Calendars in Antiquity. Empires, States, and Societies

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period of Ptolemaic control.^84 This inscription only proves that the Egyptian
calendar was known to whoever wrote it, but not that this was the calendar
that even he himself used.^85
The case of Samos reminds us that the spread of the Egyptian calendar in
the Ptolemaic Empire was by no means ubiquitous. Nevertheless, it is signifi-
cant that Egyptian dating is not attested anywhere outside the possessions of
the Ptolemaic Empire.^86 The spread of this calendar in the Mediterranean was
clearly contingent on Ptolemaic rule.


Libya Cyrenaica

The Egyptian civil calendar already makes itsfirst appearance in the city of
Cyrene under Ptolemy I Soter (inSEG9. 1). It was used there continuously
through the Ptolemaic period, although the Ptolemaic Macedonian calendar
was sometimes used along with it.^87 By the Roman period, and apparently
until the end of Antiquity, the Egyptian civil calendar—now, presumably,
adapted to the new Alexandrian calendar—seems to have become completely
standard.^88
The Egyptian calendar is also well attested in other cities of Lybia Cyrenaica
in the Roman period, e.g. Ptolemais and especially Tocra.^89 In the city of
Berenike, two substantial Jewish inscriptions from the latefirst centuryBCEor
earlyfirst centuryCEare dated according to the Egyptian calendar.^90 The use of
the Egyptian calendar by Jews—whose own religious calendar was otherwise
lunar, as can be demonstrated from these very inscriptions^91 —demonstrates


(^84) See e.g. Hallof (2000) nos. 82, 151, 169, 172, Michel (1900) 738–9 no. 899, Samuel (1972)
120 – 1.
(^85) In actual fact, the omission of Choiak in this list of months may suggest poor knowledge of
the Egyptian calendar.
(^86) According toCILviii. 17584, the Egyptian date‘4 Choiak 269’appears in a fragmentary
mosaicfloor from late Roman Byzacena (present-day Tunisia), i.e. well beyond the geographical
area of the earlier Ptolemaic Empire. The reading of this inscription, however, is very uncertain.
The meaning of 269 is also unclear, as a long era is not known to have been used in Africa in the
late Roman period. 87
Double datings appear in inscriptions from Cyrene of 155BCE(SEG9. 7) and 108BCE(SEG



  1. 5, l. 60; for this year—better than 161BCE—see Bennett http://www.tyndalehouse.com/Egypt/
    ptolemies/chron/chronology.htm
    ). The latter also mentions (in l. 45) the Greek month-name of
    Theudaisios, which is presumably local and pre-Ptolemaic (it is well attested in other ancient
    Greek calendars: see Samuel 1972: 297).


(^88) SEG9..4 (16/15BCE), 244 (112CE), 246 (20CE), 267 (late 3rd c.CE), and 286 (?);SEG52:
1841 – 2 (1st c.CE).
(^89) Ptolemais:SEG9. 375, 379. Tocra: ibid. 467, 557–723, and the Jewish tombstones inSEG



  1. 877–929.


(^90) SEG16. 931; Reynolds (1981) 244–7 (nos. 17–18). For the precise dating of these inscrip-
tions, see Stern (2001) 58 91 – 61, 120–1.
Stern (2001) 120–1. On Jewish Diaspora calendars, see Ch. 6.
192 Calendars in Antiquity

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