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The short radius of women's mail
Status is derived only from the shepherd-authored triage/prediction data above -- community submissions and claims are a separate overlay and can never change it (see the participation panel below).
Claim (verbatim)
Women appear as senders in a solid minority of papyrus letters, and those letters have geography. If women's correspondence was primarily kin-maintenance across household splits — daughters writing to mothers, wives to traveling husbands — their letters should span shorter distances and reuse a smaller set of counterpart names than men's business mail, independent of who physically penned the sheet. Both properties are measurable in the mapped letter corpus. If it holds, gendered mobility rather than gendered writing ability becomes the binding constraint visible in the everyday record, and the women's letters we possess are the near-field of networks whose far-field was male-carried.
Prediction clause (verbatim)
In papyri.info letters with mapped origin and destination, female-sent letters show a median route distance at least 30% shorter than male-sent letters of the same period band. Primary clause: that median distance gap — a distribution test on the place-mapping data.
Kill-dataset (verbatim)
papyri.info sender identifications joined to the project's papyri place-mapping data.
Nobody has run this test. The kill-data is named above. If you can run it — or you know the paper that already settles it — claim the kill or submit the prior. Kills and priors are credited here, by name, as they come in.
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Provenance
Run: Fresh agent generation · model: claude-fable-5
Generated blind by claude-fable-5 in a single Write from the inline prompt alone, with no file reads, web access, or database queries.
Novelty / leakage triage
anticipated in the literature — this exact test has never been run
Bagnall & Cribiore's corpus of women's letters analyzes their social and economic contexts and finds standing rather than gender drives expression, anticipating the terrain, but the median route-distance comparison of female- vs male-sent letters on mapped origins/destinations is un-run.
Predictions
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