The papyrus contains a previously unknown medical text from late antiquity, describing a condition called “hysterical apnoea” Hasselblad H5D/ University of Basel

Scientists at the University of Basel have solved the mystery of a 2,000-year-old papyrus. They deciphered the Greek document and discovered a medical script which was probably written by one of the most important doctors of late antiquity.

This content was published on July 16, 2018 - 11:47

swissinfo.ch/ln

The Basel papyrus collection has been home to the mysterious papyrus since the 16th century. A university research team have now decoded the document using ultraviolet and infrared imaging techniques, the university announced in a press release.

Until now, the papyrus was “regarded as unique in the world of papyrology and puzzled generations of researchers”, the university wrote.

The researchers discovered that the document was in fact not just a single papyrus, but several layers of papyrus glued together.

A specialist papyrus restorer came to Basel to help separate the individual sheets, enabling the team to decode the document for the first time.

It contains a previously unknown medical text from late antiquity, describing a condition called “hysterical apnoea”, according to Sabine Huebner, professor of ancient history at the University of Basel.

+ Dozens of skeletons found under a Swiss school

High value

On the basis of these findings, the scientists assume it is either a text by the Roman physician Galen or an unknown commentary on his work.

After Hippocrates, Galen is widely regarded as the most important physician of antiquity.

“This is a sensational discovery,” Huebner said. The majority of papyri were letters, contracts or receipts, but this literary text was of a much higher value than those more common kinds,” she said.

The researchers from Basel made this discovery within the context of a project funded by the Swiss National Science Foundation.

The papyri collection of the University of Basel contains 65 documents. In 1900, at a time when papyrology was booming, the university was the first German-speaking university to procure a papyrus collection.

This article was automatically imported from our old content management system. If you see any display errors, please let us know: community-feedback@swissinfo.ch