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Households in Context: Index

Households in Context
Index
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Preface and Acknowledgments
  2. List of Contributors
  3. Note on Abbreviations
  4. Introduction: Houses, Households, and Homes: Toward an Archaeology of Dwelling
  5. Part I Households in Spatial Context: Settlements, Neighborhoods, and Urbanism
    1. 1. Egyptian Houses in Their Urban and Environmental Contexts: Some Case Studies of the Roman and Late Roman Periods
    2. 2. Neighborhood Networks: The Civic and Social Organization of Accessways in Ancient Karanis
    3. 3. The Tower Houses of the Hellenistic Period: A Solution to the Urban Pressure within Egyptian Towns and Villages
  6. Part II Households in Social Context: Families, Individuals, and Communities
    1. 4. The Papyrus Trail: Houses and Households in Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt
    2. 5. Habitatio: Transfer of Houses and Rights of Residence in Roman Egypt
    3. 6. Unsafe Houses in Greco-Roman Egypt: Forms and Locations of Violence
  7. Part III Households in Practice: Production, Consumption, and Discard
    1. 7. Modes of Production and Reproduction in Roman-Era Egyptian Villages
    2. 8. Domestic Discard: The Making and Unmaking of Romano-Egyptian Houses
  8. Part IV Households in Cosmic Context: Religion and Ritual
    1. 9. Figurines and the Material Culture of Domestic Religion
    2. 10. The Supernatural Vulnerabilities of Domestic Space in Late Antique Egypt: Perspectives from the “Magical” Corpus
  9. Part V Expanding the Household: Dwelling Practices in Monastic and Military Contexts
    1. 11. Three Monks and a House: The Archaeology of Monastic Houses in Byzantine Egypt
    2. 12. Domestic Activities in Alternative Settings: The Ptolemaic Fort at Bi’r Samut, Egypt
  10. Afterwords: Perspectives from Pharaonic Egypt and the Greco-Roman World
    1. 1. Greco-Roman Households in Pharaonic Perspective
    2. 2. Contextualizing Houses, Households, and Homes in the Classical World and Beyond
  11. Index

Index

Abdelwahed, Youssri, 16, 159, 262, 324, 332, 335

access, 89n37, 89n39, 89n41, 324; consequences of changing systems, 85–87; house access plans, 73, 74, 76, 77, 78; neighborhood interproperty access points, 78; space syntax analysis (SSA), 73, 74, 76, 76–77; supernatural and, 257, 261–263; temporary vs. permanent, 82; tower house, 104–105

actor-network theory, 4, 29n130

‘Adaima, 281, 283

agency, 222; architecture and, 28n104, 275–276; concept of, 14, 16; domestic agency, 23, 185, 325; material agency, 15, 16, 275–276; political agency, 19; supernatural and, 263–264

aithrion,62

Akhetaten, 218

Alexander, Rani, 25n26

Alexandria, Egypt, 126, 130

Alexandria Museum, 107

Alston, Richard, 6, 20, 139, 181, 264, 324, 333, 334, 337

Amara West, 18, 326

Amarna, 325, 326

Amheida, 54, 55, 62, 67n55, 203. See also Serenos’house; Trimithis

animals as household members, 17, 211, 221

Ankhsheshonq, 2, 130, 131, 138

Annales school, 10

annexation, 83–85, 89n42

anthropocentrism, 9–10; anthroprocentric models, 9–10; vs. non-anthropocentric archaeology, 14, 276

anthropology, 7, 9–10, 160, 193n11

Apa Paul monastic community, 273–290

Apis, 234. see also religion

apotropaic practices. See supernatural, the

archaeology as a field, 7, 14; archaia vs. logos, 15, 29n128; balancing textual and material sources, 337–338; emic archaeology, 275, 276, 291n18; excavation disparities, 92; flat ontology and, 14; gender inferences, 27n67; geomagnetic surveys, 92, 93, 95, 99; GIS3-D, 13; interpreting archaeological data with SSA, 73–74; ladder of inference, 27n60; microarchaeology, 11, 326, 328; non-anthropocentric archaeology, 14, 276; origins of, 7–8; research trends, 327–328; satellite imaging, 93; scale of inquiry, 18, 140, 199, 202, 229, 239, 333, 337; stratigraphic analysis, 66n39; use of rubbish disposal, 199, 217–220. See also specific types of archaeology

archaeology of dwelling: as a discipline, 1; domestic impact of imperialism, 1; dwelling as fuzzy set, 20; dwelling perspective, 2, 19–22; history of, 8–9; intersection of domestic material culture and larger cultural phenomena, 2, 22; research, 2, 9–10, 13–14, 17–18, 64, 107–115, 125–140 (see also research sources); research trends, 327–328; stratigraphic analysis, 66n39; use of rubbish disposal, 199, 217–220. See also dwellings; households

architecture, 107; agency and, 28n104; as communication, 10, 11, 28n90; domestic architecture, 28n102, 49–67; vernacular, 93, 112; verticalization, 114. See also houses

archival archaeology, 28n92

Arnold, Felix, 218–219, 221

Ashmolean Museum, 232, 233

Ashmore, Wendy, 288

Ault, Bradley, 5

Bagnell, R.S., 160

Bailey, D.M., 226

Baird, Jen, 182

Bakchias, 95; house foundations, 97

Barrett, Caitlín Eilís, 1

Barrie, Thomas, 275

Battle-Baptiste, Whitney, 20

behavior: aberrant behavior, 16; adaptation, 8, 336–337; discard behavior, 200, 206, 215, 216–217, 221; hoarding behavior, 220; patterning, 10, 13; speaking through the nose, 167–168; violent behavior, 16–17, 29n139, 159–173, 190

Belzoni, G.B., 54, 65n20

Bender, Donald, 10

Berenike port, 133

Bes, 231, 233, 233, 234, 235, 239

Besa, 277

bia (violence against property), 161–163, 169

biaioi (those who died violently), 162

Binford, Lewis, 8

Bi’r Samut fort, 6, 22, 297–315, 298, 300, 303, 304, 307, 325; abandonment deposits, 316n17, 339; architectural overview, 299–302; bathing complex, 302, 302–307; bread stamp, 304, 305; compared to houses in Syene, 308–310; courtyard, 301; dates of, 300; distribution of activities, 302–307, 339; domesticity, 314–315; food preparation, 299, 304, 305, 306; gates, 301; multifunctional spatial configuration, 299, 339; network of suppliers, 306; population of, 298, 307; production activities of, 298, 339; roofing, 316n18; storage, 299, 303; stratigraphic overview, 299–302; transience, 314–315; vessels of, 298, 303, 305, 306, 314

Blanton, Richard, 11

Bollnow, Otto Friedrich, 288

Boozer, Anna, 4, 20, 21, 182, 184, 199, 325, 333, 339

Bourdieu, Pierre, 10, 20, 182–183, 333

Braudel, Fernand, 10

bread ovens, 78–79, 79, 80, 204, 205, 325

British Museum, 107, 108–109, 231, 232, 233, 235, 236, 237, 239, 248n50, 248n50; figurines of, 233; map of, 232. See also museums

brothels, 5, 26n44

Bryen, A.Z., 160

Building Z (Athenian Kermeikos), 5, 26n42

built space as communication, 10, 11, 28n90. See also architecture

Buto, 92, 93, 94, 105, 106

Cairo Museum, 107

Cannon, A., 202

Cassian, John, 276

Çatalhöyük, 12

cemetery, 4, 5

census, 128, 154–155n9, 185; occupational record, 129–130

ceramics, 133, 200, 201, 203, 281, 305, 309, 310; ceramic reuse, 206, 215, 215; production, 316n19

Chesson, Meredith, 20

children, 141n16, 246n3; child abuse, 161; childbirth, 238; child care, 27n67; illness, 259

Chrysostom, John, 169

“City of the Dead” (Cairo), 5

civic organizations, 71–89passim

cleanliness, 200, 204–206, 214, 218–219, 221; animals and, 211; streets and, 209. See also rubbish disposal

Cobb, Charles, 19

colonization, 24n6, 107, 182, 191; categories of the colonial, 182, 193n6. See also imperialism

community, 30n149, 30n156, 277, 288, 336; dispersal of, 186; epistolary function, 186; rural villages, 181–193; spatial organization of community, 49

Conference of 2018 (Cornell University), xii, 24n1

cooking, 30n167, 184, 205, 206, 280, 299, 301, 302, 304, 306, 311, 314, 328; diet, 245; eating, 30n167. See also bread ovens; courtyards

Coptic monks, 7, 284. See also monks and monastic communities

Coptic practices, 256, 259–260, 277

courtyards, 53, 58, 60, 67n56, 76, 77–79, 175n126, 183–184, 221; domestic discard, 199–222; domestic production and, 184; forts, 301, 313; tower house, 104–105; at Trimithis, 211–212

creditor-debtor arrangements, 151–153, 333

cults. See religion

Dakhla Oasis, 133, 184; rubbish disposal, 202–214

Daniel, R.W., 62

Davoli, Paola, 12, 15, 49, 204, 336, 337

Deir el-Medina, 217, 325

Delos, 11, 220

Depraetere, David, 204

Dime, 52, 53, 54, 59; tower house, 59

Dimeh, 95

Dionysos, 236

dispositions, 20

distribution function of household, 8

Dixon, D.M., 217, 219

domestic, the: abuse, 16–17, 29n139, 159–173 (see also violence); activities, 4, 18, 23, 30n167, 77–79, 117n53, 184, 206; activities in alternate settings, 5, 22, 23, 297–315; agency, 23, 325; cults (see religion); discard, 199–222 (see also rubbish disposal); domestic architecture, 28n102, 49–67; domestic figurines, 16, 224n65, 226–246passim; domestic rituals, 21, 50, 229, 335 (see also religion); domestic vulnerability, 255–264, 324; as fuzzy category, 6; limits of the domestic, 5; volition of, 16. See also household; houses; space

domus, 11, 74

donatio mortis causa, 148–149

dovecotes, 184

dromos, 50; purpose of, 50

dwellings: adaptation and, 19, 63–65, 336; definitions, 288; dwelling as fuzzy set, 20; dwelling as place-making, 20; dwelling as spectrum, 6; dwelling perspective, 2, 19–22, 23; meaning of dwelling, 19; semisubterranean dwellings (Upper Egypt), 278, 281–284, 283; temporary habitation, 5. See also archaeology of dwelling

economics, 77–79; bread ovens, 78–79, 79, 80; economic privilege in Ptolemaic Egypt, 125; economic structures, 76; middle class, 194n32

Egypt: Archaic period, 217; Byzantine Egypt, 19, 273–290; Egyptian gods, 231–238, 242, 243, 247n18, 247n31, 248n38; Eighteenth Dynasty, 217; festivals, 233, 234, 236, 238, 242, 244, 245, 248n39, 249n63; Lagid rulers, 95; Late Period, 93, 95, 107; map of, 230; Middle Kingdom, 92, 326; New Kingdom, 92, 217, 326; Nile Delta, 93, 95, 96, 234, 287, 328; Nile River, 114, 126, 217, 231, 233, 236, 242, 245, 249n63, 279; Nile Valley, 16, 114, 133, 245, 287, 299; Pharaonic Egypt, 217–220, 323–328 (see also Pharaonic Egypt); physical environment, 12, 15, 49–67 (see also physical environment); Ptolemaic era, 1 (see also Ptolemaic Egypt); Roman period, 1 (see also Roman Egypt); Saite Period, 93; Twelfth Dynasty, 217; urban pressures, 92–115; Western Oases, 92

Egyptian Museum, 108–109, 110, 236, 240

Elephantine, 96, 218–219, 326, 329n6; house foundations, 100

encroachment, 83–85

endogamy, 188, 192

enslaved, the, 3, 127, 132, 139, 149, 168; violence against, 162, 166

environment. See physical environment

Esna (Upper Egypt), 278, 281–284, 283

ethnic identity, 125; artifacts and, 133; houses and, 133; labeling ethnicity, 182; names and, 130; status and, 133

ethnoarchaeology study (Kalinga Province, Philippines), 217, 219

Evagrius, 276, 277

Evans, K.G., 160, 169

everyday, concept of, 183, 193n11

excrement, 174nn72–73

exogamy, 188

family, 23, 25n24, 155n11, 155n17, 185; Cambridge family typology, 132; conflicts, 186–190; coresidential group and, 192; definition, 3, 7, 128; division of assets, 126–127; familial power, 186–190; family-based networks, 185, 194n32; fictive family, 19; Greek vs. Egyptian, 131–132; incest, 189–190; kinship relations, 12, 25n24; life cycle of, 126; members away from family unit, 192, 195n61; military families, 186; mothers-in-law, 150–151; relationships among families, 10, 186–190; relationships to house, 191–193; relationships within families, 10, 186–190; reproduction function of household, 8, 26n46 (See also households)

Fayum, 92, 95; colonization, 107; house foundations, 97; houses, 15, 49, 58–60; settlements, 17; settlements on outskirts, 50–54; tower house foundations, 97; tower houses, 92–115passim. See also Karanis

feminist archaeology, 11

fertility, 185, 229, 236, 238, 248n42

figurines, 16, 221–222, 224n65, 226–246passim; functions of, 246; Greek figurines, 247n24; Naukratis, 231–239, 233, 235, 240, 242–246, 243, 244; Ptolemaic Egypt, 234–246, 235, 243, 244; Roman Egypt, 238–241, 240, 243, 244

Fisher, N.R.E., 164

Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, 232, 233, 235

forthold, concept of, 22, 299, 307, 325; military families, 186

foundations, 58–59, 100; casement, 93; cellular, 93, 116n15; house foundations, 97; tower house, 96, 97, 99, 100

Frankfurter, David, 16, 19, 21, 255, 324, 334

garbage: meaning of term, 200, 218. See also rubbish disposal

garbology project (University of Arizona), 217, 220

Gates-Foster, Jennifer, 22, 297, 325, 339

gender, 183; cleanliness and, 206; gendered use of space, 327; males in family unit, 185–186; patriarchy, 188–189; pregnant women, 259; sexual relations, 26n46, 30n167; violence and, 159, 160, 169; woman as house, 259; women as assets, 189, 190; women’s labor, 8

Gibson, James, 10

Giddens, A., 13

Gillespie, Susan, 12

globalization, 2; as glocalization, 19

Godsey, Melanie, 22, 297, 325, 339

Goldberg, M.Y., 19

Goody, Jack, 10

granary, 76, 82, 184, 185

Great Oases: houses in, 60–63; settlements in, 54–58

Greco-Roman Egypt. See Ptolemaic Egypt; Roman Egypt

Greco-Roman Museum, 108–109

Greece, archaeology of, 331–338

Grenfell, B.P., 216

Gurob, 217

habitatio, 6, 145–154, 324, 334; creditors, 151–153; definitions, 145–146; mothers-in-law, 150–151; widowers, 149–150; widows, 147–149

habitus, 20; material habitus, 30n166

Hanson, J., 10

Harpocrates, 231, 233, 233, 234, 235, 236, 236, 237, 238, 239, 240, 241, 242, 245

Hartman, Saidiya, 22

Hayden, B., 202

Hedstrom, Darlene Brooks, 7, 12, 15, 22, 273, 324, 336

Heidegger, Martin, 288

Hellenistic Egypt. See Ptolemaic Egypt

Hendon, Julia, 4

Hillier, B., 10

historical models of household, 10; microscale vs. macroscale, 18

Hobson, Deborah, 139

Hodder, Ian, 11, 201, 275

home, 30n168; contextualizing, 331–339; versus dwelling, 22; emic vs. etic concepts, 5, 13, 20–21, 275, 276, 335–336; homespace, 20, 30n174; houseful, 3; house vs. home, 275; objects from home, 22, 222 (see also households)

homemaking, 19–22; description of, 20–21; gender and, 21

Horus, 231–234, 233, 234, 245

household archaeology, 25n26, 275, 276, 338–339. See also archaeology of dwelling

households, 155n17, 155n18; as abstraction, 4; activities inside vs. outside, 4, 6–7, 18, 336 (see also domestic, the); adults in, 131, 136; animals in, 17, 211; anthropological models, 9–10; as complex assemblage, 15–18, 192; contextualizing households, 331–339; definitions of, 2–3, 10, 23, 26–27n57, 30n149, 30n156, 128, 331–334; distribution function of, 8, 189, 298, 299, 302–307, 314; economics and, 8, 9, 21; with “faces,” 11–12; family in, 3, 190–193 (see also family); Greek vs. Egyptian, 131–132; historical models of, 10; intersection of domestic material culture and larger cultural phenomena, 2, 22, 199–222, 287, 336; link to house, 3–4, 16, 191–193; material objects of, 4, 12–15, 16, 199–222, 287–290, 335; membership of, 3, 17, 127, 128, 131, 132, 136, 136, 139, 149, 190–193, 192, 211; multiscalar household, 18–19; as network, 4, 15–18, 19, 192, 333; pigeoncotes, 17; plants as household members, 17; production function of household, 8, 183–186; reproduction function of household, 8, 182, 183, 188, 189, 190, 192, 193; role of food, 5–6, 30n167, 206 (see also cooking); servants in, 3, 128; as set of relations, 4, 15–18, 19, 192, 287, 333; size of, 131; slaves in, 3, 127, 132, 139, 149; supernatural members of, 16; textual records of (see research sources); transmission function of household, 8; urban vs. rural, 139

household studies, 7, 21. See also archaeology of dwelling

houses, 76, 88n23, 133–139, 206; abandonment, 206–207, 213, 214–216; access plans, 73, 74, 76, 76–77, 78 (see also access); banquet halls, 59–60; cellars, 59; central rooms, 204, 206; circulation patterns, 53, 62, 77; as closed system, 58; as cognitive construct, 11; communication between houses, 18; construction, 206, 213, 215; contextualizing, 331–339; couches as measurement, 134; courtyards, 53, 58, 60, 67n56, 76, 77–79, 175n126, 183–184; definitions, 3, 25n20; domestic discard, 199–222; domestic vulnerability, 255–264, 324; doorways, 53, 61, 63, 66n30, 71, 171 (see also access); emic vs. etic concepts, 5, 13, 275, 276, 335; enjoined with settlement, 18; façade, 170–171; fireplaces, 61, 204; floors and flooring, 76, 205, 206–207, 207, 328; foundations, 58–59, 60, 97, 99, 100 (see also foundations); house as asset (see habitatio); houses in arid environments, 60–63; house vs. home, 275; interiors, 172–173, 336; Jewish, 183, 194n14; kitchens, 30n167; link to household, 3–4, 16, 191–193; as location of production, 183–186, 206; location of violence in, 170–173, 332; material form of, 18, 58, 159; monastic houses, 273–290; monastic terminology for, 276, 285; mud-brick houses, 12, 134; multistory, 58, 66n40, 76, 97; nostalgia and, 191; peristyle house, 64, 67n57, 74; as private property, 190–193; pylons, 171–172; as reflection of cultural decorum, 71; reuse of houses, 4, 207–211, 213; roofing and roofs, 53, 54, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 64, 65n17, 204; safety issues, 159–173, 334–335 (see also violence); self-standing, 58, 66n40, 76, 77; shape of, 58, 59, 60; sizes of, 184; social dimension of, 71, 133, 159, 181–193; as symbolic, 28n99, 181, 182–183, 194n14, 255, 334; terrace, 58; thresholds, 72, 288, 339; transfer of ownership, 145–154, 190–193 (see also habitatio); tripartite, 311, 312; use of figurines in, 238–241; ventilation, 62, 107; walls, 59, 60, 71, 76, 88n23; windows, 58, 59, 60, 66n43, 67n51. See also tower house

Hue-Arcé, C., 159

Huebner, Sabine, 6, 145, 324, 333

Hunt, A.S., 216

Husselman, Elinor, 74

hybris (emotional abuse), 161, 164–170; definition, 164

identity, 2, 13–14, 20, 335; Egyptian vs. Greek, 234; intersectionality and, 335; monastic, 282; objects and, 213–214, 222, 234

imperialism, 12; domestic impact, 1

Ingold, Tim, 2, 19

inheritance, 145–154, 190–193, 194n43, 324, 326. See also habitatio

Instruction of Ankhsheshonq, The, 2

Isis, 236, 236, 237, 238, 239, 245; Isis-Hathor, 231, 233, 234, 235, 241, 242

Italy, archaeology of, 331–338

Jeme, 273

Jewish houses. See houses

John of Lycopolis, 274

Justinian, 146

Kabyle households (Algeria), 10, 20, 182–183, 333

Kahun, 217, 326

Kamoution family, 187, 187–188

Karanis, 13, 53, 59, 65n17, 75, 93, 107, 223n35, 324; bread ovens, 78–79, 79, 80; consequences of changing systems of access, 85–87; courtyards, 183; economic downturn, 82–83; economic structures, 76; history of, 214–215; house foundations, 97; houses, 76, 88n23, 184 (see also houses); houses as middens at, 214–216, 215; Karanis Central (KAC), 75, 85; military families, 186; neighborhood networks, 71–89; occupation dates, 75; private property rights, 77 (see also private property); settlements, 75–76; shortcuts through private property, 79–83, 80, 81; SSA and, 74–77; street layout, 71, 79–83; windbreak walls, 53

Karnak, 96; house foundations, 100

Kellia, 276–277

Kellis, 61, 67n56

Kelsey Museum, 215

Kerkeosiris, 160, 170, 171

Kestner Museum, 109t.3.1

Kom A at Bruto, 94–95

Kôm el-Loli, 95

Kôm Gamman rubbish mound, 217

Kysis, 57, 66n30

labor, 185–186, 189, 287; migration and, 185–186, 194n36; pooling of, 8. See also production function of household

landfills, 201

Laslett, Peter, 3, 10

Lawrence, J., 160

Lefebvre, H., 13

legal issues, 324; contracts, 85, 88n35; creditor-debter arrangements, 151–153, 333; habitatio, 145–154, 334; inheritance, 145–154; loan contract, 151–152; private property rights, 77, 83, 88n35; retirement contracts, 151; Roman law, 145–146; succession, 145–154; taxation, 128–129, 132, 134, 139; trespassing, 170, 171, 324, 326

Lehner, M., 19

Leonard, Jr., A., excavations of, 235, 238nn48–49

Leontius (saint), 255

Lévi-Strauss, C., 10

lighting, 107; lamp holders, 112

literature, Greek and Roman, 338

litter, 221; definition, 201

loans, 151–152; antichretic loan, 152–153, 156n34; interest, 152; loan contract, 151–152; mortgage, 152

loidoria (verbal abuse), 161, 164, 169

Louvre Museum, 107, 108–109

Lynch, K.A., 1

ma nshõpe, 5

Marcellus, 146

Marouard, Gregory, 15, 92, 324

marriage, 194n30; age of male partner, 186; dowry, 147–148, 150, 186; familial conflict, 186–188, 187, 188; habitatio, 145–154; sibling marriage, 188, 195n48; virilocal vs. uxorilocal, 125, 135; wife beating, 169

material agency, 15, 16; rubbish disposal, 199–222

material culture. See households, material objects of

material habitus, 221, 222, 333. See also rubbish disposal, discard behavior

Medinet Habu, 96; house foundations, 100

Melas, Aurelius, 186–187, 189

Memphis, 217, 229, 239, 240, 242–246, 243, 244

Mendes, 105

Meskell, Lynn, 30n166, 333

middens, 201, 214–218; definition, 201; location of, 201, 214–216, 216–218, 219–220. See also rubbish disposal

middle-range theory, 13

Mission Archéologique Française du Désert Oriental, excavations of, 297, 300, 315n1

Monastery of Apa Jeremias (Saqqara), 278, 284–285, 285

Monastery of Apa Thomas (Wadi Sarga), 278–280, 279, 280, 284, 324; letters of monks, 280–281; physical remains, 280–281

monks and monastic communities, 6, 22, 30n167, 256, 273–290, 326, 336; cells, 273–275; defining monastic households, 273–276; monastic terminology for houses, 276, 285; objects in, 287–290; settlements, 276–287; solitary vs. communal, 277–278

Mons Claudianus, 229, 240–241, 242–246, 243, 244

Mountain of Cells (Jabal Nalqun), 278, 285–287, 286

mud bricks, 12; mud-brick houses, 134; mud-brick tower houses, 96

Müller, Miriam, 14, 18, 323

mummies, 26n35; record of mummies, 126

museum archaeology, 126

Museum of Classical Archaeology, Cambridge, 232, 233, 237

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 236, 237

museums, 107–110, 126, 215, 231, 261–262, 278. See also specific museums

Myos Hormos, 133, 229, 239, 240, 241, 242–246, 243, 244; trench, 244

Narmouthis, 50, 59, 92, 113

Naukratis, 93, 229, 240; Kom Hadid, 238–239; map of, 232; South Mound, 238, 239

neighborhoods, 18, 107, 324, 326, 337; abandoned, 212; Byzantine neighborhoods, 19; interproperty access points, 78; networks, 71–89; shortcuts through private property, 79–83, 80, 81

Nevett, Lisa, 130, 331, 332

New Archaeology. See processualist archaeology

new materialism, 12, 13, 29n124; Xenophon and, 13

New Year’s festival, 233, 234, 236, 238, 242, 244, 245, 249n63

New York University excavations of, 54

Nubia, 326, 328

Oasean houses, 15

Oasean settlements, 17

oasis, 49

oikos, 5, 9, 128, 276

Olabarria, Leire, 12

Olsen, Bjørnar, 275

On the Cell (Paul of Tamma), 274

ontology, 8; flat ontology, 14

Osirian triad, 234

Osiris, 234. see also religion

ostraka, 66n31, 204, 206, 212, 245, 278, 280, 298, 300, 305, 307, 316n21

Oxyrhynchus, 127, 152, 220, 262; houses as property, 191; Kôm Gamman rubbish mound, 217; legal petitions from, 160, 162; middens of, 216, 216–217

Özbal, Rana, 12

Pachomian monastic community, 277, 288, 290

papyrus: as fuel, 219; papyri textual evidence (see research sources)

Parca, M., 160

patriarchy, 188–189

Paul of Tamma, 274

per, 5

Petrie Museum, 108–109

pharaoh, meaning of term, 19

Pharaonic Egypt: garbage disposal, 217–220; household studies, 325–327; perspective of Greco-Roman households, 323–328; research trends, 327–328

Philadelphia, 80, 95, 107, 133, 151, 171163; house foundations, 97

phylakites, 298, 307

physical environment, 12, 15, 16, 77, 325; adaptation to, 63–65; building and, 49–67; houses in arid environments, 58–63; Mediterranean settings, 67n61; settlements in arid environments, 49–58; sun, 15, 53, 57, 58; wind, 52–53, 67n58

plants as household members, 17

Pompeii, 338

posthumanism, 7, 12, 28n99

postprocessual archaeology, 11

practice theory, 10, 20

privacy, 16–17, 71, 77, 107; monks and, 287; private space and social interaction, 77–79

private property, 82, 82, 324; houses as, 190–193; interproperty access points, 78; invasion of, 168; perimeter walls, 77–78; rights, 77, 83, 88n35; shortcuts through private property, 79–83, 80, 81

private vs. public space, 7, 71, 79–83, 83–85, 183, 194n12, 335–336

processualist archaeology, 8–9, 11; middle-range theory, 13

production function of household, 8, 183–186; animals, 184; cooking, 30n167, 184, 205, 206, 245, 280, 299, 301, 302, 304, 306, 311, 314; granary, 76, 82, 184, 185; weaving equipment, 184

Ptolemaic Egypt, 1–3, 24n6; adults in households, 131; Christian period, 256–264; ethnicity in, 2, 125, 130; figurines, 234–246, 235, 243, 244; forts, 22, 297–315; goblets, 236–238, 237, 247; Greek/Hellenic identity, 2, 125, 130; habitatio, 147–153; house-by-house survey, 18 (See also research sources); houses, 133–139; kings, 162; lamps, 236, 236, 244; multidisciplinary study of households, 2 (see also research sources); nomenclature, 125, 130; population growth, 140; privilege in, 125; research trends, 327–328; social difference, 125; textual sources of research, 125–139 (see also research sources); tower house, 16, 29n138, 29n141, 92–115 (see also tower house). See also specific settlements

public space, 183, 194n12; encroachment, 83–85; private vs. public space, 7, 71, 79–83, 83–85, 183, 194n12, 335–336

pyrgos (pl. pyrgoi), 58, 116n33, 117n47

Rainville, Lynn, 4, 5, 7

Rapoport, A., 10, 11, 289

Rathje, William, 7, 8, 9

raw materials, 12, 282, 287

Reddé, M., 57, 63, 66n30

Redon, Bérangère, 22, 297, 325, 339

refuse, 218; de facto refuse, 201, 202, 206; meaning of term, 200; primary refuse, 201, 202, 206; secondary refuse, 201, 208; tertiary refuse, 201. See also rubbish disposal

religion, 23, 50, 226–246, 325; chapels, 246n13; Christianity, 273–290passim; cult of Horus, 231–234, 245; cult of Osirian triad, 234; cult of Serapis, 241, 247n27; domestic figurines of supernatural beings, 16, 221–222, 226–246passim; Egyptian gods, 231–238, 242, 243, 246n12, 247n16, 247n18, 247n31, 248n38; Greek gods, 247n26; Greek sanctuaries, 247n15; masks, 239, 245, 248n50, 249n52; New Year’s festival, 233, 234, 236, 238, 242, 244, 245, 249n63; ritual, 21, 50, 229, 242, 246, 256–264, 335; ritual lists, 259–261; ritual specialists, 255–256; supernatural beliefs, 16, 23, 255–264 (see also supernatural, the). See also monks and monastic communities

rented property, 3, 152

research sources, 14, 17–18, 64, 125–140, 134–135, 332; balancing textual and material sources, 337–338; cartonnage, 127; census, 128–130, 154–155n9, 185; dipinti, 277; garbage dumps, 127 (see also rubbish disposal); geomagnetic surveys, 92, 93, 95, 99, 105, 106; granary ownership document, 184–185; on habitatio, 145–154, 156n31; house-by-house survey, 18, 136–138; household database, 130; house ownership document, 184–185; house sale documents, 190; individual database, 130; magical texts, 256–264; Nemesion archive, 194nn38–39; papyri petitions regarding domestic violence, 159, 161; Princeton University papyrus collection, 151; record of mummies, 126; Sakaon archive, 186–189; tax records, 128–129; texts re. Ptolemaic houses and households, 125–140; texts re. Roman houses and households, 125–140; village registrar, 134–135. See also museums

research trends, 327–328

Rijksuniversiteit Groningen, excavations of, 75

Roman Egypt: Christian period, 256–264; figurines, 238–241, 240, 243, 244; forts, 22; habitatio, 147–153; houses as modes of production, 183–186; houses in environmental context, 49–67; houses in urban context, 49–67; lamps, 236, 244; multidisciplinary study of households, 2; population ethnicities, 2; research trends, 327–328; Roman houses, 12; Roman atrium house, 74; Roman wall paintings, 12; rubbish disposal, 199–222; rural villages, 181–193; social organizations, 71–89; taxation, 139; textual sources of research, 139–140 (see also research sources); tower houses, 103–104. See also specific settlements

Roman Italy, 338

Roman Trimithis (Amheida), 133

Roman wall paintings, 12

roofing and roofs, 53, 54, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 64, 65n17; flat roof as active area, 78, 108; materials, 138, 220, 305, 316n18

Routledge, Bruce, 3, 21

rubbish: construction, use for, 206, 215; land reclamation and, 220; meaning of term, 200. See also rubbish disposal

rubbish disposal, 199–222, 325; in abandoned house, 212, 214–216; Archaic period, 217; case studies, 217–220; connectivity between households and society, 201–222; discard behavior, 200, 206, 215, 216–217, 221; efficiency, 219, 221; Kôm Gamman rubbish mound, 217; multiscalar approach to, 201–202; occupational history and, 206–211; Pharaonic Egypt rubbish disposal, 217; removal costs, 213; terminology, 200–201, 218; utility concepts, 220. See also middens; refuse

Sakaon of Theadelphia, 186–187, 189

Sayings of the Desert Fathers, 22, 273, 276

scavenging, 208, 213; pigs, 208, 210, 219, 221; zabbaleen, 208

Schiffer, Michael, 201, 202, 217

Schlanger, Sarah, 288

Schulz, D., 62

semisubterranean dwellings (Upper Egypt), 278, 281–284, 283

Serenos’ house, 54–57, 56, 60, 61, 61, 66n31, 67n51; reproduction as information center, 62, 62–63, 64

settlement: taverns, 5

settlement archaeology, 8, 18, 49–58, 288; expansion due to population, 65n9; multistratified sites, 65n9; shortcuts through private property, 79–83, 80, 81. See also settlements

settlements, 324–325; alleys, 54–57; density of buildings, 54–57; fences, 52; inns, 5; monastic, 276–287; outskirts of Fayum, 50–54; settlements in arid environments, 49–58; streets, 54–57, 208–211; windbreak walls, 52, 53, 54–57; workmen’s settlements, 326

Shaw, I., 218

Shenoutean monastic community, 277, 288, 290

Shenoute of Atripe, 277

Simpson, Bethany, 13, 16, 71, 215, 324, 333

singletons, 128, 141n24, 195n61

slaves. See enslaved, the

Serapis, 234, 239, 247n27. see also religion

social groups: houses and, 133; violence and, 160

social organization, 71–89passim; fluidity of social relations, 181; private space and social interaction, 77–79; social roles, 23, 71

Soknopaiou Nesos, 50, 51, 51, 52, 53, 92, 107; house foundations, 97; houses as middens at, 214–216

Sothis (Dog Star), 236, 237, 240, 241

South Abydos, 326

Souvatzi, Stella, 287

space, 324; ambitis, 106; domestic space, 23, 49–67, 255–264, 339 (see also habitatio); gendered use of space, 327; Hippodamian grid, 80; limited space for building, 16; multifunctional spatial configuration, 299, 339; negotiation of, 326; private space and social interaction, 77–80, 191, 333; rubbish disposal and, 218 (see also rubbish disposal); social construction of, 13; social interaction and, 77; space syntax analysis (SSA), 10, 13, 28n104, 71–89passim (see also space syntax analysis (SSA)); space vs. place, 25n17; spatial organization of community, 49; vulnerability and, 255–264, 324. See also private vs. public space; public space

space syntax analysis (SSA), 10, 13, 28n104, 71–89passim, 73, 74, 76, 76–77, 87; access plans, 73, 74, 76, 76–77; connectivity, 72; depth, 72; interpreting archaeological data with, 73–74; local vs. global measures, 72; mathematical probability and, 72; networks, 72, 85; real relative asymmetry (RRA), 72, 85; relative ringyness, 72, 81, 85, 86; symmetry, 72

Spencer, N., 18

squatters, 211, 213–214

stibadium, 54–55

storage, 28n102, 184, 299, 303; Roman storage practices, 12–13

streets and street layouts, 54–57, 81, 326; alleys, 54–57; consequences of changing systems of access, 85–87; Hippodamian grid, 80, 107; shortcuts through private property, 79–83, 80, 81

succession, 145–154. see also habitatio

supernatural, the, 16, 23, 326–327; access and, 257, 261–263; agency and, 263–264; apotropia, 255, 256, 257, 261; Aramaic incantation bowls, 257; charms, 258, 261, 262; curses, 262–263; demonology, 256–264; domestic figurines of supernatural beings, 16, 226–246passim; domestic vulnerability and, 255–264, 324; evil eye, 256, 265n12; rituals against pests, 17; scorpion, 258, 261; sorcery and, 261–264, 266n39

Syene (Aswan): cookware, 309, 310; houses of, 308–310, 309; supply sources, 310; tableware, 309; vessels, 309

symmetrical archaeology, 16

Tanis. See Naukratis

taxation, 128–129, 132, 134, 139; oil tax, 160; salt tax, 128, 132, 134

Tebtynis, 50, 51, 92, 95, 103, 103, 105, 107, 133, 301, 316n19; courtyards, 53; domestic quarter, 96; house foundations, 97; house sale, 190–191; legal petitions from, 160, 162; weaving equipment, 184

Tell Dafana, 106

Tell Edfu, 96, 103; house foundations, 100; mud-brick tower houses, 102

Tell el-Amarna, 217, 218

Tell el-Balamun, 92, 93, 96, 106

Tell el-Dab’a, 18, 92, 95, 326

Tell el-Fara’in-Buto, 93, 96

Tell el-Herr, 95, 96

Tell el-Herr fort, 310–314, 312, 313

Tell el-Iswed, 96

temples, 169–170

Theadelphia, 186–187, 195n45

Thebes, 273, 288

Theophilos, 133

thing theory, 15

Thomas, Ross I., 16, 221, 226, 229, 246n1, 325, 335

Thompson, Dorothy, 3, 6, 18, 125, 324, 332, 335, 336

tower house, 16, 29n138, 29n141, 59, 92–115, 94, 308, 324–325; access, 104–105; circulation patterns, 104–105; courtyard, 104, 104–105, 114; distribution of weights and forces, 102; domed silos, 103; doorways, 113; Egyptian compared to Yemenite, 113–114; foundation, 97, 99, 100, 112; foundations, 96, 97, 99, 100; freestanding facades, 105; house plan, 112; identifying criteria, 93–104; limestone models, 110, 111, 112–113; location of, 94, 94–95, 114; main entrance, 105; models of, 108–109; mud-brick tower houses, 96, 102; privacy vs. public interaction, 114; purpose and location of rooms, 115–116; reconstruction models, 93; roof, 113; stairs, 104, 104–105, 113; terracotta, 111, 112–113; upper stories, 112; urban organization and, 106–107; vaulted cellars, 103; windows, 111, 113

transfer of houses. See habitatio

trash: meaning of term, 200, 218. See also rubbish disposal

Trimithis, 55, 57, 182, 203, 325; abandoned houses of compared to other sites, 214–216; area 1, 203–206, 204, 211; courtyard C2, 211–212, 212; feasting event, 213; house B-1, 209, 210, 212, 213–214; house B-2, 203–206, 206–207, 206–211, 207, 211, 212, 213–214, 220–221; house B-9, 211; lack of middens, 202–203; rubbish disposal, 202–214; street S1, 208–211; street S2, 213

Tringham, Ruth, 8, 11, 19, 25n17

Tsakirgis, B., 19

Tuna el-Gebel, 95, 104, 106; house foundation, 99

UCLA, excavations of, 75, 215

Una’s abomination, 174nn72–73

University of Auckland, excavations of, 75

University of Michigan, excavations of, 52, 52, 53, 58, 59, 74–75

University of Munich, excavations of, 95

urban space, 10, 17; changes in urban layouts, 50; orthogonal organization, 52; tower house and, 92–115; town organizing, 106–107

urine, 165–166, 174n65, 174n68

Uronarti, 326

usufruct, 146

usus, 146, 154n3

values: cultural, 2, 15, 16, 29n138, 182, 183, 191, 334; religious, 264, 274, 276; worldview, 23

Van Oyen, Astrid, 12

verbal assault, 167. See also loidoria (verbal abuse)

Vindolanda, 22

violence, 16–17, 29n139, 159–173, 190; acceptable violence in Greco-Roman Egypt, 161; agents, 163; compensation, 163; definitions, 160; forms of domestic violence, 160–170; gender and, 159, 160; legal protection, 160; locations of domestic violence, 170–173; status and, 160, 162, 169; stripping of clothes, 166–167

Warner, N., 62

water management, 65n9, 201, 282, 298, 299, 301, 302, 311, 314, 315

Webmoor, Timothy, 275

widowers, 149–150

widows, 30n147, 147, 148–149, 154n9, 155n11, 155n18; dowry, 147–148; remarriage, 147. See also habitatio

Wilk, Richard, 7, 8, 9

Xenophon, 13

Yanagisako, S.J., 5

zabbaleen, 208

Zagora, archaic, 19

Zarmakoupi, Mantha, 12

Zenon papers, 133–134

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