاسعة عشرة. تنتمي معظم تلك الشخصيات الملكية إلى عائلة رمسيس الثاني، مما يشير إلى أن الوجه الخلفي للبردية ربما يرجع إلى عهد رمسيس الثاني، بينما قد يرجع تاريخ الصفحة التي تلي إلى فترة ما بعد عصر الرعامسة بقليل. يعد ربط أسماء أوزيريس بالأسماء الملكية نادراً جداً، ولربما استخدامت هذه البردية في مناسبة دينية، وهذا يعتبر مثالاً هاماً لاستخدام كتاب الموتى أثناء الطقوس الدينية.</named-content></p>
</abstract>
			<kwd-group kwd-group-type="simple"><kwd>king–list</kwd><kwd>Litany of Osiris</kwd><kwd>royal ancestors</kwd><kwd>spell 142 of the Book of the Dead</kwd>
			</kwd-group>
			
			
		</article-meta>
	</front>
	<body>
		
  <sec>
    <title>1. Presentation and content of P. Turin Cat. 1877</title>
    <sec>
      <title>1.1. Description of the papyrus</title>
      <p>The papyrus Turin Cat. 1877 consists of twelve fragments recognized so far (Figs.1-15).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref1">1</xref> Further fragments may exist in the Turin collection. Assemblage of joining fragments has reduced the twelve to eight distinct fragments, currently mounted under different glasses. The size of the current fragments in their largest section, as mounted in the frames, is:</p>
      <p>Fragment 1: height 17 cm, length 6.8 cm (Figs. 1,2).<named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Fragment 2: height 5.1 cm, length 4.1 cm (Figs. 1,2). <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Fragment 3: height 20 cm, length 38.1 cm (Figs. 1,2).</p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 1</label>
          <caption>
            <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, fragments 1, 2 and 3. Scan by the Museo Egizio. <ext-link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133" ext-link-type="uri">https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133</ext-link></p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-1-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, fragments 1, 2 and 3. Scan by the Museo Egizio. https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-1-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 2</label>
          <caption>
            <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso, fragments 1, 2 and 3. Scan by the Museo Egizio. <ext-link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133" ext-link-type="uri">https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133</ext-link></p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-2-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso, fragments 1, 2 and 3. Scan by the Museo Egizio. https://papyri.museoegizio.it/d/133</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-2-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>Fragment 4 (CP116/001 + CP116/008): height 14.1 cm, length 2.8 cm (Figs. 3, 4, 5, 6; subfragments joined in Fig. 7).</p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 3</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/001 recto, fragment 4, subfragment 1. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-3-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/001 recto, fragment 4, subfragment 1. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-3-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 4</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/001 verso, fragment 4, subfragment 1. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-4-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/001 verso, fragment 4, subfragment 1. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-4-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 5</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/008 recto, fragment 4, subfragment 2. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-5-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/008 recto, fragment 4, part 2. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-5-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 6</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/008 verso, fragment 4, subfragment 2. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-6-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/008 verso, fragment 4, subfragment 2. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-6-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 7</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/001 + CP116/008 recto (left) and verso (right), fragment 4, complete. Restitution by Renaud Pietri. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-7-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/001 + CP116/008 recto (left) and verso (right), fragment 4, complete. Restitution by Renaud Pietri. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-7-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>Fragment 5 (CP116/002): height 10.7 cm, length 2.8 cm (Figs. 8,9). <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Fragment 6 (CP116/004): height 4.4 cm, length 1.2 cm (Figs. 10,11). <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Fragment 7 (CP111/086): height 2.6 cm, length 2.3 cm (Figs. 12,13). <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Fragment 8 (CP147/034): height 2.9 cm, length 2.8 cm (Figs. 14,15).</p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 8</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/002 recto, fragment 5. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-8-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/002 recto, fragment 5. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-8-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 9</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/002 verso, fragment 5. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-9-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/002 verso, fragment 5. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-9-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 10</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/004 recto, fragment 6. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-10-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/004 recto, fragment 6. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-10-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 11</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP116/004 verso, fragment 6. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-11-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP116/004 verso, fragment 6. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-11-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 12</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP111/086 recto, fragment 7. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-12-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP111/086 recto, fragment 7. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-12-ste.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 13</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP111/086 verso, fragment 7. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-13-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP111/086 verso, fragment 7. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-13-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 14</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP147/034 recto, fragment 8. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-14-site-2.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP147/034 recto, fragment 8. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-14-site-2.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Fig. 15</label>
          <caption>
            <p>CP147/034 verso, fragment 8. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-15-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>CP147/034 verso, fragment 8. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/fig-15-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>The position of the second fragment is not certain. Based on the content of the recto and the position of the fibers of the papyrus, it could be placed at the end of the second column. As for the verso, the scribal hand may correspond to that of the previous column, but the content of the column – the royal titulary of Ramses VI – suggests placement of the fragment in the middle of the second column. In this case, however, the content of the recto would<named-content content-type="pagination">24-28</named-content> be difficult to understand (see below). Fragments 4, 5, 6, 7 and 8 – those with the inventory number beginning with CP – were not kept together with P. Turin Cat. 1877 until recently. Indeed, these fragments were identified by Renaud Pietri in March and May 2022, who suggested they belonged to P. Turin Cat. 1877. He also found the join between subfragments CP116/001 and CP116/008, now fragment 4 (Fig. 7).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref2">2</xref><xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref2"/></p>
      <p>Fragment 4 can be placed under column II, the first of fragment 3 (see below), so that the height of the papyrus can be estimated at at least 34.1 cm, probably more if fragment 2 is to be placed in this column also.</p>
      <p>Moreover, there would have been enough space at the top of column IV of the recto for another line of text, but this space is empty, so it seems reasonable to assume that the column begins with its first preserved line. The scribe included a date at the same position on the verso of the papyrus, which is appropriate for the beginning of a column. The content of the recto of column IV suggests that 8 lines of text are missing at the end of column III. Taking into account the restitution of column II and the content of columns III and IV, we can suggest that each column contained at least 31 lines and measured approximately between 34,1 cm and 39,2 cm in height (see below).</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>1.2. Provenance and studies of the papyrus</title>
      <p>The papyrus belongs to the Drovetti collection, acquired by king Carlo Felice of Savoy in 1824. There is no indication about the text’s provenance, but it may come from Deir el-Medina like the majority of papyri from the Drovetti collection in the Museo Egizio.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref3">3</xref> It was presented for the first time by Jean-François Champollion in 1826, in one of his letters to the Duc de Blacas d’Aulps.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref4">4</xref> It was subsequently studied by Willem Pleyte and Francesco Rossi, who produced a facsimile and a commentary.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref5">5</xref> A brief description is found some years later in the catalogue of Ariodante Fabretti, Francesco Rossi, and Rodolfo V. Lanzone.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref6">6</xref> <xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref6"/> Some scholars have examined the recto. Kenneth A. Kitchen provided a<named-content content-type="pagination">29</named-content> hieroglyphic transcription and a translation of the recto in his volume of the <italic>Ramesside Inscriptions</italic> dedicated to Ramses II.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref7">7</xref> Pascal Vernus translated the third column of the recto in his book on Athribis.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref8">8</xref> Donald B. Redford offered a brief comment on the content of the recto in 1986.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref9">9</xref> The verso has received little scholarly attention aside from Pleyte and Rossi’s brief description, and more recently Stéphane Polis and Nathalie Sojic’s presentation of the whole papyrus (verso and recto) in the Turin database of papyri.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref10">10</xref> Finally, Renaud Pietri added six fragments from the Turin collection to the papyrus in March and May 2022.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>1.3. Content and date of the papyrus</title>
      <p>The recto contains an extract of a litany to Osiris (corresponding to Spell 142 of the Book of the Dead) followed by the names of kings, queens, and princesses, mostly belonging to the New Kingdom. Based on the presence of women of the family of Ramses II (e.g., his mother, his wife Nefertary, and at least four daughters), we can suppose that the recto was written during his reign. However, the handwriting would also be compatible with a later date during the Ramesside Period (see palaeography below). In this case, the original was perhaps written during Ramses’ reign and later copied. The verso contains three or four extracts from various texts, each written by a different scribe. Among these texts is an extract from the royal titulary of Ramses VI and what seems to be an administrative text that includes a date.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref11">11</xref> This part was then probably composed after the recto, but no later than the Ramesside Period.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>1.4. Palaeography of the recto of the papyrus</title>
      <p>It seems that scribes from Deir el-Medina did not have a specific, recognizable writing style, although we can identify the hands of some famous scribes.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref12">12</xref> The writing on the papyrus resembles literary cursive, as it is less cursive than administrative texts and lacks many of the ligatures often observed in them.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref13">13</xref> Unfortunately, a palaeography of manuscripts from Deir el-Medina or from the Ramesside Period is still lacking,<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref14">14</xref> so I must limit myself to a comparison with signs in the second volume of Georg Möller’s palaeography<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref15">15</xref> or the magical papyri from Turin studied by Alessandro Roccati, with a palaeography by the present author<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref16">16</xref> (Table 1).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref17">17</xref></p>
      <p>
        <fig>
          <label>Table 1</label>
          <caption>
            <p>Palaeography of P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, choice of signs.</p>
          </caption>
          <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-16-site-1.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>Palaeography of P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, choice of signs.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-16-site-1.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
        </fig>
      </p>
      <p>This short presentation of signs seems to indicate that many are more common in the 20<sup>th</sup> than in the 19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref18">18</xref> Since, as already mentioned above, complete palaeographical data are still lacking for the Ramesside period, it appears that palaeography only is an inconclusive criterion for accurate dating of the recto of the papyrus. All it tells us is that it dates from the Ramesside Period, most likely the 20<sup>th</sup> Dynasty; however, because of the content of the text (see above), the 19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty cannot be ruled out. As for the verso, the presence of the royal titulary of Ramses VI allows us to date it during his reign.<named-content content-type="pagination">30-31</named-content></p>
    </sec>
  </sec>
  <sec>
    <title>2. Translation and commentary of P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto (Figs. 16–17)</title>
    <p>
      <fig>
        <label>Fig. 16</label>
        <caption>
          <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, restitution with fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
        </caption>
        <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-17-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, restitution with fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4. Scan Museo Egizio. </long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-17-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/> <license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license> </permissions></media>
      </fig>
    </p>
    <p>
      <fig>
        <label>Fig. 17</label>
        <caption>
          <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, hieroglyphic transcription, fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4.</p>
        </caption>
        <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-18-site-1.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto, hieroglyphic transcription, fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4. </long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-18-site-1.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/> <license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license> </permissions></media>
      </fig>
    </p>
    <p>The recto of P. Turin Cat. 1877 currently consists of four columns that contain a variant of the so-called Spell 142 of the Book of the Dead. Fragment 4 (CP116/001 + CP116/008), based on its content and the few traces left at its beginning, is certainly the continuation of the first column of fragment 3, that is, column II. In this case, this column would consist of at least 29 lines and be 34.1 cm high. It is unclear, instead, where exactly the last fragment at the end of column II (i.e., fragment 2) should be positioned with respect to the previous fragments. The content suggests a position at the end of column II, but this is uncertain and the join between the two fragments is difficult to determine. If we add this fragment to column II, then this column would contain at least 32 lines and be at least 39.2 cm in height.</p>
    <p>Spell 142 is generally found combined with Spell 141 during the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period, although they form two separate spells from the Late Period onwards.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref19">19</xref></p>
    <p><underline>Book of the Dead papyri used as parallels for the translation (corresponding to BD 142)</underline> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/><italic>New Kingdom</italic> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Nu (18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty): P. BM EA 10477.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref20">20</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Kha (18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty): P. Turin Suppl. 8438.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref21">21</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Neferrenpet (19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty): P. Bruxelles MRAH E. 5043 + P. Philadelphia E 2775 + 16721 + 16722.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref22">22</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Kha and P. Neferrenpet contain the main witnesses for Spell 141/142 from Deir el-Medina.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref23">23</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>For the New Kingdom, in addition to the papyri, the version of BD 142 of the Osireion at Abydos is also used as a parallel.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref24">24</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/><italic>Third Intermediate Period</italic> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Nedjmet: P. BM EA 10541 + P. Louvre E 6258.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref25">25</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Greenfield : P. BM EA 10554.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref26">26</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/><italic>Late and Ptolemaic Periods</italic> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Iahtesnakht: P. Colon. Aeg. 10207.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref27">27</xref> <named-content content-type="linebreak"/>Iuefankh: P. Turin Cat. 1791.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref28">28</xref> <named-content content-type="pagination">32-33</named-content></p>
    <sec>
      <title>2.1. Fragment 1, column I</title>
      <p>On the first preserved fragment, column I includes 13 lines of text. The two subfragments it is composed of were joined sometime in the last century, as Pleyte and Rossi’s 1869–1876 publication depicts the column on two separate fragments.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref29">29</xref> The position of the fragment relative to the one with columns II–IV is uncertain; it could be placed slightly lower (as in Fig. 16), but the lacunae are two large for a confident decision to be made in this regard. In any case, based on all known versions of BD 142 from the New Kingdom, to which this papyrus dates, column I certainly comes before column II.<named-content content-type="pagination">34</named-content></p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_01-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+1</sup> Osiris [ ] (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+2</sup> Osiris [ ] (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+3</sup> Osiris [ ] (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [m] swt.f imy[wt 6A-Smaw]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+4</sup> Osiris [in] (b) his places that are in [Upper Egypt].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+5</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [m] swt.f imy[wt 6A-mHw]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+5</sup> Osiris [in] (b) his places that are in [Lower Egypt] (c).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+6</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [m] pt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+6</sup> Osiris [in] the sky.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+7</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir [m] swt.f [imywt RA-sTAw]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+7</sup> Osiris in his places [that are in Ro-setau].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+8</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir NDs</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+8</sup> Osiris Nedjes (d).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+9</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir ItfA-wr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+9</sup> Osiris Itefa-wer.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+10</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir 4kr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+10</sup> Osiris Sokar.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+11</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir HkA Dt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+11</sup>Osiris ruler of eternity.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+12</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nb Iwnw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+12</sup>Osiris lord of Heliopolis.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>I,x+13</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir &lt;m&gt; Rwty-ist</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>I,x+13</sup>Osiris &lt;in&gt; Ruty-iset (e).</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>
        <underline>Notes on the translation</underline>
      </p>
      <p>(a) Columns I and II are very similar to the version of BD 142 in the Osireion at Abydos, so that we can wonder if the missing names of Osiris at the beginning of column I are not <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir 4kr m Pd-S</named-content> “Osiris Sokar in Pedj-she" (Osireion, register II, no 29), <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir xnty niwt.f</named-content> “Osiris foremost of his city” (Osireion, register II, no 30) and <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m Pgs-r</named-content> “Osiris in Peges-ra" (Osireion, register II, no 31). Furthermore, the same names occur in P. Nu (col. 93, 94 and 95).</p>
      <p>(b) Traces of the preposition <italic>m</italic> are still visible in the facsimile of Pleyte and Rossi.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref30">30</xref></p>
      <p>(c) I have made the restitution after the version of the Osireion at Abydos (register II, no 33 for “Osiris in his places in Upper Egypt” and register II, no 32 for “Osiris in his places of Lower Egypt”), but I suggest to place Upper Egypt before Lower Egypt as it is the preferred order in this papyrus (see for example II,16-II,17 or II,22-II,23). P. Nu (col. 96) only contains the name of Osiris with “Lower Egypt.”<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref31">31</xref></p>
      <p>(d) Or <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m nDsty</named-content> (<italic>Wb</italic> II, 386, 1, which includes this as a name of Osiris). As highlighted by <italic>LGG</italic> II, 550, later versions seem to change this to <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m nst</named-content>, “Osiris on the throne.”</p>
      <p>(e) Ruty-iset is probably a toponym and seems to correspond to the current city of Abusir, as Didier Devauchelle observes.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref32">32</xref> Another translation, adopted by <italic>LGG</italic> II, 551, prefers “Osiris, der um die Mannschaft (außen) herum ist”. Furthermore, “Osiris in Heliopolis” and “Osiris &lt;in&gt; Ruty-iset” are not included either in the list of the Osireion or in P. Nu, but they are in P. Berlin P 3002 (3rd register, no 11, 4<sup>th</sup> register, no 1).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref33">33</xref> <named-content content-type="pagination">35</named-content></p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>2.2. Fragments 3 and 4, column II</title>
      <p>Column II spans at least two fragments: the first column of fragment 3 (column II of the currently reconstructed text), which corresponds to the upper part of the papyrus and contains 14 lines of text, and fragment 4, which corresponds to the lower part with 15 lines. To these two fragments, a further fragment with 3 lines can be added based on the fibers of the papyrus and the similar content. If we compare the upper part of this column with column IV, which probably includes the upper part of the papyrus, it appears that 2 lines at the beginning of the column are missing, so that we can estimate the column to have contained between 29 lines (without fragment 2) and 32 lines (with fragment 2).<named-content content-type="pagination">36</named-content></p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_02-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>Fragment 2</p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_03-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Wsir ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,1</sup> [Osiris ].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Wsir ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,2</sup> [Osiris ].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 4iA</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,3</sup> Osiris in Sia.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m BdS</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,4</sup> Osiris in Bedesh.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,5</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 8p</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,5</sup> Osiris in Dep (Buto).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,6</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 4Aw [Hry]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,6</sup> Osiris in [upper] Sais.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,7</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsỉr m Prts (?)</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,7</sup> Osiris in Peretes (?) (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,8</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 5nw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,8</sup> Osiris in Shenu.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,9</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 1nkt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,9</sup> Osiris in Henket.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,10</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m tA 4kr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,10</sup> Osiris in the Land of Sokar.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,11</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 5Aw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,11</sup> Osiris in Shau.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,12</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m fA 1r</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,12</sup> Osiris as He-who-carries-Horus.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,13</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m MAaty</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,13</sup> Osiris in Maaty.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,14</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 0ni</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,14</sup> Osiris in Heni (b).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,15</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m bA [it]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,15</sup> Osiris in Ba-[of-the-father] (c).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,16</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m rs-nt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,16</sup> Osiris in the South Chapel.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,17</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m mH-nt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,17</sup> Osiris in the North Chapel (d).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,18</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nb nHH nsw [nTrw]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,18</sup> Osiris, lord of eternity, king [of the gods].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,19</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m 6Aw-wr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,19</sup> Osiris in the nome of Abydos (e).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,20</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m ASrw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,20</sup> Osiris in Isheru (e).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,21</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m tAw nbw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,21</sup> Osiris in every land (e).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,22</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione"> [Wp-wAw]t 5ma</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,22</sup> [Wepwaw]et of Upper Egypt (f).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,23</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Wp-wAwt] MH</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,23</sup> [Wepwawet] of Lower Egypt.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,24</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione"> [Itm] kA psDt [aAt]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,24</sup> [Atum], bull of the [great] Ennead (g).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,25</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Ra]-1r-Axty</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,25</sup> [Ra]-Horakhty.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,26</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[PtH Dd] Sps st [Ra]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,26</sup> [Ptah], excellent [djed-pillar], throne [of Ra].</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,27</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Gb] rpat nTrw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,27</sup> [Geb], prince of the gods.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,28</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[1r] nxt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,28</sup> [Horus] the victorious (h).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,29</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[1r] sA Ast</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,29</sup> [Horus]-son-of Isis.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,x+30</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] ?</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,x+30</sup> [ ] ? (i)</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,x+31</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Iwn-mwt].f ab pr-wr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,x+31</sup> [Iunmut]ef, he who purifies Per-wer (i).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>II,x+32</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[1r sx]A</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>II,x+32</sup> [Hor-sekh]a (i).</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>
        <underline>Notes on the translation</underline>
      </p>
      <p>(a) This version of the sequence is unknown, as most others have Neperet in this position (compare P. Nu, col. 105, no 2; P. Kha, third line of names, no 27, while P. Neferrenpet, l. 16, has <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">aprt </named-content>and the Osireion <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Npt</named-content>, register II, no 13).</p>
      <p>(b) Fragments 3 and 4 can be placed here. The reading <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">0ni</named-content> on the two fragments seems clear enough (compare with the Osireion, register III, no 20). Furthermore, “Osiris in Heni” is the last Osirian name of BD 142 in P. Nu (col. 107) and P. Kha.</p>
      <p>(c) The restitution is based on the version of the Osireion, register III, no 21, and P. Greenfield, 35f,2 which share a similar sequence for this passage as in<named-content content-type="pagination">37</named-content> P. Turin Cat. 1877. This name of Osiris is also present in later versions (P. Iahtesnakht 68d,25). Indeed, almost all the Osirian forms from column I are attested in the Osireion, so that the restitution seems likely, even if we cannot rule out other possibilities. Furthermore, the names of Osiris starting from this point, line II,15 to line II,21, are attested in this order in the Osireion only (except II,16 which is not in the Osireion list) as well as in P. Greenfield (35e,21-35f,5), starting from the name of line II,10 (Osiris in the land of Sokar) to II,18 (Osiris lord of eternity, king of the gods).</p>
      <p>(d) The reading of the sign <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_1.jpg"/> is uncertain. It could be the group <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_2.jpg"/> for <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">mH-nt</named-content> “North Chapel” (compare with Möller II, no 452) which is present in the Osireion (register III, no 22) as well as in late versions of BD 142 (P. Greenfield, 93d,25; P. Iahtesnakht, 68d,27). It could also be a writing of <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_3.jpg"/> (Möller II, no 165B / Sign list F26). In this case, it could refer to the (royal) Residence or simply to the interior of some building. This epithet is attested for deities in lists in temples, as in the Litany of Sokar in Medinet Habu as <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">4kr m Xnw pr</named-content> “Sokar in the interior of the temple”<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref34">34</xref> or in a list of <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">wdnw</named-content> given to <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Imn m Xnw</named-content> “Amun in the interior” in the Luxor temple.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref35">35</xref> But because of the similarities of this papyrus with the Osireion and P. Greenfield, as well as the presence of the “South Chapel” in the previous line, I prefer the reading <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">mH-nt</named-content>.</p>
      <p>(e) “Osiris in the nome of Abydos”, “Osiris in Isheru” and “Osiris in every land” are well-known in late versions of BD 142 (see P. Greenfield, 35f,10, 35f,12, 35f,13; P. Iahtesnakht, 68c,19, 68e,8 and 68e,9 and P. Iuefankh 2,4 and 3,4 for “Osiris in Isheru” and “Osiris in every land”). For the New Kingdom, only the Osireion seems to contain these names (register III, no 24, 26, 27). Thus, the Osireion and P. Greenfield have the same order as P. Turin Cat. 1877, but with a further name after “Osiris in the nome of Abydos”, that is “Osiris in Deni” (P. Greenfield, 35f,11 and Osireion, register III, no 25).</p>
      <p>(f) From this point (II,22) to the end of the preserved column (II,29), and maybe also of fragment 2, are the names of other deities than Osiris that are preserved in versions later than the New Kingdom. The restitutions are given here following P. Greenfield (36a,5-36a,18), which has a similar structure. The versions are somewhat different in the Late and Ptolemaic periods (compare P. lah-tes-nakht, 68f,2-68f,14). As for “[Wepwaw]et of Upper Egypt” and “[Wepwawet] of Lower Egypt”, later versions have “Wepwawet of Upper Egypt, mighty one of the Two Lands” and “Wepwawet of Lower Egypt, mighty one of the sky” (P. Greenfield, 36a,5-36a,6; P. Iahtesnakht, 68f,3-68f,4). In P. Turin Cat. 1877, it seems that nothing is written after the words “Upper Egypt” and “Lower Egypt”.</p>
      <p>(g) The restitution of “[Atum], bull of the Ennead” follows P. Greenfield, 36a,7 and P. Iahtesnakht, 68f,2, but both versions have “Atum, bull of the body of the great Ennead”, the word “body” (<named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Xt</named-content>) has been omitted in P. Turin Cat. 1877.</p>
      <p>(h) Other later versions register “Min the king, Horus the victorious” (P. Greenfield, 36a,14; P. Iahtesnakht, 68f,11) instead of “[Horus] the victorious”. In P. Turin Cat. 1877, there is not room enough for the name of Min and his function.</p>
      <p>(i) The following three lines belong to a fragment whose position is uncertain, making it impossible to say how many lines are missing between the two fragments. The few traces in the first line are not enough to identify a name, but the last two lines could correspond to BD 142, the version usually found in the Late and Ptolemaic Periods (P. Iahtesnakht 68f,12 and 68f,14, but without the <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">3nm-1r Htp</named-content> of line 68f,13, see also Mosher).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref36">36</xref> Usually these names are at the end of the spell and are not followed by Osiris’ names, which end earlier. In P. Turin Cat. 1877 however, the next column again gives the names of Osiris, followed by those of other deities. Perhaps the fragment should be placed after column III, but it seems that the end of this column contained the names of various pharaohs. Interestingly, P. Greenfield gives the following succession of names: “<sup>36a,15</sup> Iunmutef, he who purifies Per-wer, <sup>36a,16</sup> Horus-son-of-Isis, <sup>36a,17</sup> Hor-Sekhat.” Here these names are followed by other deities, names of Osiris together with Horus (“<sup>36c,6</sup> Horus-protector-of-his-father in all his names”), and names of Anubis (“<sup>36c,7</sup> Anubis, foremost of the divine booth, in all his names”), which all appear in column III of P. Turin Cat. 1877. If the litany in the Turin papyrus was similar to the one in P. Greenfield, this could explain the presence of Osiris in different parts of the spell.<named-content content-type="pagination">38</named-content></p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>2.3. Fragment 3, column III</title>
      <p>Column III contains at least 13 lines, with the first line of the column probably preserved, based on a comparison with column IV.<named-content content-type="pagination">39</named-content></p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_04-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Wsir ity] m AbD[w]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,1</sup> [Osiris sovereign] in Abydo[s] (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[Wsir it]y Hr(y)-ib 6A S</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,2</sup> [Osiris sove]reign in the middle of To-she (a).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir PtH nb anx m 1wt-kA-PtH</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,3</sup> Osiris Ptah lord of Life in Memphis.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nb pHty ptpt sbiw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,4</sup> Osiris lord of strength who tramples the enemies.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,5</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir 1ry-Sf m Nn-nsw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,5</sup> Osiris Herishef in Heracleopolis (b).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,6</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir kA m Km-wr Hry-ib Km-wr</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,6</sup> Osiris, bull in Kem-wer, in the middle of Kem-wer (Athribis) (c).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,7</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir Htyt Wp-wA(w)t Sma</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,7</sup> Osiris the breather, Wepwawet of Upper Egypt (d).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,8</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir m rnw.f nbw m swt.f nbw m bw nb nty im</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,8</sup> Osiris in all his names, in all his places, in each location in which (he) is.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,9</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">1r nD it.f sA Ast iwa Wsir</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,9</sup> Horus who protects his father, son of Isis, heir of Osiris.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,10</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione"> 1r sA Wsir mAa-xrw.f m rnw.f nbw m swt.f nbw m bw nb nty im</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,10</sup> Horus son of Osiris, he who justifies, in all his names, in all the places, in each location in which (he) is.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,11</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Ast nTryt m rnw.s nbw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,11</sup> Isis divine in all her names.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,12</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Inpw xnty sH-nTr m rnw.f nbw</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,12</sup> Anubis foremost of the pavilion in all his names.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>III,13</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>III,13</sup> [ ] (e).</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>
        <underline>Notes on the translation</underline>
      </p>
      <p>(a) Restitutions are made according to P. Greenfield (35f,22–23), which has a very similar litany listing the same forms of Osiris (P. Greenfield, 35f,22–36a,5).</p>
      <p>(b) The association of Osiris with Herishef in Spell 141/142 seems to be very rare. P. Greenfield gives “Osiris, lord of Heracleopolis” (94c,15). Only P. Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen II (col. 1,11)<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref37">37</xref> and the version in the Osireion of Abydos (register III, no 33) explicitly mention “Osiris-Herishef, lord of Heracleopolis”.</p>
      <p>(c) Vernus includes numerous attestations of this form of Osiris, both in the Litanies of Osiris in the ritual context and in Spell 142.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref38">38</xref></p>
      <p>(d) Wepwawet should be written on another line (compare with P. Greenfield, 36a,5).</p>
      <p>(e) Some traces are visible, but they are insufficient to suggest a restitution.<named-content content-type="pagination">40</named-content></p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>2.4. Fragment 3, column IV</title>
      <p>Column IV contains 12 lines with a space above the first line that allows us to infer that this fragment preserves the original beginning of the column.<named-content content-type="pagination">41</named-content></p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_05-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nsw (aA-xpr-n-Ra)| sA Ra (9Hwty-ms)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,1</sup> Osiris, king (Aakheperrenra)|, son of Ra (Thutmosis)| (Thutmosis II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nsw (aA-xpr-kA-Ra)| sA Ra (9Hwty-ms)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,2</sup> Osiris, king (Aakheperkara)|, son of Ra (Thutmosis)| (Thutmosis I).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nsw (9sr-kA-Ra)| sA Ra (Imn-Htp)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,3</sup> Osiris, king, (Djeserkara)|, son of Ra (Amenhotep)| (Amenhotep I).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nsw (Nb-pHty-Ra)| sA Ra (IaH-ms)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,4</sup> Osiris (Nebpehtyra)|, son of Ra (Ahmosis)|.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,5</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Wsir nsw (2pr-kA-Ra)| sA Ra (4(-n)-Wsrt)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,5</sup> Osiris (Kheperkara)|, son of Ra (Sesostris)| (Sesostris I).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,6</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Hmt-nTr Imn (IaH-ms Nfrt-iry)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,6</sup> Divine wife of Amun (Ahmes-Nefertary)| (wife of Ahmosis).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,7</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Hmt-nTr Mwt (6wti)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,7</sup> Divine wife, (royal) mother (Tuti)| (a) (mother of Ramses II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,8</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Hmt-nsw wr(t) (Nfrt-iry mr(t) n Mwt)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,8</sup> Great king’s wife (Nefertary)| beloved of Mut (b) (wife of Ramses II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,9</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">sAt nsw Hm[t] (nsw) (Mryt-Imn [)|]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,9</sup> King’s daughter, (king’s) wife (Merytamun [ )| ] (daughter of Ramses II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,10</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">sAt nsw Hmt nsw (Nb(t)-tAwy)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,10</sup> King’s daughter, king’s wife (Nebettauy)| (daughter of Ramses II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,11</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">sAt nsw Hmt nsw (BA-tA-anti)|</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,11</sup> King’s daughter, king’s wife (Batanat)| (daughter of Ramses II).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>IV,12</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">sAt nsw Hmt nsw [( )|]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>IV,12</sup> King’s daughter, king’s wife [( )|] (c).</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>
        <underline>Notes on the translation</underline>
      </p>
      <p>(a) The writing <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">6wti </named-content>certainly refers to the mother of Ramses II, usually written <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">6wy</named-content> or <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">6wiA</named-content> (cf., for example, K<italic>RI</italic> II, 844–47; the scribe has probably written <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">ti</named-content> for <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">y</named-content>).</p>
      <p>(b) The ligature <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_3_bis.jpg"/> at the end of the cartouche clearly refers to the name of the goddess Mut, as it often appears in the cartouche of Queen Nefertary – though it is normally written at the beginning of the cartouche, or at least before <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">mr</named-content> “beloved” (cf. K<italic>RI</italic> II, 848–853). Kitchen reads the group as a phonetic writing of the goddess <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_4.jpg"/> (K<italic>RI</italic> II, 922), although it could also be a ligature of the vulture-glyph with a “t” (<inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_5.jpg"/> ).</p>
      <p>(c) The traces in the last line are insufficient to identify the name of Ramses II’s daughter here. Kitchen (K<italic>RITANC</italic> II, 622) surmised that it might be Henutmira.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>2.5. Fragments 5-8</title>
      <p>Fragment 5 (CP116/002) (Figs. 8,9) and fragment 6 (CP116/004) (Figs. 10,11) only contain parts of columns with the sign <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_6.jpg"/> on the recto, while some signs are written on the verso of fragment 5 and nothing is written on the verso of fragment 6. Fragment 7 (CP111/086) (Figs. 12,13) only shows traces of signs that could may be <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_7.jpg"/> in the first line and the name of Osiris followed by a scarab <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_8.jpg"/> in the second. On the verso, this fragment carries part of a vertical line. As for fragment 8 (CP147/034) (Figs. 14,15), it shows the sign <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_6.jpg"/> and few traces of the beginning of the name of Osiris <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_10.jpg"/> , and nothing on the verso. They are certainly part of P. Turin Cat. 1877, but their exact position is hard to determine.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>2.6. General comment on P. Turin Cat. 1877 recto</title>
      <p>The recto of P. Turin Cat. 1877 lists names of Osiris that correspond to BD 141/142 – specifically the second part of Spell 142, dedicated to Osiris – in association with the names of royal ancestors and members of the royal family.</p>
      <p>1. Names of Osiris and other deities (columns I–III)<named-content content-type="linebreak"/>The order of names in columns I and II reflects the traditional versions of BD 141/142 (see the Osireion at Abydos, P. Nu, P. Kha, P. Greenfield, P. Turin 1791), except for the names of “Osiris lord of Heliopolis” (I,x+12) and “Osiris in Ruty-iset” (I,x+13), which generally only appear in late versions (from P. Greenfield onwards) and are rarely attested during the New Kingdom. The most similar parallel version of P. Turin Cat. 1877 is the one in the Osireion at Abydos, where the names of Osiris are almost in the same order. The New Kingdom version also omits the third column, which only appears in late versions starting in the Third Intermediate Period (compare with P. Greenfield, 35f,22–36a,17, and P. Iatesnakht, from col. 68e,20 onwards).</p>
      <p>2. Royal names (column IV)<named-content content-type="linebreak"/>The list in column IV gives the names of the following pharaohs in reverse chronological order: Sesostris I for the 12<sup>th</sup> Dynasty and then Ahmose to Thutmosis II (Ahmose, Amenhotep I, Thutmosis I and Thutmosis II) for the 18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty. This kind of list generally contains the second part of the 18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty (except Hatshepsut and the rulers of the A-mar-na period) and the first rulers of the 19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty up to Ramses II – as seen in the list of the Ramesseum.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref39">39</xref> Therefore, there are most likely eight rulers missing from this list: Thutmosis III, Amenhotep II, Thutmosis IV, Amenhotep III, Horemheb, Ramses I, Sety I, and Ramses II. This would also suggest that at least eight lines are missing between the end of the previous column and the beginning of this column. As no part of the papyrus appears to be missing before the first line of column IV, I suggest that the missing royal names originally stood at the end of column III, occupying at least eight lines.</p>
    </sec>
  </sec>
  <sec>
    <title>
      <bold>3. The fragmentary texts on P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso (Figs. 18–19)</bold>
    </title>
    <p>The verso of P. Turin Cat. 1877 contains three or four different texts that have no relationship with the recto. The papyrus was probably reused after the scribe had copied the main text on the recto. As the focus of this article is on the litany on the recto, I will only provide a description of, and very short comment on, this part of the papyrus, as it could be useful for further, more detailed research.</p>
    <p>
      <fig>
        <label>Fig. 18</label>
        <caption>
          <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso, restitution with fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4. Scan by the Museo Egizio.</p>
        </caption>
        <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-19-site.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso, restitution with fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4. Scan by the Museo Egizio. </long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-19-site.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/> <license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license> </permissions></media>
      </fig>
    </p>
    <p>
      <fig>
        <label>Fig. 19</label>
        <caption>
          <p>P. Turin Cat. 1877 verso, hieroglyphic transcription, fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4.</p>
        </caption>
        <media xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-20-site-2.jpg"><alt-text/> <long-desc>P. Turin Cat. 1877verso, hieroglyphic transcription, fragments 1, 2, 3 and 4.</long-desc><uri xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/fig-20-site-2.jpg"/><permissions><copyright-statement/> <copyright-holder/><license license-type="creative-commons"><license-p>cc by 2.0</license-p></license></permissions></media>
      </fig>
    </p>
    <sec>
      <title>3.1. Text 1</title>
      <p>The first text on the verso contains only a single line with traces of a date.<named-content content-type="pagination">42-43</named-content></p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_06-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p><named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Rnpt-sp</named-content> 1 <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">(?) [Abd?] prt sw</named-content> 3 <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">? [ ] ?</named-content></p>
      <p>Year 1 (?) [month ?] of the peret season [ ], day 3 ? [ ] ?</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>3.2. Text 2</title>
      <p>Text 2 consists of two columns containing elements of a royal titulary, probably referring to Ramses VI. The two columns seem to belong to the same text, though this is not certain since each seems to have been written by a different scribe. We can compare, for example, the way that Horus is written at the beginning of each column and the type of ink used, which is darker in the left column. Fragment 4 is placed at the end of this column because of the content of the recto. Finally, the position of the fragment at the end of the second column (fragment 2) is not certain. The signs in these two columns are higher than in the other texts on the papyrus.<named-content content-type="pagination">44</named-content></p>
      <p>Text 2, column 1</p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_07-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">1r</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>1</sup> Horus,</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">kA nxt aA</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>2</sup> strong bull, great of</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">nxtw sanx tAwy</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>3</sup> victories, who makes the Two Lands live</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">nbty</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>4</sup> the Two Ladies</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td>
                  <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ]</named-content>
                </td>
                <td>[ ]</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>Text 2, column 2</p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_08-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>Fragment 2</p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_09-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
      <p>The position of fragment 2 would make sense in the lacuna in line 2 because of the meaning. In this case, the complete line would be: <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/sign_11.jpg"/></p>
      <p>But there does not seem to be enough room and it would have no sense for the meaning of the recto, which is why I prefer to place fragment 2 somewhere near the end of the column, even though this position remains uncertain.</p>
      <p>
        <table-wrap>
          <table>
            <tbody>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>1</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">anx 1r kA nxt [aA nxtw]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>1</sup> May Horus the strong bull live, [great of victories],</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>2</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">wsr xpS hd [Hfnw] rnpwt</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>2</sup> powerful of arm, who prevails over [the hundreds of thousands], &lt;powerful of&gt; years,</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>3</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">mi 6A-tnn ity Hb-sd </named-content></td>
                <td><sup>3</sup> like Tatenen, sovereign of the Sed(-festival).</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>4</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] </named-content></td>
                <td><sup>4</sup> [ ]</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>5</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] anx wDA snb</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>5</sup> [ ] may he live, be prosper and be healthy.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>6</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] WAst</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>6</sup> [ ] Thebes.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>7</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>7</sup> [ ]</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>8</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] anx wDA snb</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>8</sup> [ ] may he live, be prosper and be healthy.</td>
              </tr>
              <tr>
                <td><sup>x+9</sup> <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">[ ] Hfnw [ ]</named-content></td>
                <td><sup>x+9</sup> [ ] the hundreds of thousands [ ].</td>
              </tr>
            </tbody>
          </table>
        </table-wrap>
      </p>
      <p>The fragment x+9 would be better placed in the lacuna of line 2, so that the translation would be: “who prevails over the hundreds of thousands,” the Nebty-name of Ramses VI.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref40">40</xref> Thus, the whole column gives the royal titulary of Ramses VI (Horus name, Nebty-name, and Golden Horus name). However, although such a reconstruction would theoretically work for the verso, it would not produce a coherent text for the recto; but this fragment could be part of the Nebty-name of Ramses VI repeated in the lower part of the column.</p>
    </sec>
    <sec>
      <title>3.3. Text 3</title>
      <p>This fragmentary text written in five lines is difficult to identify and translate because only a few traces remain legible. According to Pleyte and Rossi, who did not realize that the two fragments belonged together, the text described the construction of a tomb (because of the presence of the word <named-content content-type="traslitterazione">xr </named-content>“tomb, necropolis” on line x+4) to the west (<named-content content-type="traslitterazione">Imntt</named-content>, line x+3) of Thebes.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref41">41</xref> The Turin papyrus database suggests that the fragment carries some kind of literary text.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref42">42</xref> Both suggestions are possible, and if more fragments surface in the Museo Egizio’s collection researchers may be able to more confidently identify the genre of this text and offer a more coherent translation.</p>
      <p>
        <named-content content-type="figureImage"> <inline-graphic xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://rivista.museoegizio.it/wp-content/uploads/2022/07/geroglifici_10-1.jpg"/> </named-content>
      </p>
    </sec>
  </sec>
  <sec>
    <title>
      <bold>4. Some remarks on litanies of Osiris and royal names in the cultic context</bold>
    </title>
    <p>The text written on the recto of P. Turin Cat. 1877 is a name list enumerating several forms of Osiris, other deities, and members of the royal family. The Osirian list in this text corresponds to the one found in Spell 141/142 of the Book of the Dead.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref43">43</xref> As remarked above, the spell was usually a single one during the New Kingdom and the Third Intermediate Period, and was then separated into two distinct spells with their own titles (141 and 142) during the Saite Period. An exception for the New Kingdom is P. Berlin P. 3002 (19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty), which only contains Spell 142.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref44">44</xref> Thus, in this period Spell 142 could also occur alone in the Book of the Dead. Spell 141 lists the names of various divine entities, while 142 mostly contains names of Osiris, with some names of Horus, Isis, Anubis, and Wepwawet. The spell(s) is/are very well attested in funerary contexts from the New Kingdom to the Ptolemaic Period, mostly on papyri and in tombs.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref45">45</xref></p>
    <p>Attestations of Spell 141/142 in Deir el-Medina are not frequent. Among them are P. Kha of the 18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty and P. Neferrenpet of the 19<sup>th</sup>. As said, these attestations resemble only columns I and II of P. Turin Cat. 1877. So far, it is not possible to distinguish a specific tradition of the names of Osiris in Deir el-Medina. Furthermore, the version in P. Turin<named-content content-type="pagination">45</named-content> Cat. 1877 is very similar to the one inscribed on the walls of the Osireion at Abydos. Thus, it seems that the origin of the text in P. Turin Cat. 1877 comes from the ritual context of temples.</p>
    <p>Indeed, versions with the names of Osiris (i.e., similar to Spell 142) often appear in the context of temples. In addition to the mentioned version in the Osireion at Abydos,<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref46">46</xref> Jean-Claude Goyon indicated the Litany of Sokar in Medinet Habu.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref47">47</xref> In his publication of P. Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen II of the fourth century BCE, Joachim Friedrich Quack also argues that the text was originally used in a temple context.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref48">48</xref> This is also the case for the ritual performed during the Festival of Khoiak, attested in P. Louvre N 3176 S of the Roman Period.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref49">49</xref></p>
    <p>Two papyri published by Raymond O. Faulkner likely also stem from a temple context: the Book of Hours (P BM EA 10569, Late Period)<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref50">50</xref> and the litany in Giessen University Library Papyrus no. 115 (end of the Ptolemaic Period or early Roman Period).<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref51">51</xref> Furthermore, the Book of Hours is the only papyrus that associates Osiris’ names with kings and queens, but the latter are only referred to by the general expression “The Kings of Upper Egypt and the Kings of Lower Egypt”.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref52">52</xref> Moreover, the demotic liturgies of P. Berlin P. 6750 and P. Berlin P. 8765 of the Roman Period also contain a version of Spell 142.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref53">53</xref></p>
    <p>Like Spell 142 and other texts like it, the litany of P. Turin was thus probably a <italic>wdnw</italic> (“offerings” or “litany of offerings”) used in a temple context. What is particular about this papyrus is the presence of pharaohs’, queens’, and princesses’ names in addition to those of Osiris. Name-lists of royal ancestors such as the Ramesseum list, the Abydos list, or those found in ritual papyri are common enough.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref54">54</xref> The names of royal ancestors can vary from one document to the next, or even within the same papyrus – as in the Ritual of Amenhotep I.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref55">55</xref> Usually Mentuhotep II was the main pharaoh for the Middle Kingdom, but in some cases Sesostris I is also be mentioned, as indeed in P. Turin Cat. 1877.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref56">56</xref></p>
    <p>These lists rarely mention female members of the royal family. There are of course exceptions, such as Queen Ahmes-Nefertary, wife of Ahmose,<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref57">57</xref> or women of the royal family of the 18<sup>th</sup> Dynasty, who appear in stelae, tombs, papyri, and other objects from Deir el-Medina.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref58">58</xref> The queens and daughters of the family of Ramses II occasionally appear in temple lists, as do the sons of Ramses II, but they are not attested together in a liturgy following a litany of Osiris, as seen in the Turin papyrus.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref59">59</xref> Therefore, it seems that priests introduced the names of the royal family on this papyrus in order to associate them with the offering ritual usually devoted to Osiris. Another interesting point is that the names of kings are prefixed by “Osiris”, while those of women are prefixed only by the title they bore during their lives. This may indicate that they were still alive when the papyrus was copied (with the exception, of course, of Ahmes-Nefertary).</p>
    <p>The ritual on this papyrus was certainly used in a temple where royal ancestors and living members of the royal family were invoked so that they could benefit from the cult and the offerings. Kitchen wondered if this text may stem from the archives of Ramses II in Abydos.<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref60">60</xref> This could be possible because of the links between the version in the Osireion and in P. Turin Cat. 1877. Yet, the papyrus was probably found in Deir el-Medina, where other lists are known,<xref ref-type="bibr" rid="ref61">61</xref> and was certainly used in a Theban temple, but a common model with the Osireion‘s version is possible. At some point, probably during the Ramesside Period, it was then reused to record administrative texts and a royal titulary.</p>
  </sec>
  <sec>
    <title>Bibliography</title>
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  </sec>


	</body>
	<back>
		
		
					<ref-list>
			<title>Notes</title>
		<ref id="ref1">
			<label>ref1</label>
			<mixed-citation>I am very grateful to Susanne Töpfer for her help and her welcome at the <italic>Museo Egizio</italic>, to Stéphane Polis for information about the papyrus, and to Alessandro Roccati for sharing his notes about the papyrus with me. I also would like to thank Laurent Coulon for discussions on this topic and the anonymous peer reviewers for their suggestions. This article is part of a project led by L. Coulon and G. Lenzo on the litanies of Osiris in the framework of the Ifao-program “Transmission des textes funéraires et pratiques rituelles en Égypte ancienne au Ier millénaire av. n.è.: continuités et changements de la Troisième Période intermédiaire à la Basse Époque” (directed by F. Albert and G. Lenzo, 2022–2026). Finally, I am also grateful to Dylan Johnson who corrected the English text and to Federico Poole for editing the article and for his suggestions.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref2">
			<label>ref2</label>
			<mixed-citation>Renaud Pietri very kindly informed me of his discovery and I am extremely grateful to him.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref3">
			<label>ref3</label>
			<mixed-citation>See <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935">https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935</ext-link>.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref4">
			<label>ref4</label>
			<mixed-citation>Champollion, <italic>Lettres à M. le duc de Blacas d’Aulps</italic>, 1826, pp. 43–57.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref5">
			<label>ref5</label>
			<mixed-citation>Pleyte, Rossi, <italic>Papyrus de Turin</italic>, 1869–1876, pp. 22–25, pls. XI–XV.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref6">
			<label>ref6</label>
			<mixed-citation>Fabretti, Rossi, Lanzone, <italic>Antichità Egizie</italic>, 1882, pp. 239–40.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref7">
			<label>ref7</label>
			<mixed-citation>K<italic>RI</italic> II, 921, 10–922, 6.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref8">
			<label>ref8</label>
			<mixed-citation>Vernus, <italic>Athribis</italic>, 1978, p. 290.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref9">
			<label>ref9</label>
			<mixed-citation>Redford, <italic>Pharaonic King-Lists</italic>, 1986, p. 39.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref10">
			<label>ref10</label>
			<mixed-citation><ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935">https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935</ext-link>.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref11">
			<label>ref11</label>
			<mixed-citation>According to the Turin papyrus database, the verso has three texts: a royal titulary, an extract of a literary text, and an administrative text, see &lt;a href=&quot;https://papyri.museoegizio.it/Object/Writing/detail.aspx?!iid=715e6f9448e64a878c9b7
532e4e78a91&quot;&gt;https://papyri.museoegizio.it/Object/Writing/detail.aspx?!iid=715e6f9448e64a878c9b7
532e4e78a91&lt;/a&gt;.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref12">
			<label>ref12</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Fischer-Elfert, in: Davies and Laboury (eds.), <italic>The Oxford Handbook of Egyptian Epigraphy and Palaeography</italic>, 2020, pp. 654–57.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref13">
			<label>ref13</label>
			<mixed-citation>On three different styles of hieratic (administrative, chancery script and literary cursive), see Fischer-Elfert, in: Davies and Laboury (eds.), <italic>The Oxford Handbook of Egyptian Epigraphy and Palaeography</italic>, 2020, pp. 654–57. For examples of various scripts on papyri from Deir el-Medina, see Černý, <italic>Papyrus hiératiques de Deir el-Médineh</italic>, 1978, 1986.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref14">
			<label>ref14</label>
			<mixed-citation>See also Fischer-Elfert, in: Davies and Laboury (eds.), <italic>The Oxford Handbook of Egyptian Epigraphy and Palaeography</italic>, 2020, p. 648.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref15">
			<label>ref15</label>
			<mixed-citation>Möller, <italic>Hieratische Paläographie</italic> II, 1927.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref16">
			<label>ref16</label>
			<mixed-citation>Lenzo, in: Roccati, <italic>Magica Taurinensia</italic>, 2011, pp. 195–255.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref17">
			<label>ref17</label>
			<mixed-citation>Sign list based on Verhoeven <italic>Untersuchungen</italic>, 2001.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref18">
			<label>ref18</label>
			<mixed-citation>Sign 12bis in Möller, <italic>Hieratische Paläographie</italic> III, 1936.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref19">
			<label>ref19</label>
			<mixed-citation>The <italic>Totenbuch-Projekt</italic> database registers about 125 attestations for all periods, but without distinguishing between 141 and 142 (see <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://totenbuch.awk.nrw.de/">http://totenbuch.awk.nrw.de/</ext-link>).
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref20">
			<label>ref20</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Lapp, <italic>The Papyrus of Nu</italic>, 1997.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref21">
			<label>ref21</label>
			<mixed-citation>Photos at &lt;a href=&quot;https://collezionepapiri.museoegizio.it/en-GB/document/439/?inventoryNumber=8438
&quot;&gt;https://collezionepapiri.museoegizio.it/en-GB/document/439/?inventoryNumber=8438&lt;/a&gt;.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref22">
			<label>ref22</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Milde, <italic>The Vignettes</italic>, 1991, pp. 156–59, pl. 29–30.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref23">
			<label>ref23</label>
			<mixed-citation>A fragment of Spell 141-142 also survives in P. Neuchâtel Eg. 429, from Deir el-Medina; see Lüscher, <italic>Totenbuch-Papyrus Neuchâtel Eg. 429</italic>, 2007, pp. 4, 6, pl. 3
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref24">
			<label>ref24</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Murray, <italic>The Osireion at Abydos</italic>, 1904, pl. IX.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref25">
			<label>ref25</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Lenzo, <italic>BMSAES</italic> 15 (2010); Lenzo, in Bonnet et al. (eds.), <italic>Naming and Mapping the Gods</italic>, forthcoming.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref26">
			<label>ref26</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Lenzo, <italic>The Greenfield Papyrus</italic>, forthcoming.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref27">
			<label>ref27</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Verhoeven, <italic>Das saitische Totenbuch der Iahtesnacht</italic>, 1993.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref28">
			<label>ref28</label>
			<mixed-citation>Lepsius, <italic>Das Todtenbuch</italic>, 1842.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref29">
			<label>ref29</label>
			<mixed-citation>Pleyte, Rossi, <italic>Papyrus de Turin</italic>, 1869–1876, pl. XIII, fragment IV for the upper part and fragment III for the lower part.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref30">
			<label>ref30</label>
			<mixed-citation>Pleyte, Rossi, <italic>Papyrus de Turin</italic>, 1869–1876, pl. XIII, fragment III.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref31">
			<label>ref31</label>
			<mixed-citation>P. BM EA 10477, see Lapp, <italic>The Papyrus of Nu</italic>, 1997, pl. 44.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref32">
			<label>ref32</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Devauchelle, in Coulon (ed.), <italic>Le culte d’Osiris</italic>, 2010, p. 50, n. 6.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref33">
			<label>ref33</label>
			<mixed-citation>Munro, Das Totenbuch des Nacht-Amun, 1997, pl. 16 (col. 455 and 445).
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref34">
			<label>ref34</label>
			<mixed-citation><italic>Medinet Habu</italic> IV, pl. 221, col. 4..
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref35">
			<label>ref35</label>
			<mixed-citation>K<italic>RI</italic> II, 625, 69, translated as “in Khenu” (or: “in the Residence”) in K<italic>RITANC</italic> II, 414.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref36">
			<label>ref36</label>
			<mixed-citation>Mosher, The Book of the Dead, 2020, p. 476.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref37">
			<label>ref37</label>
			<mixed-citation>Quack, <italic>ZÄS</italic> 127 (2000), pp. 78–79, remark i.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref38">
			<label>ref38</label>
			<mixed-citation>Vernus, <italic>Athribis</italic>, 1978, pp. 290–94.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref39">
			<label>ref39</label>
			<mixed-citation><italic>Medinet Habu</italic> IV, pl. 213. On the content of the list on P. Turin Cat. 1877, see Redford, <italic>Pharaonic King-Lists</italic>, 1986, p. 39.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref40">
			<label>ref40</label>
			<mixed-citation>Compare von Beckerath, <italic>Handbuch</italic>, 1999, p. 95.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref41">
			<label>ref41</label>
			<mixed-citation>Pleyte, Rossi, <italic>Papyrus de Turin</italic>, 1869–1876, p. 25; see the facsimile in two separate fragments, pl. XV, fragments III and IV.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref42">
			<label>ref42</label>
			<mixed-citation><ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935">https://papyri.museoegizio.it/o/200935</ext-link>.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref43">
			<label>ref43</label>
			<mixed-citation>On this spell, see Lenzo, in Bonnet et al. (eds.), <italic>Naming and Mapping the Gods</italic>, forthcoming A.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref44">
			<label>ref44</label>
			<mixed-citation>Published by Munro, <italic>Das Totenbuch des Nacht-Amun</italic>, 1997, pl. 16 (lines 436-455).
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref45">
			<label>ref45</label>
			<mixed-citation>For the many papyri with Spell 141/142, consult the database of the <italic>Totenbuch-Projekt</italic>: <ext-link ext-link-type="uri" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:href="http://totenbuch.awk.nrw.de//">http://totenbuch.awk.nrw.de//</ext-link>. A presentation of this spell in the context of this article would be difficult, but a complete study is being prepared by the author.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref46">
			<label>ref46</label>
			<mixed-citation>Murray, <italic>The Osireion</italic>, 1904, pl. IX.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref47">
			<label>ref47</label>
			<mixed-citation><italic>Medinet Habu</italic> IV, pls. 221–22. For the names of Osiris in the cultic context of the Karnak temples, see Coulon, in: Pironti, Bonnet  and Loriol, (eds), <italic>Dieux en série?</italic>, forthcoming.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref48">
			<label>ref48</label>
			<mixed-citation>Quack, <italic>ZÄS</italic> 127 (2000), see especially pp. 83–86.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref49">
			<label>ref49</label>
			<mixed-citation>Published by Barguet, <italic>Le Papyrus N. 3176</italic>, 1962; see more recent observations by Coulon, in Quack, Luft (eds.), <italic>Schrift und Material</italic>, 2021, pp. 176–79.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref50">
			<label>ref50</label>
			<mixed-citation>Faulkner, <italic>Book of Hours</italic>, 1958.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref51">
			<label>ref51</label>
			<mixed-citation>Faulkner, <italic>JEA</italic> 44 (1958), pp. 66–74.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref52">
			<label>ref52</label>
			<mixed-citation>P. BM EA 10569, 6,7, see also Redford, <italic>Pharaonic King-Lists</italic>, 1986, p. 64.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref53">
			<label>ref53</label>
			<mixed-citation>Widmer, <italic>Résurrection d&#039;Osiris</italic>, 2015, particularly pp. 67–71, 99–111, 194–244. A list of demotic sources can be found in Quack, <italic>ZÄS</italic> 127 (2000), p. 77, n. 18.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref54">
			<label>ref54</label>
			<mixed-citation>See the presentation of various king-lists in Redford, <italic>Pharaonic King-Lists</italic>, 1986, pp. 1–64.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref55">
			<label>ref55</label>
			<mixed-citation>Tackes, <italic>Das Opferritual</italic>, p. 183.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref56">
			<label>ref56</label>
			<mixed-citation>On the mention of Sesostris I in lists, see El-Enany, <italic>Memnonia</italic> 14 (2003).
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref57">
			<label>ref57</label>
			<mixed-citation>See Tackes, <italic>Das Opferritual</italic>, 2013, scenes 48.8g and 54.24b, vol. I, 201, 263; vol. II, 182–83, 221–25
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref58">
			<label>ref58</label>
			<mixed-citation>Redford, <italic>Pharaonic King-Lists</italic>, 1986, pp. 42–62, for documents stemming from private people. On royal ancestors in Deir el-Medina, see El Shazly, <italic>Royal Ancestor Worship</italic>, 2015. On female royal ancestors, see El Shazly in: Lenzo, Nihan, and Pellet (eds.), 2022.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref59">
			<label>ref59</label>
			<mixed-citation>See the various documents registered in K<italic>RI</italic> II, 916–22.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref60">
			<label>ref60</label>
			<mixed-citation>K<italic>RITANC</italic> II, p. 622, who follows an idea first put forward by Helck, <italic>LÄ</italic> IV, 1982, 735.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
		<ref id="ref61">
			<label>ref61</label>
			<mixed-citation>See, for example, an ostracon from the 19<sup>th</sup> Dynasty published by Sauneron, <italic>CdE</italic> 26 (1951) and other lists in El Shazly, <italic>Royal Ancestor Worship</italic>, 2015.
				
			</mixed-citation>
		</ref>
	</ref-list>
		</back>
		
		</article>