Nicola Aravecchia
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摘要

本文讨论了罗马晚期定居点古艾因·格迪达(位于上埃及的达赫拉绿洲)的考古和文献证据,特别关注该遗址可能被认定为一个时代,即一个小型农村中心与一个大型农业庄园的管理有关。Ain el-Gedida于1993年至1995年由埃及代表团首次发掘,并立即引起了在绿洲工作的学者的兴趣,初步确定该遗址是一个农村村庄或修道院定居点。最近的挖掘和研究季节(从2006年到2010年)是由哥伦比亚大学(当时的纽约大学)的一个由罗杰·巴格纳尔(Roger Bagnall)领导的小组进行的,这使得调查人员能够收集到大量的新数据。这一证据于2018年和最近的2020年发表,支持了将艾因·格迪达确定为其他类型定居点的一个转折点的可能性。在这篇文章中,根据从文献资料中了解到的关于epoikia和现代埃及语ezab的资料,讨论了来自Ain el-Gedida的数据。值得注意的是,到目前为止,没有多少其他类似规模的农业村庄被广泛挖掘和出版。同样值得注意的是,虽然有大量关于epoikia的书面证据,但Ain el-Gedida遗址可能提供了这类聚落的第一个考古证据;因此,它可能为古埃及晚期epoikia的布局和组织提供新的有用资料。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Hamlet of ʽAin el-Gedida in Dakhla Oasis
This article discusses archaeological and documentary evidence from the late Roman settlement of ʽAin el-Gedida (located in the Dakhla Oasis of Upper Egypt), with a particular focus on the site’s likely identification as an epoikion, i.e., a small rural center associated with the management of a large agricultural estate. ʽAin el-Gedida was first excavated by an Egyptian mission in 1993–1995 and immediately raised interest among scholars working in the oasis, with the site being preliminarily identified either as a rural village or a monastic settlement. More recent excavations and study seasons, conducted (from 2006 to 2010) by a Columbia University (then New York University) mission directed by Roger Bagnall, has allowed investigators to gather a substantial amount of new data. This evidence, published in 2018 and more recently in 2020, supports the likely identification of ʽAin el-Gedida as an epoikion over other types of settlements. In this article, the data from ʽAin el-Gedida are discussed in light of what is known from documentary sources about epoikia, as well as modern Egyptian ezab. Worthy of note is that not many other agricultural hamlets of a comparable size have been extensively excavated and published thus far. It is also remarkable that, while written evidence on epoikia abounds, the site of ʽAin el-Gedida may provide the first available archaeological evidence for this type of settlement; therefore, it may offer new and useful data on the layout and organization of epoikia in late antique Egypt.
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