Schubart suggests that Waluburg may have accompanied Germanic auxiliary troops who were sent to the southern Egyptian border. During the Byzantine era, Germanic troops appear to have been stationed there, which is shown by the find of
a fragment of the Gothic Bible in Egypt, and seeresses often accompanied Germanic troops. Enright considers it unlikely for her to have arrived at the location unless she followed a warband of auxiliary troops of her own tribe, and perhaps, the seeresses
Veleda,
Aurinia, and
Ganna often accompanied the troops of their warlords. However, although, there are abundant records of Germanic troops in Egypt and three cohorts in Syene in the fourth and fifth centuries, there is no evidence of a Germanic garrison in Syene during the first and the second centuries AD. Consequently, it has been suggested that the ostracon is from a later time, but the ethnonym, or cult name,
Semnones did not survive the seonnd century, and it was last attested in 179/180 AD by
Cassius Dio. It also is unlikely that Waluburg served in one of the temples on the island. Schubart also proposes that Waluburg may also have been a war prisoner accompanying a Roman soldier in his career that led to his being stationed in Egypt at the
first cataract.
Simek considers her to have been deported by the Roman authorities, and he writes that it is uncertain how she arrived at Elephantine, but it is not surprising considering the significant and obvious influence that the Germanic seeresses wielded politically. She also may have been a valued hostage who eventually would have been returned to her people (cf.
Germania 8), and perhaps future finds of papyri will clarify this. Reichert considers her to have been hired by the
Roman governor, as the Romans appreciated the prophetic skills of the Germanic seeresses.
Clement of Alexandria, who lived in Egypt at the same time as Waluburg, and the earlier
Plutarch, mentioned that the Germanic seeresses also could predict the future while studying the eddies, the whirling and the splashing of currents, and this may be the reason why Waluburg found herself on the island of Elephantine within hearing distance of the swirling waters of the First Cataract of the Nile. ==Notes==