E. Laflı/H. Bru, Inscriptions gréco-romaines d’Anatolie V, in: H. Bru/G. Labarre (eds.), Chronique d’Orient, Chronique 2016, Dialogues d’histoire ancienne 42, 2, 2016, 224-239, 2016
In this brief note in French language some new Greek and Roman inscriptions from Asia Minor were ... more In this brief note in French language some new Greek and Roman inscriptions from Asia Minor were presented. This is an abridged version; please e-mail me for the full-version: [email protected]
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This article will be displayed in Academia beginning from January 1, 2023 at the same time with Persée, as it can be filed on freely accessible online archives no earlier than three years after the release of its journal. Please e-mail me for obtaining this brief article before 2023: [email protected]
In this brief note in French language five formerly unpublished Roman inscriptions from Asia Minor were presented which are in Greek.
A correction:
For the dedication to Tyche (no. 2), the name of the dedicant is apparently the double name of a Roman citizen, e.g. Ἰουνία Ἀρσινόη (rather than Μουνία Ἀ. - although there is a Roman nomen Munius/Munia) - with a Roman nomen and a Greek cognomen; otherwise a sequence of two non-Roman names in the nominative (and one of them unattested) does not make much sense.
In no. 3, Πακυια also seems to be a Roman name, Pacuvia/Pacuia (in Greek usually written with ου, Πακουια).
The full form of this brief article will be displayed in Academia beginning from January 1, 2023, as it can be filed on freely accessible online archives no earlier than one year after the release of its journal. Please e-mail me for obtaining this brief article before 2023: [email protected]
This paper presents four formerly unpublished Greek inscriptions from western Turkey. These new texts consist of two Hellenistic funerary steles, an altar dedicated to divus Augustus and to the goddess Livia Hera (including a new priest of Caesar and a new priestess), then also a new list of boukoloi (cowherds) of Dionysos Kathegemon dated from the beginning of the second century A.D.
Keywords: funerary steles, boukoloi, thea Livia Hera, priest of Caesar
This article will be displayed in Academia beginning from January 1, 2023 at the same time with Persée, as it can be filed on freely accessible online archives no earlier than three years after the release of its journal. Please e-mail me for obtaining this brief article before 2023: [email protected]
In this brief note in French language five formerly unpublished Roman inscriptions from Asia Minor were presented which are in Greek.
A correction:
For the dedication to Tyche (no. 2), the name of the dedicant is apparently the double name of a Roman citizen, e.g. Ἰουνία Ἀρσινόη (rather than Μουνία Ἀ. - although there is a Roman nomen Munius/Munia) - with a Roman nomen and a Greek cognomen; otherwise a sequence of two non-Roman names in the nominative (and one of them unattested) does not make much sense.
In no. 3, Πακυια also seems to be a Roman name, Pacuvia/Pacuia (in Greek usually written with ου, Πακουια).
The full form of this brief article will be displayed in Academia beginning from January 1, 2023, as it can be filed on freely accessible online archives no earlier than one year after the release of its journal. Please e-mail me for obtaining this brief article before 2023: [email protected]
This paper presents four formerly unpublished Greek inscriptions from western Turkey. These new texts consist of two Hellenistic funerary steles, an altar dedicated to divus Augustus and to the goddess Livia Hera (including a new priest of Caesar and a new priestess), then also a new list of boukoloi (cowherds) of Dionysos Kathegemon dated from the beginning of the second century A.D.
Keywords: funerary steles, boukoloi, thea Livia Hera, priest of Caesar
This article will be displayed in Academia beginning from January 1, 2024 at the same time with Persée, as it can be filed on freely accessible online archives no earlier than three years after the release of its journal. Please e-mail me for obtaining this brief article before 2023: [email protected]
In this brief note in French language five formerly unpublished Roman inscriptions from Asia Minor were presented which are in Greek.