LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0407 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7695 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aDocumentary Text$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.3 x 19.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, traces of a few large letters written with a thick pen =500 \\5 lines; broken at top left =500 \\The hand is a clear cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official letter?: refers to a delivery to the treasury; dated Year 3 Pharmouthi 26 of an unknown year =545 \\Part of the Zenon archive? =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. 61 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0408 =090 \\Princ. 126 =046 \\$aq$b$d =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.7 x 15.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\9 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is an upright, fluent cursive =500 \\Some holes on fold lines and a large hole at bottom right =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b126 =520 \\Official letter concerning garden taxes for the planting of a vineyard; from the exetastes, Diophantus and Heras to Ischyrion =545 \\From the Arsinoite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7935 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0409 =090 \\Princ. 22 =046 \\$as$c246$e249 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[246-249 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is an upright, compact cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b22 =520 \\Official letter addressed to Aurelius Philoxenus, strategos of the Oxyrhynchite nome concerning arrears of wheat =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\AM 8939 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0410 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell X 85 D =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.4 x 7.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Written in a large, formal epistolary hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official(?) letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 85 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 9 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0411 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7925 B =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14.3 x 13.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, an address =500 \\10 lines; broken at top =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =500 \\Damage along two vertical fold lines =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official(?) letter from Paesis to Hierakion, son of the illustrious Phoibammon =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 210 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0412 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell II 218 E =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.1 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand a large, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official letter, requesting Theon, Sambas and others to gather all the people of a village =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 218 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0413 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7925 A =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, traces of an address =500 \\7 lines; broken at left an bottom? =500 \\The hand is a fine, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official(?) letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 210 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0414 =090 \\Oxy. 940 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$fV[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.7 x 30 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\5 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VI$b940 =520 \\Official letter to a clerk, Joseph, containing instructions to delay the accounting of the vintage until all the vintners have harvested the crop =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0415 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell X 85 B =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c20.1 x 10.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\14 lines; broken at top and left =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official letter, referring to a woman. The letter probably consisted of two columns =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 85 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 2 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0416 =090 \\Princ. 137 =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c32 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\Some holes =500 \\The hand is a large, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b137 =520 \\Official letter, concerning collection of arrears in taxation. The sums owing were paid within eight days =545 \\From the Hermopolite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7625 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0417 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell X 86 B =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.9 x 11.3 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\12 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Official letter, to an agrophylax concerning crime and violence against women and with a request to send the culprit to an official(?). Also mentions a water pumping device =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 86 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p418 =090 \\Hib. 163 =046 \\$aq$b230$d229 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$a$f[230/229 BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.2 x 7.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; broken except at bottom =500 \\The hand is an upright semi-cursive =510 \\$aP.Hib. I$b163 descriptum =520 \\Letter to Clitarchus mentioning the village of Tmoinethumis in the Herakleopolite nome =545 \\From Hibeh. Mummy 10 =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4432: Frame 39 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p419 =090 \\Hib. 152 =046 \\$aq$b250 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$a$f[ca. 250 BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.8 x 9.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; On back, decoration from mummy cartonnage =500 \\In the same frame is a small piece (parts of three lines), also in a Ptolemaic hand, and with similar decoration on the back =500 \\6 lines; broken right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a good-sized cursive =510 \\$aP.Hib. I$b152 descriptum =520 \\Letter from Charikles to Miusis. Refers to loading something on a boat and to shipbuilders =545 \\From Hibeh. Mummy 98 =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4430: Frame 38 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0420 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 8907 recto =046 \\$aq$b199$d1 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.5 x 5.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, 4 lines of text =500 \\11 lines; broken except at bottom =500 \\The hand is a good-sized cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton I 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0421 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1926, H. I. Bell III 63 J =046 \\$aq$b199$d150 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[1st half II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.8 x 10.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, an address =500 \\8 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a clear cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from men of the Kynopolite nome to Euphron =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 63 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\Published as GD 9555: A. E. Hanson, P J. Sijpesteijn, "The Dossier of Euphron. Letter from Men of the Kynopolite nome to Euphron," AncSoc 20 (1989): 133-145 =590 \\Small flat box 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0422 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1926, H. I. Bell III 63 A =046 \\$aq$b199$d150 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[1st half II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.5 x 18 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\3 lines; broken at both sides, top right and bottom left =500 \\The hand is a clear, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Alexandros, chief of police, to Euphron =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 63 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\Published as GD 9554: A. E. Hanson and P. J. Sijpesteijn, "The Dossier of Euphron. Letter from Alexandros to Euphron," AncSoc 20 (1989): 133-145 =590 \\Medium flat box 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0423 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1926, H. I. Bell III 63 I =046 \\$aq$b199$d150 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[1st half II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.2 x 13.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on back part of an address =500 \\3 lines; broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is a clear cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Apollonios to Euphron and Korax =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 63 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\Published as GD 9553: Ann Ellis Hanson and P. J. Sijpesteijn, "The Dossier of Euphron. Letter from Apollonius to Euphron and Korax," AncSoc 20 (1989): 133-145 =590 \\Small flat box 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0424 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 87-57 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24.3 x 6.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso an address and traces of previous texts in 3 hands =500 \\24 lines; almost complete, but has several large lacunae =500 \\Cut from a roll; a kollesis ca. 2 cm. from left side =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =500 \\Related to the letter of Hermocrates (inv. AM 87-56, apis.p0427) =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Asklepiades to Dionysodoros. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0425 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7684 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24 x 12.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines; broken at top =500 \\Many holes =500 \\Upper layer of fibers has been stripped and text is severely damaged =500 \\The hand is a clear cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter?: content uncertain. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0426 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 87-53 H =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.5 x 5.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso 13 lines of text affected by surface peeling =500 \\13 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Written in a good-sized epistolary hand with few ligatures =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Removed from mummy cartonnage opened by Michael Fackelmann, Vienna, July 1982 =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 12 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0427 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 87-56 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.5 x 13.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =500 \\Related to the letter of Asklepiades to Dionysodoros (inv. AM 87-57, apis.0424) =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Hermocrates to Dionysodoros, concerning a letter from Asklepiades about bad wine =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0428 =090 \\Princ. 19 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.5 x 22.5 cm =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on verso =500 \\7 lines + 7 lines marginal annotation; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b19 =520 \\Letter from Pamnous to Euphron in which the writer says that he has given instructions to send a boat to him at Alabanthis. His sister will accompany him on the journey. Pamnous then instructs Euphron to provide a three-couched cloth tent for their use during the visit =545 \\From the Fayum =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7692 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0429 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell XVIII 78 A =046 \\$as$c2 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[20 July, 2 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.2 x 11 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\10 lines; broken at top =500 \\Damaged along fold lines =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter to Heraklea, presumably from one of her parents (addressed 'To Heraklea, my daughter), asking that she send items needed for a festival =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XVIII 78 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\Published as GD 9560: A. E. Hanson, "Fragment of a Letter from the Reign of Augustus," BASP 24 (3-4) (1987): 97-102 =590 \\Small flat box 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0430 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11234 B =046 \\$as$c14 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ca. 14 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c26.8 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\16 lines; complete =500 \\Some holes =500 \\The hand is a large cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\From Tasmustha to Asklepiades(?). Dated year 41(?) of Augustus, Mesore 23 =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton 165 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0431 =090 \\Oxy. 294 =046 \\$as$c$22 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[22 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23.1 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\33 lines; complete but top right corner missing =500 \\Some large holes in lower left side =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. II$b294 =520 \\Letter from Sarapion in Alexandria to his brother Dorion seeking information about the searching of his house and that of another, which seems to have taken place as the result of a case in which Sarapion is involved. He informs his brother that he is being urged to enter the household of the chief attendant at the prefect's court, which would strengthen his position at the trial. He notes that two officials in the retinue of the strategos are under arrest by order of the prefect until the session commences =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4402: Frame 22 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0432 =090 \\Princ. 186 =046 \\$as$c28 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[28 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16.5 x 5.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; blots (an address?) on back =500 \\19 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is an untidy cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b186 descriptum =520 \\Letter from Arthonis to his brother. Refers to the receipt of wine =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\); P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7642 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0433 =090 \\Princ. 161 =046 \\$as$c33 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[33 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\16 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\Several large holes in the center and some damage to the bottom =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b161 =520 \\Letter from Chaeremon to Dios asking him to send a guard to the new orchard on his (i.e. Dios') father's property and another to the place of Areios =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11232 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0434 =090 \\Princ. 65 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[40(?) AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\17 lines; broken at right =500 \\A line may have been lost between lines 6 and 7 =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b65 =520 \\Letter from Nemesion to Dionysios requesting that he pass on certain instructions to a tenant farmer relative to his work, including the admonition to fertilize the soil with manure whenever necessary =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8914 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0435 =090 \\Princ. 162 =046 \\$as$c89$e90 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[89/90 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 11.8 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, a demotic text with 2 lines of Greek =500 \\15 lines; broken top and left =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b162 =520 \\Letter in which the writer agrees to go to Alexandria and exhorting the recipient to set sail without having completed some business =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7535 verso =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0436 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7694 =046 \\$aq$c1$e99 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19.6 x 6.7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; traces of an address on back =500 \\19 lines; compete, but quite a few holes =500 \\Part of upper layer of fibers stripped on right side =500 \\The hand is a small, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Nikokles. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0437 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1928, H. I. Bell I 7 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[early I AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.9 x 9.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter? Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1928, no. I 7 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0438 =090 \\Princ. 187 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a) 19 x 8.5 cm. (b) 15 x 4.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Frag. (a) 26 lines; frag. (b) 19 lines + 3 lines in left margin; broken except at left =500 \\The hand is a good-sized cursive =500 \\Only half of the text on fragment (a) was published in the ed. pr., and a reference to the note in the margin of (b), although there is no indication in the edition that the text is in two fragments =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b187 descriptum =520 \\Letter to Eudaimon. Refers to a letter and to money and asks Eudaimon to write to the sender. In the left margin is a reference to something sent by the camel driver Cholus =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11235 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0439 =090 \\Oxy. 298 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199` =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22.9 x 18.5 cm. =500 \\Written on both sides of the papyrus =500 \\Recto: 24 lines; verso: col. I, 22 lines; col. II 15 lines; broken at left and at center =500 \\The text extends to the verso of the papyrus, where it is written in two columns =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. II$b298 =520 \\Letter from a tax collector. The letter is long and is written on both sides of the papyrus. The writer talks of visiting various nomes and collecting arrears in payment, and of reports received from Alexandria. However, the letter is mostly concerned with private affairs =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4403: Frame 23 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0440 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7650 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19.8 x 10.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\19 lines; broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter written to a brother =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XVIII 59 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0441 =090 \\Princ. 66 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken at top and bottom =500 \\The hand is a good-sized, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b66 =520 \\Letter which conveys urgent instructions to pass on a certain order, in case the flood does not get beyond the writer and to send irons for the oxen =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8925 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0442 =090 \\Princ. 160 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.5 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; the papyrus has been glued to paper, so presumably the verso is blank =500 \\5 lines; complete, but some damage along a central vertical fold line =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b160 =520 \\Letter from S( ) to Anchasius and Thamines. The writer says that he has written to Pnepheros to demand a contract and asks the recipients to get it and keep it safe until he comes =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\A. E. Hanson, "P. Princeton 160," BASP 10 (1973): 81-84 =581 \\J. L. White, Light from Ancient Letters (1986): No. 66, 106 =590 \\GD 7680 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0443 =090 \\Princ. 67 =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is cursive but with some separation of letters =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b67 =520 \\ =545 \\Letter from Theano to her brother(?) Dionysius, in which she reports concerning a certain man about whom information was desired =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\S.H. Weber, TAPA LVI (1925), xlii =590 \\AM 8928 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0444 =090 \\Princ. 188 =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.8 x 8.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\24 lines; broken except at right =500 \\The hand is a small, fine cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b188 descriptum =520 \\Letter dealing with exposure of an infant(?) =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11245 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0445 =090 \\Princ. 189 =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.5 x 6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\19 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a large, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b189 descriptum =520 \\Letter written to a brother and mentioning a sister. Refers to the recipient knowing whether something has been sent. Mentions the names Alexandros and Chairemon =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11230 D =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0446 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 3B 1 recto =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.8 x 7.6 cm. =500 \\Both sides written along the fibers; on the verso, a document =500 \\6 lines; broken except at top =500 \\The hand is upright and angular =510 \\$a$b =520 \\From Herakleides to Sarapion. Mentions a village called Psuchis. Villages of that name are attested in the Memphite, Cynopolite, Hermopolite , Herakleopolite and probably the Oxyrhynchite nomes =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\Published as AM 15960 B 1 in P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Fragmentary Papyri from the University of Princeton Papyri Collections," Aegyptus 70 (1-2): 33-41 =590 \\Kase Collection: Frame K 8 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0447 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell IX 28 B =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.3 x 11 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; broken at bottom and right =500 \\The hand is a rather shaky cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Isarous to Petesouchos. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. IX 28 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 6 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0448 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell IX 14 B =046 \\$aq$c1$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[I/II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.3 x 11.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\3 lines; broken at top and bottom =500 \\A very large space is left blank beneath the text =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter to Harpocration(?) with greeting to Cyril(?). Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. IX 14 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 6 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0449 =090 \\Fay. 271 =046 \\$as$c100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ca. 100 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c20 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\20 lines; broken at bottom and right =500 \\Text is very fragmentary =500 \\The hand is a large cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b271 descriptum =520 \\Letter from Gemellus =545 \\From Euhemeria (Kasr el Banat) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4421: Frame 32 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0450 =090 \\Oxy. 1189 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ca. 117 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16.6 x 13.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\14 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\Column number(?) in upper margin =500 \\The hand is a large, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. IX$b1189 =520 \\Letter from Aquilius Polion, strategos of the neighboring Herakleopolite nome to Apollonios, strategos of the Oxyrhynchite nome. It relates to a 'schedule of property which belonged to the Jews'. Also refers to Sabinus, strategos of the Cynopolite nome =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society 1914-1915 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4108: Frame 16 =600 \\00$aAquilius Polion,$c strategos of the Herakleopolite nome =600 \\00$aApollonios, $c strategos of the Oxyrhynchite nome =600 \\00$aSabinus, $c strategos of the Cynopolite nome =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0451 =090 \\Princ. 185 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[162 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\18 lines; complete but with some damage at upper left corner =500 \\Some holes in center =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b185 descriptum =520 \\Letter concerning termination of guardianship. The guardianship may have begun on 13 October, 160 AD and appears to have been terminated on 12 March 162 =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7628 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0452 =090 \\Princ. 190 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c18.5 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; traces of an address on back =500 \\28 lines; broken at bottom and with some damage at top =500 \\Many holes and the text is fragmentary =500 \\Written in a large epistolary hand, with a thick pen =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b190 descriptum =520 \\Letter to a brother. Contains a proskynema to Sarapis formula =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11245 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0453 =090 \\Princ. 68 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; traces of an address on back =500 \\16 lines; broken at top =500 \\The hand is an upright, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b68 =520 \\Letter in which the writer refers to a financial transaction completed by him on behalf of the addressee. He promised to devote his careful attention to the further commands of the latter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7622 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0454 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7685 =046 \\$aq$100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21.1 x 35.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\16 lines; the text is almost complete but abraded =500 \\The hand is a tiny, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from [ ]us [ ]onius, a strategus of Oxyrhynchus, to a person whose name is illegible, perhaps Severus Alexander. Apparently C. Julius Longus is referred to as prefect, and no Hathyr of a 6th year of a sole reign is available for a new prefect between Hadrian and Severus Alexander =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. III 69 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0455 =090 \\Princ. 165 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16.5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; =500 \\13 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b165 =520 \\Letter to Horion requesting a fish and reminding him of a birthday =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11234 A recto =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0456 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7723 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.9 x 10.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\11 lines; broken top and left =500 \\Papyrus is very tattered and frayed =500 \\Damaged along five vertical fold lines =500 \\The hand is a good-sized fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter? Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 179 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0457 =090 \\Princ. 69 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$fII[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 16.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken at top =500 \\Traces of a preceding column. Whether this is from the same letter is uncertain =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive, sloping slightly to the right; in adding the closing formula the writer considerably reduced the size of the script =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b69 =520 \\Conclusion of a private letter which refers to a distant landowner, in Philadelphia =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton II 26 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0458 =090 \\Princ. 164 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.5 x 6.8 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, a document =500 \\10 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a small cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ.III$b164 =520 \\Letter from Chaeremon to his brother Sarapammon. Refers to a monthly statement having been given to the nome guard with whom the brothers seem to have had some dispute =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11226 B verso. Mounted with P.Princeton III 142 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0459 =090 \\Princ. 163 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\10 lines; complete =500 \\Some damage along horizontal fold lines at lines 4 and 8 =500 \\The hand is an upright, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b163 =520 \\Letter from Gaius to Horion in which he complains that cedar oil has not been delivered by Horion's camel driver. He asks that he be reimbursed in money or grain if he does not receive the oil =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0460 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 24 A 1A =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 7.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at bottom, probably after a horizontal fold =500 \\Pale papyrus =500 \\The hand is a good-sized fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from Chaireas to Kephalon. Refers to a meeting between Chaireas and Apollonios who has made some pledge to Kaphalon, mainly because of Chaireas =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\A. E. Hanson and P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Three Papyri from the Princeton University Collection," ZPE 103 (1994): 46-47, pl.2 =590 \\Small flat box 9 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0461 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11225 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12 x 4.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\16 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Written in a good-sized epistolary hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0462 =090 \\Princ. 70 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\14 lines which slope sharply to the right; complete =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b70 =520 \\Letter from Eumelus to Ammonios in which he urges Ammonios to receive the mother of Dioskoros, in the event she comes to him, and to deliver to her the rents of certain lands. He assures Ammonios that this is not the purpose of her visit. He also commends him on the manner in which he as provided a report to the tax collectors. Ends with the usual greetings to family members =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\H. C. Youtie, "Linguistic Notes on Papyrus Texts" EOS 48.1 (1956): 375-378 =590 \\GD 7689 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0463 =090 \\Princ. 166 =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.5 x 10.4 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; the address on the back was written across the text on the recto, which had been erased =500 \\11 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a large, messy cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b166 =520 \\Letter from Besas, the goldsmith, to Eidos. Besas asks Eidos to collect the body of his father and to keep it safe until he returns for the funeral. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0464 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell XIVc 79 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.3 x 2.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at top and left =500 \\The hand is large and partly cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVc 79 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0465 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 C =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23.8 x 9.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\18 lines; complete =500 \\A space of about 7 cm. is left blank beneath the text =500 \\The hand is that of a slow writer =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter from H™reis to his mother Demetrous, containing the proskynema formula and greetings to and from various family members =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\A. E. Hanson and P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Three Papyri from the Princeton University Collection," ZPE 103 (1994): 41-46 =590 \\Kase Collection: Frame K 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0466 =090 \\Oxy. 1068 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24.1 x 9.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\29 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VII$b1068 =520 \\From Satornilus to Apollonios, referring to the difficulty of getting a boat in order to carry a body to Alexandria and to some delay in the preparation of the body. He got one through the intervention of Clematius the chief priest, who sent a skiff of 60 artabs burthen. He seeks from Apollonios a letter which those bearing the body can carry with them to avoid trouble of some kind during the journey =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4104: Frame 13 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0467 =090 \\Princ. 71 recto =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 13 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a eulogy =500 \\20 lines + 2 lines in margin; =500 \\The hand is a large, compressed upright cursive, showing influence of the chancery style =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b71 =520 \\Letter which refers to a dispute concerning the payment of 5,500 drachmas =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8950 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0468 =090 \\Princ. 73 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16.5 x 12.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\18 lines; broken at left and with some damage on the right =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =500 \\the top half is effaced and very dark =500 \\Some holes along fold lines =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b73 =510 \\$aCPJ III$b469 =520 \\Letter from Aphunchis to Augarus bearing greetings and instructions to dispatch a boat to the writer without delay =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0469 =090 \\Princ. 167 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.5 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, faint traces of a washed out text =500 \\18 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =500 \\A large hole on the lower right side =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b167 =510 \\$aSB XVIII$b14052 =520 \\Letter from Aurelius Herieus to his brother Aurelius telling him not to worry about his daughter; also reminds him of some instructions and asking him to buy a mina at the same rate as some previously purchased =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\AM 11238 C =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0470 =090 \\Princ. 72 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines + 2 lines in left margin; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive; that in the margin is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b72 =520 \\Letter from Aurelius Lucadius to Euporos giving instructions to make preparation for an impending visit of his steward. Pack animals are to be loaded with chaff and honey and dispatched to the principal harbors =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8949: mounted with P.Princeton II 27 =600 \\00$aAurelius Lucadius,$cStud. Pal. V 52-56. III 3-3, 73.3-5 =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0471 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11225 C =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.9 x 5.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Contains name Piuris. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0472 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7691 B =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.5 x 9.6 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\12 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Written in a large epistolary hand, with use of some ligatures =500 \\Text on the left is faded =500 \\Some holes and traces of red paint =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton II 100 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0473 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7709 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.4 x 7.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at top =500 \\Some holes =500 \\The hand is a fine, sloping cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter which mentions a catholicus =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 92 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0474 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 218 J =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.2 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Palimpsest; the letter is the secondary text =500 \\7 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 218 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0475 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 218 I =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23.4 x 2.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\17 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Some surface abrasion =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter which uses the phrase "beloved brother" found in Christian letters =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 218 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0476 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7718 C =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.7 x 4.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Top layer of fibers stripped at the top =500 \\The hand is a small, fine, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 154 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0477 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell IX 54 A =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a document =500 \\7 lines; broken except at right =500 \\Written with a fine pen in an epistolary hand; signed in a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter written to a brother. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. IX 54 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0478 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7706 H =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[III-IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5.4 x 3.7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Frayed at top =500 \\The hand is a fine cursive, with some separation of letters =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 70 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0479 =090 \\Princ. 168 + Princ. inv. AM 15690 C2 =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSchool Exercise$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c Princ. 168, 5.5 x 10.5 cm.; Princ. inv. AM 15690 C25.5 x 13.5 cm. =500 \\The two fragments are not contiguous: the text was written on a long, narrow strip of papyrus =500 \\Written along the fibers; =500 \\5 lines; Princ. 168 broken at right, Princ. inv. AM 15690 C2 broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is poorly written, in uncials =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b168 =510 \\$aSB XVIII$b14053 =520 \\School exercise with the appearance of a letter from Nestor to his wife urging her to take care of some matters. Mentions payment of a fare in relation to someone called Zoilos. Also refers to grain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\AM 11228 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0480 =090 \\Princ. 74 =046 \\$as$c300 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ca. 300 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\12 lines; broken except at left =500 \\Several holes =500 \\The hand is an upright cursive which shows the influence of the chancery style =500 \\Text is somewhat effaced =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b74 =520 \\Letter in which the writer requests that his correspondent show him the respect and good will which he has received from others. He then gives instructions concerning some wine =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7670 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0481 =090 \\Princ. 97 =046 \\$as$c326$e327 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[326/327 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23.5 x 9.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto traces of an account =500 \\30 lines; one line missing at the top =500 \\The text s effaced in the center and at the right =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b97 =520 \\Letter in which the writer gives instructions to the recipient to issue receipts to certain farmers and vine-dressers who have delivered the required number of pigs in settlement of claims against them. He is instructed to further credit these deliveries on his accounts. In most cases one pig has been delivered. Deliveries are creditied for the years 325/326 and 326/3227. The letter also contains an instruction for the settlement of taxes on the estate under the supervision of the addressee =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7619 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0482 =090 \\Princ. 183 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aCorrespondence$f[345 AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragment;$c(a) 26 x 14 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, an account for money =500 \\21 lines; broken at both left =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b183 descriptum =520 \\Official correspondence which concerns arrears of taxation =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8959 recto =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0483 =090 \\Princ. 98 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24.5 x 6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\26 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is an upright, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b98 =520 \\Letter from Theodoulos to Eulogios in which Theodoulos takes Eulogios to task on his failure to deliver some hemp for which he has been waiting for two months and requests that delivery be made to Kalokairos and Paniskos whom he names as agents. The name of Paniskos has been added as an interlinear addition by a second hand). He reminds Eulogios that the hemp belongs not to him (Theodoulos), but to his master. He also suggests alternatively that the money value of the hemp might be paid =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7647 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0484 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7728 C =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV(?) AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14.6 x 3.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\21 lines; broken at top and left =500 \\Interlinear corrections above lines 7 and 8 =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 222 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0485 =090 \\Oxy. 1162 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.2 x 12.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VIII$b162 =520 \\Christian letter of recommendation from Leon, presbyter, to his Christian brothers. recommending Ammonios =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4107: Frame 15 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0486 =090 \\Princ. 100 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.5 x 11.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; traces of 1-2 letters on back =500 \\13 lines; broken at top and bottom =500 \\Some holes, but these do not affect the text =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b100 =520 \\Letter referring to a visit to Toka on the preceding day The writer requests the sending of a tax list together with information relative to the measure which his correspondent wishes to use =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7691 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0487 =090 \\Princ. 99 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.5 x 26 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken at top, but almost complete =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b99 =520 \\From Ptolemaios, an irenarch, to the komarchs of Philadelphia, asking then to come to "the city" )Arsinoe) immediately =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7646 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0488 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7708 F recto =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[IV(?) AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c3.6 x 1.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a document =500 \\5 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Written in a large, well spaced epistolary hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 80 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0489 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 217 C =046 \\$aq$100c$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.5 x 2.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\12 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Written in a small epistolary hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 217 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0490 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7634 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21 x 26.4 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\9 lines; broken at left =500 \\Many holes =500 \\The hand is a good-sized, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 37 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0491 =090 \\Princ. 191 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V(?) AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12 x 18.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\9 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\The hand is a large cursive, thickly written =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b191 descriptum =520 \\Letter, poorly written in terms of spelling and orthography. Mentions a brother Georgos who may have been in Constantinopolis. Asks the recipient to write =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987); 143-148 =590 \\GD 7886 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0492 =090 \\Princ. 169 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 20 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\6 lines; broken at right and bottom. Some loss of text in upper right corner =500 \\The hand is a large, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b169 =520 \\Letter written to the father of a young lady by a suitor? =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7526 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0493 =090 \\Princ. 103 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10 x 30.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the verso a document =500 \\5 lines; complete =500 \\Many holes =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b103 =510 \\$aCPJ III$b499 =520 \\Letter requesting money, supplied by various individuals, for surety for a certain Ammon. Names mentioned are Jacob, Symeonios, Sampathios and Silvanus. The writer also requests that the recipient send or bring 25 1/2 pounds of woolen waste =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7637 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0494 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7629 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5.2 x 23.4 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\5 lines; broken except at bottom =500 \\The hand is an upright cursive, written with a thick pen =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 53 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0495 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7702 A, B =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c(a) 11.2 x 14.2 cm. (b) 4.7 x 4.6 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; traces of an address on back of frag. (b) =500 \\Frag. (a) 11 lines, broken at top and left; frag. (b) 5 lines, broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 54 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0496 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 156 B =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.3 x 8.1 cm. =500 \\Written the fibers; =500 \\7 lines; =500 \\The hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Mentions a priest named Peter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek (or Coptic?) =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 156 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0497 =090 \\Oxy. 1107 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.4 x 31.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\5 lines; comlpete =500 \\The hand is a good-sized, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VIII$b1107 =520 \\An order from an official, Eudaimon, whose status is not mentioned, to an assistant, John, not to permit the removal of the produce of a cultivator, Psetheious son of Phutos, until he had paid the rent due to the landowner who is described as the nurse of Sophronios =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4120: Frame 18 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0498 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell XIVa 4 C verso =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.6 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the recto, a letter =500 \\4 lines; broken except at right =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVa 4 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 2 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0499 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell XIVa 4 C recto =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.6 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a letter =500 \\4 lines; broken except at right =500 \\Lines 3, 4 are faint and in a second hand =500 \\The first hand is a large, rapid cursive, the second a small, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVa 4 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 2 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0500 =090 \\Princ. 170 =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.5 x 16.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\10 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\Very many holes =500 \\The hand is a compact, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. $b =520 \\Letter in which the writer says that his master has ordered him to send something via camel. Refers to other things to be sent to each village(?) and to some sort of money transaction =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7688 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0501 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7644 B =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23.3 X 19 cm =500 \\Written across the fibers; traces of address on back =500 \\6 lines; broken at right =500 \\Most of the text is rubbed or damaged =500 \\Horizontal kollesis 6 cm. from lower edge =500 \\The hand is a large, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIV c 45 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0502 =090 \\Princ. 106 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10 x 29.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\Large hole in the middle =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b106 =520 \\Letter urging the recipient to obtain wine for the writer who has given him 2 solidi for that purpose. The wine is to be purchased at the rate of not less than 45 xestia per solidus. The recipient is further instructed either to dispatch a boat to the city in order that the writer may send back some jars =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7653 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0503 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7715 =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.2 x 24.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank? =500 \\6 lines; broken except at right =500 \\Very dark and brittle; stuck to paper backing =500 \\The hand is a very large, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 136 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0504 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11247 B =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 11.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; address on back =500 \\8 lines; broken at top and left =500 \\Written with a thick pen in a large, fluent hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Conclusion of a letter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Some Byzantine Papyri from Princeton," JJP 20 (1990): 134-135 =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0505 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7618 =046 \\$aq$c550$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[late VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21 x 21.3 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\8 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\Damaged along five horizontal fold lines =500 \\Top frayed =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 97 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0506 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 H recto =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19.5 x 30 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the back, an address and a Coptic letter =500 \\14 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter sent to an ecclesiastic =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Fragmentary Papyri from the University of Princeton Collection," Aegyptus 70 (1-2) (1989): 33-41 =590 \\Kase Collection: Frame K 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0507 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7664 =046 \\$aq$c600$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VII AD] =300 \\$a4 papyrus fragment;$c(a) 5.2 x 19.2 cm., (b) 1.9 x 7.9 cm., (c) 4.6 x 10.3 cm., (d) 8 x 10.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; address on back =500 \\Frag. (a) 4 lines; frag. (b) 1 line; frag. (c) 5 lines; frag. (d) 3 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is a large, clear cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter which mentions the property of a certain Makarios =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 168 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0508 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 1 B verso =046 \\$aq$c500$e799 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[VI-VIII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.7 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the recto a letter in Coptic with Greek annotations =500 \\5 lines + one line, upside-down and in Coptic; =500 \\The hand is possibly the same hand as that which wrote the Greek annotations on the recto =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter. Content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0509 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 1 B recto =046 \\$aq$c600$e799 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aDocumentary Text$f[VI-VIII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.7 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the verso a letter in Greek =500 \\8 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Bilingual text. Recto, written against the fibers, is Coptic with interlinear annotations in Greek. The last line on the verso, upside-down in relation to the rest of the text, is in Coptic and may relate to the Coptic letter on the front =545 \\ =546 \\In Coptic and Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0510 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell XIVc 74 B =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14.9 x 9.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\23 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive with some separation of letters =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter containing the rare name Germania =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVc 74 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0511 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell IX 13 D recto =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aLetter$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the recto, a list =500 \\8 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is a clear, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Letter: content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. IX 13 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\