No CrossRef data available.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
During a journey in the spring of last year along the east coast of the Messenian Gulf I took an impression of a fragment of a Latin inscription built into the north wall of the Church of Hagios Taxiarches in the village of Oetylus.
The fragment is of white marble and is broken on every side. It measures ̇47 m. in height and ̇21 m. in width. The letters measure ̇013 m.
1 C.I.L. iii. pp. 804–811: Leake, , Transactions of the Royal Society of Literature, 1827, pp. 181–204Google Scholar. It was first discovered by Sherard, British Consul at Smyrna, 1702–1718.
2 C.I.L. iii. pp. 802, 803: a facsimile of a portion of it is given by Hübner, , Exempla script. epigr. Lat. (Berlin, 1885)Google Scholar.
3 C.I.L. iii. p. 1913: Papers of the American School at Athens, v. (1892) pp. 233–244.
4 C.I.L. iii. p. 823.
5 Ath. Mitth. xvii. (1892) p. 156 ff: C.I.L. iii. p. 1915.
6 Le Bas-Foucart, , nos. 229–232: C.I.L. iii. 816–819 and 1925Google Scholar.
7 It is mentioned in the Catalogue of the Ships (Il. ii. 585).
8 On the Topography and Antiquities of Oetylus, see B.S.A. vol. x. p. 160.