The feverish battles over tattered papyrus scrolls

Papyrus trading is becoming feverish with 15 tattered lines of Homer selling at 16,000 euros

Tattered papyrus scrolls are increasingly sought items in the world of online auction trading. Typical of the fierce battle in online auction trading is a rectangular papyrus scrap measuring 4.5 inches by 1.5 inches with 15 partial lines of Homer’s “The Illiad” written by a 4th-Century Egyptian scribe sold this month to a European buyer for 16,000 pounds.

St. Paul’s epistle to the Romans was bought at Sotheby’s for 301,000 pounds. The price stunned auctioneers and is indicative of a burgeoning online trade that unscrupulous sellers are interested in cashing in on.

There is a free-ranging trade on eBay where documents are carved up for sale. Traffickers dismembering papyrus books to sell page-by-page items and forgers flourish here. One of the most famous cases was a fragment known as the Gospel of Jesus’s Wife that made headlines after overturning nearly two millennia of theological teaching that Jesus was unmarried but is now viewed as a forgery.

There are concerns that the old documents aren’t handled well. The Gospel of Judas was stored by one of its owners in a safe-deposit box for sixteen years before being placed in a freezer by a potential buyer who that that this was one way to preserve it.

There are fears that ancient manuscripts are crumbling and will soon be lost forever.

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