LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0616 =090 \\Fay. 32 =046 \\$as$c131 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aProperty Return$f[131 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.5 x 8.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines + 1 line in a second hand in the upper margin; complete =500 \\The hand is a tiny, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b32 =520 \\Return of house property, submitted by Sambous, daughter of Pnepheros, son of Dionysios to the keepers of the property registers of the Arsinoite nome, the ex-gymnasiarchs Dios, also called Apollonios, and Herodes, also called Diogenes; Sambous' brother, Allothon(?) is acting for her in registering a half share in a house and courtyard =545 \\From Kasr el Banat =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1100: Frame 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0617 =090 \\Fay. 216 =046 \\$as$c131 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aPetition$f[131 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines; broken at right? =500 \\The papyrus is frayed, particularly at the right =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive in which initial pi and delta are enlarged =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b216 descriptum =520 \\Return of property for a half share in a house and courtyard submitted by Alexion to the keepers of the property registers of the Arsinoite nome, Dios and Herodes (see apis.p0616); the signature of Dios appears at the top in a different hand; dated in Mesore of the fifteenth year of Hadrian =545 \\From Kasr el Banat =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1103: Frame 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0618 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7734 C =046 \\$as$c276$e282 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[276-282 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9 x 6.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines: 8 lines Latin, 2 lines Greek; broken at top and right =500 \\The Latin is written in a fine, sloping cursive, the Greek in a small, upright hand =510 \\$aChLA IX$b404 =520 \\Receipt for payments made to, or in connection with soldiers in Egypt under the command of the praepositus, Rufinus; this praepositus is not the Rufinus of P.Dura 54, not the Rufinus of Tab. Vindol. 3B, 38; the nomen Aurelius is used in the Latin text , but not in the Greek; dated in the reign of Probus =545 \\ =546 \\In Latin and Greek =561 \\ =581 \\A. Bruckner and R. Marichal, Chartae latinae antiquores (1977) no. 404; =581 \\D.S.A. Renting, P. J. Sijpesteijn, "A Document Concerning the Roman Army: ChLA IX 404," Cd'ƒ LXII (1987): 223-226 =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0619 =090 \\Princ. 125 =046 \\$aq$c146 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[2nd January, 146 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9 x 11 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; complete =500 \\10 lines; =500 \\The hand is a tiny cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b125 =510 \\SB XVIII 13091 =520 \\Receipt for payment of garden taxes for the year 145 AD. Paid by Athenarion the elder, daughter of Herodes =545 \\From Theadelphia? =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Short Remarks on Some Papyri', Aegyptus 65 (1985): 35 =581 \\L. C. Youtie, "A Second Century Taxpayer at Theadelphia," ZPE 17 (1975): 258-9 =590 \\GD 7626 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0620 =090 \\Princ. 131 =046 \\$aq$c196 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[March 16, 196 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c26.5 x 14.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\17 lines; complete except for some damage at upper right =500 \\The hand is a small rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b131 =510 \\= SB XVI 12642 =520 \\Receipt for 118 dr. paid for taxes on 26 1/2 arouras of katoikic land in the neighborhood of Pela in the allotment of Diodoros, son of Demokrates. Paid to Neilos and Sarapammon, tax collectors, by Origeneia, daughter of Marcus [ ] Niger (?) and Demetria daughter of Sarapodoros. Origeneia is a citizen of Alexandria, as is her representative in the transaction, Apollonios alias Didymos, son of Apollonios (?), grandson of Dioskoros. The land was ceded to Origeneia and Demetria by Tbekis, daughter of Pausiris and Kollauchis, from Pela =545 \\From the Oxyrhychite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\L. C. Youtie, "Receipt for telos katalochismon. P.Princ. III 131 Revised," ZPE 38 (1980): 277-280. =590 \\GD 7732 =600 \\00$aNeilos,$ctax collector =600 \\00$aSarapammon,$ctax collector =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0621 =090 \\Fay. 76 =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5.7 x 4.3 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b76 =520 \\Customs house receipt for payment of the dues on three donkey loads (9 artabas) of orobos being exported through the customs house at Bacchias =545 \\From Umm el 'Atl =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1101: Frame 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0622 =090 \\Princ. 51 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5 x 4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a tiny, fluent cursive, tending towards upright =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b51 =520 \\Customs house receipt for payment of the limen Mempheos on a small shipment of dates being exported through the customs house at Philadelphia =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8953: mounted with P.Princeton II 27 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0623 =090 \\Hib.165 =046 \\$as$b232$d321 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[232/231 BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13.3 x 7.7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken at bottom and left =500 \\The hand is a small cursive =510 \\$aP.Hib. I$b165 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for 11 1/6 artabas of wheat, probably for phylakitikon and iatrikon. Dated Year 16 (of Euergetes) Phaophi 11 =545 \\From Hibeh. Mummy 10 =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4433; P.Hib. 165: Frame 39 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0624 =090 \\Princ. 26 =046 \\$as$c154 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ca. 154 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c13 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\24 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, compact, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b26 =520 \\Shipping receipt in which the kybernetes in command of three boats engaged in the transportation of grain to Alexandria, acknowledges to the sitologoi of Arsinoite Philadelphia the lading of 8627 1/2 artabas of wheat =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8930 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0625 =090 \\Oxy. 613 =046 \\$aq$c155 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ca. 155 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.4 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. III$b613 descriptum =520 \\For one artaba of wheat paid out from the deposit of Diogas, by the silologoi for the topos of Monimou; contains the signature of the recipient =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4406: Frame 24 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0626 =090 \\Oxy. 618 =046 \\$as$c179$e180 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[179-180 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.4 x 5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. III$b618 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for twenty-eight artabas of wheat paid to the public officials =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4410: Frame 29 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0627 =090 \\Oxy. 615 =046 \\$as$c179$e180 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[179-180 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.2 x 16 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; complete =500 \\Two large holes =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. III$b615 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for payment of sixty-five artabas of wheat paid out by the sitologoi of the eastern toparchy =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4407: Frame 26 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0628 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 124, Bell II 218 D =046 \\$aq$c300$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[IV/V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.7 x 7.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive, written with a thick pen =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for one artaba of grain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 218 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 6 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0629 =090 \\Princ. 138 =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c30.3 x 13.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; =500 \\7 lines; complete =500 \\Very many holes, some large =500 \\A space of ca. 19.5 cm. is left blank beneath the text =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b138 =520 \\Receipt for grain paid to Eusebios, ordinarius. by Timotheos on behalf of Anelios, kybernetes =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11237 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0630 =090 \\Princ. 35 =046 \\$as$c161 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ca. 161 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4.5 x 9.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b35 =520 \\Receipt issued by Neilos, son of Mysthos, to Aretion Nasonos for payment of a debt =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8937 =600 \\00$a Aretion Nasonos,$cpresbyteros of the village of Theadelphia: P.Mey. 4.6, 25 =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0631 =090 \\Princ. 141 =046 \\$as$c23 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[23 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15 x 20 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; docket on back =500 \\7 lines; complete =500 \\Some abrasion at right =500 \\Space of 3 cm between the receipt and the signature of the recording officer =500 \\The first hand is a good-sized cursive. The second is a fine, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III $b141 =520 \\Taseus, daughter of Pekysis, with her father acting as guardian, acknowledges the receipt of 300 drachmas of silver and interest. Asklepiades acts as scribe. Recorded by Alexander in charge of the record office of the middle toparchy =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11228 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0632 =090 \\Princ. 34 =046 \\$as$c144 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[August 8th, 144 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\26 lines; broken at top right and at bottom =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b34 =520 \\Horos acknowledges to Ekysis the receipt of a sum which was owed to him by the latter. The transaction appears to cover various debts previously incurred by Ekysis =545 \\From Theadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7655 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0633 =090 \\Oxy. 1132 =046 \\$as$c162 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[162 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.4 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\19 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\Some holes =500 \\The hand is a tiny cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VIII$b1132 =520 \\Chairemon, son of Sarapion, his mother being Taplutas, acknowledges that he has received from Tryphon son of Herakleides, the sum of 600 silver drachmas plus interest which was owed to him. The transaction took place before time, through the bank bank at the Serapeum at Oxyrhynchus, the officials involved being Phanias, ex chief priest and Ptolemaios, both described as the overseers associated with Audasius Paulinus =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4105: Frame 14 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0634 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 B =046 \\$as$c202$e202 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[201/202 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c17.5 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\27 lines; broken at top =500 \\Severe abrasion at top, as well as loss of upper layer of fibers =500 \\The hand is a small, neat cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Acknowledgment of receipt of 600 drachmas plus interest of a drachma per mina per month lent by Chr..ous, son(?) of Amois, his mother being Asklepia, to a man whose mother is Demetrous. Both parties live in the hamlet of Dositheos =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\A. E. Hanson and P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Three Papyri from the Princeton University Collection," ZPE 103 (1994): 48-51, pl. 3 =590 \\E. H. Kase Collection: Frame K 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0635 =090 \\Princ. 81 =046 \\$as$c344 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[344 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.5 cm. 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the back traces of three lines =500 \\18 lines; broken except a t top =500 \\In some lines, 2-3 letters lost at left =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b81 =520 \\Receipt for the repayment of a mixed loan of wheat and money lent to Aurelius Kollouthos by Aurelius Tithoes, son of Tithoes =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\Also published as P. Princ. 181 descriptum =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0636 =090 \\Oxy. 1043 =046 \\$as$c578 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[578 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.6 x 33.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; =500 \\15 lines; complete =500 \\A few holes =500 \\The hand is large, upright and rather angular =510 \\$aP.Oxy. VII$b1043 =520 \\Receipt dated by the eras of Oxyrhyhnchus, for three sextarii of oil. Received through Serenus, collector, by Makarios and Elias and Kamoul =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4123: Frame 21 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0637 =090 \\Hib. 99 =046 \\$aq$b$d =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14.5 x 9 cm =500 \\Written along the fibers; the back is covered by a layer of gesso =500 \\15 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a small cursive =510 \\$aP.Hib. I$b99 =520 \\Receipt for payment of rent, partly in olyra, partly in a money equivalent of wheat, by two farmers. Land appears to be crown land. The protocol contains a mention of the association of the gods Adelphi with Alexander in the Alexandrian cult. Reference to the canephorus of Arsinoe is missing =545 \\From Hibeh, Mummy A17 =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4434: Frame 39 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0638 =090 \\Princ. 17 =046 \\$aq$b199$d100 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II? BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.5 x 6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a clear, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b17 =520 \\Receipt for payment of rent(?), with omologia formula. Written by Papontos son of Nekpheros to Socrates son of Apllonios =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7693 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0639 =090 \\Princ. 37 =046 \\$as$c255$e256 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f 255 and 256 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.5 x 25.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Two columns: col. I, 12 lines, col. II, 12 lines; Col. I complete, col. II broken except at top =500 \\The hand =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b37 =520 \\The text is divided into two columns, in each of which is a separate receipt is recorded. Both receipts are for payment of rent (ekphorion)made on a parcel of land situated near Tanis, a small village a few miles south of Philadelphia. The land is part of a chleros. Aurelious Herakleides, ex-cosmete of Alexandria appears as lessor. The land was leased by Aurelius Patron, Aurelius Asoeis and Aurelius Atammon. The amount of rent paid in the first receipt is not stated, but in the second it is 656 1/2 artabas =545 \\From Tanis =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7624 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0640 =090 \\Oxy. 1325 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.1 x 7.7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive, thickly written =510 \\$aP.Oxy. X$b1325 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for payments of wine made by Anoup and Johannes to Martyrios =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1914-15 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4115: Frame 7 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0641 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell XIVa 11 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.2 x 4.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; broken except at top =500 \\The hand is written in a clear, epistolary style =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for payment received from Dionysios =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVa 11 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0642 =090 \\Princ. 50 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[255 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.5 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a medium-sized, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b50 =520 \\Receipt for 100 drachmas for the annona militum, paid by a high priest, Bitharion. The tax may have been paid to a female tax collector =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Another Female Tax Collector," ZPE 64 (1986): 121-122 =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "P.Princeton II 50 and the Number of Soldiers in Egypt," ZPE 65 (1986): 168 =581 \\B. Palme, N. Lewis, "Notationes Legentis," BASP 27 (1990): 40 =590 \\GD 7687 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0643 =090 \\Hib. 137 =046 \\$as$b244$d243 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[244/43 BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.3 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the back and at the bottom of the text is a layer of gesso, complete with decoration =500 \\10 lines; almost complete =500 \\The hand is a small cursive =510 \\$aP.Hib. I$b137 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for the brewing tax in the amount of eighteen drachmas for the month of Pachon paid by Petosiris, agent of Taembes. At the end are the signature of Dorion and a line of demotic =545 \\From Hibeh, Mummy =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1907 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4435: Frame 34 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0644 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 3D 1 =046 \\$as$c178 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[178 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.5 x 10.1 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken at left: only 3-4 letters lost in each line =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for dike tax for Soknopaiou Nesos in the amount of 7 dr. 4 ob. 2 chalk =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\ =590 \\Kase Collection: Frame K 10 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0645 =090 \\Princ. 94 =046 \\$aq$c600$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6 x 25 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\Two columns: col. I, 5 lines, col. II, 5 lines; broken at left =500 \\Some holes on right-hand side =500 \\The hand is a small, ornate cursive =500 \\One complete receipt, ends of lines of a preceding receipt =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b94 =520 \\Receipt for payment of 2 7/24 carats for tax, the demosia. Could refer to the land tax in particular or public taxes in general. Received by Kollouthos also called Stephanos =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7613 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0646 =090 \\Princ. 93 =046 \\$aq$c600$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5.3 x 10.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b93 =520 \\Receipt for 30 artabas of grain collected for land tax =545 \\From the Hermopolite nome(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\AM 8967 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0647 =090 \\Princ. 90 =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; almost complete but some damage at bottom =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b90 =520 \\Receipt for tax, the merismos. This and P.Princ. 91 were written by the same hand and issued to the same person, Makarios son of Kerekos(?) in different months of the same year, presumably as installments for the tax =545 \\From Kerkesoucha Horous =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7623 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0468 =090 \\Princ. 91 =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6 x 6.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b91 =520 \\Receipt for tax, the merismos. This and P.Princ. 90 were written by the same hand and issued to the same person, Makarios son of Kerekos(?) in different months of the same year, presumably as installments for the tax =545 \\From Kerkesoucha Horous =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7616 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0649 =090 \\Fay. 191 recto =046 \\$as$c78 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[78 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.7 x 8.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a receipt =500 \\4 lines; almost complete but some damage at right =500 \\Several holes =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b191 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for nine(?) obols of copper paid for dike work =545 \\From Bacchias (Umm el 'Atl) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4415: Frame 31 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0650 =090 \\Fay. 191 verso =046 \\$as$c80$e81 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[80/81 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.7 x 8.8 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, a receipt =500 \\11 lines; broken at bottom and right =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b191 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for nine(?) obols of copper paid an unidentified tax =545 \\From Bacchias (Umm el 'Atl) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4415: Frame 31 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0651 =090 \\Fay. 192 =046 \\$as$c135$e136 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[135-6 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.3 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines + traces of ends of 7 lines of a previous column; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b192 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for for various taxes, including dike work =545 \\From Bacchias (Umm el 'Atl) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4416: Frame 29 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0652 =090 \\Princ. 92 =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI-VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; complete =500 \\A large space is left blank beneath the text =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b92 =520 \\Receipt for for one sixth of a solidus paid for poll tax =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\7620 I. J. Poll, K. A. Worp, "Two Princeton Papyri Revisited," BASP 33 1-4 (1996): 73-76 =590 \\GD =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0653 =090 \\Princ. 89 =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4.5. x 15.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b89 =520 \\Receipt for 3 1/2 carats paid for poll tax paid by Dioskoros on behalf of Phoibammon =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7681 A =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0654 =090 \\Princ. 43 =046 \\$as$c141 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f141 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.5 x 34 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; complete =500 \\Right side effaced =500 \\Three columns, each of 5 lines; =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b43 =520 \\Three receipts for payment of twenty drachmas each from three brothers, Chairemon, Herakles(?) and Diodoros for poll tax. All have the same father, Chairemon; The mother of Herakles and Diodoros is Apia, Chairemon's mother being Diodora =545 \\From Arsinoe =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7615 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0655 =090 \\Princ. 45 =046 \\$as$174 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[174 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back bank =500 \\7 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b45 =520 \\Receipt for 20 drachmas, 10 obols received as poll tax from a resident of the Macedonian quarter of Arsinoe, Polios Horos, son of Pathermouthios, his mother being Taeus =545 \\From Arsinoe =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0656 =090 \\Princ. 47 =046 \\$as$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 16.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, a letter =500 \\8 lines; some damage at top =500 \\The hand is a large, rapid cursive, thickly written =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b47 =520 \\Receipt for 44 drachmas paid in several installments for the poll tax. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8932 verso: mounted with P.Princeton 26 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0657 =090 \\Fay. 356 =046 \\$as$c132 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[132 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; almost complete =500 \\The papyrus is dark and has several large holes =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b356 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for 20 drachmas, 10 obols for the poll tax of the seventeenth year =545 \\From Theadelphia (Harit) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1105: Frame 6 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0658 =090 \\Fay. 354 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; broken at left and top =500 \\The papyrus is dark and has several large holes =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b354 descriptum =520 \\Receipt for 20 drachmaas, 10 obols for the poll tax paid by Zosimos =545 \\From Theadelphia (Harit) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1104: Frame 6 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0659 =090 \\Princ. 44 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.5 x 11.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b44 =520 \\Receipt for 12 drachmas, 1 1/2 obols, 2 chalci received in partial payment of the poll tax, together with smaller sums paid on various taxes =545 \\From the Fayum =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7649 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0660 =090 \\Princ. 48 =046 \\$as$c206 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[206 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is a good-sized rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b48 =520 \\Receipt for 20 drachmas as payment for the tax imposed upon calves offered for sacrifice =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7630 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0661 =090 \\Princ. 41 =046 \\$as$c50 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[50 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 13.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b41 =520 \\Receipt for 60 drachmas, 2 obols, 2 chalci for payment of trades' tax. The trade for which the tax was paid is not specified. An additional payment of 3 drachmas, 3 obols is also recorded, evidently representing a subsequent installment of the same tax =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8916 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0662 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7638A =046 \\$as$c171 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[171 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.2 x 8.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\Some damage along vertical fold lines =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for an unknown tax =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 83 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0663 =090 \\Fay. 166 =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c5.4 x 5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; complete(?) or perhaps broken at right =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b166 =520 \\Receipt for harbor tax for persons leaving the Fayum =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1102: Frame 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0664 =090 \\Princ. 49 =046 \\$as$c216$e217 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[216/217 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.5 x 5.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\11 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b49 =520 \\Receipt for three-sixteenths of an artaba of barley issued by the grain collectors. The barley may have part of a special requisition destined for the army massed in Syria for Caracalla's war against Parthia =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\N. Lewis, "NOHMATA LEGONTOS," BASP 4.1 (1967): 15 =590 \\GD 7669 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0665 =090 \\Princ. 52 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aAccount$f[III AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c18 x 12 and 11 x 6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso of both fragments, an account =500 \\Frag. (a) 14 lines; frag. (b) 12 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is an upright, compact cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b52 =520 \\Account for payments of taxes listing names and amounts paid in money =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7676 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0666 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 2 B =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4.5 x 3.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for tax (?). Contains a signature by Plenis and resembles receipts on ostraka from the same period (cf. O.Mich. I, II, III) =545 \\From Karanis =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 2 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0667 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 2 C =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c3.6 x 3.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for tax (?). Related to Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 2 B =545 \\From Karanis(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 2 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0668 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell X 86 D =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22.5 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\23 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive =500 \\Signed by a slow writer =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for tax for a 12th indiction. The recipient is a priest (presbyteros) and his name might have been Sonsneus =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. X 86 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0669 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7710 A =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReciept$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.4 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; traces of a docket on back =500 \\6 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for tax payment =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 95 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Some Byzantine Papyri from the Princeton Collection," JJP 20 (1990); 129-138 =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0670 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 24 D =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c6.2 x 5.3 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt for unloading of a river boat =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\Published as MA 13395 D in Bruce Kraut, "Certificate of Unloading of a River-Boat," ZPE 51 (1983): 75-76 =590 \\Small flat box 7 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0671 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7726 B =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.4 x 4.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is a fine, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 214 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0672 =090 \\Princ. 133 =046 \\$as$c303 =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[303 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c26 x 10.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\17 lines; broken at right. =500 \The left side is frayed =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =500 \\A space of 10 cm. is left blank beneath the text =510 \\$aP.Princ. $b =520 \\Receipt for 3,000 drachmas from the public bank at Oxyrhynchus made out to Aurelia Sintotoe also called Alitarion. The managers of the bank are named as Aurelius Ptolmion, exegete, and Aurelius Hereaklianos also called Morion chief priest =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7738 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0673 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7713 =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c18.4 x 13.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\The papyrus is dark and has very many holes =500 \\The hand is a fine, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 218 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0674 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 6 E verso =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 15 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto an effaced text =500 \\5 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is an upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt?; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0675 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7700 A =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.8 x 10.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken at top and bottom =500 \\The hand is tiny and compressed =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt. Dated 21st of an unknown month; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 210 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0676 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7721 D =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a) 10 x 5.5 cm. (b) 8.2 x 5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Frag. (a) 5 lines, frag. (b) 2 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a small, fine cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipts?: text consists of sets of 2-3 lines separated by a space of ca. 2 cm. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 170 Pt 1 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0677 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell XIVa 5 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReceipt$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.9 x 11.3 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken except at right =500 \\The hand is an upright rapid cursive. Chi and lambda are very large =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Receipt; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIVa in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ GD 9563: small flat box 5 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0678 =090 \\Princ. 1 =046 \\$as$c24$e25 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aAccount$f[24-25 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c30 x 33.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Four columns: col. I, 30 lines; col. II, 27 lines; col. III, 19 lines; col. IV, 19 lines; =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; the same scribe wrote P.Princ. 1-6 and P. Cornell 21 =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b1 =520 \\Daybook of arrears for payments of a tax, probably the syntaximon. Dated in the eleventh year of an unnamed emperor, in all probability Tiberius. Each entry consists of a name. patronymic and an amount =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0679 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell IX 13 A =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c17 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, 3 lines of text =500 \\7 lines; broken at right and bottom(?) =500 \\In the margin, 2 lines of shorthand =500 \\The hand is upright, angular and compact =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Register for expenses or contributions listed by villages or epoikia. In each case the agent is the local steward (pronoetes) of the large estate =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. IX 13 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0680 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7657 recto =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.8 x 10.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a document =500 \\12 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Traces of one preceding and one following column =500 \\Some holes on the left side =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Land register?; content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 91 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0681 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 8935 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11 x 6.8 cm. =500 \\Written on both sides of the papyrus but texts not related =500 \\14 lines recto; 10 lines verso; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand on the recto is an upright, fluent cursive: that on the verso is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Land register. =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton II 35 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0682 =090 \\Princ. 134 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a) 12 x 30 cm. (b) 12 x 6 cm. =500 \\Two fragments, containing 4 columns. Column (iv) was not published in ed. pr. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\The papyrus is dark =500 \\Col. I, 9 lines; col. II, 10 lines; col. III, 9 lines; col. IV, 8 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\Column (iv) published only in P.Sakaon 4 =500 \\The hand is a clear cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b134 =510 \\$aP.Sakaon$b4 =520 \\Land register which lists names and amounts of both crown and private land =545 \\From Theadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7932 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0683 =090 \\Princ. 136 =046 \\$aq$c300$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aAccount$f[IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment; $c20 x 18 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; the text continues on the back across the fibers =500 \\11 lines recto; 13 lines verso; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is large, with many flourishes and should belong to the second half of the century =500 \\This papyrus was found the be the upper part of a document, the lower part being in the collection of Columbia University; together the pieces are almost complete =500 \\Photo of this papyrus together with P. Columbia inv. 108b, the lower half of the complete text, is placed next to P.Princeton III 135 =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b135 =510 \\$aP.Col. VIII$b238, publication of the complete text =520 \\Private account of parcels of land, arranged by cultivator, probably listing rents; the crops are barley, wheat and flax; these are the accounts of a large estate =545 \\From the Oxyrhynchite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0684 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell III 115 A =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.6 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\7 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Some effacement at top =500 \\The hand is a large, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Register of payments; purpose unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 115 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 10 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0685 =090 \\Oxy. 333 =046 \\$as$c89$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[24 August, 89 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21.3 x 10.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines; complete but defaced in parts =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. II$b333 descriptum =520 \\Notice from Zenon o the agoranomos to register the sale of a house(?) sold for 700 silver drachmas or 52 talents 3,000 drachmas of copper; at the end, a docket =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1098: Frame 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0686 =090 \\Princ. 84 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[V? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c17.5 x 16.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the verso, a Coptic text =500 \\14 lines; broken at right and top =500 \\The hand is a very large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b84 =520 \\Sale of a house and contents; the vendors, Serenus and Euphemia, acknowledge the receipt of the purchase price; each states a different amount, probably because each is acknowledging their share of the amount; the total is 21 solidi; Serenus signed himself, in a crude hand, but Kollouthos wrote for Euphemia =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7887 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0687 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 15960 3A 2 =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand is a fine, sloping cursive; a second hand is a larger, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Sale of property in Ibion Argaiou; includes the name Aurelius Harpokration =545 \\From the Arsinoite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University in 1957 by Edmund H. Kase in memory of Professor Allan Chester Johnson =581 \\Published as AM 15960 A (2) by P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Fragmentary Papyri in the University of Princeton Collection," Aegyptus 70 (1-2) (1989): 33-41 =590 \\Kase Collection: Frame K 7 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0688 =090 \\Oxy. 332 =046 \\$as$c89 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[ca. 89 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7 x 8.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\Written in a small, oval hand which uses few ligatures =510 \\$aP.Oxy. II$b332 =520 \\Sale of the third part of a slave, Sarapos, aged fourteen =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1097: Frame 3 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0689 =090 \\Princ. 85 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[V? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24.5 x 17 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the verso, an account =500 \\22 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand is a very large, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ.II$b85 =520 \\Sale of a slave; the name Johannes is mentioned as well as a reference to (his?) children =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7658 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0690 =090 \\Princ. 2 =046 \\$as$c25 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f25 [ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 52.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; text on the back published as P.Princ. 11 =500 \\Seven columns: col. I, 8 lines; col. II, 2 lines; col. III, 32 lines; col. IV, 28(?) lines; col. V, 37 lines; col. VI, 30 lines; col. VII, 31 lines; =500 \\Columns I-IV greatly damaged and effaced; some effacement to the remaining columns; very many holes =500 \\This papyrus joins with P. Corn. 21: col. IV of P.Princ. 2 is the top portion of col. I of P.Corn. 21 and col. VII of P.Princ. 2 is the top portion of col. II of P.Corn. 21 =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; same hand as P.Princ. 1, 3-6 and P. Corn. 21 =510 \\$aP.Princ. Ib2 =510 \\$aCPJ II$b416, (Col. III, ll. 10, 12, 13, 24) =520 \\Register for payment of the syntaximon; entries are recorded daily and list name, patronymic and amount paid =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8913 recto; oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0691 =090 \\Princ. 4 =046 \\$aq$c20$e33 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 20-33 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\5 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; the same scribe wrote P.Princ. 1-6 and P. Cornell 21 =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b4 =520 \\Record of a single day's payments of the syntaximon; this fragment differs from the other associated Princeton tax registers in that the scribe, in giving the total of daily receipts added up the payments for the syntaximon and then added the payments for the pig tax as well =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8920 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0692 =090 \\Princ. 3 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c23 x 22 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; verso published as P.Princ. 12 =500 \\Three columns: col. I, 3 lines; col. II, 28 lines; col. III, 15 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; the same scribe wrote P.Princ. 1-6 and P. Cornell 21=510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b3 =520 \\Register for payment of the syntaximon; entries are recorded daily and list name, patronymic and amount paid =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8921 recto =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0693 =090 \\Princ. 5 =046 \\$aq$c20$e33 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 20-33 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c14 x 12 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Three columns: col. I, 6 lines; col. II, 19 lines; col. III, 15 lines; broken exxcept at top =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; the same scribe wrote P.Princ. 1-6 and P. Cornell 21 =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b5 =520 \\Register for payment of the syntaximon; entries are recorded daily and list name, patronymic and amount paid =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8922 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0694 =090 \\Princ. 6 =046 \\$aq$c20$e33 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 20-33 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; recto published as P.Princ. 7 =500 \\Two columns: col. I, 28 lines; col. II, 22 lines; broken at both sides and at top? =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive; the same scribe wrote P.Princ. 1-6 and P. Cornell 21 =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b6 =520 \\Register for payment of the syntaximon; entries are recorded daily and list name, patronymic and amount paid =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8922 A verso =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0695 =090 \\Princ. 7 =046 \\$aq$c20$e33 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 20-33 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; verso published as P.Princ. 6 =500 \\Two columns: col. I, traces 12 lines; col. II, 22 lines; broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b7 =520 \\Register of payments for the syntaximon; entries contain a name. date and amount paid, in each case installments of 4 drachmas, or multiples of 4; a space of two lines was left under each name for the record of his payments, which were entered by a second clerk; the names are not arranged alphabetically ant the record is probably that of a street or quarter of Philadelphia; there are twelve names in all; check marks are beside the five names of those who have paid in full =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8922 A recto =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ x LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0696 =090 \\Princ. 14 =046 \\$aq$c40$e41 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 40/41 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c27.5 x 47 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Five columns: col. I, 29 lines; col. II, 29 lines; col. III, 35 lines; col. IV, 29 lines; col. V, 23 lines; complete =500 \\Quite a few holes, especially in the bottom half =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b14 =520 \\Tax register, possibly for the poll tax; entries consist of a name, patronymic and a payment in the amount of 45 drachmas, 2 obols, the combined total paid for the laographia and pig tax; the arrangement of the list is topographical and entries refer to estates; the register is a record of Philadelphians residing outside the village; two systems of checking are found: a single stroke is drawn under the name at the left of the entry in most cases but in others a stroke resembling a quarter circle is found at the left of the name =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\A. E. Hanson, "Lists of Taxpayers from Philadelphia (P.Mich. inv. 879 and P.Princ. I 14)," ZPE 15 (1974): 229-248 =590 \\AM 8910: oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0697 =090 \\Princ. 8 =046 \\$aq$c27$e32 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[ca. 27-32 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 166 cm =500 \\Written along the fibers; verso published as P.Princ. 13 =500 \\Ten columns: col. I, 28 lines; col. II, 27 lines; col. III, 29 lines; col. IV, 21 lines; col. V, 30 lines; col. VI, 28 lines; col. VII, 13 lines; col. VIII, 24 lines; col. IX, 12 lines; col. X, 21 lines; complete =500 \\The papyrus was rolled up while the ink was still wet and many lines are blotted =500 \\Some holes; col. I affected by surface peeling; col. VI has holes at the bottom =500 \\The hand is a fine, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b8 =520 \\Tax register for payments for the syntaximon; entries include name, patromymic, metronymic and age; usually twelve names were entered in each column and a space of about 2 lines was left under the name for the record of payments, which were entered by a different clerk; names are not arranged alphabetically but family groupings suggest that the arrangement was topographical and that the register is of a quarter or tax-precinct of Philadelphia =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8917 recto: oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0698 =090 \\Princ. 9 =046 \\$as$c31 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[31 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 76.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; verso published as P.Princ. 10 =500 \\Seven columns: col. I, 26 lines; col. II, 36 lines; col. III, 24 lines; col. IV, 27 lines; col. V, 28 lines; col. VI, 29 lines; col. VII, 12 lines; =500 \\Col. V severely damaged; only marginal notations of col. VII remain =500 \\The hand =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b9 =520 \\Tax register for payments of the syntaximon for the year 29-30 AD; names are arranged alphabetically with name, patronymic and occupation or some other descriptive epithet; on an average, twelve names were entered in each column; the roll has a series of checks and marginal notations; two sloping parallel indicate that payment has been made in full; before several names a single dot appears, perhaps indicating that the entry had been checked against that in a day book; marginal notations indicate persons who have fled and those who are exempt from taxation =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8912 recto: oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0699 =090 \\Princ. 10 =046 \\$as$c34 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[34 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 77 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; recto published as P.Princ. 9 =500 \\Eight columns : col. I, 32 lines; col. II, 32 lines; col. III, 31 lines; col. IV, 31 lines; col. V, 32 lines; col. VI, 29 lines; col. VII, 32 lines; col. VIII, 31 lines; complete, but part of a larger roll =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b10 =520 \\Register of payment of the syntaximon; payments are of 4 or multiples of 4 drachmas; the total of each day's receipt was given in the margin at the left; the names were unchecked, but in col. V. 14, 17-22, 25-28 the amounts were checked by a short vertical stroke above the sum; entries consist of name, patronymic and an amount =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8912 verso: oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0700 =090 \\Princ. 11 =046 \\$as$c35 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[After August 30, 35 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 52.5 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, P.Princ. 2 =500 \\Three columns: col. I, 18 lines; col. II, 8 lines; col. III, 4 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =500 \\Text is only on the right-hand side and starts halfway down the papyrus =500 \\This papyrus joins with P.Corn. 21 verso =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b11 =510 \\$aSB XVI$b12632 =520 \\Register of arrears owed for the syntaximon and the dike tax in years 19, 20 and 21 of Tiberius by taxpayers whose idia was Philadelphia, but who were currently away from the village =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\A. E. Hansen, "P.Princeton I 11 and P.Cornell 21v," ZPE 37 (1980): 241-248 =590 \\AM 8913 verso : oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0701 =090 \\Princ. 12 =046 \\$as$c35 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[35 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c21 x 18 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, P.Princ. 3 =500 \\Two columns: col. I, 9 lines; col. II, 4 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. I$b12 =520 \\Two short columns written on the verso of a longer tax register (P.Princ. 3); register of arrears in payment of the poll tax for the 19, 20 and 21st years of Tiberius; another scribe used the bottom for a record which resembles the day books of the syntaximon (col. II) =545 \\From Philadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 8921 verso =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0702 =090 \\Princ. 173 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16.6 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, P.Princ. 165 =500 \\21 lines; broken except at right =500 \\Faint traces of a second column =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b173 descriptum =520 \\Tax register; list of names with only the patronymics preserved; of the nineteen people on the list four pay 5 drachmas, eleven pay 6 drachmas and three pay 8 drachmas =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0703 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7933 B recto =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c20.7 x 11.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, traces of an account =500 \\24 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\Several large holes =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Register; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton III 122 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0704 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11236 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegister$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a)11 x 8.9 cm., (b) 9.9 x 2.1 cm. =500 \\The fragment mounted on the left may belong on the right hand side but is not contiguous with the larger fragment =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Parts of two-three columns: col. I, 4 lines; col. II, 13 lines; col. III?, 4 lines; =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =500 \\Small amounts of gold leaf adhere to both sides of the papyrus =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Register. Short entries, possibly dates (eis b, eis d) follow groups of ca. 6 lines of text. On the verso are five short lines of what appear to be calculations =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0705 =090 \\Princ. 140 =046 \\$aq$c600$e699 =100 \\ =245 \\00$aRegister$f[VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c(a) 15.8 x 17.3 cm. (b) 19.4 x 17.2 cm. =500 \\Both sides written transversa charta; broken top and bottom =500 \\Two fragments from a sheet which join together with little loss of text =500 \\'Verso', col. I, 45 lines, col. II, 47 lines; recto, col. I, 35 lines, col. II, 42 lines =500 \\Frag. (b): verso =500 \\The hand on the 'recto' is a carefully executed minuscule; that on the 'verso' is a slightly more cursive style =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b140 =510 \\SB 20.14282 =520 \\Tax Register? Concerns some kind of assessment based on (landed?) property for taxation =545 \\From Apollinapolis Ano (Edfu) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\K. A. Worp, "P.Princ 140 Re-edited," BASP 24 (3-4) (1987): 111-124; K. A. Worp, "Additional Remarks on P. Princeton III 140," BASP 27 (1990): 109-110 =590 \\GD 7652 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0706 =090 \\Princ. 24 =046 \\$as$c21 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegistration$f[21 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c33 x 6.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, P. Princ. 55 =500 \\27 lines; broken at right =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b24 =520 \\Registration of live stock, sheep and goats, for the current year; addressed to the strategos of the Oxyrhynchite nome, whose name may be Chaereas; presented to the toparch Sarapion who functions in a similar capacity in P.Oxy, 351 =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7640 recto =600 \\00$aSarapion,$ctoparch in P.Oxy. 351 =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0707 =090 \\Princ. 28 =046 \\$as$c219 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegistration$f[219 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19.5 x 8.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank except for a large blot of ink =500 \\30 lines; broken at top and bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b28 =520 \\Registration of live stock, covering a flock of 15 sheep, 10 lambs and 3 goats for the year 218/219; it would appear that an identical return had been made in the previous year; the flock subsequently suffered a loss of 10 sheep, which was balanced by the birth of 10 lambs; the lambs of the previous year were numbered among the sheep of the current year =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7659 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0708 =090 \\Oxy. 241 =046 \\$as$c98 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRegistration$f[ca. 98 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c19.3 x 6.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\35 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Oxy. $b =520 \\Registration of a mortgage addressed to an agoranomos by Caecilius Clemens, an official whose status is not specified; the mortgage is made out to Thonis, chief bearer in the temple of Thoeris and Isis and Sarapis and Osiris, on the security of the third part of a house situated in the Gymnasium square quarter and mortgaged to him by his brother Thomphuas; to this notification is added a banker's certificate that the tax on sales and mortgages had been paid =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University by the Egypt Exploration Society, 1901 =581 \\ =590 \\AM 1095: Frame 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0709 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7931 =046 \\$aq$c500$e699 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aRelease$f[VI/VII AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c28 x 13.2 cm. =500 \\Written the fibers; on the verso, a docket =500 \\20 lines; broken at left =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive, tending towards upright =500 \\The papyrus is dark and brittle; broken on 12 horizontal fold lines, perhaps the result of a roll being flattened =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Release from a property contract(?), signed by one person =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 157 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0710 =090 \\Princ. 124 =046 \\$as$c130$e131 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[130/131 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c17.5 x 12.7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\19 lines; broken at bottom =500 \\Written in a clear semi-uncial hand =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b124 =520 \\Report concerning status for assessment of taxes; some citizens had been registered as metropolitans until the 15th year of Hadrian but apparently been unable to prove their right to this classification in proceedings held before the strategos =545 \\From the Arsinoite nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7739 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0711 =090 \\Princ. 21 =046 \\$as$c236$e237 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[236-237 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11 x 11 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, an account =500 \\8 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a compact, upright cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b21 =520 \\Report of receipts and expenditures submitted by the strategos to another official, perhaps the epistrategos of the Delta region =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987):143-148 =590 \\GD 7639 =600 \\00$aAurelius Eudaimon,$cstrategos of the Alexandrian chora, 236/237 =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0712 =090 \\Princ. 127 =046 \\$as$c159$e160 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[159/160 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c12.6 x 10.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\Some damage to top half =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b127 =520 \\Report of laographoi supplementing a list of men recorded in the house-to house census of the 23rd year of Antoninus =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Short Remarks on Some Papyri," Aegyptus 65 (1985): 30 =590 \\GD 7926 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0713 =090 \\Princ. 16 =046 \\$as$b158 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[158? BC] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22 x 18.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\22 lines; broken except at right (traces of a preceding column) =500 \\The hand is an upright, clear cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b16 =520 \\Portion of an official record of a trial held in the court of the chrematistai, sitting in Crocodilopolis; details of the case remains obscure but it seems that someone connected with the case had been instructed on the thirteenth of Mecheir, in the twenty-third year of an unnamed ruler, to appear in court on the same day to attend the hearing of the case; his appearance in court was prevented, however, by the fact that on the same day he was occupied in taking a letter from the praktor in Crocodilopolis to the epistates in the village of Philadelphia =545 \\From the Fayum =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0714 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7673 A =046 \\$aq$c500$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.6 x 9.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; docket on back, also written along the fibers =500 \\5 lines; broken at both sides =500 \\The hand is a large, fluent cursive; signed in a very large cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Report of legal proceedings; bilingual, Latin & Greek; the presiding magistrate bore the name of Nikomedes; docket or on the back includes the name Phoibammon =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek and Latin =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 226 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0715 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 11228 C =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c10.5 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\13 lines; broken except at right? =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =500 \\The papyrus is very frayed and dirty =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Report of legap proceedings; content uncertain =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0716 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, H. I. Bell XVIII 32 recto =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[II/III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.8 x 8.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a document =500 \\7 lines; broken except at right? =500 \\The hand is an upright, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Report of legal proceedings involving immovable property(?) =545 \\From Umm el-Breigat(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XVIII 32 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Small flat box 2 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0717 =090 \\Princ. 130 =046 \\$as$c198$e209 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[198-209 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.5 x 10 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\20 lines; broken at top and right =500 \\The hand is a tiny, rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b130 =520 \\Report of tax collectors of the poll tax recording payments made in multiples of 4 drachmas; mentions the village of Thonis =545 \\From Oxyrhynchus(?) =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7654 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0718 =090 \\Princ. 132 =046 \\$aq$c100$e199 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c20 x 7 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\34 lines; broken at right and bottom =500 \\The hand is a fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b132 =520 \\Report of tax overseers; entries include payment for taxes on Syrian wool, shepherds, an Egyptian drug; entries are listed under geographic headings which include the villages Psenephtha, Phenyletheines, the city of Isis =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 11242 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0719 =090 \\Princ. 128 =046 \\$aq$c164 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[post 163/4 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.5 x 7.5 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken at bottom and left, but only 2-3 letters are missing from the beginnings of lines =500 \\The hand is a small, fluent cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b128 =520 \\Report of a village scribe to the board of plerotae, submitting names of tenants who have sublet land from Heron, son of Mystharion =545 \\From Theadelphia =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7926 C =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0720 =090 \\Princ. 182 =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c 8 x 13.7 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\8 lines; broken except at top =500 \\Written in a large, sloping epistolary hand =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b182 descriptum =520 \\Official report; content unclear, but a debt may be involved =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Corrections on Some Princeton Papyri," ZPE 68 (1987): 143-148 =590 \\GD 7886 B =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0721 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7650 A =046 \\$aq$c1$e99 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aReport$f[I AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.9 x 4.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\10 lines; broken except at left =500 \\The hand is a good-sized, fluent cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Report which mentions a registry office, Theadelphia and a farmer =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XVIII 59 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ 722 LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0722 =090 \\Fay. 239 =046 \\$as$c176 =100 \\ =245 \\00$aReturn$f[176 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c2.5 x 7.3 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\16 lines; broken at bottom and right =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Fay.$b239 descriptum =520 \\Return of receipts for an unknown month, addressed to Flavius Apollonius, strategos of the Heraklides division of the Arsinoite nome, from the praktor =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\AM 4420; Frame 31 =600 \\00$Flavius Apollonius,$c strategos of the Heraklides division of the Arsinoite nome =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0723 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 2 A =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[III AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a) 17.5 x 15.2 cm. (b) 11.2 x 5.9 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Frag. (a) 20 lines; frag. (b) 13 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Frag. (a): top frayed and some of the upper layer of fibers is missing =500 \\The hand is a condensed cursive, tending towards upright =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Sale of a piece of property, probably land; fragment (b), in two hands, probably shows the signatures of the contracting parties =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 2 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Large flat box 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0724 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7677 C =046 \\$aq$c200$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSale$f[III AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.4 x 4.1 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\9 lines; broken on both sides =500 \\The hand is a small, upright cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Sale; content unclear =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\Mounted with P.Princeton II 81 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0725 =090 \\Princ. inv. AM 13395 11 A recto and verso =046 \\$aq$c300$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSchool exercise?$f[IV/V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c7.2 x 31.2 cm. =500 \\Written on both sides of the papyrus =500 \\Recto: 10 lines: 1 line original document, 9 lines school exercise =500 \\Verso: 9 lines: 6 lines original document, 3 lines school exercise =500 \\The hand of the document is a large, fluent cursive; the shorthand is fine and small =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Documentary text later used for a school exercise, to practice shorthand; the original document is written in brown ink, the school exercise in black ink =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Given to Princeton University, in 1947 by Mrs. Charles A. Askren of Tacoma, Washington =581 \\ =590 \\Three contiguous fragments previously recorded as 11 A, B, C =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0726 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7522 =046 \\$aq$c400$e499 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTachygraph$f[V AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8.8 x 26.1 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; complete? =500 \\Some dirt on surface =500 \\The shorthand is written in a large hand as is the Greek text =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Shorthand document, with Greek text at left =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. III 26 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0727 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell III 92 B =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTachygraph$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c22.3 x 7.6 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\18 lines; broken at left =500 \\Written in a small, fine hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Shorthand document =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 92 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Medium flat box 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0728 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell II 45 B =046 \\$aq$c400$e599 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTachygraph$f[V/VI AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c16 x 29.2 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, also written along the fibers, a document =500 \\5 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Written in a good-sized hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Shorthand document =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. II 45 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\Oversize flat box 1 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0729 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit 1924, Bell XVIII 78 B verso =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTachygraph$f[II/III? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c15.4 x 10.4 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the recto, a document =500 \\5 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\Written in a small hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Shorthand document =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0730 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7705 B =046 \\$aq$c100$e299 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTachygraph$f[II/III? AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c4.1 x 9.8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\4 lines; broken except at left =500 \\Written in a small, fine hand =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Shorthand document =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 65 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0731 =090 \\Princ. 119 =046 \\$aq$c$e =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSpeech$f[ca 325 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c24.5 x 63 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\Col. I (marginal summary), 24 lines; col. II, 26 lines; col. III, 26 lines; col. IV, 7 lines; complete =500 \\The hand is a good-sized, fluent cursive; the summary in the margin is in a small, cramped hand =500 \\Published as a petition in ed. pr =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b119 =510 \\$aSB XII$b10989 =520 \\Rhetorical presentation of a case at law, which contains a summary of the speech in the left margin; the case involves a parcel of land owned by Theon and used for planting grain and for vineyard; the plaintiff, Dioskoros, represented by his son Makrobios, charges tax evasion and his claim centers on the vineyard which he claims is unregistered for tax purposes; the defendants claim that the land is registered but offer no evidence to this effect =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\A. E. Hanson, "Memorandum and Speech of an Advocate," ZPE 8 (1971): 15-27 =590 \\GD 7531: oversize =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0732 =090 \\Princ. 172 =046 \\$aq$c100$e164 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSurvey$f[first half II AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c20 x 15 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; on the verso, a much effaced text, probably written by the scribe who wrote the text on the recto =500 \\24 lines; broken at top? =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. III$b172 descriptum =510 \\$aSB XVIII$b14068 =520 \\Land survey =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, "P.Princeton III 172 Reconsidered," ZPE 70 (1987): 139-142 =590 \\AM 11233 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ 700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0734 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7641 =046 \\$aq$c225$e275 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSurvey$f[mid III AD] =300 \\$a2 papyrus fragments;$c(a) 13 x 15.5 cm. (b) 15 x 14.1 cm. =500 \\Written on both sides of the papyrus: the text on the verso is upside-down in relation to the text on the recto =500 \\Recto: (a) 10 lines, (b) 11 lines; verso: (a) 6 lines, (b) 12 lines =500 \\The hand is a rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Land survey; entries list the name of the person to whom the land is registered and the name of the person responsible for the payments of rent or taxes on this land; several categories of land situated in different chleroi of the Oxyrhynchite nome are involved; each column consists of several entries separated by a blank space of differing size =545 \\From the Oxyrhynchite Nome =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. XIV B 32 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\P. J. Sijpesteijn, K. A. Worp, "A survey of land," ZPE 70 (1987): 128-132 =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0735 =090 \\Princ. inv. GD 7706 C verso =046 \\$aq$c200$e399 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aSurvey$f[III-IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c11.1 x 3.7 cm. =500 \\Written across the fibers; on the recto, a document =500 \\13 lines; broken on all sides =500 \\The hand is a small, compact cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Survey or account? =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1926, no. II 70 in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\ =590 \\ =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0736 =090 \\Princ. inv. Garrett Deposit NS 8 =046 \\$aq$cIII$eIV =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aTable$f[III/IV AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c9.1 x 8 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; back blank =500 \\15 lines; broken except at bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, rapid cursive =510 \\$a$b =520 \\Table of fractions; all the numbers, not just the fractions, are characterized as such by a small oblique slash above them =545 \\ =546 \\In Greek =561 \\Garrett Deposit 1924, no. in H. I. Bell's inventory =581 \\Published as GD 9556 P. J. Sijpesteijn, "Varia Papyrologica II," ZPE 81 (1990); 245-251 =590 \\Small flat box 4 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\ LDR \\ =001 \\apis.p0737 =090 \\Princ. 38 =046 \\$as$c264 =100 \\$a =245 \\00$aWill$f[ca. 264 AD] =300 \\$a1 papyrus fragment;$c8 x 27 cm. =500 \\Written along the fibers; verso published as P.Princ. 174 =500 \\13 lines; broken at left and bottom =500 \\The hand is a small, sloping cursive =510 \\$aP.Princ. II$b38 =520 \\Will drawn up in the Roman form by Aurelia Serenilla, also called Demetria, who names her mother as heir; her sons are declared to be disinherited; bequests of land are made to her husband who also acts as kyrios, as well as to the man who acts as her kourator =545 \\From Hermopolis =546 \\In Greek =561 \\ =581 \\ =590 \\GD 7645 A recto: mounted with P.Princeton II 30 =600 \\00$a,$c =653 \\ =700 \\