TM 61193
PLitLond 251+PHarr 36
Homer, Iliad 12.128-40, 176-91, 249-63, 355-68, 370, 374, 399-402, 404-12, 446-58
200-101 BC
r
Egypt
SIGLA:
~ The figure is mostly measured, but has some element of approximation.
~~ The figure is measured, but is an approximation of the average line length of a verse text.
* The figure is calculated.
** The figure is calculated, but on the basis of a small amount of evidence.
‡ Calculations of the total columns in a roll or the roll’s length are given for a single work unless otherwise specified. The question of what a bookroll may have contained is non-trivial and these calculations must therefore be used with consideration and caution.
| Letters/Line | Column Width (cm) | Intercolumn (cm) | Width from Column to Column (cm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| [verse] | **9.4 | ~~2.0 | **11.1 |
| Lines per Column | Column Height (cm) | Upper Margin (cm) | Lower Margin (cm) | Roll Height (cm) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 45.4 | **21.7 | ≥2.7 | ≥**24.4 |
| Columns Extant | Letters per Column | ‡Estimated Columns in Roll | ‡Estimated Roll Length (m) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 7 | [verse] | ‡11 | ‡1.2 m |
| Leading (mm) | Letter Height (mm) |
|---|---|
| 4.7 (4.5-4.8) | ~2.75 |
| Kollesis (cm) |
|---|
SIGLA:
** The categorization is based on a small amount of data.
| Adscript Usage | Adscript Hypercorrection Examples | Nu-movable Usage |
|---|---|---|
| Adscript added |
| Paragraphus | Marking Full Breath Pause | Marking Lesser Breath Pause | Multiple distinctive dots | Marking Speaker Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Indeterminate (left margin extant) | Unmarked | Unmarked |
| Punctuation Grade (for Prose Texts excepting Dialogue) | Punctuation Summary (for Poetry & Dialogue) |
|---|---|
| Dot/space not used, paragraphus indeterminate |
Script quality
| 2 |
The script evaluation approximates the evaluative measure implied by the Diocletian pricing edict, which differentiates the cost of hiring a scribe into three categories:
1 — “best writing”
2 — “second quality writing”
3 — “writing a petition or legal document”
Foundational to our project is that the data are culled not from editions, but from independent analysis based on autopsy or high-resolution images. The analysis is facilitated by a suite of dedicated software, and for known works makes use of machine-readable texts from the TLG project.
