Miriam Müller, Joanne Stolk
Leiden University Library, Vossius room
The collections of the NINO have undergone a transition period over the past two years. Following the relocation of the NINO to the Herta Mohr Building in 2024, all NINO collections – including the clay tablets and objects as well as the paper archives – were integrated into the Special Collections of the Leiden University Libraries. Parts of the collections were also transferred to and are now on display at other institutions, such as the National Museum of Antiquities. During this transition period, the collections were researched, preserved, and partially digitized. Many colleagues, student assistants, and guest researchers contributed to various aspects of this work.
The Leiden University Library is also home to the Leiden Papyrological Institute. The collection of the Leiden Papyrological Institute consists mainly of Greek papyrus documents from Graeco-Roman Egypt, but also contains other written objects – from potsherds to wax tablets – in various languages. A significant part of the collection has not be published yet and work on the deciphering and interpretation of the papyrus documents is ongoing.
During this event, we aim to showcase our ongoing projects and present the results of recent studies on materials from these two collections.
13:00-13:15 | Introduction – Miriam Müller (NINO) & Joanne Stolk (Leiden Papyrological Institute)
13:15-13:45 | The Böhl collection & archives in Connection – Sebastiaan Berntsen & Carolien van Zoest (NINO)
13:45-14:15 | The NINO glass slide collection: past, present, and future – Luna Beerden (Leiden University)
14:15-14:45 | Professor Machteld J. Mellink and her NINO and Kampman connections: from beginning archaeologist to honoured publicist for BiOr – Machteld Pel (niece & biographer of Machteld J. Mellink)
14:45-15:00 | Break
15:00-15:30 | Developments in Graeco-Roman amulet use with the arrival of Christianity (P.Leiden Pap. Inst. inv. 81 and 514) – Patricia Kret (Leiden University)
15:30-16:00 | Registering people in ancient Oxyrhynchus: new evidence for the last census in 257 CE (P.Leiden Pap. Inst. inv. 182) – Elise Hoekstra (Leiden University)
16:00-16:30 | The grain account of Tatriphis in Tholtis (P.Leiden Pap. Inst. inv. 153) – Walt Kraeger (Leiden University)
16:30-16:45 | Closing
17:00-18:00 | Reception (Herta Mohr Building, Common Room LIAS/NINO)