A joint Egyptian-German archaeological mission has uncovered around 13,000 inscribed pottery fragments at Athribis in Sohag Governorate, offering fresh insights into social, economic, and religious life in Upper Egypt across centuries. The total ostraca found since 2005 now reaches roughly 43,000, setting a global record for a single site.
A joint Egyptian-German archaeological mission, collaborating between Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquities and University of Tübingen, announced the discovery of approximately 13,000 ostraca during the current excavation season at Athribis in Sohag Governorate. Ostraca served in antiquity as inexpensive writing surfaces for daily records, education, and religious purposes. This brings the total unearthed at the site since operations began in 2005 to roughly 43,000, which archaeologists describe as a global record surpassing finds at Deir el-Medina near Luxor and any other Egyptian site over more than two centuries of work. Preliminary analysis shows 60-75% of the new ostraca inscribed in Demotic script, 15-30% in Greek, with 4-5% featuring pictorial or geometric drawings. Smaller shares include Hieratic (about 1.5%), Hieroglyphic (0.25%), Coptic (0.2%), and Arabic (0.1%). The texts cover practical administrative records such as accounts, lists, tax receipts, and delivery orders. They also feature students’ writing exercises, indicating Athribis functioned as an important educational center, alongside religious content like hymns, prayers, dedication formulas, and checks on sacrificial animals’ ritual purity. Experts state the find offers valuable material for tracing the evolution of language, administration, education, and religious practices in ancient Egypt, highlighting the society’s cultural diversity and administrative complexity across eras.