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Law and Enforcement in Ptolemaic Egypt

Law and Enforcement in Ptolemaic Egypt

Law and Enforcement in Ptolemaic Egypt

John Bauschatz, University of Arizona
October 2013
Hardback
9781107037137
Hardback
eBook

    This book examines the activities of a broad array of police officers in Ptolemaic Egypt (323–30 BC) and argues that Ptolemaic police officials enjoyed great autonomy, providing assistance to even the lowest levels of society when crimes were committed. Throughout the nearly 300 years of Ptolemaic rule, victims of crime in all areas of the Egyptian countryside called on local police officials to investigate crimes; hold trials; and arrest, question and sometimes even imprison wrongdoers. Drawing on a large body of textual evidence for the cultural, social and economic interactions between state and citizen, John Bauschatz demonstrates that the police system was efficient, effective, and largely independent of central government controls. No other law enforcement organization exhibiting such a degree of autonomy and flexibility appears in extant evidence from the rest of the Greco-Roman world.

    • The first full-length, English-language treatment of police officials in Ptolemaic Egypt
    • Contains several dozen primary sources which are discussed at great length and presented in both the original Greek and (the author's) English translation
    • Also contains a discussion of law enforcement machinery in other ancient states

    Product details

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    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781107439856
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    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Introduction: the place of police
    • 2. The officer corps - police administration and hierarchy: the Phylakitai
    • 3. The officer corps - police administration and hierarchy: civil and military police
    • 4. Agents of appeal: petitions and responses
    • 5. Busting and booking: arrest, investigation, detention, resolution
    • 6. The strong arm of the law: security and muscle
    • 7. Conclusion.
      Author
    • John Bauschatz , University of Arizona

      John Bauschatz is Assistant Professor in the Department of Classics at the University of Arizona. His research focuses on Greek and Roman social history, Greek papyrology, Hellenistic and Roman Egypt, and crime in antiquity. He has been named a National Lecturer for the Archaeological Institute of America (2013–14) and has published in such journals as The Classical Bulletin, The Classical Journal, Syllecta Classica and Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik.