I Can’t Sleep - Papyrus | Can’t Sleep? Learn About Ancient Paper

Episode Date: June 17, 2026

Papyrus helped preserve human knowledge for thousands of years. This episode explores the papyrus plant, how ancient Egyptians transformed its stems into a writing surface, and how papyrus became one ...of the most important materials in the ancient world. Along the way, you’ll hear about scribes, scrolls, libraries, archaeological discoveries, and the surprisingly long journey of written documents from the banks of the Nile to museums and collections around the world. It’s steady and consistent, with no whispering and no sudden changes, just enough to give your mind something to follow as you wind down. Happy sleeping! Read with permission from Papyrus, Wikipedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Papyrus), licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. — Ad-free episodes: ⁠icantsleep.supportingcast.fm⁠Have a topic in mind? ⁠Request a topic⁠ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit ⁠megaphone.fm/adchoices Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:31 where I help you drift off one fact at a time. I'm your host, Benjamin Boster, and today's episode is about papyrus. Visit BetMGM Casino and check out the newest exclusive. The Price is Right Fortune Pick. BetMGM and Game Sense remind you to play responsibly, 19 plus to wager. Ontario only. Please play responsibly. If you have questions or concerns about your gambling or someone close to you,
Starting point is 00:01:01 Peace contact connects Ontario at 1-866-531-2600 to speak to an advisor, free of charge. BetMGEM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming Ontario. Papyrus is a material similar to thick paper that was used in ancient times as a writing material. It was made from the piss of the papyrus plant. Cypirus papyrus, a wetland sedge. Papyrus, plural papyrus. or papyruses, can also refer to a document written on sheets of such material, joined side by side, and rolled up into a scroll, an early form of a book.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Papyrus was first known to have been used in Egypt, at least as far back as the first dynasty, as the papyrus plant was once abundant across the Nile Delta. It was also used throughout the Mediterranean region. Apart from writing material, ancient Egyptians employed papyrus in the construction of other artifacts, such as reed boats, mats, rope, sandals, and baskets. Papyrus was first manufactured in Egypt as far back as the third millennium BCE. The earliest archaeological evidence of papyrus was excavated in, 2012 and 2013, had Wadi al-Jarf, an ancient Egyptian harbor, located on the Red Sea coast.
Starting point is 00:03:00 These documents, the diary of mirror, date from circa 2560 to 2550 BCE. The papyrus rolls described the last years of building the great pyramid of Giza. For multiple millennia, papyrus was commonly rolled into scrolls as a form of storage. However, at some point, laid in its history, papyrus began being collected together in the form of codices, akin to the modern book. This may have been mimicking the book form of codices created with parchment. Early Christian writers soon adopted the Codex form, and in the Greco-Roman world, it became common to cut sheets from papyrus rolls to form codices. Codices were an improvement on the papyrus scroll, as the papyrus was not pliable enough to fold
Starting point is 00:04:10 without cracking, and a long roll or scroll was required to create large volume texts. Papyrus had the advantage of being relatively cheap and easy to produce. but it was fragile and susceptible to both moisture and excessive dryness. Unless the papyrus was of perfect quality, the writing surface was irregular, and the range of media that could be used was also limited. Papyrus was gradually overtaken in West Asia and Europe by a rival writing surface that rose in prominence known as parchment,
Starting point is 00:04:57 which was made from animal skins. By the beginning of the 4th century C.E., the most important books began to be manufactured in parchment, and works worth preserving were transferred from papyrus to parchment. Parchment had significant advantages over papyrus, including higher durability in moist climates, and being more conducive to riding on both sides of the surface. The main advantage of papyrus had been its cheaper raw material. The papyrus plant is easy to cultivate in a suitable climate and produces more writing materials than animal hides.
Starting point is 00:05:47 However, as trade networks declined, the availability of papyrus outside the range of the papyrus plant became limited, and it thus lost its cost advantage. Papyrus's last appearance, in the Merovingian Chancery, was with a document from 692 CE, though it was known in Gaul until the middle of the following century. The latest certain dates for the use of papyrus in Europe are 1057 for a papal decree under Pope Victor II, and 1087 for an Arabic document.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Its use in Egypt continued until it was replaced by less expensive, of paper, introduced by the Islamic world. By the 12th century, parchment and paper were in use in the Byzantine Empire, but papyrus was still an option. Until the middle of the 19th century, only some isolated documents written on papyrus were known. A museum simply showed them as curiosities. They did not contain literary works. The first modern, discovery of papyri rolls was made at Herculaneum in 1752. Until then, the only papyri known had been a few surviving from medieval times. Scholarly investigations began with the Dutch historian Kaspar Yaakov Christiane Royvins. He wrote about the content of the Leiden Papyrus, published in 1830.
Starting point is 00:07:41 The first publication has been credited to the British scholar Charles Wycliffe Goodwin, who published for the Cambridge Antiquarian Society, one of the papyri Greikai Maggiqai the 5th, translated into English with commentary in 1853. Papyrus was made in several qualities and prices. Plenty of the elder and dissedore of Seville, described six variations of papyras that were sold in the Roman market of the day. These were graded by quality based on how fine, firm, white, and smooth the writing surface was. Grades range from the superfine Augustine, which was produced in sheets of 13 digits, 10 inches wide, to the least expensive
Starting point is 00:08:44 and most coarse, measuring six digits four inches wide. Materials deemed unusable for writing or less than six digits were considered commercial quality and were pasted edge to edge to be used only for wrapping. The English word papyrus derives via Latin from Greek, Papyrus, a lone word of unknown origin. Greek has a second word for it, Biblos, said to derive from the name of the Phoenician city of Biblus. The Greek writer Theophrastus, who flourished during the 4th century B.C.E. uses papyrus when referring to the plant used as a foodstuff, and Biblus for the same plant when used for non-food products, such as cordage, basketry, or writing surface. The more specific term Biblas, which finds its way into English and such words as bibliography,
Starting point is 00:10:05 bibliophile, and Bible, refers to the inner bark of the papyrus plant. Papyrus is also the edamon of paper, a similar substance. In the Egyptian language, papyrus was called wadge, chufi, or jet. The word for the material papyrus is also used to designate documents written on sheets of it, often rolled up into scrolls. The plural for such documents is papyri. Historical papyri are given identifying names, generally the name of the discoverer, first owner, or institution where they are kept,
Starting point is 00:10:59 and numbered, such as papyrus' salivorous. Harris 1. Often an abbreviated form is used, such as P. Harris 1. These documents provide important information on ancient writings. They give us the only extant copy of Menander, the Egyptian Book of the Dead. Egyptian treatises on medicine and on surgery. Egyptian mathematical treatises. and Egyptian folk tales.
Starting point is 00:11:37 When in the 18th century a library of ancient papyri was found in Herculaneum, ripples of expectation spread among the learned men of the time. However, since these papyri were badly charred, their unscrolling and deciphering are still going on today. Papyrus was made from the stem of the papyrus plant, Cyperus Papyrus. The outer rind was first removed, and the sticky, fibrous inner pit is cut lengthwise into thin strips, about 40 centimeters long. The strips were then placed side by side on a hard surface, with their edges slightly overlapping, and then another layer of strips is laid on top at right angles.
Starting point is 00:12:39 The strips may have been soaked in water long enough for decomposition to be, begin. Perhaps increasing adhesion, but this is not certain. The two layers possibly were glued together. While still moist, the two layers were hammered together, mashing the layers into a single sheet. The sheet was then dried under pressure. After drying, the sheet was polished with a rounded object, possibly a stone, seashell, or round hardwood. Sheets or molemma could be cut to fit the obligatory size or glued together to create a longer roll. The point where the molema are joined with glue is called the coalesis. A wooden stick would be attached to the last sheet in a roll, making it easier to handle.
Starting point is 00:13:45 To form the long strip scrolls required, several such sheets were united and placed so all the horizontal fibers parallel. with the rolls length, were on one side, and all the vertical fibers on the other. Normally, texts were first written on the recto, the lines following the fibers, parallel to long edges of the scroll. Secondarily, papyrus was often reused, writing across the fibers on the verso. One source used for determining the method by which papyrus was used, created in antiquity, is through the examination of tombs in the ancient Egyptian city of Thebes, which housed a necropolis containing many murals, displaying the process of papyrus-making.
Starting point is 00:14:49 The Roman commander, Plenty the Elder, also describes the methods of preparing papyrus in his naturalis' history. In a dry climate like that of Egypt, papyrus is stable. formed as it is of highly rot-resistant cellulose, but storage in humid conditions can result in molds attacking and destroying the material. Library papyrus rolls were stored in wooden boxes and chess made in the form of statues. Papyrus scrolls were organized according to subject or author and identified with clay labels that specified their contents
Starting point is 00:15:38 without having to unroll the scroll. In European conditions, papyrus seems to have lasted only a matter of decades. A 200-year-old papyrus was considered extraordinary. Imported papyrus, once commonplace in Greece and Italy, has since deteriorated beyond repair, but papy are still being found in Egypt. Extraordinary examples include the Elephantine Papyrus, and the famous finds at Ox Rinkus and Nag Hammadi.
Starting point is 00:16:21 The villa of the papyri at Herculaneum, containing the library of Lucius, Calpurnius, Pisos, Sisoninus, Julius Caesar's father-in-law, was preserved by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius, but has only been partially excavated. Sporotic attempts to revive the manufacture of papyrus have been made, since the mid-18th century. Scottish explorer James Bruce
Starting point is 00:16:54 experimented in the late 18th century with papyrus plants from Sudan. Her papyrus had become extinct in Egypt. Also in the 18th century, Sicilian Saverio Landolina manufactured papyrus at Syracuse, where papyrus plans had continued to grow in the wild. During the 1920s,
Starting point is 00:17:21 Egyptologist Berescombegan lived in Ma'adi outside Cairo. He experimented with the manufacture of papyrus, growing the plant in his garden. He beat the sliced papyrus stalks between two layers of linen and produced successful examples of papyrus, one of which was exhibited in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo. The modern technique of papyrus production used in Egypt for the tourist trade was developed in 1962 by the Egyptian engineer Hassan Ragab using plants that had been reintroduced into Egypt in 1872 from France. Both Sicily and Egypt have centers of limited papyrus production. Papyrus is still used by communities living in the vicinity of swamps, to the extent that rural householders derive up to 75% of their income from swamp goods.
Starting point is 00:18:33 Particularly in East and Central Africa, people harvest papyrus, which is used to manufacture items that are sold or used locally. Examples include baskets, hats, fish traps, trays, or winnowing mats and floor mats, papyrus is also used to make roofs, ceilings, rope, and fences. Although alternatives such as eucalyptus are increasingly available, papyrus is still used as fuel. Collections of papyrus. Amherst Papyri This is a collection of William Tissan Amherst, First Baron Amherst of Hackney. It includes biblical manuscripts, early church fragments, and classical documents from the Ptolemaic, Roman, and Byzantine eras. The collection was edited by Bernard Grenfell and Arthur Hunt in 1900 and 1901.
Starting point is 00:19:49 It is housed at the Morgan Library Museum, New York. Archduke Rainer Collection, also known as the Vienna Papyrus Collection, is one of the world's largest collections of papyri, about 180,000 objects, in the Austrian National Library of Vienna, Berlin Papyrus Collection, housed in the Egyptian Museum and Papyrus Collection, Bodmer Papy This collection was purchased by Martin Bodmer in 1955 to 56. Currently it is housed in the Biblioteca Bodmeriana in Coloni.
Starting point is 00:20:40 It includes Greek and Coptic documents, classical texts, biblical works, and writing of the early churches. Chester Beatty Papyri A collection of 11 codices acquired by Alfred Chester Beatty in 1930 to 31 and 1935. It is housed at the Chester Beatty Library. The collection was edited by Frederick G. Kenyon. Cult papyri housed at the Morgan Library and Museum, New York.
Starting point is 00:21:24 Dead Sea Scrolls. A collection of Second Temple Period. Jewish manuscripts, discovered in the West Bank between 1946 and 1956. The scrolls were penned using various writing materials, with 8 to 13 percent of them being written on papyrus. Most of the scrolls are currently housed at the Israel Museum Shrine of the Book in Givot Ram, Jerusalem. Former private collection of Griegel Tsaretele, a collection. collection up to 100 Greek papyri, currently housed at Georgian National Center of Manuscripts, the Herculaneum papyri. These papyri were found in Herculaneum in the 18th century,
Starting point is 00:22:23 carbonized by the eruption of Mount Vesuvius. After some tinkrene, a method was found to unroll and to read them. Most of them are housed at the Naples National Archaeological Museum. The Heroninus Archive, a collection of around a thousand papyrus documents, dealing with the management of a large Roman estate, dating to the 3rd century C.E., found at the very end of the 19th century at Baden Erich, the site of ancient Theodelphia, in the Fiam area of Egypt by Bernard Pine Grenfell and Arthur Surridge Hunt. It is spread over many collections throughout the world. The Houghton's papyry. The collection at Houghton Library, Harvard University, was acquired between 1901 and 1909, thanks to a donation from the Egypt Exploration Fund.
Starting point is 00:23:36 Martin Shuren Collection Greek and Coptic, Dead Sea Scrolls, Classical Documents. Michigan Papyrus Collection This collection contains above 10,000 papyri fragments. It is housed at the University of Michigan. Oxyrinkus papyri. These numerous papyri fragments were discovered by Grenfell and Hunt, in and around Oxyrincas.
Starting point is 00:24:15 The publication of these papyri is, still in progress. A large part of the Oxyrinkas papyri is housed at the Oshmolian Museum in Oxford. Others in the British Museum in London, in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, and many other places. Princeton Papyri. It is housed at the Princeton University. Papiri de la Societad Italiana, PSI. a series still in progress, published by the Societat Per La Recherca de Papiri Grecia of Athina in Egypto, and from 1927 onwards by the succeeding Instituto Papyrologico G. Vitale in Florence. These papy are situated at the Institute itself and in the Biblioteca Lorenziana.
Starting point is 00:25:18 Rylans Papiri This collection contains above 700 Papyri with 31 Ostrakha and 54 codices. It is housed at the John Rylands University Library, Tebtunus Papyri, housed at the Bancroft Library at the University of California Berkeley. This is a collection of more than 30,000 fragments.
Starting point is 00:25:54 dating from the third century BCE through the third century CE, found in the winter 1899 to 1900, at the site of ancient Tebtunus, Egypt, by an expedition team led by the British papyrologist Bernard P. Grenfell and Arthur S. Hunt, Washington University Papyrrery Collection includes 445 manuscript fragments, dating from the first century BCE to the 8th century CE
Starting point is 00:26:32 housed at the Washington University Libraries Yale Papyrus Collection Housed by the Benek Library It contains over 6,000 inventoried items It is cataloged, digitally scanned and accessible online Individual papyri Brooklyn Papyrus
Starting point is 00:27:03 This papyrus focuses mainly on snake bites and their remedies. It speaks of remedial methods for venom obtained from snakes, scorpions, and drentulas. The Brooklyn Papyrus currently resides in the Brooklyn Museum. Sadie Oracle Propyrus This papyrus located at the Brooklyn Museum records the petition of a man named Pimu. on behalf of his father, Herceisi, to ask their God for permission to change temples. Strasbourg Papyrus Will of Naunachte
Starting point is 00:27:49 Found at Der El Medina and dating to the 20th Dynasty, it is notable because it is a legal document for a non-noble woman.

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