{
    "type": "FeatureCollection",
    "name": "artefact",
    "crs": {
        "type": "name",
        "properties": {
            "name": "EPSG:4326"
        }
    },
    "features": [
        {
            "type": "Feature",
            "geometry": {
                "type": "Point",
                "coordinates": [
                    30.886509,
                    28.64023
                ]
            },
            "properties": {
                "id": 539,
                "artefact_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/artefact\/539",
                "site_id": 55,
                "site_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/place\/55",
                "site_name": "Qar\u0101ra",
                "clm_id": "TM 21459",
                "material": "Papyrus",
                "description": "P.Neph. 48: Sale of a house\r\nThe text is fragmentary and details are missing, but it contains a sale contract concerning a house. The contracting parties are two inhabitants of the \"Mount Phathor\" in the Herakleopolites, one of whom, the purchaser, is expressly described as a monk; the seller, who had previously lived in Oxyrhynchites and left it to settle in Phathor, inherited the object of sale from a priest named Dioskoros, which strongly suggests that he too was a monk. These indications make it clear that the \"Mount Hathor\" here is identical to the desert or mountain where the monastery of Phathor mentioned ten years later in P.Lond VI 1913 was located.\r\nAccording to the editor, at the time of the contract, the monks on Hathor apparently did not live in a communal monastic complex, but in private houses that belonged to them and, as the text shows, were even quite large and furnished in a way that we do not really expect from a monastic dwelling (at least three rooms here, including a linen weaving workshop, a staircase to an upper floor). Presumably, then, Hathor is a summary name for the settlements of the monks, and it only later became a monastic district and a monastery.\r\nThe script is a slightly clumsy cursive typical of the 4th c. The scribe has made many mistakes that could be an indication that he was a Copt.",
                "date_from": 323,
                "date_to": 323,
                "dating_criteria": "Dated to the 4th c. in ed.pr. but the date formula was later corrected to September 15th, 323 (BL IX, 174).",
                "selection_criteria": "Mention of Christian cult officials\/institutions",
                "absolute_relative_date": null,
                "stratigraphic_context": "",
                "shelf_mark": "",
                "bibliography": "",
                "external_links": [
                    {
                        "text": "TM 21459",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/text\/21459"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "DDbDP (PN)",
                        "url": "http:\/\/papyri.info\/ddbdp\/p.neph;;48"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "Heidelberger Papyrussammlung \u2013 Das Archiv des Nepheros, P.Neph. 48",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de\/~gv0\/Papyri\/P.Neph.\/048\/P.Neph._48.html"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "TM Archive 164 \u2013 Apa Paieous",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/archive\/164"
                    },
                    {
                        "text": "TM Archive 150 \u2013 Nepheros ",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/archive\/150"
                    }
                ],
                "classes": "Textual",
                "writing_medium": "Sheet\/roll",
                "text_content": "Documentary",
                "language": "Greek",
                "archive": "Archive",
                "authors": [
                    {
                        "author": "Val\u00e9rie Schram",
                        "year": "2021"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    ]
}