Oxyrhynchus Papyri: Pt. 72
'Part I continues publication of the New Testament papyri from Oxyrhynchus, with fragments from two codices of Corinthians. Part II offers otherwise unknown hexameter poetry, much of it on traditional mythological subjects; the most substantial fragment, 4850, combines Homeric language and pathetic rhetoric in a way typical of Late Epic. Part III contains substantial fragments of two rhetoric handbooks. All but two of the thirty-five documentary texts in Part IV relate to giro transfers of private grain-stocks within and between state granaries. The papyri in Part V relate mostly to the fourth and fifth centuries and are chosen for their contribution to the chronology of consulates and post-consulates and include matters on civil and military bearing' - "Graeco-Roman Memoirs, Numbered 92", 2008.