A Nilometer from Graeco-Roman Thmouis

Hydrographical, Historical and Ideo-Political Significance in Hellenistic Egypt

Authors

  • Jay E Silverstein Cranfield University
  • Robert J Littman University of Hawaii
  • Stacey Anne Bagdi Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München
  • Elsayed F Eltalhawy Tanta University
  • Hamdy Ahmed Mashaly Al Mansoura Office of the Ministry of Antiquities
  • Emad Hassan Mohamed Al Mansoura Office of the Ministry of Antiquities
  • Mohamed Gabr Tanta University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/jma.23769

Keywords:

Delta, Isis, Mendes, Nile, Nilometer, Tell Timai, Thmouis

Abstract

In 2010, a construction project for a new water pumping station on the west side of Tell Timai (Egyptian Delta) encountered a limestone structure. This discovery triggered a salvage excavation that exposed a rare example of a well-preserved Delta nilometer. The architectural features of the nilometer reveal some specific and even unique adaptations consonant with the hydrological situation of the Graeco-Roman city of Thmouis. Unlike other examples of nilometers, an aqueduct runs from the north, spilling into the stairwell leading down into the stilling well. A dam stone in the aqueduct appears to have regulated the release of water. The nilometer was also articulated with an adjacent hill by a staircase. Folk tradition memorialised the stair and nilometer location in local fertility and healing rituals performed during Nile flood-related festivals; this tradition preserved the sacred space long after the nilometer and its associated architecture were buried and forgotten. The multifaceted role of the Thmouis nilometer in the cultural and economic life of the city and nome carries wider implications for the political organisation of the nome and the dynamic between syncretic forces and imperial appropriation in Graeco-Roman Egypt. Here we review the shape, function, archaeological context, ideological significance and hydrography of the nilometer and consider the implications of the nilometer for the history of the Mendesian nome and its sacred relationship with the Nile River.

Author Biographies

  • Jay E Silverstein, Cranfield University

    Jay E. Silverstein is an Affiliate Professor at the Cranfield Forensic Institute. His primary research interests are the archaeology of militarism, Ptolemaic Egypt, hydrological adaptations, remote sensing and the rise and fall of complex societies. He is the Co-Director of the Tell Timai Excavation.

  • Robert J Littman, University of Hawaii

    Robert J. Littman is Professor of Classics at the University of Hawaii at Manoa and Director of the Tell Timai Excavation. He specialises in Greek history, archaeology and Graeco-Roman Egypt.

  • Stacey Anne Bagdi, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München

    Stacey Anne Bagdi is a PhD candidate in Egyptology at Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich. Her primary research is in ancient pilgrimage and religious ritual, particularly the archaeological evidence associated with the worship of Osiris at Abydos, Egypt. She is also a curator in London.

  • Elsayed F Eltalhawy, Tanta University

    Elsayed F. Eltalhawy works for the Ministry of Antiquities, Dakahlia Governorate, and serves as the General Supervisor of the Antiquities of Dakahlia and Damietta. He is also the General Supervisor of the Affairs of Lower Egypt and Director of the Kom el-Khilgan and Tell el Balamun projects.

  • Hamdy Ahmed Mashaly, Al Mansoura Office of the Ministry of Antiquities

    Hamdy Ahmed Mashaly has worked with the Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities, Dakahlia Governorate, since 1993, and now serves as a Director of Antiquities there. He has extensive experience working with Egyptian and international expeditions including at the Predynastic sites of Tell al-Samara and Tell Ghazaleh, and at Tell Timai, Tell Tebilla, Tell al-Raba and Tell el Farkh.

  • Emad Hassan Mohamed, Al Mansoura Office of the Ministry of Antiquities

    Emad Hassan Mohamed is a 2009 graduate of the Faculty of Archaeology, Fayoum University. He has significant experience both as an inspector of antiquities in Egypt and as a member and a director of many excavations over multiple seasons in Egypt.

  • Mohamed Gabr, Tanta University

    Mohammed Abd al-Aziz Gabr earned his degree at Tanta University and he served as an Inspector of Archaeology with the Ministry of Antiquities in the Dakahlia Inspectorate from 2002 until his death in 2018. He worked on more than twenty archaeological projects including Behbeit el-Hagar, Tell Timai, Giza, Tell Tebilla, Taposiris Magna and Sa el-Hagar. He specialised in core survey, geomorphology and excavation. He also directed the Behbeit el-Hagar field school.

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Published

2022-09-07

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Articles

How to Cite

Silverstein, J. E., Littman, R. J., Bagdi, S. A., Eltalhawy, E. F., Mashaly, H. A., Mohamed, E. H., & Gabr, M. (2022). A Nilometer from Graeco-Roman Thmouis: Hydrographical, Historical and Ideo-Political Significance in Hellenistic Egypt. Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology, 35(1), 56-84. https://doi.org/10.1558/jma.23769