Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gvvz8 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-26T05:46:34.355Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Epigraphic disjecta membra in Cyrenaica

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 March 2015

Extract

1. In 1936 Professor Gaspare Oliverio published an inscription cut on a sandstone stele found re-used in one of the Churches of ancient Taucheira. The apparently mundane text has attracted no attention. In 1959 R. G. Goodchild initiated serious excavation of the building concerned by the Libyan Department of Antiquities and in the course of work supervised by Mr. Breyek Atiyah another inscribed sandstone stele was found very close to Oliverio's. It became apparent that the two adjoined and that the resulting text is of some interest.

Two rectangular sandstone blocks forming part of a composite monument (together width 0.72 m × height 1.17 × depth 0.40), a damaged at the upper righthand corner, b along all edges; there is extensive pitting on the face, some of which had already occurred before the stone was inscribed.

Letters, II–III cent. A.D.: 1.1, 0.06; 11.2–5, 0.05–0.06; ε, ω; Y cut within 0 in 11.3, 4; the cutter has spaced so as to avoid holes in the face.

G. Oliverio, Documenti Antichi dell'Africa Italiana II (Bergamo, 1936), no.288 and pl.LXXII, fig.29, whence SEG IX, 544 (righthand side only).

Photos, Dept. F.1078 (righthand side only); JR Tocra III. 51 (E. Alföldi-Rosenbaum). See plate 1.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society for Libyan Studies 1974

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1. See e.g. SEG IX.63Google Scholar
2.SEG IX.172Google Scholar
3.Kraeling, C. H., Ptolemais (Chicago, 1962), p.212, no.15 and pl.LIIIC.Google Scholar
4.Sterrett, W., Papers of the American School at Athens, III (1884\1885) p.280f.Google Scholar
5.SEG IX.93Google Scholar
6. See Nock, A. D., JHS XLV (1925) 95f. and the discussion S. V. Epiphanie in PW S IV.Google Scholar
7.Annuario delta Scuola Archeologica di Atene XXIII–IV (19621921), p.240, no.28.Google Scholar
8. e.g. SEG IX.80f.Google Scholar
9.SEG IX.68, 65.Google Scholar
10.Annuario vol. cit. above p.242. no.33, with photo, fig.1.Google Scholar
11.Africa Italiana III (1930) 211 and 192, with photo, fig.51 = SEG IX.97.Google Scholar
12. cf. SEG IX. 174Google Scholar
13. In Sculture Greche e Romane di Cirene ed. Anti, C. (Padova, 1959) 183; the inscriptions and statues are also mentioned in G. Oliverio, Scavi di Cirene (Bergamo, 1931) 31 and the statues are illustrated by E. Paribeni, Catalogo delle Sculture di Cirene (Rome, 1959) pl.172.Google Scholar
14. There is in fact at Ptolemais an inscription of the later second century linking a Pausanias, C. Julius with a Thaleia, Cocceia, SEG IX.411; but it is unlikely that the Ptolemais family had connections of this sort with Cyrene.Google Scholar
15.SEG IX.242Google Scholar
16.SEG IX. 128Google Scholar
17.SEG IX.257, 274, 275, 293, 299Google Scholar
18.Annuario, vol. cit. above, no.68.Google Scholar