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1Christians in Muslim Egypt

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Book's cover

“Christians in Muslim Egypt” Metadata:

  • Title: Christians in Muslim Egypt
  • Author:
  • Language: ger
  • Number of Pages: Median: 294
  • Publisher: Oros Verlag
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: Altenberge

“Christians in Muslim Egypt” Subjects and Themes:

Edition Identifiers:

Access and General Info:

  • First Year Published: 1998
  • Is Full Text Available: Yes
  • Is The Book Public: No
  • Access Status: Borrowable

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Qift

[ʔeftˤ]; Coptic: Ⲕⲉϥⲧ Keft or Kebto; Egyptian Gebtu; Ancient Greek: Κόπτος Coptos / Koptos; Roman Justinianopolis) is a city in the Qena Governorate of Egypt

Sekhemre Wahkhau Rahotep

performed] in temples at Abydos and Coptos". In Abydos, he had the enclosure walls of the temple of Osiris renewed and in Coptos he restored the temple of Min

Coptos Decree

The Coptos Decree of Nubkheperre Intef is a legal ruling written in hieroglyphic on the wall of the Min-temple in Coptos. English Wikisource has original

Coptos Decrees

numbered with letters of the Latin alphabet, starting with "Coptos Decree a" and ending with "Coptos Decree r". The earliest of the series were issued by Pepi

Min (god)

upheld right arm holding a flail. Min's cult began and was centered around Coptos (Koptos, modern day Qift) and Akhmim (Panopolis) of Upper Egypt, where in

Copto-Arabic literature

Copto-Arabic literature is the literature of the Copts written in Arabic. It is distinct from Coptic literature, which is literature written in the Coptic

Horus

Herui (double falcon or Horuses) – the 5th nome of Upper Egypt god in Coptos. The Festival of Victory (Egyptian: Heb Nekhtet) was an annual Egyptian

Neferirkare

on a single decree, the Coptos Decree R, now in the Egyptian Museum, JE 41894. The decree concerns the temple of Min at Coptos, exempting it from dues

Magdalen papyrus

later 3rd century and found in a jar which had been walled up in a house at Coptos [in 250].” If 𝔓4 was part of this codex, then the codex may have been written

Wadi Hammamat

coast at the western end of the wadi. The Hammamat route ran from Qift (or Coptos), located just north of Luxor, to Al-Qusayr on the coast of the Red Sea