Universitätsbibliothek HeidelbergUniversitätsbibliothek Heidelberg
Metadaten

Bulletin du Musée National de Varsovie — 42.2001

DOI article:
Twardecki, Alfred: Greek Inscriptions Acquired for the National Museum in Warsaw by Professor Kazimierz Michałowski
DOI Page / Citation link:
https://doi.org/10.11588/diglit.18950#0135

DWork-Logo
Overview
Facsimile
0.5
1 cm
facsimile
Scroll
OCR fulltext
I. GROUP OF METRIC INSCRIPTIONS

1. Epitaph of Doxa (cat. no. 3; inv. no. 198829; ill. 2), from Madytos on
Thracian Chersonesos.

2. Epitaph of Philo (cat. no. 14; inv. no. 198848), from Tigani (Samos).

One of two written testimonies of the neologism v|/nxo/Vt7ifię
(“souldeparting” i.e. dead). Important, repeatedly published and ąuoted
inscription of popular literary theme.

3. Epitaph of Menander, Poseidonios, Asklepiades and Melitine (cat. no. 16;
inv. no. 198855; ill. 3), from Kyzikos. It is most probably

a tombstone of the entire family.

4. Epitaph of Photinos, son of Lakon. (cat. no. 17; inv. no. 98785),
from Erythrai

5. Epitaph of Hermogeneia (cat. no. 20; inv. no. 198731), from Dometia in
Asia Minor. Elements of Doric dialect used in the text suggest its origin.
Hormogeneia herself came from Egypt.

6. Epitaph of Sabinos (cat. no. 30; inv. no. 198790), from Byblos
in Phoenicia.

7. Epitaph of Sosibios (cat. no. 67; inv. no. 198803; ill. 4), from Egypt.

8. Epitaph of Herois (cat. no. 68; inv. no. 198796), from Egypt.

Inscription in the form of dialogue. 9

9. Epitaph of Sarapion (cat. no. 69; inv. no. 198786), from Egypt.
A rare epithet dpxtyevetoę (young-bearded) was used here. In epigraphic texts
it appears also in a metric epitaph from Peloponnesus.

3. Epitaph of Menander,
Poseidonios, Asklepiades
and Melitine
(photo Z. Doliński)

133
 
Annotationen