2 February 2026 The Future is the Product of the Past

Polish archaeologists discover papyruses containing a list of Roman centurions at Berenike

Papyruses with lists of Roman centurions stationed in Egypt were found by Polish archaeologists in Berenike. These unique documents were found along with, among other things, pottery from Italy, Roman coins, and a special coat buckle in what may be the remains of a centurion’s office.

Berenike, located on the Red Sea, is an ancient port built by Emperor Tiberius shortly after the Roman Empire annexed Egypt. Archaeologists have suspected for years that a military unit was also stationed at Berenike. – It is very likely that these were soldiers of the Third Legion of Cyrenaica, who were famous, for example, for stopping the expansion of Meroe in Nubia and pacifying the uprising in Jerusalem in 70.

“For Egyptologists and other scholars of antiquity, this is an extremely rare and high-caliber discovery. There are very few sites from the Roman period in this part of the world. On the other hand, the rank of these discoveries is truly phenomenal,” says Professor Marta Osypińska from the Institute of Archeology of the University of Wrocław.

An international team led by Professor Marta Osypińska investigated a unique pet cemetery from the 1st and 2nd centuries in Berenike. Among the animal burials discovered there, archaeologists discovered an accumulation of exclusive ceramics from Italy, the Mediterranean, Africa and India, Roman coins, and a fibula, a coat pin that was characteristic and popular in Europe and was worn by legionnaires. The finds also included ostracons (fragments of texts on ceramics) and, above all, several papyri, which may be an invaluable source of knowledge about the ancient inhabitants of Berenike.

The correspondence preserved on papyri are letters of centurions, i.e. co-officers and commanders of Roman legions. The names that appear in the letters are Haosus, Lucinius, and Petronius.



📣 Our WhatsApp channel is now LIVE! Stay up-to-date with the latest news and updates, just click here to follow us on WhatsApp and never miss a thing!!



“In this correspondence, Petronius asks Lucianius, stationed at Berenike, about the prices of particular exclusive goods. There is also a statement: I give you the money, send them with dromedarius (a troop of legionaries moving on dromedaries). Take care of them, so that you provide them with calves and tent poles” – describes the archaeologist.

Photo: M.Osypińska

The animal cemetery where the papyri were found is located on the western outskirts of Berenike. So far, mainly ostracons have been found there, which – as Osypińska says – are “objects of desire” for philologists and epigraphists. “It’s a direct Roman written source and it’s in Egypt. Now, when looking for animal burials, we pull out dozens of these ostracons. However, no one has found papyri at this site so far,” she emphasizes.

According to scientists, the finds come from the centurion’s office or residence, which must have been located near the cemetery. Over the years, when the area was leveled, the remains of the legionnaires’ presence were mechanically transferred to the animal cemetery.

At the beginning, it was difficult to assess the importance of the discovery. Archaeologists found only small rolls, a few centimeters long. Although they were identified as fragments of papyri, unwritten papyri were usually kept that way.

“We secured them, however, and waited for the arrival of the epigrapher, the head of the Institute of Papyrology at Heidelberg University, Prof Rodney Asta. He and his wife assembled a jigsaw puzzle half a metre long and 30 cm wide from these small rolls. They covered them with glass to allow them to expand and were able to assemble several letters from them. Now the texts are still being carefully studied” – describes the researcher.

The project ‘Non-humans in the Berenike community’, led by Prof. Dr. Marta Osypinska, is funded by the National Science Centre.

PAP

Cover Photo: K.Braulińska

Related Articles

A 42,000-year-old pendant found in northern Mongolia may be the earliest known phallic art

20 June 2023

20 June 2023

An international team of researchers has found a pendant in northern Mongolia that may be the earliest known example of...

Mass graves of Crusaders killed in the 13th century have been discovered in Lebanon

17 September 2021

17 September 2021

From 1096 to 1291, waves of Europeans took up arms and marched into the Middle East. They hope to “take...

New finds in ancient Rome’s Pompeii show ‘conditions of precarity and poor hygiene, in which people of lower status lived during that time

20 August 2023

20 August 2023

Archaeologists have discovered a small bedroom in Civita Giuliana villa near Pompeii that was almost certainly used by slaves, throwing...

Archaeologists uncovered a 3,500-year-old Egyptian Royal Retreat in the Sinai Desert

5 May 2024

5 May 2024

An Egyptian mission uncovered the ruins of a 3,500-year-old “royal fortified rest area” at the Tel Habwa archaeological site in...

The Headless Corpses of Somersham was Victims of Roman Executions

30 May 2021

30 May 2021

Excavations at Knobb’s Farm in Somersham, Cambridgeshire, unearthed three small late Roman graves on the outskirts of an agricultural village....

A Previously Unknown Bronze Age Settlement Discovered in Switzerland

18 February 2024

18 February 2024

In advance of a construction project in Heimberg, the Archaeological Service of the Canton of Bern carried out a rescue...

Over 20 terracotta warriors have been discovered in the Terracotta Army pit in China

24 January 2022

24 January 2022

More than 20 Terracotta Warriors were unearthed from the Terracotta Army pit in Xi’an, northwest China’s Shaanxi province, according to...

An Unprecedented Discovery: Archaeologists Found a Viking Age Vulva Stone -A Counterpart to Phallic Symbols?

25 September 2025

25 September 2025

Archaeologists in Norway may have uncovered the first known vulva stone from the Viking Age. The find could reshape our...

Scientists Find Aztec ‘Death Whistles’ do Weird Things to the Listeners’ Brains

18 November 2024

18 November 2024

New research reveals that one of the Aztecs’ most chilling artefacts, clay death whistles, which resemble a human skull and...

Earliest Evidence of Bronze Production in the Southern Levant Unearthed at Site of El-Ahwat

11 August 2025

11 August 2025

Archaeologists working at the site of El-Ahwat in northern Israel have uncovered the earliest known evidence of on-site bronze production...

“Exceptionally rare” gold sword pommel given to Scottish national museums

24 October 2022

24 October 2022

An “exceptionally rare” solid gold sword pommel found by a metal detectorist near Blair Drummond, Stirling, has been acquired by...

7,000 years ago the earliest evidence for the cultivation of a fruit tree came from the Jordan valley

17 June 2022

17 June 2022

Tel Aviv University and Jerusalem’s Hebrew University researchers have unraveled the earliest evidence for the domestication of a fruit tree....

Ancient settlements that challenge traditional thinking “Karahantepe and Taş Tepeler”

5 December 2021

5 December 2021

After Göbeklitepe in Şanlıurfa, which sheds light on 12,000 years ago in human history and is considered one of the...

New Archaeological Discoveries in Abu Dhabi shed light on Umm an-Nar Bronze Age culture (2700-2000 BCE)

1 February 2024

1 February 2024

New findings demonstrate the resilience and inventiveness of local Bronze Age societies (Umm an-Nar Bronze Age culture), as well as...

1900 years old a rare mosaic was discovered in Durrës, Albania

6 November 2023

6 November 2023

In the port city of Durrës, on the Adriatic Sea in western Albania, a unique mosaic dating back 1900 years...