The Ptolemaic Decrees were a series of decrees by synods of ancient Egyptian priests. They were issued in the Ptolemaic Kingdom, which controlled Egypt from 305 BC to 30 BC. In each decree, the benefactions of the reigning pharaoh, especially towards the priesthood, are recognised, and religious honours are decreed for him.[1]
There exist three copies plus a fragment of the Decree of Canopus, two copies of the Memphis Decree (one imperfect), and two and a half copies of the text of the Rosetta Stone, including the copy on the Nubayrah Stele and a temple wall inscription with edits, or scene replacements, completed by subsequent scribes.
243 BC Decree of Alexandria (Ptolemy III)
The Decree of Alexandria was issued on the 13rd of Gorpiaios (3 December) 243 BCE. It proclaimed that statues of Ptolemy III and his wife Berenice II as well as a shrine for them should be set up in each temple to worship them as beneficent gods.[3]
238 BC Decree of Canopus (Ptolemy III)
The Decree was issued on 7 Appellaios (Mac.) = 17 Tybi (Eg.) year 9 of Ptolemy III = Thursday 7 March 238 BCE (proleptic Julian calendar).
Stone 1: Stele of Canopus, (no. 1), found 1866, 37 lines of hieroglyphs, 74 lines of Demotic (right side), 76 lines of Greek 'capitals', fine limestone.
Stone 2: Stele of Canopus (no. 2), found 1881, 26 lines hieroglyphs, 20 lines Demotic, 64 lines Greek 'capitals', white limestone.
3rd partial text with lines of hieroglyphs (now in the Louvre).
4th text was discovered in 2004 at Bubastis, by the German-Egyptian 'Tell Basta Project'.
217 BC Decree of Memphis (Ptolemy IV)
Stone 1: Raphia Decree, found 1902 at the site of ancient Memphis, hieroglyphs, Demotic, and Greek, dark granite.
Stone 2: Pithom Stele, No. II, found 1923, hieroglyphs (front), 42 lines Demotic (back), virtually complete, providing an almost total translation, and Greek (side), sandstone.
Stone 1: Stele of Rosetta, "The Rosetta Stone", found 1799, (remaining) hieroglyphs, 14 lines, 32 lines Demotic, 54 lines Greek 'capitals', dark granite (granodiorite).
Stone 2: Nubayrah Stele, found in the early 1880s, hieroglyphs, lines 1–27 were used to complete the missing lines on the Rosetta Stone, Demotic, Greek capitals, limestone.
Site 3: the Temple of Philae, inscribed hieroglyphs from the Third Decree on walls, also overwritten, with scenes and figures of humans/gods.
186 BC Philensis II Decree (Ptolemy V)
Issued at Alexandria on 6 September 186 BC after the suppression of Ankhwennefer's Upper Egyptian revolt.[2][4]
Stone 1: Stele of Philae II
Stone 2: Stele of Cairo
186 BC New Year's Decree (Ptolemy V)
Issued on 9 October 186 BC (New Year's day), perhaps to celebrate the birth of Ptolemy VI.[4]
Papyrus 1: P. Kroll. = P. Köln 7.313
185 BC Philensis I Decree (Ptolemy V)
Issued at Memphis on 29 October 185 BC, upon the enthronement of an Apis bull.[2][4]
Stone 1: Stele of Philae I
182 BC Memphis decree (Ptolemy V)
Issued on 29 May 182 BC, after a visit to Memphis by the Mnevis bull.[4]
161 BC Decree (Ptolemy VI)
Issued on 31 July 161 BC, upon a royal visit to Memphis, shortly after Ptolemy VI was restored to power.[4]
Thompson, Dorothy J. (2012). Memphis under the Ptolemies (2nd ed.). Princeton (N. J.): Princeton university press. ISBN9780691152172.
Further reading
El-Masry, Yahia; Altenmüller, Hartwig; Thissen, Heinz-Josef (2012). Das Synodaldekret von Alexandria aus dem Jahre 243 v. Chr (in German). Buske. ISBN9783875486223.
Von Recklingshausen, Daniel (2018). Die Philensis-dekrete: Untersuchungen Uber Zwei Synodaldekrete Aus Der Zeit Ptolemaios' V. Und Ihre Geschichtliche Und Religiose Bedeutung (in German). Otto Harrassowitz. ISBN9783447108027.