Elephantine books - significado y definición. Qué es Elephantine books
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Qué (quién) es Elephantine books - definición

COLLECTION OF ANCIENT JEWISH MANUSCRIPTS
Elephantine papyrus; Jewish temple at Elephantine; Jewish Temple at Elephantine; Elephantine Papyri; Elephantine papyri
  • Marriage Document of Ananiah and Tamut, July 3, 449 BCE, [[Brooklyn Museum]]
  • Papyrus narrating the story of the wise chancellor Ahiqar. Aramaic script. 5th century BCE. From Elephantine, Egypt. Neues Museum, Berlin
  • Property Sale Document: Bagazust and Ubil Sell a House to Ananiah, September 14, 437 BCE [[Brooklyn Museum]]

Elephantine         
  • View south (upstream) of Elephantine Island and Nile, from a hotel tower.
  • The [[Aswan Museum]], and a [[nilometer]] (lower left)
  • Small Kalabsha Temple Reconstruction, south of the island.
  • Khnum temple at Elephantine island, New kingdom, Reconstruction
  • Elephantine, as published in the 1809 [[Description de l'Égypte]].
ISLAND IN THE NILE
Elephantine Island; Elaphantine; Elophantine; Yeb; Syene-Elephantine
·adj Pertaining to the elephant, or resembling an elephant (commonly, in size); hence, huge; immense; heavy; as, of elephantine proportions; an elephantine step or tread.
elephantine         
  • View south (upstream) of Elephantine Island and Nile, from a hotel tower.
  • The [[Aswan Museum]], and a [[nilometer]] (lower left)
  • Small Kalabsha Temple Reconstruction, south of the island.
  • Khnum temple at Elephantine island, New kingdom, Reconstruction
  • Elephantine, as published in the 1809 [[Description de l'Égypte]].
ISLAND IN THE NILE
Elephantine Island; Elaphantine; Elophantine; Yeb; Syene-Elephantine
[?l?'fant??n]
¦ adjective resembling or characteristic of an elephant, especially in being large or clumsy.
elephantine         
  • View south (upstream) of Elephantine Island and Nile, from a hotel tower.
  • The [[Aswan Museum]], and a [[nilometer]] (lower left)
  • Small Kalabsha Temple Reconstruction, south of the island.
  • Khnum temple at Elephantine island, New kingdom, Reconstruction
  • Elephantine, as published in the 1809 [[Description de l'Égypte]].
ISLAND IN THE NILE
Elephantine Island; Elaphantine; Elophantine; Yeb; Syene-Elephantine
Used of programs or systems that are both conspicuous hogs (owing perhaps to poor design founded on {brute force and ignorance}) and exceedingly hairy in source form. An elephantine program may be functional and even friendly, but (as in the old joke about being in bed with an elephant) it's tough to have around all the same (and, like a pachyderm, difficult to maintain). In extreme cases, hackers have been known to make trumpeting sounds or perform expressive proboscatory mime at the mention of the offending program. Usage: semi-humorous. Compare "has the elephant nature" and the somewhat more pejorative monstrosity. See also second-system effect and baroque. [Jargon File]

Wikipedia

Elephantine papyri and ostraca

The Elephantine Papyri and Ostraca consist of thousands of documents from the Egyptian border fortresses of Elephantine and Aswan, which yielded hundreds of papyri and ostraca in hieratic and demotic Egyptian, Aramaic, Koine Greek, Latin and Coptic, spanning a period of 100 years in the 5th to 4th centuries BCE. The documents include letters and legal contracts from family and other archives, and are thus an invaluable source of knowledge for scholars of varied disciplines such as epistolography, law, society, religion, language and onomastics. The Elephantine documents include letters and legal contracts from family and other archives: divorce documents, the manumission of slaves, and other business. The dry soil of Upper Egypt preserved the documents.

Hundreds of these Elephantine papyri span a period of 100 years, during the 5th to 4th centuries BCE. Legal documents and a cache of letters survived, turned up on the local "grey market" of antiquities starting in the late 19th century, and were scattered into several Western collections.

A number of the Aramaic papyri document the Jewish community among soldiers stationed at Elephantine under Achaemenid rule, 495–399 BCE. The so-called "Passover Letter" of 419 BCE (discovered in 1907), which appears to give instructions for the observance of the Festival of Unleavened Bread (though Passover itself is not mention in the extant text), is in the Egyptian Museum of Berlin.

The standard reference collection of the Aramaic documents from Elephantine is the Textbook of Aramaic Documents from Ancient Egypt.