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o(; 10
AnoXXa
'Ecpecnoi ?eoqnc,
NiKooxpdxo-o
Gepioxayopac, 1 ... II
Fredrich. 2 10
Conze.
and
Blau Conze
Schlottmann,
ErjeA$ovxoc,. ....
IAZ Blau
Schlottmann.
and
_.
El.A
Schlottmann,
9 Bia6a
oc; cov , a os tes tes, but I find it unlikely that the carver inscribed N for a P. A name like Ponteius or Pontenius is possible. 0(; oc, o<; os. C. Pacciu[s] C. 1.Apollonides, 79.i M. Paccius P. f. Fal. Rufus, 79.ii
Habicht.
12 NTOI
Blau
and
legerunt.
Epigraphical Commentary Fredrich dates the inscription to the 1st century B.C. on the basis of its lettering, but the 2nd century B.C. cannot be excluded. Lines 2, 4, end: The text probably continues on an adjacent block. Line 9: BioOouoc,, squeeze. The iota is clear, and there is not enough to
space
suppose
a rho.
Commentary
Line 4:A MeveKpdxric,MeveKpdxorj occurs inLHalikarnassos 51.2 (undated), but the name MeveKpdxnc, is too common to allow an identification. Line 5: Fredrich notes that another >X)Xr\q from Halikarnassos,
0x>Xr\q rio^uyvcoxou, is attested in an inscription found inAstypalaia (IG XII.3 213.8). The same person also occurs in a series of Rhodian inscrip tions (IG XII.1 69.1, 85.5, and many others) dated to the middle and second half of the 3rd century B.C.The name $>{)Xr\qis otherwise poorly attested. Line
9: BigGccIoc,
nian name
is a
hapax.
However,
BioOocpoc,
occurs
as a
Kolopho
6.IV.451 and 6.VI.627, as Habicht points out is It that the stone carver made a mistake. (p. 112). possible Line 11: Oeotpic, seems to be a hapax. Line 12: Oejuiaxocyopocc; is attested as an Ephesian name in I.Ephesos 563.28. 3
of theoroi-proxenoi from Priene and Samos inscription is known from the copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona,
Record The
Cod.
in LKolophon
Vat.
Lat.
5250,
folio
20,
verso.
Its dimensions
are unknown.
It was
probably on a wall block. Edd. [Ziebarth 1906, p. 411, no. 2]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 165]. Cf. Mommsen, CIL III (1873) 713; Conze 1880, p. 98, IX; Hiller von Gaertringen, LPriene (1906) 540; Robert and Robert, BullEp 1958 270; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69.
RECORDS
OF
of 2nd
THEOROI
ON
INSCRIBED
WALL
BLOCKS
25
B.C.
century
- - nomen
[em $aoikE(?>q
- - xov
- - nomen
patris
-
-]
[oi5e jcpoc^evoi eyevovxo xfj<;nokz
7tocpocy?v6u?voi npinveic;
Qxkxoq 0pao(3o'6^oD A7ToAAo5cbpoi)
Baai^eiSrjq
xo\) rioa<8>i8(jovioD Xduroi Atco?\A
Me^aiveax;
'kpX&TioXxq KaAAiaxpaxo-o ApiaxucTtoc; 'Epumc;
vel Oaucvoi)
<Ap?>ji?voD
AauoKpdx?
d
Fredrich. 3 0EOPOI Cyriacus. 5 0PAIEIBOYAOY Cyriacus.
9 AITOAAONIOE
Cyriacus.
11
PAMENOY
Apuivou Fredrich. 12 AAMOKPATEuJX Cyriacus.
Cyriacus. 7 ITOIIAuJNIOY Cyriacus,
<0>cc|nevoa)
vel
13 ATOPANOMOYNTOS
Cyriacus.
Commentary
1-2: It is possible that the text, restored by Fredrich in these two lines,was inscribed on the block above, ifwe assume that thismonument consisted ofwall blocks.We do not know, however, what shape ithad.
Lines
Line 5: The recorded by Cyriacus, may spelling 0paaei(3o'6?lo'o, be an example of etacism, and not necessarily his mistake. The Oi?uo<; 0paaDpo'6Ao'u honored in LPriene 234 as a victor in the boys' pankration maybe the same person. The ?pocoTapoutax; OiAioi) mentioned in LPriene 255.3-6 may be the son of the theoros in the present inscription, as Hiller von Gaertringen remarks (p. 151). Line 6: Fredrich notes that A7toAA68copo(; IIoa8i8coviou, the father of Basileides, is known from LPriene 37, a decree set up in the early 2nd century B.C., so he dates the inscription to themiddle of the 2nd century.
An A7toAA6Scopoc; IloaeiScovioD is also honored in other documents from and 237. One of them is especially interest Priene: LPriene 65,186,236,
ing (186):
BccoiAei8ri(; kocIKocMuviKn xov auxcov
7iax8pa
A7toAA65copov IIoo8i8coviod i8pr|X8i)ovxa
BaaiAeT
Koci Koupnoiv. This
2nd-century
B.C.
round
statue
base
must
have
supported
a statue
of
AjcoAAoScopoc,nooeiScovkn), who served as a priest of Basileus (Zeus Kreta asHiller von Gaertringen comments, though he genes) and the Kouretes, is not surewhether the honorand is the same person as the ArcoAAoScopoc; IIoa8i5covio\) in LPriene 65, 236, or 237. LPriene 37 tells us that the real father ofApollodoros was Artemidoros, and that he was son of Poseidonios
26
chapter
2
by adoption. One wonders whether this Poseidonios could be related to son of Herodes, Poseidonios the father of the poet Herodes, who was honored as a judge in I.Priene 63 and praised in an honorary decree by Samothrace, I.Priene 68-70 (see Appendix 1.5). Poseidonios, however, is a relatively frequent name in Priene, so such a connection seems unlikely. ArcoA^oScopoc, nooeiScoviou isprobably to be identifiedwith the one men tioned in the other Prienian documents. His same
as
the
theoros
here,
since
Basileides
is a
son Basileides must be the
relatively
rare name.
patronymic Metaxivecoc, may occur in another Samian document, /GXII 6, 130, which has MzXai[v (2nd century b.c.). Line 10: A descendant of ApxejtoAic, KaAAaoTpcxTO-o is attested in IG 9: The
Line
XII
6.1 322.1-2
11: The
Line while
'Apjievog
(1st century a.d.). rare name Oocjievoc, is attested in SEG XXVIII
is more
1431,
common.
use of the formula dyopavojJxruvTOC,+ name to date a is document attested in 11 other Samothracian documents with eight pre served names; see Index. The function of the official is unclear. In most of these documents an eponymous king ismentioned at the beginning, before 13: The
Line
the agoranomoSywho occurs sometimes in the beginning, sometimes at the end of a document. Robert (pp. 67-68) calls officials like the Samothra cian agoranomoi "pseudo-eponyms," to be distinguished from the actual eponymous magistrates. He suggests that in the case of Samothrace the a was 6cyopav6|LiO(; probably concerned with the organization of large-scale 7tocvriyrjpi(;. Robert considers
equivalent
was of considerable
cites
instances
of
to 7tavnyupidp%r|(;,
Ttavriy-opecoc, and
concludes
ayopocvojaoc,, that
a title he
the cxyopocvouoc,
importance for the practical aspects of the Samothra cian festivals (p. 69). This is an attractive suggestion.We know from Livy (45.5.6) that the basi/euswas the chiefmagistrate of Samothrace and that he addressed the assembly in 168 b.c. regarding Perseus s capture. Therefore, if the basileus was concerned with the city affairs in general, it is likely that another official had to deal with the increasing needs of the Sanctuary of theGreat Gods, and that officialmay well have been the agoranomos.
4
of theoroi-proxenoi from Ephesos, Alabanda, Klazomenai, Astypalaia, and Kos
Record
Fig. 5
Three joining fragments of Thasian marble, forming a block of a large monument base preserved on all sides. The top, back, and bottom are rough-picked, and the sides have anathyrosis. A rectangular dowel hole and a pry hole are visible on top, and an end dowel hole appears at
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. the right edge. Archaeological Museum 61.502 (a). Fragments b and c, joined byWolters (apud Fredrich), have no inventory numbers. Fragment cwas found in the house ofAnagnostes
fragment b was considered lost by Fredrich, and must have reappeared in themuseum later; fragment a was found on July 5,1961, by P. Bernard in the area of theGenoese Towers. I associated a with b + c in July 2001. H. 0.18 m,W. (combined) 1.04 m, Th. 0.57 m; L.H. 0.02 m (lines
Bourgares;
1-2), 0.012 m (lines 3-end).
records
Figure
5. Record
of theoroi-proxenoi Klazome Alabanda,
from Ephesos,
nai,Astypalaia, and Kos (4)
of
theoroi
on
inscribed
wall
blocks
27
Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 622, Edd. a, Salviat 1962, pp. 274-275; cy no. 16; Conze 1860, p. 67; b + cyKern 1893, pp. 368-369, no. 11; Fredrich, 168. 7GXII.8 1st to 2nd century a.d.? Col.
a,
1
[-]traces [hub xcov 7co]XecovGecopol
I
Col.
Col.
Ill Cyii
by ii
ay ii ?7ii pao[iAico<;-]KAEIOYI
eyevovTo] t[ox>-nomenpatris-oi5e xcov TtoAxcov orjuou d[7col too] Gecopoi] 7capay?vr|6?vx?<; 7ipo^ev[oi Ee-
K^a^oucvioi
'Ecpeoioi vacat
II
Xaipecpcov AY[-]
A7totaoviSr|<; Ariurixpuyo
Apx?Ui8copo<;[?]
n\)0icov fEpjj.oy?Vo[u(;]
Aoxu7iaA,[ai?i<;]
voKpdxriq IIOAYKAEI[-] BaKYuUoc NOf- -]
'Hynoiac; MHTP[0
A^apav8?i<;-
AyaGoK^fjq API[-] Kcoi'oi
M?V?Kpdxr|(;[- -]
KpaxTvoc ApxcuiScoplcn)
Apioxocputax; AI[?]
Fredrich,
Salviat.
1-3 Dimitrova.
1 znx pao[b\ecoc,-oi'8e]
Salviat,
[em
Wolters [oi]8[e rcpocjevoieyevovxoxfjc,rcoAecocJ supplevit xov br\]\iov 2 eyevovxo Salviat, xfjc, rcoAecoc,?] [Gecopol 7tp6cjev[oi (apudFredrich).
fioLGikecoq.]oc 7iapayevr|6evxec,
A[?]
Fredrich.
3 [?xcovSe
xcov rc6]Aecov Gecopoi
[7iapayev6uevoi]
Fredrich. III.6 Dimitrova, Salviat. II.7 [Kjpaxivoc,Fredrich. III.5 noA\)KAe[un)cJ No? Fredrich,AYTA Fredrich. Bd[xx]ocAo<; Epigraphical Commentary The letters are uneven and inelegant, dated by Fredrich to ca. a.d. 100. The first two lines, containing the opening formula, are inscribed in larger letters.
Line
1:Dotted
Line 2: The
letters: unclear traces.
delta and eta of 8r|uorj are visible.
II.7: IIY0IQNA, lapis. II.9: A piece was broken off the stone on the left, and only the now is visible. sigma Line Line
28
chapter
2
Line III.3: Perhaps the sigma was omitted from the line below. Itmay have been the final letter of the ethnic, inscribed above by the carver in order to avoid transferring a single letter to a different block. Lines III.4-5: The name HevoKpdTT|<;was presumably omitted and added later. Line
iota of IIOAYKAEI is visible. III.6: Nothing is visible now after the omicron. The crowded between lines above and below it. III.5: The
Line
name
is
Commentary
The block contains two records of theoroi-proxenoi, i and ii.Only a small part of the opening formula of i ispreserved, since the beginning of this part of the textwas inscribed on the block to the left.Most of ii is preserved:
only the end of the opening formula in lines 1 and 2 ismissing, having been placed on the block to the right.This shows that the recordswere inscribed while the blocks were still together. It is unclear fromwhich structure they came. The dowel holes on the top and right, aswell as the joint surfaces on
the two sides, show that therewas at least one block to the left,one to the right, and three blocks on top; this suggests a monument of considerable size. The theoroi records on itmay not be original. Line 2: Fredrich observes that the aorist participle 7tapay8vr|08VT8<; is attested only here, and Fraser (p. 67) notes that the formula, as re
stored by Fredrich (oi'5e 7tp6c^8voieyevovxo xfjc,noXecoq Oecopoi xov df\[Lov is otherwise unrecorded. The expression 7cpoc^evoixov mpayevnOeVcecJ, on the other 8r|um>, hand, is attested in hundreds of inscriptions. Line 6: Bd<xx>a^o(;, suggested by Fredrich, isnot attested. Bockx6a<^)o<; is a common
5
name
and
is confirmed
by
the
stone.
Record of theoroi-proxenoi fromAlabanda, Kyme, Mytilene, Bargylia, Naxos, Maroneia, Priene, Kaunos, Abdera, Samos, Kos, Rhodes, Iasos, Stratonikeia, Pergamon, Parion, and
Fig. 6
Ephesos block ofThasian marble, apparently preserved on all sides, reused as the front lintel block of the inner door of the Church of Christ (placed Wall
upside down). H. 0.35 m,W. 1.56 m,Th. 0.22 m; L.H. 0.01-0.015 m (inscription i), 0.015-0.02 m (inscription ii). Edd. Conze 1880, pp. 96-97; [Michel 1900, no. 867]; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 170. Cf. Sake 1925, p. 159; Hiller von Gaertringen,7GXII Suppl. (1939), n. 2.1 Ohlemutz Samotbrace 148; 5; 1940, 435, Fraser, (1960), p. p. pp. 72 no. III Robert Hansen 73, appendix 4; B, 1963, pp. 63-64; 1971, pp. 435
436; [/Mr 1031].
150 b.c. or shortly thereafter See text opposite.
About
Fredrich.
22
Ilaicovioc,
Fredrich,
nicbvioc,
Fraser,
IIpicbviOQ
lapis.
41 Aopicoc,Mr|Tpo8copoYj Fredrich (inminusculis),Aopicoc,Mr|Tpo56TOU Fredrich (inmaiusculis), Salac, Fraser. 50 Scoa[iK]?ie{5o[vj Fredrich,Zcoa[av]5pi5o\) Salac, Zcooa[v]8pi8o'o 'IaTpOK^8i
Fraser.
65 T[o8i]cov Salac,
Fraser.
Fraser. 75
73 MaxpoK?i8i
[floA]-
Fredrich,
[-] 55 K\)|i(xToinpirivecov laiaicov Ka0' 8e \)o0eaiav Ilapiavcov Ti^ianoXioq BaaiA?i8r|(;
[-Av]xr|vopo<; BapyuAifjxai "Epiicovm,z Anaxovpioq KdSiou. Anaxovpiov. n[pe]7Ccov 75 {GONJ-uScopoi) [AfroAAoScopoc; NncrjaavSpoi). pa]aiA?0)(; [etc! [-] E]ENOY Arjlxoyjevou L(oaa[v]8p{8o\) [oi'Se 7ip6^ev]oi ey[e]vo[vxo] xo\>
[--]NIOY xox) OiAo^evot) 45 Kauvicov Oeo8eicxr|<; npcoxouSou AvxiAecov MeveKpdxcu Arjirnxpioc, E\)jievo\)<;
-]OniMOY Mr|xpo86xo\) 0\)pao\) AyaOoKAeioix; AopKoq 'Ep|ioyevr|<; 5xox> Ti\i6lkoXic, MdvSpcov, 80 Eixppayopou AnoXXoxi^oq [-] 20 AtaxpavSeic. xfjc. tc6A,eco<; Gecopoi 7capayev[6|ievo]i ZmXoq ZwiiXov xov Apicx[o] [i,Col.I
i,
Col.
II
ii,Col.IRecord II Figure 6. of theoroi-proxenoi Alabanda, from Mytilene, Kyme, Bargylia, Naxos, Abdera, Priene, Maroneia, Kaunos, Rhodes, Samos, Kos, Col. ii,
[--o]iKdXXinnoq EvKXeibov xox> 'Hcpaiaxicovoc. E\)k^ei8r|c, 60 Avxiyovoi) ApxejiiScbpo'u xox> 'IaxpoK^eijoi)}GeoSoxoq BaSponiou
[--] 0e68copoc, OiAo86^o\) 70 OiAo^evoq Kpdxrjxoq BiAAapo<;'EpjiioD Apdicovxoq 'Iaaewv
10 [--]OY M\>xiArjvaToi AvxiTtaxpoc.'IaxpOK^euroc. Kco'icov SxpaxoviKecov Xpuadcop 85 'Ecpeoicov
[-] Avoiaq AuaioD Mapovixwv xou Avaiou ApSripixaw65 'P[o8(]cov [livov
Stratonikeia, Iasos, Pergamon, Parion, and Ephesos (5) [-
-]
35 0eoKAfj<;
[-] 'IepoKAfjq Iajj.id8o\)N\)|Li(po[8]cbp[o]\j [-]INOY 15 Bptxov 'IepoicA.eio'uc, [-] Nd^ioi
[-IO)IIK[-] -]XAPIOI
3o
chapter
2
Epigraphical Commentary The block contains two inscriptions, i and ii. Inscription i is now very hard to read and to check against its published editions. Fraser notes that it is written in "a very strange angular slanting hand." Itmust also be a record of theoroi-proxenoi, apparently a continuation from the blocks above and to the left. Inscription ii, however, is obviously confined to the block: in lines 77-78 and 82-83 names were divided between lineswhen the carver reached the edge of the stone. This arrangement may have been used for stylistic purposes or because the right end of the block fell at a corner. The most legible part of the stone is inscription ii, column I. Fredrich
observes that the hand of inscription ii, columns II and III-IV is different from that of inscription ii, column I, though the inscription is the same. Lines ii.l?2: The letters of the heading are slightly larger and more spaced
out.
Line 22: The second letter is a rho. Line 75: C0vvj8cbpo'u,lapis.The omega nu of the preceding name have apparently been repeated by mistake. Commentary
This is the largest preserved block with theoroi records. It shows that it was typical to fitmore than one inscription on one block. Presumably the on an adjacent block. was i of beginning inscription Line 22: Iipicbvioc, is not attested in inscriptions, while Ilaicbvioq is a common
name,
as Fraser
notes;
hence
his
correction.
I
prefer
to
leave
Ilpicbvioc;, as it is on the stone, in view of the name IIpicov, attested in a Delian epitaph (SEGXXVII 456). On the name Mivvicov see 13, inscrip tion i, ad line 11. It is interesting that in both cases the theoroi are from Alabanda, but it is unclear whether they are related. name AnToyevric;, though regularly formed, is not attested epigraphically. One wonders whether a delta should be read instead of the lambda, inwhich case An^ojYeVnq, a well-attested name, could be Lines
37, 50: The
restored.
Line 56: Z&xkoq Zco'iXod occurs in /GXII 6.1 182 (2nd century b.c.) as a victor in various games; he may be the same person (Hallof). Line 58: ?eoSeKxric, is a relatively rare name, but it occurs in another
Samian inscription, JGXII 6.1 29 (306-301 b.c.), and possibly in 2G XII 6.1 176. npcoTOu5orj is a hapax. Line 66: EvjdpocTOC,is very common on Rhodes. Fredrich quotes IG XII. 1 792, but the name occurs inmany other Rhodian inscriptions. Line 67: TiumroAic, E-ucppayopoD also appears in IG XII. 1 836, as Fredrich remarks.He is also attested inLindos 223 and 228, while his son and grandson are attested inLindos 252 (ca. 115 b.c.). Lindos 223 is dated ca. 149 b.c. and 228 is dated to 138 b.c.; record ii therefore is probably to be dated to themiddle of the 2nd century b.c. or shortly thereafter. Line 69: OiAivvoc, with double nu is very rare. Line
194.
70:
BiMxxpoc,
is a very
rare
name,
but
it occurs
also
in I.Iasos
Line 72: Robert (pp. 63-64) proves that Stratonikeia in Karia is meant: the name Xpuadcop is typically Karian, and 'IaxpOK^fiq is attested
RECORDS
ON
INSCRIBED
THEOROI
OF
WALL
BLOCKS
31
only inKaria and Ionia. Moreover, Xpuadcop is to be connected with Zzvq XpDoacbpicx;, who was a major Karian deity and had a sanctuary near Stratonikeia (Robert, p. 63). Line 79: Fredrich observes thatAttalos II or more likely III ismeant. Attalos II seems to be the preferable candidate, since the inscription is to be dated around the 140s B.C. (see adline 67). Of course, a slightly later date
cannot
excluded.
be
80: It is strange that the kings ambassadors a nymics (cf. 26). Atco^Aotiuoc; is hapax. Line 88: NiKrjadv5po\) is a hapax. Line
6
Record of theoroi-proxenoi fromMyrina,
do not have patro
Samos, Kos, and
Fig. 7
Teos
Fragment of a wall block ofThasian marble, broken on the left,with traces of claw-chisel at bottom. The back was cut off for shipping purposes in the 19th century.Found built into a house. Paris, Musee du Louvre, inv.
saw the stone in July 2001. 0.61 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.015 m (inscription i), 0.02 m m. (inscription ii), omicron, delta 0.01 Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 623, no. 17; Conze 1860, pp. 67? 171. 68; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Cf. Robert 1935a, pp. 487-488; Hiller von Gaertringen, IGXLI Suppl. (1939), p. 148; Robert 1963, p. 62.
Ma.
4183.1
H. 0.355 m,W.
2nd
century
B.C.?
iTuGayopac; 'HpaK^ci-
[-]AOXOY tod
payevojievoi ?au|ia>v] ASrjprcoc, 0?padvS[povj] [-] AnjirjTpioc,Apxe|ucov[o(;]
[-o]Y
0a^fj<; 'HpaK^ei8oD [-]TOY 25 Kcoicov [-]Oaivi7C7co(; AnjioKpdx[o\)]
[-]TOE Ka^iKpdxr|(;
OiXi7uu[8o\)l
[- Trjitov
[-]n
-
[-]HENOY
AyocGokMk AIIOAA[-
-
-]
[-]X0Y [-] Fredrich. Sajx[icov]
13
[-----
Robert
Hiller,
o]i
Fredrich.
21
Eav[a(cov]
vel
Zav[icov]
Fredrich,
1935a.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering isvery similar to that of 11 and 26. Fredrich dates the inscrip tion to ca. 100 B.C. on the basis of its lettering, but I prefer a 2nd-century date
in view
of
its close
resemblance
to 26.
32
CHAPTER
2
Line 1: First preserved letter: two bottom parts of verticals; the second, bottom horizontal. Line 6: First preserved letter: right bottom part of a triangle. Line 13: A faint nu is discernible. Line
18: The
last five letters are very faint now.
Lines 20, 22, 26, 27, 29: The underlined letters reflect on damage the stone thatmust have occurred after itspublication in IG XII Supple
ment.
Commentary It is possible that this inscription was the beginning of the record in 11, the similar letters and If so, then itmust have been placed given layout. on the block above 11. Line 1: For eponymous kings attested on Samothracian coins as MENE see Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 41.Metronax is a name commonly associated with eponymous kings; see 46, 89, and Fredrich, IG XII.8, and A0HNA
p. 41. Line 3: It is unclear which Myrina ismeant; see ad 9. Lines 5-6: The cutter omitted the name of Pythagoras Herakleitou, then tried to fit it below [Aio]v\>ciO(;Muoq, but ran out of space for the last three letters.
as Fredrich notes. 8,11,14,17: Presumably ethnics, 14: Fredrich restores [?o]i, but there are other possibilities for the ending of an ethnic (e.g., -ou) and,more importantly, the genitive plural ismore likely than the nominative; cf.Mupivoucov in line 3. Line 23: On the restoration, see also Robert (1963, p. 62), who notes Lines Line
that the name ASripiTOC, is typical of Samians. Line 29: An AyocGoKAfjc, A7toMx)8cbpoD is attested inI Teos 87, but it is same unclear whether he is the person, since names with AtuoA,A,o-as their firstcomponent are rather frequently attested.
Figure 7. Record of theoroi-proxenoi from
andTeos Samos, Kos, Myrina, du (6). Photo ? C. Larrieu, courtesyMusee Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and
Etruscan Antiquities
RECORDS
Figure
8. Record
of theoroi-prox
enoi(?) fromAlabanda and Stratoni
keia(7)
7
OF
THEOROI
ON
INSCRIBED
WALL
BLOCKS
33
Record of theoroi-proxenoi(?) fromAlabanda and Stratonikeia Fig. 8 Wall block ofThasian marble, broken on the leftand right,badly worn.
of back is rough-picked. Found in Chora. Archaeological Museum inv. 39.1131. Samothrace, courtyard, H. 0.35 m,W. 0.45 m,Th. 0.19 m; L.H. 0.01-0.012 m (col. II), 0.015 m
The
(col. I). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 24. Cf. Robert 1963, pp. 63-64. 2nd century B.C.? I Col. Col.
[-]ioi KA[-
-]ON ]AN[--]
II -
-]
MeveKpdrnq 0E[-] [-]0tOlCQV
5
Apuxcay6pa<; MHN[ MH[. .ca. 5..]! [A]nur|[Tpuro] 0eo[(pS?]v
[.. .]IOY
AioK^fjq fHyr|uovo<; AnuriTpioc;MENE[-] 10
A>,ap[av8ecov] Aiovuaioq Aiovuaioq
E[. .]Y[-] [-]
IxpaTo[viKecov] EN[....]S
[--.]
[ -M. JHZ [.]
CHAPTER
34 Fraser. II.3
. ?.
II.2 M[.
[-]ocoicov
.]0E[-]
Dimitrova,...
Fraser, xai(co)v
Dimitrova.
0E[-]
MeveKpdxrn;
Fraser.
II.4 MHT
2
Fraser, MHN
Dimitrova.
Fraser.
II.5MEN[.'/5..]'l
Epigraphical Commentary The date is roughly based on the letter forms.According to Fraser, "how far the stone extended to the left and right, and how many columns there originally were, cannot be determined. The photograph reveals more than the stone itself or the squeeze." Line I.3-end: Mostly illegible traces. Line II.3:What Fraser read as nu is omega, with scratches resembling nu. It is followed by a leftvertical.
Commentary
1-2: Fraser notes that larger letters suggest a heading; but only the letters in the first column are larger,and theymust belong to another record. Column II, which must have begun on the block above, contains names. Line II.3: Fraser points out that thismust have been an ethnic because of the indentation, and that the final nu should allow for restoring the Lines
ethnic in the genitive plural. Line 11.12: Presumably Karian 8
Stratonikeia
ismeant;
see ad 5.
Record of theoroi-proxenoi(?) from Priene, Halikarnassos, Klazomenai, Thasos, Maroneia, Abdera
Wall block ofThasian marble, heavily damaged. It is lying outside the Church of Christ, to the left of the entrance. An end dowel hole is visible on the right, and a dowel hole on top. H. 0.35 m,W. 1.09 m,Th. 0.21 m; L.H. 0.012 m. Edd. Conze 1860, pp. 70-71; Fredrich, JGXII. 8 161. Cf. Lehmann-Hartleben p. 72, appendix III B, no. 2. 2nd
century
1939, p. 144; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960),
B.C.
[-] AjtoAA? Apxerc6?u[8o<;]
AT[-jOMAXOY, [-]A[-]
? . . [. .]AZ Apiaxeou, AiovDCjoScopoc,APTEMI[-] 5 [npi]rjve!<; ?eouvncrcoc,
Akpigiou,
AAaKoepvaooeic,
N-ouxpcov
KaA.A.iKpdTo[\)]
AvTi7ton;po<;
OaviTtTtou
MevoiTou, AvTi7iccTpoc,AvTucdxpoD fl?poic[?\Jfj(; KA,a^o|ievoi
10 Sijicov KA,eopot)Am), AaK?ir|7i;id8r|<;A7toaXo[-] ?daioi
Anumc, A[.
. .]v[.]jj,d%od,Oavo^ecoq
E
MapcovTxai
15
AAadp%oi), Apiax6Po\)[^]o(; Apiax[- -] 'E7EiKpcVcr|(; Ap8r|pTxai Aiovijaioq Aio[v]\)aiou, Apxcxyopac, Apiax6vo[u].
OF
RECORDS
Fredrich.
THEOROI
4 Xco5[d|i]a<;
INSCRIBED
Fredrich,
ON
WALL
Apxe)j.i[8cbpo\)?]
BLOCKS
Fredrich.
Fredrich. 12 A[|jA)]v[o]jLLdxoDFredrich, A[jj.?i]v[o]|udxo"o Hiller
35
8 AvTutdxpOD
(apud Fred
rich).
Commentary Epigraphical The stonewas practically illegiblewhen Fraser saw it: "Itwas badly defaced across the inscribed surface in 1938 (the new inscription is conveniently as an one is earlier of The 1758). dated, inscription (particularly the first names now worn in is of each almost beyond legibility, and it line) pair is barely possible to follow the text as printed in IG, let alone correct it." Now the legibility is even worse. Line 8: The left oblique stroke printed in Fredrich's majuscule copy as the last letter of Avxi7iaTpo\) can an upsilon, so I have belong only to removed the dot under it.
Commentary
Line 4: XcoSduocq is not attested, but ?coSocuo<; and EcoSccurSocc;,however, are.
was sent as a 8iKacrr/n<;toTroadic 6: A Ni&uxpcovKa^iKpdxoi) (LPriene 44), as Fredrich notes. Most probably he is the same person, since the name is relatively rare. ?eouvnoToq AicpicrioD is not at tested, but AKpioioq occurs in Priene several times (LPriene 42, 111, 313). As Fredrich notes, it cannot be proven that the stephanephoros AKpioioc, mentioned in I. Priene 111 was the grandson of the father of 0e6uvr|cTTO<; in the present inscription. as far as I know, Line 7: Oavucrcoc; does not occur inHalikarnassos, but the name is very frequent on Thasos. Line 12: The name knii&aq is attested elsewhere on Thasos (IG XII Line
Alexandia
(1939) 429, line 9). Audv6jioc%0(; seems to occur only inAttic in scriptions,while A|ieiv6uo:%o<;, though regularly formed (cf.Aucwovikxx;, for example), is not attested epigraphically. OocvoXeocx; is a very common Suppl.
Thasian
name.
Line
14: The
rare name A?Uap%o<; is attested on a lead tablet from
Sicily (SEGXXXIX 1013; cf.also SEGXXXVII 1806). 9
Record
of theoroi-proxenoi(?) from Phokaia, Dardanos, Fig. 9 Aigai, Myrina, Kyzikos, Chios, Eresos, and Nysa Wall block ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides. There is ana thyrosis on the left and right, an end dowel hole at the bottom right edge, and a dowel hole on top, roughly centered, with a pry hole to its left.The back is rough-picked, the top and bottom smooth-picked. The block was outside the Church of Christ when Fraser saw it in 1954; itwas recently moved to theOld School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities in Palaiopolis. 0.35 m,W. 1.10 m,Th. 0.20 m; L.H. 0.012-0.015 m. Edd. Kern 1894; Fredrich, IG XII.8 162. Cf. Bechtel 1898, p. 82; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 72, appendix III B, no. 3; Habicht 1972; [7MT107]. H.
chapter
2
2nd century b.c.? Col.
I
II
Col.
Col. M[....]
K\)^lKT|VOl
Aiovucuog ?eo5(GpoD [..]. AI. 01 MaxpioD 5
15
NiKoyevric;AxxdXoi) Maidv8pio<;
AapSaveTc/
Aiyaieic/
SxiapaKoc, 30 Mevxcop AaKX,r|7tid8o'o Aiov\>oio<;
20
NiKoyevr|(; fEpuoy?vou vecbxepoc;
10 ['Efaiyovog [. JONATOY [A]ya0[6]oxpaxo<; npacjupdvoi) [0]i[ai]7uco<; Nncnpdxo'u
lepOKArjc,Meveoxpdxoi)
Apiaxcov Topyun)
lepOK^fjc, Mev?crcpdxoD xox>nepiK^Eioix; 35
OeoScopoc, Ajiwcod
'kpoK^fjc, 'IepoK^eiovc, xov Meveoxpdxou
Topyiaq Apioxcovoq
25 Oi^oKpdxriq TiuoKpixou Aiocpavxoq Ar|jLir|xpio'o
'Epecuoi
Aynoiu?vr|c, BaK^oa) npcoxicov Naicovoq 40
Nikioc[cJMr|xp[co]vo(; Fredrich. 10 [Aevel ?ejovaxoi) Fredrich. Fredrich. 4 ['E7t]i5iK0<; Epigraphical Commentary The inscription isnow almost illegible, so I have largely reprinted Fredrich s text.Fredrich dates the inscription to the 2nd century b.c. on the basis of its lettering.
Line 4: First preserved letter is a vertical; fourth letter a leftvertical.
Commentary Line 3: 'E7u8iko<; is a very rare name, and not the only possible restoration; E\)9t>SiKO<;,for instance, ismuch more common.
Lines 6, 8: It is interesting that the patronymics are the same; the second one might have been repeated by mistake. Lines 7,11: Fredrich assumes thatAigai andMyrina are theAsiatic cities situated near Pergamon, since the catalogue lists theoroi fromAsia
seems a likely conjecture. Lemnian Myrina cannot be excluded, since it is close however, enough toAsia Minor to be associated with such are listed in the are a list;Eresos and Samos, for inscription but example,
Minor. This
not on themainland. Moreover,
xox> Aiovoeuou
Aiocpavxoq MayeSdxoi)
XToi
M[\)p]ivaioi
Aiovucuoi)
0?|iiacov ?euiacovoc,
'IepoKArjc,Arj^nxpio-u
'Epuoyevoi)
Avxutdxpou
Iftinjuaxoq
A^iKapvaaaeiq
[ZjcoTt-opoq Mr|xpo8copo\) Ai'cnuoc,
Ayfjvopoc,
Ill
the typical appellation of the citizens of
N-ooaieTc/
0?oScopo<; A7uoM,covi[o]'u.
RECORDS
Figure 9 (opposite).Record of theoroi-proxenoi(?) Dardanos,
Aigai,
from Phokaia,
Myrina,
Kyzikos,
Chios, Eresos, and Nysa (9)
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
WALL
BLOCKS
37
tribute lists isMupivocioi rcapd Ki>ur|v, as the Athenian Asiatic Myrina testify.As forAigai, the question ismore complicated. There are numer ous cities with this name: inAchaia, Euboia, Cilicia, near Pergamon, and theMacedonian capital. Among these, theAsiatic Aigai near Pergamon seems themost likely candidate. Line 15: The patronymic AxxdAou gives a valuable insight into the
relations between Kyzikos and Samothrace, and consequently, into the functions of theoroi on Samothrace. initiate in 56 and 58, First, it occurs in the name of a Cyzicene same is it the AaKXr\nid8r\qAxxdtaru; person in both documents, probably as Fraser assumes. In 56 he is sent as an envoy in his capacity as dpxvxcKXCov, called both initiate and epoptes,while in 58 he is only an initiate. He has an adopted name in 56, [.]iKiq Mvnoiaxpdxo'u, while in 58 he ismerely
Ae>k^r|7ud8ri<;Axxdtan), which prompts Fraser to conclude that the second inscription is earlier. Second, in 59 a certain [AijoyevrigAxxdtaru is recorded as a hieropoios sent by theCyzicene demos. It is tempting to restore the name in the pres ent inscription, [NiK]oyevr|<;, instead of [Ai]oyevr|<;,and certainly possible: Conze's drawing shows that there is room for nu, iota, and kappa before the omicron.
is attested in other Cyzicene inscrip Line 16:The name Maidv8pio<; tions (LKyz. 1447.B; 1462, line 17; 1543). Lines 22-23: lepoK^fj^ lepoicXeunx; xou Meveaxpdxou may have been a son of either lepoK^fjq Meveo-xpdxou xou nepiK^euruc; or lepOK^fj<;
Mevecrxpdxou, mentioned in lines 19-21. Lines 28-36: Fredrich notes that it is uncertain whether these are theoroi from Chios. There is a large number of names without an ethnic, and even ifwe suppose an ethnic preceding line 28 the list is still too long. We find a similar situation in 22, lines 27-37. There are several possible explanations for the long list. First, a citymight send a large number of sacred envoys to reflect its own stature.Another possibility is that theoroi from the same citywere sentmore than once during a year. A third pos sibilitywould be to suppose that allmembers of the sacred delegation were listed as theoroi. Inscriptions 14 and 15 show the opposite phenomenon, namely, that cities sometimes sent a group of ambassadors, all of whom were referred to as initiates (uuoxcu e-ooepeTq), while only the first few among
them were
theoroi.
33, 36: Apuxccov ropyioD and Topyiaq Apiaxcovoc; are probably father and son,with the father listed first, although there is no confirming Lines
evidence.
Line 35: MocyeSdxoD is a hapax, tomy knowledge. Lines 38: Aynoiuivrjc; is a rare name, but attested elsewhere on Lesbos (7GXII.2 526), as Habicht notes (p. 110). The theonym BaK%oq is not a typical name for a person.We could suppose that the iota of Bock%iouwas omitted by the stone carver or the editors of the inscription, but the condi tion of the stone makes this impossible to determine. 10
Record of theoroi-proxenoi(?) from Kyzikos, Eresos, Kyme, Teos, Priene, and the koinon of technitai from Ionia and theHellespont
Kolophon, Dionysiac
Fig. 10
38
CHAPTER
2
marble, preserved on the right.A rectangular dowel hole and a pry hole are visible on top, ca. 0.43 m from the right edge .The back is cut and secondarily smoothed. Found in "the lower part Wall
block ofThasian
of the castle" (Conze). Paris, Musee stone in July 2001.
du Louvre,
inv.Ma.
4181.1
saw the
10. Record
Figure
of
theoroi-prox
enoi(?) fromKyzikos, Eresos, Kolo phon, Kyme, Teos, Priene, and the koinon ofDionysiac technitaifrom Ionia and theHellespont
Photo ? M.
and P. Chuzeville,
(10).
courtesy du Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
H. 0.355 m,W. 1.02 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.015 m (col. I), 0.015-0.02 m (col. II), 0.015 m (col. Ill), omicron 0.01 m.
Musee
Edd. Conze 1860,p. 65; Fredrich,7GXII.8 163; [7MT1575].
Cf. Ziebarth
with n. 3; Aneziri 2nd-lst
1896, p. 85; Salviat, Chapouthier, and Salac 1956, p. 144, 2003, p. 154, with n. 74, and p. 287, with n. 86.
century B.C.? Col. -
I
-]EIOY
--]OI
-
-]POI MeveKpdxcn) -]YPOI Baxxiov -M]evdv8pcru
0dcno?]i -Oa?]v6A,eo)
]KPATOY 10
Col.
II
Col.
[K]xr)ai7i7C0(;[-] IcooiyEVTi'c;I. [.3:4.]IO[Y]
A5iec^ijLia%0(;ITi)0i[cdvocJ 15 n-oGiaq A|idpSi8o<;
KoA,o(pcovun
K\)L^lKT|VOl
IlapjievioKoq Apiax?co<;
25 Mr|xp6Scopo<; Acopo0?o-o ArijifixpioqMr|vo(pdvxo'o
OiX-6^?vo<; Oi^oc^evoi)
Kuumoi
'Ep?Gl0l'
Apx?jj.i8copo<; kou Arcl[oM(oviSr|c;?] oi AkoAAcdviSod
20 Ap%?Xao<; Apiaxcovaicxoc, AyE^aoq E\)|i?8ovxo(;.
Ill
30
Tr|toi
-]QNOI
A0r)vaioD 'Hp6(piA,oc,
-]INOY
N?av8poc; N?av8po\) nplT|v?t)(; IIap|i?vicov nap|i?vico[vocj 35 x0\) koivou xSv 7c?l[plxov Aiovuoov] x?%v?ixcgvxa>vl[d7t6looviacj Kai fEAAr|07t6vxoD Aioixr|5r|<;MrjxpoScopoD A0t|vikcov Eaxt)p[o\)].
Fredrich. 3 [-7t]Dpoc, Fredrich. 5 [tov Me]vdv8poD vel [(pvaei 5e Me] vdv8po\)Fredrich. 7 [4>a vel Kpi?]v6AxcoFredrich. 14 n\)9ico[vocj Fredrich. 22 23 Za)[aiP]ioa) Fredrich,fortasse Ico[giy?]vod Dimitrova. 37 Kxfjauntoc,Fredrich. Fredrich. fEAAr|07t6vxo|[\)]
OF
RECORDS
INSCRIBED
THEOROI
ON
WALL
BLOCKS
39
Commentary Epigraphical The three columns have different letter heights, but it is unclear whether they belonged to one, two, or three inscriptions. It seems likely that at least column III was part of a different inscription, since it is separated from column II by a much greater distance than that between columns I
and II, and the spacing between the lines of III is narrower than that of either I or II.Moreover, the larger letters of II and the vacant space after it strongly suggest that itwas the end of a record. The hand is similar to those of 6,11,26, and especially 1. For the possibility that 1 and 10 could see ad 1. Fredrich dates the inscription to the 1st century belong together, b.c. on the basis of its lettering,but inview of its resemblance to 26,1 prefer a 2nd-century date, though the 1st century is possible. Line 5: Traces of the epsilon can be made out. Line 7: First preserved letter: right vertical. Line 11: First preserved letter: right vertical.
14: Last preserved letter: nothing visible now. Line 22: First preserved letter: nothing visible now; second and fifth letters:middle vertical; third, sixth, and seventh letters: two vertical lines; eighth and ninth letters: clear omicron and sigma. Line
Line 23: Last
letter before the first brackets: unclear traces; the first letter after the brackets, a vertical line; the last letter,nothing visible. Line 37: Last letter: left diagonal with the right position for upsilon.
Commentary Line 7: KpivoXecoc, often,
and
is
extremely
is a very common
rare name,
while
OavoX^ecoc;
occurs
more
on Thasos.
15: Auxip5i5o<; seems to be a hapax. AuocpSiocKoc; occurs in an inscription fromTanais, CIRB 1279. Line
Lines 17-18: IlapjieviaKoc; Apiaxeccx; and OiXoc^evoq Oi^oc^evoD occur as initiates and as Fredrich, and later Fraser, point out. hieropoioi in 58, Line 31: The name 'Hpocpitax; is attested elsewhere inTeos: I.Teos 83.14, 87.1.23,104.5. Line
34: napjievicov,
a
very
common
Greek
name,
is attested
elsewhere
in Priene: LPriene 238.3, 313.344, 313.579. Lines 35-end: The Dionysiac artists, guilds of actors and musicians, as own assemblies, officials, and functioned independent states,with their are attested from the 3rd century b.c. until at least the religious life.3They 3rd century a.d. The technitai enjoyed royal patronage in theHellenistic
kingdoms and Imperial Rome. They also had various privileges (personal immunity during travels, tax exemption, etc.) deriving from their club membership. The most famous guilds were those of the Isthmus and Nemea (later based inArgos and Thebes); ofAthens; of Egypt; and of Ionia and the Hellespont (mentioned in the present document). The technitai of Ionia and theHellespont were granted immunity, as two Delphic docu ments show (IG IX.1 175, ca. 237/6 b.c; FdD 111.3 218.B, ca. 235 b.c);
65); they also issued decrees (7GXI.4 1061 [172-167 b.c], 1136; and sent ambassadors (I.Cos 7, 81 b.c). Inscription 10 shows that their theoroi visited Samothrace. The names mentioned here are otherwise unattested. It is possible, as Salviat suggests (p. 144), that the presence of
3. See UAssociation Stephanis
1988; Aneziri
dionysiaque; 2003.
Dionysiac Samothracian
artists reflects the importance of dramatic performances festival.
at the
CHAPTER
40
11
2
Fig. 11
Record of theoroi-proxenoi(P) from Kos, Bargylia, Klazomenai, and a koinon ofDionysiac artists
Wall block ofThasian marble, broken above and on the left.An end dowel hole is visible at the leftbottom edge. The inscription was found in theGenoese Towers, in the course of archaeological work undertaken by the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities in 1995. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv.no. H. 0.35 m,W. 0.62 m,Th. 0.20 m; L.H. 0.01-0.015 m (left), 0.015 0.02 m (right). inKaradima 1995, p. 492. Unpublished. Mentioned 2nd century B.C.? [
. .
B.[.
vacat
.c.a.6..].IOI
ZmXoq AioScopou llt)0(ovMe[.]a)voc; 5
15
Kcoicov OpacnSrjc, ADKoupyou "AvQinnoqTijuo^evo\) BapyuAarjxcov lotaov
10
[-] NYM[.
.c.a .6. .]EY
.
[-]
toC Koivoi) xcov 7t[epixov Aiovugov] t?%vitcgv [-] 'Apaxoq ITPAT[-] Nouur|vio<; AA[-] TapavxTvoq vacat
'Appcovoc,
KA,a?ou?v(cov Mr|Tp68copo<; AGrivayopoD ntiGepiioc, Oavorco^ioq vacat
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are carefully carved and clear, except in the first two lines, where the surface of the stone is damaged. The hand is consistent with 2nd-century
B.C. documents, and resembles those of 6 and 26; see 6, Epi
graphical Commentary.
Figure
11. Record
of
theoroi-prox
enoi(?) fromKos, Bargylia, Klazo menai, and a koinon ofDionysiac artists (11)
RECORDS
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
WALL
BLOCKS
41
Commentary
This block has the format of a record of theoroi-proxenoi. The vacant spaces at the bottom suggest that thiswas the end of a list,whose beginning was presumably inscribed on a block above. Further, the letters preserved in the second line do not seem to be larger or to indicate an opening formula in any otherway. For the possibility that 11 belonged with 6, see 6, Commentary. Lines 15-16: For the listing ofDionysiac technitai, see ad 10. Lines 17-18: The names Apocxo<; and Not)jLir|vio^ are attested without patronymics for other Dionysiac no identification is possible.
technitai (see Stephanis
1988, s.w.), but
Line 19: Presumably the ethnic TapavxTvo^ refers to Nouur|viO(;. Fifteen other technitai fromTarentum are known, according to Stephanis 1988, p. 554. This is the firstTarentine attested as visiting Samothrace. This
not mean,
need
that Tarentum
however,
but rather that the guild ofDionysiac happened to be fromTarentum. 12
sent
theoroi
to Samothrace,
artists sent theoroi, and one of them
Record of theoroi-proxenoi(P) from Kyzikos andMylasa Fig. 12 on Wall block of Thasian marble, broken only the right, found in
Chora.
Museum
Archaeological
of Samothrace,
courtyard.
saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.35 m,W. 0.42 m,Th. 0.17 m; L.H. 0.02 m. Edd. Kern 1893, p. 354, no. 3; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Beginning
No
inv. no.
I
169.
of 2nd century b.c.? the
[...].
. m_n.
. [-]0[-
[..?.].AK[....]I . .A [. .]AIL
-
[- -]
-]
. . . IOY
[. . .]MH[-]OriOE
5
MtAoco-eTc;
[. . ?. JMCTXOi?io5ti|ho[\)] [.
10
.
.] AMO
.HI
'Epuro'-o
Ku^iKnvcbv nooeuSeot) [-]NOZ -traces
Fredrich.
3 .Xk[.
.. o]i-,
[Z]aK[-6v6io]i?
10 [ur|]v6<;noaei5ecov[ocj Fredrich.
Fredrich.
5 ['Ep]|ifj[<; Meplcmoc,
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is almost illegible. Fredrich dates it to the beginning of the 2nd century b.c on the basis of its letter style. Commentary
Line 3: Possibly an ethnic, as Fredrich suggests. Line 9: The genitive of the ethnic is surprising, given the nominative in line 6. Line 10: One would expect a name of a Cyzicene ambassador rather than a month, and the squeeze clearly shows an omicron instead of the omega of theword Poseideon; hence my reading. Poseideos is a rarer form of the
common
name
Posideos.
13
2
CHAPTER
42
of theoroi-proxenoi(?) from Kyzikos, Halikarnassos, Kaunos, Alabanda, and Dardanos (inscription i), and of theoroi initiates from Keramos (inscription ii)
Figure
Records
12. Record
of theoroi-proxe
noi(?) from Kyzikos andMylasa
block ofThasian marble, apparently preserved on all sides, reused as the inner door lintel of theChurch of Christ; the inscription appears on the underside of the lintel.The top and right sides are smooth, the bottom are visible above and on the left and right. apparently so; clamp cuttings H. 0.355 m,W. 1.37 m, Th. 0.22 m; L.H. 0.02 m. Wall
Edd. Blau
and Schlottmann
1855, p. 616; Conze
1860, pp. 69-70;
160.
Fredrich,/GXIL8 Cf. Conze 1880, p. 85, no. 2; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
appendixIII B, no. 1; [7MT1576].
(1960), p. 72,
2nd century B.C.? (inscription i), 1st century B.C.? (inscription ii) i
[...
15
[- -]8copoc,Mi8(o\),
'Apxuuioq Apiaxioovoc,
ii
A^iKapvaoaeTq [- -]v(a<; MeXavxoxt, M6o%oq Moa^ou [K]auvioi [- -]rh)ppixou, BeM-epocpovxriq 'Ayioq, [- -]aq Tijicovoq
10
IiATjvoC vacat
K\)^lKT|VOl
5
ApxejiiScopoq
.]oi
[- -]oq ApiSeiKOD, Kpdxr|c; Kpdxrixoq
AtaxPavSeTc/ [- -]v 'Idoovoq, 6 (p\)G?i Mwvicovoq, IId|Li(piXo<;AkoA-Xcoviou AapSaveiq [Mejve^aoq Avxrjvopoq, AeicpiX-oqMnvioD.
em paaiAicoc, ITuBicdvoc,xox>[- K?pa|iir|xcov 0?copoi uuoxcu
eijcePeic;
'fcpoK^fjc,Ari|Lir|xpio\)xofiMoa%[ 20 Apiaxoji?vr|(; Apiaxojjivouc, Ka6' uo0?cuav 8e AcopoGeod ?odg?pf|(; [ivo(xr\q) (sic) ex>
(12)
THEOROI
OF
RECORDS
6
BLOCKS
43
Dimitrova.
[- -]vioc<; Mc^ocvtod
Fredrich,
[- -]MeA,dvTO'u
WALL
[apud Fredrich]. 4 [-SJcopoc;Fredrich, 8copo<;
Fredrich. 1 [T65i]oi? Hiller Dimitrova.
ON
INSCRIBED
8
-
[-
ni)]ppi%o\) Fredrich, ITuppixo-uDimitrova. 13 [- -]Xaoq Fredrich, [Me]ve?Uxo<; Dimitrova. 16,fin. [Api8r|?Uyu?]Fredrich. 19 Moo|[x-] Fredrich. 22 uio"(Tr|<;) Fredrich.
Commentary Epigraphical The right part of the stone is better preserved. The hand of inscription ii resembles closely those of 15 and 17.ii. The dating is based on letter style (Fredrich, commentary). In 2004 a piece was broken off below the block, which allowed additional letters to be read on the left in lines 4, 6, 8, 13. 16-21: The hand is different and presumably later. 19: Parts of the chi can be detected. Lines 22-23: Fredrich: "nihili sunt."The letters are different (lunate sigma and epsilon) and carelessly executed. Lines Line
Commentary
the second inscription, ii, is a list of theoroi-initiates. The earlier inscription, i,was probably a list of theoroi-proxenoi, lacking the initial formula. Its layout resembles that of 8: the ethnics are indented, and often two names are placed on a single line. It is possible, therefore, that 8 and
Only
13 were
next,
or at least
close,
to each
other.
Line 1:Hiller von Gaertringen suggests [T68i]oi?, since ApiSeiKriq is a Rhodian name. Another possibility would be [Kcbi]oi? since both Api5eiKT|(; and
ApiSeiKeix;
occur
on Rhodes
and
Kos.
Line 4: The
patronymic Mi5iod is probably from M(8)i8ioc<;, and not from Mi8iO(;, which is a very rare name. Curiously enough, a Cyzicene document (7MT1456) frequentlymentions the name M(e)i8ioc(; both in the nominative and the genitive, and offers two possible candidates tomatch the name in the present document ([MnJxpoScopoc;MeiSuru, line 1.56, and line 1.87); the identification is far from certain,
ApT?ui8copO(; M8i8i[od], since
however,
the name
is so common.
Line 6:The name Metaivrn<; is attested in documents ofHalikarnassos in the formMetaxvTocq.A Moa%oq M6o%ou (e.g.,I.Halikarnassos 73.2,228.1.8) to\)Moo%icovo(; occurs in aHalikarnassian inscription (I.Halikarnassos 97.6), but the name is too common to allow for a certain identification. Lines
8-9: None
BeMiepocpovrnc;
of the names
is a very
listed occurs elsewhere
in Kaunos.
rare name.
10-11: The name Mivvicov is typical of Rhodes, Kos, Karia, and Ionia. The patronymic occurs also in 5, line 22, but it is unclear whether Lines
the
two
honored
theoroi
from Alabanda
are
related.
A
certain
'Idocov
in an
Mivvicovoc,
is
(I.Halikarnassos 9). inscription fromHalikarnassos Line 13: Only the patronymic Mrjviou among the names listed occurs elsewhere inDardanos (IMT174). Lines 14?15: It is unclear whether the name is part of theDardanian group. Itmay belong to a list inscribed on the block above. Line 16: Fredrich notes that the eponymous official isperhaps the same as the one in 57 (7GXII.8 186), ITuOicovtoo ApiSfitaru. IIY0 is numismati cally attested for a Samothracian
eponym; see 7GXII.8,
p. 41. There
are
44
chapter
2
two eponymous kings with the name Aridelos attested on Samothrace: (58).The abbrevia ApiSri^oc; xov QiXo^evov (57) and Api8riA,o<; [-]i%ov
tions ANAH, read as A
in Keramos (Oeoi fieydcAm KepaiiifjTou) is attested in inscriptions. ethnic indicates of course that theywere not identical with the Sa mothracian Great Gods; according to Laumonier, theywere a Zeus and a local figure associated with either Zeus orApollo.4 Gods The
14
Record
of theoroi-initiates fromDardanos
initiates
of uncertain
Fig. 13
and of Roman
provenance
Wall block of Thasian marble, broken recently in the upper right corner.The broken-off piece is preserved. Smooth-picked on the left, top, and bottom, rough-picked on back. There may be anathyrosis on the right. The stone was lying outside the Church of Christ in 1954, when Fraser saw it. It was recentlymoved to the Old School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities in Palaiopolis. 1.104 m, Th. 0.19 m; L.H. 0.04 m (line 1), 0.02 m H. 0.355 m,W. m 0.012-0.015 (col. II). (col. I),
Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 615,4; Conze 1860, p. 70; [Mom msen, CILI (1863) 581]; [Lommatzsch, CIL P (1918) 667]; [Mommsen, CIL III (1873) 716]; Conze 1875, p. 43; Fredrich, JGXIL8 173; [Degrassi,
(1957) andP (1965) 211].
ILLRPl
Cf. Conze 1880,p. 98, C; Fraser, Samothracel.l III B, no. 5; [IMF 104]; Clinton 2001, p. 35.
(1960),p. 73, appendix
June 3, 66 b.c. M(anio)
Lepid(o) Iunias
Vo[lc]ac(io)
L(ucio)
mystae piei
[. . . .]ni[. . .] 1. E vacat
5
Clodus
Qi
Diodo[t]us
1.
II
Col.
I
Col. N(umerius) * L. Ne[.]ius
Ill Non(as)
co(n)s(ulibus) A. D.
enl Paai^ecoq Apiaxcovoq tou uuaxou euoepeic, 'IcpiKpoVcoax;
. [.. Jus 10
Oecopoi Aap8aveic, A7to^A,covi5o'o
Auaijjivric,
Agacles
ArtoM-oScopoc,AeivoK^eouc,
A[th]enogenis Artemo Nearchi.
v IcoK^fjq
aujj|i\)cn;ai-
vacat 15
'OAA)U7uo5copo'o ... OI kou
IIAT
A7roA^CGVi5ric,
oi A^ec^ijidxoD Aiovocuoc,
Aio8copou
MnvocpocvTOC,
Oi^oKpcVcouc,
ockoXodOoi
20 ApxejiiiScopoc; Eunjaipm). Fredrich. 1M(anio) rich, mystae
Dessau
Fredrich. 2 mistae Fred Lepid(o) L(ucio) Vo[lc]ac(io)
\_apud Fredrich]. . . .]ni[. N [.
Fredrich, Ep[hor]us(?) 15 naxi[a]KOc; 'IaoK^fjc, Fredrich. 20 EiSScopoc, Fraser.
.
.... 3 N(umerius) . 1. Jus Degrassi. .] Ef[.
^/ndT[ai]Koc,
ni[us
Fredrich,fortasse
N.]
l(ibertus)
13 IcoK^fjq
Fraser,
II6Vcpi%o<; Fraser. 4. Laumonier
1958, pp. 646-652.
RECORDS
Figure 13. Record of theoroi-initi ates
from Dardanos
and of Roman
initiatesof uncertain provenance (14)
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
WALL
BLOCKS
45
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now almost obliterated. Its Latin portion was almost illegible even at the time of its firstpublication in CIL. The consular dat
over both columns of the inscription and is cut in very large ing is spread
letters.
so in order to print Line 5: Fredrichs majuscule copy has ArACLES, one has to assume that the stone carver confused theGreek and Agacles, Roman
alphabets.
Commentary This document Greek
it has a Latin part in addition to the list of theoroi-initiates. It is curious thatRoman mystae are listed on is unusual because
theoroi. In fact, only the firsttwo Greek initiates dimensions of the block are compatible with those of the other blocks, but there seems to be no justification for inscribing names of initiates on the same building that held lists of theoroi-proxenoi. the same block as Greek
are also theoroi. The
expect a list of initiates to be placed on an individual stele as two of the Romans mentioned in this purely private initiative.At least were freed slaves (lines 3, 5), so it is unlikely that theywere inscription none of the people important to the city of Samothrace. Unfortunately,
One would a
listed is attested elsewhere, sowe cannot determine whether the Romans came fromDardanos as well. It seems logical that they all came to Samo thrace together.The following document, 15, provides a good parallel for Dardanian initiates listed together with Roman initiates. Itwould seem that after the recording of theoroi-proxenoi ceased to be a popular practice, names of initiateswere inscribed on the same building. The difference is that the records of initiates list a single city; theywere perhaps not set up by Samothrace, but privately by the initiates. Another noteworthy feature of this document is that it reveals a hier are theoroi, the next three archy in the initiates' status: only the firsttwo are while the last person mentioned is a servant, akolouthos.The symmystai, use of the must be amistake, unless the list continued plural title akolouthoi on the block below. Line 8: The
abbreviation API is numismatically attested for a Samo father ofAriston here may be related to
thracian eponym; see ad 13. The the king in 15.
CHAPTER
46
2
Figure 14. Record of theoroi-initi ates from Dardanos initiates (15).
of uncertain
Photo ? M.
courtesyMusee Greek, Roman,
15
Record of theoroi-initiates fromDardanos
and of Roman
initiates of uncertain provenance
Fig. 14
Wall block ofThasian marble, broken on the right; the back was cut off and smoothed for shipping purposes in the 19th century; theremay have been an end dowel hole in the lower left edge. Found built into "the bigger tower" (Conze). Paris, Musee du Louvre, inv.Ma. stone in July 2001. H. 0.355 m,W. 0.52 m, Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.02 m.
Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 622, no. 15; Conze
4184.1
saw the
1860, pp. 63
CIL I2 (1918) 671]; 64; [Mommsen,CIL I (1863) 580]; [Lommatzsch, [Mommsen,CIL III (1873) 715]; [Cagnat,IGR 1.4 (1905) 852]; Fred rich,/GXIL8 174; [Degrassi,ILLRPl (1957) and I2 (1965) 214]; [IMT 105]. 1st century
B.C.?
EKl pOCOlAicoq 'IcpiKpdlODC;TOX)[- -] Gecopoi AocpSccvecov jLiuaxai euaepeic/ nauaaviaq 5 Aiovuaioq
AiqnAOD Ikotuod
Avtioxoc; Iko7uod cck6ao\)6o(;
L. 10
naoaavioD
"Ojlu^oc,
mystae piei f. Pollion Veneilius L. Acorenus
Dionysius E_* se[r](vus)
1. Alexsander
Fredrich. 1 STOY Blau and Schlottmann, ITO Conze, TOY Fredrich. 7 AOI edd. 9 VS I SEB Conze. Epigraphical Commentary The letters are carefully done and clear.Their
style is very similar to that of 13, inscription ii, and 17, inscription ii.The Greek and Roman letters seem to have been executed same hand. by the The
last few letters in lines 1, 7, and 9 are underlined
no longer be seen.
since they can
and
of Roman
provenance
and P. Chuzeville, du Louvre, Department of and Etruscan Antiquities
RECORDS
OF
THEOROI
ON
INSCRIBED
Commentary For the recording ofGreek and Roman initiates, see 14. The theoroi blocks.
WALL
BLOCKS
47
initiates in addition to the theoroi
inscription conforms to the dimensions of the other
eponymous king may be the father or another relative of the one in 14, hence the tentative date. Line
1:The
Lines 5-6: Ikotiixx; is a very rare name. Line 7: For the ockoXooGoc;,cf. 14, Commentary. Line 10: The name Acorenus, as far as I know, is unattested.
16
Record of theoroi-initiates from Elis Fig. 15
marble, preserved on both the left and right sides, the top and bottom being close to the original surface.The measure 0.215 m inwidth, and the space between them ca. 0.25 regulae architrave block ofThasian
Doric
front surface is light gray,with a secondary reddish coloring. The back was cut and secondarily smoothed in the 19th century for shipping purposes. The stone has damage holes on the right; the broken surfaces
m. The
are white. Found built into "the lowest tower" (Conze). Paris, Musee du saw stone in 2001. inv. the Ma. 4186.1 Louvre, July H. 0.42 m,W. 1.38 m,Th. 0.075 m; L.H. 0.04 m. Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 621, no. 12; Conze 1860, p. 64; 176. Bechtel 1887, no. 236; Conze 1880, pp. 98-99; Fredrich, /GXII.8 2nd-lst
century
B.C.?
?7ii PaoiXeax; Teiaia
xox>Kpixcovoq
'H^eicov Oecopoi uuaxai
8uaepeT(;
'AvxavSpoq 08o8ciE)poD
5 ApioTOKpdxriq Avxupdvecoq -traces Fredrich.
Figure 15. Record of theoroi-initi ates fromElis (16). Photo? M. andP. Chuzeville, Department Antiquities
courtesyMusee du Louvre, of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan
5 Avxicpdvecoc, Dimitrova,
Avxicpdveoc,
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and carefully done. Line 5:1 see an omega. Line 6: Unclear
traces of letters.
Fredrich.
6 Dimitrova.
CHAPTER
48
2
Commentary
architrave block is of crucial importance in trying to reconstruct the building fromwhich the theoroi blocks came (see discussion above, pp. 16 17). This is the only inscription that mentions ambassadors from the a b.c. or 1st cen Peloponnese. Fredrich suggests date in the 1st century on a.d. which is the basis of the letter tury possible, but I prefer shapes, an earlier date because the eponymous official might be the same as the one recorded on a pseudo-Rhodian coin that is dated by Richard Ashton to the firsthalf of the 2nd century b.c.5 The name T(e)icuocc; occurs as a
This
a list of initiates inscribed on a patronymic of the eponymous king in 62, block from the building that held theoroi records. Fig. 16 Wall block ofThasian marble, broken on the right; the left side has are smooth-picked. A rectangular dowel anathyrosis; the top and bottom 17
Records
of theoroi-initiates from Stratonikeia and Sardis
hole is visible on top, 0.695 m from the left edge. Found 1 km northeast of Kamariotissa, near the intersection of themain coastal road and the country road leading to Potamia. Palaiopolis, Old School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities, Ephoreia inv.C 80.106. 1.08 m, Th. 0.18 m; L.H. 0.015 m (inscription i), H. 0.355 m, W. 0.02 m (inscription ii, lines 1-3), 0.017-0.02 0.015-0.018 m (inscription hi). 1985, pp. 312-313. Ed.Triantaphyllos Ct.SEG XXXV 964. 1st century
m (inscription ii, lines 4-7),
b.c.?
ii [-]
i
[-] [-]OI10
[-JMY. . .
iii
SxpocToviKecuv [-] eTtipocoiAicuc,An[-] jLiuGTca[euaepeic,-] [-] [-] dp%i9ecop6c,MEN[-] v 5 [-] Oecopoi ApiGTOAxxtoc,--] [-] kocO' -uoOecuav 8e AN[-] [-] Apeix; OiXoKpdxo[i)vacat
-]
[-] ?tu paaiAicoc, Atu
XapSiavoc,
[-] Sikocgttic; vacat 5 Oecopoi Dimitrova. 4 6 . xoq apxiOecopoc; Triantaphyllos, Triantaphyllos. . . xova 12 Dimitrova. [tou -] Oecopoi Apiox6tax[o<;Kap fortasse Triantaphyllos,
Avxi]a0evo\) Pleket (apud SEG).
Epigraphical Commentary The letters of inscription ii, larger and more elongated than those of iii, resemble the hand(s) of 13, inscription ii, and 15.The inscription (at least ii) can be tentatively dated by its letter forms to the 1st century b.c. The
5. Ashton
1988;
see also 26 and 62.
RECORDS
Figure 16. Records of theoroi-initi atesfrom Stratonikeia and Sardis
(17)
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
WALL
BLOCKS
49
letters of inscription iii, added in the vacant space after ii, are consistent with a date in the 1st century B.C., but a later date is also possible. The block contained another inscription on the left,where unclear traces of letters are visible.
Line 4: There is a strayhorizontal mark above the rho of dpxiGecopoq, which gives the appearance of tau. Line 9: The omicron of An
at a certain point only initiates were recorded on the building with theoroi blocks.
inscribed
Line 9: An eponymous king with the name Aewcov Arcc-MxoviSo'u is attested in 56, as Triantaphyllos observes.6 It is unclear whether the two are related. kings
6. In his textthereis a slightmis
name as Aetvcov KnoXXowi print of the must be a patro but A7toAAcovi5o\) 8r|c,, in the nymic genitive singular.
Lines 12,13: The ethnic Sardianos is otherwise unattested in Samo thracian context, asTriantaphyllos notes. Presumably AvTio"0evr|<;was sent are numerous to Samothrace as a judge, and then became initiated.There were one sent who from inscriptions honoring judges city to another. son ofHerodes, for example, the father of the Prienian poet Poseidonios, praised by Samothrace,
served as a judge (see ad 3, line 6).
CHAPTER
3
of Theoroi
Records on Other
Inscribed
Stones
are inscribed on following documents concerning theoroi1 (18-28) a round altar. stelai, unidentified blocks, a statue base, and
The
Record of theoroi(?) from Parion Fig. 17 a on the right, Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, preserved rough on back. Paris, Musee saw the stone inv. Ma. du 4185.1 Louvre, picked 18
inJuly2001.
0.165 m,W. 0.20 m,Th. 0.04 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 Ed. Fredrich,/GXII.8 175. Cf. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 65; [JMT103].
H.
1st century
m.
B.C.?
[-]l [?]?oq
Ilapiavco[v] Av8pe
[od, A7iaT?]o{>pio<; Ilo [- -o]vq, 5
Avxi
[--].Xe
Fredrich. 1 [uuaxai euaepeicj Fredrich. 2 [9ecopo]iFredrich. 6 [k vel d]A? Fredrich.
Figure 17. Record of theoroi(?) from (18). Photo ? C. Larrieu, courtesy du Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
Parion Musee
1. See 132 forpossible theoroifrom Perinthos.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering,different from that ofmost other Samothracian
inscriptions, is indicative of a lst-century B.C. date, according to Fredrich. Line 2: Dotted letters: bottom verticals. Line 6: Upper diagonals, followed by the apex of a triangle.
Commentary The restoration proposed by Fredrich in line 1, [uugtcu euoepeiq], is far from certain, so I have not included this inscription among the other re cords of theoroi-initiates.
52
19 a wall
CHAPTER
3
Fig. 18 a of Thasian of block marble, found inChora, once built into Fragment Records of theoroi and initiates
xou recopyiou,
on
the right and
left. It
Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 620, nos. 10, 11; Conze 177. 66-67; Fredrich, IGXII.8 pp. Cf. Conze 1860, p. 62; Collini 1990, p. 261.
1860,
outside
the Koccpeveiov
preserved
is unclear whether the top and bottom are preserved. The block is inscribed both on the front (side A) and on the left (side B). Paris,Musee du Louvre, inv. Ma. 4187.1 saw the stone in July2001. H. 0.45 m, W. 0.31 m, Th. 0.15 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m (lines 1-3), 0.015-0.02 m (lines 4-6), 0.05 m (line 8), 0.03 m (line 9), 0.02 m (lines 11-end).
Date?
SideA euafelpelc/ NiKricpopoc;, Acoai
OiXocrcpccToc;, Oeoc,, Aaoq,
Eurijiepoc,, Tocao[d]
'E7iajjAVCGvSoc(;, pac,, BiOdc,.2
SideB vacat
[-]F vacat -
-0e]copoi - -]EI1AP
10
15
-7c]oAa5oc,, -o]8copou, -]vr\q Apia -Jcao-o, 'Hpa -]6Soxo<;
-],Anuf|Tp[i] oq Fredrich. [?7eI PocaiXecex;]
-
-]q, Nek
6-7
TA
.
[. .]
. .. PAX Blau
| [to-o Seivoc;
and Schlottmann,
xox> SeTvoq]
Fredrich.
13
Ta)io[x>]\paq fortasse
Fredrich.
8-9
Etioiarn; Fredrich.
Commentary Epigraphical The letters are clear, though a bit uneven. Line 2: The inscription is now damaged where the second epsilon of eucj[e]p?i(; should have been. Line 6: The left oblique stroke of what seems to be a lambda looks "broken."
Commentary
The
space
after
the omicron
seems
to be vacant.
This block, 0.45 m high, ismuch larger than the standard 0.35 m blocks. The names in the inscription on sideA aremost probably those of slaves, as Fred rich notes, so itmust postdate that on side B, which mentions theoroi. is a prefer Line 6: The name TccA-opac; is unattested, so Ta^o[u]pa(; occurs in several inscriptions from able reading. The genitive TocA-ODpou
2. As Symbols,
noted
in the List
I follow
of Editorial
the standard
schol
arly practice of accenting Thracian are attested names if only in they sources but unattested Greek literary and epigraphically, cented otherwise.
leave them unac
RECORDS
Figure 18. Records of theoroi and initiates (19): sideA (left),side B
Photos ? M. and P. Chuzeville (right). (left), C. Larrieu (right), courtesyMusee du Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
OTHER
STONES
53
and Thessaly. The name itself is considered to be Thracian,3 and is see 89. Initiates with Thracian names attested also in the formTarula(s); are commonly attested in Samothrace (see Chap. 9).This is not surprising,
Attica
given the geographic proximity and the traditional interest of theThra cians in Samothracian cult. A B.C. late-4th-century inscription from the our Thracian of is earliest major city Seuthopolis epigraphical record of the
worship of the Samothracian gods outside Samothrace.4 Inscription 171 and inscription Appendix II.3 are from twoThracian cities, Odessos and
Dionysopolis, respectively, thatmention localworship of the Samothracian Mysteries. It is likely that the pre-Greek settlers of Samothrace came from Thrace, and aThracian origin of the termKabeiros would certainly make better sense from a geographic and cultic point of view than a Semitic one would.5 Even Thracian royalty became Samothracian initiates, as is evident from 46. a 8: It is unclear what F means, but itmust belong to different inscription. Fredrich suggests [km PaoiAiax;] |[xou 5?ivo<; xov Sewoq], but the vacant space on the stone does not allow this restoration. Line 13: A certain Evjaunq occurs in 50, as Fredrich points out. Line
3. Detschew I owe
1957, pp. 491-492. to Dimitar
this observation
Boyadzhiev.
4. IGBu/gV 5614; Velkov 1991, pp. 7-11, no. 1; Elvers 1994,266 (SEG XLII 661); Tacheva 2000, pp. 28-35; cf.Cole 1984, pp. 59-60,147-148, no. 14.
5. Collini (1990) argues against the
Semitic
term. origin of the
20 Record of theoroi(?)fromKolophon Fig. 19 Fragment of Thasian marble, broken on all sides. Paris, Musee Louvre, inv.Ma. 4182.1 saw the stone in July 2001. H. 0.16 m,W. 0.20 m, Th. 0.04 m; L.H. 0.02 m. Edd. Reinach 7GXII.8
166.
du
1892, p. 204, no. 3; Kern 1893, p. 375, no. 25; Fredrich,
CHAPTER
54
3
Figure 19. Record of theoroi(?) from Kolophon (20). Photo? C. Larrieu, courtesyMusee
Greek, Roman,
2nd century B.C.? Ko^ocpcb[vioi] i;f/Ko^ocpco[v{a)v] [M]eve.[---].
Fredrich. 1 Kotaxpco[vioi]Fredrich. Epigraphical Commentary The lettering resembles that of 1,6,10,11, and 26, except that the present more pronounced serifs.Fredrich thinks the hand suggests inscription has a date in the 1st century B.C., but I prefer a 2nd-century B.C. date on ac count of its similarity to 26. Line 2: Of the last letter there are only unclear traces. Commentary It is unclear whether Line
this fragment belonged
to a list of theoroi.
1: Either the nominative or the genitive plural is possible.
20 by theoroi(?) from Patara Fig. Base ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides. The top and the sides are smooth in front and rough-picked on back. The back is rough.A dowel hole and a pour channel are visible above on the left.The block was removed from a wall inChora, before Fredrich copied it in the local schoolhouse. of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv. no. Archaeological Museum 21
Dedication
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is consistent with 2nd-century B.C. documents, hence Fred rich's dating.
of du Louvre, Department and Etruscan Antiquities
records
Figure 20. Dedication by theoroi(?) fromPatara (21)
of
theoroi
inscribed
on
stones
other
55
Commentary The pour channel and the dowel hole suggest that a dedication stood on top of the block. It is possible that therewere other blocks to the right and the left. It is uncertain whether the inscription is original and whether the Ilaxapeiq mentioned in itwere theoroi. If theywere theoroi who set up a dedication to the Great Gods, then thiswould be another example of
names of theoroi on bases of monuments; 22
cf. 4 and 26.
Record of theoroi(?) fromTeos, Methymna, Samos, Kolophon, Kaunos, Abdera, Parion, and Kalchedon
Klazomenai,
Two joining fragments of a stele ofThasian marble, badly worn. Pre of served on all sides. Found inRoman aqueduct. Archeological Museum
Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 38.376. H. 1.74 m,W. 0.40-0.45 m,Th.
0.085-0.10
m; L.H.
Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 22. Cf. Lehmann-Hartleben 1939, p. 144; Robert
62; [7MT1032 (Klines 51-64)]. After middle
of 3rd century b.c.?
em pocoiAeox; [-]vo8cbpoi)
5
AnoXX&vxoq [.. JuuSou [...].
(cov
AyocOocpcov AyaGoviKOu Au?t?p6<; UavxaKXeoq Aauo7uoXi(; AytioiMuod [. .]?ucgv 10 Ai68oxo<; npcDToqnAoi) ITuOcov ITuOoKpiTOD NiKooxpaxcx; Apiaxopot)Xou MnGrjuvaicov
0dut|xa<; Aeiva[. 15
[-]v
. . ?]od
MivSpoi)
xou Air[-]
0.015 m.
1963, pp. 51-53,
55,
chapter
56 [np]t>TCCVl[cJ[-] .A . .]
m[. A[-
-] -]
[-^
20Xa[jLLi]cov -]
[------'
[-]dxioq
[-](po\)
[-
-----..]
[KoA,o]9cov[icov]
25 [-]
fHpo8[-]
[. . .]k[. .]iod
[-]covio<; [-]icov
UXeiaxiov
Ylanaaviaq
Apicxcovoc;
n^eiaxoKpaTriq
30 Ayricuccc;Xxpa[-] [-
-]r|vot)
[-] Oeocpitan) Apiaxotax fEpjLio7i;ei0riq 35
EiSuriXoc,ZTpaxcov6|Lio\) [-]
A6r|vay6pa
[-]
Aiov-ocucru
EKajjxxv8p[uyo]
ria[.]r\q
K^a^ojxevicov 'Hpayixcov
ArijLmxpun)
40 Tr|^8cpdvr|(;Mr|xpo8copo\) Apx?uxo[v] [-Jcpdvcoq Krxovicuv BoiGKOD [-JlCOV . . Ad[. .] navxaAiovxoc;
45
A(38r|pixcov E-OKpaxTjc;
'HpaKA^iSou
nu0oS[-] A7toAA.68cGpo[cJ
50 riapiavcov AkoXXoHVIOX) -]od
-]
55
noA,\)8[.]
'Emyovot) -]voq --M
-]7t[-
.]x>[. .][izv0v -]^o[v]
M-
-M-
-
.-]
60 -] -.M- - -] -M-
----rio^-uScopoc;
Aiovt)oo86xo\)
XxpcVrnyoc,[.]o0?od
3
RECORDS
OF
65
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
OTHER
STONES
57
Koc^%r|8ovicov [-
-]
Aii[-
-]covo<;
Oi^ocpdvriq [rit)?]ppivot) [-----r-;k 70 Aioyevr|(; MevvAAou T68ioc; niatKpdxr|(; Exmuoi)
Fraser.
1 A[0]avo8cbpca>
KviSicov
Fraser),
xr\q Fraser,
[. JiSioc;
Fraser.
9 MrjAacov
Fraser.
nocvTaK^fic,
Robert,
3 noX,Djj.[-] Fraser.
haesitanter.
Fraser.
14 Aeiva[yop]o\) 68
[rTo]ppivoD
5 Mr\?ucGV Bean Fraser. Robert,
37
(apud ilocM-dv
[Mu]ppivoi)
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The stone ispractically illegible now, to such an extent that it seems pointless to underline what can no longer be seen. In 1939 the two fragments made a complete join, as Fraser points out; then a piece was broken off from the lower right corner of the top fragment. The readings are those of Fraser. Line 1:1 see nothing before nu in the name of the eponymous official. Last letter:Fraser has obviously seen a left vertical and a top horizontal, since he reads either gamma or pi. Line 5: First letter after the brackets: apparently a triangle, since Fraser reads a delta, while Bean reads a lambda. reads
Line 9: First letter after the brackets: apparently a triangle, since Fraser a lambda.
Commentary
Fraser notes that the present inscription is unusual in its form: it is a stele, not a block from a wall. Another curiosity is that there is no record of on the theoroi. Fraser concludes that although it is bestowing proxenia to the format of stelai tempting assign listing theoroi who were not made an to earlier date, the considerably later date of another stele of proxenoi theoroi, 24 (2GXII.8 172), would point to the parallel existence of simple lists of theoroi and lists of theoroi-proxenoi. The date of 24, however, is
uncertain. The present stelemust have been set up by Samothrace since it is unlikely that people from all the cities listedwould have erected such a monument together. It isuncertain whether the officials listedwere theoroi, although this seems probable. It is conceivable that therewas a series of stelai and that the titlewas
inscribed on the first. names of theoroi were inscribed on stelai in that the hypothesis the 3rd century b.c., a practice replaced by publication on building walls, be 1.3 may (mid-3rd century b.c?), which calls supported by Appendix for publication of the names of the theoroi "on the stele" (lines 11?12). "The stele" is not further explained, presumably because itwas generally understood in Samothrace what itmeant, namely, the stele on which names of theoroi were annually inscribed. Line 4: [E-6p]t7u8ou seems the most likely among the few possible The
restorations.
Lines KviSicov
5-8: Robert is not
dotted,
(p. 52) points out that in Fraser's text the delta of
while
in his
commentary
it is: "KviSicov
is not
certain.
CHAPTER
58
3
theoroi do not occur elsewhere in the lists, and Bean prefers to read theword as seems tome more this though MrjAicov, probable in line 9." It is interesting to note that the names AyaBocpcov,navxocKAfjc,,Aa
Knidian
[lonoXiq, and Ayr|cu8auoc, occur in Rhodian inscriptions: AyocOocpcovis a very rare name, yet it is attested, to my knowledge, only in the present document and on Rhodes (Lindos II 51x.II, line 55). The rest are espe cially well documented on Rhodes.6 Restoring [To]5icov in line 5 should be
considered.
name Au^xepoc, (the accent is on the last syllable) is very
Line 7: The rare
IG V.l
(e.g.,
1441a.2).
'Hjuixepoq
not
does
occur
as a name,
except
for
the feminine 'Hjiexepoc (IG V.2 536; cf.Robert, p. 53). as evidence for theoroi Line 9: Fraser s reading Mrj^icov has been used fromMelos, but the reading is uncertain. Line 10: npcoxocpi^ot) is a hapax, tomy knowledge. Line 14: Oujxnxocc, is very rare.The only comparable instance known to me is IG IP 6270, GuurjxdSoc,. As for the patronymic, Aeivd[px]oi) is also possible and better attested. Line 27: Robert suggests that [To8]icov can be restored since the fol lowing three names are likely to be Rhodian. This would be hard to prove, however,
names
because
such
over Greece, while
as noroaocviocc,
and Apioxcov
are
common
all
Il^eiaxiac, and n^eioxoKpdxriq are unattested inRho dian inscriptions (see below, Klines 28, 29; for a more probable Rhodian see Klines list, above, 5-8). Lines 27-37: Fraser notes that a group of 10 names preceded by a single suggests that an ethnic may be read in line 31,
ethnic is very unusual. He -nvoD?for
-rrvcov.7 Even
example,
if this
is correct,
assumption
the
following
group of six names still calls for an explanation (cf. ad 10, lines 28-36). Line 28: Il^eicmoc, is a rare name, attested only inDelphi, CID II 139.40. Fraser has as the nominative in the index TlXzioxiaq, which is a more
common
name.
is not attested epigraphically, tomy knowl
Line 29: II^eiaxoKpdxri^ edge.
33: TpuxmeiOric, seems to be a hapax, while ApuxcoAxxc, is very
Line
common. 34:
Line
seems
Zxpaxcovuuoc,
to be
a
hapax.
Line 37: naAAdvxnc,, restored by Fraser, is unattested. Robert suggests
tentatively
(p. 53)
navxocKArjc,.
Line 39: 'Hpay(e)ixcov is a very rare spelling, attested only in 7GXII.5 881, tomy knowledge. 'Hpoy(e)ixoe>v,on the other hand, is very common. Line 43: The patronymic Boiokod occurs elsewhere in a Kaunian context:
Llasos
18,
a decree
honoring
Toxiocloc,
Boiokod
Kccovioc,.
68: IToppivoc, is a much more commonly attested name than and the ending is restored, so one cannot be sure about the IVToppivfocJ,8 Line
exact
form
of the name.
patronymic MbvoaXod occurs elsewhere in Rhodian Lindos II 363; SEG XXXIII 642. inscriptions: Line 71: According to Fraser, [Kv] 1810c,is possible, "inwhich case he was presumably omitted from the KviSioi in lines 5ff."This observation, Line
however,
70: The
contradicts
his
only hypothetical. Even
former
conclusion
that
the
restoration
Kvi8icov
is
though the reading of lines 5 and 9 is uncertain,
6. navTOCKXfjc, XII.l
258,
/ -eve, is listed in IG Lindos II l.A,
765,1034.11;
etc. 347.b.II, 419.III, 51.a, 347.a.III, 730; Aocue>7to^ic, occurs in IG XII.l Lindos II 270.11, 286, 294.11, 349.11. is attested as a Rhodian AyrioiSauoc, name
in a large number of inscriptions. 7. Robert (1963, p. 52) notes that the upsilon of -nvoi) should have been
dotted
to allow
for a variant
occurs in IG 8.Myrrinos fr. f, col. Ill, line 161. Fraser
reading. IP 1951, lists the
in the index as Ma)ppivr|c,, but such a form does not occur for the nominative masculine.
RECORDS
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
OTHER
STONES
59
one could still restore [Kv]i8iO(;, without necessarily presupposing that the name was omitted earlier. n(?)ioiKpdxr|<; does not occur in Knidian inscriptions, but is quite common on Rhodes. For example, a Il?iGiKpdxr|<; is listed in 50, a record of Rhodian initiates and hieropoioi. One wonders whether [T]68io<; can be an alternative restoration. 23
Record of theoroi(?) from Ephesos, Rhodes(?), Alabanda, Lampsakos, and Athens(?)
Fig. 21
Kyzikos,
Block ofThasian marble, with anathyrosis on the right, built into the southeast face of awall of theGattilusi fortress, ca. 13.50 m to the north west of the southeast corner of the smaller Gattilusi Tower and ca. 0.33 m above present surface. Eugene Dwyer noticed it in the 1970s, and James Sickinger took a photograph of it in 2002.91 located it and copied itbriefly in 2003, and examined the text in greater detail in 2004. 0.77 m,W. 1.04 m,Th. Ed. Matsas and Dimitrova
H.
2nd-lst
inaccessible; L.H. 0.01 m. 2006, pp. 129-130.
B.C.?
century
I
Col.
Col.
II
[. .c.a .6. .]A7ioMo8a>poM
. .via<; A^ec^dv8po[D] A0r|vaioc; AnuoKpdxoDC,
TiuokA,?i8oc(;
'Ecpeoioi 5
[. .5r1.0. .] vacat} . . [. .5r1.0. .]
.
[. .5r1.0. .]
MEuvoviSnc,.
AKoXX(oviby]q KvcbaaoD
AcogiO?[ocJ
. .
A0nv[aioi
'ETUKpdxou
T65ioi
io
. A
AauYaKnvoi 'EpaoivviSou
'Epaoivvi8rt<;
'HpocK^eioric,
YP
0?oc;?voq
[. A"1.0.
.]
?]
vacat
AA[.I0:1?.] HPO . [.}?rl5..]
Kt>?[lKT|VOl] .ca\6. .]
M?V[.
MEVlGKOq fHpaK^?i5r|(;
.ca-.6. .]
NA[.
A^a(3av8?i[(;] 15
[.
[fH]paK^?coxri9
. .
[A]vcc?i8r||4o<;_caA.?.
.ca.A.?_] . .
.]
vacat
Epigraphical The
inscription
Commentary is now
very worn.
Commentary
9.1 wish to thank both for kindly me about the monument and informing notes and their sharing photograph.
This was probably a list of theoroi, as suggested by the format of the inscrip tion,which consists of names preceded by ethnics. It appears to be a wall block, but it is unclear fromwhich building it came; it does not match the dimensions of the other blocks with theoroi records, which have a height of ca. 0.35 m and a thickness of ca. 0.20 m. The date is based on the fact that
the known
theoroi
lists
are
dated
to the 2nd
the letter shapes are consistent with this date.
and
1st
centuries
B.C.;
6o
CHAPTER
Line
1.6:The
rare name Knosos
is typical of Ephesos,
a spelled with single sigma. Line II.7: The presence ofAthenians,
3
and is usually
if the reading is correct, probably refers to colonists on Imbros or Lemnos, since Attica was not a common a place of origin for visitors to Samothrace; cf. 30, record of the initiation ofAthenians on Imbros. An Athenian initiate is also mentioned in 29. 24
Record of theoroi(?) from Samothrace(?), or Eresos, and Thasos Ephesos
Lampsakos, Myra,
The inscription is known from the copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona, Cod. Vat. Lat. 5250, folio 20, verso. Its dimensions are unknown. Edd. Ziebarth 1906, p. 412, no. 4; Fredrich, 7GXIL8 172, with add., p.vii;[/MT22]. Cf. Mommsen, 62-65. pp. Ca.
CIL
III
(1873)
713; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
100 B.C.? [eni] (3aoiA,eco<; npoicAioix; xoC ASpiavoi) lajioGpotKcov (sic) AjtoA^ouivoD A7toA,AxoviO(; Av8p6viKo<; noA-DviKoi) 5
Aa<|i>\|/aKnvcov
ApxeiiiScopoq [Kp]dvxopO(; Aiaxutax; Aioxpicovoc; Mupecov E\)ay6pa<; fH[y]r|xopO(;
(sic)
(sic)
(1960),
Figure 21. Record of theoroi(?) from Ephesos, Rhodes(?), Kyzikos, Ala banda, Lampsakos, andAthens(?)
(23)
OF
RECORDS
10
ON
INSCRIBED
THEOROI
OTHER
STONES
6l
'Ooe
E\>aX
ApojLicovoc;
Avxiyovoq
'Eleoicov XcocuGecK;
?HpaKA,8i8o\) Hevioi)
ApT8(ii8copo(;
15 AnuoSoToq Aiovdoiod Gaaicov AvTlCpCOV XoCpOK^ElODq ApiaxocpcovToc;
1e
AioK^fjc; 'Hy[r|]aio\)
20 Auocvxvvoc, (sic) OiXoc^evod. Fredrich.
2 fortasse
5 AAYAKHNOJN
Eauicov.
Cyriacus.
9
[E\)]ur|Topoc, Wil.
Iacobs [apud Fredrich], HMHTOPOE Cyriacus. 10 [apud Fredrich], [E\)cp]r|Topoc, EYAAOIOXEOTOY Cyriacus. 12 'E[p W(p]eaicov Fredrich, EIESIOJN Cyriacus. 18 fIe[p]cov Fredrich,
IEruJN
Cyriacus.
19
Fredrich,
'Hy[r|]cucn)
HITEIOY
Cyriacus.
Commentary
The inscription is unusual in its form: the layout ofCyriacus's copy suggests a stele rather than a block. It is not certain that this is a list of theoroi, but itspattern?ethnics that followed by groups of several names?resembles of the other theoroi documents. Line 1:The last name must be a mistake, as Fredrich notes. Api8r|taru is possible, but cannot be verified. As for Prokles, we should note that the abbreviation IIPO is numismatically attested for a Samothracian magistrate; see JGXIL8, p. 41. Line 2: The presence of Samothracians is curious, as Fredrich points out. It is unparalleled in lists of either sacred ambassadors or initiates in Samothrace. Perhaps it is a mistake for Xaurcov; cf. Cyriacus's reading of
for uucttou in 58, line 18 (see Fig. 46). JlIdottipicov Line 9:A certain EuocyopocqA[y]f|xopo<; occurs inLindos 224 as a priest ofDionysos, but most probably he was a Rhodian. Line 17: Avxi(pcov, son of EocpOK^fjc;, is attested fromThasos, 7GXII.8 430 (undated) and 441 (ca. 100 B.C.). If ours is the same person, he must
have gone to Samothrace as a relatively young ambassador; the second verse thatmentions his untimely death before inscription is an epitaph in the age of 30: dpxi
u? vi)uxpi5icov
anb
naaTcov
dp7cao?
Suauopov
8ai|Licov eq xpixdxav vioojievov SeicdSa, dpxi plot) 7c?p6covxakocx' ?\)k^?OcOeoura Soc^ac; oTvyvbq
cbtcaSa
AvTicpocovToc,
86u\oi<;
yovocTcn
'Hpco, xch ^utouocv
duxpeKata)\|/'
XocpoK^eoq
o\) TEKoq
aXka
Ai8ac;
ov xcke xdcpov
uoVcrip . . .
Yet the epitaph refers to the glory he brought to his fatherland, so it is not as a theoros. Thus I tentatively impossible that he went to Samothrace date the present inscription to ca. 100 B.C., but it could be earlier in light of the hypothesis that itwas common practice in the 3rd century to record theoroi on stelai (see ad22). The other inscription, 430, mentions just his name. A Sophokles, son ofAntiphon, attested in 7GXII.8 312, served as a theoros
on Thasos.
62
CHAPTER
3
Figure 22. Record of theoroi(?) from Myrina and Erythrai (25). Samothrace 2.1, pi. XI:
Record of theoroi(?) fromMyrina
25
and Erythrai
appendix III A
22
Fig.
marble, part of top edge preserved. Archaeological of Istanbul. Non vidi. H. 0.17 m,W. 0.240 m,Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.008-0.01 m. Block ofThasian
Museum
Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 69, appendix III A. Date? Col.
I
Col.
Col.
II
Ill
vacat Aockcov
5
fHpdKA,?uo<;
paragr.}
noA?|i(0v paragr. MupivccToi A7toM,60?|ii(;
-]v. -]ioi
lepcGvujLioq.
10
. . ?]vioi [paragr.] [.
[]oq
paragr. ,Ep'u[0paioi] Aiayofpaq] Apiaxa^opaq
vel -ioc,?]
Ei)9-o8a[|xa(;] K [evio i (?) ] [paragr. ] A,ai^o|Ji
Fraser, eRobertiectypo.II.7 [Koa>]vioiFraser. III.9 Dimitrova, KA,a^o[uevioq(?)] Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The overly elegant letters are suggestive of a later date. The hand is unlike those of the other theoroi records, as Fraser points out.The paragraphoi are new ethnics. The readings are largely those noteworthy:10 they introduce
of Fraser, based on L. Robert s squeeze. Line 1.2: Fraser prints a clear iota for the firstpreserved letter,but the at that point. drawing of the squeeze is unclear
Line III.12: Left part of a bottom horizontal, whose decorative finials have the right angle for a paragraphos. Line III.19:The kappa and omicron are clear.Two triangles are visible after the kappa. The leftupper part of themu can be discerned.
10. Fraser (Samothrace 2.1, p. 70, n. 4) mentions that the same sign occurs in I.De/os 313.1, line 14, and
316, lines62, 111, 113, sqq.
inscribed
theoroi
of
records
on
other
stones
63
Commentary
Fraser notes that this document must have been Samothracian because of theThasian marble used. He assumes that itwas a list of theoroi. Its most striking feature is the format of the names: they have no patro for the nymic. This is unparalleled among the theoroi documents, except two ambassadors of King Attalos in 5. It is unclear when the document was inscribed. Fraser favors a later date, on the basis of the contrast with the lettering of the other inscriptions. It must be emphasized, however, that both the provenance and the nature of the inscription are far from certain.
Line III. 19: Fraser, following Bean, prefers to restore K^a?o[uiviocJ as a personal name since the letters "are not indented and preceded by a out that "this is not an improbable name for a paragraphus? and points is amore probable citizen ofErythrai." Inmy view the ethnic Ktax?o",[evioi] was a see whether it preceded by paragraphos, reading. It is impossible to save and the lack of indentation maybe in order to space, since Ktax^ouivioi is a longer word than most other ethnics. Moreover, KAxx^opivioq is not as a
attested
name.
personal
by theThessalian League to theGreat Gods Fig. 23 Block of coarse-grained Thasian marble, broken below, smooth on the left,rough-picked on back, moderately rough-picked above. Found in 1986, built into awall of a Byzantine structure in the northwestern corner of the 26
Dedication
Ship Building, during American excavations. Two dowel holes with pour channels are visible on top, positioned diagonally. That in the left corner is 0.055 m from the left edge and 0.04 m from the front edge. The dowel hole on the right occurs in a similar position in the upper rear corner,with
some lead preserved in it.The positions of the dowel holes suggests that a rectangular object covered the top of the block, possibly a relief.There is a
small, shallow, rectangular cutting approximately midway down the left side, 0.045 m from the front edge. In wall of Byzantine structure. Inv. 01.2. H. 0.804 m,W. 0.47 m,Th. 0.20 m; L.H. 0.01-0.025 m. Ed. Pounder and Dimitrova 2003. Cf. McCredie
1990 (mentioned).
b.c.
170-140
to koivov Oeoic,
?eoaa^cov jLieydAxnc,
hC\ Oecopcov vacat
ca. 0.02
5
m tod AeovTouivouc,
AauoOowou
tod Ol?U7r7tOD
OlAX)VlKOD
Oepaicov IlauxpiAxn) Adkiokod
tod
BccOdka^iodc,
tod
Boc0dk?1?iod<;
Aapiaaicov vacat
10
ca. 0.02
m
87tipocaiAicGC, NDJLKpoScbpOD
TOD 0?CDv8oD
64
CHAPTER
3
Figure 23. Dedication by theThes salian League to theGreat Gods (26) Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear, carefully executed in comparison with most other Samothracian inscriptions, and they are adorned with finials. Omicron
and theta are usually smaller (0.01-0.012 m) than the other letters.The hand resembles those of 1,6,10, and 11. It is consistent with 2nd-century reasons for the date, see Commentary), notably with 5, inscriptions (on the a inscription ii,and municipal document of Scotussa, dated by the eponyms of theThessalian League (161/0 B.C.).11This is the earliest securely dated Samothracian document with a broken-bar alpha.
Commentary The commentary is largely reprinted from the editioprinceps. to the This document is a dedication by the Thessalian League in Samothrace. The Thessalian Great Gods delegation consists of two
11. Pouilloux 1955, pp. 443-459 (=?EGXV370).
theoroi
of
records
on
inscribed
stones
other
65
citizens from Pherai and two from Larisa. It is headed by the Pheraian son of Leontomenes, Damothoinos, undoubtedly none other than the in The other three theoroi are 161/0.12 Thessalian of the League strategos of Bathykles, are attested in their that names, except unknown, although Thessaly.13
as "repre expression hCx Oecopcov in line 3 should be understood can be or sented by the theoroi" something similar.A parallel for this usage The
and many found inDelian inventory lists (e.g.,/GXL2 184,186,188,190, others), where a gift by a certain delegation, whose leader ismentioned by name, is referred to as "ccvdOnuo: 87iidpxiOecopoi) [name]."
son of Leontomenes Damothoinos, (line 4), is known from other in as strategosof the league.14He belonged is mentioned where he scriptions, to a famous Pheraian family,whose members, attested from the 3rd century b.c. until the 1st century a.d., performed important public duties. Both his II were great-grandfather Epikratidas and his grandfather Damothoinos at Pherai,
gymnasiarchs
ca.
241
b.c.
ca.
and
216
b.c.,
His
respectively.15
son ofDamothoinos, was strategosof theThessalian father,Leontomenes, in 186/5 b.c., as IG IX.2 64, 67, and 274 testify.In the next year, League uncle Pausanias held the same of 185/4, his brother and Damothoinos's fice. Damothoinos's ca.
strategos,
100-90
son
Leontomenes,
grandson, b.c.16
of
was
Megalokles,
also
A date before 170 b.c. for the present inscription is unlikely: Damo thoinos, son of Leontomenes, would probably have been too young to head the
embassy.
His
father,
son
Leontomenes,
in 186/5 b.c., and sowas probably between His son, then,was probably born between b.c. would have been between 20 and 35 (though theoretically possible) age to hold as the head of an embassy. The eponymous king Nymphodoros, is otherwise
The
unattested.
rare
name
was
of Damothoinos,
strategos
40 and 55 years old at the time. ca. 205 and 190 b.c., and in 170 a very plausible years old?not such an important public office son ofTheondas
aHadra
(lines 10-11),
however,
Theondas,
occurs
else
vase from Egypt mentions
where in connection with Samothrace: a Samothracian ambassador toAlexandria, named Theondas, who died in 219 b.c.17According to Livy (45.5.6-12), aTheondas was an eponymous name is also attested on coins, dating king of Samothrace in 168 b.c. The same 168 b.c.18 The eponymous king recorded in the from the year, perhaps
12. Although
is not
Damothoinos
the listing of his those of the other theoroi
called
architheoros,
name
before
suggests that he was the most tant member of the delegation. 13. For instance, Pamphilos attested
in IG
IX.2
474.A,
impor is
line 42,
517, line 54, 557, line25, 562, line 17; Lykiskos
in IG
IX.2
109.a,
line 38,121,
14. Pouilloux XXVIII
505.19);
505.21). For
the two possible restorations XXVIII 505, see Kramolisch p. 58. 15. See Kramolisch 16. Kramolisch a useful
/GIX.2 65, line 11, 234.1, line 32, 257. inThessaly, is very common Philippos in Pherai and is found elsewhere (IG
family. 17. SB
415).
pp. 443-459
and possibly Axeni
dis 1939 (SEGXXVIII
275, 288, 290.a, 527, 851; Philonikos in
IX.2
1955,
(SEG XV 370); Syll? 668 (SEG
stemma
Alexander appears on a posthumous tetradrachm of the early or mid-2nd century B.C. and on pseudo-Rhodian coins, which he is inclined to date to
in SEG
168 B.C. and
1978,
Samothracian Alain
1978, pp. 28, 31.
1978, p. 31, provides of Damothoinos's
1 1639.
18. Ashton (1988) demonstrates that the name Theondes/Theondas
their thereby acknowledge am to (I grateful origin Bresson for this reference). For
Samothracian
coins,
see also Munster
berg [1911,1912,1914,1927]
1973,
p. 28; /GXII.8, p. 41. The name The ondes is also attested (twice) on a lead curse tablet, considered Samothracian
by Dusenbery pp. 1165-1168).
(Samothrace
11.2,
66
CHAPTER
3
present dedication would have been too old between 170 and 140 b.c (the suggested date of the document; see below) to be the son of the ambassador Theondas. He would have been at least between 55 and 85 at that time, if we assume that his father had died as early as about age 40, which is pos sible but unlikely.He might have been was king in 168 b.c. This would mean ca. 160 b.c., the time ofDamothoinos must have served as eponymous king
the son of the otherTheondas, who that if the inscription is to be dated s service as strategos,Nymphodoros
at a relatively early age (ca. 40), and his father at a relatively late age (ca. 60), which is theoretically possible. A date around 150-140 b.c would suit this scheme a bit better, but of course one cannot be surewhether the two kings were indeed father and son. It is also unclear whether the ambassador Theondas was related to the eponymous king of 168 b.c, but the time interval suits the possibility that he was the latter's grandfather, thereby conforming to theGreek custom of naming the grandson after his grandfather. In view of the names rarity, the hypothesis that the eponymous king of 168 b.c was the grandson of in the present the ambassador Theondas and the father ofNymphodoros inscription
is attractive.
can be safely suggested, in view of Damothoinos's generalship, which is dated to 161/0 b.c, and of b.c. Nymphodoros's possible relation to the eponymous king of 168 was a It is impossible to determine whether there specific occasion for the dedication, such as the capture of Perseus by theRomans inAugust of Thus
a date between
170 and 140 b.c
rule. 168 b.c, followed by the liberation of Samothrace fromMacedonian As mentioned above, Theondas was the eponymous king of Samothrace when Perseus was captured, whereas the eponymous magistrate of the son of Theondas. The inscription, present inscription isNymphodoros, a cannot to be dated civil therefore, year that included August of 168 b.c. If the Samothracian calendar was similar to theAthenian, that is, if the year began with the firstnew moon after the summer solstice, the firsthalf of 167 b.c is also precluded. The Thasian year, on the other hand, may have begun with thewinter solstice (as did the Parian one), as Jean Pouil loux observed.19 If Samothrace followed the example ofThasos (and if the year indeed began in thewinter), then the inscription could be dated to 167 b.c, shortly after Perseus s defeat. Too little is known about
Thasian the
Samothracian
calendar,
however,
only evidence is thatMaimakterion
a
to make
strong
andMounychion
argument.
Our
were Samothracian
months.20
19. Pouilloux 1954, p. 149; see A recent discussion also pp. 456?458. of the Thasian and Parian calendars
has been providedbyTriimpy (1997, pp. 65-72). 20. See
1972, p. 130. He lists two Samothracian months, Maimakterion (Samothrace 2.1 5) and Poseideon noted mistake
^line
Samuel
169). It must be ismost probably a for the name Posideos (see 12,
(JGXII.8 that Poseideon
10). Cole (1984, pp. 40,119,
n. 333)
observes
that "neither Mou
nor Artemisios is listed by nychion, as a Samothracian month." Samuel which
Mounychion, Roman May,
appears
corresponds in an initiate
published byMcCredie ismentioned
Artemisios
to list
(1965, p. 115). in another
list
a (Robert 1936, pp. 52-53, corrected version of IG XII.8 195), but as aMacedonian month, not a Samo
of initiates
thracian
one.
Triimpy
only Maimakterion
1997, p. 118, lists for Samothrace.
INSCRIBED
THEOROI
OF
RECORDS
ON
STONES
OTHER
67
is not unique in mentioning theoroi setting up a and Two in Samothrace. dedication 28) mention theoroi inscriptions (27 to the Great Gods. The present inscrip from Paros offering dedications tion adds to the geographic range of cities and institutions connected with Samothrace: now Pherai and Larisa inThessaly can be included in the list of places that sent sacred ambassadors. Previously the only other place in mainland Greece thatwas certainly attested as sending theoroi (excluding The
document
Macedonia and Thrace, which were traditionally connected with Samo was Elis, as a record of theoroi-initiates (7GXII.8 176) testifies. thrace) The new information thatThessaly also sent theoroi prompts us to reexamine the identity of the city of Larisa that is attested in 1 as sending theoroi; see ad 1, line 3. Although it is not certain thatThessalian Larisa ismeant, this possibility is now well worth considering. The document introduced here is also interesting from a histori
cal perspective. After the Second Macedonian War (200-197 B.C.), the Thessalian League was liberated by the Romans. In 194 B.C.T. Quinctius Flamininus reorganized its structureby establishing strategoi,who presided over the federal government as annual officers.21A typical feature of the new
was
constitution
the
council,
synedrion,
which
functioned
as a
repre
sentative government.22 The Greek face of the new organization reflected the Romans' desire to demonstrate that the league was indeed free from Macedonian supremacy.The territoryof the refounded state did not include some of the northern areas formerly inhabited byperioeci, but in the south it gained Phthiotic Achaia, Aitolian Lamia, and other regions.23 The period to follow?the firsthalf of the 2nd century B.C.?directly our to The Thessalian pertains inscription. League experienced a full marked considerable fledged revival, by political activitywith an expanded a learn from decree of Phokaia, honoring a certain geographic scope.We from Priene and dated ca. 190 B.C., that Priene was visited Apollodoros ambassadors.24 A decree found at Delphi, dated to 186 or by Thessalian 184 B.C.,25honors Nikostratos, son ofAnaxippos, a prominent citizen of Larisa who fulfilled various diplomatic duties with distinction, including service as a hieromnemon of theThessalians in the reorganized Amphictionic Council, which now consisted of autonomous members (lines 3-4) and was not dependent, as before, on theAitolians.26 A decree of theThessalian League, found in Philia, near the federal sanctuary ofAthena Itonia, and dated to 179-165 B.C.,27 discusses financial aid given toAmbracia by the league and can serve as evidence for their good relations: Ambracian citi
zens were granted proxenia and invited to the sacrifice in honor ofAthena Itonia. As Habicht observes,28 theThessalian koinon also sent theoroi to 21. Livy nization
34.51.4-6.
The
reorga
of the Thessalian
League and the 10 legati (the by Flamininus are also referred to in strategoi) Syll? 674, lines 50-54. 22. Presumably Flamininus the from Achaean inspiration which
had had
cf. Larsen
years; 23. Larsen
a
drew
League, synedrion for 200 1968, p. 284.
1968,
p. 282.
24. LPriene
65.8-10.
25. Syll? 613.
26. See especially Habicht's discus sion of the decree (1987, pp. 60?62). For the new Amphictionic Council, see also Lefebre 1998, p. 205; Sanchez 2001, pp. 496-509.
27. SEG XXVI 688. 28. Pers.
Dimitrova
comm.; 2003,
see Pounder
p. 31, n. 1.
and
68
CHAPTER
3
Figure 24. Dedication by theoroi fromParos (27) theAsklepieia inMytilene29 and participated in theKlaria of Kolophon,30 and Larisa, the capital of the league, honored officials of Eumenes II.31 The league fought on theRoman side against Perseus during theThird
(171-168 B.C.), and subsequently regained the cities it had indirectly lost to Philip V during the Roman war with Antiochus III and theAitolians in 192-188 B.C.,when Philip had been allowed to as a reward for the conquer some Thessalian territory help he gave the Romans. The Thessalian feats of cavalry performed bravery by helping
Macedonian
War
in 171 B.C.,33 and in general played an active part in thewar. This was celebrated by the founding of the contest of the Eleutheria inLarisa, commemorating theThessalians'valor.34 Thessaly, on thewinning side at last,was in a position to exert the influence thatmust have accompanied victory. In 168 B.C., immediately afterPerseus reached Samothrace, embassies fromThessaly were dispatched: L. Aemilius Paul lus gave audience to numerous delegations at Pella, maxime exThessalia?5 us that theThes Against this background, the present monument informs the Romans
at Callicinus32
salian League
sent theoroi to Samothrace?a
one that enriches our knowledge ofThessalian in the 2nd century B.C. 27
Dedication
by theoroi from Paros of a marble statue base,
Fig.
fact hitherto unknown, and and Samothracian history
24
on top, bottom, and the Fragment preserved left.On top at the front left corner there are two small holes and a pour channel leading to the front; in the center there is a cavity for the inser
tion of a plinth, presumably of a marble statue. Archaeological of Samothrace, inv. 70.456. H. 0.04 m,W. 0.133 m,Th. 0.18 m; L.H. 0.007 m. Ed. McCredie 1979, p. 26.
Cf. Bingen apudSEGXXIX 797.
2nd century B.C.? vv Ilapicov 6ecopoi E[-] AecjiGeoc,Ar||iocTpd[Torj-] erci paoi^ecoc, Avxi(pav[o'o vel -odcJ McCredie.
Museum
29. /GXII Suppl. (1939) 3, after
196 b.c.
30. Picard 1922, pp. 345-347. 31. Polyb. 22.6; and IG IX.2 512 (= SEGXXX1 574) andGallis 1980 [1981-1982], pp. 246-249, no. 1 (= SEGXXX1 575), both inscriptionsof 171 or 170 b.c 32. On
the correct version
of this
1995, p. 264, n. 150. Helly 33. Livy 42.55-60.
name,
see
34. BullEp 1964 227;Walbank 1979, p. 305; IG IX.2 553. 35. Livy
44.46.9.
RECORDS
OF
THEOROI
INSCRIBED
ON
OTHER
STONES
69
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and carefully done. Commentary Bingen dates the document
to the 3rd or 2nd century B.C., apparently on the basis of its letter style. I prefer the 2nd century B.C. in view of the broken-bar alpha. Line 2: Neither Ae!;i0eo<; nor Arjuoo-Tpaxog is hitherto attested in
Paros.
28
Line 3: The
eponymous king is otherwise unknown.
Dedication
by theoroi from Paros
Round
altar ofThasian
Fig.
marble. Found
of theAnaktoron. Archaeological inHall B, inv. 39.914.
Museum
25 in 1939 outside the entrance of Samothrace, on exhibition
0.18 m, Diam. 0.135 m; L.H. 0.005-0.01 m. Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben 1940, pp. 355-356, fig. 37; Fraser, Samo thrace2.1 (1960) 13. Cf. Lehmann 1955, pp. 82-83 = Lehmann 1998, p. 126; Robert and H.
Robert,BullEp 1964 366.
from Paros pl.VIII:13
(28).
Samothm^^ 2.1,
^
CHAPTER
7? 2nd
3
B.C.?
century
riocpicovGecopoi XaiplTTIC, TijioScopou, XccTpic,
5 KpiTcovoq Oeoic, Meydtanc,. Fraser.
Epigraphical
Commentary
The
is consistent
lettering
dating. The broken-bar
with
2nd-century
B.C. documents,
second half of the 2nd century ismore
hence
Fraser
s
likely, in view of the
alpha.
Commentary
Fraser draws attention to a Cretan thymiateriondedicated by a Parian (IC I 35 3). He believes that the twomonuments are very similar in shape and letter style, and may have been produced on Paros. The lettering,however, is not much different from that of other Samothracian monuments, namely 1,6,11, and 26. Another counterargument is that the present altar ismade ofThasian
marble (see Lehmann). Lines 2-3: Neither Xaiprcr|<; nor TiuxSScopoc, is attested otherwise on Paros, tomy knowledge. Line 4: The hypocoristic name Xcdpic, is attested in another Parian document (7GXII.5 461), as Fraser remarks. Line 5: The name Kprccov itself is not attested otherwise on Paros, but 1G XII.5 216 has the form Kpixcovi88co.
CHAPTER
4
Part
Conclusions,
I
PROSOPOGRAPHY The preceding documents contain approximately 250 names of Samothra cian theoroi (see the Index ofNames), with nine new names. The previously published names have been collated with the stone where possible, and a large number of them have undergone major or minor corrections.
OF THE
PROVENANCE
THEOROI
The places of origin of certain or presumable theoroi areAbdera (attested in 5, 8, 22), Aigai (9), Alabanda (4, 5, 7, 13, 23), Astypalaia (4), Bargylia (5,11), Chios (9), Dardanos (9,13.i, 14,15), Elis (16), Ephesos (1,2,4,5,
(9,10,24[?]), Halikarnassos (2,8,13), Iasos (5,Appendix (22), Kaunos (5,13,22), Keramos (13.ii), Klazomenai (4, 8,11, 22), Kolophon (2,10, 20, 22), Kos (4-6,11, Appendix LI, 1.2), (23, 24), Larisa Kyme (1, 5, 10), Kyzikos (9, 10, 12, 13, 23), Lampsakos inThessaly (1?, 26), Maroneia (5, 8),Methymna (22),Mylasa (12),Myra 23,24[?]),
Eresos
1.3,1.4), Kalchedon
(24),Myrina (6, 9, 25[?]),Mytilene (5),Naxos (5),Nysa (9), Parion (5,
18,22), Paros (27,28), Pergamon (5), Pherai (26), Phokaia (9), Priene (3, 5, 8, 10, Appendix 1.5), Rhodes (5, 23), Samos (3, 5, 6, 22), Stratonikeia (ll?),Teos (6,10,22),Thasos (8,24), and possibly (5, 7,17.ii),Tarentum Athens (23), Erythrai (25[?]) and Patara (21).There is no positive evidence
in theTroad (see 1, ad'line 3) orMelos (see 22, adXmz 9) sent theoroi. Samothrace (24) might have been a mistake for Samos. The geography of these places is consistent with Cole's main conclu sions that the best-represented areas in the records of both theoroi and initiates areMacedonia,Thrace, Asia Minor, and theAegean islands, with that Larisa
"almost total lack of reference to the cities of central Greece," and that the clientele seems to have been "limited to a certain defined
Samothracian area."1
Although
mentions l.Cole
1984, p. 43.
more
visitors
theoroi from Larisa 23 record visitors fromAthens
from mainland
Greece
are now
known?26
and Pherai inThessaly; 29,30, and perhaps (or its colonies), while 31 records presumable
72
CHAPTER
4
initiates fromTegea and Torone?this does not change significantly the ratio of visitors coming frommainland Greece versus those from the best represented places. This ratio can be explained by the fact that Samothrace rulers,while cities of certainly was a favorite sanctuary ofMacedonian
central and southern Greece felt a stronger traditional attachment to the Eleusinian Mysteries (this is especially true, of course, forAthens);2 and that the best-represented citieswere either geographically close to Samo thrace, or shared religious affinitieswith it,expressed in theworship of the Samothracian or similar divinities.3
INSCRIBING
OF THEOROI
RECORDS
records of theoroi were inscribed on wall blocks ca. 0.35 m high that may have come from a building in the city of Samothrace, since no ex cavated building in the sanctuary matches the hypothetical dimensions reconstructed from the architrave block (16), nor does any excavated building in the sanctuary display wall blocks of the same size. The build ing displayed records of theoroi-proxenoi and of theoroi-initiates dating from the 2nd-lst centuries B.C. (the securely dated inscriptions are from to the the 2nd century). This implies that the practice of granting proxenia theoroi was most vital during the 2nd to 1st centuries B.C., but itneed not be limited to this period. Earlier theoroi records may have been inscribed The
on
stelai.
Records
of theoroi
were
also
carved
on monument
bases,
set up
usually by the theoroi themselves (except 4, whose inscription may not be original). At any rate, the fact that the building that displayed the records of theoroi was more likely associated with the city than the sanctuary is
consistent with the fact that the visits of the theoroi, through their dem onstration of piety, had a primarily political purpose, directed toward the polis of Samothrace; and so theywere honored by the city, in decrees (some ofwhich honored their home cities as well) and with grants of proxenia. Their statuswas very different from that of ordinary mystai.
FUNCTIONS SAMOTHRACE
OF THE
THEOROI
IN
In modern
scholarship the theoroi in Samothrace have traditionally been associated with attendance at a special festival.4Two inscriptions provide evidence about festival attendance. The first is an Iasian copy of a Samo thracian decree
(Appendix 1.3, lines 6-9), which recommends that the demos of Iasos and the recently arrived Iasian theoroi receive praise at the Dionysia. The second is a Samothracian decree set up inKos (Appendix 1.2),which states, "and now he [Praximenes] has arrived at the [-]ia, having been sent as theoros by the Koans" (line 12). It is impossible to restore the festival name in this inscription with certainty.The editor, seem to K. Hallof, suggests the Dionysia or theMysteria. The Dionysia make better sense, since they fit the space slightlybetter and arementioned
2. Ar. Pax
277-279
that some Athenians
seems were
to imply initiates at
but very few Athenians Samothrace, appear in the records of initiation; see 9. Chap. 3. See Hemberg 1950, and Cole 1, for the chap. 5 and appendix of the Samo distribution geographic 1984,
thracian
and related
4. E.g.,
Cole
cults.
1984, p. 48.
PART
CONCLUSIONS,
I
73
in line 19 as the event at which Praximenes is to be honored.5 It is of considerable significance that Praximenes is honored also with a grant of prohedria in the aycbveq, but the principal dycoveq in Samothrace will have been the Dionysia. Such a grant would make practically no sense if the theoroi were not expected to attend theDionysia. The importance of the
technitai Dionysia for the theoroi is also signaled by the fact thatDionysiac came as theoroi (10,11), most likely because of the special character of the Samothracian
The
Dionysia.
fact that theoroi were honored and most likely present at the can be reconciled with Salviat's views about the Samothracian
Dionysia festival.He
emphasizes the importance of theatrical performances, which evidently included dramatization of Samothracian myth.6 The fact that the poet Dymas was praised forwriting a drama about Samothracian myths furtherpoints out not only the importance of theDionysia at Samothrace (Samothracian praise suggests production in Samothrace) but also an in connection
teresting
between
and Mysteria.
dramatic
Dramatizations
and
performance
the Samothracian
related to Samothracian
Dionysia myth were apparently performed both secretly,during the initiation ceremonies, and publicly, during the Dionysia.7 This would parallel the situation at Eleusis, where performances enacting Eleusinian myth took place during theMysteria and sometimes in the theater during theDionysia.8 If Praxi menes arrived for theDionysia, as the evidence tends to suggest, it is quite
conceivable that theDionysia constituted themajor Samothracian festival that attracted theoroi and other visitors. There is no clear indication that therewas a special annual celebration of theMysteria separate from the
various celebrations that, at least in the Roman period, took place repeat edly throughout the sailing season (see Chap. 9). Moreover, it is on general grounds questionable whether a festival such as theMysteria, with its promise of personal acoxripia, had a significant at to induce theoroi to come spe dimension Samothrace enough public
cifically to attend this festival. At Athens there is little evidence that the and Mysteria regularly attracted theoroi, in contrast to the Panathenaia were at at Honors for Athens announced foreigners Dionysia.9 regularly the latter festivals (not at theMysteria), just as theywere at theDionysia in Samothrace. Of course theoroi did become initiates in the Samothra cianMysteria, which could have been held close enough to the time of the Dionysia 5.Although line 19 isheavily
there is no reason to doubt damaged, tcoi ocycovi, the restoration Aiov]ua[icov since
it has numerous
contextual
paral includ
lels all over the Greek
world, documents ing other Samothracian 1.3,1.4, and 1.5). (Appendix
6. Salviat, Chapouthier, cf. Cole 1956, pp. 142-145;
1984,
cf. Cole
p. 122, n. 410.
8. See I.E/eusis70 (= IG IP 1186),
a choral implies performance in honor of Demeter and Kore at the
which
out that Clinton local Dionysia. points were the main festival of the Dionysia control Mysteria
7. Chapouthier (1935, pp. 174-175) similar views;
thewishes of visitors.
the deme
and Salac
p. 122, n. 410. maintains
to accommodate
1984,
of Eleusis, which had little over the Athenian festival of the and the sanctuary.
9.Apparently IG IP 992 (early2nd
century B.C.) is the only document that refers to theoroi who performed
a sacrifice Mysteria; Habicht
at the Greater (presumably) see for the prosopography 1994a, pp. 256-260 (SEGXL
58), andGunther 1992 (SEGXLIl 1072). No dedications attested at Eleusis. On including Dionysia,
ambassadors, see especially
by theoroi
are
foreigners, the attending Pickard-Cam
on attendance bridge 1988, pp. 58-59; at the Panathenaia, I.Priene theoroi by 45 and Habicht 1994a, p. 260.
74
CHAPTER
4
us in the typical activity of the theoroi during theirvisit isgiven to Samothracian decree published in Iasos (Appendix 1.3, lines 3-4): theyper formed tt|v Gdgiocv Kai tt|v &7tocp%r|v Kcd XTjvOecopiav TTjvTiapayeyevriiuivriv eiq to iepov. This was typical of theoroi at festivals in general; cf, for ex ample, the theoroi sent by the cities of Euboia to Chalkis (7GXII.9 207, lines 18-20): [uftepOecopcbv- 7t?U7teiv8e t]occ, 7i6a^k; Eiq xovq ay&vaq tcov The
Aiwugicov Kai Ar|jLir|Tpi8icovkXoiievovq Oefcopouq kojlli^ovtocc,to koctoct]6 i|/r|(pia|LiaKaA^iaTeTov, ArauPdvovTac, dpyopiov rcapa xr\q iSiac, n6Xe[(oq 8pa%ud<;-Kov]Ta
Kai
cruv7tov7i;?'u?iv
Kai
xdXXa
ndvxa
jcpdrceiv
KaTa tov E-opoi'Kov vojio[v]. The theoroi in Samothrace followed a similar pattern, performing sacrifice (which of course would involve marching in the procession), offering a gift (a7iap%r|v), and performing theoria at the
sanctuary,which, as the evidence tends to suggest, included viewing the in the theater at the sanctuary. Dionysia On the other hand, the phrases "the first theoroiwho arrive from Iasos"
1.4, line 31) and "the first theoroi who arrive from Priene" lines 9-10) suggest multiple visits, not connected with a 1.5, (Appendix if the theoroi were expected solely or primarily for a par event; particular ticular event, therewould be no reason not tomention the event in these references. They imply that itwas not clear when the next theoroi from a particular citywould arrive,whether to attend a festival or to announce a festival held in their home city or for some other purpose. This means that festival attendance was not the the only function of the theoroi in (Appendix
Samothrace. The evidence does seem to suggest, however, that theDionysia were amajor festival thatmany theoroi did attend. Of course,many theoroi participated in theMysteria, though such participation may have been only a secondary purpose of their visit. It should also be noted that an oracle is attested for Samothrace;10 this too may have been a focus of their piety, paralleled atDelphi, which received many theoroi fromAthens. The majority of the inscriptions suggest that the theoroi were (1) dis as the few identified names tinguished representatives of their home cities, in made dedications to, and ingeneral, sacrifices; (3) reveal; (2) participated a in the Great Gods, usually by participating honored, great festival such as theDionysia; and (4), in turn received proxenia and other privileges. Many were initiated, as the records of theoroi-initiates show.
10. [Plut.] Mor. 229D mata Laconica, Lysander
1 240).
(= Apotheg 10; Samothrace
PART II: DOCUMENTS CONCERNING IN SAMOTHRACE INITIATES
CHAPTER
5
of
Records
CONTEXT Mystery
OF THE
Initiates
RECORDS
Cult
religious context of these Samothracian documents isGreek mystery cult.A brief synopsis of its relevant aspects is given here.1 To many modern readers, the term "mystery cult" immediately evokes
The
in the Classical festival of the Mucrcripia, the notion secrecy.However, of secrecy, though significant, was secondary. The central ritual of the Muaxfipioc was initiation. The word "initiation," however, is of course de rived from the Latin translation of jiuoxripioc,namely, initia (beginnings), but this has had the unfortunate consequence that theword "initiates" is a somewhat imprecise translation of theGreek uuaxcu, theword for par ticipants in the Muoxripia who underwent the extraordinary experience (7td0o<;)of the ritual.2The term uuaxoci is obviously related to jiuoxripia, but the ancient word (ja)o~xr|piocshould not be understood in itsmore modern sense of "secrets" (a sense that is primarily attested in the post-classical period), but rather, as in the case ofmany ancient Greek festival names, as reflecting a significant element of the ritual performed in the cult. In the case of jiuaxripia, theword simply refers to the participants, the uuoxou:
1. The mystery Burkert
best
introduction
cults is Burkert 1993
to Greek
1987.
(on Samothrace),
See
also
Clinton
1992 and 1993 (onEleusis), and Clin ton 2003
and Samothrace). (on Eleusis 2. Aristotle, fr. 15: xobq xeXov^ievovq ou jaocBeTvxi 8eiv aXka 7toc9eTvKai 5ia xeurjvca, Srj^ovoxi
yevouivoix;
emzr\
the terminology Seiovq. On regarding initiates and initiation, see Dowden
1980, p. 414; Clinton 2003, 2004. 3. Clinton
2003.
4. See Clinton on blindfolds Merkelbach and 30.
1992, inMithraic
1984, pp.
pp. 86-87; mysteria,
136-137,
figs. 29
it is the festival of the uuerxoci. The word uugxoci is a nominal form from the verb uuoo, "to close."
The
uyuoxoci are
"the
closed
ones."3
The
question
then
turns
on
the manner
of the "closing": are they closed with respect to theirmouths (prohibited from revealing what they experienced), or closed with respect to their eyes (ja-ocofrequently refers to closing the eyes)? Clinton has argued for the lat ter,pointing out that prohibition against divulging the content of rituals applied to a broad range of cults and was not restricted to mysteria; the distinguishing feature of uuoxou, therefore, should be more specific. In fact, in some mysteriawe know that the uuoxou were blindfolded, and the custom of providing the initiates with
jLiuoxaycoyoi(guides of the uvaxai) would be consistent with blindfolding. The practice would have had the effect of a death-like experience?before increasing the initiatespathos?undergoing see the extraordinary vision inwhich the mysteria culminated.4 they could
CHAPTER
78
5
term mystaiwas given to participants in theEleusinian, Samothracian, and Andaman Mysteries, as well as Dionysiac mystery rites, but itwas apparently not used in all rites that involved some sort of initiation, but only
The
in those specifically called mysteria (i.e., those that included the practice of blinding and whose participants were called mystai).5 In Samothrace, as at Eleusis, the first-time initiates are called mystai, "blinded ones," as opposed to the epoptai, "viewers," initiates participating in the second stage of the rite.The semantics of epoptai thus offers further support for the suggestion that the mystai were blindfolded initiates.This gradation, attested firstat Eleusis and elsewhere only at Samothrace, ap parently originated at Eleusis, where mystai, the first-stage initiates, could become epoptai at a second participation in theMysteries after a year's interval.6
The
process
of
participating
as a
mystes
was
called
jLiurjaiq.
term jiurjaK;, however, also meant a purificatory procedure that was performed prior to initiation, at least in Eleusis and probably also in The
Samothrace.7 Presumably the reason for this had to do with the fact that blinding occurred during both the preliminary ceremony and the first was both the process of becoming a uuornc, stage of the mysteria; iitmcuc; and acting in the mysteria as jiucnrnc,.8 For the Eleusinian Mysteria the in the cityEleusinion or at the sanctu preliminary myesis took place either was a at ary Eleusis, and performed by member of either of the two main priestly clans (Eumolpidai and Kerykes). At Samothrace myesis evidently took the form of thronosis,whereby a blindfolded person was put in a chair and was the focal point of an ecstatic, terrifyingdance by ministers of the cult.9
Little is known about the central ritual of the ancient Greek mysteria, shrouded as itwas in secrecy. Literary, epigraphical, and archaeological evidence tells us that the mysteria usually took place at night, and involved a frightening, deathlike experience. The blindfolded initiates at Eleusis, for were in led the darkness by a mystagogos amidst a cacophony of example, until finally the blindfold was removed. They passed frightening sounds, from terrifyingdarkness to immense bright light to experience a vision of the divine, revealed by the hierophant in theTelesterion.10 The
Samothracian
Mysteries
Samothracian Mysteries also took place at night. Document 29 informs us that at a climax in the rite the initiates saw a sacred light (see 29, Commentary, and Chap. 9, p. 244). There is good reason to believe that the ceremony celebrated the union ofman and woman, expressed in
The
It has been traditionally myth by thewedding of Kadmos and Harmonia. assumed that at Samothrace the first stage of initiation took place in the structure called theAnaktoron, the second in theHieron. However, James McCredie's discovery in the 1990s of the other half of the building now called theHall ofChoral Dancers revealed that this building, the largest and most central building in the sanctuary,was most likely theTelesterion.11 Its frieze consisted of the depiction of around 800 dancing women, probably representing a wedding dance.
5. Clinton
2003,
6. Clinton 7. Clinton
2003, 2003.
8. Clinton
2003,
p. 50. p. 50.
pp. 50-65. 2003, pp. 61-65. 10. Plut. fr. 178 (= Stobaeus Clinton 1992, pp. 84-90 4.52.49); 9. Clinton
bibliography; 113-114.
Burkert
11. Lehmann Clinton
2003,
with
1987, pp. 91-93,
1998, pp. 35, 73-78; p. 61.
OF
RECORDS
INITIATES
OF
RECORDS
79
INITIATES
With regard to the recording of the names of mystai on stone, Samothrace is extraordinary.Although mystai arementioned in inscriptions throughout theGreek world, including decrees, sacred laws, dedications, and epitaphs,12 in such abundance, the only in Samothrace do records of initiation appear vast majority of them set up by the initiates themselves. This practice must have been encouraged by the polis of Samothrace. Several lists of mystai eusebeis are found in Imbros (7GXII.8 87, 88, 89, undated; and possibly 85, 4th-3rd century b.c.). It is conceivable that therewere many more records, since the Kabirion at Imbros has not been excavated.We do not know whether the Samothracians adopted the prac tice of recording mystai eusebeis from Imbros or vice versa, but the cult of the Kabiri on Imbros never achieved the international reputation of the cult.
Samothracian
of
Records
Initiation
Initiation into themysteries of theGreat Gods in Samothrace was sought throughout antiquity, especially during theHellenistic and Roman periods, when the sanctuarywas at the height of its popularity. Yet our attempts to reconstruct
the Samothracian
are
Mysteries
impeded
by
numerous
unan
swered questions, many ofwhich are quite fundamental.We do not know for certainwho theGreat Gods were orwhat function several of the sanctuary buildings served.The origin of the cult is obscure, and the pre-Greek history of Samothrace is only gradually being clarified by excavations.13 Literary sources are abundant, but often frustratingly confusing. How helpful, then,
is the documentary evidence in elucidating the Samothracian cult? The 143 documents included here in Part II are inscriptions on stone are records of initiation, and so have pertaining to initiation.Most of them
considerable prosopographical value in providing information about the people who visited the island to be initiated. The 32 unpublished docu ments included here add about 100 new names of certain or presumable initiates, while emendations of the republished records modify many names. In addition, the documents in Part II furnish previously known about the initiates' places of origin, cultic experi information important 259. e.g., IGX.2 laws: e.g., LSAM 15, 65. 84; LSS 11 143; JG XII Dedications: e.g., ISM 12. Decrees:
Sacred
Suppl. 397,1125; 7GXII.8 643; IPrusa e.g., 7GIP
48. Epitaphs:
3639,
7GXI.1 313; IGUR III 1169. 13. See
the account
the excavations of Prehistoric
by D. Matsas
of the 19th Ephoreia and Classical Antiquities
in Lehmann (Komotini) 179, with bibliography, On Greek colonization, 2001. 14. Cole
3811;
1984,
p. 41.
(33, 53, 60, 68, 95, 97,128,138,148,157). of
1998, pp. 165 pp. 183-184. see Graham
ence, social status, the dates of initiation records, the stages of initiation, and the existence of an annual festival (see Chap. 9). Whereas most records of initiation were inscribed on stelai, some ap pear on bases (35,41,45, 55,131), and several on blocks of unclear origin "stones
were
used
and
re-used
often
many
What
times,"
is clear, however, is that with
names
"added
at
the top, in themiddle, or at the end of other lists."14 Some "parasitic" lists were
even
inscribed
on monuments
that were
originally
not meant
to record
initiates (39, 41,45, 55, 76,131). Recording of the initiates' names must have contributed to the prestige of the sanctuary by displaying the diversity and multitude of itsworshippers, and this in turn fostered its prosperity.We have 138 certain or probable
8o
CHAPTER
records of initiation, not including the records of theoroi-initiates presented in Part I, and we must bear inmind that this is but a tiny fraction of their number. The several limekilns found within the sanctuary are original an enormous for the destruction amount of of undoubtedly responsible we and next to know material, may explain why nothing about, for example, sacred personnel. The preserved records of initiation formmore than half of the known Samothracian inscriptions (ca. 250, including insignificant fragments), but we should probably imagine that the records of initiation numbered several thousand in antiquity. Locations
of
the
Records
of
Initiation
The presumably large number of records naturally raises the question of where theywere displayed. If the initiates intended them to advertise their piety, and the Samothracians encouraged this publicity for the benefit of the sanctuary, it is logical to suppose that the records stood in the vicinity of the sanctuary, so that theywould make a lasting impression upon all visitors, especially those who were not yet initiated (i.e., those who were not yet allowed to enter the sanctuary,butwhom the Samothracians wished to encourage to become initiated). Unfortunately, the vast majority of our inscriptions are scattered throughout the island, far from their original locations, the process of dispersal having begun at least as early as late antiquity and continuing at least through the 19th century. The
excavations
revealed
many
fragments
in and
near
the
sanctuary,
though, unfortunately, none were found in situ. The findspots suggest several possible areas as original locations. The area around the Stoa on theWestern Hill, where many certain and presumable records on initia tion were found (46, 61, 69, 74, 86, 88, 96,104,109,115,116,125,126, 136, 140, 146, 147, 151, 158, 166), must have been a very suitable place for setting up stelaiwith names of initiates.Within the Stoa, fragments of
stucco covering an early phase of the interiorwall show a very interesting feature: "a system ofwall decoration which imitated masonry with drafted margins, and other fragments preserve portions of mouldings. The most unusual feature of thiswall stucco is the fact thatmany of the fragments are inscribed."15The many inscriptions on thiswall clearlywere created at different times. One fragment preserves the letters BAXIAE at the top of a raised panel, which suggests the beginning of a document with a date ac
or Eni] BAEIAE[COI. cording to the eponymous basileus, BAXIAE[YONTOS Another small fragment contains the letters OIIT at the top of a raised panel thatmost likely are part of theword En]OIIT[AI.16 This surely is to be interpreted as the heading of a list of epoptai (mere mention of epoptai in a decree is possible but less likely).The interiorwall of the Stoa, built in the firsthalf of the 3rd century,may well have served early on as a surface for inscribing lists of mystai and epoptai.The area surrounding the Stoa also served to display stone documents containing these lists,most probably from at least the beginning of the 2nd century b.c., starting perhaps only after thewall of the Stoa was no longer used for this purpose (the beginning of the 2nd century is the probable date of 64, the earliest dated list, not found in situ). All this bears upon the issue ofwhether theWestern Hill
15. McCredie 16. McCredie
1965, pp. 108-110. 1965, p. 109, with
shows the pi. 31:c. The photograph stroke upper left part of the horizontal of tau and the lower tip of its vertical stroke.
RECORDS
OF
INITIATES
8l
formed part of the sanctuary proper. Given its natural separation from the central buildings by a stream, as well as its somewhat public nature (stoa, monuments, dining rooms, etc.), ithas the characteristics of an area suited
to host visitors to the sanctuary even prior to their initiation. The Eastern Hill, especially the space above the southern perimeter of the theatral area (Fig. 3:25), might also have been a good place for dis playing records of initiates. Inscription 123, a small fragment, was found there,but since a fragment of the frieze of dancing maidens from theHall of Choral Dancers was found nearby,17 123 may likewise have traveled quite a distance from its original location. Numerous marble bases are also preserved in this area.18 Some originally held a stelewith a decree next to the statue,while others might have held stelai with lists of initiates, but no stelewith such lists has been found. A fragment of 63 was found built into a retaining wall along the SacredWay (between the theatral area and the center of the sanctuary), and its other fragments were excavated nearby in the Sacred Way; but all are light enough to have been carried from a distance. Thus
convincing evidence is lacking for the display of initiation records around the theatral area or along the Sacred Way. Inscription 55 was found alongside the path from the Propylon of Ptolemy II to the ancient city?probably not far from its original loca tion, given its enormous size. Itwas originally created as a statue base for a gymnasiarch, and may have served that function throughout antiquity. But on at least two of its other sides, at dates later than the original inscrip tion, lists of initiates were inscribed. These are examples of the parasitic listsmentioned above, which were placed on monuments thatwere not to hold records of initiates. originally designed Inscription 39, a very substantial block not built into a later structure, was found well within the the ancient city, at a considerable height above sea level.The initiate lists on it are probably parasitic. Given the large size of the block, itprobably has not traveled far from its original location, and thereforedemonstrates thatmonuments in the ancient city received inscrip tions of initiation records.We have a parallel monument in 76, a substantial statue base that carries a dedication by the demos of Samothrace in honor of Pythokles, son ofApollophanes, and has on its right side a parasitic list of initiates. It was found in the ancient city; Fraser assumed that itwas moved there from the sanctuary, but it is farmore probable that, like 39, it was originally set up in the ancient city and remained there, providing at a later date a suitable surface for a list of initiates.When systematic exca vations of the ancient city are undertaken, we can probably expect many more
17. Diary 1965, p. 266. 18. Publication of the Eastern is currently being Wescoat. 19. For
prepared
the date of the building
the repair, see Lehmann
Hill
by Bonna
1998,
and
p. 61.
such monuments
to come
to
light.
Some inscriptions have been found in or near the following buildings in the sanctuary (see Fig. 3): the Sacristy (34,48,101,154), theAnaktoron the of Rotunda Arsinoe and the (42,155,169), (40,100,137,141,162), Hieron Of the in found the (81, 165, 168). inscriptions Sacristy, 48 was found in theLate Roman floor in secondary use; 34 (ofa.d. 113), according to Lehmann, was built into the interiorwall of the building (or intended for that purpose), presumably in the early-4th-century repair;19 and 101 and 154, relatively small fragments,were found nearby. Thus no clear case can be made for original display within this structure, and in any case such
82
CHAPTER
5
a display would not be consistent with the public purpose of these records. The few fragments of records found near theAnaktoron, the Rotunda of Arsinoe, and theHieron are small and easilymovable, and therefore insuf ficient
to
support
an
for
argument
original
location
in these
areas.20
the locations attested with most probability for the display of initiation records are the area in and around the Stoa on theWestern Hill, the road from the ancient city to the sanctuary, and the ancient city itself. Thus
shared characteristic of these areas is apparently the fact that theywere located outside the sanctuary, that is, outside the specific sacred area that was prohibited by 168 and 169 to those who had not undergone myesis. The
EDITORIAL CONCERNING
ARRANGEMENT INITITATION
OF RECORDS
the documents concerning initiates are arranged geographically, according to the ethnic of the initiates. If a document lists two ormore ethnics, it is included only once, with a cross-reference under the other place(s) mentioned. Under "Roman initiates" are listed initiates with Roman names whose city of origin is unspecified or who are from Rome itself.Records of initiates whose ethnic is unknown are grouped are together in Chapter 7 (117-167). Presumable records of initiation indicated with a question mark after theword "initiate(s)." By "presumable In Chapter
records"
6 (29-116),
I mean
documents
that do
not
preserve
categories
such
as
mystai,
or sailors. It must be noted that the degree of epoptai, slaves, freedmen, we are dealing with within the probability presumable records varies: if or Thracian) Roman blocks or stelai with non-Greek names, (mostly
then it is highly likely that these are lists of initiates; this is also true ifwe have a Roman date or a list ofGreek names; but ifonly theGreek date is preserved,
then
there
is considerable
uncertainty.
concerning initiation at Samo Chapter thrace: two prohibition inscriptions forbidding entry to the amyetoi (168 a benefactor and 169); a Samothracian decree in honor ofHippomedon, of the sanctuary who was eager to take part in theMysteries (170); and a Samothracian copy of a decree of Odessos inThrace, which refers to 8 contains other documents
participation in the Samothracian cult (171). Appendix II comprises inscriptions from other sites relevant to initia tion at Samothrace: 1 concerns initiates and Samothrakiasts fromRhodes,
Odessitan
and 2 and 3 mention and Dionysopolis,
initiates fromGreek colonies on the Black Sea,Tomis
respectively.
168 and 169 are 20. Inscriptions not records but prohibition documents; the loca neither was found in situ. On tion of 169, n. 43.
with
see Clinton
2003,
p. 61
CHAPTER
6
Inscriptions
Concerning
Initiates
Ethnic
Whose
Is
Known
inscriptions below attest initiates into the Samothracian Mysteries from the following areas: Attica, the Peloponnese, Thessaly, Illyria,Mace donia, Thrace, theAegean islands, Asia Minor, Rome, and Egypt.
The
ATTICA a Epitaph for Samothracian initiate Fig. 26 Two joining fragments of a pedimental stele ofwhite (now grayish) marble, preserved on all sides except below, rough-picked on back. The letters bear traces of red paint. At ca. 0.05 m below the text are visible three small round holes, which must have held an elongated metal orna ment, perhaps a branch, staff,or torch. Provenance unknown, possibly stele appeared in theMuseum ofKavala during theGer Amphipolis.The World War II (1941-1944). Archaeological man-Bulgarian occupation in of Kavala, inv.A 70 (old 465). Museum H. 0.925 m,W. 0.31 m,Th. 0.125 m (pediment), 0.10 m (field); L.H. 0.015-0.017 m (lines 1-3), 0.007-0.01 m (lines 4-22). 29
Ed. Karadima
Cf. Lazarides
and Dimitrova
2003.
1969, pp. 87-88; Cole
[BullEp1984 313]. 2nd-lst
century
1984, p. 113, n. 206 (mentioned);
B.C.?
'I o i 8 cop e NlKOCTpCXTOD %a
AOrjvocTe
5
i p e
doxov AOrrvcdcov \|/acpapdKoviq v oc8e k?K8U0ev KoXXaKiq oq QviLzkaq rjpoae PaKxeaicdc; uiuikov ?Kcppd?cov i<^>apov yov touc,
evxpixcp
fj0>i?v
cp-oaiKaic,
X6
xeprccov
jno-oaop-OTOic;
10 xdpia {.} i vr\v8e (piXoiq ipaxoq, 8i kcuoc,, npoq ndvxaq dXr\Qr\q, zvGzfikq ev yv%?\ k-uSoc; ext^v]
CHAPTER
$4 v
ocpexfiq-
ii\)axr\q
6
jLievlocuo
v Qpatqi Ka|3iporj Si%' iepov (pax;, 15 ayva 5' 'EXevoivoq Ar)oi)<; uxyd0D * owskev e-oyfipcog [uo]c; iSev [6k]xo> SeicdSocc; ?u)KapdvxcGv [fl]vi)G' fJC7cr|jLidvTC0(; 'Iai65copo<; [oc]vr|i-
20
v
okX'
Ai8a
aKoxior3%8,
Pa
[p]Da6ev?c; epKoc; dvdyKnq, [/copjov eq evjaePecov xov8' d [y]ayoav Kd6iaov. vacat
Karadima okotiov
and Dimitrova.
%e
Verse
d[y]aa9evec,
8 vel ev xpixcp. 19, jin.-20 Karadima
Burkert
(pers.
comm.),
and Dimitrova.
arrangement:
v doxov A6r|vaicov \j/a(papdkovk; oc8e K8Ke\)6ev noKkaKiq oq QviieXaq rjpoae pocKxeaicdq uiuikov 8K(ppd^cov !<^>apov Xoyov evxpixcpfi6<8>i? xep7ccov
xaxq
(pvciKoiq
uo-ooopmoK;
xaptol.
}i-
v
v
r\v8e (piXoxqzpaxoq, Sikocux;, npoq 7idvxaq afor\Qy\q v evozfieq ev \|a)XT1icoSo(; ?%[cov]dpexfjc;v iivaxr\q iikv?ajn60paJ;i Kapiporj 8i%' iepov cpcoq, v i'8ev dyvd 8' 'EXevaxvoq Ar\ovq jLxeyoc9u[jLLo]c;
oiWeicev e\>yr|pco<;[6k]xo> SeicdSac; ta)Kocpdvxcov v [rjjvDa' d7rr||Lidvxco(;'Ioi65copo<; [d]vr|iaW Ai8a OKoxio-Dxe, pa[p]\)a0ev8(; epKoq dvdyicr|<;, [xcop]ov &q 8\)aep8cov xov8' d[y]ayoov KaGiaov. Translation:
Isidoros
Nikostratou | light earth has | | ofAthens, farewell. This \san Athenian citizen, who frequently | tilled at the Bac chic altars, | recounting merry speech as a mime | in the third part, | delighting with his natural,Muse-flowing 110graces. He was loved a to reverent renown | his with truthful man, friends, all, by | just | covered
an initiate, great-hearted, |he saw the for the virtue in his soul. As | in Samothrace,1 |l5 and the pure sacred of Kabiros doubly light | rites ofDemeter in Eleusis.2 |Because of this, bearing his old age
well, | Isidoros completed eighty years without | pain and trouble. of necessity, But you, gloomy Hades, bastion 120extremely powerful man to lead this the of and the Reverent | Region | place him there. Epigraphical Commentary The letters are inelegant and hard to read.
Line 7: The second letter of \<\>apbv looks more like a delta. Line 8: ENTPITCOHOI lapis.The last letter looks like a combination of epsilon and iota. Presumably the stonecutter omitted the epsilon and carved iota first,then tried to correct it.At the place where the final iota of f|0<e>i should
have
been,
i.e.,
the
space
between
f|0<e>i
and
xep7icov,
there
is now
only an upper horizontal. It is conceivable that the stonecutter exchanged the places of the iota and the epsilon, and then just painted the correct sequence. Another possibility would be to interpret the upper horizontal
1. Literally, "among the Samothra cians," with poetic omission of the ev. preposition 2. Literally, "the pure rites of Deme ter of Eleusis."
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
85
4. 4 riwsfrf. r (51 *t i t:>A A
'
j; , -vr>p.
r * .i./r tMjys&rw At * i 17/ ^ ?4c j*? ^,!arjrior;'
IV t tU-K
I
rr *
yXHWtJ
A<&i eon'"':'^rr*w /.*
'
"'^1
Figure 26. Epitaph fora Samothra cian Matsa
initiate
(29).
Courtesy C. Karadima
as an
verse end, but this is not very likely, since interpunct, denoting the the other verse ends are marked only with a vacant space. Line 10: %dpia{. }i:The dot represents what looks like a crossed-out
carve a second sigma. The stonecutter must have started to sigma, and then changed his mind. Line 14:The circle of the theta can be made out; the beta of Ka(3ipo\) is poorly cut: it looks like a delta, but narrower. Line 18: First preserved letter: leftvertical.
Line 20: The first letter is upsilon, whose right diagonal and middle vertical are visible; there are scratches to the right of it,which create the appearance of an alpha, as was incorrectly assumed in the editioprinceps. Commentary Although this document is not from Samothrace, it is included here, and not inAppendix II, due to its extraordinary importance. The commen tary is largely reprinted from the editioprinceps, with some additions and
86
CHAPTER
6
inscription is an epitaph for theAthenian citizen 'Iai8copO(; man a of admirable qualities and a curious fate, described NiKoaxpaxoi), below. The letters, and especially the broken-bar alpha, are consistent with corrections.The
a date in the Late Hellenistic period. The 2nd century b.c is the suggested terminus post quern, since the theophoric name Isidoros is apparently unattested inAttica before the 2nd century b.c.3 Lines
4-22
Lines 6,9,18: of uouoopp-oxoK;,
represent
a
written
poem,
in
elegiac
distich.
pccK%eocKd(;instead of PocK%eiocKd(;,uoDOOpmoK; instead and
the form
'IoioScopoc,
occurs rarely; it is attested in IMT1011; the name of aMylasean priest of Isis.
must
be metri
I.Mylasa
causa.
632-635,
Isiodoros
803, etc., as
6-8: jlxijliikovindicates that Isidoros must have been a mime, is consistent with the idea that he brought joy to his audience. This is emphasized in lines 7-8 by iap6v 2u3|yov and xepTtcov,and brings to mind Quintilian's discussion (6.2.13) of the good speaker's ethos: non solum mite ac placidum, sedplerumque blandum et humanum, audientibus Lines
which
amabile
iucundum.
atque
The "Bacchic altars" are to be understood QviizXaq fjpooe pocKxeocicdg: as a metonymy for "orchestra." ODjuiAxi was the altar ofDionysos, which stood in the orchestra, and the orchestra was the place where mimes usually performed;
cf. Suda,
s.v. okt|vt|.
A helpful parallel for the use of theword QvileXk} in an epitaph for a mime is provided by an inscription fromAquileia, IG XIV 2342 (= GVJ 567, ca. 220 b.c), commemorating the glorious mime Basille, who was called by the author of the poem "the tenthMuse":
Tr|v noXXdiq 5f|uoien ndpoq noXkaiq xe 7t6^eaoi (pcovdeaaav
86c;ocv
7iavxovn<;
5
dpexfj<;
evi GKnvaTen ev uiuok;,
eixa
^apoucrn %opo!oi
noXkaKiq ev Odux^ocic;, aXX' ov% oiSxco5e 0ocvoi)OT| xfi8eicdxr|Moijan xo XaXziv oocpoc; 'HpaK^eiSnq jiii|Lid5iBaacri^Ari oxrj^rjv Oexo pioA-oyoc; (pcog r\8f| Kai veKvq ouoa lonv Piod ?Xka%? xi|nf|v, uoucukov
eic; 5a7ie8ov
ocbji'
dva7ia\)aajievr|
. . .
3. Parker
It is noteworthy that in both poems theword noXXciKiq is associated 0\)jLie?iai.This helps to explain the somewhat unusual metaphor "plowed the Bacchic altars" in line 6 as most likelymeaning "tilled at the
with
altars," in the sense of performing repeatedly in the orchestra. Isidoros might be the same as themime mentioned inCicero, In Ver rem 2.3.34.78, 2.5.12.31, 2.5.31.81, as John Jory pointed out tome.4 Our was in well and the location of his epitaph in case, traveled, Isidoros, any
Bacchic
northern Greece
presumably
A possible explanation of the crux evxpixcp / ev xpixcp f|0<e>i ("in a threefold/third character") was recently suggested by Jory,who drew my attention to the fact that the parts played by mimes were sometimes by
numerical
quartarum} The
phrase
tury B.C., and adds that the two firmly datable names derived from Isis (a Thasian Isigonos, attested in 350 B.C., and a Rhamnousian
Isigenes, attested since they B.C.) are questionable "are known from defective transcripts of stones now lost." in 325
indicates the place where he settled in old
age.
designated
(2000, p. 74) confirms conclusions (1937) that the cult in the 2nd cen of Isis was established
Dow's
notations;
cf. Latin
tertiarum,
secundarum,
and
can be translated as "in the third part," thus
4. Pers.
comm.
5. GIL VI10103, VI10118, X 814, XIV Caec.
9.14.4; Cic. Div. 4198; Val. Max. 48. For ranks in the mimes' hier
see archy, Jory 1963, esp. p. 75; Bea cham 1992, p. 132, with nn. 52, 53.1 am very to John Jory for this grateful information.
WHOSE
INITIATES
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
87
referring to a grade in themimes' hierarchy.Horace, for instance, compares the subservient man to the mime playing the "second part" (Epistulae 1.18.10-14). A problem with this interpretation, as noted by Nicolay Sharankov,6 is that itwould be unusual tomention in an inscription con was a "third-part" actor. Yet a taining mostly praise for Isidoros that he Latin inscription (CIL X 814) mentions the dedication of a statue in honor is called secundarumy that is, "of the second
of the archimime Sorix, who
part,"7
without
connotations.
any unflattering
Another interpretationwould be to translate evxprccp/ev xprccpri0<e>i as "in a threefoldway"; that is, Isidoros was able to play several characters within one performance, which was an alleged quality ofmimes, aswe see, for instance, inCicero ("He jumped for joy like a character in amime, starv ing one moment, then suddenly rich,"Phil. 2.65)8 and Choricius of Gaza ("Who would not give up an attempt to enumerate all [mimes] imitate? Master, ers,
servants,
contract
merchants,
makers,
sausage
stammering
sellers, child,
bakers,
youth
restaurateur,
in love,
another
banquet one angry,
another quieting the other s anger,"Apology forMimes 110). Accordingly, the a canon of parts or characters a phrase "in third character" might indicate that themimes performed, asMr. Sharankov suggested tome.9 The fact that Isidoros was an actor bears upon the importance of the
atrical performance in Samothracian cult; see Chapter 4.We do not know whether he performed at Samothrace, but his visit to the island is paralleled by the visits ofmusicians and Dionysiac artists (10,11, 35, 121). Line 12: e-uaepec,: Religious terminology is abundant in the poem. euaePec, and euoepecov in line 21 immediately bring to mind the typical
to Samothracian initiates, jruoTca euaepeTc,. The adjective phrase applied ayvoq (line 15) belongs to the cultic vocabulary of the Eleusinan Myster ies, and is a frequent epithet ofDemeter and Kore. Its substantivized use, however, is very rare: apparently the only parallel is I.Ephesos 27C, lines 383-384 (iced xocay]vd k[al] tcckoivoc z[r\qu^yicrr/ncjkou | emo^umoVr/nc; \)|jxgv KoXzayq).
Lines 13-14: Among themost important features of this text are the use of theword Kdpipoq at Samothrace and the information that viewing sacred lightwas central to the initiate s experience there. The only appellations that otherwise occur in inscriptions for the gods of the Samothracian Mysteries are 0eoi MeydAm, ?eoi ZajioOpocKeq, or name Kabiri appears in literary sources11 and in inscrip simply 0eoi.loThe tions recording related cults in other places (notably Delos12), but never in inscriptions referring to the cult in Samothrace. A possible explanation for this is to assume that the titleKabiri was applied informally (hence its use in literature or in the present epigram), and that the appellation "Great Gods" was established by the Samothracians as the official title. 6. Pers. 7.1
owe
Schlapbach. 8. Csapo
this reference and Slater
377. 9. Pers.
comm.
1984, pp. 1-2. 11. E.g., Hdt. 2.51; Stesimbrotos, 107 F10 = Strabo 10.3.19-20; FGrH 10. See Cole
comm. to Karin
1995, pp. 376
1.23.5; Euseb. 1.10 (on the last, see Praep. evang. Samothrace 1 140,163, 168). Burkert
Dion.
Hsl.Ant.
Rom.
(2002, p. 45) points out that since Stes imbrotos wrote a book on the mysteries, and
since he was
from the neighboring he probably knew well were. who the Samothracian gods 12. Cf. Bruneau 1970, pp. 390-399. island of Thasos,
88
CHAPTER
6
In Kocpipcru 5i%' iepov cpccx;, "the doubly sacred light of Kabiros," the adverb 8(x(oc) must modify iepov. One way to understand Kapipoi) is to assume that a single god Kabiros was worshipped at Samothrace, as, for in Thebes,13 Pergamon,14 and Thessaloniki.15 The problem with example, this
however, interpretation, in Samothrace.16 Kabiros single
no
source
Moreover,
in
is that
to us mentions
known
for
Pergamon,
instance,
a we
have solid evidence forworship of the Kabiri in the plural, in addition to themention of Kabiros in the singular.17Even in theTheban cult, themost notable example of a single Kabiros, the plural form is sometimes used.18
The Samothracian Kabiri are always referred to in the plural. According to some authors (e.g., Nonnos, Dion. 14.17-22; 29.193-196),19 theywere two; according toMnaseas (Scholia Parisina toAp. Rhod. Argon. 1.917),20 two, three, or four; according to Strabo (10.3.20), three.21 Presumably this discrepancy implies that sometimes the titlewas used to refer only
to a couple of central male divinities, and sometimes to thewhole group of deities worshipped in the Samothracian Mysteries. Thus it has been inferred that therewere two central Kabiri, frequently equated with the Dioscouri.22 The lack of precision in using the name Kabiri may have been an additional reason for the adoption of the titleTheoi Megaloi, which
must have included the entire group of divinities. Therefore it seems right to interpret"the doubly sacred light ofKabiros" as a poetic way of saying "the sacred light of the two Kabiri." I understand 5i%cx,"doubly," not in the sense of "twice," but in the sense of "in two parts," the basic meaning of theword. It is unclear how literally one should in terpret this phrase, but it is conceivable that the initiates saw illuminated twinlike statues of the Kabiri, possibly the two statues thatwere set up in
theAnaktoron, according to ancient testimony (Hippol. Haer. 5.8-9).23 It has long been known that light played a significant role in the Samothra cian cult, as is clear, for instance, from the remains ofmonumental marble torches;24 from the depiction of torches on stelaiwith records of initiates;25 and from the evidence of Nonnos, who describes sailors rejoicing at see ing the sleepless flame of the Samothracian torch (Dion. 3.43-44),26 the nocturnal festive torch of Samothrace (Dion. 4.185),27 or statues holding blazing torches before banqueters (Dion. 3.169-17128).29 In the epitaph for Isidoros we learn for the first time that viewing "sacred light" constituted a central act of the initiates' experience, as in the Eleusinian Mysteries. 13. Hemberg 14. Hemberg
1950, pp.
184-186.
1950, pp. 176-178. 15. Hemberg 1950, pp. 205-210. 16. The only possible indication of a on Samothrace is an early coin, Kabiros whose (1952) has image Schwabacher as that of Kabiros. interpreted 17. Hemberg 1950, pp. 172-175. 18. Paus. 4.1.7, 9.25.5-10; cf.Hem 204.
1950, pp.184, 19. Samothrace
1 167.
20. Samothrace
1 150a.
berg
21. Samothrace 22. See, most
1 163. recently, Clinton
2003, p. 69. 23. Samothrace sion in Clinton
1 148. Cf.
2004;
2003, p. 75. 24. Samothrace Parisinou
2000,
the discus
see also Clinton
cf. 3, pp. 135-138; nn. 114,
pp. 200-201,
115. 25. /GXII.8 26. Cf.
188,189,190. 1 73. Samothrace
27. Cf. Samothrace 28. Cf. Cole
1 151.
1984, pp. 36-37;
Samo
thrace 1 67. 29. Cf. n. 45.
also Cole
1989, p. 1576, with
INITIATES
WHOSE
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
89
Line 21: [xcop]ov eq ?VO?pecov:The restoration is fairly certain, since the expression is typical of epitaphs inwhich the deceased either abides in the Xcopoq euaepecov or awish is expressed that he/she maybe sent there.30The Region of theReverent has long been identifiedwith Elysium and the Isles of the Blessed, where heroes and even gods dwell.31The x^P0^ euaepecov is in the underworld;32 thus, for example, /GXII.5 304 (Roman period) and 1190 (undated) suggest that the x^?P?^ euaepecov is located in the XII.3 house of Persephone. 7GXII.5 310 (2nd century a.d.) also associates the with AAAd oi) 7ta|ipaoiA,eia Oed, 7ioAucov\)ji8Kot)pa,| place Persephone: tt|v8'
ay'
87c' euaepecov
Pseudo-Plato's
exo-oaa
x&pov,
%zp6q.
[Ax.] 371c-d (Late Hellenistic period), is especially illuminating. Discussing Plouton's kingdom, Socrates describes an idyllic place reserved for those whose lives were inspired by a good account,
daimon: ooo\q
u?v
ovv
ev xcg C,r\v 5aijicov
dyaOoc,
87ce7tve\)aev,
eiq
xov
xcbv
euaepcov x^pov oiKi^ovxai, evOa acpOovoi |iev cbpai 7tayKdp7to\) yovfjc,ppuoDcnv, 7rnyai8e i)8dxcov KaOapcbv peouoiv, 7tavxoioi Se Xeiii&veq dvOecn 7uoikiAoi<;eapi^ojaevoi, Siaxpipai 8e (piAoaocpcov kou
7toinxcbv
Kai
xe eupeAfj
Kai
Oeaxpa
cruujtoaid
kukAioi
xopoi
eiAa7rivai
K<*i po-uaiKa
aKOuauocxa, Kai
auxoxopriynxoi,
aKT|paxo<;
dA\)7iia Kai f|8eia Siaixa- oike yap xet^? acpo8pov oike QaXnoq eyyiyvexai, aXk' euKpaxoc, dr|p xeixai a7iaAai<; fiAiou aKxiaiv dvaKipvdjaevoc,.
evxauOa
xdiq
[ie\iX)r\[iivoiq
eoxiv
xiq
TtpoeSpia
The last sentence is important in pointing up the connection between initiation and blissful afterlife. Since initiates had a privileged position in the x^P?^ euoePecov, theymust have been inspired by a good daimon, that is, their lives must have been marked by good deeds and pursuits.33 statement that initiation in the Sa This is consistent with Diodoruss mothracian Mysteries made people morally better, euaepeaxepouq Kai not to connect is It difficult Diodoruss 5iKaioxepou<;.34 euaepeaxepoix; with x^P?^ e'ucrepecov and jruaxai euaePeiq. Initiates were perceived as more reverent than non-initiates, and therefore worthy of a prohedria in the Region of the Reverent. It iswell known that initiates in the Eleusinian and certain otherMys teries deserved a better place in the afterlife.35Early on, initiates at Eleusis 30. Cf. Gow
and Page
1965,
1199-1202; ISE 115; SEGXLll 206 (= /GIF 13088); CorinthVIII. 1 130; SEG XXXIV 325; 7GXI.2 313.a; EAM193; EKM\ 404; 7GXII.7 115; 7GXII.8 38; 7GXII.5 304, 310; TAM 470; IGX11.3 1190, etc. On evG?$f\q as an cf. epithet of the deceased, Erhardt 1999, p. 274, with n. 9.
see the the %copo<; evaePecov, Graf discussion (1974, by s.v. cf.Etym. Magn., pp. 79-94); is the xcopoq euaepecov 'HtaLxnov, where with 'HA/omov and the vfjcjoi equated 31. On
detailed
uxxicdpCGv. See 242.
also Nilsson
IP, pp. 231
32. See Graf 1974; [PlutJCons.
120 B also places the xcopoq AeYexoci 5' vnb jiev e\)0?pecov inHades: tov jxe^iKoo) niv8dpoD xa>v | xocuxi 7tepi xoTai Axxuttei jiev euaePcav ev 'Ai8od |
adApoll.
xav ev0d8e vdkxoc kocxco aGevoq ae^ioi) . . . (Pind. fr. 129). 33. Cf. Nilsson IP, pp. 241-242. On agathos daimon here in the sense of not, for instance, in good spirit?and the sense of good fortune or a tutelary that accompanied deity (a good genius)
a persons life?see Hershbell 1981, context of the p. 67, n. 68. The dialogue it clear that those inspired by a makes good daimon are morally better people, since they are further contrasted with led to the the evildoers, who were Xcopoq daepecov ([y^*.] 371e). 34. Diod. Sic. 5.49.6. With
regard to this passage, Rohde (1987, p. 235, n. 34) comments not that the mystai did
appear to have but were made
any moral obligation, better "without effort on
their part by a pure act of grace." 35. Cf. Burkert 1987, pp. 21-29.
90
CHAPTER
6
as receiving a good lot,while non-initiates receive a bad distinguished lot.36 When belief in the xcopoq euaePecov was well developed, thiswas felt to be their proper place, but their special status, at least according to theAxio are
chus,now demanded prohedria as well. The relation between mystery cult and x^P0^ Buoepecov is nicely illus trated in an epigram of Posidippos that parallels both theAxiochus passage
and
our
document:37
14 r\kQev87t' euoePecov NiKooxpdxri iepoc jiugxcov 15 opyux Koci Koc6ocp6v 7TUp87UTplKToXe[lLOV 16
17 18
r\v d\\f r\ cp. . [.]
. . . TaSauocvO-ooq
[
.5cojaocnvXaq x'{e} [Ai5eco Aiockcx; e[.] xekvcov [TrAfjOocJ i5oi)oav del 8' d7ia[9lcoT?po]o<; omco
19 _ dv0pco7c[oi(;ta)yp]oi) yfipaoq eoxi ^ijar|[v.
It is likely that the reason the Samothracian initiates are referred to as uuoxou e-oaePeic; has to do precisely with the %copoc;e-uoepecov; the present epigram is the only documentary piece of evidence to support this supposi tion, since Isidoros was a Samothracian initiate. oiiveicev in line 16 implies a causal connection between the previous and following thoughts, and
may be interpreted as an indication that initiation was believed tomake a person more prosperous in life and more hopeful about death?an alleged benefit to those initiated into the Eleusinian Mysteries.38 Up to this point there has been no certain evidence that theMysteries of theGreat Gods at Samothrace assured a happy life and afterlife;39the current epigram is the firstdocument
Mysteries
to tell us that both the Eleusinian
and the Samothracian
provided this benefit.
cleruchy on Imbros Fig. 27 Stele ofThasian marble, broken above and below, with molding, rough picked on back. The inscriptionwas found in secondary context and brought to Paris by Champoiseau, after his mission to Samothrace in 1891. Musee du Louvre, inv.Ma. 4191.1 saw the stone in July 2001. H. 0.85 m, W. 0.38 m (above)-0.44 m (below), Th. 0.06 m; L.H. 30
0.015
Record
of initiates from theAthenian
m.
1892, p. 201, no. 4; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Cole 1984, p. 150, no. 19, pi. V:b. Syll? 1054; Cf. Kern 1893, p. 372, no. 15. Edd. Reinach
a.d.160-180 8
0 paai^e-uovxoq AOnvoucov 6 an 5
?v
0
1.
XaPeivoi)
oi5e
oxpocxnyoc;
vIjj,ppcp ZcoKpaxnc;
xcov
Ap%e^doi)
rieipoci
yap uovoic, eicei | ?fjv ecm, xoic, 7idvx' e%eiv kockoc.
37. Bastianini no. VII.
14-18.1
15 as "Nikostrate
and Galazzi understand went
2001, lines 14
to the sacred
rites of reverent
initiates and the pure fire of Triptolemos." On p. 160 the edi
tors list this translation as a possibility, but prefer to take euaepecov with an omitted noun (xcopoq, velsim.). The use of e-oaepecov with udctxcdv creates
however: kn\ is used better parallelism, once with iepd opyia and a second time with 7rup; not a third time to modify yet another, omitted, accusative. ut Leg. 2.36: initiaque ita re vera principia vitae cum laetitia neque solum
cognovimus; vivendi rationem accepimus, sed etiam cum spe meliore moriendi; Isoc. Paneg.
28: xf|v T?^?TT|v, r\qoi laexaaxovxeq 7iepi xe xfjc; xou Piou xe^evxfjq Kai xou
vacat
6 koci Eiai8copo(; Oi^o Kpdxoix; 'OfjOev AoK^r|7cid8ri<; MnvoScopoi) ^Xvevq
benefit
Eijoxril^cov
safety
Oi^oKpdxnc;
10
Toia88 5' d^oioi
38. Cf. Cic.
AOnvaicov
Xpuoepcoxoc;
Ileipaieix;
Kopvf|Xio<; ASeiuocvxoq Avacptaaaxioq
|
710G' ouoicov |aiaav e%ei cpGijaevoc; 7tep bub ^ocpcp eupcbevxr, Soph. fr. 837: d><; oi xcdka Tpio6?ipioi | KeTvoi ppoxcov, ec/Ai8o-o 88px6evTec; T?^r| | uotaoa'
appellantur,
8jLi\)r|0r|oav
daxecoc;
216; Dittenberger,
480-482: 36. Hym.Hom.Cer. ol$\oq oq xd5' 67ico7i?v e7ti%0ovicov dv0pcb7icov dq 8' 6cT8^r|(; iepcov, oq x' aujuopoi;, ou
cruujtavxoc; aicbvoc, riSioax; xdq e^7u5a<; 8%ouoiv. 39. Previously,
2002,
the only known initiates was
for Samothracian
at sea; cf., most p. 61.
recently, Burkert
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
91
Figure 27. Record of initiatesfrom theAthenian cleruchyon Imbros (30). Photo ? C. Larrieu, courtesyMusee cluLouvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
Kopvri^ia A^e^dv8pa
Kop(vr|A,un)) ASeijidvxovj 0u(ydxr|p)
KopvrjXia OiAoxpocpov ec;A?r|viicov Icoxac; Boxpuoq AaiSaW8r|<; vacat
15
?7c67cxai n6(nA,io<;) 'Epevvioq Aeovxcix; A^nvietx; KXapoq KAxxpou Aic^coveix; 'Ico^ioq "EpJLLUTJCOc;
in corona:
20
Meydtanc; Lau60pa
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear,with a characteristic rectilinear shape, especially sigma. They resemble the hand(s) of 36 (except for the omega), 41, inscription iii, and perhaps 44. 45,116,166, Line 16: The omicron of Yloinkioq) is above the pi and much smaller than the other letters.
92
CHAPTER
6
Commentary
inscription is a record of Athenian initiates from Imbros, dated by to a.d. 160-180 since several of the names mentioned in Dittenberger the inscription are attested elsewhere. The initiateswere members of the Athenian cleruchy on Imbros. Reinach (p. 203) concludes from the expres The
sion 6 cut' dcrcecoq aTparnyoc, AOnvcacov in line 4 that at the end of the 2nd century a.d. Imbros was still an Athenian cleruchy, and that the strategos in the present inscription (unattested otherwise) was sent by Athens, and not elected by the cleruchy. Line 2: The eponymous official is otherwise unknown. The formula pocGiAeuovxoc,+ name is common throughout theGreek world, but atypical of Samothrace. The only other example of paoiAeuovToq possibly occurs in 104. Lines
2-3:
oi'Se
...
ejroriOrioav
is unattested
as a formulaic
expression.
The verb ui)eco is used in one other Samothracian inscription (126), but in the aorist active, and the participle u-DnOevTSc,occurs in 61 and 63. Line 5: For Archelaos, father of the Socrates mentioned here, see Traill, no. 209755. Line 7: See Traill, no. 384110. A certain Eisidoros, son of Philo-, of Oe, was an ephebe in a.d. 155/6 (Traill, no. 384180), but it is unclear whether
he
is the
same
person
or a relative.
Line 9: A certain AoKAr|7ud8r|c,Mrrvo5cbpo'o of Phlya is attested in an ephebic catalogue of a.d. 154/5 (IG IP 2967.67). It is likely that he is the same person, as Dittenberger points out. This consideration aswell as the identification of \\6ink\oq)Tpevvioc, (see ad line 16) were the probable reasons for Dittenberger's dating of the inscription to a.d. 160-180. On
AoKATj7ud8nc,MnvoScopoi) and his family seeTraill, nos. 219840, 219825, 219830.
Line 14: Sotas's brother, NeiKcov Boxpuoq Aou8oc?u8r|c, v(ecoT?po(;), ismentioned in IG II2 5964, dated to the 2nd century a.d.; see Traill, no. 267930. On the semantics of the name Botrys, cf. 34, line 11. Line 16: Yl6(Tzk\oq)Epevvioc, Aeovxeix; A^nvieuc, (Traill, no. 401480) is
well known from other inscriptions, as Dittenberger points out (see above, 9): he served as an ephebe in a.d. 142/3 (IG IP 3740.B.21), as a gymnasiarch (IG IP 2049.25), and as a bouleutes in a.d. 152/3 or 153/4
^line
(Attica,Agora XV 336.11.17). Line 18: It is interesting that 'IouAioc, "Epjuuutoc, has no demotic. Lines 19-22: The document is both a list of initiates and a dedication to the Great Gods. The dedicatory formula is inscribed within a laurel
crown.
PELOPONNESE 31
Greek Thera,
record of initiates(?) fromAlexandria, Tegea, Torone,
Fragment Provenance no.
and
of a stele of Thasian
unknown.
Fig. 28
Aspendos40
Archaeological
marble, Museum
broken above and below. of
Samothrace.
No
inv.
40. For material see 16.
pertaining
to Elis,
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
KNOWN
93
Figure 28. Greek record of initi ates^) fromAlexandria, Tegea, Thera, Torone, andAspendos (31) H.
0.21 m,W.
0.255 m,Th.
0.065 m; L.H.
0.01 m.
Unpublished. Date? ca. 20 j|-
ca. 20 ca. 20
j j j
j-
[-----]...[----/--2.1 5 vacat AA,e!;av5p?iL><; vacat [-ci-1?-]AtcoXAxoviovj[-?-]
vacat Teyedrnq
vacat
GeuioTayopcxCj A7ioA,ta)Scoporj vacat vacat QnpaToq 10 KpaTi8auo<; P
..TO
...
A7co^o8copou AK
...
ITOY
... OY [ToJpovaToc; 'IcpoK^fjq A Kuaiou Ao7tev[8iO(;] [E\)7c]op(cov
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now badly worn. Commentary This probably was a list of Greek initiates,who came from various cit ies?Alexandria, Tegea, Thera, Torone, and Aspendos. All except Alex andria are hitherto unattested as ethnics of initiates.
THESSALY For material pertaining toAzorion/Azoros,
see 35.
CHAPTER
94
6
ILLYRIA 32
Record
of initiates from Epidamnos
Fragment
of Thasian
marble.
Found
in Palaiopolis,
now lost. Its
are unknown.
dimensions
1855, p. 619, no. 9; Fredrich, IG XII.8 196; Cabanes and Drini 1995, 515 (SEGXLV 696). Cf. Conze 1860, p. 62. Edd. Blau
and Schlottmann
Date? uuotoci ?\)o[?p?i<;] 'E7ii5a|ivico[v
]
. .]AZT[- -] Oikv[. Auaicov E[-]
5 Scoai[.
.]oq riap(i?vico[vo(;] . . .]XPH[- -] ATEIPIO[.
Fredrich. 3 [A5p]dat[o\)?] Fredrich. 5 ?cogi[Xoc]ck;Fredrich. 6 Ax?ipio[c,? 0eo]%pri[aTO'o?]
Commentary
Fredrich.
Lines 3, 5, 6: The sibilities.
restorations proposed by Fredrich are not the only pos
Line 4: A-ooicov is a relatively rare name. It occurs mostly inEpidaurian documents. Line 6:Ateirios apparently is not attested. Ax?pio<; is attested inAttica
and Rhodian
and inMacedonia (see LGPNll) (SEG XXXVIII occurs in Axfipioq) occasionally papyri.
701). Axr\piq (genitive
MACEDONIA also has a probable pertaining to Styberra, see 53?which initiate from Sirrhai; forHerakleia apo Strymonos, see 36, and forTorone,
For material 31.
of an initiate from Sirrhai Fig. 29 Block ofThasian marble, with a raised right edge, broken below. There is a lip on the left and anathyrosis on the back. A clamp hole is visible on the top, near the back edge, and it is roughly centered. Found in Chora on June 25, 1939. of Samothrace, courtyard, Archaeological Museum
33
Record
inv. 39.83.
H. 0.61 m,W. 0.18 m,Th. m (lines 1-2, 7-10). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben
(1960) 46.
0.26 m; L.H.
0.02 m (lines 3-6), 0.025-0.03
1940, p. 358, no. 4; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp 1963, p. 65, n. 7.
1944 151a;Walton
1963, p. 99; Robert
is
ethnic
whose
initiates
known
95
Figure 29. Record of an initiatefrom Sirrhai (33) 2nd century a.d.?
[aylaGftfi] em
Paai
Aeax; KA. 5
AlOVDCUOU
llapd liovoq 10 ZcoiAou Iippaioq. vacat Fraser.
4 KA,. Fraser.
8 napduovo(;
Fraser.
8-9
Ilapd||iovo(;
Walton.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering, dated by Fraser to the 2nd century a.d., resembles that of 34, with lunate epsilon and sigma. Ligatures of omicron and upsilon are used (lines 5,10). Line 1: First preserved
letter: right oblique
circle.
Line 4: The
lambda is clear.
stroke followed by a
chapter
96
6
Commentary It is possible that the block belonged together with 67 and 97; see ad 67. a According to Fraser, itwas firstused in structurewhere it layhorizontally, on in light of the anathyrosis the back, and was then reused in a vertical
position, as the clamp hole above, predating the inscription, shows. Lines 8-10: A certain Zoilos, son of Paramonos, is attested in another (SEG XXXVIII 679.42-43, a.d. 74/5). It is inscription fromMacedonia impossible to prove a connection, however, as both Paramonos
are
very
common
Greek
names.
Paramonos
occurs
as
the name
and Zoilos
of a slave
in another Samothracian document (34). 11:Most likely the same ethnic occurs in 53; see Robert, p. 65.
from Beroia Line 34
of initiates from Beroia
Fig. 30 Stele ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides,with a tenon below for insertion.The back is rough-picked. Found in the Sacristy on July 5,1939. of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.332. Archaeological Museum H. 0.74 m,W. 0.37 m,Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m. Record
Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben 2.1 (1960) 47. Cf. Robert
1940, p. 345, with p. 493; Fraser, Samothrace
and Robert, BullEp 1944 151a; Robert 1963, pp. 70-76; 1963, p. 100; Robert and Robert, BullEp 1964 377; Lehmann 61. 1998, p.
Walton
a.d.
113
87tipocaiAeocx; 0eo5cbpo\) xou q uuoxca
ei)oepeic,
Bepoiocioi 5
Ti.
KAccuSioc,
EuAocioc,
OvXnia
AAecjdv8poc f]yuvf| ocmou
Toe
Tcupioc,
IhyuSric,
5ouAoi
10 KAco)5iou
EuAouod
Ilocpduovoc, ?npcac,
8X0Dq Fraser.
8 Tai.
a^q T-opux;
era-date 261
Ilotioric, Robert.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are very similar to those of 33, except that there are no ligatures. It is possible that theywere executed by the same hand. Commentary
is a record of Roman initiates from theMacedonian city Beroia and of their slaves. It is dated to the year 261 of theMacedonian era,which a when b.c. Macedonia became Roman in 148 (see Fraser, began province p. 100, n. 1; Samuel 1972, p. 247).
This
initiates
whose
ethnic
is
known
97
Figure 30. Record of initiatesfrom Beroia (34) Line 2: Fraser corrects Lehmanns reading 0?o8copo\)TO<; to 0?o8copo'D xou <;', following Roberts suggestion about the numeral q\ "six." The had the same name for six ancestors of the eponymous king Theodoros n. 1). Other eponymous kings whose firstname generations (Robert, p. 70,
are attested in 1,17, inscription iii,46, inscrip tion ii, and on coins; see 7GXII.8, p. 41. Line 5: Robert (pp. 71-76) discusses the name Eulaios in great detail, tutor of Ptolemy Philometor who refuting the traditional view that the was called Eulaios was of oriental origin. The conclusion that the name is richly supported by epigraphical evidence; see /GX 2.1 isMacedonian 243.1 (lst-2nd centurya.d.); S?GXXIV505 (2nd-3rd century a.d.); SEG or patronymic isTheodoros
XXXVIII 679, line40 (a.d. 74/5),680, line52 (a.d. 74/5);SEG XXXIX 627 (Roman period). Line 6: Robert (p. 70) points out that cities stopped bearing the name name remained in Ulpia early in the reign ofHadrian, while the personal use
long thereafter. Line 8: Fraser comments that "Pudens, who alone of those present has the 'tria nomina,' is sandwiched between the Beroians and their slaves," but there is no indication that he was not a Beroian himself, as Robert
remarked (p. 70; cf. alsoWalton, who writes: "There is no reason to ques tion the explicit statement on the stone that Eulaios, his wife, and Pudens are one and all Beroians."). Robert also draws attention to the fact that
chapter
98 Claudius
Tiberius to have
three
names,
Eulaios
has three names, while Ulpia
6
is not supposed
a woman.
being
Iturius is a rarename, bringing tomind the Ituriusmentioned inTacitus, Annales 13.19-22, as Fraser notes.The name Ituria occurs inCIL VI 35503 (see Robert), and also in an early Christian epitaph from Italy, ICUR IX 26070 (undated). In view of the name's rarity, Robert suggests thatwe might be dealing with the common name Turius instead, and proposes to read
roci.Tupioc, nouSnc,. The medial dot after the alpha looks certain, however. Another problem with this reading is the fact that inGreek inscriptions the name Gaius isvery seldom abbreviated after the iota; of the examples known tome, I. Cos 22$, NSER and and 267 563, 458, only the last two LEphesos have
unproblematic
readings.
Ta.
is a much
more
common
abbreviation.
Pudens occurs frequently inGreek inscriptions both as a cognomen and a firstname. InMacedonia it occurs in, e.g., SEGXXXVIII 680, line 42 (a.d. 74/5), and XL 557 (Imperial period). Line 11: Robert (p. 70, n. 2) discusses the semantics of the name
inwhich two men with Etocxdc,.He cites an epitaph fromThessaloniki, the remarkable names Botrys (grape cluster) and Stachys (corn ear) set up amonument inmemory of their brother (/GX 2.1 401,2nd century a.d.).
The
name
is not infrequent throughout the Greek world times (ca. 50 examples). 13: The personal name Onpouc; is very rare.
inHellenistic
and Roman Line 35
of initiates fromAzorion
Records
and Kassandreia Fig. 31 a on statue of base Thasian of broken marble, top.Found Fragment only built into the church of St. Andrew, now in theArchaeological Museum of Samothrace,
courtyard.
H. 0.07 m,W.
No
inv. no.
1.62 m,Th. 0.49 m; L.H.
0.015 m (inscription i),0.012 m
(inscription ii). Edd. Conze
178. 1875, p. 42, no. 19, pi. 71:19; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 504; Hillervon Gaertringen,/GXII Suppl. (1939), p. 149; Salviat, Chapouthier, and Salac 1956, p. 144, with n. 5; BullEp 1958 261; Collini 1990, p. 261. Cf. SEGII
2nd
century
B.C.?
[-] ano A^copiou axpaxriyoq Tpi7ioAiT[cb]v iced OTcAocpopoc;
nocpjueviooKoc/
aKOAxroOoc,
MevavSpoc,.
n
[....] \rboxiqe\)0?pr|c/MevvXka 5 InnoaxpaTOX) Kocoaccv^pemc, KiQapioxpia
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary It is unclear how many lines are missing above the two inscriptions. The hands of i and ii are different in size and shape, dated by Fredrich to the 2nd
century
Commentary
The
B.C.
base contains two records of initiation, i and ii. It is impossible to whether the inscriptions were original or i and ii list Both say secondary. individual initiateswith their accompanying servants, akolouthoi.
ockoAouOoc,
Eipr|vr|.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
99
Figure 31. Records of initiatesfrom Azorion and Kassandreia (35): left end of statuebase (top), centralpor
tion (middle), and rightend (bottom) Line 2: A^copiov, also known as Azoros, is a city inThessaly, as Fred rich notes (Polyb. 28.11; 7GX.2, p. 265). He also remarks that strategos is
the title of the eponymous magistrate of theTripolitai (i.e., the citizens of A^cbpiov, AoAi%r|, FrvjOiov). Line 3: The name napjuevioaicoc; seems to be recorded with double sigma only in the present inscription and in Gonnoi II 261 (undated). The suffix -iccKoq, however, occurs with two sigmas all over the Greek world.
is very rare, as opposed to its rather fre quent masculine counterpart MewXXoq. Apart from the present inscription, it is attested, tomy knowledge, only in I.Delos 298.A, line 10 (240 B.C.). occurs elsewhere inMacedonia, but is attested The name 'r7i7c6o"xpaxo<; Line 4: The
inKassandreia
name MevvXXa
for the firsttime.
while 5: Fredrich prefers to punctuate after Kaoaav8peixiq, after KiOccpioxpia. I refrain from expressing a definite opinion on s conjecture.Moreover, Menyllas occupation, but tend to supportWilhelm the first record too has akolouthos, followed by the name itmodifies. Line
Wilhelm
Line 6: Salviat interprets themention of the kitharistria as evidence formusical performance at the Samothracian festival. Although there is
no evidence that this particular musician participated in any Samothra cian performance, the mention of her profession may be related to the importance of theatrical performances for the Samothracian cult (cf. the Dionysiac
artists in 10 and 11).
ioo
chapter
6
Figure 32. Record of initiatesfrom Thessaloniki andHerakleia apo Strymonos (36) 36
Record of initiates fromThessaloniki41
and Herakleia
apo
Fig. 32
Strymonos Stele ofThasian marble, broken at top and bottom. The back is rough picked. A piece is broken off at the top left corner.Acquired in 1926 by
of Chapouthier fromChrysostomos Nimorios.42 Archaeological Museum Samothrace, courtyard, inv.49.438. H. 0.225 m,W. 0.29 m, Th. 0.055 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 58. Cf. Chapouthier 1935, p. 234, n. 4; Robert 1936, p. 53; Hiller von Gaertringen,7GXII Suppl. (1939), p. 149, under no. 195; Hemberg 1950,
p. 209, n. 6; Salviat 1962,p. 269; Robert 1963,pp. 76-77; BullEp 1964 378.
2nd-3rd century a.d.? [. ?]IO? GeacocAoveiKeuc;, M. 'OpcpiSioqAyy\ciXaoq
fHpaK^ecbxr|(;octcoIxpuuovoc;,
KXau8iO(; luuxpopoc; 5
GeaoaAoveiKcuc;,
MdpKioq MvjpiajLioq 0eao"ocAoveiK?t)(;.
[8]o\)Aoi euoePeifc] Fraser.
1 IOX Fraser.
3 Ixp-uaovoc,
Fraser.
8 Dimitrova,
5]o\)Xoi
E\)o"?p[ioD?]
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The rectilinear hand, consistent with a date in the 2nd and 3rd centuries a.d., resembles that of 30 (except for the omega), 41, inscription iii,45,116, 166, and perhaps 44. Fraser must have not seen a photograph of 30, since he concludes that the hand is quite different from that of any other Samothra cian inscription, but resembles the style of inscriptions fromThessaloniki
41. See
also 37, line 7, for a Thessa
lonikian initiate,and 166 forpossible initiates
from Thessaloniki.
42. Cf.
Salviat
1962, p. 269.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
IOI
n. 1). He suggests that the carverwas trained in that (p. 108, style (p. 108). It seems tome that such a connection would be hard to prove, in view of
the above examples of Samothracian documents with rectilinear lettering. Line 1:There is space for one or two letters before the dotted vertical. First letter: bottom part of vertical stroke. NE are in ligature. Line 2: HE are in ligature. Line 3: TH and TP are in ligature.The omicron of anb and the letters uovo
are much
smaller
than
the other
characters;
see
Commentary.
8: Top part of a circle; upper part of upsilon; apex of a triangle; a circle; top vertical; top leftvertical joined with top horizontal; of top part upper part of upsilon; top leftvertical joined with top horizontal; top left vertical joined with top horizontal; top part of beta or rho; top horizontal followed by the top part of a vertical. Line
Commentary
Although the titlemystai eusebeis ismissing, the listing of slaves in line 8 makes ithighly probable that themonument is a record of initiates, since the typical layout of such documents has at firstmystai, followed by freed men
or
slaves.
1:There must have been at least one letter (or a ligature) before the first preserved letter. It is unclear whether a complete name was in scribed there orwhether itwas transferred from the line above. It ismore Line
logical to expect a full name, since all other names in the inscription are kept within a single line. Line 2: The nomen Orfidius is relatively rare, as Fraser notes. He cites the names of C. Orfidius Benignus (legatus leg. I Adiutr. in a.d. 69) and P. Orfidius Senecio {consul suffectusin a.d. 148), but it is impossible to
establish a connection with theM. Orfidius in the present document. Line 3: Robert (p. 77) points out that Fraser's reference to his article in RPhil 1936 is incorrect, since the article in question does not refer to the so-called Herakleia
in question is identified anb ?xpt>|a6vo(;.The Herakleia as Robert town Collart43 and with the of Zervochori, by Honigmann44 notes. He draws attention to the fact that the usual appellation of the town is Sivxikti, while "of the Strymon" is attested only inHierocles (639.9), and suggests that 5avxikt|was probably inscribed originally in the present
document, and then corrected to "of the Strymon," which can explain the discrepant letter size. It has to be noted, however, that Eivxikti does not appear in inscriptions,while "of the Strymon" occurs also in a grave epigram fromDion for a renowned doctor from 'HpocKAeiccXxpuucovic, (SEGXXX1 630.8, Roman date). It is curious that in this inscription Expupxovic, is spelled with omega. This unusual feminine adjective is attested in Stephanus of Byzantion
(s.v.),
spelled
XxpDurjvic,.
Line 6: Robert comments on the curious semantics of the name My rismos. He mentions that names deriving fromwords denoting ointments are typical of the Imperial period and cites several parallels, listed inBullEp 1939 171,1953 194, and 1954 159. The last reference contains five examples of the name Myrismos, given inKallipolitis 1953. Line 8: Fraser suggests that a name in the genitive singular, e.g.,
1937, pp. 503-507. 44. Honigmann 1939, p. 15.
43. Collart
(of the slaves' master), should be expected after 8oi3Aoi. He Euoepiou also allows for the possibility 8ouAoi euaePeTc;, but prefers to restore a
102
CHAPTER
6
personal name because the expression is unparalleled. On the other hand, the remains on the stone are consistent with restoring euaePei*;. Fraser is not convinced that the horizontal mark after the beta is a letter at all, but I see clear traces of a top horizontal and a top vertical. 37
Record
of initiates fromThessaloniki,
Amphipolis, and Beroia on a tenon Marble broken with for insertion below. The stele, top, xco ev Aocp8ocve?uoi(; k. textwas copied Tcocpoc by Dionysios Markopoulou AnunTpicp Hav0O7ioiL)^cp.Part of the Froehner collection. Non vidi. H. 0.60 m,W. 0.35 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. ca. 0.015 m. kcci Pip^ioOfiKn (Smyrna) II, 2-3, Edd. Markopoulou, MoDoeiov (1876-1878) 17, 219 (non vidi); Fredrich, IG XII.8 195; Robert 1936, p. 52, no. 44, ph.; Hiller von Gaertringen, IGXII Suppl. (1939), p. 149. Cf. BullEp 1938 309; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69.
Robert 38
b.c-a.d.
and Robert, BullEp
1958 270, p. 256;
43
[eni pocoiAictx;]
[Av]xi|jiSovxo<; xov [....] vac.
AEIAOY-
5 OiAipcoq
oq 10
vac.
Apxeuiauyo-
BiOd-
dyopavojuo-uvlroq]
Oi^exoupou xov Anjjr|Tpio[/u] coq8e MaKeSoveq dyoDoiv exotx; A k[oci .] Kai P, urjvoc;
era-date 1(?)1
0eooaAoviKe\)[cJ
uyooxai e-oaePeiq- Ap%inoX\[q\ NiKOTco^eco^*A|X(pi7io^iTa[i] [r]^a\)Kia(; A7ioM*o8cbpoD,
KA-eoTcdxpa
vvoioq
08086x0-0, Aio
rtaxDKioi)
FXavKiaq
aneXzxtQe
Mavxaq
[p]oi- BiQvq r^a-OKioi), Koxdc; 15 r^oruKuyo,
rAm)
Atco^covioc;
[k]io\),Mr|xp68copo<; BiOdoc;, [AjOnvicov Bi0tjo<; vacat vac.
Ilepixoct;
Aiovoaioq
Ap%e
BepoiocTot; vSpou, 20
noXecoq"AXvnoq
Fredrich, Kai
I] Fredrich,
aaXoviKevlq]
Robert.
Fredrich, Mavxdc, 18 riepaac, Fredrich,
?ovxoc;,
Aeovxoq.
.... Fredrich, vac. 7 [A' kocI .] Robert. Robert,
Robert.
3 Ayi8o\)
8 Ap%?7t6^ecoc,
Robert.
Totxpicov
vac. Toucpicov
Mevd
vac.
Ileprcac,
Fredrich,
Robert.
vac. Robert. Fredrich,
NiKOTcoXecoq Robert.
Fredrich,
17 A6r|vicov
Robert;
0eoaaXoviK?[icJ
l^eiSoi)
20
[A]6r|vicov Robert, vac. Robert, O.A
6
[A
0eo
13 MavTa
Robert.
In latere sinistro:fPG)q
ve/Tpwq
Fredrich,
OiAe|pcoc,
Bi0-doc, Robert.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and elegant; see the photograph inRobert's edition. Line 6:1 see a clear alpha, followed by kappa in the photograph.
initiates
whose
is
ethnic
known
Commentary
is a record of initiates fromThessaloniki, Amphipolis, and Beroia. and Beroia must have accompanied those
This
initiates fromThessaloniki
The
fromAmphipolis and their freedmen. Line 3: On the agoranomoi see 3, ad line 13. Line 6: If iota is to be restored in the brackets, then the date of the inscription would be 111 years after 148 b.c. (the start of the respective Macedonian
era;
see
ad
34),
i.e.,
38
b.c.,
as Fredrich
calculates.
Yet
any
1 and 9 seems possible, so the era date could be 191, 181, 171, 161, 151, 141, 131, 121, or 111, and the date of the inscription would fall in any of the following years: 38, 28, 18, 8 b.c., or a.d. 3, 13, number between
23,33,43. The name on the left side, Phileros Bithyos, was omitted initially. Line 7: OeaaocAoviKeufcJ was added later in the vacant space, as the ethnic of Apxe7toAi[cJ NiKOTioAecoq; see IGX1I Suppl. (1939), p. 149. Line 11:A KA?07udxpa 0?o56xou is attested in an epitaph from Egypt (SEG VIII 384), but no additional information is available. Lines 13-14: Robert assumed that the freedmen are Dionysios and see are JGXII 149. There difficulties with this Mantas; Suppl. (1939), p. interpretation,
however.
First,
the
name
Mantas
occurs
primarily
in
its
feminine form,Manta. It is also possible that Aiovuoioc, Mocvxocc,is a single person. Another difficultywith understanding Dionysios andMantas as the freedmen is the position of the title aK?Xzx)Qe\ [p]oi. It normally precedes the names itmodifies (cf. 41, side B, 46, 53, and 63), and so I prefer to connect it to the names that follow. Lines 14-16: Kotys and Bithys are among themost common Thracian
names. For Bithys, see ad7S, line 18.The men with patronymics Glaukiou may be brothers. Lines 16-21: Presumably Metrodoros, Athenion, and Phileros Bithyos (lines 6-9, left side) are brothers (possibly sons of Bithys in line 14). Rhouphion and Alypos may also be brothers. The ethnic Beroiaios modi fies the name (or names) that follows, as Robert noted. Moreover, all of the ethnics in this inscription precede the names they refer to.
THRACE For other material pertaining toThrace, see 137. On the importance of the Samothracian cult there, see ad 19 and Chapter 9. See 39 and 53 for certain initiates from Byzantion and 67 and 134 for possible initiates from there.
38
Records of Roman
of initiates from Philippi initiates
of unknown
and Chios,
and
Fig. 33
provenance
Stele ofThasian marble, broken above and on the left, rough-picked on back. Found in Palaiopolis, now in Paris, Musee du Louvre, inv.Ma. 4190.1 saw it in July 2001. H. 0.29 m,W. 0.18 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.015 m (lines 1-2), 0.025 0.03 m (line 3), 0.02-0.025 m (line 4), 0.01-0.015 m (lines 5-9).
CHAPTER
104
Edd. Reinach
6
1892, p. 203, no. 6; [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl. 1.3 (1893)
CIL I2 (1918) 666]. 12319];Fredrich,7GXII.8 209; [Lommatzsch, Cf.Kern
1893, p. 373, no. 17.
century B.C.?
2nd-lst
[-]ASQN [-OjiAjntetx;
iv
[-] ii T(iti) iii [-]Valeries
5
Xicov
vacat
ut>GTai
* l(ibertus)m(ystes) pi(us) (sic) m(ystes) leaf
[eu]oe
vacat peiq N\)U(p65 vacat copoqNi)|icpo8[co] [pou]. vacat
Fredrich. 1 [np]dcjcovFredrich. 4fortasse Valerie (sic) s(ervus)?Dimitrova, m(yste)s Fredrich,m(ystes) Reinach. Epigraphical Commentary Fredrich notes that the lettering of lines 1-2, 3, and 4 differs from that of 5-8. He dates lines 1-2 to the 2nd century B.C. and lines 5-8 ("pessime scripti") to the 1st century B.C.,whereas lines 3 and 4 must have been writ ten at different times between the 2nd and 1st centuries B.C.
Line 4: The final s, represented by previous editors in the reading a m(yste)s, is leaf. Commentary The fragment contains four separate inscriptions. Inscription i is a record of an initiate from Philippi, ii and iii are of two Roman initiates, and iv is of an initiate from Chios.
1: [IIp]d^cov, though plausible, is not the only possible restora tion, since there are various other names ending in -dc^cov,e.g., Anaxon or Phylaxon. Line 4: It is unclear whether Valeries is amisspelled name or an ethnic, as Reinach noted. Line
Lines
7-8: The
name Ni)|i(p65copo<; is attested elsewhere on Chios
(e.g., L Chios 408.1). 39
of initiates from Byzantion and Perinthos Fig. 34 Base ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides, inscribed on front and top; two dowel holes with pour channels are visible on top, one near the m from the left on the right edge, the other ca. 0.30 edge. The inscription near is in the left dowel hole. Found 2004 the workmen of top (side B) by the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities, on the eastern bank Records
of the eastern streambed of the lower part of the ancient city,at an elevation of ca. 43 m, ca. 120 m southwest of the southeast tower of the Gattilusi fortification. Its long axis lies in a north-northwest direction. Ephoreia inv. 68.
to south-southeast
Figure 33. Records of initiatesfrom Philippi and Chios, and ofRoman initiates
of unknown
provenance
(38). Photo ? C. Larrieu, courtesyMusee du Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
initiates
whose
Ed. Matsas H.
ethnic
is
known
2006, pp. 128-129. 1.35 m, Th. 0.667 m; L.H. 0.022 m (side A), 0.01 m
and Dimitrova
0.26 m,W.
(sideB). 1st century
b.c.-2nd
century
a.d.
SideA Aya0fii %\)%r\\ 87tiPaaiAECoq NiKOGXpdxoi) ut)crcai evGefieiq B-u^dvxioi Flo. KacrcpiKKx; AjtcpoCq 5KdpTtoq riocm riepwGioq Agkat|7u68oto<; BocGiXeiSoi) Mupcov npoK^o-o xpocpijioqAgkat|7uo86xo\) SovXoq
SideB ?7ciPaGiAecoc;Modgcdviou xou Aioyevotx; TO
Figure 34. Record of initiatesfrom Byzantion and Perinthos (39): sideA (above), sideB (below) (not at same scale)
.B
.
iix>Gxr\q euGepfjc,.[.
[.!_c.a-.15.]poi[.c.a-.15.]
B.2fortassexov
B.'
.ca.5..]
Io6
CHAPTER
6
Commentary Epigraphical The inscription on top of the base is veryworn, and displays lunate letter shapes.
Commentary
The inscriptions on the front (A) and top (B) are records of initiation.That on side B may be later than that on A, judging by the letter style. Both inscriptions most probably represent a secondary use of the base; the dowel
holes suggest that a block stood on top,which may have held the original inscription. Initiate lists are frequently inscribed on reused surfaces.45This
is the first record of initiation definitely found in the ancient city: other monuments have been found between the city and the sanctuary. So far most of the initiate lists found in ancient contexts have come from the sanctuary, and especially the area around the Stoa. Both eponymous kings are hitherto
unknown.
name Castricius is attested from the 1st century b.c.; hence the terminus post quern. The name Publius Castricius is attested for several familymembers mentioned in an epitaph from Ephesos {I.Ephesos 2266), but a clear connection with theCastricius in the present monument cannot be established. None of the Castricii listed inPIR2 has the prae The
nomen
Roman
Publius.
on the first Apphous and Papas are sometimes accented a semantics have been the of freedman, judging by syllable. Karpos may The
his
names
name.
singular IlepivOioc, refers toAsklepiodotos, although naturally his household slave must have come from Perinthos too. Line B.2: xov B' is a frequent expression in Greek documents and would make good sense as referring to the patronymic of the eponymous Lines A.6-7:The
king. 40
Records
of Roman initiates of unknown provenance and Fig. 35 of initiates fromMaroneia, and a record of an epoptes Stele ofThasian marble, broken on top and on the left,badly damaged. Found near the Rotunda ofArsinoe. Its present location is unknown. H.
0.56 m,W. 0.25 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 39, no. 3, pi. 71:3; [Mommsen, CIL
III Suppl. 1.1
(1889) 7368]; [Cagnat,IGR 1.4 (1905) 849]; Fredrich,JGXII. 8 215. a.d.
64? (vss. 1-17), a.d. 65 (vss. 18-21)
i
[C. Laecanio
Basso, M.
Licinio Crasso]
[Frugico(n)s(ulibus)?] [- -dies-
5
[-]Qj
-]
[mysta]e pii Clodius
Longus [- -]IAANDRVS SAPAMONI -
-]Leontiscus [L]eon[t]isci ii [eis]dem co(n)s(ulibus) [-?- id]usMaias May
8-14
45. Cole
1984, p. 41.
INITIATES
WHOSE
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
IO7
. f p 11
KQ.-C LODI
VS
!?NGV5
(-! AANDIW55 A PAMONI 1 l'>ON n.f
[d F0NT!5CVi
D E M -Co 5 3MAIA5 i'Y-STAEPfl .MAM Miiy?', I AAP<J
AYCTA n o C I4 U N CTPATONEIKH
IOC
ACnAC
iAC
NO AVATTI COVLSTI A Co enofiTHc FYao p o c A h M o ci/?^0 Y 35. Records of Roman initi Figure ates of unknown and of provenance initiates from Maroneia, and a record of an epoptes
(40).
Conze
1875, pi. 71:3
_?_y
[m]ystaepii
10
[A]maranthus(?) uucrtou
iii
Mccpco
veiTail
15
-]
vac.
-]
Vac.
noenScovioc, ZTpaTOV?lKT| -].[-----] -]
.
[A. Licinio Nerva
[- -]Ao7iaoiac;
Silia]no
M
87io7CTr|q
ITo068co
Attico Vesti
[no co(n)s(ulibus)] 20
poq Armoo[Tpdx]o\). Fredrich.
1-4,8,18
Hirschfeld
(z^/Fredrich).
6 [-Eu]andrus
[P]aramoni
correxitWA. (apud Fredrich). 7 correxitWA. (apud Fredrich). 11MARANIIIVI Mommsen, Fredrich.
M.
Aranteius
Wil.
(apud
Fredrich),
M.
Aranplius,
M.
Aratrius,
chapter
io8
6
Commentary Epigraphical The stele is now lost, but one can get an idea about the letter forms from s facsimile.
Conze
Line 6: IAANDRVSSAPAMONI, facsimile. Line 7:1 FONTISCUS, Line Line Line
facsimile.
11:MARAN
11IVS, facsimile. 16: Either a lunate sigma or an omicron. 17: The top part of a circle is visible on the facsimile.
Commentary
The
stele contains three records of initiates and one of an epoptes, dated
according
to the Roman
consuls.
Greeks
and Romans
from Maroneia
are
listed together. Lines 1-2: The
reason forHirschfeld s restoration is the assumption that the consuls of the previous year, a.d. 64, must have been listed. Of course, this is only a conjecture. Line 5: A Clodius is also mentioned as an initiate in 14. He was a freedman of a certain CX Clodius, but it is unclear whether his master
might be related to the initiate in the present document. Line 6: [Ev]andrus is not the only possible restoration, and itdoes not match the remains on the stone: the facsimile shows a vertical line before is indeed the first preserved letter.As for his patronymic,
fact,
Ilocpapovoi)
line 6.
occurs
as
a
patronymic
in the
next
document,
41,
9: There must have been a numeral before Id]us, since for the the day of the Ides we would expect the ablative; any day between May 8 and 14 is possible; cf.Clinton 2001, p. 35. name (unlike Aranteius Line 11: Amaranthus is a well-attested and Aranplius); cf. CIL II 178, 2432, 4970.360, 6257.13, CIL III 1770, Line
CIL V 4722, etc. Lines 12-17: It is unclear whether theGreek initiateswere part of the same record as theRoman initiates. Perhaps theywere, because there is no in date for their either record ii or iii. separate listing Line 13: Hirschfeld assumed that the letters -[veixai] were on another stone, but Fredrich advanced the counterargument that this is a stele, not a block. Presumably the ethnic was continued in the beginning of line 13 or on the side of the stele. (Fredrich) 41
Records
of initiates fromThasos
andMaroneia
Fig.
36
Two joining fragments of a block ofThasian marble, inscribed in front (side A) and on the right side (side B). Broken on top, back, and on the left. Found in "the bigger tower" (Conze). Paris, Musee du Louvre, inv. Ma. 4192.1 saw the stone in July 2001. H. 0.61 m,W. 0.44 m,Th. 0.23 m; L.H. 0.025 m (fragment a, except line 10, 0.01 m), 0.02 m (fragment b). Edd. Conze 1860, p. 63; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 220. Cf. Collini 1990, p. 261; SEG LX 748; Salomies 1996, p. 118 (SEG
LXVI 1186).
IS
ETHNIC
WHOSE
INITIATES
KNOWN
io9
of 2nd?
End of 1st century A.d.?beginning
SideA [(niaxiq ?\>a]8pr\qBouPia O vacat
spatium
. . [. .ca:5..]
versus
(sic) Ti. Oaxxo\ho(/u]
[enl $]aGi\eoq [Tit]od
viov
uuoxk;
eiaaePriq
5
unius
Kxr|ai(piA,o'o
0acna [. .ca.5. .]x8iuioc
napajjovcn)
[r\]Kai Zcoaijirj
iii iv
[. .ca:5. .]Soxo<;
AkoXXcdviov.
[ml fijaaiXeioq M. T(odPiod) 'Ik[8]oioc; Avtioxod [xco]vo<;uuaxou euaepeic;
10
Opov
[MapcoJveTxai KnoXXodwpoq TOA [.ca3.]ou,
EvfiovXa
Aiovucuox),
15
XEI
TioDxa
[.ca:3.] AiovDOiKAv8iot), 'EvTlUOD.
SideB [. JIAAI[M]
6 Kai riocAvf.. .] 6c7l8A,81L)0[8pOl]
N8iKoox[p]axo[(;]
20
rXa(p\)p[i]8[r|]^ Ta\xoq vacat
EioiScopoc; 'E7ra(pp68e[ixo(;] vacat vac.
o
unius
spatium
versus
riai?
zL cpr co -O
Fredrich. 1 Baipia Op6[vxcovo(;?] Fredrich. 3 init.Dimitrova, Fredrich.
6 [OiAolxeijiioc
Fredrich.
14 TiOoxoc
Fredrich.
Fredrich,
12-13
TioDxa
ToA,| [uai|ou? Dimitrova.
Dimitrova.
13-14
[Tip8pi]o\) Lei|
[a-irvicJ
Epigraphical Commentary The hands of the five records are different (note especially the shape of the sigma: in inscription i it is four-bar, in ii lunar, in iii rectilinear, in iv rectilinear,
and
in v four-bar).
10: The name is carved in smaller letters. Presumably Avxio%od was omitted from the record below. Line
Line Line
penultimate
14: TIOYTA lapis. 24: A bottom horizontal letter
precedes
the pi of Ilai^
'iKeaioq
The
is an omicron.
There might be traces of erased letters below the vertical 6 8fjuo<;.
IIO
CHAPTER
6
Commentary The block contains records of initiates fromThasos
(inscription ii) and to dated different (iv), years. Inscriptions i, iii, and v are presum are ably also records of initiation, but no details preserved. The thickness of the block matches that of the theoroi blocks, but its preserved height
Maroneia
Figure 36. Records of initiates from Thasos andMaroneia (41): sideA (left),side B (right).Photos? M. and P. Chuzeville
(A), C. Larrieu (B), courtesy du Louvre, Department of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan Antiquities
Musee
(0.61 m) is too great.The vertical upside-down inscription in the lower left part of the document (side B) seems unrelated to the records of initiation, but it can provide a clue about the nature of the monument. It predates
the initiation records, given its layout, and forms part of a dedication by the demos. This means that the block was part of a base, which held the letters 6 orjuoq horizontally, in the upper left corner. Line 2: A OA. Kxr|cn(piAo<;was agoranomos in the yearwhen M. Toupioq Opovxcov was eponymous king, as 45 testifies (on the agoranomoi see above, 3, adlinz 13).Most probably he is the same person, and in this case record ii should be dated to approximately the same time as iv.The name Opovxcov is also attested for the eponymous king in 97. It is possible are related. people
that the two
Line 3: [Tix]ou suits the space better, and ismore commonly attested as the praenomen of Flavius. As for the abbreviation in line 2, it regularly represents the name Titus inGreek inscriptions.A certainTitus Flavius is also attested as basileus in 95. He may well be the same person, given the similar lettering and the spelling poccnAeoc,,present in both records. Line 6:The name OiAoxei|iia/OiAoxiuia is apparently not attested epi are numerous in for graphically except ships (e.g.,/GIF 163l.d.484).There stances of the name Ilccpdp.ovoc;onThasos, and no identification is possible. Lines 9-10: On Opovxcov, see also 45, line 2.
Line 13 end: There aremany possibilities for restoration. Line 14: The name Ti0t>xoc is apparently unattested. Tiodxoc, however,
is a common
Thracian
name.46
46. See Detschew 1957, p. 507; cf. IGBulg 1005,1348.
initiates
ethnic
whose
is
known
III
Figure 37. Record of initiatesfrom Ainos
(42).
Samothrace 2.1, pi. XVIII:42
42
Record of initiates fromAinos
Fig. 37
on the right,with Fragment of stele of Thasian marble, preserved double molding above. The back is reworked, perhaps close to the original surface.A dowel hole is visible on top, at 0.065 m from the right edge. A
caduceus is engraved in the lower right part of the stone (cf. 104,156,169). of Found near theAnaktoron on June 30,1953. Archaeological Museum inv. 53.84. Samothrace, courtyard, H. 0.48 m,W. 0.19 m, Th. 0.13 m; L.H. 0.015-0.018 m (lines 1-5,
9), 0.025 (line6), 0.02m (line7).
Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 42. b.c.-lst
1st century
century
a.d.?
[eni (3aai^eco]q Oprjvi%oo [tov-]o5(opou [ut>GToa e\)o]Ep?i(; Aivioi [-0]iX(oxou 5
[-A]nur|Tpio|/D]
[-]HNOI vacat
[-]ioi vacat m 0.05 spatium
[]YAOZ[- -]
Fraser.
2
[xox> Ai]o5cbpoi)
Fraser.
chapter
112
Commentary Epigraphical The inscription is now badly defaced. The
6
letters are squarish.
Commentary
is a record of initiates from Ainos. The date is unknown, possibly as early Imperial, judging by letter forms, Fraser suggests. The eponymous official may be numismatically attested as OPYNI;
This
41.
see/GXII.8,p.
Line 2: [xov Ai]o8cbpou is not the only possible restoration. Line 6: Fraser suggests that -nvoc, is a patronymic rather than an but
ethnic,
such
are
patronymics
extremely
rare as
opposed
to ethnics
end
ing in -rrvoc,(see, e.g., 46, col. I, line 11, Apu8r|v6(;).The onlywell-attested example of such a patronymic that I know of is the genitive "EXhiyvoq. Given the ending -toe, in the following line, I consider it likely that both lines 6 and 7 contained ethnics.
43
Record
of initiates(?) fromAinos
A fragment ofThasian marble, found inChora, transferred from the church IIavayo'u5a into the house of Phardys.The inscription is now lost. It is unclear whether the fragment is preserved on any side. H. 0.30 m,W. 0.15 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H.? Edd. Tachydromos (newspaper, Istanbul) May 29, 1898 (non vidi);
Fredrich, 7GXII.8 217. Cf. BullEp 1900, p. 129. lst-3rd
century
a.d.?
[dya0]fix<)[%x\] [eki paaiAecoq[jlL-ugtcu e-uaepjeic,
-]aGice>vo<;[-?-] Aiv[icov
vel
-101]
[-To?]u(poD[-?-] 5
[-]OEI[----].
Fredrich. trova. 6-ogi[od?]
2
'Ijacncovoc; Fredrich. .Fredrich.
4 Alv[(cov]
Fredrich,
Alv[(cov
vel
-ioi] Dimi
Epigraphical Commentary The letters, judging from Fredrich's majuscule copy, look rounded, with lunate epsilon and sigma; hence the tentative date. Commentary
This probably is a record of initiates fromAinos, in view of the likely res toration in line 3. Fredrich's publication is based on Phardys's copy. Line 2: Toccucov is an extremely rare name, although it is tempting to imagine a Samothracian king with the name of themythical figure Iasion. I know of only one inscription, however, thatmentions this name, and it is far from providing a certain reading (iGXII.3 1504: koc[i Toc]oi[co]v[?]). on the other is ?ocgicgv, hand, relatively common, and is attested for a Samothracian king; see 87. Another problem with Fredrich's restoration is that usually both the firstname and the patronymic of the king are given.
OoccncovGaAoccucovoc, ispossible, inwhich case the inscription is to be dated
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
II3
to a.d.
14.Unfortunately this is only a hypothesis, since the remains of the inscription do not allow for any cross-references to be made. Line 4: Both the genitive and nominative plural are possible. Line 5: Toficpoq is a very common name in the Roman period, and seems to most be the To?]\)(po\) likely conjecture. 44
Record of mystides fromAinos Fragment of Thasian marble. Discovered castle" (Conze), but now lost. I saw a squeeze
May
218.
in "the lower part of the in the Berlin Academy in
2004.
0.18 m,W. 0.22 m, Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.01 m. Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 621, no. 14; Fredrich, 7GXII.8
H.
Cf. Conze
1860, p. 65; SEG LX 748.
Roman?
[uJuotiSec; ei)o-?p?![<;] Aiviou Kmvxioc
5
Mitaovoc;
['IJouaacx
rr|7rai7rA)pov
[-]IA
KaAAiKpaTOD
[-]nH
Nikcovoc;
[-]ION
[A]vti9Cov[tocJ Aiovuaiou.
[-]ION Fredrich.
4
['I]oDAaa
rr|7t[ai]7rupo<'d>
Mordtmann,
rY|7rai7TDpov Dimitrova.
5
Fredrich. 6 [KaA,A,i6?]7rr| Fredrich. 7 legitHiller (apud Fredrich). ['IodAJioc
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is rectilinear; for Samothracian parallels, see ad 30. Line 4: rr|7cai7r\)pov: the squeeze shows faint traces of alpha and iota and
a clear
nu.
Commentary
The inscription represents a record of female initiates fromAinos, dated to the Roman period on account of the names Kmvxia and ['IJodaacc. It is noteworthy that theywere initiated as a group and thereforemust have arrived together as a group. Presumably they were accompanied by an entourage
of servants.
Line 4: rr|7iai7rupo\) is not attested. rr|7t?7ropi<;,on the other hand, is a
Thracian Gepepyris
feminine can
be
name.47 a feminine
IGBulg or
1346
has
a masculine
where
rr|7i;?7r/upi<; Movxocvo'u, the
name?although
latter
is less likely, for lack of good parallels. It is possible that Iulias cognomen was modified to resemble Greek feminine names in -ov (cf. the names in -ov in lines 7-8) orwas recorded incorrectly on the stone. 45 47. Cf. Detschew IGBulg
2343.
1957, p. 106;
A
Record of Roman initiates of unknown provenance of an initiate fromAinos
and
Fig. 38
Base ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides, rough-picked on back. clamp cutting is visible on top at the right edge. Six laurel crowns are
CHAPTER
ii4
6
carved above the inscription. Two of them, the ones on the right, are not du Louvre, inv.Ma. 4193.1 saw the stone fully preserved. Paris, Musee
inJuly2001.
H. 0.695 m, W. 0.62 m, Th. 0.017 m (lines 2-6). Ed. Fredrich, 7GXII.8 221.
0.14 m; L.H.
0.02 m
(line 1), 0.012
Cf. BullEp 1911,p. 321;RobertandRobert,BullEp 1958270, p. 256; Robert 1963,pp. 67-69; Salomies 1996,p. 118 (SEGXLVl 1186). End of 1st century A.D.-beginning
of 2nd
corona
corona
corona
corona
corona
corona
Er
87tipaaiAecoq
M
ToDpiou Opovxco dyopavojLioCvxoq T((xod) OAaptaro KxnaupiAo'u jniaxou evjaepeic/ T. 'IouAioq voq
5
Niyep, T. ToDxeiAiov lloxeixou oIkovouoc, A. npoiiaioq, vacat NeiKoAaoc; OAI. OY Ai'vioc,.
Fredrich. 3 T(ixou) Dimitrova, OAapiou Fredrich. 5 Oikovo^oc, Fredrich, oiko vouoc, Dimitrova.
6 npoucnoc,,
'OAiou Fredrich.
Figure 38. Record ofRoman initi ates of unknown
provenance
and of
an initiate fromAinos (45). Photo?
M.
and P. Chuzeville,
Louvre, Department Etruscan Antiquities
courtesyMusee du of Greek, Roman, and
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
115
Epigraphical Commentary The rectilinear letter style resembles that of 41, inscription iii, except for the shape of the phi and themore elegant layout. Given the fact that the eponymous king is the same (41, inscriptions iii and iv), it is conceivable that the cutter might have been the same, too. For other Samothracian documents with rectilinear lettering, see ad 30. Line 1:Apparently the stonecutter began writing the text on this line, but then changed his mind because the textwould have been too close to the crowns, as Fredrich points out. This proves that the crowns are older than
the
text.
oblique stroke of what Fredrich took as an interpunct the digit 7 seems to be a straymark. resembling Line 6: npcueucx;: the dotted letters are almost illegible now. Line
3: The
Commentary
initiates and an Ainian initiate. The height of the block is comparable with that of 41, if one assumes that not much is missing from the latter.Given the crowns, it is likely that the block belonged to amonument base, which was reused. At least one other block must have
This
is a record of Roman
been attached to the right, and it probably held the original inscription. Lines 1-3: For the names of the officials and the date of the docu
ment,
see ad 41.
name Rubius, attested also as Rubbius and Roubius (see is Fredrich), relatively rare. Salomies suggests that the person in the pres ent inscription and in 41 may be related toTcuppioc MdpKOD &7teA,?D0?pa Line 2: The
TriyiAAa atThessaloniki. Lines 4-5: A person with the name ofGaius Iulius Niger is recorded as a hierophant in a catalogue of Cyzicene officials, (IMT 1459.A.II.19), dated to the reign ofTrajan. The same name appears inAE 1975 284 and 1979 35, and ILAlg I, 3279. People with the name Gaius Iulius Niger are rather frequently attested in papyri from the middle of the 2nd century a.d. Given the popularity of the name Gaius Iulius Niger, it seems im possible
to identify the person in the present inscription with any of his
homonyms.
Line 5: Fredrich takes oikovouoc; to be a personal name, but given the genitive of the name Titus Rutilius Potitus (which seems complete by itself,and not in need of a second cognomen), it seems more probable that itwas the title ofNiger or Prusius.
is not attested,while IIpoDOiac; occurs fre Line 6:The form npouaioq name was Latinized, especially quently. It is possible that the ending of the in view of the persons praenomen. Prusius may be attested in ILJug. 1365 and IMS II 19, but the endings in both documents are restored. 46
48. For material sos, see also 171.
pertaining
to Odes
of initiation ofThracian royalty,Romans, Odessitans,48 and a citizen ofAbydos Record
Fig. 39
Nine fragments of a stele of Thasian marble, broken in the upper holes right corner.The back is rough-picked and largely reworked; several were cut through it secondarily. A rebate of ca. 0.01 x 0.013 m running a along the bottom edge in front evidently marks the upper end of tenon,
n6
chapter
now missing. Found on on theWestern August 2, 1971, east of the Stoa of Hill, in the northeastern corner of room D. Archaeological Museum inv. 71.961.
Samothrace,
0.67 m, W. 0.47 m, Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.014-0.015 m (line 1), 0.032-0.033 m (lines 2-3), 0.025 m (lines 4-6), 0.015 m (line 6, lastword), 0.011-0.013 m (lines 7-8, except beta, 0.020 m), 0.009-0.011 m (lines 9-19, except rho), 0.009-0.012 m (lines 21-24), 0.013-0.017 m (line 25). H.
Ed. Clinton, forthcoming. Cf. Cole 1984, p. 120, n. 356.
Ca.
a.d.
40-45?
znl PocGiAecoc, AynGap/ou xou Ayn[Gdpxoi) ?]
i
raToc/IouAio^PaafKocJ P o i (i rj [ t a A ] k o u [. . . .8. . . .] [A]vxcov[(a Tp\)(pai]va pajaiAecoc, IIo] 5 Aeucovoc, [0DycVc]ripkoc[i Pocgiaigot|cJ w juu[gx]cu [nu]0o5cGpi8[ocJ vacat
spatium
unius
versus
I
Col.
[Koiv]xoc, 'Oiccdp^ioc,Am .[-] [ [. . . Joe,MaiKiAioq Tixou u[i]6(; [-nomen-]
II
Col. [
-]8ou
vvv [ KcapeMuoc, TaXXoq [K]o[i]vxo<; TaniXXioq Kowxod u[i]6c, [nomen [_]
10
-]noq -]A?\)C,
-]ez[!]6s [OeojSoaioc,
[[MevoiKecoqAPu8rrv6[cJ]
-k [.]v
AyaOrivopoc,
'OSnGGeixric,
IIoGiScbvioc, TeijaoKpaTOU^ amXcvQepoi
15
vv
'0]5noGeru[r|cJ
PAN[-
-Joe, [
[A]vxcov[i-] [ vacat
87CtpOCGlAicOC, 0?o8cOp[oi)? Mnxpcovaicxoc,
25
jauGxai
v
TOX)]
euGepepcJ
TaToQ Aupr|Aio<; MdpKou uioc, Tcp[t v AyaOcbvujLioc;XcoGiSdum) '08rj[GG?ixr|cJ GDVjLiUGxric;.
Clinton.
Epigraphical Commentary I have reprinted Clinton's epigraphical commentary, after collating itwith the
stone.
xr\q -]evq
Ejxecpavoc,
-'--]
[A]vxcovia [-] [Ajvxcovia [-] 20
-
[
[M]6cpKoc,Avxcovioc, [ ['OjTTxaxa
10
kt>Pepvr|
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
II7
Figure 39. Record of initiationof Thracian
royalty, Romans,
Odessi
tans, and a citizen ofAbydos (46) letterbefore break: bottom part of a vertical stroke letter: two vertical strokes. lacuna on the right is 0.13 m long and could have contained nine
Line 1:Next-to-last at the left.Last The letters
at most.
Line 2: Next-to-last
letterbefore break: apex and right oblique
of the alpha. The lacuna on the right is 0.095 m three or atmost four letters.
stroke
long and could have contained
Line 3: The lacuna on the right is ca. 0.198 m long and could have contained seven or atmost eight letters. Line 4: Next-to-last letter: vertical stroke on the left; the horizontal
attached to its lower end seems to curve upward on the right; a short stroke on the joining the center of the vertical seems to slant upwards. Last letter:
left the lower tip of a stroke, apparently oblique. The lacuna on the right, including the last preserved stroke, is ca. 0.17 m long and could have contained eight or atmost nine letters (if one was an iota).
Line 5: First letter: an upper apex. The right-hand lacuna is approximately 0.14 m long, enough for ap proximately eight letters; the restoration would have completely filled the space, with perhaps a little crowding.
n8
chapter
6
Line 6: Letter before last break: the upper tip of the leftoblique stroke and perhaps the bottom tip of the vertical of upsilon. Following line 6 there is a vacant space of approximately the same height as line 7.
Line 7: Last letter (following epsilon): only an upper serif,apparently over the center of the letter,perhaps lambda. Clearly a second column of names was inscribed, presumably starting
at the level of column I, line 7; its firstpreserved line does not align with column I, line 8; other lines in this column are similarly out of alignment with column I. Line 11: The second text in the erasure is apparently by a different hand, employing rectilinear epsilon and sigma instead of lunate. The original text is illegible. Line 13: Of the first letter the bottom parts of two verticals can be out in the photograph; half of a circle.
made
of the second a circle; of the third the left
Lines 21?25 may be by a different hand. The distorted character of line 25 undoubtedly reflects the difficulty that the cutter had in carving these lines after the stelewas erected, especially this last one. Line 21: The rho is quite faint. Line II.7: Apparent traces of letters, but they are difficult to distin guish.
Lines II.9-10: Having run out of space at the end of line 10, the cutter put the last syllable on the line above. Commentary
See Clinton's commentary for a detailed discussion of this document. The stone contains two records of initiation, i and ii. Inscription i provides our firstevidence thatThracian royalty took part in theMysteries of theGreat Gods. The only othermention ofThracian kings occurs in 53, where freed men of king Rhoimetalkes are listed as initiates.Gaios Ioulios Rhaskos, a hitherto unknown member of theThracian dynasty, is themost prominent initiate in this list,judging by the size and spacing of the lettersof his name.
Antonia Tryphaina (PIR2 A 900), daughter of Polemon I, king of Pontus, and wife of Kotys VIII, king ofThrace, is listed second. Clinton concludes thatRhaskos was most likely the son of Rhoimet alkes II (PIR2 1517), and adds other arguments for dating the inscription to a.d. 40-45. Rhaskos was probably the lastmember of theThracian royal line before Thrace became a Roman province. Most of the liberti have the same gentilicium as Antonia Tryphaina, and were presumably her freedmen, as Clinton observes. The people listed in column II may have been members of the s ship crew (cf. line 10). Line 1:The eponymous king is unknown, as Clinton notes. Line 8: Possibly [M6cpK]o<; MaiKiAaoc, Titod d[i]6(; [ToucpocJ,proconsul ofAchaia before a.d. 67 (PIR2M 44), who was honored with an equestrian statue at Olympia before a.d. 67 (IvO 334). Lines
12-13:
For
connections
between
Odessos
also 171. Agathenor
is a very
popular
name
at Odessos.
and
Samothrace,
see
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
KNOWN
II9
Lines 21-25: This is a different record of initiates, added later, as Clin are ton notes. Eponymous kings with the name or patronymic Theodoros name or attested in 1,17, inscription iii, and 34, and with the patronymic as at in 6, inscription ii, and 89; forTheodoros andMetronax Metronax tested on Samothracian coins, see IG XII.8, p. 41. Lines II.9?10: The name of the gubernator was probably added later, and the final syllable of KuPepvr|Tnc,was written on the line above, as remarks.
Clinton
47
initiates of unknown provenance, and records of and Tralles initiates fromAlopekonnesos
Record of Roman
Stele ofThasian marble, broken above and apparently below. The back is smooth. Itwas inscribed on both the left and right sides, but the letters are now badly damaged. Found in Chora, in the house of Phardys, after a door, being reused in the church Ayios Stephanos. A round building with flanked by a snake-entwined torch on either side, is carved on the front.
of Samothrace, Hall B, inv. 68.55. Archaeological Museum H. 0.51 m,W. 0.44-0.445 m,Th. 0.115 m; L.H. 0.01 m. Edd. Reinach 1892, p. 200, no. 3; [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl. 1.3 (1893) 190. 12323]; Kern 1893, p. 360, no. 6.A; Fredrich, IGXII.8
and Lehmann 1973, pp. 25-47, esp. pp. 32-33, with of front, fig. 24; Roux, Samothrace 7, pp. 32, 115?116, with photograph photographs, figs. 31, 79 (front). Cf. Lehmann
B.C.
1st century
Side A
i
iv
[mystjai[piei]
M.
Side B (in latere sinistro)
(in latere dextro)
[e]k\ ftaoiXe
Livius
wq Arjuo
Pamplus,
Babullius 5 ii
10
tov
[P]amphilus M.
1.
35
ITuGo
yevo-oc;
[A]stymeno[s] [e]ki PaoiAico[cJ
Tpa^iavo[i]
[AlriiaoKAeio-utcJ
[e]\)g?pf|(; [6] koctcc
[to]v ITuGoye [v]od AAome
40
[Kov]vr|aiO(; [jjjucrr/nc;
e\>
(paveixot) aycovog
xcov jTl)6[l]
Attivocc, 15
Aioyevou
45
[k]ai p,{)OTr|[cJ
[A]y5p6|aax[ocJ
[|a]uaTn<; 8\)a[?pf](;] [,,E]v5r||ao(;?
ie
Auorcoicoq
[A]r|jar|Tpi[oD],
Kp]axepoD,
A7coAAft)v[ioc;vel -it)r\q] 20 Mr|vcKpav[- -].
cov kcxi paycoyoc;
50
[-]
chapter
120
(jniaxri^eiL)G?[PricJ
[. JIKOS TOM[. vacat
iii
25
spatium
6
.]
3 vss.
?7U PaGiA^ECucJ [At|]|LlOKA?Orj [x]ou ITd0o[y?VOu] [jLiucn;]ca [?\)a?]
30
[PeTq-] [-]
Fredrich. Mr|vo(pdv[o\)(;]
11
[Kojvriaioq
Fredrich.
19 Dimitrova,
XnoXk6sv[\o
Fredrich.
20
Fredrich.
Commentary Epigraphical The inscription isnow badly defaced, and I have mostly reprintedFredrich's text.
Line 49: Third
and fourth letters: apparently a triangle and a circle.
Commentary
right side of the stone contains three records of initiates, one inLatin (inscription i) and two inGreek (ii, iii), ofwhich iimentions two initiates fromAlopekonnesos. The left side contains one record ofGreek initiates (iv) fromTralles. The ethnics of the other initiates are unknown. All of
The
theGreek
lists are dated to the same year, but the date of the Latin
list is
unclear.
Perhaps the most striking feature of this stone is the reliefwith the round building.There are three other such stelai (56-58). They allmention
Cyzicene initiates, and Phyllis Lehmann concluded that the building rep resented is a symbol of Kyzikos: a round building is depicted on Cyzicene coins (p. 37, fig 26) and on a funerary stele from Kyzikos (p. 43, fig. 27). The present inscription, however, does not mention Cyzicene initiates. This might mean that the text is not contemporary with the relief or that Cyzicene initiateswere mentioned on the part of the stone that is now lost (on any side of the stele), including the upper part of the front face. The other possibility would be not to assume a definite connection between the relief and Kyzikos; see also ad 56. Lines
14-15: A certain Axxivac, AioyEVouc, ismentioned in IOSPE I2 at on coast found Chersonesos the north of the Black Sea and dated 394, to a.d. 140. It is unlikely that he was the same person. Lines 19-20: A certain KnoXX&vioq Mnvocpdviou occurs in an Ephe no identification sian list of kouretes eusebeis (LEphesos 447, undated), but is possible for lack of further information.Moreover, the names matching the
remains
of the
stone
are
quite
common.
Line 24, end: Perhaps an ethnic like Tojiixric;. Lines 34-35: The abbreviations IIY0 and IIY0O are numismatically attested for Samothracian officials; see 7GXII.8, p. 41.
Lines 39-46: Ajioctokoc, Ar|ur|TpioD was announcer of the Pythia celebrated inTralles; cf.Fredrich, adline 44). The term katangeleusis syn onymous with theoros as a festival announcer (cf. SylL3 635.32; OGIS 456;
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
121
Boesch
1908, p. 11, cited by Fredrich; and above, Chap. 1, pp. 13-15). Apart from festival announcer, AurxcoKoc; Ariunxpiorjwas also hieragogos.This I take also to be synonymous with theoros,as an envoy sent to a sanctuary to
a perform sacred mission; see below, ad 50. The name Amatokos cian, better attested as Amadokos (Detschew 1957, pp. 14-15).
AEGEAN
isThra
ISLANDS
see 120, and new record of regard to Kos possibly 122, line 1. A initiates found in 2005 provides information that initiates from Andros visited Samothrace; its publication is in preparation.
With
48
Record of initiates fromThasos49
and Philippi
Fig.
40
ofThasian marble with incised akroteria and cornice, broken back is rough-picked. A rectangular cutting is visible on top. in the Late Roman floor of the Sacristy on July 10,1939, second
Plaque below. The Found
arily used as a pavement inv. 39.547. H. 0.55 m,W.
slab. Archaeological
0.40 m,Th.
0.08 m; L.H.
Museum
of Samothrace,
0.035 m (line 1), 0.025-0.03 m
(line2), 0.025m (lines3-5), 0.02m (lines6-13).
Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben 1940, pp. 346-348, fig. 25; Fraser, Samo thrace2.1 (1960) 59. Cf. BullEp 1944 151a; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69; Robert and Robert,
BullEp 1964 378.
2nd-3rd century a.d.? in cornice:
dyaGfi toxH hCx PaaiAiax; 'Iou vuro 'HpcbSoi) jauoxai
below cornice:
euaePeu; 0daioi 5 Apioxayopaq Eiai8copo\) M.
Avxcovioq
T)7rxaxo<;
OiAa7i<7t>ex>
vacat 0.035 m Sc-uaoi
Apioxayopou
OiAOUuevc-q
Mayiavoq 10
OiAoaxopyoq [N]uu(piKO<;
leaf
[..:...]?
Figure 40. Record of initiatesfrom Thasos and Philippi (48)
49. For other material initiates from Thasos,
pertaining see 41,51,53,62.
to
[-]IE [] Fraser.
7 Apiaxayopa
Fraser,
Apioxayopov
lapis.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is highly decorated. Fraser notes (p. 110, n. 1) that the style is typical of northern Greece, and is found in 3rd-century a.d. Thasian inscriptions.
122
CHAPTER
6
Line 6:The second pi ofOiAi7c<7i>?i5(; is omitted. Lehmann-Hartleben see also Fraser, p. 110, n. 4) thinks that the letters of this line are 348; (p. sees no difference in style. I tend to agreewith Fraser's "sloppier," but Fraser conclusion. The cutter leftout a letter and squeezed the final sigma below the upsilon, but thismay have been due to lack of space.
Commentary
is a list of initiates fromThasos
This
Lines
2-3:
remarks
Fraser
that
and Philippi. the
is otherwise
eponym
unknown.
is illogical, since there
Line 4: Fraser thinks that the plural form Odoioi
initiate. Lehmann-Hartleben is only oneThasian (p. 348) believes that the a was meant M. Antonius but stele for Thasian, Optatus from originally a was stone to "later added the Philippi (probably by lucrative trick of the administration)." It seems to me thatwe need not assume that Optatus
was
added later (see Epigraphical Commentary, adYme 6), but the form Gdoioi can be explained by the fact that both Apurcocyopac, and his slaves were Thasians who were initiated. Lines
None
8?end:
of
the
slaves'
names
are
attested
elsewhere
on
Thasos.
Fraser notes that this is the only list ofThasian initiates. 41, 51, 53, and 62 record other Thasian 49
Records
mystai (p. 110), but
of initiates from Chios50 and Rome
Stele ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides,with twoGreek inscrip tions on the front side, another Greek inscription on the left, and one in Latin on the right side.The inscriptionwas found in Solinari, on the north
shore of Samothrace, some 4 km east of the sanctuary. Archaeological of Samothrace, courtyard, Ephoreia inv.C 81.2. H. 0.94 m, W. 0.315 m, Th. 0.12 m; L.H. 0.013-0.017 m (side A, m (side A, inscription i, lines 12-36; side inscription i, lines 1-11), 0.01 m (side C). side 0.022-0.025 A, inscription ii; B), Ed. Skarlatidou 1993, with photograph (SEG XLI, 717; AE 1992
Museum
502). Cf. BullEp 2nd?1st
1994 456; Clinton
century
2001, p. 32, n. 22.
B.C.?
SideA 3-4 lines
x
[-]
- -
[-]TAT.[-
-]
[-....] tovc,
ox?[(pavcba]ai
8i
5 k[aGTdc, ?A[- - -]TI O [- -] M?vd[v8poD k]ai Zdrup[ov] XoCTUpOD
%pVO(bl
OT?
(pdv[co]iapExr\q ?V?k[oc] Kod (pi[Ao]xi|uia<; xr\qziq e 10
amo-uc; 7rcca
jLiuaxai evoefiEiq
Kai
?(po
50. For other material initiates from Chios,
pertaining see 38, 49, 89.
to
WHOSE
INITIATES
AGrjvaioq
Ar||icbva^
AioaKo\)pi5rj(;
Mr|xp68copo<;
Aiovuo68cDpo<;
ApXBJICOV
OiA,68r|uo<;
Avxi7iaxpo[(;]
AGrrvaux;
Nbcov
AnoXk&vxoq
AyyeATjc;
Aiovoaiot;
0e65oxo<;
OiAcov 20
25
30
35
KNOWN
ca. 1 vs.
vacat
15
IS
ETHNIC
Ariurixpioq
AnoXkdyvxoq
AyyeArjc;
Aiovooioc;
Not>|ar|vio<;
Oi^6[^e]vo(;
Oupiog
Nixripaxoc;
Ayyekr\q
E\)pi7ii5r|(;
AaKAT|7ud5r|(;
Aiovuaioc;
06a<;
Avai;i5ox[o]<;
0?O(pdvr|[(;]
Mevcov
0eoKpixoc;
Hevoov
08O(pdvr|(;
Ayye^fiq
Kpdxcov
AvTi7iaxpoc;
NiKioct;
ArijLieoct;
Topyiaq
Tx\\XY5xnokxq
Exexpavoq
MeveKpdxrn; Ayye^fjc;
Atuca^ikcov OiAaaxfi<; 0ecov
'HpocK^ecov
1;^^/
Zcoaipioc; vacat
ca. 1 vs.
ca. 1 vs. Xicov
Oi
ev xoic; ATjaxo
axpaxe\)ad|i8voi
(p\)A,aKiKoT<;
xo 5e-6xepov
iCkoxoxq
\)7i6
dp%ovxa 'HpdtK^eixov xov Acopo6eo\) [y]ovfj5b "Icovck;uucixai evczfiExq 08O(pdvr|(;
8(pOTCXai
AioaKoupi5r|(;
N[i]kioc<;
[.?*:5..]xoq [.. 10
7:8..
fHpaK^8cbxr|(;
[Z\)?]vr|0io(;
JStk
-]
[
Side B (in latere dextro) Xico[v] [Oi a]xpax8D[c>d] [fie]voi ev xoTq [9ir|]axo(pD^aK[i] [ko]i<; 7t?U)ioi<;i)[7xo] [d]pxovxa 'Hpd [k]?181xovAco[po]
[GJeoD yovfji5[e]
10
["I]covo<; [ujuaxca
8\)a8
[pe]!<; vko Seicd
123
CHAPTER
124
6
[x]ocp%ovIapoc7t[i] [co]va Kal oi hub S[e] [koc]t(xpxovMrjvocv 15 Gaaicov, [A]yy?at|[cJ AyyeAfjc;,AyyEkr\q [?]oooioxp[axo]c, Eoaaiaxpaxoc,
[?]eu5d(;, 'HpocKAeco[v] 20 M\>p}rnc;,Aiov-uaijocJ ndvxccuxoc,,
. .
'HpocicfA
.]
. .]
[K]aXXiKXr\q,MAN[. Hap[LEvxaKoq
[A]7ioXXo(pavr\q . OM[.
25
. .5T8. . .]!
[JA[. . .5:8.. JOZ [A]r|[(if|x]pi09 [A]aKAr|7rid5r|(; 30
pH]paKAecov [njpac^ayopaq Mev[. . .]oq, 'HpaKfAfjc,?] [fE]c;riK80Xoq AiooKODp(5r|(; pE]7U07i;xai
35
'HpdicAeixoc, Xapcaucov 'HpctKAicov A0T|VICOV no\)AD5ducxc,
40 Arjjirixpioc; Av5p6jiaxoq MrjvocpiAoc, Oeocpdvuc, vacat 'E7iiyovo(;
Side C iv [-c--?-]Vol(tinia) C [*;.?] Aninius(?) C. . [. J.DUS s(ervus) Skarlatidou.
i.4 OTe[(p]a[vo]-uoi
(^mlatere sinistro) f.
eq(ues) eq(ues)
ITut[- -] Skarlatidou.
ii.8 'HpaicAecDv Skarlatidou/HpaKA,ecbTr|<;
latidou,
[Id?]vti0ioc;
Dimitrova.
Skarlatidou,
iii.15 Odacov
i.5 [-]o[...]
Dimitrova. Skarlatidou,
Skar
ii.9 [-]v Gaaicov
. 0io<; Skar
Dimitrova.
iii.21-22 iii.27 Dimitrova. Mt>pur|c; Dimitrova. Dimitrova. iv.2 Caninius Skarlatidou. [1-2] [Ajr^uriTjpiot;
-] Skarlatidou,
pius
m(ystes) pius
latidou.
EYPY[-
m(ystes) pius Sab(atina) m(ystes)
iii.20
[-M.^.hc,
Epigraphical Commentary Lines 1-6 on side A are badly worn. The lettering of the Greek records is similar, consistent with a date in the 2nd or 1st century B.C.Horizontal lines are drawn between lines, as Skarlatidou notes (p. 155).
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
125
Lines A. 10-11: The lettersof the heading iLvoiai kou ?9671x0:1evce^eic; are somewhat crowded and less regular than the preceding text. Line B.20: First letter:The mu is damaged, with only its leftdiagonal visible; a narrow bottom horizontal is discernible below the level of the line.
Commentary
commentary for a detailed discussion of the document and its historical context. The stele contains one decree and four lists of initiates, threeGreek and one Latin. The precise relation between the decree See Skarlatidou's
and the first record of initiation is unclear. Judging by the crowding of the rubric in lines 10-11 itwould seem that the decree was original, and the recordwas added later. Skarlatidou considers the first list to be the earliest on the basis of its lettering, and she dates it to the second half of the 2nd century b.c The other two Greek lists enumerate Chian initiates, who are dated by fought in anti-pirate ships, lestophylakikaploia. These records Skarlatidou to 80-60 b.c., the time of theMithridatic wars, when Greek
cities joined Rome in her actions against the pirates. The editors of BullEp suggest that the anti-pirate patrol may have consisted of light and swift war galleys), and compare their func ships, presumably triemioliai (small tion with that of the phylakides ships of Athens and Rhodes (cf.Robert, Hellenica 2, pp. 123-126). The commander of a ship is called archon (side inscription ii, line 4; side B, inscription ii, line 6) and dekatarchos (side B, inscription ii, lines 11-14). The archon is the chief officer, attested also in Rhodes as a commander of small units and light ships, as the editors of BullEp note. The term dekatarchos, commander of 10, ismore difficult to define in this context.We only know that he was a junior officer in the Rhodian fleet,who probably replaced thepentakontarchos in smaller units (Casson 1995, p. 309). Furthermore, the term dekatarchos is attested in
A,
(IG XII Suppl. [1939] 210, as Skarlatidou notes), which probably refers to the crew of a triemiolia, as Casson remarks (p. 309, n. 39). Thus it is possible that the anti-pirate patrol ships in question were a Rhodian
document
indeed triemioliai.
The first listmay have included Chian initiates aswell, in view of the name Ayye^fjc;,which is extremely typical of Chios. prominence of the Its initial part is a decree in honor of certain benefactors, one ofwhom is named ZoVropoc;EocTUpou. It is curious that all of the Greek initiates are listedwith a single name, perhaps in order to save space. Line ii.4: Both 'HpocK^Eixoc; and Acop60eo<; are well-attested names inChios. Line B. 14:The name Mnvocq isnot attested inChios, tomy knowledge, but is otherwise common in Ionia. Line C.2:1 see a medial dot between C and Aninius, but this implies that therewas a vacant space before it.Caninius cannot be excluded. Both C, Aninius, C. films, and Caninius, C. filius, are commonly attested and no identification ispossible. As far as the date of this list is concerned, it is pos sible that itwas inscribed before the right side of the stelewas, and therefore the terminus post quern would
b.c.,
the
approximate
terminus
be around themiddle
post
quern
of side A,
of the 2nd century
inscription
i.
126
CHAPTER
6
Fig. 41 Stele of Thasian marble, inscribed on front and back, preserved on the right (with respect to the front, side A). Found inChora, now in the of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv. no. Archaeological Museum H. 0.25 m,W. 0.22 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.011 m. 50
of initiates from Rhodes,51 Xanthos,
Record
and Ephesos
Edd. Rubensohn 1892, p. 233, no. 3; Kern 1893, p. 365, no. 9; [Michel 1900, pp. 466, nos. 107, 108; Fredrich, 1900, no. 1142]; van Gelder IG XII.8 186; [Dittenberger, Syll? 1052a-b]; Hiller von Gaertringen, JGXII Suppl. (1939), p. 149; LPerinthos (1998) 15. Cf. Robert 1963, p. 67.
B.C. (side A), Early 1st century
ca. 137-134
B.C.? (side B)
Side A [mi pOCGlAicucJ ITuQicqvoc xou ApiSrtAxn) To8icov
i?po7roioi iced ?7i67n;ca
Iliugxcu 5
e\)aepeTc
EcoaiK^f|c: Euicpdxeuc neiaiKporrnc
Ti|iiapdxot)
Aajudxpioc A|h(poxspo\) ci)vey8a|Lioi
10 KaA^iKpdxnc
Aauraxpuyu
AvoccziKpdxncAvacziKpdxeFucl Qe\)8copoc ?Hpay6p[a1 [-]
'IcnSoxoc, Aa|uaaa[-]
15 Ay oca [-] SideB 87tipa[ai^8C0(;-] coq8e ev T68[coi
zni iepecocj xou AAaou [Apicn^dian) T o 8 i cov
20
lepoTcoioi [u-oaxca e]uaepe[T(;
]
AocAa[d8oc<;Avxur;d]xpo[u] Apiaxo[yevr|(; NiKou]d%o['o] v[ou)xoci] Aiov[ucn]o<; 'Ecpeaux;
25 Gfjpcov EdvOioc, Eucxuric,
'Ecpeaioc,
[AyJaOdvyetax; [. .c.a .6. .]ioq
ev T68coi
[dyopavojjjo-uvxoc,
30
[-]
51.With
Fredrich. 18 supplevitHiller, cf./GXII.l Fredrich,
HdvOioq
Dimitrova.
1089 (apudFredrich). 25 IlepwOioc,
51 for certain sible initiates.
see also to Rhodes, regard initiates and 57 for pos
INITIATES
Figure 41. Record of initiatesfrom Rhodes, Xanthos, and Ephesos (50):
sideA (left), sideB (right)
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
12J
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering of both sides is somewhat inelegant. Side A is almost entirely obliterated: only the lettersthat are not underlined are now barely discernible. Fredrich believes that the inscription on side B, written in even less elegant, on A, but itmay be earlier; see adWnz 18. larger letters, is later than that Line 25: Edv0io<; lapis.
Commentary Both inscriptions represent lists of Rhodian mystai and hieropoioi, accom on sideA and nautai in that on side B. The panied by synegdamoi in the list
officials listed on sideA are both mystai and epoptai.This has bearing upon the issue of the interval between the two stages of initiation.Other inscrip
tions (56,67,89, and 155) also record people who are both mystai and epoptai. None of these documents, however, provides indubitable proof that myesis and epopteia took place on the same day; see Chapter 9, pp. 246-248. As for the office of hieropoios,the same tide is also recorded forCyzicene
initiates in 56 and 58. Fraser assumes that the hieropoioi in 58 are Cyzicene cult officials (adno. 29, p. 82). Robert, on the other hand, in discussing the on Samothrace, concludes that theirduty corresponds examples of hieropoioi to that of sacred envoys, elsewhere called theoroi or synthytai.He points
out that parallels for this usage are found in IGXll.l
701 and Delphinion two of theCyzicene
141. This hypothesis seems ratherplausible. Moreover, see Com a list of presumable theoroi-proxenoi; hieropoioi appear in 10, in issued Samothracian The documents mentary. by preferred terminology
officialswas apparently theoroi, while the designation of sacred envoys in individual records of initiation was given according to the terminology This is used in their respective cities (see also above, pp. 13-15,120-121. consistent with the fact that the title hieropoios is only found in individual records of initiates, never on blocks recording theoroi-proxenoi. The
term
CHAPTER
128
6
used for an envoy fromTralles in 47 is hieragogos; this seems to be yet an other way that a home city designated a sacred envoy; see ad 47. Line 2: The same eponymous officialmay be attested in 13, inscrip tion ii. Line 6: EooaiK^fjc, Ex)KpdT[e]u(; is attested inLindos II 294.11.40, dated to 85 B.C. He served as a hierothytes.Presumably he is the same person, since the name is not attested elsewhere. This gives an approximate date for the inscription in the beginning of the 1st century B.C. Line 9: ouveySocum should be understood as private "fellow travelers," as attested
in
literary
texts,
cf. LSJ,
s.v.
ouveK8nuoc;.They
too were
presum
are contrasted with the official delegates. This ably mystai and epoptai, but as additional evidence in support of interpreting themeaning taken maybe of hieropoioi as "sacred envoys."The hierarchy exhibited in this inscription is paralleled in 14, where only the first few of the mystai are theoroi, and
the rest are symmystaiand akolouthoi. Line 14: In view of the rarity of names thatwould fit the remains on the stone, a plausible restorationwould be Aajaaaoc[y6poccJ, attested partially in another Rhodian
5.1.6. inscription,NSER are numerous other examples of dating Rhodian in was celebrated at scriptions by the priest of the Sun. The cult of the Sun Rhodes with a festival by the name of A^ieioc. Hiller von Gaertringen's restoration of the name [Apuxc?]dKOD is based on /GXII.l 1089, which 747 1247. SEGXXXIX has the same eponymous official; cf. also /GXII.l Line
18: There
provides additional ApiaTocKoc, kocO'
information:
XccpiSdum)
\)o0eoiav
8e
Avtivocktoc, A^icoi.
Finkielsztejn (2001, p. 195) dates Aristakos I to ca. 137/6-135/4. If this date is correct, then either the inscription on side B should be dated before that on sideA, to the second half of the 2nd century B.C., or one has to as sume that the priest ofHelios with the name Aristakos mentioned on B is a different person, perhaps a descendant of the one in SEG XXXIX 747. Line 24: A Aiovoaioq 'Ecpeaioc, is attested as a Rhodian metic in
ASAtene 22 168.21 B.I, line 4, tentatively dated to the early 1st century B.C. It is possible that he was the same person. Line 25: This is the first instance of the ethnic Xanthios attested in Samothrace.
Line 28: An ethnic modifying AyocOdvyetax; is to be expected; cf.Tit Cam. 282,22, line 3, [Ap]iGT0|ji8[r|c, Onp?]ccTo(; evT68[coi. Presumably ev T68[coi refers to all of the sailors listed above. 51
Record Thasos,
of initiates from Rhodes, Antioch, Priapos,
and Arsinoe
Fig. 42
Stele ofThasian marble, inscribedwith uneven letters. Itwas built into the church of St. John in Loutra. The inscription is now lost. H. 0.41 m,W. 0.23 m, Th. 0.05 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1880, p. 96, no. 12; Fredrich, JGXII. 8 184.
WHOSE
INITIATES
ETHNIC
IS
Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp
vM Ef I
_
E B
(,A H Z 4> IAA rpoy
Po)
HA I
iOZ
IKA
TAIETXEBE
IOS IKAOAZ APIZTOAAMOf/ XINOEY21 > TO
1963, pp. 62,
jLi\)ox]aie\)0?p?[!(;] -]kAt|(; -]q
1
OitaxypoD ToSfioq] lepcovoq Avxio%8iL)(; A(ppo8iaioi) AvTio%eiL)<;
-]oq -]q
^ZTPATOKAEoYE '.IO.NM '
1958 270, p. 256; Robert
Date?
OZ^4>|>OAI2 loYANTI.oXEYi N^r, XAl?rENdr?TfpiATrH
KA
129
67-69.
Z IE PJINOXANTIOXET^ "OMAKOI
KNOWN
Aioyevoix; npia7rnv6(; Kai
-]touo:xoc;
I
Kai
-]o<; -]<;
SxpaxoK^eoDc; MlKOC.
-]icov 10
? OYN ik a e on;
jn\)]aTai
8\)oePeT(;
-]Mikoc
Odcnoc;,
-]<;
ApioTo8duo|/o]
Ajpcnvoeix; Figure Rhodes,
42. Record Antioch,
and Arsinoe no. 12
(51).
of initiates
dyopav]ojio'uvTO<; -?- -Ap]%lK^80D(;
from
Thasos, Priapos, Conze 1880, p. 96,
_?_ 1 euaepeic,
Fredrich.
Fredrich.
2 T65[iocJ
Fredrich.
5 npiotTmvoc,
Fredrich.
14
Fredrich.
[dyopavo]jaoi)vto(;
Epigraphical Commentary Conze's facsimile gives an idea of the lettering of the inscription. He re ports that the firstfive lines have large uneven letters, the following eight even larger letters, and the last two the smallest letters, but he gives no dimensions. Judging by the facsimile, the letterswere probably carved by the
same
cutter.
Lines 1,2,5:The seem unambiguous,
upsilon, omicron, and delta, dotted inFredrichs
text,
though damaged. Line 6: First letter: top horizontal. Line 8: First letter: bottom horizontal.
Line
10: First letter: top and bottom horizontal. 13: First letter: part of an upper circle. 14: First letter:medial circle, with the right position for omi
Line Line cron.
Commentary
It is unclear how many records of initiates this document contains. The headings mystai eusebeis are probably attested in lines 1 and 10, though line 1 may have had epoptat eusebeis as well. If so, those listed may have been part of the same record.The initiates are from Rhodes, Antioch, Priapos, Thasos, and Arsinoe. Fredrich was uncertain about the identification of
Antioch
and Arsinoe, near
Arsinoe
but Robert
favors Antioch-on-the-Meander
and
Patara.
name Mikas is characteristic ofThasos, as Robert notes. 15: Since the inscription is lost,we do not know how much is missing to the left and below, and whether ApJ^iK^eoix; is the official's first Line 9: The Line
name
or his
patronymic.
CHAPTER
130
6
ASIA MINOR For material relating toAspendos, see 31; toKeramos, 13, inscription ii; to Magnesia, 53; toPergamon, 89; to Sardis, 17, inscription iii.For a listof pos sibleKalchedonian initiates, see 134. For probable initiates from fromAigai inCilicia, 53; fromAntioch-on-the-Meander, 51; fromArsinoe near Patara, 51. For Stratonikeia, see 17, inscription ii for certain initiates and 166 for possible initiates. For initiates from Smyrna, see 63; fromXanthos, 50. Record
of initiates fromAbydos The text of the inscription is based on a copy made by the Swedish Its dimensions diplomat and orientalist Johan D. Akerblad (1763-1819). 52
are unknown.
Edd.
[Boeckh, CIG
7GXII.8 183];[ZMT77].
II. 1 (1832) 2160, with add. p. 1021];
[Fredrich,
Cf. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 34, n. 1 (lines 1-3).
Date? va'oapxo'uvToq
AeovxiSoc;
xox)Ae6v|ri]5oc/ Ap-oSnvcov ji-ugtoci euoxPeic; ATco^ocpavnc;
AioScbpo'd
5 Meveoriuoc; Meveoriuoi) Oi^Tvoq OiAivoD vecoxepoq Av[ti]uo:xoc; N[?i]kcdvo<; A7coM,[cbv]io<; Ar|[u]eoD AvSpoviKoq
AtcoX^covio-u
10 08cov Ar|(ir|Tpio\) ["E]puxov AnjinTpuyo K?p5cov [A]v[x]i|id%o'o E\)fi|Liepo(;A?ov[t]i8o<; 15
Bi[0]u(; Aeovxi8o(; IIooi8?o<; A?ovxi8o(; Meviokod ''OTitxlriq?
THPOYI?
Fredrich.
Commentary
is a list of initiates fromAbydos (for Abydos see also 46). It is pos sible that the initiates listed in lines 10-11 and in lines 13-15 were related, perhaps as brothers. The latter group may be related to the nauarch.
This
53
The
Record of Roman initiates of unknown provenance, and of initiates from Ilion, Thasos, Byzantion, Sirrhai, Magnesia, Alexandria, Styberra, Aigai, and Thrace
Fragment of a block of Thasian marble, broken at top and bottom. back was cut off and smoothed for shipping purposes in the 19th
century.
Ma.
Fig. 43
Found
4189.1
in
secondary
context,
now
saw the stone in July 2001.
in Paris, Musee
du Louvre,
inv.
INITIATES
Figure 43. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown
provenance,
and
of initi
ates from Ilion,Thasos, Byzantion, Sirrhai,Magnesia, Alexandria, Sty berra,Aigai, andThrace (53). Photo
? M.
and P. Chuzeville,
Louvre, Department Etruscan Antiquities
du courtesyMusee of Greek, Roman, and
H.
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
131
0.48 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 206. Ed.Fredrich,/GXIL8 0.34 m,W.
Cf. BullEp
0.01-0.015
m.
1963, p. 65, with n. 7; Robert
1911, p. 321; Robert
and
Robert,BullEp 1964 395;Robert 1966,p. 79,n. 6;Cole 1984,pp. 99-100; Habicht 1986,p. 97;Tacheva 1995,pp. 459-467 (SEGXLV 831); SEG LI 2094. 1st century
b.c.-lst
[..
.c.a.8..
century .Tipe]pioq
laXXoicxioq
a.d. lovXioq
[ExxpJpoaDvoc,,
Toucpoq, Taioc; 'Iouvioq Avoi\ia%oq,
rdi'oq 'Oiaaomoc, Baooq, Tixoq AemSoq Nu[ji] qnoc/AvTKpdvnq ATto^Acoviou 'iXizvq, KdSpxx; 0deno[cJ,
5 AnoXX&vxoq AvxKpdvou 'iXizvq, AvxiyiXoq AvxiqnAxn) Bu^dvxioc/ AiSduoc, Ai8u(iod AtacjavSpetx;, Kp6v[i] oq 'HtaoScopov Atac^avSpetx;, Mevejiaxoc; Mr|xpo
Scopou Bu^dvxioc/ Boicoxoq Bpiapecoq leipaioq, A^ecjavSpog iKealou Mdyvr|c/ Ariprixpioc,KnoXXtovi 10 od AtaJ;av8p?u<;, npeipxx; AttoMcoviod AXeb,av8pe[x>q], KoXXxq KoMaSoq 6mi Mdpeic/ Avxicpavrjc,AiocncoDp[i] Sod LxuPeppaTog, Aiovuoioq KDpepvrixric,AiyaToq, MapKoq Avxcb [v]ioq 'Hyricnaq,drcetauGepoi Poi|ir|TaA,ko\) P[ae>i]^?[cGcj vacat
Ilei0[...
.c*-!?...
JviKoq,
AioyevncJ--ca-1-?"-15--]
15 [-]io\),Iko[-c-
-?-]
Fredrich. 1 [Eu(p]p6
letter: unclear traces.
Line 7: Last
letter: top leftpart of a circle.
Line
12: Last
letter: clear omega.
in the end of this line.
132
CHAPTER
6
Commentary
inscription records the names of Romans, Greeks from various cit ies (notably Alexandria, Ilion, and Byzantion), and a group of freedmen of the client king Rhoimetalkes ofThrace. The Samothracian gods were certainly worshipped at Ilion, but their sanctuary is not positively identi
The
fied.52Although the title mystai eusebeis ismissing, it is almost certain that the people listed in this textwere initiates.The heading apeleutheroi lends considerable probability to this assumption, since names of slaves and freedmen are attested in numerous records of initiates. It is unclear which Rhoimetalkes ismeant, as Fredrich observes. For members of the royal family, cf. 46. Line 1: Fredrich assumes that the praenomen of Sallustius Rufus must have been written at the end of this line.The remains on the stone, however, do not confirm this assumption. Moreover, the name Sallustius Rufus occurs also in an inscription fromAphrodisias (Cormack 1962, no.
Thracian
517, Imperial period), without a praenomen; the inscription honors the a daughter of senator named Sallustius Rufus. It is unclear whether he is related to the Samothracian initiate. Line 3: A certain Gaius Octavius Bassus, son of Gaius, is attested in an undated Delian
inscription (LDe/os 2488), but no identification is
possible.
Lines 6-7: Robert assumes thatEgyptian Alexandria ismeant since the names Ai5uuo<;, Kpovioq, and fH^i68copo<; are frequently attested inEgypt. Y^okXxq and Mdpnc; in line 11 are also typical of Egypt, as Fredrich notes. Line 8: Presumably Eeipccloc; is to be understood as referring toMace donian Sirrhai, as Hiller von Gaertringen (apud Fredrich) and Robert remark.
Robert
moreover,
notes,
that
the
rare
name
Boicoxoc;
occurs
in
another document from Sirrhai (SEGXXX 590). Bpiapecoq is a hapax. Lines 9-10: Habicht notes thatDemetrios, son ofApollonios, from Alexandria, may be the same as the homonymous sculptor fromAlexandria, attested in twoMessenian dedications, roughly dated to the 1st century b.c.-lst centurya.d. (JGV.l 1461 and Praktika 1962,p. 112 [= SEGXXlll
225]; cf.SEGXXXVI 789. Line
an
54
12: Robert
important
Record
suggests thatAigai
in Cilicia
ismeant,
since itwas
port.
of initiates fromAlexandria Troas
Fragment of Thasian marble, found in Palaiopolis, now lost. The inscription was on the left side of the stone; the right side was still in the ground at the time of Fredrich's edition. H. 1.00 m,W. 0.96 m,Th. 0.22 m; L.H.? Edd. Kern 1893, p. 373, no. 19; Fredrich, IGXII.8 223; [7MT446]; [Ricl, LAlexandreia Troas (1997), p. 224, no. T 117, 2]. 41/30-27/12
b.c.
87ii paoiAico[cJ MriTpo8cbp[o'o] wo Mr|Tp[o] 5copou |li[i)ct]
is the current opinion of the director of the excava Rose, tions at Troy (see Rose 2003). Cf. the recent discussion Lawall byMark 52. This
Brian
(2003).
INITIATES
5
WHOSE
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
133
tcu euoef^eicj TpcoocSelc,
'Iot>A,[i]8[i]c/ Fredrich.
Commentary
The eponym is otherwise unattested. The date of the inscription is based on the fact thatAlexandria Troas was named Colonia Iulia (line 7) between 41/30 b.c., when the Roman colony was founded, and 27/12 b.c., when Augustus sent additional colonists and changed the city's appellation to Colonia Augusta; see LAlexandreia Troas, pp. 224-225. 55
Records
ofGreek
and Roman
initiates fromAlexandria
Fig. 44
Troas
Block ofwhite marble, broken on top, inscribed on the front (side A), left (side B), and back (side C). The right side might have been inscribed, too, but is now veryworn. Found alongside the path from the Propylon of Ptolemy II to the city, about 10 m inside the back gate to the sanctuary.
of Samothrace, courtyard, Ephoreia inv.C 81.3. Archaeological Museum H. 0.51 m,W. 0.71 m,Th. 0.55 m; L.H. 0.04 m (sideA), 0.02-0.025 m (sides B, C). Unpublished. Middle
of 2nd
b.c.-lst
century
century
a.d.?
SideA ....
[-m-] yevoj^evov
yuuvoccuocpxov ev evi Kcapcoi
5
mi
jieyaA,o\|n)xioc<;
ev8K8v Kai xfjq 7tepi 7cdvxa tov piov dpexfjc,. vacat
SideB [Ti(berio) Plautio Aeli-] anoTauro Statilio Corvino
September 11(f), A.D. 45 III Idus Se[pt.] co(n)s(ulibus) . Heraclid .
mistae.?.1.5.OR
Metronacte 5
L.
Comenius
C. Decimius
Metro[nactis(?) L.
. f. . . M
rege(?)-]
. . . anus Troadensis
C. f.Felix Troadensis
Thimotheos,
Meitaiaioc, . AIONYEIO [-] KEY [-] [----] 10 A. Ee7rc?iuio<; Kpdao^ (sic), 6 Kai [....] NAIOE
SideC -illegible
traces
. .c.a .6. .
134
CHAPTER
6
WHOSE
INITIATES
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
135
Figure 44 (opposite).Records of
Greek
and Roman
initiates
from
Alexandria Troas (55): sideA (top), side B (middle), sideC (bottom)
5
[
MjaxpcovaKTOc;
[
. 0e6c>vo<; A OY[
-].... 1
.>.
iot> [voaxiq ca. 10
MocJkeSovck; Epigraphical Commentary The letters of side A are even and somewhat narrow, suggestive of a late Hellenistic date; the broken-bar alpha favors a date after themiddle of the 2nd century B.C. Sides B and C, inscribed later, are badly worn. Commentary
is a statue base in honor of a gymnasiarch, whose
This
name
is not pre
served.
The Latin document, inscribed on side B, is the first hitherto attested list of initiates of the year a.d. 45. is correct, then it prompts the restoration Line B.4: IfMetronacte which would be the first documentary instance of the dating [rege(?),
formula in Latin.
Line B.7: Meilasios, derived from the ethnicMilesios/Milasios, rare as a 5 228.3, which has Meilasia. personal name; cf.MAMA Line C.8: MocjKeSovoc, could be an ethnic or a name.
isvery
Record of initiates from Kyzikos53 Two joining pieces of a stele ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides. Itwas found in Palaiopolis, latermoved toAthens, and is now built into a wall in Bignor Park, Sussex, England. The upper part of the stele con
56
tains a relief of a round building, flanked by snake-entwined torches, and crowned with a pediment enclosing a circular object; the text is inscribed below. Non vidi. H.
0.79
m, W.
0.33-0.37
L.H.
m,Th.?;
0.017-0.02
m.
Edd. Boeckh, CIG II.l (1832) 2158; Conze 1880, pp. 113-114; Fredrich,/G XII. 8 188, with add. p.vii; [Rubensohn 1892,158,171,216]; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 112, appendix IV, pi. III. Cf. BullEp 1929, p. 196; Robert 1936, p. 60, n. 4; Hiller von Gaertrin gen, IGXL1 Suppl. (1939) 149; Robert and Robert, BullEp 1958 270; SEG XIX 593; BullEp 1964 392; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69; Lehmann and Lehm ann 1973, pp. 30-47; Cole 1984, pp. 45-46; 1989, p. 1580, n. 71; Roux, Samothrace 7 (1992), pp. 223-226;
2nd?1st
century EKi
SEGXLll
B.C.?
poccuAicGC,
Aeivcovoc,
TOU
A7to^coyi8o'u,
[a]yopavoum)vTOC,TpuoKpd[Tou] TO\) nt>0OV?lKOD
5
53. See possible
also 59 for hieropoioi from Kyzikos.
initiates
and
[d>]<;5e Ku^iicnvoi ereiTxaipico [v]oq too) E-ujivrjaTO-o i7t7idpx[eco] ILtuaTrjc eTJcePhc kou en6n%r\[q] [NITkicMvnqiq[Tp1cVcoi), qyuaei 5[el KaKXr\niadr\Q
Attoc^od
K\)?ikt|
HOObis;
[7MT1568].
CHAPTER
i36 10
voc,, dpyiT?KTcov,
6
dTtocrcaA^ic,
7iapd KuCikuvcqv [Kalxd rhv to\) Srjum)
7tp?apeiav
xox>
[S]ap.o9paKcov eveKa xr\qI[- -]
Koiaq
koi
tcqv
l?pCOV ?ikov(ov
(?)
-QNOZ 20
-ac
AaK^r]7iid8o\) . Axru?
-Xa|u
[Ma-(?)1 <0>pdacov-OY dK7lOC
Fraser.
1 Awoovoc, Fraser.
AnoXXcovidov 9ok[A,]?[i]od[c;]? 6 Evjivfiaxo-o
Fredrich, i[7i7id]p[xeco]
e-Daepfjc; Kai
e[7i]o7tt[r|(;] (pvaei
Myrjoia^pldto-o, 9 AoK?ir|7iid5r|(;
AxxaXov
10 voq, dpxixeKTcov, 11 napd
2 AnoXXcavidov Aeivcqvoc, Fraser. Fredrich, 4 xov A[ya] Fraser. Fredrich, 'Epuo?Ep(ioKpd[xo\)] xov n\)9oveiKo-o em Fraser. 5 [t]n\ Fredrich, Fraser.
Fredrich, 3
Fredrich,
jruaxnQ e\)aepf|c
Fredrich, 8[e]
EujivnGTO-o
Fredrich,
Mikic,
Fredrich,
Ka)[^ikt|]
i7i7idpx[eco] Kai
7 uualtjric,
?7t67rrn[cJ Fraser.
Mvnaia[Tpldtot), AoK^ri7iid8ric
Fraser.
8 [N]Tki<;
(pt)G?i 8[el 'AixaXov
Kd^ikti
Fraser. Fraser.
Fraser. voq, apyiTEKTcov, anooTaXeig Fredrich, .. > [kocItoc rhv Fraser. Fredrich, reapd KDCncnvcov Fredrich, Ttpeapeiav tov 8t)[liod tov Fraser. 13 [i]r\q
[a7toa]Ta}t[?icJ [Ka]xd xf|v
Kd^iktivcov xov dr\\xov xox> <S>
12 7ipeopeiav
v[eco]Fredrich, xfjc;i[epo] Fraser. 14 7toi[a]<; [Kai] t[co]v iep[co]vTpjicov Fredrich, 710'iaq Kai
tcqv iepcov eiKovcov Fraser. 19 ONOS ONOX Fraser. 20-ac, Fredrich, AaK^n7nd8o\) Fraser. 21-Iau{t>]?un)?, Fredrich,-ac tan)?Fraser. 22 [-, [-] Fredrich, 0]pdacov?
MvAoK^r|7iid5o\), MaFredrich,-Ia|j.. [Ma-(?)] OY
Fraser.
Fraser.
23
24 dKxioc,-Fraser.
od,
[BjaKxioc,-Fredrich,
<0>pdacov
25-Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary I have not seen the stone, which had badly deteriorated by the time of Fraser's copy. Lines 16-24 are now missing, judging by his photograph. Commentary
date is based on comparison with 58 and the letter forms.This is a record of a Cyzicene mystes and epoptes,AoK?lr|7tidSr|(; AxxaXox), and pos sibly of other Cyzicene visitors, as the names in lines 19-end imply.The in FauveFs inscription, recorded initially by the fourth Earl ofAberdeen Athenian house in 1803, had been lost and was later rediscovered at Big nor Park in Sussex.54 The relief connects the document with a series of The
Samothracian stelai representing a round building with a snake-entwined torch on either side (47, 57, 58). Fauvel had noticed a figure,which he interpreted as Kybele, in the rectangular area below the pediment, as Phyllis Lehmann notes (p. 34, with n. 67). As noted in the Commentary on 47, it is uncertain whether this relief should be connected exclusively with Kyzikos?though such an idea is very tempting, especially in view of Phyllis Lehmann's illuminating discussion of iconographic parallels in
54. See Samothrace2.\, pp. 112-113, for a detailed account of the document's unusual
fate.
INITIATES
a
WHOSE
context.
Cyzicene
ETHNIC
Some
issues
IS
KNOWN
remain
137
unresolved,
however,
such
as
the
possible impact of the Rotunda ofArsinoe on the relief and the fact that the other Cyzicene images of round buildings are very few: two coins, discussed by Phyllis Lehmann (p. 37), and a funerary stele ofAttalos, pos
father, that depicts, inter alia, a female figure carrying siblyAsklepiades' a miniature round building. This stele was recently discussed (I.Kyz. 100) by Roux (pp. 223-225), who remarks that the inscription was carved on top of an older text that had been deleted, and thereforeAttalos may not be associated with the round building on the relief at all. (I did not notice any evidence for a deleted text, however, when I saw the stone on exhibit
in the Louvre in 2004.) The other Cyzicene reliefs that I know of have no on round bearing buildings. The inscriptions on three out of the four stelai with reliefs of round buildings (47,56,58)55 mention people who were sent to the sanctuary on a sacred mission of some sort {hieropoioi, hieragogos, katangeleus). It ispossible that the reliefswith round buildings represent the Rotunda ofArsinoe, and that the names of sacred envoys were inscribed on stelaiwith such reliefs because the Rotunda was connected with their activities (e.g., as the place where theywere entertained at a festive dinner). So few reliefs are preserved on Samothracian stelai, however, that it is also
possible that the depiction of a round building (perhaps theArsinoeion) was a popular design at the sanctuaryworkshop, and thatmore prominent visitors had their names inscribed on such monuments. Line 2: The name A7ioAAcovi8r|(; is attested for another Samothracian
king; see 17, inscription iii. Lines 5?6: The hipparch is the usual eponymous official of Kyzikos. Line 7:This should be taken not as evidence thatAsklepiades received
both stages of initiationwithin a single ceremony, but rather as his honorary titles; cf. 58, line 24, where he is only mystes. Line 8: Mikk; (the type and place of accent are unclear) is a very rare name, attested only in Egypt, Delta 1-3 681.396 (6th-5th century b.c.), accented on the last syllable, and in SEG LX 1568, line 56 (220 b.c.), with an acute accent on the firstsyllable. NTkk;, on the other hand, is awell-at tested Greek name, and so I prefer Fredrich s reading.
11-12: For the phrase Kara 7tpeapeiocv, cf, for instance, I.Delos (ca. 154 b.c). Lines 13-14: On the office of hieropoios, see ad50. Frasers restoration no 8V?kocxr\qi[epo]|7coia<;, "on account of parallels, and is hieropoia" has Lines
1517.21
to
hard
accept.
It is unclear what to be
unattested
Lines formation
in
ismeant by "sacred images." The
expression seems
inscriptions.
19?end: Possibly names of initiates; cf. 58, though secure in is
missing.
Of the names mentioned
in the document, only BdK%io<;, 'Attocaoc;and (rather frequently) AaKAT|7tid8r|(; are attested inKyzikos. Records of Roman initiates of unknown provenance, Fig. 45 and of initiates fromMaroneia, Rhodes(?), and Kyzikos A fragment of a stele ofThasian marble, inscribed on front (side A), back (side B), and on the left (side C), preserved in the upper leftpart (with respect to side A). The front shows traces of a reliefwith a round building 57
that the fourth 55. It is possible inscription, 57, listed such officials, on the parts of the stone. missing
too,
CHAPTER
i38
6
flanked by snake-entwined torches.The inscriptionwas found by Phardys built into a Byzantine wall in the ancient citynear theGattilusi Towers, and had been brought toChora, when Fredrich published it. Its present location is unknown. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.33 m,W. 0.22 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.035 m (side A, line 1), 0.02
m (side A, lines 2-10), 0.01 m (side B), 0.04 m (side C). Edd. [Rubensohn 1892, pp. 227-231]; [Mommsen, OIL III Suppl. 1.3 (1893) 12322]; Kern 1893, pp. 356-357, no. 5 (with drawing, fig. 46); BullEp 1894, p. 389; [Cagnat, IGR 1.4 (1905) 844]; Fredrich, IG XII.8
189; [/MT1567]. Cf. Lehmann
2nd-lst
and Lehmann
1973, p. 32 (with drawing, fig. 23).
B.C.?
century
SideA K
MV[-] M.PI
u / ...
co
round
snake-entwined
. . .
vac. M.
v
vel
torch
building
MV[-] .AMAS, [m]us[tes] [M]arone[ys] 10
Seleucys .P I / I T I\I SideB [-'OjPpljLlO-0 [-]kiou
[-]68oc<; eki
[eki-]., 15
pocaiAicoc;
Se
ev Ea
[uoOpaicni xo\) SeTvcx; 7iapfjoa]v oi OTpaTeuodjaevoi [jLiexd-axpajTriyou [kou vocudp%oD
xov
dvOimcxTcyu kou - -] . xcxpxovToc; 8?ivo<;
Av8pia
Kai
xpi
[npapxouvxoc; too SeTvcx; u/ugtoJi EvaE^Eiq [T65i?]oi Aajaayopaq OiAiokou, 20
[-]iovtoc;,
AioKArjc;E\)dv5po\)
T-Icxtcovoc
MeAo:vi7t7ro<;
Tui)alTai
Mevxcop
?7ui Pocai
[Moi?]pocyevr|<;
TelijaepfeTcl
. 25
Kpdrnc;
Xecoc; 35
ApiSrjAOD tox> OiAo
?c%o<; M.a%o<; . . 5po(;
^evov iixxjxaq e-oaepfiQ
. avia<; . cov
30
iKA.fi<; [- -: -k
SideC 42
C.
Cestius.
40
iTuGayo
paqT
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
139
\
^^^^^
fBPlMoY^? /lAM_^^4
r-\ _
_\
IIIa '
Ml
/NolitPATEYrAMENoI
I HroYANeYPATOY m
V k A I irv\ / h
,
S
Ii'EYXEBE11 r^^#m^^ ji AA^AroPAlHAI^l
nil
\
01
WZ&P*
MENTxiP
H^iEV-
* V'
If
(j
EHIBAII
napo^lEKfoV
EYXEBHi
\ P>^pN 45. Records of Roman Figure ates of unknown provenance, initiates
from Maroneia,
|
lAPXoNTo^AH^PiAKAiTPl
'jr^\f\
X YJ/\\ // | r\
A/\~i ' ' \ Av
M-)
i
initi and of
Rhodes(?),
and Kyzikos (57): sideA (upper left),side B (upper right),and side C (below).
After Kern
1893, p. 356
Fredrich. 6 AMAS Kern, Fredrich. 2^[oTTjcJ Fredrich. 5 jiuo[TncJ m maiusculis,
[A]a|aa<;
z/zminusculis.
7
Kern. 14 i7ntdp%??]co Fredrich. Seleucys Kern. 19 [fP65i?]oi Dimitrova.
[(JualrricJ 17
Fredrich.
7cp]co?Tdp%ovxo(;
9 Seleycys Fredrich,
Fredrich Fredrich, xdp%ovTo<;
Epigraphical Commentary Kern's facsimile and the squeeze are the only basis for picturing the layout and the letter forms of the document. Judging by the squeeze, there is no reason that lines 2-10 should all be in the Greek alphabet, and not the Latin.
14: First preserved letter: right bottom horizontal;
Line
sigma is pos
sible.
Commentary
date is based on analogy with 56 and 58 and is consistent with the Philiskou in lines lettering and the possible identification of Damagoras 19-22. Side A contains one record ofRoman (and possibly Greek) initiates,
The
presumably from Kyzikos, if the names in lines 2?10 are contemporary with the heading in line 1; if they are later than the heading, then the names of the Cyzicene initiates were probably written below the relief. Side B includes at least two Greek records. Inscription ii on side B is a list of initiates from a naval crew, possibly from Rhodes. Fredrich thinks that B was the first side inscribed, then A, then C. If this is correct, then the reliefwas carved on the back side of the original stele. It is unclear whether the names written on the pediment are part of a separate record (side B, inscription i), but such a supposition seems likely.The right side lists one Roman
On
name,
C.
Cestius,
written
vertically;
cf. 66,
side
B.
the interpretation of the relief, see 56, Commentary.
chapter
140
6
above, it is possible that all of the names inscribed in Latin. Line 9: Seleucys has been interpretedby previous editors as the personal
Lines 2-10: As mentioned and titles listed here were name
TzXevKoq,
Lines Line
not
as
the ethnic
Ee^eDKeix;.
14-32: Apparently the crew of a warship; cf. 49. 16: The title strategosanthypatos corresponds to Roman
procon
sul.
titlepro tarchon apparently does not occur for a naval of ficer.A word like [88K]aTdp%ovTO<; is possible; cf. 49, side B, lines 13-14. is attested in a Rhodian Lines 19-22: A certain Aajnayopac; Oiaiokod document (Chiron 23, 83.12, shortly after 85 b.c.). He could be the same person, and if so, then the ethnic before his name should be Rhodioi. in line 14 led to the assump Fredrich's restoration [erci-i7t7i;cxp%??]co tion that the initiates must be Cyzicene, since the eponymous hipparch 17:The
Line
is a Cyzicene, and not a Rhodian, official.Another argument in favor of supposing that the ship in question was Rhodian is the fact that the name is extremely frequent inRhodes, but unattested inKyzikos, to Damagoras andMentor my knowledge. The names Euandros, Diokles, Melanippos, are also well attested in Rhodes.
Line 38: The Doric form mystas proves that the records of initiates must have been written by the initiates themselves before being inscribed on
as Clinton
stone,
suggests.
Line 42: A C. Cestius was a consul ina.d. 35, but it isunclear whether he is related to the person in the present document. 58
Record and
of initiates from Kyzikos, and records ofGreek
Roman
initiates
of uncertain
Fig. 46
provenance
The upper part of themonument (lines 1-8) isknown only from a copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona.The lower and middle parts are two nonjoining a fragments of stele ofThasian marble. A round building with crown-shaped bands on either side is carved on the stone. Fredrich connected the lower part of b (b2)with the text of a, which was confirmed by the discovery of a1'2 in 1938 in the Byzantine chapel of St. Demetrios inChora. Fragments b1 and a3 are also known only from Cyriacus's manuscript. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, Hall B, inv. nos. 39.16 (a), 39.23 (b). a1-2:H. 0.33 m,W. 0.28 m, Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.013 m (lines 1-4), 0.018 m (line 5), 0.016 m (lines 6-9). b2:H. 0.20 m,W. 0.23 m,Th. 0.13 m; L.H. 0.016 m. Edd.: Line 3, Latin: [Muratori 1739-1742 III, p. 1720 (after Cod. Ambros. A 55), no. 13]; [Mommsen, CIL III (1873) 721]; [Fredrich, 39]. 3-8, Greek: [Muratori 1739-1742 II, p. 650, no. 2 (under 6182b "Roma")]; [Franz, CIGlll (1850) (under"Roma")]; [Kaibel,/GXIV (1890), p. 776]; [Ziebarth 1906, p. 413, no. 7]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 259]. a1: [Muratori 1739-1742 III 1636, no. 16]; [Franz, CIG III (1850) CIL III 5926a]; [Mommsen, (1873) 719]; [Fredrich, IG XII.8 211 (lines
7GXII.8,p. Lines
1-4)]. no. 1]; [Franz, CIG III (1850) 5927]; a2'3: [Muratori 1739-17421156, [Rubensohn 1892, 172]; [Michel 1900, no. 1141]; [Kern 1893, p. 364]; [Ziebarth 1906, p. 414, no. 10]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 191].
whose
initiates
is
ethnic
b1: [Muratori
1739-1742
known
141
1670, no. 1]; [Franz, CIG
III
III
(1850)
5926b]; [Mommsen,CIL III (1873) 718]; [Ziebarth1906,p. 414, no. 10];
[Fredrich, 7GXII.8 212, lines 1-7)]. b2: [Kern 1893, p. 363, no. 7]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 192]. b: Lehmann-Hartleben with 1943, a1'2, pp. 117-123, photograph and reconstruction of the monument by S.M. Shaw; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 29. + 1571]. + Fragments a2 b2, a3: [IMT1570 Cf. Kerenyi 1955, p. 151, esp. n. 1; Robert 1963, p. 67;Walton 1963, 1976, facs. fig. 13, p. 99; BullEp 1964, pp. 375, 393; Bodnar andMitchell 23; Cole 1984, p. 96; 1989, p. 1580, n. 71. 2nd-lst
B.C.?
century
KuCiktivcqv
M
* Ne
Oppius
vel
Zrivcov
A7uoM,covioc Aiovpcnou a1 vss.
in corona
9?12
10
b1 vss.
sinistra:
in corona
9?15
dextra:
?(p6[7tlxnc 9E0IAI:
Av8p6[ia%oq
{ jliq } i>p
Arjurixpi-
ZHriNTOE
od vacat
ToSok^tiou, ToSco 15
_V,
PREGE f. pius [K]\)^ikt|vcov i?p07toioi Kai uuaxca L.
QiVisellius a?b3
?7t' Ayxiy?vo\)
Evoefieiq,
xou rEp|uay6poD i7C7tdpx?co [
20 a3
[mystes(?)]
Api8r|^ou Apio~x?co[cK
nap|ii?ViGKOC
[xov-]iyou-
[OiAxSlcxvocOiTtocxvou vacat ?\)a?p?i(; AaK?ir|7ud8r|(; AdA,ou
<|x6a>Tai 25
Fraser, Neeos
Muratori,
Cyriacus,
MOIPAnOIOI pius Fraser.
Boeckh, 20
(Cod. Ambros., MENOOIAOY Fredrich,
Nepos
0e
Cyriacus,
Z
A<xx>dtan)
Cyriacus. Muratori.
Fredrich,
0eo[(p]oc[cj
vel
'Hpoy?ix-
0?paicov
Ashm.),
AITEAI,
Fraser.
Cyriacus, Mriv6(piA,o
10 0EOIAX Boeckh,
Fraser.
Walton. I |7C7cdcpx?co ArAAOY Hamb.,
'Hpoyeix[ovo]<; Fraser.
EYIEPOI
Cyriacus, Boeckh,
Cyriacus.
Fraser.
11 Dimitrova,
12 ZHriNTOI
Fredrich,
Zri
24 AITAI,
ArAAOY Ay[X\aov> Fraser, Fraser,
3
Mommsen,
0eo|X|(x[<;]
Cyriacus, 0eo
Zri
25 0epoicov
MrjvocpiAoi).
Kt>P?pvr|xr|<;
Dimitrova.
2 Clinton,
Moipa
Zr|
i 17i7cdpx?coFraser,
Boeckh,
-
Cyriacus, Fraser. 17 Muratori Fredrich,
HPOrEITHZ, Mriv6(pita>[<;]?
CHAPTER
142
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering, as far as it is possible preserved
text,
is consistent
to assess it from the scarcity of the
2nd-lst-century
B.C.
documents.
lower verticals, followed by lower parts of a barely visible
Line 17:Two V and a clear S. Line
with
6
20: The
first letter of i|7t7tdp%?cois not preserved, asWalton
notes.
is recorded only as mystes here, while
Line 24: Asklepiades ismystes and epoptes.
in 56 he
Commentary
text (lines 18-end) represents a list of Cyzicene initiates and is unclear what the precise relation between the texts in the It hieropoioi.
The main
wreath-shaped
bands
and
the main
though he agrees with Lehmann
parts
are
contemporary.
Lehmann
inscription
is, as Fraser
observes,
that the inscription coheres and all its believes
that
the bands
represent
"the
purple scarfwhich the initiatedwore around the abdomen for protection from evil" and that the people listedwithin them are probably epoptai, as opposed to the mystai and hieropoioi recorded below (pp. 122-123). Only one of the people whose names are inscribed within the bands, however, is called epoptes (fragment b, lines 1-3). It is possible that the names within the bands are a continuation of another record of Cyzicene visitors, pre served in the manuscript, since lines 18-19 seem to be the beginning of
a record. Therefore,
I have printed the entire text of the stele as recorded although it is not completely certain that lines 1?8 render
by Cyriacus, Samothracian inscriptions.Muratori attributes the Greek record in lines 3?8 to Rome, whereas Fredrich lists it under Samothrace but notes that its Samothracian provenance is not obvious (7GXII.8, ad259). It seems
likely, however, that the heading Ad marmoream & ornatissimam basim Graecis EsfLatinis litteris epigrammata (see facsimile in Fig. 46) refers to the entire page, even lines 1-2. The inscription on the previous page in the (CIG III 5901). manuscript is fromThasos For the office of hieropoios, see ad 50 and Chapter 1, p. 14. Line 2: The adjective emepo<;, attested in the manuscript, is never ap to a some One would title of sort, such as the one in plied expect people. lines 18-19, [K]\)?iKnvcov iepo7ioioi koc1 jLi-uaxaile-ooepeTt;. Line 3: The name MYEIAAAS is not attested. A name of the type Pausillas is possible.
the office of the trierarch, see ad 61. Line 4: Two people with the name AnuriTpioq AnuriTpuyo are recorded in a Cyzicene inscription (IMT 1456.1, line 46, and II, line 16), but it is unclear whether either of them is the same person, in view of the names frequency.A Anurixpioc; AnuriTpuro too AdjicovoQ is attested in IMT 1462, line 18 (pre-Roman). On
Lines 7?8: A Aiovvoioq AtcoaAcovio'd is attested in a Cyzicene epitaph of the Roman period (IMT 1594.4), but it is unclear whether he is related to the person in the present inscription. Lines a.9?12: A certain AnjLif|Tpio<; AvSpojudxcm is recorded in a Cyzi cene line but the name is too common to allow (IMT 1456, 71), inscription further speculations on the possible relation between the two men.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
143
Figure 46. Record of initiatesfrom Kyzikos, and records ofGreek and Roman initiatesof uncertain provenance (58): facsimile of the monument as recorded byCyriacus
(above)y and actual fragmentsof the Samothrace 2.1, pi. XIV:29, Stele (below). and courtesy Samothrace Excavations, respectively
Line
trouble with Fraser's conjecture, which best fits the seems to be unattested. reading, is that the form
10: The
manuscript Lines 16-17: Prece pius is an awkward phrase, which seems to be was the name of another initiate unattested. It is possible that PREGE as Clinton suggests, or the continuation of the name P. (e.g., Rege[inus]), below the left crown. Line 17: It isunclear whether theLatin name was inscribed at the same time as theGreek text.Fraser notes that theVisellii of Brundisium were "active as wine-growers and exporters in the 1st century B.C. (See CIL X 545)." The person mentioned here might be connected with the consul
144
CHAPTER
6
is of a.d. 24, L. Visellius Varro. A certain Koivtcx; OviOEXXioq Taio-u-, I.De/os 1741. attested in an undated Delian inscription, Lines 22-23: The same people are attested in 10, lines 17-18, dated on the basis of its hand to the 2nd-lst century B.C. Line 25: Neither 'Hpoyerccov/ -r\qnor Gepoicov is attested inKyzikos. It is unclear why Fraser prints Gepocov: the manuscript has Gepcucov, is a more
which
common
name.
Although
'Hpoyerccovoc,
is a much
better
known form (and the name Herogeiton much more frequent), the genitive 'HpoyercoD is attested as well, which better fits themanuscript, so I keep the possibilities open. As for the last initiatementioned, I prefer the read
ing KDpepvrjxriq MnvocpiAo-u, since the manuscript confirms it and since K\)pepvr)Tr|(; is a well-attested name. Of course, Ki)p?pvr|Tr|(;MnvocpiAoq cannot be excluded as a possibility. record of initiates(?) and hieropoioi from Kyzikos Fig. 47 on top. It Fragment ofThasian marble, broken at bottom and possibly is unclear how the back looks orwhether the fragment belongs to a block or a stele. Found xeqMupcnveq, in the northeastern part of the island.
59
Greek
Its present location is unknown.
0.69 m,W. 0.58 m,Th. 0.15 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 43, no. 21, pi. 71:21; Fredrich, IG XII.8
H.
[/MT1572].
Cf. Rubensohn 1892, pp. 171-172; n. Robert 116, 19; 1963, p. 67. p. 1st century
Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
194; (1960),
B.C.?
,!i i&ah ai eh r
i]nl Pacn^ecoq E\>lLld%0\)
Y MAXOYTOY
TOX)
Tr|(i8vo\), cbq8e
H M ENOTHIAEI Til kH NOIA TOY EFl IPPO NIK OY f-ftN
Ku^iicnvoi dyoo) 5
aiv
?7ii Itcicovikou
tov ADoayopoi)
i7rjcdp%?C0, iepoTtoiofi]
TC.YA YZATOfOY
ol d7tOGT0CAivT?(; VKO
10
^AfXEQIEPoP^
TOV dr\lLOX>
loiApoiTAAENTEI Wo TOYAH M o y
[x]o\)Ku^iKnvcov [NiK?]oyevr|(;Ar/cd^ou oq 0eo%dpoD
[...].
-O.
pYK^SMKHNHN
. .
p f e N He /ATTAA?y|
Fredrich.
11
[Ai]oyevr|c, Fredrich,
Epigraphical Commentary Conze s facsimile gives an idea of the lettering and layout. Line 12, beginning: Top horizontal followed by top part of a circle. Commentary
is a list of Cyzicene were hieropoioi, who presumably initiates. The preserved part of the stone does not contain the titlemystai, but all other
This
aZ0EOXAfoY
[NiK?]oyevr|c, Dimitrova.
Figure
47. Record
of initiates(?)
from Kyzikos hieropoioi 1875, pi. 71:21
(59).
and
Conze
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
145
were initiates. It is in hieropoioi mentioned in Samothracian documents no a is relief of round teresting that there building preserved. For the office of hieropoios, see ad 50 and Chapter 1, p. 14.
eponymous king is unknown. name iswell attested in Kyzikos, e.g., Hipponikos IMT 1459.A.II, line 12 (Hadrianic), 1460, line 17 (Hadrianic), 1461.3, line 42 (undated), 1486 (4th c. b.c.); and so is Lysagoras, e.g., IMT 1452 (undated), 1542 (1st century b.c./lst century a.d.). Line 11: On the possible identification of [Nikjogenes, son ofAttalos, with the Cyzicene theoros listed in 9, see ad 9. Line 12: The name ?eoxdpnc, is not otherwise attested inKyzikos. Lines 2-3: The
5-6: The
Lines
60
Record of initiates from Kaunos56
Block ofThasian marble, ofwhich the leftpartwas visible and the right side was hidden in the ground, "by the stream between the plane trees" in Palaiopolis, when Kern copied it. Its present location is unknown. 0.39 m,W. 0.28 m, Th. 0.25 m; L.H.? Edd. Kontoleon 1891, p. 299, no. 4; Reinach 1893, p. 373, no. 18; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 222. H.
lst-3rd
century
1892, p. 203, no. 5; Kern
a.d.?
Kccuvi[cov] jurjaToci
5
euaePTc/ (sic) AOnvouc; Il?p8iKoc<; Av8p6uxxxo(; OiA.dpy\)po[cJ.
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary Judging by Reinachs majuscule
copy, the epsilon and sigma are lunate.
Commentary
initiates in this inscription may have been slaves, since they have just a name. None of the names is attested otherwise inKaunos. Fredrich single the inscription to the 3rd century a.d. on the (following Kontoleon) dates basis of the lettering.An earlier date is also possible.
The
and Rome Fig. 48 Stele ofThasian marble, preserved on the left and on back, which is in July 1971 at 17.80-21.00 m east and 33.50-37.50 rough-picked. Found m south of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. Archaeological 61
Record of initiates from Knidos
Museum
of Samothrace,
courtyard,
inv. 71.962.
H. 0.56 m,W. 0.28 m,Th. 0.075 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m (lines 1-5), 0.015 m (lines 6-18), 0.02-0.025 m (lines 19-20), 0.015 m (line 21), 0.02-0.025 m (line 22).
56. See
also
ates from Kaunos.
133 for probable
initi
Ed. McCredie 799). 1979, pp. 16-17 (SEGXXJX Cf. BullEp 1980 357; Cole 1989, p. 1580, n. 71, p. 1589, n. 131.
146
CHAPTER
6
2nd century B.C.? KviSicov uugtocimi
u
evoefteiq vavapxoq 5
EupoDta)^]
ApxuiOAaoc; xpir|pap%oi AydGivoq EuP[otl>ax>i)] 'buioSauoc, Ava?dvSpi8[o<;] Kai eninXoi xpiripapxoi KAEY[-]
NiKaoiPouAOD, IcoaGevriq 0EY[-] 10 ypajiuccxeix; AaK^r|7cid8ri [cj Aionckevq Kai xoi cviiKXevcavTeq Kai |iur|0evx?(; Kai vj7T07CT8iL)aavT8<; (sic) vacat
15 ?7cipaaiAiox; MvrjGia[xpdxo\)] xou K^eopouXoi) (bq8e KviSioi you
znx 8auio[i)p]
v n-oGoviKon
iimystae piei 20 qum Cn. Lentul[o] venere initiatei A D P-Aninius-P-1-SA|.[-
[-] -]
McCredie.
2 \)7C07c[Tai] McCredie, ixporclrai] lapis. 10 Ao~KXr|7ud8r|[cJ to! 12 McCredie, to! Dimitrova. 20 Qu M AoKA,r|7ud8r|[cJ lapis.
McCredie, Cn Lentulus McCredie, Qum Cn. Lentul[o?? Bingen (apud SEG)> qum Cn. Lentul[o] Dimitrova. 22 1.SaiMcCredie, 1 SA|. Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and carefully done. The Latin record shows republican letter forms, especially P. Line 1: Lower part of a vertical stroke. Line 2: Lower part of a leftvertical. Line 22: The L of l(ibertus) is clear.
Commentary The inscription contains a fully preserved record of Knidian initiates in initiates in Greek (inscription i) and an incomplete record of Roman Latin (ii).The Knidian initiateswere members of the crew of awar galley, as the titles of naval officers in lines 4, 6, 8, and 10 suggest. The trier arch, commander of the trireme,was practically the captain inHellenistic 1995, p. 307), the epiplous was the vice-captain (Casson 1995, p. 307), and the nauarch was the commodore (Casson 1995, p. 307, n. 30). The grammateus was a high officer, the "trierarchs secretary and as treasurer," Casson defines it (p. 307). Lines 12-14 refer to the rest of times (Casson
the crew.
Figure 48. Record of initiates from Knidos and Rome (61)
initiates
whose
ethnic
is
known
H7
confusion of prefixes seen in the spellings \)(p67t[xoci]and in line 14 is noteworthy.The carvermust have been thinking
Line 2: The
vnonxevoavTzq of VKonxoq, asMcCredie observed. The aspiration of the firstpi is paralleled occurs in 49, 67, 71, and 7GXII.2 which 275. by ecponxai, Line 6: A certain EiSPouAoc, AyaGivou of Knidos is honored in a de
cree issued by Chalcis, IG XII.9 900A, dated to the first half of the 2nd century b.c. It seems likely that he was related to the person mentioned in the present document, perhaps his father or son.
7: The name Avcci;ocvSpi8a<; iswell attested in Knidos (e.g., in I 34, 76). Line 9: The name NiKacnPouA-oc, is attested elsewhere in Knidos (LKnidos I 427). EcoaGevriq is a common name, but unattested in Knidos. Lines 17?18: Other Knidian inscriptions dated with the damiourgos are LKnidos I 801, 7 (1st century a.d.?) and 802, 1 (ca. 100-150). The same Line
LKnidos
official also occurs as eponym inRhodes, Naxos, Samos, andTeos. Lines 19-22: The spelling of the diphthong El in the nominative plural o-stems of suitswell a date in the 2nd century b.c.; see, e.g., Ernout 1935, pp. 50-51; Palmer 1961, p. 217. Line 20: A Cn. Cornelius Cn. f.Lentulus was consul in 146 b.c., but it is unclear whether he is the same person or a relative. For the spelling of the preposition cum as qum, cf., e.g., CLL I 1772, III 3908.
49 and Thasos Records of initiates fromMiletos Fig. Block ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides.The left side has ana on the right, top, and bottom, rough thyrosis.The block is smooth-picked on back. Palaiopolis, Old School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric picked and Classical Antiquities. Ephoreia inv.C 80.105. H. 0.35 m,W. 0.795 m,Th. 0.19 m; L.H. 0.03 m (inscripton i, lines 1-5), 0.025 (inscription i, line 6, and inscription ii). 1985, pp. 312-313. Ed.Triantaphyllos 62
Cf. SEGXXXV
2nd
965;Touchais
1986, pp. 730-731.
b.c.?
century
i 87tipacuAicoc, OiAocjevoi) xou Tiaioi) SiKccaxai
MiAT|T07co^e!Tca uuoxca
euaepeiq
ApxeuiScopoc, ApxeuiScbpou xox> noaeiScoviOD,
5
Zdynvpoq
MeviTuiou ii
Euaeprjc,
NiKTjcpopoc, Gdcuoc,
Triantaphyllos.
MnxpoScbpou u-oax-nc;
2 MiXr|xo7to^?ix[ai]
Triantaphyllos,
M i^tixotco A,eixociDimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters of inscription i are more elongated and faded than those of ii, was added in the vacant though sufficiently clear and legible. Inscription ii space
after
i.
Line 2: The
last two letters are faint, but visible.
CHAPTER
148
6
%Wl
,-?
-:".R ".f ,.
t
'
-
-
-. -
-
-e -'
-
-
Y'
,i
:--,w -t.ui F
:- ,? -.
-
' W"
a4
L
tN
e
w , w_w ," t -
- 2
" '
.
Y,
d
-.-4
. S ': " ':' "
.,;".
.
w, ... . ,
Commentary The block must be from the building of theoroi, given itsheight and thick ness. It contains two records of initiates, fromMiletos andThasos, dated on the basis of the lettering. is attested also in 16, as the firstname Line 2: The name T(e)ioiaq of the eponymous official, and on Samothracian coins; see Ashton pp. 131,133, with nn. 16 and 17. Line 3: On judges in Samothrace, see ad 17. 63
Record of initiates from Rome, Pessinus, and Smyrna
1998,
Fig. 50
Four joining fragments of a stele of Thasian marble, with parts of the top and the left and right sides preserved; the back is smooth-picked. of Samothrace inv. nos. 93.47 (fragment c) and Archaeological Museum 93.48 (b) were found on June 30, 1993, in the excavation of the Sacred to thewest of a rectangular structure that Way on the Eastern Hill, just
protrudes southward from the north retaining wall of the Sacred Way ("the cement on the fragments suggests that they had been reused, either in the adjacent structure or in the retaining wall," Diary 1993, p. 8). Inv. 93.49 (d) was found in the vicinity on the following day. Inv. 01.1 (a) was removed from the retaining wall along the SacredWay on June 26, 2001; it had been built into thewall ca. 1.5 m east of the protruding structure. stele has a taper.Traces of mortar remain. Vertical border lines are incised along the left and right edges. H. 0.395 m,W. 0.466 m,Th. 0.052 m; L.H. 0.025-0.03 m (fragment m 0.010-0.014 a\ (fragments b-d).
The
Unpublished. May-June
a.d.
186 a [dyocOrii]xx>%v\\
[rcpo vel
xr\ rcpo-
-cov 'Iorj]vioov
ocuxo
xo E
5
[Kpdxopi M. Aup. Kou]u68coi [kxxIAk?iaicdi ]r^aPpicovi xo B [urcaxoic;oi8? oi?]
jiuaxai xoiq
,
i
x
Figure 49. Records of initiates from Miletos andThasos (62)
INITIATES
[oeuvoic,? [Gevxec,
WHOSE
KNOWN
149
iivr\
iLVOT]j\pioiq Korea
IS
ETHNIC
x]rrv rcpovoi
87cipaoiAi[cDcJ [av Gecbv u.eY<xA/?](ov[-;-]Ano[
[-n.] 'kr6[Aio<; [Teurvux;MapKi]av6<;
dv0(iL)7taxo<;)
I
Col.
Col.
[-]
II
Col. A[-]
[.---] [-]
. . .
[-]ivioc[[- -]'Epoa6<;
[- -]APXIOX[- -] [. . . .]fHpdaxpaxo[(;?]
EP.
'Iorja
[.]ria7i;eipio<;
[----]
6vX[... . . . .
vxo[qn]8aotvot)vxio[(;] AiX Teiuaioc; Tleo
om-]
-
9....]
Ei)7c6piaxo(;
'EjcixDyxdvcotv]
nayoq
Euuxpopoq
TlovxiKoq
T. n?p7U8vva OoaKog IT .Ai'A,. Oapcruvcov
'EniXoyoq Oiatigioc;
SovXoi
vacat
^aivouvxioc;
U-]
-]
[- -Jvetvoi;'PriYeTvoq
[. . . .]coyuvfia\)xo[u]
Ill
N?iKT|xr|(;
.]NO[. .]N
o[-]
-]
[-]
^ZjLiDpvaioc;
t-;--]
800^(01)
OC7C8^8'66?pOl
OvX A^Ki(3id8r|(; 0\)\ Apdcov
---]
IlEiaaToq
'Io-uolwu]
---]
Openxoq
'EipK?ivo(;
---]
Au prolog A%i^?tx;
-]ioq
Boupatax; 8ouX(oi) T?iuaio[/u]
Kopvr(k(\oq) rioXi)8cop[o(;]
---]
Zbpoq
Y\am\p{\oq)
-~]oq -]
MeUVCDV
OiSA,
'YaKiv0[ocJ
[na7C?i]p(iO(;) 'E?i7iw[iKO(;] ?]i [?-
111[?]
Sotitax; 0apat)v[ovx]o[(;]
q
K\elqav8poq Ov>X- Ei>Tx>xiOLv6[q]
---k
0\)^'X?lPI
Clinton,
Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elegant and somewhat rounded, with to 133. sigma, very similar Line 1.15: First letter: vertical stroke. Line
[-'-]
11.16: Unclear
lunate epsilon and
traces; EPM is possible.
Commentary
is the latest certainly dated list of Roman initiates, from lateMay (if the June Kalends are to be restored) or early June a.d. 186 (if the Ides or Nones are to be restored). Fragment a was built into the north retain so a.d. 186 is a terminus post quern for its ingwall of the Sacred Way,
This
construction.
Line 2: npbwith the genitives KataxvScov, Ei8cov, Novvcbv corresponds to Latin pridieywhile xx\[rjpipa] 7cp6with the genitive of a number (e.g., x?oadpoov)
followed
by KaA,av8o)v,
EiScov,
Novvcov
corresponds
to ante
150
CHAPTER
6
Figure 50. Record of initiates from Rome, Pessinus, and Smyrna (63) diem, followed by the accusative of the relevant number and of theKalends, Ides, orNones. A phrase containing a cardinal numeral in the dative (e.g., "on the first,second, third, fourth, day") with KataxvScov, Ei8a>v, Novvcov is also possible inGreek. Lines 6-7: The phrase in Samothracian
documents.
is so far unparalleled uucrcjrjpunq uuT^Gevxec,
7-8: Versions of the expression kcxxocxr|v Jtpovoiocv0ecov ap I2 42.e, line 12 (ca. a.d. pear in Tit.Cal 69 (a little after 25 b.c.); IOSPE (end of 2nd century a.d.), P.Oxy. 200-210); IvO 53 (a.d. 4); LSAM691 Lines
XXVII
(a.d. 289), etc. 10-11: The remains on the stone match
2477
Lines
Geminius Marcianus, restoration likely. Line
Lines
proconsul ofAsia
15: Herastratos 18-20,23: These
sinus and Smyrna.
the name of P. Iulius
around 186 a.d.,
and I find the
is a rare form ofHerostratos. are the firstinitiates attested so far from Pes
WHOSE
INITIATES
IS
ETHNIC
KNOWN
151
ROMAN INITIATES Record of an initiate from Rome Fig. 51 on the a right and per Fragment of plaque ofThasian marble, broken near theGenoese Towers in on top.The back is Found haps rough-picked. 64
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 53.2. early 1953. Archaeological Museum H. 0.15 m,W. 0.23 m,Th. 0.03 m; L.H. 0.03 m. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 25.
927.
Cf. Cole 1984,pp. 134-135,n. 697; 1989,p. 1581,pi. 8; SEGXXXiX
Beginning of 2nd century B.C.? L. Iu
M
[ f]
Thalna
my[stes] pius vacat
Fraser. 1 L. Fraser, P Edson (apud Cole), L. Dimitrova, IVENTIVS, M[fil.] Fraser,M [ f] Dimitrova.
Figure 51. Record of an initiatefrom Rome (64)
lapis,
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are thin and relatively shallow. Line 1:The firstletter is a clear L, and the last letter a clearM. Line 2: Last
letter: upper leftdiagonal, suitable forY or V.
Commentary This is a record of a Roman
one name, plaque contains only of single initiates are relatively rare, as Fraser notes. Fraser dates the inscription to the 2nd century B.C., but thinks
Lucius
Iuventius Thalna.
initiate.The
Records
that identifying the initiatewith the L. Iuventius Thalna known from Livy 38.4 and 39.31 is unlikely because thiswould require the inscription to be dated to the beginning of the 2nd century B.C. Charles Edson (apud Cole, pp. 134-135) thinks that the initiate in the present inscription is Publius
in 148 B.C. to suppress Iuventius Thalna, who was sent toMacedonia Andriskos's revolt.The firstletter is not a P, however, but a clear L. Lucius Thalna was active in 185/4 B.C., as Fraser notes. It seems likely tome that he is the initiate, although secure proof ismissing. Plutarch mentions that Marcellus dedicated offerings at Samothrace as early as 211 B.C., as Cole
observes (1989, p. 1570), so the early 2nd century B.C.may well have been a timewhen Romans were being initiated. Line 1:The omission of the second V in Iu
uncommon.
65
Record of Roman
in the inscription:
initiates(?)
inscription isknown from the copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona. Its dimensions and present location are unknown. The
Edd. [Mommsen,CIL III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 7367]; [Kern 1893, no. 23]; [Fredrich, CIL I2 (1918) 7GXII.8, p. 38]; [Lommatzsch, 375, p. 662a-b]. Cf. Cole
1984, p. 93.
152
CHAPTER
6
113 B.C. C
Caecilio
Cn
Papirio cos
<M>arcello
C 5
proq
Mommsen.
4 AArcello,
codex.
Epigraphical Commentary Line 4: Presumably theM
and A were
the codex.
in ligature, hence the spelling in
Commentary This probably was the beginning of a list of Roman initiates, dated to has C. Marcellus 113 B.C. The proquaestor (presumably inMacedonia) been associated with C. Claudius Marcellus, who was praetor in 80 B.C. was his son. (Broughton [1952] 1984, p. 55). It is possible that the latter The ablative <M>arcello is unusual: it could be amistake for <M>arcellus, case he would have been an initiate.
inwhich 66
Record of initiates from Rome
and Catana
Fig. 52
marble preserved on all sides except above, rough on back, found in 1984 byD. Matsas at the site of Papa-Vbunos, on picked Mikro Vbuni, i.e., on the the southwestern shore of Samothrace, not far from side of the island opposite its original location in the sanctuary.The tenon Stele of Thasian
for anchoring the stele to a base is preserved below. There is a sharp taper of Samothrace. No inv.no. from bottom to top.Archaeological Museum H. 0.505 m (excluding tenon),W. 0.29 m (at line 1), 0.34 m (at last (lines line), Th. ca. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.032-0.038 m (line 2), 0.028-0.032 3-10), 0.032-0.036 (side B).
Ed. Clinton 2001, pp. 27-35 (SEG LI 1092).
September 4,100
B.C.
SideA [_
M
. . -5
. _
_]jr
Fannius M
Cor(nelia) L Tullius
vac. M
f. praef(ectus) f.
Cor(nelia) vac. praif(ectus) P Petellius QL- f. v Norba eq(ues) P Gadienus P f. w Clu(stumina) eq(ues) 10 C Menenius C f Ar(nensi) 5
SuceAcx;w Kaxavrxioq ApxeuiScopo<; riavKpaxou * L Valer(io) C Mar(io)
cos
Figure 52. Record of initiates from Rome and Catana (66): sideA. pr(idie) n(onas)
Sept.
Courtesy K. Clinton
INITIATES
WHOSE
[-k
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
153
Side B (in latere dextro) w A f Mass0 Claudius C
Clinton.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering and layout closely resemble those of 72, and it is likely that the cutterwas the same. I have reprinted Clinton's Epigraphical Commentary below, after checking it against the stone. In addition to the inscription on the front side (A), one line is inscribed on the vertically right side (B). all Latin words and abbreviations are separated by a midline Nearly dot
or a vacant
space.
the final letter the lower part of a vertical stroke is almost directly above the vertical stroke of the final F in the preserved, next line. Of the preceding letter the very bottom of a vertical stroke is over theM in the following line; it seems too distant preserved, centered from the next letter to be an I (cf. IF in line 5). The space seems too narrow to contain PR. (The narrow R at the end of line 10 is the result of crowd assume similar crowding in this line,which ing, but there is no reason to a title.) presumably holds only the tribal affiliation and Lines A. 11-12: These lines appear to have been carved by a different Line A.l:
Of
hand.
seems to be by the same hand that carved the rest text, but its uneven character suggests that itmay have been inscribed after the stele had already been set in its base. Line B.l: M and A are in ligature.The final O isvery small, obviously Line A. 13: This
of the Latin
because
the cutter had run out of space.
Commentary
See Clinton's commentary for a detailed discussion of thismonument. The inscribed on the front, dated to September 4, 100 B.C., records Roman initiates, including Lucius Tullius, Cicero's uncle; M. Fannius, the praetor in 80 B.C. and plebeian aedile; and other prominent Romans. All were returning from the campaign ofM. Antonius, the orator and document
Cilician pirates. The inscription grandfather ofMark Antony, against the informs us that L. Cicero stopped in Samothrace on theway back from Cilicia, and that he was initiated on September 4. On the other hand, Ci
cero writes that his uncle Lucius not only went to Cilicia with Antonius, but also departed togetherwith him (una decesserat,De or. 2.2). This raises the question whether Antonius was also initiated, his name inscribed in themissing top part of the stone. There are various pro and contra argu ments for this suggestion, which, as Clinton notes, "remains at best only a possibility" (p. 31). Lines A.6-7: Petellius, in listing his city instead of his tribe, departed from the practice of the other Roman citizens in this list, as Clinton notes.
Lines A. 11-12: This visit
Samothrace.
is the first citizen of Catana
in Sicily known to
CHAPTER
154 67
6
of initiates from Rome
Records
and Byzantion(?) Block ofThasian marble inscribed on the front, left, and right.The back is smooth-picked. Dowel holes are visible on top and bottom, and there is a pi-shaped clamp hole on top, behind the dowel hole. Brought in 1953, now in theArchaeological from the church ofAyios Demetrios Museum
Samothrace,
H.
inv. 53.560.
courtyard,
0.66 m,W.
0.28-0.32
0.18 m; L.H.
m, Th.
0.02-0.025
(side A),
0.015-0.020
(sides B, C). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2..1 (1960) 28. Cf. Robert 1963, pp. 66-67; BullEp 1964 374; Cole 1984, p. 93; Sherk 1984, p. 26, no. 27.A; Cole 1989, p. 1580, with n. 71, p. 1589, with n. 131; Clinton 2001, p. 35. 2nd-lst
B.C.?
century
SideA (June13) .
B Side Side C ..
IVSO.[....]
Iunieis
[<w?]ID [.] Cornelius
pr. vacat
pro
leg
L
epop[ta vel -es] f Lent[ulus]
5mustae piei . L 1.Phil[o] [L CJornelius 1 Erun[- -] C [C .]Mutius
10
[.M]anius Demetr[ius] 1 LICT[[P .Jallius P [. . .]Cor[. JMITOR[[ [. . .JUS Cornel[ius[-
15
- - - -
-]R
[.JO
Muti
C
Corne[lius-
[A]iov|/6cno(;]
8\)a[8PeT(;]
[fH]paKAT|[<;]
npoKA,?io|/D(;] vel -u] [.] . t965r|jLLo[<; [l]epouo:xo[(; vel -d]
[fH]paKAi[o\)<;]
[1....]
1 ]
[r]?ia\)Ki[a(;] .
otaovoc;
[.] .oXka[q\
[K]poiooq
['Hp]aKAio[\)cJ
[A]-0ko(ppov[o(;]
[A7t]oaAcg[(;] [Ai]o86t[od]
ocko^odOoi
-]
[A]iovdo[io\)]
[I]cbaTpaxo[(;]
Ax[x]d^o\)
-]
1 ] -
. ...
[Medial
-] -
.OAI
pH]^i68(op[oc;]
ztyonxai'vv
[n]To?l8(Lia[io(;]
[XocJpiSauoc,
[A]uxpi5oxo[<;]
[Xa]pi8duo[t>]
Icboapxoc;
[. .]8c0v
[-M-]
[Bo]a7iopixo[-o] vacat
[r^a]\)Kia(; [. . Jvxog [. .o]08vrj(;
[. .]ENIO[Y] . . .EIO
20
. I .A
Fraser. A.l [P.M]allius
P
1
.OE.Fraser. Lict[avius?]
A.ll [-]C[.]NU[.]
B. 4 npoK^8io[\)]
Fraser.
B.12
Robert. C.7 [A]u(pi?o%o[cJ
13 C.
A.2 Fraser. A.10
. . . Id. A.9 Fraser, [w] Id. Clinton. . Fraser. [. .]Cor[. .]Matrod[orus]
Fraser.A.13 Muti(us) [n]xo?i?|j.a[cJ
Fraser.
B.13
Fraser,Muti Dimitrova. [A]|i(pio%o[cJ
Fraser,
[n]xoMix[cJFraser, [k]noXKa[c\fortasseRobert. C.12
. . . . . . Robert. [AlpiSajaoq [A]pi5du.o[/o] Fraser, [Xa]pi8ocu.o<; [Xa]pi5duo[/o] 14 [AJecov Fraser, C.17 [KAJeoov Robert. [AeoJvToc, Fraser. C.19 [Oa]evvo[t>]
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering of the Latin record (side A) C ismore legible than that on B.
is best preserved. That
on side
. . .
WHOSE
INITIATES
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
155
Line A.l: The remains on the stone seem compatible with restoring the name ofDrusus as part of the consular date. Line A.2: Clinton (p. 35) suggests a lacuna at the beginning of this line, since there is space for no more than two letters. is in ligature, as Fraser notes. Line A.3: The NT of Lent[ulus] Illegible traces. [A]uxpiSo%o[cJhas a clear delta, as Fraser notes. Lines C. 12-14: Two letters need to be restored in the lacunae before the names of the epoptai, as Robert notes (p. 64). Line A.ll:
Line B.13:
Commentary
The block on which the above recordswere inscribed must have been part of a large structure. Fraser comments on the fact thatmore than one line must be missing above all three inscriptions, although the top of the block can barely fit one line. He suggests, therefore, that the block was joined with other blocks and that the structurewas inscribed vertically on three sides.This is supported by the clamp and dowel holes in the blocks top and bottom, as Fraser notes. The blocks architectural form is similar to that of 33 and 97, and it is possible that they belonged to the same structure.The on the front and the sides of the present block would suggest inscriptions that itwas part of an anta or a similar structure, but the other two blocks are inscribed on one side only. It seems possible to fit the beginning of the records on sidesA and B on line 1 and themissing line above it, so perhaps
was still in place. only side C was inscribed while the block This document, dated by Fraser to the late 2nd or the 1st century B.C., contains three lists of initiates: one Latin in front (side A), and two Greek, side B on the left and side C on the right.The record on side C
is probably one of initiates from Byzantion. The spelling El in the Latin record (Iunieis, piei) is consistent with a Republican date. Record A should be dated to June 13 and not before, as Clinton observes. It is impossible to identifyCornelius Lentulus, as Fraser notes. Many name Cornelius, Luci fllius,Lentulus, including the consuls people bore the in201,199, and 162, butwe have no information about a legatuspropraetore with the same name. Fraser also remarked that Lentulus was made epoptes on the same day that the liberti listed on side A were initiated. Fraser notes a difficulty in the distribution of patronymics in the names of initiates in record B.The only securely recorded patronymic isAT[r]dAOD in line 7. Fraser considers also npoicA,eio[- -] in line 4 to be a patronymic, in line 14 because it is inset. It must be noted, however, that Zcbaap^oq a been a not well have is also inset, but is patronymic. IIpoKXeio[- -]may patronymic
because
the nominative
npoKA,?ioc,
is very
rare,
compared
to
is the typical the frequently attested npoKAflc/npoKAirjc,. npoKAi(()ot>(; name npoKAfjc/npoKAinc,, while IIpoK^e(i)o\) is extremely genitive of the rare. Fraser restores the name in line 5 as a nominative, but it could also be a second genitive, modifying Ejcbcrcpaxoc, npoKA?io[/u<;. The name in line 6, on the other hand, could be a patronymic of the name in line 5. Hence the alternative endings in lines 5 and 6. Line A.9: There aremany possibilities for restoration before -Jallius and after Lict[-
-]. Lictavius
is a very
rare name.
The
title
lictor
is
possible.
156 Line A. 10: A name such as Numitorius Line A. 13:The
abbreviation Muti(us)
is possible. is uncommon. We
have the genitive Muti. Line B.5: [.] . i068r|uo[<; vel-x>] is a possibility. Line B.10: On the akolouthoi see also 14,15,35,71.
CHAPTER
6
may simply
Fraser remarks that
or theywere presumably slaves people of humble origin, and probably lacked patronymics. I have accepted Fraser's restorations of their names' endings, as
no they have patronymics in any of the other inscriptions that list them. for lack of space, although Line B.12: Fraser restores [njiotauafc] he admits that [n]xoA?|ia[iO(;] would be more natural. He interprets the as indicative of a lower status, but Robert (p. 64) questions hypocoristic
the validity of this observation. It is possible to fit [n]TOA.?ua[iocJ into the lacuna.Moreover, Ptolemas seems to be attested not as a masculine name, but as the genitive of Ptolema, a woman's name. Line B.13: Robert remarks (p. 64) that [A]uxpiSoxo[c;] is regularly
formed and cannot be excluded as a possibility. Line C.7: The name TlxoXkhq is very typical of Egypt, and a certain 'HpaK^eioq WxoKKa is attested in Egypt (Portes du desert, 10.19, 2nd cen turya.d.), but the poor legibility of the inscription does not allow us to determine whether Fraser's restoration is correct. Lines C. 12-13: Api8ocuo<; is not attested, while Xapi8auo<; common, as Robert points out (p. 64). Line C.15: The name BoaTcopixoq is to be connected with of Byzantion,
as Robert clarifies.Thus
is fairly the city lists
it is likely that the document
initiates from Byzantion. Line C.19: Robert (p. 65) notes that [Oa]evvo[u]
is unlikely.
53 Record of initiates and an epoptes from Rome? Fig. on all sides.The Fragment ofThasian marble, broken right side may be close to the original edge. Found on June 17,1949, in theRuinenviereck north of the Stoa (cf. Lehmann 1998, plans 111:5, IV). Archaeological 68
Museum H.
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv.49.4. 0.16 m,W. 0.08 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.03 (line 1), 0.015
(line 2),
0.005
(lines 3-7). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2A (1960) 30. Cf. Sherk 1984, pp. 26-27, no. 27.B.
2nd-lst
century
b.c.?
[- -]
[C.Mar]tius
[epjoptes piu[s] vacat}
. NINI
[-] [-]ILACI 5
-]ONINI
1
C
Mart(i)
[- -]
vacat
[-ejxaminantes [--].ARI.[-]
Fraser.
C vacat
. [-] M
. tius Fraser,
vacat
rius Sherk, Mar]
Mari Fraser. 5 Dimitrova.
this Dimitrova.
3 Dimitrova,
[
Figure 53. Record of initiatesand an epoptesfromRome? (68). Courtesy Samothrace Excavations
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
KNOWN
157
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are Republican, carefully done, but hard tomake out in places. The difference in size between those in line 1 and the rest is noteworthy. Line 1: First letter: clear T. What looks like a right diagonal, suitable forR, is damage to the stone. Line 1: Last letter: bottom part of a left oblique
stroke.
Commentary This is a record of a Roman
epoptes,C. Martius, and his entourage. Mar a rare tius is relatively name, which caused difficulties in deciphering line 3, where previous editors read C. Mari, looking for connections with the famous
69
Marius.
initiates and of an epoptes of unknown
Record of Roman
Fig. 54
provenance
on the left.The a stele of Thasian marble, Fragment of preserved back is smooth, inscribed with very faintGreek letters.Brought from the of Samothrace, church inChora on July 5,1949. Archaeological Museum inv. 49.442. courtyard, 0.39 m, W. 0.19 m, Th. 0.065-0.067 m; L.H. 0.03 m (line 1), 0.015-0.02 m (lines 2-3), 0.02-0.025 m (line 4), 0.01-0.015 m (lines H.
5-8).
BCHA9 (1925),p. 2S6\AE 192634; [Lommatzsch, Edd. Chapouthier, CIL I2 (1918)2505]; [Degrassi, ILLRPI (1957) and I2 (1965)209];Fraser, Samothrace 2 A (1960)31. 99 or 44 B.C.? -
free
[A. Postumio velY. Dollabella]
M. Anton[io]
co(n)s(ulibus)A. D. IV [-] epoptesp[ius]
5
Q_* Luccius
Q/
[f ]
mystae piei R Antonius Cn
f V
M. Antonius Cn
f
Antonia [...].
M
[-] [-]
1. [-]
SED[-]
Fraser. 6 R Antonius Chapouthier, R Antonius Cn. f.V Fraser. 7M. Antonius * * [QJ f Chapouthier, M. Antonius C. f.Degrassi, M. Antonius Cn. f.Fraser.
Figure 54. Record ofRoman initi ates and of an epoptesof unknown provenance Excavations
(69).
Courtesy
Samothrace
9 ISED Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The Latin text is inscribed on top of aGreek text, illegible letters ofwhich are visible in the upper leftpart; ca. 10 lines.The lower part they occupy of the Latin inscription is defaced, but still legible. Commentary This is a list of Roman
initiates and an epoptes. Chapouthier dated the therewere consuls with the name
to either 99 or 44 B.C.,when inscription
CHAPTER
6
M. Antonius. Degrassi prefers the earlier date, since in 44 Caesar s name always preceded that ofAntony. The inscription is decorated with a relief above, representing a tree. association Chapouthier connects the treewith the Kabiri because of their
with vegetation and their relation toDionysos, while Lehmann (
70
as Fraser
comments.
of initiates from Rome
Record
The inscription is known from the copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona, Cod. Vat. Lat. 5250, folio 20, verso. Its dimensions are unknown. Edd. [Ritschl 1852, p. 28 = 1866-1879 IV, p. 149]; [Mommsen, CIL
I (1863) 578; CIL III (1873) 713,with Suppl.LI (1889) 7367 (commen
1 (1902) 4053]; [Zie tary)]; [Garrucci 1875-1877 934]; [Dessau, ILSII. barth 1906, p. 411, no. 1]; [Fredrich, JGXII. 8, pp. 38-39]; [Lommatzsch,
CIL I2 (1918) 663]; [Degrassi,ILLRPl Cf. Hatzfeld
1919, p. 60; Cole
July,92 B.C.? [C.?] Claudio L Lucceius M
Lucceius
Qj
Hortensius
Mommsen.
1 DIEI
(1957) and I2 (1965) 210].
1984, p. 95.
* cos mens(e) muste (sic) Quinc(tili) Perpenna 1 Pal(atina) f leg(atus) P .Livius M
M M
1 Artemidorus
M M
Cyriacus.
1 Archelaos 2,fin.
PVL
Cyriacus.
Commentary
This list of initiates is probably to be dated to July 92 B.C.,when the consuls were C. Claudius and M. Perpenna. Another possible date is 130 B.C., as Mommsen notes, when the consuls had the same names except for the
(Aulus). Scholars have preferred the later date praenomen of Claudius in view of the initiates' cognomina, which they deemed more suitable for 92 B.C., and because of the expedition against theThracians dated to that
year (see Degrassi). Line 1: Cyriacus must have taken the open P inPIEI msen
forD, asMom
notes.
to Pal(atina). codex has PVL, corrected byMommsen rare. of for freedmen is tribes relatively listing Line 3: It is possible that the person listed here was a freedman of the father of Lucceius in line 2. Line 2: The
The
of initiates and epoptai from Rome Pedimental stele ofThasian marble, with molding, broken at bottom. Found at Chora, now lost. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.28 m,W. 0.23 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.01 m. 71
Record
Edd.
[Rubensohn
1892, pp. 231-233,
no. 2]; Kern
1893, p. 367,
piei
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
159
no. 10; [Cagnat,JGRI.4 (1905)851];Fredrich, JGXII.8 205; [Dittenberger, von IGXLI Suppl. (1939),p. 149]. Syll? 1053]; [Hiller Gaertringen, Cf. Cole
1984, p. 96; 1989, pp. 1585-1586.
After 90 b.c. 87ciPocaiAiox; A7co^o(pdvon xou
Aic-Scopou
8(p07ciai euoepeiq 5
AeuKioq Iikwioc; Mocdpicoi) Tcouaioq Kai dKOAouOoc;HXzvKoq UVjGXCU
10
euoepeiq
AvXoq IiKivtoq AevjKioi) TcojiaToq AOnvicov [Ircojpux; riepaioq Ko'wxoo [Tcojuaioq AecoviSnq [-]\)7ir|p8XlKO\)
[-8r|]jULoai[o]\) Fredrich. 12-13 [apxcov]\)7ir|p?TiKoi) [tiXoiod8r|]|Lioai[o]'uHiller. Commentary This is a record of Roman
initiates, including l7t6pio<; riepaioq AscoviSnq, a probably captain of dispatch boat (hyperetikon) in state service, as Hiller von Gaertringen surmised in IG XII Suppl., p. 149. Fredrich dates the inscription to after 90 b.c., since the Greek names of the initiates listed serve
as
cognomina.
Record of Roman
72
initiates of unknown provenance
Fig. 55 a on top Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, preserved and the left.There is amolding above. The back may be close to the origi nal surface. Found near theGenoese Towers. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 57.856. H. 0.27 m, W. 0.22 m, Th. 0.075 m; L.H. 0.025 m (lines 2-6), 0.02 m (lines 7-9). Edd. Fraser, Samothrace 21 Cf. Cole 1984, p. 95. 76
0.01 m
(line 1), 0.02
(1960) 32; [Sherk 1984, p. 26, no. 27].
b.c.
on
molding: below molding:
[e]7ciPaoiXfecoq Cn Oc[tavio M. f] C Scrib[onio C. f. co(n)s(ulibus)] A D X[-] mustae [piei] Q/ Minuc[ius-] The[rmus] C
Magul[-] [.L?]aberi[us-]
Figure 55. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (72)
Fraser. 8 RMagul[nius Fraser,C. Magul[Fraser.
-Dimitrova. 9 L- vel. F]aberius [.
CHAPTER
i6o
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and squarish. Line 1 has much Fraser notes. The hand looks the same as that of 66. Commentary
This the
6
smaller lettering, as
initiates, dated by Fraser to 76 b.c., on the basis of
is a list of Roman names.
consuls'
find likelyFraser's suggestion that thismight be the same as the governor ofAsia in 52-50 b.c. The homo Thermus Q^Minutius b.c. is another possibility (cf.Broughton [1952] 1984, 86 of nymous legate Lines 6-7:1
p. 592). 9: Laberius
Line
is a very
common
name,
and
a
preferable
restora
tion.
of initiates and epoptai from Rome on the right Fragment of marble stele with molding above, broken and below. Found in Potamia, in the northwest of the island, in a church, then brought to the school. Now missing. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.25 m,W. 0.25 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.02-0.03 m. 73
Record
Edd. [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl. 1.3 (1889) 12318]; Kern 1893, p. 374, no. 22; [Dessau, ILS II. 1 (1902) 4054]; Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 39, no. 1; ILLRP I CIL I2 (1957)and I2 (1918) 665]; [Degrassi, [Lommatzsch,
(1965)213].
1984, p. 96.
Cf. Cole
Ca.
79 b.c? Mystae
Epoptae Fourius
L
Crassupes
5 P
Teidius
unclear
Mommsen,
piei
L P
s(acrum
vel
-acra
acceperunt?)
f Ou[f(entina)] f Pom[p(tina)]
traces
Degrassi.
1 Pieis,
edd., piei
s(acrum
vel
-acra
acceperunt?)
Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are discrepant, but clear. Line line above and one below. Commentary
The
date
1 is separated by one horizontal
is based mainly on the plausible identification of L. Fourius (seeKlines 3-4). The spellings El and OU are typical of the
Crassupes Republican period. Line 1: Previous editors have assumed that the right edge is preserved, and have printed PIEIS, which does not make sense. The squeeze shows a medial dot between PIEI and S.
INITIATES
WHOSE
Line
3: The
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
l6l
last U, read by previous editors, is not visible on the
squeeze.
Lines 3-4: The Furii Crassupedes (also spelled Crassipedes) were a famous family, as Degrassi observes. L. Fourius Crassupes of the present same as the one attested in an inscription is probably the inscription from 3218, dated to ca. 79 B.C.He must have been an official since the inscription from the Piraeus mentions an ambassador
the Piraeus,/GIF
inGreece, sent to him (cf.Miinzer, RE VII. 1 1910, cols. 352-353). He may also be the legatus of 73 B.C.,mentioned by Plutarch.57 Line 5: The name Teidius is common during the Imperial period, as notes.
Mommsen
74
Records of Roman
initiates(?) of unknown provenance
Fig. 56
an opisthographic stele of Top left (with respect to side A) part of Thasian marble. Found in July 1962 in the area of the Stoa, in the interior of a post-antique structure,2.15 m west of thewest foundation. Archaeo of Samothrace, inv. 62.1464. logicalMuseum H. 0.16 m,W. 0.07 m, Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.02 m (side A, lines 1-2), 0.01 m (side A, line 3, and side B). Unpublished. 67
B.C.
SideA M'(anio) A[cilio] C(aio) Pis[one co(n)s(ulibus)] vacat [-] A. D. [-] vacat
SideB [-S]cip [-]Scipio [-]Scip [-
-]US
SAC
5 [-]ITTAI [-]DI'
t-].:
Figure 56. Records ofRoman initi ates(?) of unknown provenance (74): sideA (top), side B (bottom)
57. Thomasson no. 146.
1991, p. 17, app. I,
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are carefully done. Commentary This may have been a list of Roman initiates, dated to 67 B.C. It is unclear whether the inscription on side B is a continuation of that on side A, but this seems likely in view of the lettering,which in the 1st century B.C.
is consistent with a date
162 75
Greek
record of Roman
CHAPTER
6
epoptai(}) of unknown provenance
Fig. 57 Fragment pedimental stele ofThasian marble, probably with crown ingmolding, preserved on the left.The back is smooth-picked and inscribed with stray letters.Found inAugust 1976 in a Hmekiln in the ancient city. of a
of Samothrace, storeroom, inv. 76.16. Archaeological Museum H. 0.41 m,W. 0.145 m,Th. 0.071 m; L.H. 0.025-0.035 m (lines 1-3), 0.01-0.015 m (lines 4-10). Unpublished. 62
b.c.
or a.d.
78?
. .Q\[-]
y. AeuKio[u-] A8k[uovj-] 87t6[7TCai(?)-] 5 lKpeipco[vi-] IKpeU3[_-] to\)K[-]
EYT[-] E[---]
10 AEY[-]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and carefully executed, similar to those of 79 (espe cially kappa). Line 1:Unclear Line 4: Third
traces. UTtdxcovis
possible. letter: a circle. Omega is possible, if the mark on the
left is part of the letter.
Commentary This probably was a list of epoptai and initiates.The stone could belong with 79, but a secure join cannot be established. Two dates are possible if the
names AeuKioq and Aeicuoc; are the consuls' praenomina: 62 b.c, when the consuls were D. Iunius Silanus and L. Licinius Murena, and a.d. 78, when the consuls were D. Iunius Novius Priscus and L. Ceionius Commodus. If the stone belongs with 79, then the earlier date is to be preferred since 79, inscription ii is dated to 46 b.c., and was inscribed after 79, inscription i. 76
Record of Roman
initiate(s) of unknown provenance
Fig. 58
a Fragment of base ofThasian marble, inscribed on the front and on the left,above, and on the back. Found on broken right, July 18,1950, in the ancient city, just above the spring that fed the "Roman aqueduct."
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 50.632. Archaeological Museum H. 0.22 m, W. 0.515 m, Th. 0.395 m; L.H. 0.03 m (side A, lines 1-4), 0.015 m (side A, line 5), 0.025 m (side B, lines 1-2), 0.03 m (side B, line 3). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 17. Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp 1964 368,400.
Figure 57. Greek record ofRoman epoptai(}) of unknown provenance
(75)
INITIATES
Figure 58. Record ofRoman initiate(s)
of unknown
WHOSE
Hellenistic?
provenance
ETHNIC
IS
(side A), 2nd-lst
KNOWN
163
century B.C.? (side B)
SideA
sideB (right) A (left), (76):side
[Ia]uo[0pdiK(ov] 6 8fjuo<; vacat iToGoKAfiv 5
[A7t]oA,Xo(pdvoD(; [-e]7tovn[cj?v]
SideB mys] [tes?] pius ... Regius [- -] [- -] .PONTE[-] [- -]atello[-
[----]..[-]
Fraser. B.l Atelli[us f. vel 1.Fraser, - -]Metello[co(n)s(ulibus)(?) trova. B.2
... NIO
. NI
Fraser.
B.3
epo
Dimi
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering of theGreek part suggests aHellenistic The Latin part is defaced.
date, as Fraser notes.
Side B, first letter:Oblique stroke, as Fraser notes. Side B, dots: Unclear traces.
Commentary The stonewas originally a statue base, inscribed with the name n\)9oKA,fj<; ATtoAAocpdvoix;when he was honored by the people of Samothrace. Then the stone was reused and a record of Roman initiates was inscribed on ancient city, above the spring the right.The findspot of the base?the that fed the Roman aqueduct?is curious; for the location of the spring, see Lehmann-Hartleben 1939, pp. 142-144. Fraser thinks that the base was transferred to the ancient city at originally stood in the sanctuary and
a later date, but in view of the other inscriptions found in the ancient city (39,57), such an assumption is no longer necessary. son of is also known from an inscription on Pythokles, Apollophanes, the base of a statue that he dedicated
to theGreat Gods. The monument
164
CHAPTER
6
was
found in the sanctuary, near theMilesian dedication (Salviat 1962, was is It he that honored the p. 270). possible by people of Samothrace because of the dedication that he made. The tentative date of the Latin record is based on the lettering, es pecially thewide, open P, as Fraser notes. He dates the record before the of the 1st century b.c. Line 6: A name such as Anatellon, scriptions, is possible.
middle
relatively frequent in Roman
in
Line 8: Fraser reads epo
77
Record of Roman
initiates(?) of unknown provenance a of Fragment pedimental stele of Thasian marble, broken on the left and below. Fredrich copied it in Chora, at the house of Phardys. Its in present location is unknown. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy May 2004. H. 0.24 m,W. 0.26 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.012 m (lines 1-2), 0.025 m (line 3). Edd. Kern 1893, p. 372, no. 16; [Mommsen, CIL
III Suppl. 1.3 (1893)
12320]; [Cagnat,IGR 1.4 (1905) 846]; Fredrich,IG XII.8 208; [Lom
matzsch, CIL P
(1918) 669].
50 or 49 b.c. [eVi] fiaoxXeayqNoDjunvioi) [xox> N]oDUT|VlO'D
[L. Paull- velC. Lentul]o
C. Marce
[llo co(n)s(ulibus)] Fredrich.
Commentary
This probably was the beginning of a list of initiates. Lines 1-2: The eponymous official is otherwise unattested. Line 3: Either name is possible, but the space is perhaps more suitable for a shorter name (e.g., [L. Paull]o), as Fredrich notes. 78
Record
ofGreek, Thracian,
and Roman
initiates from
Fig. 59
Rome(?) Stele ofThasian marble, found inPalaiopolis, thenmoved to Istanbul (Qinili Kiosk, Topkapi Palace), but Fredrich was unable to locate it. H.
0.49 m,W. 0.16 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1880, p. 92, no. 2; [Mommsen, CIL
III Suppl. 1.1 (1889)
7GXII.8 207]; [Lom 7369]; [Cagnat,LGR 1.4 (1905) 847]; [Fredrich, CLL ILLRP I (1957) and I2 (1965) I2 matzsch, (1918) 668]; [Degrassi, 212]. Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp Cole 1984, p. 94. 59 or 48 or 46-44
b.c
sac[raW-um] C
Caes
[- -co(n)s(ulibus)]
1958 270; Robert
1963, pp. 67-69;
ETHNIC
WHOSE
INITIATES
A- D- V- I[dus-
e R.T
LEfl
Avxiyovoq Ti[xou?] 15 M. Baebius '[-]
/////////(
fvr.iv
it- o fa t v le T- oFATVLFN^
s-*/&xrj*//.[ iv v/^-///;
Sabini
f>-CVRTIVSP-U/'W/i A NT ITO NOT P//*//#//'7 \S%'////(W, (M- B AM
SABfNIl 4|f PHlLOMV Sv'4j
o&mr,
beitvs
-]
T. Ofatulenu[s-] T. Ofatulenus S[abinus? -] P l(ibertus) I[- -] P. Curtius
AA'
d o
-
T. Ofatulenus[-] 10 A. Furius [-]
5 A BI N V Sy IA
-]
Dom[-]
nt)0[-
AA VSti
t-ofatvlenvs
a-
Tertia
D-
T-OFATV
165
5 T. Ofatulen[us-] Sabinus
CAES-} V
A
KNOWN
must(ae) [pii]
-^3 Am
O
-
IS
Philomusus,
[servi?] [-]
Beitus, Diodo[r
vel -tus - -]
ayopavopmjvfxog-].
vel
Fredrich. 1 sa[cra acceperunt?]Hirschfeld [^^Fredrich], sacr[a
(acceperunt?)]
Dimitrova.
8 omisit Conze.
15 M.
Dimitrova. 16 Sabini leni] Fredrich,M. Baebius [-] [servi?]Dimitrova. 18 DION Conze, Diodo[ edd.
sac[ra vel sacrum]
Baebius
[-]
[-Ofatu
Fredrich, Sabini
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering can be surmised from Conze s facsimile. Line 1:The C is visible on the facsimile. Commentary
J 59. Record
Figure cian,
and Roman
Rome(?)
(78).
of Greek, initiates
Conze
is a list of Roman initiates, dated to one of Caesars consulships. Line l:The phrase sacra acceperunt, "received the sacred rites/things" is two in other Samothracian documents (100 and 169), certainly paralleled so the restoration would be were not it if for the facsimile, which likely, shows sac[r centered, with not enough space to add acceperunt. We see SACR in a similar position in 90. Therefore, I have interpreted sac[r as an abbreviation for sacra (acceperunt). Of course, this is only a hypothesis, and simply sacra or sacrum is also possible. Line 16: Sabini is indented, probably marking a new category, most
This Thra from
1880, p. 92, no. 2
likely slaves. Hence my reluctance to restore [-Ofatuleni] of the previous line.
at the end
Lines
17-18: The slaves of Sabinus must be listed here. Beitus, Greek is awell-attested Thracian name (e.g., B(8)i0\)q, spelling IGBulg 738,1283, 1398,1419, 2322, 2337, etc.).58
79
Record of Greek Roman
1957,
pp. 66-68.
and Thracian of unknown
initiates, and record of
Fig. 60
provenance
joining pieces of a stele ofThasian marble, broken only above. The back is smooth, inscribed with faint Latin characters. The lower part, inwhich a rectangular hole has been cut, has a rough surface below the inscription, but was smoothed at the bottom for insertion into a base. Found inChora on June 20,1939. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, Two
58. Cf. Detschew
initiates
inv. 39.548.
i66
chapter
H. 0.62 m,W.
0.39 m,Th.
0.07 m; L.H.
6
0.01 m (Greek), 0.01-0.015 m
(Latin). Edd. Fraser, Samotbrace 2.1 (1960) 33; AE 1947 5. Cf. Lehmann-Hartleben 1940, p. 358; Cole 1984, p. 94; Clinton 2001, p. 35.
1st century b.c.? (inscription i),October i Side A, Col. I
18, 46 b.c. (inscription ii) Side A, Col.
II
. . CONECOI Unr\VE\)[q] OiA,[-]
AplGTOKA,?lO\)c,
ITdOicqv 5
Ar|u{-] E[i)]|Li8v[r|(;]
ApioTOK^eiouc,
Ei
Oeoc^evoc,
...xaq
TlpoKkoq
Mr|Tpo8ciE)pou Mrjvocpi^oc,
[-]M[-
- -
"E^evoc, 10
[-]kod
Aiovuookatic,
[-]AE[-
Mr|Tpo8ft)po'o
-]
[-]ONE
Ai^daaKoq
[C]
Apiaxcov M
ApiaxoOe[i]ou 15 AeuKioc; 'Akcu[o](;
XV M
Aiocpdvouc,
I[ul]io Caesare Lepido
cos
A.D.
Nov. musta Paccius P f K
Rufus C Pacciu[s] 1 Apollonides Philodamus Pac[ci] Antiochus Pac[ci] [. _]MY[-] Fal
Ilepiyevric,
C
Oi^oxocpoDq Aiovuoioc,
20
- -
Aio86tod Aya0[-] 'E7tiy8vr|(;
SideB [-]HVt-
--
[-]ONIA[-
-] --
-]
vacat} Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now defaced, especially on the back. Commentary
lettering and physical properties of the stone are similar to those of it is impossible to establish a secure join. The stone contains two but 75, of lists initiates, one Greek (inscription i) and one Latin (ii).The Latin list was inscribed in the blank space after the end of i, and Fraser suggests that itmay have continued on the back. It is dated toOctober 18, 46 b.c. The
October
18, 46
B.C.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
l6j
Figure 60. Record ofGreek and Thracian initiates,and record ofRoman initiatesof unknown provenance Excavations
(79).
Courtesy
Samothrace
It is unclear fromwhich city theGreek initiates came, as Fraser notes. Line 2: A genitive of the type 'Execovecoqis possible. Line 12: Ai^acaKoq must be a diminutive, formed afterGreek models, of Dizas, a well-attested Thracian name; cf. IGBulg II 511, 523, 560, III IV 917,1106,1166,1175,1201,1310,1395, 2067,2130, etc.59Fraser notes that he is the only person without a patronymic. It is conceivable that the initiates listed in lines 3 and 5 and lines 7 and 11, respectively,were brothers, given their patronymics. 80
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
Fig. 61
Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, preserved on top and the left.The back is very close to the original surface,which was probably rough-picked. The fragmentmay belong togetherwith 81, though a secure join cannot be established. Found near the Genoese Towers on June 17,
1951. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, inv. 51.98. H. 0.226 m,W. 0.23 m,Th. 0.074 m; L.H. 0.008-0.012 5-7), 0.015 m (lines 3-4). Edd. Lehmann 34. 59. Cf. alsoDetschew 1957, pp. 133-134.
m (lines 1-2,
1953, pp. 12-13, pi. 6:d; Fraser, Samothrace2.1
(1960)
Cf.Walton 1963,p. 99;Robert 1963,pp. 67-69;Cole 1984,pp. 95-96;
1989, p. 1583 with n. 89; Clinton 2001, p. 35.
l68
CHAPTER
6
Figure 61. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (80) June 20, 35 B.C. Prim [us]
inpediment:
Hilarus
in cornice:
[aylopavouoCvioq X[-] L Cornuficio Sex Po[mpeio]
below pediment:
cos A
D
XII K
5 mustae p[i]ei M Servilius M
[. .]E[.]S
M [-]|[-]
Fraser. 6M.
ServiliusWalton,
Iul(ias) l(ibertus)
Philo
l(ibertus) Pamp[hilus]
[M. S]ervilius Fraser. 7 [M. S]e[rvilius] Fra
ser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering and the physical features of the fragment are similar to those of 81. Commentary This is a list of Roman
initiates, dated to June 20, 35 B.C. The initiates names are preserved here were all freedmen. Line 1: Presumably this man was omitted from the list below and
whose
added later; cf.Cole 81
1984, p. 42.
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
Fig. 62
Stele ofThasian marble, preserved on the right and the rough-picked back. Found in 2002 in the stream near theHieron, during cleaning opera tions in the area, now at Old School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities in Palaiopolis. Ephoreia inv. 02.50. H. 0.23 m,W. 0.16 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.01-0.015 m, 0.025-0.03
(line10),0.02m (line11). Unpublished.
m
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
169
Figure 62. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (81) 1st century
B.C.?
M
Aurelius M l(ibertus) 0[-] Masonius l(ibertus) [-] Q/ Sp L Ofalius M. l(ibertus) Oes .. iu[s-] * M Considius Aristoni[cus-] 5 [.c.a.4.]philus *Theodot[us-] C M[arc]ellus C l(ibertus) Herode[s-
L (velT) PetroniusL (velT) L
Cornelius
T
Annaeus
vacat
10
L
T
*
l(ibertus) l(ibertus)
-]
Persicu[s--] l(ibertus)
Alypus I [- -] Gem[inus?-]
1 vs.
SERVI vv
Lepidus vv Anteros
D
s(ervus) [-?-
-]
T
s(ervus) [-?-
-]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated and clear, similar to those of 80. Line 10:1-longa. Commentary This was a list of Roman
initiates, tentatively dated on the basis of the to the 1st century B.C., though a later date cannot be excluded. It lettering isvery similar to 80 in hand and layout, but the use ofY to render upsilon
(Alypus, line 8) and of I-longa (line 10) differentiate itfrom the orthography of 80, which has mustae (line 5) and does not employ I-longa.
170
82
Record ofGreek unknown
initiates and of Roman
CHAPTER
epoptai(?) of
6
Fig. 63
provenance
at the lower right. Brought Fragment ofThasian marble, preserved fromChora, now in theArchaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard. No
inv. no.
H. 0.19 m,W. 0.14 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.04 m (line 4), 0.02 m (line 0.015 5), (lines 1-4). Edd. Conze 1875, p. 41, no. 11, pi. 71:11; [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl.
1.1 (1889) 7370]; Fredrich,7GXII.8 210. Cf. Clinton 2001, p. 35.
August
8, before 8 B.C. [-:---]
5
[-A.
[-]uuaxr|v [-]A .TPO[-
-
-] -] [-e]phop[t? eid(us) D.] VI
Figure 63. Record ofGreek initiates and ofRoman epoftai(}) of unknown
Sex(tiles)
[-]Qi' f co(n)s(ulibus)
Fredrich. 4 -phor[us] Fredrich, [-e]phop[t?
-
provenance(82)
-]Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The Greek in lines 1-2 isbadly damaged, while theLatin letters are uneven and inelegant. Commentary The document
record of initiation and a Latin before 8 B.C. because the record, possibly of epopteia, dated byMommsen name Sextilis went out of use when Augustus named the month after contains an older Greek
himself in 8 B.C.The date in lines 5-6 possibly indicates the beginning of a new
record.
ofunknownprovenance 83 Record ofRoman initiates(?)
Fig. 64
a Fragment of pedimental stele of Thasian marble, broken below, on back. Its findspot is unknown. Paris, Musee du Louvre, rough-picked inv.Ma. 4196. H. 0.15 m,W. 0.26 m,Th. 0.035 m; L.H. 0.02 m. p. 39.
Ed. Fredrich, 7GXII.8, 8 B.C.
[C] Marcio C[e]nsorin[o] [C] Asinio Gallo co(n)s(ulibus) 1-2 Dimitrova,
Marcio-
-
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is nearly obliterated, and Fredrich could only read the name Marcio. The hand is similar to that of 84. Line 2: The Ls ofGallo
are
two vertical lines. represented by
Figure 64 (above, left).Record ofRo man initiates(?) of unknown prov enance
(83). Courtesy Musee Department of Greek, Roman,
du Louvre, and Etruscan
Antiquities
Figure 65 (above, right).Record ofRoman initiates(?) of unknown provenance (84)
ETHNIC
WHOSE
INITIATES
IS
Commentary This probably was a list of Roman 84
Record of Roman
KNOWN
171
initiates; it is dated by consuls to 8 B.C.
initiates(?) of unknown provenance
Fig. 65
on the left; the back has mortar Fragment ofThasian marble preserved of at places. Provenance unknown, now in the Archaeological Museum Samothrace.
H.
inv. no.
No
0.08 m,Th.
0.09 m,W.
0.04 m; L.H.
0.02 m (lines 1-2), 0.015 m
(lines 3-8). Unpublished. 8 B.C.?
[-]U[- -] Verus
vacat
C Axsius C[. F- -] . -] Pomponi[us5 C Fictorius [- -] C Rustius C F[- -] M
Cusinius
M
Licini[us-
[- -] -]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are relatively broad and carefully done, with finials. Lines 2, 6, 8: Dotted letters: unclear traces. Line 4: First letter: unclear traces. Commentary This was probably a list of initiates, perhaps the continuation of 83, inview of the similar layout and lettering. 85
Record of initiates from Rome Fig. 66
on all sides. Provenance unknown. Fragment ofThasian marble, broken Museum of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv. no. Archaeological H. 0.18 m,W. 0.27 m,Th. 0.06 m; L.H. 0.03 m. Unpublished.
CHAPTER
172 End of 1st century b.c.-middle
6
of 1st century a.d.
[mystjae leafpiti [-]
(.)
[-Cajesaris
* f Ter(etina) Proculus vacat [-?- -] August!
s L
[-?- -]
3 [- - legatus(?)Ca]esaris Dimitrova. Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated, with finials. Line 2: The first letter is eitherU or a ligature of R and U. A ligature of RAS is also possible. The E ofTer(etina) is damaged, and may be con fusedwith an F.
Figure 66. Record of initiates from Rome (85)
Commentary This is a list of Roman initiates.The phrase [-Ca]esaris August! calls for an Imperial date, but the spelling piei makes dating the inscription after the middle of the 1st century a.d. unlikely. A certain Proculus, son of Lucius, of the tribeTeretina, ismentioned in an epitaph (AE1908 218), but it is unclear whether he is the same person or related to the initiate listed here. was part of [-Ca]esaris August! title or of the person listed after him, since we do not know the dimensions of the inscription. A plausible restoration would be [legatus Cajesaris Augusti, an expression frequently attested with the name of the emperor Tiberius. 3: It is unclear whether
Line
Proculuss
ofunknownprovenance 86 Record ofRoman initiates(?)
Fig. 67
Two joining fragments ofThasian marble. The stele is preserved on the left and the top. The back is rough-picked. Fragment a was found m south, and at 17.00-21.00 m east and 33.00-37.50 fragment b at m 17.85-21.15 m east and 32.70-37.50 south, of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa in July 1971. Archaeological inv. 71.954. H.
0.36 m, W.
0.16 m, Th.
0.06 m; L.H.
Museum
of Samothrace,
0.04 m
(line 1), 0.03 m
(line2), 0.035 m (line3), 0.015 m (lines4-5), 0.02 m (line6), 0.03 m (line7). Unpublished. a.d.
6
D(is) M(agnis) * M(arco) Aemilio [Lepido] Arrun[tio consulibus] eni p[ao"iAia)<;-] 5 Attocaod v [-?-] L(ucio)
in[itiati sunt?-] C(aius) ..[-]
Gavius[-]
Figure 67. Record ofRoman initi ates^) of unknown provenance (86)
is
ethnic
whose
initiates
known
Commentary Epigraphical The letters are elegant and clear. Commentary
to OeoTc,MeydAoic,, and is The phrase D(is) M(agnis) corresponds exactly also attested in an unpublished dedication (see ad93, Commentary), where it is not abbreviated. This was probably a list of Roman initiates. 87
Record
of initiates from Rome
now lost. inscription is known from Codex Ambrosianus A 55, no. and 1739-1742 III, p. 1498, no. 9]; 6, I, p. 268, [Muratori I CIL CIGll.l (1863), add. p. 558 (1832) 2159]; [Mommsen, [Boeckh, The
Edd.
= CIL III (1873) 717,with add. p. 990]; [Dessau,ILSII. 1 (1902) 4055]; [Cagnat, IGR 1.4 (1905) 848]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 214.] Cf. Ziebarth 1906, p. 414, no. 11; Cole 1984, p. 91; 1989, pp. 1583 1584; Clinton 2001, p. 35.
September 13, a.d. em
pocaiAicoc,
14
?ocaicov
et Sex. Appuleio Sex. Pompeio co(n)s(ulibus) Idibus mystes pius Septembr(ibus) 5 P. Sextius Lippinus Tarquitianus q(uaestor) Macedoni(ae) vacat PO P 11 S mys
2 0ataxa
nus
5-6 P. Sextius Lippinus Tarquitia * vacat pii piis Mommsen. p[r]o
et
sym
6
Epigraphical Commentary Line 1: OASICONIZIOY codex. Line 5:MACEDONI Line 6:MYSIAE,
codex. PO PIIS
codex.
Commentary
is a record of Roman
initiates: P. Sextius Lippinus Tarquitianus (PIR and his entourage. It dates to September S 470), quaestor ofMacedonia,
This
13, a.d.
14.
is a very rare name; cf.LGPNII. Line 2: Thalas(s)ion Thalasios, how ever, is fairly common. The abbreviation 0AAAZI isvisible on a Samothra cian coin; see 7(7X11.8, p. 41, which may refer to the same king. The name Thasion orThalasion may also be attested in 43; see
CIL
Record of an initiate from Rome Fig. 68 near the long wall of the Stoa, now lost. Fragment ofmarble, found H. 0.135 m,W. 0.14 m, Th. 0.045 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1880, p. 91, no. 1; [Mommsen 1884, no. 223]; [Mommsen, III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 7372]; Fredrich, 7GXII.8,
p. 39.
CHAPTER
174
a.d.
6
18?
Rufus
[-]
[mustjes
praetorivs (rvfvs pivs myst\^S i ssvmanvminave somjcTI
praetorius
pius ves
numina
[sanjctissuma
[venejror precibus
|tra
vene\KOK
Mommsen.
Conze,
Epigraphical Commentary The layout can be surmised from Conze
Figure Rome
s facsimile.
precibvs
68. Record (88).
Conze
of an
s \tra
initiate
from
1880, p. 91, no. 1
Commentary
is a record of initiation, along with a personal declaration of respect for the cult by thepraetorius Rufus. As Fredrich notes, he may be the same as T. Trebellenus Rufus, whom Tiberius appointed ina.d. 18 as the guardian This
king Cotys IV after the latter'smurder by (Tac. Ann. 2.67).60
of the children of theThracian the former king Rhescouporis 89
and
of initiates from Rome, Pergamon, Chios, of epoptae from Rome Record
Fig. 69
plaque, broken below and to the right.The back is smooth on July 30, 1939, picked, possibly inscribed. Acquired from Kamariotissa as a where ithad been reused step.Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, Limestone
inv. 39.1072.
H. 0.32 m,W. 0.32 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.014 m (lines 1-3,17), 0.012 m (line 4), 0.008 m (lines 5-16,18-19). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben 1940, p. 356; BullEp 1944 151a; AE 1947 3; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 36. Cf. Lehmann, Samothrace 2.2 (1960), p. 24; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69; Cole 1984, pp. 98-99; Clinton 2001, p. 35. June 6, a.d.
19 Col.
Col.
I
II
Col.
Ill
. . . .]ov xox>
[e]7i[i paoiAicoq
Mnxpcovaiccoc;
M
L Norbano Bal[bo Idus Iunias, mystae pii f Ste(llatina) Schinas L
Iunio Silano
co(n)s(ulibus)]
VIII C Marius
Qj [RJupilia L 10
f Quinta
pii Symmus[tae] Iulius Sp f Pap(iria)
[.] Aristopus Stephanius [.]Marius Fructus [. ea:5. .]Y
.RUS
Pergamenus
[Me]nander Chius [-] Lusius vacat
15
servi Schinae Cedrus Laetus
Niger
[.
.
.]mas
Clenas Eoc[. . .] Pho[e]bus Paneros
Epaphus Paideros
An[.ca.4.] vacat Opt[.c.a.4.] Sc[.c.a.4.] To[.c.a.4.] ca. 6 |~ ca. 6 [ ca. 6 [~ Sp[.~.<.]
Tarula
Pa[.c?.4.]
Felix
Xys[.c?.4.]
J ] J 60. Cf. forthcoming above).
230, and Clinton, as 46, (printed here
also PIRT
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
[C] Marius
L
[RupilijaQj [.]Marius
20
IS
KNOWN
Epoptae f Ste(llatina)
f *Quinta
175
Schinas
Fructus
[dyopavjopouvioq
AnoXkl-xou]
AioSotod.
Dimitrova. Fraser. 8 [Her]mas Opt[atus] Fraser, [- -]mas Opt[-] 9 [-jasidius Stephaniufs] Fraser, [- -JPisidius Stephanius Dimitrova. 15
Xy[stus] Fraser,Xys[- -]Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated and carefully done, though the inscription is now badly defaced.
Line 1.7:1-longa. The slaves' names in columns II and III are rather narrowly spaced, and do not align with the lines in column I.
Commentary This is a list of Roman mystae, symmystae (including one person from Per gamon and one from Chios), epoptae, and slaves, dated to June 6, a.d. 19. An eponymous officialwith the patronymic MnTpcbvaKioq is perhaps also attested in 6 (2nd century B.C.?), but it is unlikely that the two are related. It ispossible that the eponymous basileus of 46,0?o8cop[o(;?] MnxpovaKToq, was related in some way; for the name Metronax as associated with Samo thracian eponyms, see also the numismatic evidence, /GXII.8,
Figure 69. Record of initiatesfrom Rome, Pergamon, Chios, and of epoptaefrom Rome (89). Courtesy Samothrace Excavations
p. 41.
CHAPTER
i76 Marius are themain
6
Schinas and (presumably his wife) Rupilia (column I, lines 5-6) initiates listed in this document. They were initiated together
with six other people, {symmystae,column I, lines 7-13), and theirhousehold slaves (columns II and III, lines 5-15). It isunclear whether themain initiates and the symmystaeformed one party, as Fraser notes. Three of the initiates became also epoptae: Schinas, Rupilia, andMarius Fructus (lines 16-19).This is usually taken as evidence that initiation and epopteia could occur on the same day; cf.Fraser, p. 91, and especially Cole 1984, p. 46. This is certainly
a possible interpretation, and it cannot be ruled out, although it does not make sense from a ritual point of view (see Chap. 9, pp. 246-248). I interpret the inscription somewhat differently.Although the hand is the same and there is no second date next to the listed epoptai, I see lines 16-19 as a later addition: the letters of the previous lines get progressively
smaller, as if to leave space for a text that is to be inscribed later, and the rubricEpoptae infringesupon the end of column II.Moreover, if the head ingsMystaepii and Epoptae were inscribed at the same time, then itwould
have been simpler to have the heading Mystae et epoptae above the relevant names, rather than to repeat them.Three other inscriptionsmention people who were both mystai and epoptai (50,56, and 67), and all list the two titles a separate together. Listing the epoptaewith heading below suggests that itwas not known in advance who among the mystaewould proceed to the second stage of initiation. Lines 11-12: It is unclear whether the people from Pergamon and Chios belonged to the same group as the other initiates in this record.The inscription simply tells us that theywere initiated together. Line 14:Tarula is aThracian name, a variant ofTalouras, with metath esis of the liquids; see ad 19, line 6.61On Thracian initiates, see Chapter
9, p. 244. 90
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
Fig. 70 Fragment of marble stelewith molding above, broken below and on the left.The back seems to be rough-picked. Found built into a church
{in ecclesiamaiore) in Chora, then brought to the "the school" (Fredrich). of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv. no. Archaeological Museum H. 0.49 m,W. 0.36 m, Th. 0.16 m; L.H. 0.035 m (line 1), 0.05 m (lines 2-6), 0.055 (I-longa, line 4), 0.06 m (I-longa, line 3).
Edd. [Mommsen,CIL III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 12321]; Kern 1893,
p. 374, no. 21; Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 39. Cf. Cole 1984, p. 182; Clinton 2001, p. 35. June 7, a.d. 48 inpediment:
SACR
vacat
[A.]Vitellio L
infield:
F
[L.] VIstano Co(n)s(ulibus) VII Idus Iun(ias) 5
[feljlciter myst [es vel -ai] Philipp[us-
Figure 70. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (90)
-]
Fredrich. 1 Sacr[um] Fredrich, Sacr(a acceperunt?velaccepit?) w/Sacr(a) vel Sacr(um) Dimitrova. 6 [es] Fredrich.
61.1 tar
owe
Boyadzhiev.
this observation
to Dimi
is
ethnic
whose
initiates
known
i77
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear. I-longa is used in lines 3 (VIstano), 4 (Idus Iun.), and are inscribed within the C. 5 ([fel]Iciter).The O and S of Co(n)s(ulibus) Commentary
initiate or initiates.
is a list of a Roman
This
1: The
Line
restoration of the abbreviation
is only hypothetical;
cf.
78.
Line 5: [fel]Iciter corresponds toGreek
emuxcoc;; see ad 133.
initiates of unknown provenance Fig. 71 on the left,below, and Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, broken Provenance unknown. is The back above. rough-picked. presumably 91
Greek
record of Roman
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 56.2. Archaeological Museum H. 0.40 m,W. 0.24 m,Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.015-0.02 m. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.\ (1960) 41. Cf. Robert 1st century
1963, pp. 67-69.
a.d.?
[-]on[-]
HSY
[- -KopMXiok?] -]
[- -]Zooaioc;[-
Muaxai 5
stiqePMilcl [AJoukioc; [-] AOnvicov
[K6'vv]to<;Oa.6cod?Io<; [T]o$(po<;
Tp|u
....
lac
8croAoi
10
A0rjvicov[o<;] --] .AHZEf-] [X]pfai|io<;[[enl p]ao"iAia><; AtcoaAo [- -]od too EY[-] [&YOpav]o|aowco<; [----]
Fraser. 3 Eoocuoc, Fraser.
to6
[----]
1 [e7i]67i[-e-uoxp?] 4 e\)oep[?]T[cJ
Fraser.
8 fEppi....
icxc, (fortasse
Fraser. Fraser.
2 Dimitrova,
[A]o\)Kio<;.
'Epjaayopaq)
Fraser.
10
Fraser.
[-]AH_HZY Fraser.
0[-] . AHII[-]
7 Oaxxouioc, Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is relatively careless, with too little space between the lines. The right part of the stone is badly defaced, as Fraser observed. Line 1: Circle, followed by a clear pi. Line 2: I see nu and eta in ligature, followed by lambda, iota, and a faint circle. HEY, read by Fraser, is now practically illegible.
Line 3: Both sigmas, dotted by Fraser, are clear. Line 4: e\)0"?p[?]![cj, read by Fraser, is now impossible tomake out. Lines 5, 8, 10:1 see nothing clear after [A]otjkio(; in line 5, [T]o\)(pO(; in line 8, and [X]pfioiuo<; in line 10. Line 7: There is another letter between omicron and iota, ofwhich a leftvertical is visible.
CHAPTER
i78
6
Figure 71. Greek record ofRoman initiatesof unknown provenance (91) Commentary This is a list of Roman initiates and their slaves, dated by Fraser to the 1st century a.d. on the basis of the hand. It is unclear whether an epoptes is recorded in line 1. 92
Record of initiates from Rome Fig.
72
on the left and on the Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, preserved on August 13,1939. Archaeological rough-picked back. Found inChora, of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.1071. Museum H. 0.33 m,W. 0.145 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.02 m (lines 1,5), 0.025 0.27 m (lines 2-3), 0.03 m (line 4), 0.017-0.018 m (lines 6-7), 0.07 m (K). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben
2.1 (1960) 40.
1940, p. 356;^?
Cf. Clinton 2001, p. 35. September 1,1st century a.d.?
[em?] paoiA[-] L Non[io-?-]
M Arru[ntioco(n)s(ulibus)?] K. Sept M[ystae pii]
5 L
Arrunti[us-] promag[ister] vel -istri] Ti Claudius D[-]
Ti
Cl[audius(?)-]
1947 2; Fraser, Samothrace
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
179
Dimitrova. 2 paai[Aia><; Fraser, Fraser. 1 [em]Fraser,Lehmann, eniAE, [erai?] 4 Dimitrova. Fraser. 5-6 PocaiA,[--] M[ystae promag[ister]Lehmann, [-magis ter]promag[istris], Fraser. 8 legatusLehmann, Ti Cl[audius Fraser. Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is elegant, with cursive elements (M, A). Line 2: Clear iota, followed by the lower part of a left oblique Line 4: Last letter: leftpart ofM. Line 6: The M
Line 8: Unclear
stroke.
ismarked by an apex. traces, followed by a clear C and a leftvertical.
is clear.The O
Commentary This is a list of initiates from Rome dated to September 1 of an unknown year.The consuls (if consuls are listed in lines 3-4) are unknown, and the document cannot be dated precisely. Before line 1:1 am hesitant about restoring hz\ or anything else. The next line is indented, and it seems to be the beginning of the inscription. Therefore, we may have a different formula indicating the eponymous king, such as pocoiXeiiovToq (cf. 30). Lines 5-6: Fraser restores [-magister] pro mag[istris] and sug
gests (p. 95, with nn. 2-4) that the magistri in question may be "of the type found inRoman and Italian communities in theEast, whose functions have
doubts the existence of such a community in and Samothrace, however, proposes that they came from elsewhere. I find Frasers restoration difficult to accept, for lack of precise parallels. On the other hand, the titlepromagister iswell attested as denoting a vice-magis been much discussed." He
ter?whatever meaning magister has, be it a priest of the Fratres Arvales provincial magistrate (usually in the phrases promagister publicorum or as in, e.g., portuum frumenti municipalis, I.Ephesos 761, 823, 824, 825, or a
826, 827,1403).
ifpromagister can also be a term related to teaching its precise translation in this context is unclear for lack of paral (though one since of the basic meanings of magister is "teacher." A document lels), of theClaudian period fromXanthos inLykia (FdXanth VII64) mentions One wonders
a certain Lucius Arruntius, who
served as a teacher of emperors:
[M&p]kov Appouvxiov Aicutaxv [u]iov AouKiorj Appouvxiou TpujalKOTOU 5
Ka6r|yr|Tor3auxo
Kpaxopcov, xeiXiapxov Xeye covoqKnpriva'iicfjq, ?7t(xpo7tov [K]a[iaapo(;]
n[a|i(puA,iac;].
It is possible that the Lucius Arruntius is the same person in both docu ments, but we do not know whether the title of promagister refers to him or to the names that follow.A Marcus Arruntius was consul ina.d. 66 and as Fraser notes, but in neither year was the colleague named possibly 77, Lucius Nonius. On the other hand, a Lucius Nonius must have been a Figure 72. Record of initiatesfrom Rome (92)
consul ca. a.d.
72 (see Degrassi 1952, s.v.;PIR2, N, no. 132;W. cols. 285-286, n. 8a). Suppl. 14,
Eck, RE
CHAPTER
l8o
6
Figure 73. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (93) (above); and dedication byRoman soldiers, Museum Archaeological nos. inv. 71.960 thrace,
(below) 93
initiates of unknown provenance
Record of Roman
Fig. 73
Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, preserved in the upper leftcorner.The back is smooth. Found by the joint French and Czechoslo
vakian expedition in 1926 at the foundations of theMilesian dedication (cf. of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 49.437. Salviat). Archaeological Museum H. 0.21 m,W. 0.155 m,Th. 0.07 m (stele)-0.085 m (pediment); L.H. 0.015 m (line 1), 0.015-0.02 m (lines 2-4). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 39. Cf. Salviat 1962, p. 270; Bouzek and Hosek XLV 1198-1201, lemma 3). 1st century
a.d.?
inpediment: onmolding: in field:
dyaG^ tu%r|] mist[ae pii ?] Afini[- -?] M 5
Fraser.
1995, pp. 83-85
. 3 Afini[us-
AU.[-
-
-]
...[---]
-?] Fraser.
4 Maurjus]
Fraser.
5 T.
U[-
-
Fraser.
(SEG
of Samo + 71.956
is
ethnic
whose
initiates
181
known
Commentary Epigraphical The letters are clear and elegant. Line 3:1 cannot see any letter preceding Afini[. Line 4: Top part of a leftvertical joined with a top horizontal, suitable forR, F, or P. There seems to be a medial dot between M and A, inwhich case a name such asM. Aurelius Line 5: Unclear traces.
orM. Aufidius
is possible.
Commentary
is part of the consular is a record of Roman initiates. IfAfini[-] a.d. Gallus and P. Marius Afinius is when L. it then 62, date, perhaps Celsus were consuls. The inscription possibly belongs together with two joining fragments of an unpublished dedication by Roman soldiers
This
(Fig. 73), given the similar hand and physical features (thickness and smooth back). If this supposition is correct, then the entire textwould read:
inpediment:
on
6cya8[fi %Tl] mist[ae pii ?]
molding:
in field:
Afini[-?]
M-AU 5
[-]
...[-]
a
b o.[-]
. .] . IA et Fl. Sabino Aur(elio) Hermo[. militibus coh(ortis) Cocceius Phoeb[us] Cocceius Theodotus 5
. .A
Dracontius
piei inorantes Samothraci
Diis Magnis bus
votum
. .Cocceius
libentes
to solverunt
94
Cocceius
Celerinius
meri
vacat
Record of initiates from Rome
Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, preserved on the left and above. Salviat copied it at the house of Chrysostomos Nimorios. Its location
present
is unknown.
0.185 m,W. 0.115 m,Th. 0.035 m; L.H. ca. 0.015-0.025 m. Edd. Salviat 1962, pp. 278-279, no. 5; Sasel Kos, ILGR (1979) 251. Cf. Cole 1984, pp. 97-98; 1989, p. 1587; Clinton 2001, p. 35.
H.
a.d.
65
A. Lic[inio Nerva Silano] M. Vis[tinio Attico co(n)s(ulibus)]
Mys[tae pii]
IV Idu[s-] 5 Lutacius[-] C. Iulius Augu[rinus] [-]TIS[Salviat.
-]
182
chapter
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are relatively broad, especially M. They toward the end of the inscription.
6
tend to get smaller
Commentary
This
of the
is a list of initiates fromRome, dated by Salviat to a.d. 65 on account consuls.
6: Gaius Iulius Augurinus is perhaps the same as the knight involved in the Pisonian conspiracy of the spring of 65 (TdiC.Ann. 15.50), as Salviat suggests (p. 279). He also remarks that the present document indicate that may Augurinus was sent into exile at Samothrace?a likely place, since theAegean islands were a typical destination for deportees in the Roman empire. He notes that "the fourth day before the Ides" in line 4 may refer to the Ides ofMay, since the conspiracy was planned forApril 19, and disclosed on April 18. On the basis of this date Cole concludes that ifAugurinus was "exiled immediately, he would have had time to arrive at Samothrace byMay 12" (1989, p. 1587). We need not assume, however, that the Ides ofMay are meant?the latermonths cannot be excluded, and may work better with respect to the interval between Augurinus s Line
and his visit to Samothrace,
departure from Rome
if the identification is
correct.
95
initiates(?) of unknown provenance Fig. 74 Fragment of a block of Thasian marble, preserved at bottom. Said to have been found at the Genoese Towers. Archaeological Museum of Record
inv. 68.858.
Samothrace,
H.
of Roman
0.23 m,W.
0.20 m,Th.
0.17 m; L.H.
0.02 m.
Unpublished. End of 1st century a.d.-beginning .
vacat..[-]
.vacat
POSI[-]
[-]OR 5
of 2nd?
Labeont[-]
[-]US
African[-]
[-JUS
Success[-]
Diadumen[-] [-].US [knxpaoiXJeoq (sic) Titod O^ocomoD Epigraphical The
letters
Commentary
are narrow,
elongated,
pecially M and A). The Greek by the same hand. Commentary
Kinai^iAoi^?)]
and
uneven,
with
cursive
elements
(es
text in line 6 seems to have been incised
This probably was a list of Roman initiates.The basileus could be the same as the one in 41 (seeKlines 2-3), or related to him; I therefore suggest to the the end of the 1st or the beginning of the 2nd dating inscription century
a.d.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
183
Figure 74 (above, left).Record of Roman initiates(?) of unknown provenance (95)
96 Record ofRoman initiates(?) ofunknownprovenance
Figure 75 (above, right).Record of Roman initiates(?) of unknown
inAugust 1969 near the Stoa. Archaeological inv. 69.556.
Fig. 75
on the left and bottom, pos Fragment ofThasian marble, preserved on traces the of claw chisel at the bottom. Found back; sibly rough-picked
H.
provenance(96)
0.17 m,W.
0.14 m,Th.
0.07 m; L.H.
Museum
of Samothrace,
m.
0.008-0.01
Unpublished. 1st century
[.
b.c.-lst
century
a.d.?
]...[-]
Philoni[s?-] Mnesima[-] Pilinus A[-]
5 Memno
Mnesima Heraclio Lucumo
SE
. [-]
. s(erva?) [-] I [- -?- -] MUC * Vateri I[-] C.
vacat
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and elegant, compatible with a date in the 1st century b.c.
or a.d.
97
Greek
record of a Roman
initiate(?) Fig. 76
Block ofThasian marble, broken above. Brought fromChora. Archaeo of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 49.418. logicalMuseum H.
0.51 m,W. 0.03-0.035 m).
0.18 m,Th.
0.30 m; L.H.
0.015-0.025
Edd. Kern 1893, p. 374, no. 20; Fredrich, JGXII.8
m
219.
(except phi,
184
CHAPTER
6
lst-2nd century a.d.? [..]. 0AN[..] ca. 4 vss.
vacat T.
'Io\>aio<;
AtxpiSioc
voc/ Ti(pepioi)) 5 abzlhyoc,)
dyaGfix[vxr\]' em $amX[e-] (oqOpov[x-]
covoqxo[C] 10 l?KOl)v[8o'0?] Fredrich. 1 . . .OAA Fredrich. 10 an ek Opi- an ,E
Dimitrova.
I?kouv[8od]
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is uneven and inconsistent, suggestive of a later date. Line 6: i[t>xr|]must have been squeezed in at the end of the line.
Line 10:What was read by previous editors as phi does not have its central vertical project beyond the circle. Omicron should be consid ered as a possibility, especially since the central vertical resembles a stray
mark.
a Figure 76. Greek record of Roman
initiate(?) (97)
Commentary This probably was a record of initiation. For the possibility that the block may have belonged togetherwith 33 and 67, see ad67. The name Opovxcov occurs as the eponymous official s patronymic in 41 and 45. Record of initiates from Rome Fig. 77 Two joining fragments of a stele of Thasian marble, broken below. The back and sides are rough-picked. Found in Chora on June 25,1939. of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.79. Archaeological Museum H. 0.38 m,W. 0.315 m,Th. 0.135 m; L.H. 0.04 m (lines 1,3,6), 0.02 m 98
(lines2, 5, 8), 0.03m (line4), 0.025m (line7). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben1940,p. 357;BullEp 1944 151a;AE \947
4; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 51.
Cf. Cole 1984,p. 92; 1989,p. 1584;Clinton 2001, p. 35.
a.d. April 22,
116
L. Fundanio Lamia Aeliano Sex 5 X
Carminio Vet(ere)
co(n)s(ulibus) K
Mai.
mystae pii L. Pomponius Maximus Flavius
[Sil]vanus Qj propr
Figure 77. Record of initiatesfrom
[prov.Maced.]
Rome tions
(98).
Courtesy
Samothrace Excava
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
185
Fraser. 3 Vet(ere) Fraser,Vet(ere) Dimitrova. Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and elongated. Line 1:The AM of Lamia are in ligature. Line 3: E and T are clear. Commentary This is a list of initiates from Rome, dated toApril 22, a.d. 116. Line 6: Fraser notes that Pomponius maybe the son of L. Pomponius, a.d. 121 (cf.Cole 1989, p. 1584). This would mean consulsuffectus in he became quaestorpro praetore at an early age. 99
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
that
Fig. 78
Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, preserved only on the left; the back may be close to original surface. Brought in by a local person in 1927 (cf. Salviat). Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 38.380. H.
0.28 m,W. 0.22 m, Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.035-0.04 Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 52. Cf. Salviat 1962, p. 269;Walton 1963, p. 99.
m.
2nd century a.d.? SPME
....
[-]
Servi[- -]
EutychusSiger[us] Epaphroditus 5 Tyrannu[s] Fraser. 1 . asparesFraser,. spar(W n?)es Salviat. 2 Se[rvi] Fraser, Servi [- -] Salviat. 3 Eutychus Fraser, Eutychus Siger[us] Salviat. 4 Epaphrodit[us] Fraser, Epaphroditus Salviat. 5Tyranni[o Fraser,Tyrannu[s velfortasse Tyranniu[s Dimi Figure 78. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (99)
trova.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters,dated by Fraser to the 2nd century a.d., have cursive elements, s are based on a especially R, A, and D. Salviat readings photo taken in a was on after which broken off the 1927, piece apparently right. Line 1:1 restore nothing before S, given the alignment of the names below (lines 3-4). Line 5: R and A
are in ligature.The last letter preserved consists of or two top verticals, suitable forU. Tyrannus is likely, perhaps Tyrannius, are if theN and I in ligature.
Commentary This probably was a list of Roman indicates.
initiates, as the heading servi in line 2
1: It is possible thatwe have the praenomen Sp(urius), folowed by a nomen beginning with Me-. Line
i86
CHAPTER
100
6
of initiates from Rome
Record
fragments of a stele ofThasian marble, broken below; a and b back is smooth-picked. Fragments a and c, now in the Kunst join.The historisches Museum inVienna, inv. Ill 167 a + b,were found near the Rotunda of Arsinoe. I saw these fragments in May 2007.62 Fragment b was found in Chora in 1938. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, Three
inv. 38.355.
courtyard,
a: H.
0.29 m,W. 0.17 m,Th. 0.075 m; L.H. 0.044 m (line 1), 0.03 m (line 2), 0.028 m (line 3), 0.024 m (line 4), 0.015 m (lines 5-7), 0.01 m (line 8). b: H. 0.23 m,W. 0.13 (top)-0.14 m (bottom), Th. 0.075 m; L.H. as
on
fragment
c:H.
a.
0.28 m, W.
0.15
Edd.
a, cyConze
m
(top)-0.16
m.
0.006-0.015
(bottom), Th.
1875, p. 37, pi. 62; Durr
0.075 m; L.H.
1881, no. 80; [Mommsen,
CIL III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 7371]; [Dessau,ILS II.l (1902) 4056]; a + b, cyLehmann-Hartleben
1939, p. 145; AE
(1960) 53, S3bis.
1939 4; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
Cf. Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 39; Henderson 1923, pp. 289-290; BullEp 1939 297; Oliver 1939; Robert, Hellenica 2 (1946), p. 57, no. 17,with n. 2; 1950, p. 94, n. 1; Lewis, Samothrace 1 (1958), p. 92;Walton Hemberg 1963, p. 99; Cole 1984, pp. 92, 100; 1989, pp. 1584-1585, 1587-1588, et al., Samothrace 7 (1992), p. 47, n. 101; SEGXUl 1595-1596; McCredie 7S0bis; Clinton 2001, p. 35. 9, a.d.
November
a
124
Iov[e] et Minerv(a) Regibus M Acilio iterum [C] Bellicio
Glabrione, 5
-
b
cos
Torquato
mystae
pii
[s]acra acceperunt. V Sardus [CXPla]nius
Idus
Novembr(es) Varius Ambibulus procos prov[inci]ae Mac[e]doniae -]us \?g [p]ro pr. prov. eiusdem Q
-]...o
P. Curtilius
-]s
Commodus
llctor C
Fadius Endymion Peregrinus C Maxsiminus
-]s -]alis
-- -
-]i Euanthes
-]6rus
-]hes -]us
Pretiosus
Callistion
NIcephorus Euporus
Hermes
Auctus
-]Lac6n 10 L-]tion
Restitutus
Euprepe[s] '
-]NA.I.[---]
Fraser. Isinis??
8
Walton. Fraser, [provinci]ae prov[inci]ae cA,fin. Isianus Mommsen, Dimitrova. Fraser, Amacil Maxsiminus,
Amacil(ius)?? c.l clio Fraser.
c.3 lictor(es)Fraser. c.5 [serv]i (vel [ministr]i)Fraser, [pedesequ]i Hiller.
62.1 am very grateful to Alfred for his kind assis Bernhard-Walcher tance and permission fragments.
to examine
these
whose
initiates
is
ethnic
known
187
Commentary Epigraphical The lettering is elegant, with cursive elements; apices and I-longa mark c to a different hand, but I agree long vowels. Fraser attributes fragment that the hand is the same. I consider fragment with Conze andMommsen cpart of the same inscription as a and b, given the identical thickness and hand, though it is unclear how much ismissing between the end of alb and the beginning of c. It is possible that b and c join, but less likely than to assume a gap, in view of the differentwidths of b and c.These frag ments show a gradual increase inwidth, consistent with the slant of the break.
Commentary
Fraser, following Conze, suggests that thismay have been a block from the Rotunda ofArsinoe because it is slightly concave. The back, however, is on the front cannot have belonged to a circle with straight, and the curve a radius larger than 0.60 m (cf. Samothrace 7, p. 47). This document has been the focus ofmuch debate, mostly because of the dating formula "when Jupiter andMinerva were kings for the second time." As Oliver points out (p. 464), "in a year when no citizen is found to accept the financial burden of the public office, the town is forced to take money from a temple treasury, and the god concerned becomes a eponymous." Oliver concludes that Jupiter and Minerva must be Latin
translation of the Kabiri (p. 465), since the Sanctuary of the Great Gods was the principal sanctuary of Samothrace, and must have paid for the on no is of the while the other hand there expenses kingship, example of two sanctuaries sharing such expenses. Cole rejects this interpretation for various reasons (1989, p. 1596), and suggests that the gods mentioned are
local divinities, especially since the temple ofAthena was the traditional were set up. I find this place where documents of the city suggestion highly plausible: the usual Latin appellation of the Great Gods was Di Magni, without specification of their actual names, so it is unlikely that
in an official document set up theywould be called Jupiter and Minerva at Samothrace. Even ifRoman literary tradition likens theGreat Gods to the triads Jupiter,Juno,Minerva, or Jupiter,Hermes, Minerva, this reflects
the political effort to find the origin of the Penates in Samothrace, and is quite different from actually calling the Samothracian gods by the names of traditional Roman
divinities.
document is important for revealing that the cult of Zeus, in cult ofAthena, was probably a principal addition to thewell-documented one in the polis of Samothrace. The inscription may also indicate the rela The
tive poverty
of Samothrace
in the Hadrianic
era,
since
there was
assume the financial burden of the eponymous magistracy. Line 6: Ambibulus was consul in a.d. 128; seeDegrassi
no
one
to
1952, s.v.
of initiates(?) from Rome Fig. 79 Three joining fragments of a stele ofThasian marble, broken above and below; the back is rough-picked. Found near the Sacristy on July 6,1939. of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.348. Archaeological Museum H. 0.40 m,W. 0.31-0.315 m,Th. 0.06 m; L.H. 0.03 m (lines 1-6), 0.02 m (line 7). 101
Record
CHAPTER
l88
1940, p. 346, no. 3, with p. 493; AE 2.1 Samothrace 1; Fraser, 1963, p. 99. (1960) 50;Walton 1584. Cf. Cole 1984, pp. 91-92; 1989, p. Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben
6
1947
Hadrianic? * prov M[ac](edoniae) Candi
tinianus Qfuaestor) Sex
Palp[.]llius dus Tullittianus Modius
C 5 A
Vereius Bato
Asclepiades Felix
Batonis
Purpurio Fraser.
2
Palp[e]Uius
Fraser.
4Walton,
Figure 79. Record of initiates(?) from Rome (101)
omisit Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated and carefully done, with finials. Line 1: First letter: bottom part of a vertical; second letter: lower part of a vertical; last letter: lower part of a leftbarely slanting stroke. The Q_of Qfuaestor) has a horizontal mark above, indicating ab
breviation.
Line
7: The
smaller letters perhaps
indicate that this is close to the
bottom of the stone.
Commentary This was probably a list of initiates from Rome, and his retinue. Macedonia
including
a governor of
ofunknownprovenance 102 Record ofRoman initiates(?)
Fig. 80
a stele of Thasian marble with incised pediment and Fragment of akroteria, preserved in upper left corner; the back is rough-picked. Found inChora in 1938. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 38.393. H. 0.5 m,W. 0.33 m,Th. 0.06 m; L.H. 0.015 m (line 1), 0.03-0.035 m (lines 2-4). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben Samothrace 21
1939, p. 145, no. 3; AE
1939 3; Fraser,
(1960) 54.
A.D. 131 inpediment: below pediment:
6cya9r|i [xuxni] M S Le[na] Ponti[ano] M
An[tonio]
[Rufino] 5 [co(n)s(ulibus)] Fraser.
Figure 80. Record ofRoman ini tiates^) of unknown provenance (102).
Samothrace 2.1, pi. XXL54
initiates
whose
ethnic
is
known
189
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear, if a bit inelegant, suitable for the 2nd century a.d. Commentary
This was probably the beginning of a record of Roman a.d.
initiates, dated to
131.
The misspelling of the diphthong AE with E, attested in the name Lae nas, occurs throughout the Roman empire following the 1st century a.d. 103
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
Fragment of marble stele. Its dimensions and present location are unknown. It was brought by Behr to the Louvre, whence "venit ad Leb lantium."
1857, p. 224; Conze 1860, p. 71, n. 1; [Mommsen, I (1863) under no. 581]; [Mommsen, CIL III (1873) 720]; Ziebarth 1906, p. 413, no. 5; Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 39; [Lommatzsch, CIL I2 (1918) Edd. Lenormant
CIL
664]. Cf. Conze 1875, p. 39; Cole trova 2003, p. 35. a.d.
1989, p. 1568, n. 21; Pounder
and Dimi
136
[L
Ceioni]o Com[mo] * Se]xto Vetu[leno] [civica .P]ompeiano [co(n)s(ulibus)] XI [K.- -] [. . ?. JXIII XII [do
5 [m]ystaepii Mommsen.
4
[K. Aug.
Mommsen.
Commentary
is a list of Roman initiates, dated to a.d. 136. Cole (p. 1568, n. 21) cites this document as evidence for "the festival at Samothrace." Her reason must be the listing of at least three consecutive days in line 4. It should be
This
noted,
however,
that
this
cannot
be
taken
as
secure
evidence
for a festival.
It is possible that the people enumerated in the document were initiated during a sequence of days. It is also uncertain which month is to be restored restored [K. Aug.] because in the lacuna at the end of line 4.Mommsen he assumed that the festival took place in July,on the basis of 70, which mentions themonth Quintilis. Record of initiates from Rome Fig. 81 on all a joining fragments of stele ofThasian marble, preserved an on is The decorated with incised back. sides, rough-picked upper part corner akroteria; a caduceus, flanked by two snakes, is carved pediment with in the center of the pediment (cf. 42, 156, and 169). The surface of the stone is damaged in the upper leftpart, and a large cutting runs across the face of the upper fragment, from the middle to the right edge. Found in 104
Two
the
southern
room
of a two-room
structure,
in a group
of marbles
west
of
chapter
190
6
thewest foundation and 77-78 m south of the northeastern inner corner of of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 62.885. the Stoa. Archaeological Museum H. 0.92 m, W. 0.46 m, Th. 0.085-0.125 m; L.H. 0.02 m (line 1), 0.025-0.03 m (lines 2-5), 0.015-0.02 m (lines 5-42). 205; Oliver
1965, pp. 114-116, pi. 39; AE1965
Edd. McCredie
AE 1967 444;Harris 1992;SEGXLll 780;BullEp 1993 51.
1966;
and Robert, BullEp 1966 342; Weaver 1966, column II ILGR Sasel Robert and 1967 Kos, Robert, BullEp 451; (1979) 250; 19-20; Cole 1984, p. 92; 1989, p. 1585; Clinton 2001, p. 35. Cf. Robert
165 or 166
1, a.d.
May
[Ay]a0fi[i] Tt>xr|i. vel
[ayopavouow[- -urjvoc,
5
AiAaoD
(3aai^8iL)ov]Toq
MoDVDxicbvog
[OrfTto^/Pollione] P. Anteius Orestes
et Pudente
prov(inciae) Mac(edoniae) Iulius Lupercianus
proco(n)s(ul)
Marcius 10
Felix Vic [tor? Aurelius Verinus . I[-]
-
K(alendis) Mais
co(n)s(ulibus)
amic[i] Septimius Tigr[a]nes Fl. Theodorus
'Emuxxxoi)
-]
Clinias Pompeianus PI[. (.) .] vacat vacat serr(vi) Orestis proco(n)s(ulis) I Col. [-]ius
Col.
II
Lydus
...[---]
.V[-]
15
Parthenopae[us] Abascantus
Appius Dionysius
Zoticus
Lycorus vacat
Zelotus
Phileys Felix Augustor(um) 20
Philon Moschus THS 25
.
verna
Scopus
Onesimus
must(-
dec(urio?) servos Sep
Menan[der] Numenius S
-) Euthyches ..
t[imi] T[i]granis Pasiphilus
THS
Pontius, MarcellusTHS
A. Iunius M
F
Verini
SER
Fl(avius) Threptio
[-Jrius
Gemifnus] McCredie. McCredie,
1 [Ay]a6fj[JMcCredie,
[BaaiA.e\)Ov]Toc,
Oliver,
[Ar]A0HI Harris. 2 [Ayopocvouo'uvlToc,
[BASIAEYON]TOI
Harris.
4 [Orfito] McCredie,
. .JristisMcCredie, P.Anti(us) P. [f.OJristisOliver, Oliver, Harris. 5 P Antipa[. .OJRESTIS Harris, P. Anteius Orestes Dimitrova. 6 I[. . Jus P. ANTEIV[S McCredie, [V]ib[i]us Oliver, IV[LI]VS Harris, Iulius Dimitrova. 7 Tigr[a]nes Harris. 8 P. Theodosus McCredie, Fl. Theodo[.]us Oliver, Oliver, TIGRINES or TORINUS] Harris. Theodorus' Dimitrova. 9 lic[tores] Oliver, VIC[TOR 10Asc[. Jus Vennus Vic[ McCredie, Asc[o]n[i]us Vennus vi[atores-] Oli VERINVS DI[-] Verinus Aurelius ver,AVRE[L]IVS Harris, VI[-] Dimitrova. 11 Dimitrova, CE[.]IA[. PIS McCredie, Cleinia, JOMPEMNVS
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
191
Figure 81. Record of initiatesfrom Rome (104) POMPEIANVS PI[-]ww/Harris. Pompeianus, pi pr(ece) Oliver, C[-] 12 SERRV[.]Procos serrvi McCredie, eus(dem) procos Oliver, SERR(i. e . servi)0[RES]T[I]S PROCO(N)S(VLIS) Harris, serr(vi)Orestis proco(n)s(ulis) Dimitrova. 15 MAPPIVS Harris. 18 Aucustor McCredie, autuitor Oliver, Harris. 20 AVGVSTOR(um) Weaver, [JAM[. .]SS[-] McCredie, Pam[ -----] Oliver, AM[ ]SS[ ]Harris. 21 Philo[. . Jsedius, Vinni Oliver, Virin McCredie, VERIN[I] Harris, Philon Scopus, Verini Dimitrova. 23 milit(es) 24 T[-]eacranis Dimitrova. Oliver,MVLT(itudo) Harris, must(ae?) McCredie, Dimitrova. 25THS T[I]CRANIS Harris, T[i]granis, McCredie, THS Harris. 26 Dominis [-]C[-]THS McCredie, Pothinus a(diutor) 7XRC [-] Ths Oliver, PO[-]ACHI[V]S vacatTHS Harris, PontiusMarcellusTHS Dimitrova. 27 AsethreptioMcCredie, Atithreptio Oliver, Harris, A. Fl. Threptio
chapter
192
6
Dimitrova. 28 Dimitrova,jortasse mi(les) ep(istularius)Oliver,Ml(stes) EP(optes) Harris. 29 Cim[-] McCredie, CEM[- -]Harris. Commentary Epigraphical The letters are elegant, with cursive elements (M, R, A, V). Line 5: The penultimate letter ofAnteius and the O of Orestes
are
visible.
The fifth Line 7:1 am doubtful with respect toHarris's TIGRINES. letter is illegible, and I find restoringA plausible, since the same name is mentioned in line 24 with a clear A. Line 15: Nothing needs to be restored before A, given the alignment of the other
names.
Line 20:1 cannot make out the beginning of this line. Line 21: There is a ligature ofN and I inVerini. is clear.The faint lettersTHS Line 23: The S ofMUST ning of the linewere omitted by previous editors. Line
28: Unclear
at the begin
traces.
Commentary
This is a list of initiates from Rome, dated toMay 1 of either a.d. 165 or 166: in both years therewas a consul with the cognomen Pudens (cf. AE 1965 205). The consuls in 165 were M. Gavius Orfitus and L. Arrius Pudens, and in 166 Q^Servilius Pudens and L. Fufidius Pollio. All previous editors have preferred 165, since in 166 Pudens isusually listed first.Harris verna or(um) in lines 19-20 is (p. 74) thinks that themention of a August another argument in favor of the earlier year, since it "confirms the dating to a time when therewere two or more Augusti in office."M. Aurelius's fellow emperor, Lucius Verus, died in 169, however, so he was still in office in 166. In addition, there is no reason someone should stop a being called verna orum after the reign of the relevant Augusti. August Line 2: The eponymous official is otherwise unattested, as Oliver notes (p. 75). it is logical to expect a basileus, since this is the Although
only Samothracian official referred to in this document (cf.Oliver, p. 77; Harris, p. 73), the formula paoiX-eiJovToq occurs only once in Samothra cian inscriptions (30), in contrast with the frequent ayopavojaowcoc;, and I prefer to keep the possibilities open.
Line 3: The mention of themonth Mounychion is of crucial impor tance. It shows that the Samothracian calendar was influenced by the a since on is Athenian Samothra Athenian, month; Mounychion typical cian months, see Pounder and Dimitrova 2003, p. 35, n. 15 (= 26, Com mentary). The
only other known Samothracian month, Maimakterion,
is
also Athenian.
Line 5: P. Anteius Orestes P. Anteius,
Line mon
name
see Harris,
15:Mappius Appius.
isunknown. For other people with the name
p. 74.
is unattested, as Harris
notes, but I read the com
Line 23: The lettersTHS at the beginning are also found in lines 25 and 26. They must denote a rubric of some kind, and Harris (p. 78) sug gests thatTHS be read as "Th(eodo- ri or ti) s(ervi)."The heading in line 23 must refer to the following three names, and THS in line 25 may go with Pasiphilus from column II, while THS in line 26 goes perhaps with
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
KNOWN
193
Marcellus, whose name appears to have been added later. It is also possible that the stonecutter was somewhat confused in copying the rubrics and their correct attributions.
Line 27: Atithreptio, read by Oliver and Harris, does not exist as a a name. I propose A. Fl. Threptio: the stone confirms it, and Threptio is well-attested name (cf.Harris, p. 78). His name iswritten in slightly larger letters, and it is likely that he was not a slave, but a Roman citizen. Line 28: If the readingM# F SERis correct, itmust mean Marci Felicis servus,which would provide further support forHarris's suggestion about THS.
Record of Roman
105
initiates of unknown provenance
Fig. 82
Fragment of Thasian marble, preserved only on the back, which is rough-picked. Found inAugust 1976 inside the fenced property ofG. Gly nias in the ancient city,now in theArchaeological Museum of Samothrace, storeroom,
inv. 76.18.
0.22 m,W.
H.
0.29 m,Th.
0.10 m; L.H.
0.04-0.05
m.
Unpublished. 2nd-3rd
century
a.d.?
[-]...
A.
[----]
T* Flavi[o(?)-
[-Sace]rdote
-]
[-]RQ mystae v[-] [-'--]IESO[-]
Figure 82. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (105)
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated and carefully done. Line 1: First letter:bottom part of a vertical; second letter: lower part ofD, S, orB. Line 2: Last
letter: leftvertical.
Line 3: First letter: right upper part of R is possible; last letter:E or I. Line 4: First letter:vertical stroke; second letter:E or I; last letter: left top part of a circle. Commentary This is a list of Roman
initiates, tentatively dated on the basis of the hand. in line 2 can be either a cognomen or a title. Consuls with
[Sace]rdote the names Sacerdos
are attested for a.d.
148 and 219, but none of them the title co(n)s(ulibus) does not occur after
had a colleague T. Flavius; [Sace] rdote to indicate thatT. Flavius was
a different official. If the title
was the sacerdoshimself, and "priest" ismeant, it is possible thatT. Flavius that the ]RO in line 3 is part of his name in the ablative. 106
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
inscription is known from the copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona, Cod. Vat. Lat. 5250, folio 20, verso. Its dimensions are unknown. The
Edd. [Mommsen,CIL I (1863) 579 = CIL III (1873) 714]; Ziebarth
1906, p. 413, no. 5; Fredrich, /GXII.8,
664].
p. 39; [Lommatzsch, CIL
I2 (1918)
194
CHAPTER
6
Date? CL C
C
F EQ_ muste (sic)
Lucci Mispius
1 L. Qfuinctius?)
Mommsen.
Mommsen.
Commentary This is a list of Roman
as C. initiates.Mommsen interprets the first line a to it et L. Lucci, sons ofGaius. As for EQ^he be considers name, such as L. Quinctius. is possible; cf. 49, 66. Eq(uites) initiates of unknown provenance Fig. 83 a on all sides; the back Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, broken of Samothrace, courtyard, is smooth, however. Archaeological Museum inv. 39.549. H. 0.45 m,W. 0.31 m; L.H. 0.03 m.
107
Record of Roman
1875, p. 42, no. 14, pi. 71:14; [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 7373]; Fredrich, JG XJI.8, p. 39, no. 7,with add. on p. vii. Cf. Cole 1984, pp. 171,173,175,177,182. Edd. Conze
Imperial period? ..
paideuta CH[-] RES a linteis[-] -EJutyches -]aris Litus cubicular[ius- -]
-]
-Di]onysides -Pr]iamus -JPhaestas -]orarius
Chresimus[-] Anthimius PIS[-] Asclas BA[-] Eros LECTIS[-] . [-]
Dorus
-Jcosmeta ?]actator Fortuna[rus-] 10
[- -Cle]mens velar[ius-] --]OREXST[-]
H Conze, [- ajmunerib .Eutyches Fredrich. lNw/M[-JIRFVIII Conze, ser.a linteisFredrich. 3 Fredrich, paideuta Dimitrova. 2 RESRLINTEIS BA Conze, [Tymjphrestas, arisLitus cubiculariusFredrich.6 PHRESTATASCIAS Asclas, Ba- Fredrich,Phaestas Dimitrova. 7 l]orariusEros lectisConze, lectic[arius] Fredrich, lectis[ternator?]Dimitrova. 9 Fortunus Conze, mjactator Fortuna[tus Fredrich. 10OENS Conze, Cle]mens velarfius]Fredrich. 11OAEX Conze, S]orex St-Hiller
(apud Fredrich).
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are almost cursive, with practically no difference between R and A. Line 7: Last Line
10: Last
letter: upper part of S. letter: unclear traces.
Commentary This document was probably a record of Roman initiates, since it lists slaves of a fairly large and prosperous household, with their positions and
Figure 83. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (107)
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
KNOWN
195
occupations. The date is based on the lettering,which is very similar to that of 108; see 108. Line 1: Paideuta, "teacher"; the term is attested also in CIL III 14195, spelled paedeutes. Line 2:1 find Fredrich's emendation of RES to ser(vus) plausible, but the exact meaning of ser(vus) a linteis (perhaps "slave in charge of the linen materials")
is unclear.
title cubicularius, "chamber servant," is relatively frequent; 151b. see, e.s.,AE 1905 97,1910 29,1912 116,1946 99,1975 416,1980 Line 6: The name Oaeoxocc, occurs in 7GXII.2 15,268, as opposed to Line 3:The
Tymphrestas, which, tomy knowledge, is not attested. Line 7: Fredrich restores ljorarius, but there are other possibilities, such as marmjorarius,
ebjorarius,
etc. Marmorarius
is
commonly
attested
in
or "chair inscriptions. It is tempting to restore lectic?[arius], "litter bearer" bearer" (cf, e.g., CIL VI 966, 9509), but the letter before the brackets is S. A word like lectisternator is possible. Line 8: Cosmeta (formed like paideuta in line 1) is a transliteration of kosmetes,but its precise meaning in this context is unclear. Line 9:Mactator, restored by Fredrich, is unattested in inscriptions,
Greek
tomy knowledge. Line 10:The term velarius, "servant in charge of the curtains or sails," occurs elsewhere, e.g., CIL V 7966, XIII 8160, 8321. Line 11: Hiller von Gaertringen's restoration seems plausible. initiates(?) of unknown provenance Fig. 84 from a church into "the school" Fragment of marble stele, brought is unknown. (Fredrich). Its present location Record of Roman
108
0.23 m,W.0.20 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 61, no. 13, pi. 71:13, and cf. p. 42; [Mommsen, CIL III Suppl. 1.1 (1889) 7374]; Fredrich, /GXII.8, p. 39, no. 8. Cf.Cole 1984, pp. 172,180. H.
Imperial period?
[-]SCU[S-] [-]\NDE[R-] [-]DaphnusTH[-] [-Pa]ntonicusTOH[-
-]
5 [-]riusIENE[-]
VNTQTMCW Tor/
[-]E [-]MIAIA[-]
Eusebia[-]
Conze. 6 [-]EEYXIIETIX[-]
edd, [- -]E Eusebia[-]
Epigraphical Commentary The hand closely resembles that of 107, judging from Conzes Line 6: Eusebia, facsimile. Figure tiates^) (108).
84. Record of unknown Conze
of Roman
provenance 1875, pi. 71:13
Dimitrova.
drawing.
ini Commentary
This may have been a Latin
list of initiates. It likely belongs with 107.
CHAPTER
196
109 Record ofRoman initiates(?) ofunknownprovenance
6
Fig. 85
on the left,back, a Fragment of marble pedimental stele, preserved and top.The left akroterion is preserved, and the left side has moldings. The back is smooth. Found at 16.00-26.00 m east and 32.00-43.00 m north of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa inJuly 1971, now in the of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 71.953. Archaeological Museum H.
0.24 m,W.
0.16 m,Th.
0.035 m (pediment 0.06 m); L.H.
0.01 m
(line1),0.035m (M, line2), 0.03m (line2), 0.02m (lines3-6). Unpublished. Date? vacat [-] [em (3ao-iA?]ecD<;
in cornice:
in field: M(arco?) An[tonio?-?-] TRE[-?-] my[stae?-?-]
5
Figure 85. Record ofRoman initi ates^) of unknown provenance (109)
l\->-]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elegant and clear. Line 1:The vacant space takes ca. 1-2 letters before the break. Line 2: The M Line 4: Second sible.
is bigger than the other letters.
letter: diagonal preserved on the left,U or Y
Commentary This probably was the beginning of a list of Roman ditional information can be derived.
is pos
initiates, but no ad
Fig. 86 on all an opisthographic stele ofThasian marble, broken Fragment of sides, though the left and right side may be close to the original surface. of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv.no. Archaeological Museum H. 0.30 m,W. 0.30 m,Th. 0.13 m; L.H. 0.03-0.035 m (side A). 110
Record of Roman
initiates of unknown provenance
Unpublished. Date?
SideA pii [vacat}] [^tfft7/?]mystae [- -Iu?]ventius -P f Stel(latina) CE[-
. [Epic?]TETUS Horatius S [- -] [-]
-]
.. vacat [- -]
SideB [-]AG0POO[-] [-}
vacat TEb)
vacat
2 Ce[lsus?] Dimitrova.
.[-] Figure 86. Record ofRoman initiates of unknown provenance (110): sideA
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
KNOWN
197
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elongated, with cursive elements. The tion on side B looks Byzantine.
hand of the inscrip
Commentary
Side A contains a list of Roman
initiates. Line 2: A certain R Iuventius, R fllius,Celsus, is attested inAE 1978 is also possible, 292. His tribe is restored as [V]el(ina), but Stjel(latina) inwhich to him.
case he might be the person in the present inscription or related
Line 3: Epictetus is a very common name, but there are other pos sibilities (e.g., Philoctetus orTheaetetus). initiates(?) of unknown provenance on all sides.Documentation found among Fragment ofmarble, broken Antonin Salac's papers after his death in 1960. H. 0.185 m,W. 0.115 m,Th. 0.035 m; L.H. ca. 0.015-0.025 m. Ill
of Roman
Record
1965 (non vidi);AE
Edd. Vidman p. 108, no. 252.
1966 377; Sasel Kos, ILGR
(1979)
Date? H
[-Aujfideius
[-]
[-P]ompo[nius-] [-] [-] 3D
Vidman.
vel P Vidman.
Commentary
This may have been a list of Roman 112
initiates.
initiates(?) of unknown provenance
Record of Roman
nature. Its present location and dimensions are Fragment of unclear ca. 0.09 m. unknown, except that Conze mentions that itswidth is no. Edd. Conze 9; [Mommsen, CIL III (1873) 1860, p. 61, pi. 16, 39. 722]; Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. Imperial period? [-] t?]i[-
--
-]
[A]polloni[u?] s 5 CENISPr.i nus [-
- -
-]wn[-
- -
-]
[-] Fredrich.
5 Pru
. . . nus Fredrich. |
Epigraphical Commentary The palaeography can be surmised from Conze's
facsimile.
198
Line
5: The
CHAPTER
6
letter looks like a small omega on Conze's
penultimate
drawing.
Commentary
This may have been a record of initiation, but too little is preserved to provide any significant information. 113
records of initiates(?) of unknown
and Roman
Greek
Fig. 87
provenance
on the Fragment of Thasian marble, preserved below and perhaps was Its in it. when Fredrich Chora The present published right. inscription is unknown.
location
H.
0.21 m,W. 0.22 m,Th. 0.060 m; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 42, no. 12, pi. 71:12; [Mommsen, CIL 1.1 (1889) 7375]; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 213.
III Suppl.
Date?
Ina ea h m
i [-]AIH[- - -]
n
[-]A,tkAk[- -] [kocO' \)io0?e>ia]v 5e At||liov[iko\)]. vacat
ii
[-
-
-]DNSIS 4
Fredrich.
fortasse
SYR[ENSIS
-
-]
Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary facsimile gives an idea about the hand. The Greek letters are Conze's suggestive of a later date, while the Latin ones are discrepant in size and somewhat
inelegant.
Commentary
This may have been a list of initiates.The Latin part was added later, as Fredrich notes. The abbreviation DNSIS is, tomy knowledge, unattested. It is possible thatwe have JEN SIS instead. 114
Record
ofGreek
and Roman
initiates of unknown
Fig. 88
provenance
Fragment of an opisthographic stele ofThasian marble, with molding, preserved at the top leftcorner,damaged on back. Said to have been found at the Genoese
Towers.
H.
Archaeological
Museum
of Samothrace,
inv. 68.857.
0.17 m,W. 0.16 m, Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.008 m (side A, lines 1-3, and side B), 0.045 m (side A, line 4), 0.025 m (side A, line 5). Unpublished. Roman
period
SideA on
molding:
[eni] PaoiXeco[^-] [- -JocpcovToc;
to-u
[- -]
\\X)Gxa[\ euaepeiq-
-]
87. Greek and Roman records Figure of initiates(?) of unknown proven ance
(113).
Conze
1875, pi. 71:12
|
WHOSE
INITIATES
ETHNIC
KNOWN
IS
199
Figure 88. Record ofGreek and Roman
initiates
of unknown
prov
enance (114): sideA (right), side B
(farright) C NU[-] 5 TIT..[---]
below molding:
SideB [-M-]
-] [-; Kal 8e[- -] !
[-] [-]cuv
0[- -]r|vicov0[- -] 5 . [- -]liONOI[-]
Epigraphical Commentary Side B is almost illegible; its letters are not aligned with the edge of the stone.
Commentary Side A was a list of Roman 115
Greek
initiates. Side B may have been a decree.
record of Roman
initiates(?) of unknown
Fig. 89
provenance
Two joining fragments of a stele ofThasian marble, preserved on the left, rough-picked on back. Fragment a was found in July 1968, at 27.70 31m east and 23.40-27 m south, and fragment b inJuly 1993, at 24 m east and 25-33 m south, of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. Archaeo of Samothrace, inv. nos. 68.673 (a) and 93.576 logicalMuseum H. 0.18 m,W. 0.17 m,Th. 0.03 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m. Unpublished. Date? . [-] nAKi.[---]
IEPM
. I[-]
MdjuiocJ- -] 5
Figure 89. Greek recordofRoman initiates(?) of unknown provenance
(115)
..[...]..
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is rather exquisite, suggestive of a later date.
(b).
200
Commentary This may have been a list of Roman line 4. 116
Greek
record of Roman
CHAPTER
6
initiates, given the name Mamios
initiates(?) of unknown
in
Fig. 90
provenance
on the a joining fragments of stele ofThasian marble, preserved m m at east south and 34.00-39.00 24.00-28.00 left.Found in July 1974 Two
of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. Archaeological Museum Samothrace, inv. 74.83. H. 0.195 m,W. 0.20 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.02-0.025 m.
of
Unpublished. century a.d.?
2nd-3rd
IEB[-]
T. Ai'A,io<;[-] [----]YO[.]
5
[-]
.. NA[.]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are rectilinear, suggestive of a date in the 2nd-3rd century a.d., and 166, but less carefully executed. similar to those of 30,36,44,45, Lines 6-7: Dots:
unclear traces.
Commentary This probably was a list of Roman 2 suggests.
initiates, as the name G. Ailios
in line
EGYPT For probable initiates from Egyptian Alexandria, and possibly 31.
see 53, lines 6, 7, 10,
Figure 90. Greek record ofRoman initiates(?) of unknown provenance
(116)
CHAPTER
7
Inscriptions
Concerning
Initiates
Ethnic
Whose
Is
Unknown
following 52 documents attest initiates or presumable initiates of unknown ethnic, and eight also mention an epoptes or epoptai.All the texts are inGreek except for the occurrence of one Roman name in the Latin
The
alphabet (131). Two of the inscriptions are on limestone and the remainder are on marble, primarily Thasian; one stone is lost. 117
Greek
record of initiates(?)
Fig. 91
Fragment of Thasian marble, preserved on back, severely damaged in its lower part. It is unclear whether the top is preserved or cut off.The left side has been cut offwith a saw.The inscription was inChora when
Fredrich published No
it.Archaeological
Museum
of Samothrace,
inv. no.
0.34 m,W. 0.225 m,Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.015 m. 180. Edd. Kern 1893, p. 371, no. 14; Fredrich, IGXII.8
H.
2nd
century
B.C.?
[-]Aiov-uouyu
Apioxcovoc;
[-]<;
[-Jvockcdvtoc;
5
[-M]evdv8po\) [-]oq
'OA^umoScbpoD
[- -A]iovucnoD [-]'HpaKA.?i8oc
A7co^co[vio\)]
[-]q [---kt-1 io
[-]?[----] - -]o[-]
[-
Fredrich.
3 [-EcJvaKcovToc,
supplevit
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is severely defaced.
Wilhelm
(apud Fredrich).
courtyard.
CHAPTER
202
7
Commentary This probably was a list of initiates. Line 3:The typical genitive of [?He]vdKoov would be [?HeJvaKcovoc,. [- -MnJvdKcovxoc,(e.g., LKios 97; LPrusa I?II 27) would be a more likely conjecture.
118
record of initiates(?)
Greek
Fig. 92
a stele of Thasian marble, preserved on the right and Fragment of below. The back was inaccessible, perhaps rough-picked, judging probably inv.Ma. 4188.1 by the surface around its edges. Paris, Musee du Louvre, saw the stone in July 2001.
0.25 m,Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 181. Ed. Fredrich, 7GXII.8 321. Cf.^//E/>1911,p. 0.39 m,W.
H.
3rd
0.01-0.015
m.
B.C.?
century
. [-] . .
AAI
[M8?]vav8poc;
5
vel -ocpavxocj MrjTpo(pdv[r|(; [N]uu
Apiaxocpcov [-] 10 Geoyeixcov Earuplcru] [E]uvo|uo<; [-] [.] .'.OIHI AvxiScopoM [n]oA/68copoc,KnoXX . [- -] [Ojeouvnc, 0eo8copo\) [Aijoyevng Aiovuaioi)
15
Apcaoc,
20
AvTiScopoi)
[JdvOoc,Krj8i[jio\)] IIoA,\)8 . [- -] 0pac6^ia%O(; EcoKAfjc,Oia[-] ['Ojipuaq ZrnGiKAiouq Eu8[- -] [A]7uoXA,68copo(; [SjcoaiPioq no^DK^eou.
Fredrich.
4, 12, 16, 17, 20
correxit Hiller.
Epigraphical Commentary The hand is slanting, suggestive of a later date. The ficult to read. Line
1: Unclear
letters are now dif
traces.
Commentary
This probably was a list of Greek initiates. Line 17: KdvQoc, is a very rare name. EavQoq would restoration, but it is not the only possibility.
be a more
likely
INITIATES
Figure 91 (above, left).Greek record of initiates(?) (117) Figure 92 (above, right).Greek record of initiates(?) (118). Photo?
du Louvre, C. Larrieu, courtesyMusee of Greek, Roman, and Etruscan
Department Antiquities
119
WHOSE
Greek
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
203
record of initiates(?)
a inscription is known from copy made by Cyriacus ofAncona, which he made oxo PocoiAiko (Conze 1860, p. 50), Cod. Vat. Lat. 5250, folio 20, verso. Its present location and dimensions are unknown. The
182]. [Ziebarth 1906, p. 412, no. 3]; [Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Cf. Mommsen, CIL III (1873) under no. 713 (mentioned). Edd.
1st century
a.d.?
Ar||ioKpdx[r|](; ChjAadSon Mrrv68copo<; Te%vcovo<; AiovuGioq Ti|io[KAjeun)<; 5
A7ioA,A,covi8r|<; Zevt,iSoq IIo^fj%ap|iO(; Xdpuon AXe^avbpoq ApxeurScopou Meveoxpdxou 'E7riyovo<; ApxeurScopoq riuGeon AaK^r|7tid8r|(; Aiovoaiou
10 Ar|iLif|xpio<; ApxcjiiScbpon AnoXXdsvioq Erj8a[i]uovo<; Ixpdxcov 'E7ciKpdxorj ATcoX^cbvioq AnoXXtoviov AKeoxcop EuKxrijiovoq
15 'AyaG{e}oqAydGon
Xapl8r||io<; XapuSriuou. Fredrich. 15 ArAGEOI
lapis.
Commentary This probably was a list of initiates, the beginning ofwhich was not pre served.
chapter
204
7
Line 12: A certain Zxpdxcov ,E7tiKpdxo'o is attested in IG X.2 259.11, line 32 (= SEGXXX 622), 1st century a.d. He was a priest in theDionysiac He might be the same person, given the name's atThessaloniki. mysteries relative rarity; hence the tentative date. Line 16: Individuals with the name XocpiSnuoc, XapiSriuoD are attested in LEphesos 450 and 520 and in LPriene 508, but no identification seems a son of Charidamos. possible here. Cf. also 67, which lists Charidamos, 120
Greek
record of initiates(?) and epoptai Fragment of a marble stele, preserved on the left and partially on the right, badly effaced. Provenance unknown, acquired in 1927. Its present is unknown.
location
H.
0.22 m,W. 0.31 m, Th. 0.055 m; L.H. ca. 0.013 m (line 15-end). Ed. Salviat 1962, pp. 275-278, no. 4. Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp
2nd
ca. 0.007 m (lines 3-14),
1964 400.
b.c.?
century
5
[-]
Aiaxivac, A[-] Oe-oScopoc,
??D5cbpo\) Aumum)
Aiotiuoc, 5
'COpojLi88cov Scavovxoc,
AppiScdoc, Ipipou
10
Ila^aioxpiKoq
AioK^euc,
AAicjccv5poc,
AUTOCpCOVTOC,
?eoxiuoc,
Apiaxo8dpo\)
'HpaToc,A^8Cjdv5pou 'E7r.67r.Ta1. euaepeic, 17t7uocc, AlOXDAlVOD IToOicgv
IlrjQiCDvoc,
AAiJ;av8po<; 'iKapou vacat
15
ca. 1 vs.
[-]A
Tepdvioc,
[-'-]..
Salviat.
12 AiaKD>ivoD
Salviat,
AiG%t>^iv(n)
Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is badly defaced, but facsimile and the Chapouthier's of s the in us to describe the Salviat edition allow squeeze photograph as clear and done. Lines 15-end have larger letters and lettering carefully
were
written
later,
as Salviat
notes.
Salviat restores [jnuaxai euaePelcJ as a first line, but we do not know the exact placement of this heading. Line 2: Unclear traces of letters. Line 6: Unclear traces of letters. Line 12: AiaxuXivou squeeze.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
205
Commentary This is a listofGreek
initiates,probably recorded in lines 1-10, and epoptai, recorded in lines 11-14. Salviat (pp. 276-277) discusses the prosopography of the inscription in detail and plausibly suggests a Doric origin for the initiates, presumably the islands near Kos or Kos itself.The most interest ing name is XdpoucScov (line 5), since itbrings tomindTheocrituss Idylls 7.46, which mentions the mountain XdpoucScov on Kos (Salviat, p. 276, and see also n. 5 for other references). See Salviat s detailed discussion; I
add here a few,mostly prosopographical, comments. Line 1: It is unclear how many lines are missing above line 2. Line 3: A GevScopoq GcoScbpou is attested in ICos 235.A.I.6, but the
name
is too
common
to
suggest
a connection.
Line 4: A Aioxiuog Aioxiuou is attested in I. Teos 103 (as a citizen of and another one appears in I.Iasos 135, but Magnesia-on-the-Meander) no identification is possible. Line 5: Itmust be noted that the name Sainon is not securely attested. Its only example is 7GXII.3 34, where its ending is restored: Iavvo[vxocJ. louvioc;, on the other hand, is quite common. Line 7:The name naAmaxpiKoc; seems to be epigraphically unattested otherwise, but the feminine Palaistrike exists (SEG XXXIV
SEG LXill 1215).
1226; cf. also
12: AioKuAivoc; is unattested, while AioxuA/ivoq is a common and confirmed by the squeeze. name, the same Line 13: A ITuOicdvITu0icqvo<; is attested in I. Cos 235.A.II.8, Line
that lists 0?\)8copo<; 0e\)8copOD. Even though it is impossible to ascertain whether he is the same person, the connection of the present seems inscription with Kos likely.
document
121
Greek
record of initiates
Fig. 93
on the left, and damaged in the Fragment ofThasian marble, broken was in when Fredrich The Chora upper right part. inscription published
Figure 93. Greek record of initiates
(121)
it.Palaiopolis, Old School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehistoric and Clas sical Antiquities. H. 0.23 m,W. 0.41 m,Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.012 m. 185. Edd. Kern 1893, p. 355, no. 4; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Cf Robert and R0bert, BullEp 1958 270; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69.
CHAPTER
206
1st
7
B.C.?
century
[e]ni paciAicoc, 'OpOecoc,
xou
'E7ci%dpou
[uua]Toc[i AoK?ia7cicov
5
?\)]o?pe[icJ MriTpo8(opo'u
doi5oi AneXXeovq 'Ejtouppac,,
Eu7topi(ov,
IlpcoToc;.
OiAoGeou
dyopavojio'uvToc;
to[u-].
Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now severely abraded. Commentary
inscription isdated by Fredrich to the 1st century B.C. on the basis of the lettering. It is a list of initiates, including three aoidoi, slaves ofApelles.
The
122
Greek
record of initiates(?)
Fragment
of Thasian
marble, found at Xeropotamos,
now lost. Its
are unknown.
dimensions
Ed. Hiller von Gaertringen, JGXII
Suppl. (1939) 344.
Date? [-]Kcoioc,
?
.vuro
[. .]voq 'Igicd[vocJ, [Au]Topi8cGV,
5
[ZjcGiAoq, [Tpjuiocc,, [. .jvVCDV,
[. JlCDV, [T]i|napxo<;, [. Jeicov,
10
[. Jicov, Zdropoc, ZKajudvSpoD, AaXeivoq,
15 Mr)Tp68(op[oc;] Hiller. 7 [Tt)?]vvcov Hiller. 14 AaX?ivo<;Croenert (apudHiller), AAAEINOE lapis. Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now lost, and the readings cannot be checked. Commentary
This probably was a list of initiates. Line 1:The reading of the ethnic is uncertain. Initiates from Kos are otherwise
unattested.
Line 7: [Tu?]vvcov, is reasonable, though there are other possibilities.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
2QJ
Figure 94 (right).Greek record of initiates(?) (123) Figure 95 (far right).Greek record of initiates(?) (124)
123 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 94 a or Fragment of stele plaque of veined pink limestone, decorated with an incised on top and the left, on back. pediment, preserved smooth-picked Found inAugust 1965 on theEastern Hill, on the second step of the theatral area
of Samothrace, inv. 65.981. (Fig. 3:25). Archaeological Museum H. 0.11 m,W. 0.135 m,Th. 0.025-0.03 m; L.H. 0.015 m. Unpublished.
2nd-3rd
century a.d.?
inpediment:
[i%X)yy\ i] Ayoc0fj
below pediment:
kiCxpao"iAico[<;-] . [-] Aioyevouc; T
[.]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are elegant, with lunate epsilon and sigma. Line 3: The first omicron ismuch smaller than the other letters. Commentary This was probably a list ofGreek initiates. Lines 3-4: The eponymous official is otherwise unattested.
124 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 95 Fragment ofThasian marble, broken on all sides except the smooth back; said to have been found at the Genoese Towers. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, inv. 68.856. H.
0.11 m,W.
0.11 m,Th.
0.025-0.03
m; L.H.
0.01-0.02
Unpublished. 2nd-3rd
century a.d.? [jlIuotocierjajepepq ?-] I Aioye[v-] [-]. [----]NOIE.[-] [----].[-]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters have lunate shapes, hence the tentative date.
m.
208
Greek
125
CHAPTER
J
Fig. 96
record of initiates
Two joining fragments of a stele ofThasian marble preserved on the left and apparently on back, which has been worked with a claw-chisel. Found inAugust 1971 in the southeastern room at 24.00 m east and 36.20 m south of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. Archaeological Museum
of Samothrace, inv. 71.967. H. 0.20 m, W. 0.225 m, Th.
0.04 m; L.H.
ca. 0.015 m except phi
(0.05 m). Unpublished. lst-2nd
century
a.d.?
"Hpcoq 8o\)a{o<; AcppoSienoq 5[oCao<; ExxppoouvocJ AouTucoq 8o[i)A,o(;? 5 KopivOicc EN[
Figure 96. Greek record of initiates
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and elegant.
(125)
Commentary This was probably a list ofGreek initiates, as the titledoulos, typical of such documents, indicates. The Latin name Ao\)7uto<; suggests a Roman date. record of epoptai and initiates Fig. 97 on the left.The back is a rough Fragment of marble stele, preserved a trench25-28 m south of thenortheastern inner in in 1968 Found July picked. 126
Greek
corner of the Stoa. Archaeological Museum H.
0.20 m,W.
0.26 m,Th.
of Samothrace, inv.68.354.
0.065 m; L.H.
0.02 m.
Unpublished. Date?
...[------]
iaxopiaypd(p[o(;?-] e^urioe xovc[-] ?7t67rcaidrcletauGepoi?-] Xpuo67tT?pocJ-] pTJCiai OC7t?X[?U0?pOl-.]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are clear and elegant. Commentary This is a list of epoptai and initiates,who were presumably freedmen. Line 2: The term historiographos (or historiagraphos) occurs elsewhere a as title following a name, e.g., in two decrees, fromDelphi (FdD III.3
124) andDelos (/GXI.4 697).
Figure 97. Greek record of epoptai and initiates (126)
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
209
Line 3: This is the only Samothracian inscription that uses the active eutmoe is used in its causative form of the verb jLiueco. Perhaps the form to be initiated," i.e., "paid for their initiation"; cf.Andoc. meaning, "caused
De myst 132.5; Dem. 127
Greek
In Neaeram
22.1.
records of initiates
Fig. 98 an on all sides. Found Fragment of opisthographic marble stele, broken inPalaiopolis, at the house ofMr. Palamaroudes. Archaeological Museum
of Samothrace, inv. 62.2. H. 0.30 m,W. 0.25 m, Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.02 m (side A, lines 1-4), 0.015 m (sideA, line 5), 0.010-0.015 m (sideA, lines 6-end), 0.01-0.015 m
(sideB). Edd.
Salac and Frel 1968, p. 105, 2; Bouzek
and Hosek
1995, p. 83,
1(S?GXLV1198). Date?
SideA [-]AKI[-]
[-] .IANT . [-] OY ypa|Li(a,a[T8t)(;-] [-]# [-]TOY 5
xpvr|papxo[<;-]
[-]A(jl)POY
ypaji(ia[x8vj(;-] . . .H[-]
[-]AOIP [-].A.AO...OT[-]
n[?]
[-'----]iii...0N
SideB -] . [-] -]OXA[-] -A]v0(ui[o<;?-] -...]E[-]
- -
-
-]yauapxo[(;-]
-A]v8p6viKo[c;-]
-xpi]r|papxo<; MAI[-] --]AA.... OYT 6 .. [-] -]IOYMAI[-] -]Zco7cnpo(;[-]
-jriANAIOY
TY0M[- -]
-]nOY[-]KIC0N
-
-]NIKOMIKOI[--
-]
-]IYI.[--]
-]'lNIII. Figure 98. Greek records of initiates (127): sideA (above), sideB (below)
-JOYTO
Salac [yopacj
and Frel,
Bouzek
Bouzek
and Hosek.
[-] . [-]
and Hosek. A.6-8
A.2
Dimitrova.
Avxoc[-Salac, B.l
omiserunt
Apxa[edd. B.3
-
Frel, -]M[-
Avxa edd.
B.10 pvOuiKoqBouzek andHosek. B.12 NiKouaxoq Salac and Frel, vikodMiKoq Bouzek
and Hosek.
CHAPTER
2io
7
Commentary Epigraphical The document on sideA iswritten in larger letters and isbetter preserved, though in general it is badly damaged. The lettering and appearance are similar to those of 140, and it is possible that they belonged together, namely, that 140 is to be placed near the lower part ofA, given the similar letter heights.
Commentary
This document must have contained two lists of initiates, inscribed on front and back. The initiateswere members of ship crews, as is evident from titles as YpajiuccTeiL)(;,
such
xpiripapxoq,
voroapxoq;
see ad 61.
record of initiates and an epoptes Fig. 99 Fragment of a block of Thasian marble, broken on the left and the right; the top and bottom seem close to the original surface.The back may be close to the original surface; it has a cutting on the left, suitable for a 128
Greek
pi clamp. Found inPalaiopolis in 1962, in the house ofMarmoras, theArchaeological Museum of Samothrace, inv. 62.1. H. 0.21 m,W. 0.255 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.008-0.01 m.
now in
Unpublished. Date?
-]..[--] -]
. . . TOY[-]
-]AA[-] -]KYAPOA[.]OYI
[-
-
-]
-'---].ET.'[--'-]
-]v5po<;
Aiovdoio|/o?- -]
?7t]o7n;r|<;?-6e>?P[f|<;-] -]C0N NiKojafi8[o\)?-] vacat 3 fortasse
Ku5po
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now badly damaged. The letters become larger at the lower part of the block. Line 6: Last letter: apex of a triangular letter.The letters in this line are slightly larger. Commentary
is a record of an epoptes,whose name must have been preceded by those of initiates. It is unclear whence the block came. Line 6: Nikout|5[ ismore likely a patronymic, following a name ending in -cov, though the ethnic cannot be excluded.
This
129
Greek record of initiates and epoptai Fig. 100 Stele of Thasian marble, broken only above, rough-picked on back. Itwas built into thewall of the church of St. Andrew, in thewestern part of the island, and inscribed with a Christian grave inscription (below a
INITIATES
Figure 99 (above, left).Greek record of initiatesand an epoptes(128) Figure 100 (above, right).Greek record of initiatesand epoptai (129)
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
211
contemporary relief representing a cross within a circle) located above the ancient list of initiates.Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard. inv. no.
No
0.33 m, W. 0.26 m, Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.02-0.04 m (lines 1-3), m 0.015 (lines 4-10). Edd. Conze 1875, p. 42, no. 20, pi. 71:20; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 204. H.
1st century
B.C.?
relief evGd5e koc xaKiiai (sic) Evr\ 0iv traces occupying1.5 lines 5
. .AIEI.
All.
. . . .AI
. . JLIUOXOCI
vacat
A
..
. I.
..
hzonxax
iiAmn.i. . . eoK^fjc; eoKkeovq vacat
[i\)cxi\q vacat
10 aKo^ouGoq AcKXaq Fredrich. ..ArAI..l|
4-8 Dimitrova,-IF-
- -
|
5-AI-
- -
|
6
- -
7 -I-1
8---A-Fredrich.
Epigraphical Commentary The original inscription, dated by Fraser to the 1st century B.C. on the ba sis of the lettering, is badly damaged. Lines 1-3 contain a Christian epi taph.
Line 6: The
diagonal mark before ?7t67rxociis damage.
Commentary This was a listof initiates and epoptai (lines 5-6). Lines 8-10 record another initiate, accompanied by his akolouthos. Line 8:Theokles, Neokles,
velsim.
212
130
CHAPTER
record of initiates(?) and epoptai Fig. 101 Fragment of a stele ofThasian marble, broken on the left,below, and on back. Found in 1924, below a fountain.1 probably above; rough-picked
The
Greek
J
Figure 101. Greek record of initi ates^) and epoptai (130). Samothrace 2.1, pi. XIL26
surface of the stone is heavily damaged by water. Archaeological of Samothrace, courtyard, inv.49.444. H. 0.19 m,W. 0.275 m,Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.007-0.01 m. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 26.
Museum
Cf. Salviat 1962, p. 269; Robert 1963, p. 53; Robert and Robert, BullEp
1964 373; Bouzek andHosek 1995,pp. 83-85; SEGXLV 1198-1201. 2nd-lst
B.C.?
century
Col.
I
Col.
II
no[.] Nivvapoc,
-]
OiAOKxa[- -] 'E k 6 n x a i 08\)5[ox]o(; vel 0et)8[cop]o(;
-]vn[
Aio(pdvr)<;
-]EO[.
Kovcov
]A
.JOAOTOI 10
A]7toM.68(opo<; B vacat
AION[-]
A . . [-]
AaKAT|7r[?]
[.] [-1
-]E. N[
Fraser.
II.4 Mwvapoq
Fraser,
Nivvocpoc, Bouzek
and Hosek. 1. For details
Epigraphical Commentary The stone is very hard to read. The century
B.C.
hand suggests a date in the 2nd-lst
about
the
findspot,
see Salviat 1962, p. 269. There isno information fountain.
about
the location
of the
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
213
Commentary The inscription,whose beginning ismissing, represents a record of epoptai and probably initiates. It is interesting that the names that can be read have no patronymics except for [A]tcoaA68copo<; in line 5, if the following beta indicates that his patronymic was A7coM.o8copoir, such usage of B as a numeral is quite common. According to Fraser, the patronymics must have been written on the lines below since there is insufficient space for them, at least in the second column. The preserved names, however, show that therewere only single names listed. Line II.4: The name Mivvapoq is otherwise unattested (cf. Robert, is attested, and is confirmed by the stone. p. 53). Nwvocpoq, however, Line II.6: 0?v3S[ot]o(; must have been one of the epoptai, although his name is inscribed on the same line as the as Fraser notes. heading, 131
Records
ofGreek
and Roman
initiates of unknown
Fig. 102
provenance
Round
base ofThasian
marble, with molding above, broken below. x Byzantine ruins (inner dimensions 5.50 3.30 m) of the church of St. Georgios (Ai-Giorgis stonKatsamba), reused as the altar support, now at theOld School Lab of the Ephoreia of Prehis toric and Classical Antiquities inPalaiopolis. Itmust have held a tripod or a similar object. The top has a central hole, 0.16 m in diameter above and 0.085 m below, with a pour channel, and three smaller holes 0.07-0.08 m
Found
in 2003
in theMiddle
in diameter. Ephoreia H. 0.45 m, Diam. Ed. Matsas
Figure 102. Records ofGreek and Roman
initiates
enance (131)
of unknown
prov
inv. 69.
(top) 0.46 m; L.H. 0.01-0.015 and Dimitrova 2006, pp. 131-132.
m.
chapter
214
1st century
i
b.c.-2nd
7
a.d.?
century
87il pacnAicoq AmX^ovq
(sic)
xo\) OiAoKpoVcotx; [. .275. .]ivioi u.\>oto:i 5
evozfieiq Aioyevoi)
Aiovoaioc;
S/orjupoD
A-utokAt^ Acukioc,
1 vs.
vacat
ii
MdpKoi)
87ii paaiAecoq ZonAo-u xoi3Apiaxo^evcru lAuarnq ..VS 10 euoepfiq A |RA |VR |-
15-20
J
]ai7T7lOD
[...?"?...
...
[...*?...]
Epigraphical Commentary The stone is now veryworn. The Greek hand of inscription ii is later, and less careful.The Latin hand of ii seems different from that of theGreek. Commentary
base has two records of initiates, probably not original. The names in lines 7 and 10 suggest a Roman date. The eponymous kings are appar ently unknown, but the name Aristoxenos is numismatically attested for a Samothracian official; see Fredrich, 7GXII.8, p. 41. This is the firstbase
The
for a tripod-like object on which records of initiation have been found. Line 1: The genitive of the name Apelles is spelled with an eta in several inscriptions, most of which happen to be from Ephesos (e.g., 1407). Apeles with a single lambda seems to be I.Ephesos 159, 552,1406, epigraphically unattested, though simplification of double consonants is a widespread
Line
132
phenomenon.
10: A Roman
Greek
initiate's name is recorded in the Latin alphabet.
record of an initiate
Fragment ofThasian marble, broken on both sides, now lost. Itwas and later seen by G. Seure in Istan copied by Phardys and Champoiseau, bul.
H.
0.25 m,W. 0.65 m,Th.?; L.H.? Edd. Reinach 1892, p. 204, no. 1, under no. 6; Kern 1893, p. 375, no. 24, and cf.p. 373, under no. 17; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 197; Hiller von Gaertringen, JGXII Suppl. (1939), p. 149; I.Perinthos (1998) 308. Cf. Robert 1963, p. 65, with n. 6; Robert and Robert, BullEp 1964 394; Fraser 2001, p. 183 (SEG LI \Q92bis). Date? i
in
[-]'Iai5copou
n
[- -]OI nepivOioi [-]Mvr|aiKAfi(;
5 &yoc0[fji roxrji] 87ii Paai^8[coc;-] iLvaxr\q
7cid8o\)[-] Seure.
2 oi
llepwGioi
Seure.
8 TPIAAO
Reinach.
[e-ooeprig-
-AokAti?-]
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
215
Epigraphical Commentary The letters of inscription iii are much bigger, according to Seure. Line 1:The name was written within an erasure fromChristian as Reinach
times,
observes.
Commentary It is unclear what title the Perinthians mentioned
in inscription ii had and was whether the initiate in inscription iii from Perinthos. Line 2: I prefer to interpret 01 not as the definite article, which is not typical in such documents, but as the some word, ending of possibly Gecopoi. 133
Greek
record of initiates
Fig. 103
of a marble
stele, preserved on the right. The back is in smooth-picked. Brought during thewinter of1967, possibly fromChora. Museum of Samothrace, inv. 68.56. Archaeological Fragment
H.
0.21 m,W.
0.24 m, Th. 0.05 m; L.H.
0.02 m.
Unpublished. End of 2nd century a.d.? [-]A.[--]
[-]? &[K\] Ixecpd
[vod vel -vr|(p6pcov?--]od AnzKkox> MeveicAi [-Koc]i 5
[ou<;?-Ka?]uvicov [peiq vel7tp?oP?/i)Tou
Ttpea -]|ut>crcai
[-?1)]t\)xo)c;
[-]o^9![- ' ]
Epigraphical Commentary The letter style closely resembles that of 63. The
a upsilon has decorative are the and lunate. crossbar; sigma epsilon Line 5: First letter: right upper diagonal of upsilon. Line 7: Last letter: leftupper part of a circle.
Line 8: Dotted letters: right part of a circle, top part of a circle (cf. the last omicron in line 3); top vertical.
Figure 103. Greek record of initiates
(133)
CHAPTER
2l6
7
Commentary This is a record of ambassadors and initiates, possibly from Kaunos. Lines 2-3: A name like Stephanos or the title stephanephoros.Parallels for the formula 87ii oxecpavncpopcov in the plural can be found in TAM V 542, line 12; LDidyma
magistrates
Stephanephoroswas the title of eponymous
429,515.
in various
cities
(e.g.,
Iasos).
adverb evtvx&c, is found in other inscriptions concerning mysteries, e.g., LEphesos 652, 1883; LPanamara 245, line 41. A similar notion is expressed in 90, line 5. Line 7:The
134
Greek Kalchedon
or
record of initiates from either Byzantion
Fig. 104
Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, preserved on the right and above; the back may be close to the original surface.The inscription was acquired by the excavators from a local person in 1926.2 Archaeological of Samothrace,
Museum
courtyard,
H.
inv. 49.440.
0.008 m
0.22 m,W. 0.15 m, Th. 0.08 m; L.H. (lines 2-3), 0.015 m (lines 4-8). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 27.
(line 1), 0.012 m
Cf. Salviat 1962, p. 269; Robert 1963, pp. 64-66; Robert and Robert, BullEp 1964 373; Cole 1984, p. 40, with 110 (n. 330); Bouzek and Hosek 1198-1201, lemma 5). 1995, pp. 83-85 (SEGXLV After
middle
of 2nd
b.c.-lst
century
in cornice:
a.d.?
century
\ek\PocoiAeccx;-]8cbpo\) [-eki iepoujvduovoc;
below cornice:
[-]covion [uiJCTTai
vacat
euoelpeic;-
5
[-Be ^/Me]v8iScopo|/u] [-]OY vacat [-]OYI
Fraser. Fraser,
1
-
-]kod Fraser,
Be ^/Me]v5i5copo[u]
-
4 peiQ Fraser.
-]5copoD Dimitrova.
vacat
5 Be]v5i5cbpo[i)]
Robert.
Epigraphical Commentary The broken-bar alpha and the shape of the omega are consistent with a date
after
ca.
150
b.c.
to some
Line 4: Clear beta.
point
in the
1st century
Commentary
This
is a list of initiates from either Byzantion
Line
2: Fraser
comments
that
a.d.
or Kalchedon.
hieromnemones
are
the
eponymous
of
ficials of Byzantion, Perinthos, and Kalchedon. He ismore inclined to at tribute the document to Perinthos on the basis that "Perinthians outnumber Byzantines
in Samothracian
documents."
It must
be
noted,
however,
that
= 7GXII.8 one of the initiates listed by Fraser as Perinthian (50, line 25 are mentioned in 39 186.25) in fact has the ethnic SdvOioc,. Perinthians
2. See Salviat
1962, p. 269.
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
21J
Figure 104. Greek record of initiates from eitherByzantion or Kalchedon (134).
Courtesy
Samothrace Excavations
(one citizen and his household slave), 132 (at least one person, perhaps a theoros), and on the stone allow other possibly in 145, but the remains restorations as well. On the other hand, Byzantines are recorded in 39 (two people), 53 (one person), and perhaps in 67, side C (nine people),
so the conclusion that Perinthians aremore numerous than Byzantines in documents is incorrect. Even if theywere more numerous, thiswould still not be a decisive argument for the origin of the initiates
Samothracian
in the present monument (Robert, p. 65). What the Doric form of the title hieromnamon, which,
is more
significant is as Robert points out
as a possible candidate. He (p. 66), excludes the Ionic city of Perinthos furthernarrows the choice down to Byzantion because of the name Be vel
Me]v8i8(opo[\)]; see ad lint 5. Line 5: Bev8(8copo(;, derived from the name ofThracian
goddess Ben see is in variant attested the also Robert, dis, MevSiScopoc/, p. 65. The name occurs inAttica, Eretria, Thessaloniki, Lemnos, Bendidoros/Bendidora and elsewhere.3 Robert believes that the initiate in the present document is from Byzantion, given the abundance ofThracian names there. It seems to me that Kalchedon cannot be excluded as a possibility, in view of its dialect spoken in it.Kalchedonians as theoroi in 22. are and listed 152
location and theDoric
7GXII.8 135
3. See Robert 1963, pp. 64-65, for the exact references.
Greek
are honored
in
records of initiates
Fragment of Thasian marble, preserved at the upper right. The was inChora when Fredrich inscription published it. Its present location is unknown. A basket is engraved in themiddle of the stone,within which inscription ii is cut.
CHAPTER
218
7
0.14 m,W. 0.31 m,Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.009-0.02 m. Edd. Kern 1893, p. 371, no. 13; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 201.
H.
1st century
i
B.C.?
ii
[jLToaxai euoJepeTc, [-]lOl' [-
5
-
coc; 10
-,-]HZ
IcoxeAoDq.
[-]oi T
14 navxejwcj
Fredrich.
KociNiKriaiAe
[-] Appo-
[-?-]MIE
Tiuocyopocq 080^81800
lii
08[---]
Apie>[-] llavT8[- -]
15 Guvuualrai] Oav?oc[cj
Fredrich.
Commentary
This document contains three inscriptions. Inscriptions i and iii are lists of initiates, and iimay also be a record of initiation.Fredrich thinks that ii is the oldest, followed by iii and then i.He suggests a date in the 1st century B.C. on the basis of the letter style. Lines 7-8: A certain Tiuocyopocc;08okA8i8od is attested in an undated inscription fromNaxos (7GXII.5 81). He may have been the same person, given the name's relative rarity,but the Naxian inscription contains no information
136
other
14: There
Line
Greek
than
the name.
are many
possible restorations.
record of initiates(?)
Fig. 105
Reused fragment of Thasian marble, with decorative molding at bottom and a rectangular cutting on the on the left and right, preserved below. Found inJuly 1971 at 17.85-21.15 m east and 32.70-37.50 m south of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. of Archaeological Museum inv. 71.958.
Samothrace,
H.
0.26 m,W.
0.20 m,Th.
0.06 m; L.H.
Unpublished. Date? [. . .]AAOZ[-] [. . .]o8copo<;[-] [ -]ArA[-] 5
[A7io]AAo8[?] [. .olOevnq NEI[-] [M8]vocv8po(;Mevf- -]
[AA]8^dv[8pon] [. . .]NOMOZ[- -] [.
10
.
.]MC0N
A7ioA,Acovi[o'o]
[t]ot3ApxeurScbpoD vacat vacat
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now severely abraded.
0.01 m.
-
-]
INITIATES
Figure 105 (above, left).Greek record of initiates(?) (136) Figure 106 (above, right).Record of Greek,
Roman,
and Thracian
initi
2.1,pi.XIL37 ates^) (137). Samothrace
137
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
Record ofGreek, Roman,
UNKNOWN
and Thracian
219
Fig. 106
initiates(?)
Fragment ofThasian marble, broken on all sides. The back is rough picked. Found on June 27,1953, near theRotunda ofArsinoe, to thewest. of Samothrace, inv. 53.7. Archaeological Museum H.
0.19 m,W. 0.165 m,Th. 0.03 m; L.H. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 37.
0.010-0.015
m.
Imperial period [-]i.A.[-] [-]oD7iopi<;... vacat?
Avxi7tax
[AA?]?dvSpo'u
5
[-Jxiavoq [-]7lOp?CD<; vacat
Fraser.
2 Dimitrova,
ujcoyia
Fraser.
5 Dimitrova,
omvoq
Fraser.
6 Dimitrova,
vopecoc, Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary Line 2: Part of a circle, followed by clear upsilon, pi, omicron, rho, iota, sigma.
Line 5: Clear
tau.
Line 6: First letter: clear pi; what seemed to be the diagonal of nu is a stray mark.
220
CHAPTER
J
Commentary The names in -ports can be clearly identified asThracian.4 Unfortunately, too litde ispreserved to shed furtherlight on this inscription. It isnot certain it is a record of initiates, but the listing ofGreeks, Thracians, and a a presumably Roman (line 5) makes this probable conjecture. Line 5: The Latin suffix -tianus perhaps suggests a Roman Imperial
whether
date, but it is impossible to be more specific.
138 Greek recordof initiates(?) Fig. 107 a on the left.The back Fragment of block ofThasian marble, broken is rough-picked; the right side may have anathyrosis; the top and bottom a are smooth-picked. Found inApano Meria, in the ruins of church known now at the Old School Lab of the as "Treis Ekklisies st' Alonoudhi," Ephoreia
of Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities
inPalaiopolis.
Ephoreia
inv. 25.
0.17 m,W. 0.34 m, Th. 0.23; L.H. 0.014 m. Ed. Matsas and Dimitrova 2006, pp. 130-131.
H.
2nd
century
b.c.-2nd
century
a.d.?
[.?.]
traces [-]
of letters(ca. 10) vacat} Anuoxdpriq vacat
[-]
Vacat Adujicovoq vacat
[-]_
5
vacat
AiovuGiotq
vacat
[-]y
vacat 'E7tiKpdTOUvacat vacat
[- -?-] [- -] .TEOY
vacat
[- -] . IOI
[- -]. ITOI OY
vacat vacat
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is now badly damaged. The and difficult to date.
uneven lettering is somewhat
Figure 107. Greek record of initi
ates(?)(138)
4. See, for a recent discussion,
Boy
adzhiev 2000, p. 146,with n. 207.
INITIATES
139
WHOSE
Greek
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
221
record of initiates(?)
on all sides.The inscriptionwas in Fragment ofThasian marble, broken Palaiopolis when Fredrich published it. Its present location is unknown. H. 0.19 m,W. 0.22 m,Th. 0.055 m; L.H. 0.01 m. Edd. Kern 1893, p. 379, no. 33; Fredrich, 7GXII.8
179.
2nd century b.c.?
[-]AAA[-] [- -]pexr|Avxioxoi) [__]i[____]H[-] 5
[-]A[-] [-]nO/[--]AI[--]
[-]Ano [-]noY
Commentary
was a listof initiates, containing the name - -pernAvti6%od, Presumably this but no further information can be surmised. Presumably the firstname in line 2 was Arete or a compound of it, such as Nikarete
140
Record ofGreek
and Roman
orMnesarete.
initiates(?) of unknown
Fig. 108
provenance
on all sides. Found in July 1971 Fragment ofThasian marble, broken at 21.30-24.30 m east and 22.50-35.20 m south of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. of Samothrace, Archaeological Museum H. 0.29 m,W. 0.22 m, Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.025 m.
inv. 71.957.
Unpublished. Roman
period [----].[.]
[-]. OYAAPIZ[-] [- -]OYENTOZ T[5
-
vel[- -]. OYAIAPIZ[-] -]
[- -]l\X\axpaxoq [- -] [---"-]MANOZ[-] [.-]NEIKOZ[- -]
[.]OZ[.] []
[;]
10 [-]ticott|[<;- -]
[-]NEIKH[- -] traces (3-4 vss.) 4
Figure 108. Record ofGreek and Roman initiates(?) of unknown provenance (140)
fortasse
Ka]M(crcpaTO<;.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is badly defaced. The those of 127.
are similar to lettering and layout
Line 2: It is unclear if the vertical between lambda and alpha is a letter.
222
CHAPTER
J
Commentary This may have been a list ofGreek and Roman initiates from the Roman as the remains in lines 2 and 3 suggest. period, Line 3: A name of the type Iuventus is possible. 141
Fig. 109 near the Rotunda of Arsinoe, Fragment of Thasian marble, found on is unknown. the Its location present preserved right. H. 0.14 m,W. 0.19 m, Th. 0.05 m; L.H.? 199. Edd. Conze 1880, p. 95, no. 10; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 Greek
record of initiates(?)
Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp
1958 270; Robert
1963, pp. 67-69.
Date? Aiayopoc[cJ vacat [-] Aiovuoioq vacat B[-] Znvo5c6pa[-
0^XP\fJT7^^
cnou
6
AropAN, "Q. to\)(?) Dimitrova.
xo^e Fredrich,
y
DOT
5 dyopavo[uo\)vto(;-] to\)(?) [-] Fredrich.
y
Paiony^io^
-]
Epigraphical Commentary Conze's facsimile gives an idea about the lettering.
Figure
109. Greek
ates(?)
(141).
record
of initi
1880, p. 95, no. 10
Conze
Commentary
This probably was a list of initiates, given the listed names and themention of the agoranomos;
142
Greek
on
the
agoranomoi
see
above,
3, adYme
13.
record of initiates(?)
Fig. 110 of Thasian marble, preserved on the left and above, badly Fragment defaced. Its findspot and present location are unknown. H. 0.29 m,W. 0.29 m,Th.?; L.H.? 1875, p. 41, no. 9, pi. 71:9; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 224. Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp 1958 270; Robert 1963, pp. 67-69. Edd. Conze
AM
Date? Auxpicov NiKOGTpaxofcJ
Adcpvoc;
. .N
EA?rA!;^v^N ?YH N O L
. IN
AO .AY KSpoc; 5 EAErAI N CON ON
'
C r PO CO\
Eirnvoq, rpoo(p[ocj [d]yopavo|Lio'uv[TocJ .T . . . AK[-]
AIOY
Fredrich. 5 EAErArNON I N Fredrich, EAErAINft N Wil. [apudFredrich]. rpoa[ocJsupplevit
ON Dimitrova. 6
Figure
110. Greek
ates^)
(142).
Conze
record
of initi
1875, pi. 71:9
WHOSE
INITIATES
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
Epigraphical Commentary The readings can be surmised from Conze's Line 6: Last letter: circle. Commentary
This was probably a list of initiates.The that
the
preserved
names
are
those
iv
A K KOM^
'
lack of patronymics may indicate
Alo
NYC
IPC
Fig. Ill
Date? [[-] AK KojiijLievfi] oq M .P .E[- -] ASpi[ocv6](;? 5 OoTPoq, N[ik6?] Xaoq, Xpf|oi|i[o(;?] POI TET . . ['- -]
.
Tc iAo> o c
is possible.
Fragment ofThasian marble, preserved on the left and right, badly defaced. Its findspot and present location are unknown. H. 0.60 m,W. 0.25 m,Th.?; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 42, no. 16, pi. 71:16; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 225.
PC M^fx > ; ' $ o I6 ?C V AAoC xP Hli^;; CT'At'
record of initiates (?)
Greek
facsimile.
of slaves.
Line 5: A name of the typeMeletainon 143
223
?toct[iXio(;?] 'IaiScopoc, 10
.
Aiovucuoc,
AIACJN ...[--]
2 AK Ko|ijiev[i]
Fredrich. Hiller.
supplevit in maiusculis,
i i i
9
'Iai8co[p]oc,
Fredrich Fredrich,
in maiusculis,
AK Ko|j.u?v[i]-
'IoiScopoc, Dimitrova.
Dimitrova.
11 AIAON
4
Fredrich
AIACjJN Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary Conze's facsimile gives an idea of the letter style. Commentary
Figure ates(?)
111. Greek (143).
Conze
record
of initi
1875, pi. 71:16
This was probably a list of initiates. Line 1: Kopivio[cJ (Latin Comenius), usually with a singlemu, is a rare name, also attested in IG IP 6770 (1st century a.d.) and in I.Leukopetra 23,25,30. Line 6: Ligature of eta and sigma. Line 9: The rho of 'IoiScopoc; is in ligaturewith omega. 144
Greek
record of initiates(?)
Fig. 112
on the left,back, and a Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, preserved below, with raised molding below; the back is rough-picked. Its findspot is
224
CHAPTER
J
unknown. Brought from Chora on July 5,1949. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, courtyard, inv.49.441. H. 0.246 m,W. 0.19 m,Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.025 m (lines 1-3), 0.015 0.017 m (lines 4-7). Edd. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
1963, pp. 99-100; (1960) 19;Walton Salac and Frel 1968, p. 106, 4; Bouzek and Hosek 1995, p. 85, 2 (SEG
XLV 1201).
Cf. Robert and Robert, BullEp 2nd-3rd
century
1964 369.
a.d.?
[--------;--------] tou Eio[i8[copo\) / -oxoo ? oi ?] ev
TrAoicp AI[.
.ca.5..]
B tov Eim8[copo\) / -oiou] 5 mi o\)v a[uT-cp / -die] 0f|pcov B xou M[evdv8?] pou,
Euvou [cj xo xeu[?vo<;oi] Fraser, TOY EllWalton. Fraser. 1-2 Dimitrova, [6cve9r|Kcxv?] Epigraphical Commentary The lettering isuneven and inelegant,with rectilinear shapes. Line 7,which is only half of a line below line 6, may be by a different hand; it employs lunate epsilon. It is unclear how many lines aremissing above. Line 2: Third letter: clear upsilon; last letter: lower part of a leftvertical, followed by another lower part of a vertical, which rendersmu improbable, since the second vertical is too close to the first,thus suggesting that the first is a narrow letter, such as iota. Commentary The nature of this document, dated by Fraser to the 2nd-3rd century a.d., isunclear. Fraser thought that itwas a dedication of a temenosbymembers of a ship s crew. I find the restoration of xeujevoc, in line 2 unconvincing (cf. Walton), given the remains on the stone, and suggest that the document may have been a list of initiates. Greek
145
record of initiates(?)
Marble fragment found in Palaiopolis, at the "lower tower" (Conze). Its dimensions and present location are unknown. Edd. Conze 1860, p. 64; Fredrich, 7GXII.8 203. Date?
[riepiv?]0(cov
[-]OAOI [-]N[____]
[-]O.OY[--] Fredrich. 2 [d]o[i]5oi? Fredrich.
Figure 112. Greek record of initi ates^) (144). Excavations
Courtesy
Samothrace
INITIATES
ETHNIC
WHOSE
IS
UNKNOWN
225
Commentary This may have been a list of initiates.The restoration [Ilepiv?]8icov, and therefore the connection with Perinthos, is only hypothetical.
146 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 113 on the left, rough Fragment of stele of Thasian marble, preserved on the on back. Found in Hill. 1988 Western Archaeological August picked Museum of Samothrace, inv. 88.510. H. 0.11 m,W. 0.11 m,Th. 0.06 m; L.H. 0.02 m (line 2), 0.04 m (line 3). Unpublished. lst-3rd
a.d.?
century
AO.
[----]
'EA.7u8T|(p6p|p<;vel -v-] .0YA[-] [----]
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is uneven, with pronounced serifs, suggestive of a later date. Line 1: Second letter: lower part of a circle; third letter: lower verti Figure 113. Greek recordof initi
ates(?)(146)
cal.
Line 2: Cursive delta. Line 3: First letter: right top horizontal (or an extended flnial) joined with a barely slanting right stroke; third letter: triangle. Commentary This ismay have been a list of initiates. It ispossible to restore the heading douloi in line 1 or 3.
147 Greek recordof epoptai Fig. 114 a Fragment of pedimental stele ofThasian marble, broken below. Found on July 11,1970, near the Stoa. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, inv. 70.939. H. 0.255 m,W. 0.26 m,Th. 0.045 m; L.H. 0.015-0.02 m. Unpublished. 2nd
century eni ..
b.c.-2nd
century
a.d.?
PaaiXecoq.... vaKioq
fI
epoicAioix; ?7C07cxai evoefieic, 5_
Figure 114.Greek recordof epoptc
(147)
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is almost obliterated.
226
CHAPTER
J
Commentary This is a Greek
record of epopteia.The eponymous official is so far unat then he might tested, but ifhis first name is to be restored asMetronax,
be related to the eponymous kings in 46, inscription ii, and 89.
148 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 115 Block ofThasian marble, broken on top.There are vertical lines incised on both the left and right sides, presumably for decoration. Provenance unknown, perhaps brought from the Gattilusi Towers. The front surface was almost of entirely covered with mortar. Archaeological Museum Samothrace, courtyard. No inv.no. H. 0.14 m,W. 0.54 m,Th. 0.33 m; L.H.
0.02 m.
Unpublished.
Figure 115. Greek record of initi
ates(?)(148)
Date? .. ouporj, BaKxioq Ilou8evTO<;(?) BotKxioqTpucpoToq, rioofjq Knok taxpdvouq, Te^eacpopoc; ndpjLiuScfcJ Tuxepcoq.n
.AN
....
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are even and somewhat narrow, thus suggestive of a Late Hel lenistic-Early Roman date. Commentary It is unclear whether 149
Greek
the block belonged
record of initiates
to a monument
or to a building.
Fig. 116
seems to be a Fragment of limestone block, broken below; the back near the left edge. smooth-picked. A rectangular hole is visible in front Found by Chapouthier. Brought fromChora on July 5,1949. Archaeologi of Samothrace, courtyard, inv.49.445. calMuseum H. 0.25 m,W. 0.48 m, Th. 0.21 m; L.H. 0.03-0.035 m (lines 1-2), 0.025-0.028 m (lines 3-4).
Edd. Chapouthier1925,p. 254;BullEp 1926,p. 275;Hiller vonGaer
tringen, 7GXII Cf.Salviat
Suppl. (1939) 346; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 60. 1962, p. 268.
ETHNIC
INITIATES
WHOSE
2nd-4th
century a.d.?
IS
UNKNOWN
227
Figure 116. Greek record of initiates (149).
Courtesy
Samothrace Excavations
?7tipaaiA-ecoq KaXXinnov jiue>x[ou] "Hpcov H .PE
euoePeiq
Tyiaiv[o]v[xocJ, 5
[-]'
Fraser. 2 uugx[cxi](?)Fraser. 5 [-](?)
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is late,with ligatures ofmu upsilon (line 2), eta rho (line 3), upsilon gamma (line 4). Commentary The eponymous official is unattested. This is a list of Greek no other information can be derived from it. 150
Greek
record of initiates
initiates, but
Fig. 117
on all sides except the back (rough Fragment ofThasian marble, broken near theGenoese Towers on June 21,1939. Archaeological picked). Found of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.12. Museum H. 0.22 m,W. 0.23 m, Th. 0.07 m; L.H. 0.006-0.008 m. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 35.
Figure 117. Greek recordof initiates (150).
Courtesy Samothrace Excavations
CHAPTER
228
7
Date?
[-]o\)
[-]OTOI [-]AMOY [---]W
5
[puoxai euoeJpEiq
[-]0Y [-]NOI [-]5copo\)
[-]ANIOI
io [-]?Y-?[?1 Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is badly damaged. Commentary Line 5 suggests that thiswas a list of Greek mation can be derived. 151
initiates, but no other infor
record of an epoptes Fig. 118 on all sides. Found Fragment ofThasian marble, broken Greek
in the area of
the Stoa. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, inv. 68.700. H. 0.08 m,W. 0.14 m,Th. 0.035 m; L.H. 0.008-0.012 m. Unpublished. Date?
[-].
I.
[----]
vacat ATE[-] [- -]AI hionxx^c,- -] [--]....
Epigraphical Commentary Lunate epsilon and sigma are used.
Figure 118. Greek record of an epoptes(151)
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
229
Commentary This is a record of an epoptes, but too little is preserved to gain further information from it. 152
Greek
record of initiates
Fig. 119
on all sides except the Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, broken back, which is rough-picked. Found inHalonia on June 30,1953. Archaeo of Samothrace, inv. 53.74. logicalMuseum 0.09 m, Th. 0.028 m; L.H. 0.025 m (lines 1-2), H. 0.13 m, W. m (line 3). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 48.
0.01-0.015
Date? [erciP]aoiX[8G)<;- -xou- -] [u]rjGTa[i cuoepeiq]
t-] Fraser.
Figure 119. Greek recordof initiates (152).
Samothrace 2.1, pi. XIX:48
Epigraphical Commentary Fraser notes the lettering, especially sigma, indicates a late Imperial date. Commentary This was the beginning of a list of initiates. 153
Greek
record of an initiate
Fig. 120
on all sides. Fragment ofThasian marble, with molding above, broken Itwas found inChora. Its present location is unknown. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.20 m,W. 0.20 m,Th. 0.095 m; L.H. 0.013 m (line 1), 0.055 m
(line2).
Edd. Kern 1893, p. 364, no. 8; Fredrich, 7GXII.8
193; [JMT1573].
1st century B.C.? iL\>axr\q ex>oe[^r\q] KY[----]
vel vwv]Fredrich. Fredrich. 2 K\)[?iktvvch Epigraphical Commentary The letters, dated by Fredrich to the 1st century B.C., are much the second line,with a greater space between them, as Kerns Figure 120. Greek record of an initi ate (153). Kern 1893,p. 364
on larger facsimile
shows.
Line 2: Left oblique
stroke suitable for upsilon or chi.
Commentary Itmust be noted that Kn[?iKrrv- - ?] is not a certain restoration, since there are other ethnics beginning with kappa upsilon (e.g., Kuueuoi). Moreover, it is unclear whether Kn[- -] is an ethnic at all. It is also unclear whether lines 1 and 2 belong to the same record.
23O
154
CHAPTER
Fig. 121
record of initiates
Greek
7
an incised a Top right fragment of stele ofThasian marble, with pedi ment. The back is toward broken the top. Found rough-picked, possibly outside the Sacristy on July 7, 1939. Archaeological Museum of Samo thrace, courtyard, inv. 39.338. 0.208 m,W.
H.
0.16 m, Th.
(lines 2-4). Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben
(1960) 49.
0.04 m; L.H.
0.01 m
(line 1), 0.015 m
1940, p. 346, no. 2; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1
Samothrace 2.2 (1960), p. 30.
Cf. Lehmann,
2nd-3rd century a.d.?
[aya]0fiTt>XTl
[eni PaaiA,eco](; 0>X.Triyewou [tov -]r\Xi(ovoq [p,uaxai eualePeiq
Figure 121. Greek record of initiates (154).
Fraser.
Courtesy
Samothrace Excavations
3 AjnAacovoc, Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are executed in a decorative
style,with lunate epsilon and a later date. Phi of sigma, suggestive projects far beyond the restriction of the lines,which had been marked with guidelines before the textwas inscribed.
Commentary This was a list ofGreek
initiates, as is evident from line 4. The eponymous is otherwise unattested. king Line 3: There are other possibilities for restoring the patronymic (for instance, Ex>\i]if\Xi(iyvoqy etc.). T]r|Aacovo<;, 'uJcp]r|AacGvo<;, record of initiates and epoptai Fig. 122 a stele of Thasian marble with molding; the Top right fragment of back may be close to the original surface. Found near the south door of of Samothrace, theAnaktoron on July 28,1953. Archaeological Museum inv. 53.616. H. 0.12 m,W. 0.04 m, Th. 0.05 m; L.H. 0.015 m (lines 2-3), 0.01 155
Greek
m (lines 4-5). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 55. 2nd-3rd century a.d.? -(?)]
[eni pacuAicoc,?xofi-
?
-]
|it>axai
] vacat0.02
m
E7t]67txa[i]
]TIO[.]
5
Fraser.
]T.[..]
3
[euoePeic,,
kou e7c]o7ixa[i]
Fraser.
4
[r\q / ou
]xio[i?]
Fraser.
Figure 122. Greek record of initiates and epoptai (155). Samothrace 2.1, pl.XXI:55
WHOSE
INITIATES
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
231
Epigraphical Commentary Line 1:There would be enough space for this line only if it is inscribed in smaller letters. Line 2: Sigma, tau, and alpha are in ligature. Line 3: Last letter: it is possible to discern traces of a triangular letter with a crossbar. Commentary This is a list of Greek initiates and epoptai. Fraser favors a date in the 2nd-3rd century a.d. on the basis of the lettering. Line 4: Fraser suggests an ethnic, e.g., [B\)?dv]xio[i]. Greek record of an initiate, and Latin record of initiation(?) Fig. 123 on the leftand below, a Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, preserved with molding at bottom. The back is smooth, inscribed with faint Latin characters. The lower part of a caduceus is barely visible above the text on Found sideA; theremay be another caduceus next to it (cf. 42,104,169). inHalonia on June 30,1953. Archaeo in the church ofAyios Demetrios 156
of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 53.73. logicalMuseum H. 0.29 m,W. 0.19 m, Th. 0.065 m; L.H. 0.016 m 0.025 m (lines 2-4), 0.01-0.015 m (side B). Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 56. lst-3rd
century
a.d.?
SideA ?711paGlAicofc-tou-] KdaT0)[p] eu] ,E7UKpdT[oDcJiivoxr\qvel ?7t67trn<;
SideB 4-5 lines ofLatin -] [--].ERID.[-
Fraser.
an initi Figure 123. Greek recordof ate, and Latin record of initiation(?)
sideB (farright) (156):sideA (right)y
Side
B Dimitrova.
(line 1), 0.020
232
CHAPTER
7
Commentary Epigraphical The letters are uneven and inelegant, suggestive of a later date. Side B is almost illegible. Commentary
is a record of a Greek initiate. Side B might have been a Latin record of initiation, but too little of it is preserved to be certain.
Side A
157
Greek
record of an initiate
Fig. 124
Block ofThasian marble with molding above, broken on right.Present location unknown. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.085 m,W. 0.31 m,Th. 0.14 m; L.H. 0.015 m. Edd. Conze 1875, p. 41, no. 10, pi. 71:10; Fredrich, JGXII.8 200. Date?
a\y?T1
puorn[(; euoepficj AypeocpcbvAn[- -] Fredrich. Aypeocpcbv
1
|ti'6axr|[(; Fredrich,
Dimitrova. ju.t)GTn,[
2 Aypeocpcbv
Ai- Fredrich,
Ar\Dimitrova.
Epigraphical Commentary The readings can be surmised from Conze
s facsimile.
Commentary
is a record of a Greek initiate. Fredrich notes that the name Aypeocpcbv is typical of Lykia and suggests that the initiate was from there, but the
This
name
158
is also well
Greek
in Kaunos.
attested
record of initiates
Fig. 125
Fragment of a stele ofThasian marble, broken on all sides.The back is rough-picked. Found inJuly 1970 at 33.50-34.50 m east and 19.50-22.00 m north of the northeastern inner corner of the Stoa. Archaeological Museum of Samothrace,
H.
inv. 70.771.
0.12 m,W.
0.12 m,Th.
0.07 m; L.H.
0.015 m.
Unpublished. Roman
period? [----]..
BIQ[-
[-]AAEZ [- -]OY Tip
-
-]
|iu[axai] OY[-
-]
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are highly decorated. Line 2: Epsilon and sigma are in ligature. Commentary
This probably was a list of initiates from the Roman in line 3 implies. Tib(erius?)
period, as the name
124. Greek record of an initi Figure ate (157). Conze 1875, pi. 71:10
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
233
Figure 125 (right).Greek record of initiates (158) Figure 126 (far right).Greek record of initiates (160) 159
Greek
record of an initiate
Relief-decorated fragment of Thasian marble, found in Palaiopolis. Its dimensions and present location are unknown. Edd. Blau and Schlottmann 1855, p. 619, no. 8; Fredrich, JGXII.8 202. Cf. Conze 1860, p. 62. Date? [uuoiricj cuoepfiq Ariunxpun)
[-]oq
[to?M.] Fredrich.
160
Greek
record of initiates
Fig.
126
on all sides, rough-picked Fragment of stele ofThasian marble, broken on back; worn. Provenance unknown. of Museum Archaeological badly Samothrace,
H.
inv. 89.2.
0.26 m,W.
0.14 m, Th. 0.08 m; L.H.
0.02-0.025
m.
Unpublished. lst-3rd
century
a.d.?
[____]IO0I.[---]
[-JjiTjaiai
[-]
[----]...[-:.] [----]..[-]
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is elegant, with finials, suggestive of a later date. Sigma lunate. Upsilon projects above the other letters. 1: First letter: vertical stroke; last letter: leftvertical. Line 2: Last letter: faint vertical. Line
Lines 3-4: Unclear
traces of letters.
Commentary This is part of a list of initiates. Line 1: xexpd8?]i 90wovto<; is possible.
is
CHAPTER
234
7
"KM
161
record of an initiate
Greek
Fig. 127
marble, broken below. Found inChora on June 20, of Samothrace, courtyard, inv. 39.545. 1939. Archaeological Museum H. 072 m,W. 0.50 m,Th. 0.10 m; L.H. 0.025-0.03 m. Stele ofThasian
Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 21 b.c.-
1st century
1st century
(1960) 43.
a.d.?
?7ti [|3a]aiA,?(0(; AvTi[y] 6vo[d xou Mv]noiK?t?cn)[(;] [uuaxric;] ?t)a?(3rjq EnT[..
5 [.::-] Fraser.
5 M(N?)
.c.a .8...]
.
7to<;
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The inscription is badly defaced. Line 5: No letters visible. Commentary Fraser suggests an early Imperial date on the basis of the lettering. 162
Greek
record of initiates(?)
Fig. 128
a stele ofThasian marble, broken on all sides. Found Fragment of of Arsinoe on July 30, 1949. Archaeological Rotunda southwest of the of Samothrace, inv. 49.995. Museum 0.22 m,W. 0.12 m, Th. 0.15 m; L.H. Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 57. Cf. Robert 1963, pp. 67-69.
H.
0.02 m.
Figure 127 (above, left).Greek record of an initiate (161) Figure 128 (above, right).Greek record of initiates(?) (162). Samothrace 2.1, pi. XXIL57
ETHNIC
WHOSE
INITIATES
IS
UNKNOWN
235
2nd-3rd century a.d.? traces
of letters \hC\(3aai]^eco(;[-tov-] [.]AN[---.]
Fraser.
2
[&Yop]av[oucr6vTo<;
xcn) Seivoc,-]
Fraser.
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is inelegant, with a rectilinear sigma, suggestive of a date in the 2nd-3rd century a.d. Commentary This may have been the beginning of a list of initiates.The traces of letters above were perhaps remains of a previous document, as Fraser remarks.
163 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 129 a of Thasian marble, with Top right fragment of pedimental stele a circular object in relief in the center of the pediment. Found near the of Samothrace, Genoese Towers inAugust 1955. Archaeological Museum courtyard,
H.
inv. 56.5.
0.23 m,W.
0.18 m,Th.
0.09 m; L.H.
(line3).
Ed. Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 61. Cf. Robert 1963, pp. 53,67-69.
Date? [ctcIpaoiAicoJc; n?p[iK]Aio [x>qxou-JacpdvTOD [dyopavojLiovjvToq -]ANOY xou [-.]....
Fraser.
Figure 129. Greek record of initi
ates(?)(163)
2 Ayjacpdvioi)
Fraser.
0.013 m (lines 1-2), 0.01 m
CHAPTER
236
7
Commentary Epigraphical The letters are now badly defaced. Commentary
This probably was the beginning of a list of initiates. Line 2: AylacpdvTou is difficult to justify in view of the name's rarity, as Robert notes (p. 53). 164
Greek
record of initiates(?)
on the left.The inscription Fragment of Thasian marble, preserved inChora when Fredrich published it. Its present location is unknown. I saw a squeeze in the Berlin Academy inMay 2004. H. 0.23 m,W. 0.11 m,Th. 0.08 m; L.H. 0.015 m.
was
187. Ed. Fredrich, 7GXII.8 and Cf. Robert Robert, BullEp
1958 270; Robert
1963, pp. 67-69.
Date? /[-] vacat ON[------]
5
hC\ |3a[ai?ieco(;-] AC0[-] 6cyopav[ojj,ouvxo(;- -]
KX[-] Fredrich. 4 Aco[po9eou?] Fredrich. Commentary Epigraphical Lines 3,5: The nu's, dotted by Fredrich, are clear on the squeeze. Commentary
This probably was Greek
165
the beginning of a list of initiates.
record of initiates(?)
Fragment ofThasian marble, found near the "Doric Temple" Hieron), partially preserved on top. Vienna, Antikensammlung, 1202. H.
0.075 m,W. 0.12 m, Th. 0.035; L.H.? Edd. Conze 1875, p. 11; Fredrich, iGXII.8
198.
Date? 6cya0[fji Tfj/ni] [e]7ii $ao[iXeu>q- -] Fredrich.
Commentary
This may have been the beginning of a list of initiates.
(i.e., the inv. Ill
INITIATES
WHOSE
ETHNIC
IS
UNKNOWN
237
Figure 130. Greek record of initi
ates(?)(166)
166 Greek recordof initiates(?)Fig. 130 on all a joining fragments of stele ofThasian marble, broken was found in July 1971 at sides. The back is rough-picked. Inv. 71.950 17.00-17.80 m east and 37.50-38.80 m south, and inv. 71.963 at 17.00 Three
21.00 m east and 33.00-37.50 of the Stoa. Archaeological 71.963A + 71.963B. H.
0.18 m,W.
m south, of the northeastern inner corner of Samothrace, inv. nos. 71.950 + Museum
0.185 m,Th.
0.045 m; L.H.
0.02 m.
Unpublished. Date? -
-]A vacat
--] -]v?lK?lC/
-]INOI
- - -
-]AANOI
Epigraphical Commentary The lettering is rectilinear; see ad 30.
Line 4: First letter: top part of a vertical. Line 5: First two letters: two triangles.
Commentary This may have been a list of initiates, probably fromThessaloniki tonikeia, as the ending -veikcic; in line 3 suggests.
or Stra
167 Greek recordof an initiate(?) Fig. 131 Block ofThasian marble, broken on the right and on back, with a dowel hole and a pour channel at bottom, and raised molding above the text and at the back of the bottom surface. Found inJune 1960 in "the lower town." of Samothrace, inv. 60.559. Archaeological Museum
CHAPTER
238 H.
0.15 m,W.
0.25 m,Th.
0.32 m; L.H.
0.015-0.025
7
m.
Unpublished. lst-2nd
century
a.d.?
?7ti |3[ae>iAico<;-] tou Av[? [i\)OTr\q e\)g8?]
piiqKaX[X>-] [;H]pocKAi[-] Epigraphical Commentary The letters are uneven, with lunate shapes, consistent with a date in the lst-2nd
century
a.d.
Line 3: First letter: top part of beta. Commentary This may have been part of a base, perhaps a dedication by an initiate. was the Presumably pH]pocKAi[patronymic of the initiate, though it is was part of a different name (e.g., that of an it that theoretically possible epoptes).
Figure 131. Greek record of an initi
ate^) (167)
CHAPTER
8
Other
Inscriptions
Concerning
Initiates
following four documents that relate to initiates consist of two pro hibition inscriptions, one inGreek and the other inGreek and Latin; the third and fourth inscriptions are decrees inGreek.
The
168 Greek prohibitioninscriptionFig. 132 Fragment ofThasian marble, preserved on the left and top. Found on ca. 4 m west of the pronaos of theHieron. July 10,1951, Archaeological Museum of Samothrace, Hall A, inv. 51.501. 0.17 m,W. 0.38 m,Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.04 m. Edd. Lehmann 1953, pp. 14-15, pi. 6:c; SEGXLI
H.
395; Fraser, Samo
2.1 (1960) 62; S?GXIX 593; Sokolowski, thrace LSS (1962) 75. Cf. Robert
64, 78; Robert
and Robert, BullEp 1954 207; Lehmann 1955, pp. 33, and Robert, BullEp 1964 379; Lehmann, Samothrace 2.2
(1960),p. 276; Lehmann 1960,pp. 33, 65, 81;Cole 1989,p. 1575,with
n. 41; Clinton 2003, pp. 61-62. 1st
century
B.C.?
duuriTov ur| cioievcu eiq to iepov. Fraser.
Figure 132. Greek prohibition inscription pl.XXIV:62
(168).
Samothrace 2.1,
240
CHAPTER
8
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are even and large, now slightly defaced, suggesting a date in the 1st century B.C., according to Fraser. Commentary This is a prohibition inscription ordering the amyetoi not to enter the sacred space. Lehmann interpreted to iepov as the name of the building near which the inscription was found. The document, however, was not in situ. Further, iepov usually denotes a sanctuary and not a building, as Fraser observed (p. 117; see also Clinton). Numerous sacred laws prescribe how to enter a sanctuary, or prohibit entrance into it, and in none of them
does to iepovdenote a building;cf.LPriene205; IG XII 7220; SEG VI 775; Sokolowski,LSCG, nos. 50, 68, 69, 119, 128, 130, 136, 139, 158.
(3.37.9) provides a curious parallel from Egypt for prohibition of entry into a sanctuary of the Kabeiroi: 'Eofi^Ge 8e Kai e<; tcovKapelpcov to ipov, eq to ox> GepiTov ecm eaievai aXXov ye f\tov ipea. Therefore, I find it likely that this document was set up at the entrance of the sanctuary
Herodotus
(wherever the actual sacred space began), and that it refers to those who did not undergo myesis in the sense of preliminary initiation; see Clinton. This is consistent with the various cathartic requirements that regulate entry into a sanctuary or sacred space; the most Eran Lupu (NGSL, Introduction).
recent discussion
is by
133 and Latin prohibition inscription Fig. Block ofThasian marble, preserved on all sides, rough-picked below at ca. 0.40 m from the top), decorated with a caduceus and two (starting
169
Greek
The back is rough and snakes in the lower right corner (cf. 42,104,156). an to close the with top.The surface below the irregular, oblique cutting m in is Found 0.55 text, June 1938 southwest of the high, rough-picked. entrance of the inner room of theAnaktoron. Archaeological Museum of
Samothrace, Hall A, inv. 38.401. H. 0.96 m,W. 0.52 m, Th. 0.26 m; L.H. 0.04 m. Edd. Lehmann-Hartleben 1939, pp. 138-139, fig. 6\AE 1939 2; Fra
2.1 (1960) 63; SEG XIX 593; Sokolowski,LSS (1962) ser,Samothrace
75a.
Cf. BullEp 1939 296;Hemberg 1950,pp. 112-113;Lehmann 1955, p. 35, fig.20, pp. 46, 79; Kerenyi 1955,pp. 150-151;BullEp 1964 379; Lehmann 1960,p. 82;Cole 1984,p. 89; 1989,p. 1575,with n. 42, p. 1591,
with n. 143; Clinton 2003, pp. 61-62. 2nd-lst
B.C.
century
sacra
deorum qui runt
non
accepe
non
intrant.
d|iur|Tov (if|ei 5
cnevai
Fraser.
Figure 133. Greek and Latin prohi Epigraphical Commentary The letters are even and large, now slightly defaced.
bition
inscription
pl.XXJV:63
(169).
Samothrace 2.1,
INSCRIPTIONS
OTHER
INITIATES
CONCERNING
241
Commentary
See the discussion of the previous inscription. This bilingual inscription is of identical type, set up primarily for the numerous Roman visitors. The set into the rough-picked lower part implies that the stone may have been no reason to assume that itwas displayed inside is There ground. compelling theAnaktoron, as previously assumed; cf.Clinton, p. 61. The dimensions of the block and the rough-picked area below the text suggest that itwas a reused building block.1 The inscription was not found in situ, and given the numerous examples of sacred laws prohibiting entrance to a sanctuary itwas probably originally placed at an entrance (see 168, Commentary), to the
sacred
space.
an initiate(?) in honor ofHippomedon, Opisthographic stele ofThasian marble, broken above. A piece has bro ken off on the left since the publication in IG XII. 8. Found inChora, now of Samothrace, courtyard. No inv. no. in theArchaeological Museum H. 0.48 m,W. 0.51m, Th. 0.09 m; L.H. 0.006-0.014 m. Decree
170
Edd. Kern 1893, p. 348, no. 1; Frankel 1894a, 1894b; [Michel 1900, no. 351]; Fredrich,/GXII.8 156; [Dittenberger, Syll? 502]; Robert 1935b, with pi. 27; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960), p. 39, app. I.2 b.c.
228-225
SideA [.
5
. . .
PoccnA,?\)<;
'HyJnouxcpaTcx;
. . . eircev
Oi[.
?7t?i]
[8rj fl7i7to|i88cov] Aynaitaio'u AocKeSaifuovioc; 6 xa%] vko t]ov pacnAico<; rixo^ejiaiou OTpax[r\ybq] [Qeiq [too (EX]Xr\an6vxov Kai tgW enl ?pdiKnc; totccdve[uae] [$(b]q 5iccK?iucvo<; npoq xovq Oeouq xium to teuIevocJ Onaiaic; u_evo<; eiq
Kai
dvaOriuoccnv
ttvv vfjaov
Trie T? koctoc to %copiov
kou
|i?Tao"X?iv
eomvozv tco|i
naaav
ao^aXeiaq
7iapa[y?vo]
ui)aT[npicov], rcpovoiav
[7ioi?i]
Toa_oc7toaT?^cov zovq 8ia(p\)^dc;ovTa(; inmiq [t? Kal] 10 keCovq OTpocTicoTac;Kai p?AT| Kai KaianaXxa[q Kai] to\)c y pnoo pivot) c to-otok;, eiq xe xovq uraQouc; [voiq] TpdMxcnv d^icoQdc, 7tpo5av?iaai xprmaxa e8co[Kev], pouAO|Li?voc \)7taKou?iv ndvTa Ta dc^ioi)|i?va [a?i] rfji noXeu 5iaK?iu?voc Se Kai npoq tov 5fjuov [etjvo] coc rcaciav
15
?7U|u?A,?iav
7coi?iTai
Kai
Kovvfji
xf|[c; ko]
7l?cocKai ISiai tco|linpbq auTov dcpncvonjiEvcofv,aKo] ^opQa 7ipdTTCovTfii tou paai^ecoc; aipeaei, f]<8c> [pou] Xr\ 7lpOp?pO\)^?t)K?v
a\)TC0l
7C?pl ?7taWOU
Kal
Ka0OT[l]
fj T? 7to^iT?ia Kai Ta Aoi7td Ta 8?8oucva
rcapd t[cov 7to] 20 Xitcqv (pi^dvOpcQTiadvaypacprio~?Tai ?i<; GTr|Ar|vK[ai] * |avaT?lQr)o~?Tai ?v tgh tepcoi TrieAQPnvdcl dyaOfii t[n%r|i] Fraser. 1.1 wish
to thank Emil
to my bringing this extensive 2. The
Nankov
for
attention.
on bibliography this inscription, mostly concerned with not included its economic aspects, is
here.
Epigraphical Commentary The stone is now severely damaged, especially side B. Only side A is in cluded here, reprinted from Fraser's edition and based on his inspection of the
stone.
CHAPTER
242
8
Commentary son of This is an honorary decree forHippomedon, Agesilas, of Sparta, Ptolemaic governor of Hellespont and Thrace. The document has been discussed at length,mostly in connection with the export of grain (arcou ecjaycoyri,side B, line 15). Side A is presented here because of its relevance to initiation into the Samothracian Mysteries. Lines 6-7 imply thatHip was on was initiated: the he arrival island eager to par pomedon "upon ticipate in theMysteria."
171
Decree
ofOdessos
concerning themysteries stele ofmarble, decorated with frieze and pediment. Aedicula-shaped Found in 1927 in the joint French and Czechoslovakian excavations. Museum of inv. 49.447. Samothrace, Archaeological H. 0.32 m,W. 0.32 m, Th. 0.06 m (stele), 0.12 m (pediment); L.H. 0.01 m (lines 1, 3-end), 0.025-0.03 m (line 2). Edd. Salac 1928,p.395,no.3;Mihailov,/GB?/^r (1956), p. 53, under no. 42; Fraser, Samothrace 2.1 (1960) 6;Mihailov, IGBulg P (1970), pp. 93 94,
under
no.
42.
Cf. Robert
and Robert, BullEp 1960 256; Robert Robert and Robert, BullEp 1964 362.
1963, pp. 57-58;
Date? in cornice:
87ti
inmetopes: in field: 5
[xov 8eivocJ Pacu^ecoc, it cbv] \j/r| cpia [uoc 'OSn oo ev 5e hCx obc, [iepeco-tou 8eTvocJ. '08riaacp eSocjev xx\poiA^ eTcijarivieufovToqto'o SeTvocJ [87C8]5r| tou 5f|jjm> 5ioc 7tpo[y6vcov-] [tcovev] ZajLioOpaKri puaTr|pico[v jli8T8xovto(; -] [-]TOV a7io8i5[-] [-]5uvocuav
[-]
[-]nEPO[-] Fraser.
5 5id
7ipo[xepov
Oecopicov Fraser,
8id
7ipo[y6vcov Robert,
Mihailov.
Epigraphical Commentary The letters are slightly uneven. The words in line 2 are inscribed on the metopes; see Fraser for the spacing and word division. Commentary
is a copy of a decree ofOdessos, concerning theOdessitans' partici pation in the Samothracian Mysteries (lines 5-6). It is possible that they sent theoroi to Samothrace, given the official nature of this document, but this is not explicitly stated.
This
CHAPTER
9
Part
Conclusions,
DATES
OF THE
RECORDS
II
OF
INITIATION
earliest initiation record may date to the first part of the 2nd century we accept the suggestion?to me, a highly probable one?that Lucius b.c., if Iuventius Thalna (64) was indeed the person mentioned in Livy 38.4 and 39.31.4. He was active in 185/4 b.c., and I see no impediment to dating his initiation record to the 180s or so, since Romans were dedicating offerings at Samothrace as early as 211 b.c. (see ad 64, Commentary). The latest precisely dated list of initiates is a new document, 63, ofMay or June, a.d.
The
186. Of course, theremust have been initiation records before ca. 180 b.c. and after a.d. 186, and the letter-shapes of a number of inscriptions are consistent with the earlier or later dates, but they do not provide a secure argument. Other new dates provided by hitherto unpublished monuments are 67 b.c. (74), 62 b.c. or a.d. 78 (75), a.d. 6 (86), September 11? a.d. 45 (55, side B), and presumably 8 b.c. (83).
PROSOPOGRAPHY inPart II add about 100 new names of initiates to the ap names 600 collected by Cole.1 Many of the previously published proximately names have been corrected; see the Index ofNames. The list of eponymous kings has also been emended and supplemented with 14 hitherto unknown names (or parts of names); see 39, 46, 95,114, The
documents
123,131,129,135,147,156,167.
PROVENANCE
III. 1. Cole 1984, appendix 2. See Cole 1984, pp. 43-44.
OF THE
INITIATES
The map of siteswhence initiates came to Samothrace2 has been changed on the basis of new or corrected evidence. Thus the certainly attested (31?, places are Abydos (46, 52), Aigai (53), Ainos (42-45), Alexandria 53, and see above, p. 4, n. 1), Alexandria Troas (54, 55), Alopekonnesos (37), Andros (see above, p. 121, under Aegean Islands), (47), Amphipolis
CHAPTER
244
Antioch
(51), Arsinoe
(51), Athens
(29,30),3 Azorion/Azoros
9
(35), Beroia
(34, 37), Byzantion (39, 53, 67?, 134?),Catana (66),Chios (38,49, 89),
Dardanos
(14,15), Dionysopolis (Appendix II.3), Elis (16), Ephesos (50), Herakleia (32), apo Strymonos (36), Ilion (53), Kassandreia Epidamnos Kaunos Keramos (35), (60), (13.iii), Knidos (61), Kyzikos (56-59), Mag nesia (53), Maroneia (40, 41.iv, 57), Miletos (62), Odessos (46, 171[?]), Perinthos Pessinus (39, 132?, 145?), (63), Philippi (38, Pergamon (89), 48), Priapos (51), Rhodes (50, 51, 57?, Appendix II.l), Rome (46, 49, 61, Sardis (17.iii), Sirrhai 63-67,73,78?, 85,87-89,92,94,98,100,101,104), Stratonikeia (33, 53), Smyrna (63), (17.ii), Styberra (53), Thasos (41, 48,
51,53,62),Thessaloniki (36,37),Tomis (Appendix II.2),Tralles (47), and Xanthos (50). Likely cities of initiates areAspendos (31), Kos (120),Tegea (134?), (31), Thera (31), and Torone (31); while Kos (122?), Kalchedon and Parion (18?) are only hypothetical cities of initiates. Roman initiates of unknown provenance are listed in 14,15, 38, 40, 45, 47, 53, 57, 58, 72, 74(?), 75(?), 76,77(?), 79-84,86,90,91,93,95-97,99,102,103,105-116, 158. 131,137,140,156(?), as Cole observed (1984, p. 52), relatively few of the cities Although, that sent theoroi are also represented in ethnics of initiates, the geographic distribution of the initiates' cities isvery similar to that of the sacred ambas sadors' cities (see Chap. 4), with one major difference: whereas about 50% of the initiates have Roman names, there are no Roman theoroi. Thrace is abundantly represented among initiates (as evidenced by theThracian names in 19, 37,41,44,46,47, 78, 79, 89,137), including the noteworthy
example of Rhaskos (46.i). This illustrates the long-standing interest of in the Samothracian Mysteries, epigraphically attested as theThracians as
early
the 4th
CULTIC
century
B.C.4
EXPERIENCE
regard to initiation itself, Isidoros's epitaph (29) provides precious ... he saw the doubly sacred light of Kabiros in insight: "as an initiate in Eleusis." This is the only Samothrace and the pure rites of Demeter documentary piece of evidence we possess about actual cultic experience in the Samothracian Mysteries and about the viewing of light as a central act in the initiation. Seeing light is a typical occurrence at the culmination of mystery rites; cf. Plutarch, De anima, fr. 178: "then one encounters an
With
extraordinary light, and pure regions and meadows offerwelcome, with voices and dances and majesties of sacred sounds and holy sights, inwhich now the completely initiated one becoming free and set loose enjoys the rite, crowned, and consorts with holy and pure men."5 Furthermore, the a poetic expression for phrase "doubly sacred light ofKabiros"?apparently "the sacred light of the two Kabiri"?most probably implies that theKabiri were two, and, even more importantly, provides the first attestation of the term Kabiros
Hades, Region
in documents
concerning
the Samothracian
cult.
epitaph offers another valuable detail: "but you, gloomy man to the extremely powerful bastion of necessity, lead this of the Reverent and place him there."The crucial words here are
Isidoros's
have no way of knowing, whether the cosmopolitan however, mime Isidoros (29) is representative of in the sense that he journeyed Athens 3.We
from Athens
to Samothrace
to be initi
in ated; his initiation may have occured the course of his travels or during his in northern Greece. residence to 19, line 6. 4. See Commentary 5. Trans. Clinton 2003, p. 66; on see light in the Eleusinian Mysteries,
above, p. 88. It is unclear how literally one should interpret the phrase "the but it is doubly sacred light of Kabiros," to imagine that the initiates tempting saw illuminated
statues of the Kabiri, that were set up
the statues
possibly in the anaktoron, testimony;
according 2004. cf. Clinton
to ancient
PART
CONCLUSIONS,
II
245
choros eusebeon, "region of the reverent."This inscription is the only text, documentary or literary, that associates initiation at Samothrace with a privileged place in the underworld. Previously, the only benefit known to
have come from the Samothracian Mysteries was safety at sea. The no tion that Samothracian initiates went to the choros eusebeon may explain tells us (5.49.6 why their typical appellation was mystai eusebeis.Diodorus = Samothrace 1 at FGrH initiation 548 Samothrace made that 142; Fl) one reason so eusebesteroi. and records of dikaioteroi many Perhaps people were set up was to announce the initiates, eusebeia, with its eusebeis mystai implications both in life and after death.6
SOCIAL
STATUS
OF THE
INITIATES
Initiation requirements at Samothrace were apparently quite liberal: there was no restriction on gender, origin, or social status.This is corroborated by the new documents published here,which provide further evidence that
both men and women were initiated (though, naturally, far fewerwomen,7 probably because of the practical difficulties of reaching the island), and that the social composition of the group was varied, including slaves, freedmen, or sacred officials, and royalty. In this ordinary citizens, high governmental was at the same as that at Eleusis. Samothrace respect the situation
STAGES
OF
INITIATION
ritual of preliminary myesis is outlined above (p. 78). The prohibition state that the amyetoi were not allowed inscriptions, 168 and 169, which into the sacred space, must imply that the amyetoiwere those who had not make little undergone the preliminary myesis.Otherwise these prohibitions sense: excluding from the sacred space all those who had not undergone themain myesiswould be tantamount to denying that ritual to everyone. at Eleusis, but in Samothrace itpossibly Preliminary myesis is also attested took the form of thronosis.The thronosis, or "chairing," had purificatory
The
the connection
6. On mystery a happy
was perhaps aspects. It involved ecstatic dancing around the initiand,who blindfolded and was sitting in a chair, presumably in the theatral area near the sanctuary's entrance.8 (Fig. 3:25) As Bengt Hemberg pointed out,9 initiation at Samothrace (the main was apparently available throughout the sailing season. This was the myesis) case in theRoman period, at least, since the identified days and months we have are from Latin records, dated fromApril intoNovember:10
between
the promise of life and afterlife, see Burkert initiation
and
1987, p. 12. 7. Cf. Cole
1984, p. 42. 8. See Clinton 2003, p. 50. 9. Hemberg 1950, p. 108. 10. This
list in Clinton
is an updated version 2001, p. 35.
98 104 40 63 14
of the
89 90
a.d. 116) (April 22, or 166) (May 1, a.d. 165 (May 8-14, a.d. 64?) (lateMay or early June, a.d. (June 3, 66 b.c.) (June 6, a.d. 19) (June 7, a.d. 48)
186)
246
67 80 70 82 92 66 55.B 87 79.ii 100
(June 13, 2nd-lst (June 20, 35 b.c) (July,92 b.c?)
CHAPTER
9
century b.c.?)
(August 8, before 8 b.c) (September 1, 1st century a.d.) (September 4,100 b.c) (September 11?, a.d. 45) (September 13, a.d. 14) (October 18, 46 b.c) (November 9, a.d. 124)
The most frequent month isJune (5 or 6 out of 17 records), closely followed by September (4 out of 17). This may be due to the fact that theweather was, and still is,most favorable during these two months: warm, but not too hot, without etesian winds. It has therefore seemed logical to assume that initiation was available upon request,11 after a sufficient number of
people had arrived to participate in the initiation rite.Thus many initia tion ceremonies would have taken place within a single year; in view of their large number, most of them (perhaps even all of them) probably did not take place in the context of a large-scale festival, as was the case at the
Eleusinian
Mysteries.
A special problem is the interval between themain myesis and epopteia, which at Eleusis was one year. Six inscriptions (49.i, 50.A, 56,61.i, 67, 89) list people who were both mystai and epoptai.12These records are signifi cantly fewer in number than the ones thatmention epoptai separately (30,
Entries 40,49.ii-iv, 58, 61.i, 68-70, 72, 75, 82?, 120,126,128-130,147). 56 and 58 are particularly instructive for the combination of mystes and son ofAttalos of epoptes. Both documents mention Asklepiades Kyzikos. In 58 he is only mystes,while in 56, in a list clearly issued in a different
year, he is both mystes and epoptes,which suggests that he reached the second stage of initiation after the date of 58. Document 56 is interesting son ofAttalos of in another respect. There Asklepiades Kyzikos is at the head of a delegation from Kyzikos. After the year is given eponymously (according to the Samothracian basileus and agoranomos and the Cyzicene hipparch), the document announces: "MystesEusebes and Epoptes Nikis son son ofAttalos of ofMnesistratos, by birth Asklepidades Kyzikos, archi tect, sent by the Cyzicenes according to the embassy of the demos of the Samothracians on account of the [-] and the sacred images(?)." "Mystes Eusebes and Epoptes" seems to be functioning as a titlehere, like "architect," the title that follows his name. Unfortunately, we have no information
about the date ofAsklepiades' epopteia. Inscription 50 is similar to 56 in that it introduces a delegation, of hieropoioi in this case, as To8icov iepoTuoioi, umjgtociKai 87i07tTai EVGzfieiq; here, too, it isprobably a question of a title, and no conclusion can be drawn
about the date of the epopteia. It seems that in instances inwhich people were listed as both mystai and epoptai, thiswas understood as a title reflect ing the fact that they had undergone both stages of initiation; but usually no
inference
concerning
regard the designation
the
interval
between
stages
can be drawn. We
may
uMjaxai Kai ?(po7r/caienoepeic, in 49, incription i,
11. Cole
1984, p. 39. 12. Fraser's restorations unlikely
to be correct.
in 155 are
CONCLUSIONS,
part
II
247
which refersperhaps to Chian sailors, in a similar way, as simply attesting to the fact that they are now both mystai and epoptai. The title appears we have a bit more information. The again in 61, incription i, but here title stands at the head of a list of Knidian naval officers; it is followed by amere reference (without a list of names) to the rest of the crew, as kou to! ovimXEVoavceq | iced fiDnOevTEC,|Kai U7t07iT?UoavT?c;(sic). The participles (instead of nouns) suggest activity, and we may surmise that themembers of the crew received both stages of initiation during their recent stay on the island, or perhaps on a couple of recent stops during the same mission
(the nature ofwhich, if stated, is not preserved). a Inscription 73 is in category different from the preceding examples: the first line,Mystae s(acrum vel -acra acceperunt?), is followed in piei the second line by the heading Epoptae; this is simply a list of initiates who underwent the epopteia (it is in effect equivalent to mystae et epoptae), without any indication of the interval between myesis and epopteia. Only one of the records of initiates called both mystai and epoptai provides an apparent date, namely 89, which has in lines 3?4 a date of June 6, a.d. 19. Three of the people listed under the heading mystae at the beginning of the document are also listed under the heading epoptae at the end. This has been taken to mean that myesis and epopteia could be available on the same day.We should note, however, that the original was laid out in two columns, with the inscription mystae pii and sym in servi in the first and the the second. This is Schinae column, mustaepii followed by the title epoptae, in larger letters than the titles mystae pii and a list that intrudes upon the space symmustaepii above, which introduces below the second column: it clearly has a different layout from that of the two columns above, probably because itwas not part of the original layout but a later addition. The
epoptae (followed by the eponymous date of the Samothracian agoranomos) thereforehave most likely been added later than the names of the mystai. Curiously, only three epoptai are listed, namely, the (only) two initiates listed above, and one of their six symmustae.We may therefore askwhy their five other "fellow initiates" did not receive the same time?or, even more importantly,why, if these three epopteia at the initiates became epoptai on the same day, theywere not simply called, at
the outset, mystae et epoptae (instead of being listed separately as epoptai at the end of the document). The inscription of the stelewas done, at the earliest, on the day after the ceremony took place, when itwould have been
known, had myesis and epopteia taken place on the same day, that these three initiates were both mystai and epoptai. At that point itwould have been
more
economical
to write
mystae
et
epoptae
above
the
relevant
names,
as
is
the case in the other examples of people who had both titles (49.i, 50.A, 56, 61.i), than to inscribe the names anew at the end of the document. Thus it is by no means clear that these three persons received the myesis and epopteia on the same day; it ismore likely that they received epopteia at a later date
in the
same
year. The
precise
interval
between
stages
cannot
be determined. The mason who carved the list of epoptai appears to be the same as the one who carved the rest of the document, but of course this does not preclude an interval of days orweeks between inscribings. Given the frequency of the celebration of theMysteria during the sailing season
248
CHAPTER
9
(see above), it is conceivable that the three mystai of 89 became epoptai when the next celebration of theMysteria took place?a few days later,or was even next 103 If the this so, then the (as may indicate) day. perhaps
interval between myesis and epopteia precisely paralleled that at Eleusis, in that an initiate could become an epoptes only at the next performance of theMysteria (which in the case of Eleusis would be a year later, at Samo thrace sometimes perhaps just days later). Although at Eleusis the rule was once broken, by Demetrios concerning the interval between stages Poliorketes, it is nowhere attested that any mystes at Eleusis became an
epoptes on the same day.13This is logical, since both mystai and epoptai, the "blinded" and the "viewers,"were evidently present at the same nocturnal ceremony,with each class of initiate receiving a different experience. That same performance is difficult to a person could change roles within the most reasonable hypothesis is the available Given the evidence, imagine. that at Samothrace, as at Eleusis, a mystes could become an epoptes at the
next performance of theMysteria. If initiates had to prolong their stay on the island for a certain period of time (even a short one) in order to achieve epopteia, this could explain why the records of epoptai are much fewer than those of mystai. Another reason for the scarcity of epopteia records may have been the imposition of some additional requirements (financial, at the least) that the mystai had to fulfill,but we have no secure evidence about such requirements.
ANNUAL
FESTIVAL
in addition therewas a special annual festival of theMysteria Whether to the frequent celebrations attested in the epigraphical records cannot be inferred from the records themselves. One document, 103, seems to record at least three consecutive days as evidence on which people became mystaepii, and has been interpreted for an annual festival (see 103, Commentary). This inscription, however, does not offer a definitive argument that these were the days of a grand festival, but simply tells us that people were initiated on these days?that took place, and the initiates had their is, celebrations of theMysteria names listed together.The document is too fragmentary to yield a certain conclusion either about a special annual festival orwhether theMysteria could be performed on consecutive days, ifnecessary, which seems to be a valid
alternative
interpretation.
an annual proposed that June might have been the month of at the documents time the of the because festival, preserving the majority name of themonth were dated in June, and that epopteia could have been available only during the annual festival, since the few records of epoptai new evi preserving the name of themonth were also dated in June.14The dence discussed above, however, reveals that September is almost as well represented as June among the dates of initiation. As for dated epopteia records,we have only one (89), so itsvalue as evidence isminimal.15 None of the documents in this study provides definite proof for a special annual festival of theMysteries at Samothrace. Cole
Poliorketes (Plut. 26) did not want to wait a so the an year to become epoptes, and to suit calendar had to be changed 13. Demetrios
Demetr.
his wishes, but we know only that in he received both myesis Boedromion and epopteia, not that he received both on the same emperors day. For Roman
were per Mysteria times (for the at extraordinary and the initiation of Augustus
the Eleusinian formed epopteia of Lucius
Verus), interval between
but there was
ceremonies;
an
see Clin
ton 1989, pp. 1508-1509,1529. 14. Cole 1984, p. 39. 15. Inscription 67.A is dated in June, but the epoptai appear on side C, is not dated. which
CONCLUSIONS,
PART
II
249
a neces Literary evidence suggests the existence of festival, though not was an one. writes thatVoconius Plutarch (Luc. 13.2) annual delayed sarily ev EajLioOpdicri irooujaevoc; Kai rnvnyupi^cov. This implies that initiation was separate, aswe should expect, from thepanegyris, a typical feature of a festival.A passage of Ephoros (FGrH 70 F120, quoted in a scholion toEur. Phoen. 7) refers to the existence of a plurality of Samothracian festivalswith
a ritual characteristic ofMysteria: Kai vuv ^nxouovv oruxrjv [sc.Harmonia] ev xociq eopxcdc,,but the heortai should probably be taken as referring to the multiple performances of theMysteria attested in the initiation records.16 eorceuciev The testimony in the decree 170 that the general Hippomedon
7tapa[yev6]jJLevo(;eic, xf|vvfjaov |iexao%eiv xcbji jauax[r|picov] ("upon arrival on the island he was eager to participate in theMysteria") refers to his one of these in participation performances of theMysteria. Thus there is no clear evidence that therewas a special annual festival of the Mysteria, our information suggests that of the other than celebrations; any grander therewere many celebrations of theMysteria. Unfortunately, we do not know their frequency in a given year, except for the possibility apparently implied in 103 that they could occur over a three-day period. These celebra tions were most likely regarded as eopxcd, and there is no reason to think that each such festivalwas not accompanied by a panegyris of some sort, its size determined by the number of initiates and local participants. As a possible hypothesis we might consider the notion, from a practical point of view, that the celebration could be performed at approximately monthly is attested), the precise intervals (everymonth fromApril intoNovember a to to be determined according formula not known to day of themonth over more a than single day ifnecessary. us, and it could extend The major annual festival of Samothrace, towhich theoroiwere invited and atwhich theywere honored, could have been the Dionysia, as dem onstrated by several pieces of evidence (see Chap. 4). In Part I we noted that there is no evidence securely connecting the theoroi with attendance
at a special festival of theMysteria. The Dionysia may have been themajor festival at Samothrace that attracted a multitude of visitors from abroad. This festivalwas avenue atwhich performances of important Samothracian
were put on, were connected with the myths including myths that Mysteria Iasian (see Chap. 4). The tragic poet Dymas, son ofAntipatros, put on a tragedy about the exploits ofDardanos (Appendix 1.4), and the Prienian son of Poseidonios, wrote (and epic poet Herodes, presumably recited in the Samothracian theater) an epic poem about the deeds ofDardanos and and thewedding of Kadmos and Harmonia (I.Priene 69).17Many at the Dionysia, evidently, highlighted themyths and cultic performances of the sanctuary atwhich theTheater ofDionysos was located. significance One can readily imagine that this great festivalwith its theatrical perfor Eetion
16. On cf. Clinton
the search for Harmonia, 2003,
pp. 67-70,
bibliography. 17. Cf. Appendix 1988, no. E
60.
with
1.5; Chaniotis
mances
attracted many visitors, who might then stay on and take part in as or mystai epoptai.
theMysteria
appendix
i
Other to
Inscriptions
Relevant
in Samothrace
Theoroi
These documents include information relating in some way to theo roi on Samothrace. The bibliography for each is restricted to the basic edition(s). 1
decree mentioning theoroi on Samothrace Edd. Herzog 1899, no. 87; Boesch 1908, pp. 28-29; Rigsby 2004.
Koan
Date?
]kocvoi[
-] oupeOevxec; eg "Ixcovov -]TCOl
?7raYY?AA,6vxco
OeaaocAaou
AaK^a7cieTa-ev]
icai
ev
xd 'Apyei
-5^ Oecopoi x]oi eg EauoOpdiKocv drcoa xd] AoKAa7tieia
xe?iAou?voi-eTCocyye^Aovxco
ey Xicoi
Kai
-]oucvoi Oecopoi (popeuvxco -a]ixienuivav Qecopiav -iepocpuAjaiceg, xoi 8e
10
-] 7tavdynpi(; ] Herzog.
Commentary
theoroi in this document were supposed to announce the Asklepieia in on theirway to Samothrace. This means that theoroshere was not a specifically defined term, if the same theoroi who were sent to Samothrace
The
Chios as
2
sacred
Koan
ambassadors
acted
as
"announcing"
copy of a Samothracian
theoroi
on
the way.
decree in honor of npac^ijjivrig npac^fj
Kcoiog
a Herzog 1899, no. 6; a + b + e Segre, LCos (1993) 28, 29 (SEG + + + d+ eHallof, Hallof, and Habicht 1998, a c b 549); pp. 134-136 Hallof and Bosnakis 210-211. (SEGXLVU1 1100); 2003, pp. Edd.
XLIII
APPENDIX
252
3rd
century
5
10
15
I
B.C.?
[vacat] ZauoOpdiKOov \|/r|cpiauo:. [eSoc^e] xfji PonAfji Kai xcoi 8tijlicoi e[7i8i] [6r\npJa^ijLiivng npac^fj Kcoiog 7tp[6^?] [vocj covxr\qnoXecoq Kai ?\)?py?x[r|<;Ka] [xd] xe xfjv 7upo^8viav xoig 7tapa[yivo]
[jjijvoic; xcovrcoAaxcov7iap8x[cov XP?t] [ag], Kai xd npbq xrrv7toAavKoi[vfji del] [^lAoxJiuonu^vog Ka[Aog Kai dyaOog Kai] [np6Q\)[Loqcov8i?x?]?t?i, 7t[dvxa del Xe] [ycovKai Tipdaocov] xd anjifcpepovxa xcoi] [8f||xcoi,Kai vnv 7r]apay?y?[vnxai exq]
[xd -c--~--]ia O^copog d]TcoaxaX8i[(; imo xcov] [K]coicov,oi 8e dpxovxeg 7tpop?po[u?t?i)] [Ka]aiv anxcoi 7t[epi ?7ua]ivou Kai ax[ecpdv] [on] Kai noXixeiaq 8\|/r|(pia6ai xco[i Sr|ucoi-] [87i]aiv8aai u?v npac^iuivn cb[v 8V8K8v-] [. .]xai 8v8[e]iKvnxai xfji 7u[6a.?i-] [- -, ax?(p]avcoaai
20
25
8?
[auxov
xpuocoi
ax?]
[cpdvcoiAiov]rjo[icov xcoidycovi xrjvdvdp] [pnoiv TTOionuivonc; 6 8fjuo<; ax?cpavoi npa] [^lucvnv npa^fj Kcoiov 7ip6c^?vovovxa] [xr\qnoXecoq Kai] ?\)?py[?xnv xpnocoi ox?] [cpdvcoi?t)o]?p?ia(; ?v[?K?v xr\qeiq xovq] [Qeovq Kai] evvoiaq xr\[qeiq xov Sfjuov]
[dvai be] anxov Kai xoix; [?Kyovoug noXi] [xag] |i?x?xovxa<; covKa[i oi aXXoi koXi] [xai] 8?86o"0ai be anxcoi Kai dx[?A.?iav]
covav ?iadyr|xai f\?c;dyr|[xai eiq xov] [i']8iov oikov, Kai 7i;po?8piav ?v xfoig dyco] 30 aw. ?ivai be Kai xoix; d8?^[(po\)(; an] xon M?v?axpaxov
Kai M?[v?Kpdxr|? Kai]
'Ovdan^ov
Kcbiong npofcevovq Kai] zvepyexaq Kai anxong k[ai ?Ky6von]<; Kai \)7cdpx?ivanxoig ndv[xa a Kai x]oi<;
35 aM-oic; npolqkvoiq \)7id[px?iv be] anxoig. [Kai 7t]po?8p(av ?v xoig dyco[ai, xov] 6k 7ip?a [p?]uxrrvxov Koui^ovxa x[fji k6X]ei xfjiKcbi [co]v xov ax?(pavov
40
xov
[xpi)cro\)]v
a7i?v?[y]
[k?i]v Kai npac^iuivEi x[6v \j/rj(pia]0?vxaax[?] -]0[-] [cpa]vov Kai aixr|aao"[0ai .nt .ne/[-] [-]a [--.]ia[-]
Herzog, Segre, Hallof, Hallof, and Habicht. 11-12 xrjv] | [vfjaov Segre, to] [iepov?Hallof, Hallof, andHabicht. 12-20 K. Hallof. 26-27 Hallof, Hallof, andHabicht, uxxexou] |- [01] Segre. 27-42 Hallof, Hallof, andHabicht.
TO
RELEVANT
INSCRIPTIONS
OTHER
THEOROI
253
Commentary
Praximenes was sent to Samothrace as theoros, as is evident from line 12. The remains of lettersat the beginning of the line are compatible with restor or perhaps [eicj | [id Muaxr|p]ia, as K. Hallof ing [Aiovuc>]ia (cf. line 19) restore [eicj suggests (2003, p. 211). There could be barely enough space to not enough for [xd jLU)oxr|p]ia,but in any case | [xdAiovuo]ia, and perhaps the question of space isnot determinative. The Dionysia seem tomake more sense in view of line 19.This is the firstdocumentary association of theoroi in Samothrace with festival attendance; see Chapter 9. The inscription is interesting as an illustration of the honors granted by Samothrace theoroi, including 7ipocj?via, dxe^eia, and 7tpoe5piocev xoic,dycooi.
3
Iasian copy of a Samothracian Ed. Habicht
to the
decree in honor of theoroi from Iasos
1994b.
of 3rd century B.C.?
Middle
eiTcev,dyaOfji x-ox1!1
'IdGco[v.]ou
Baai^euq xcov tcoa^cov
djuxpoxepcov,
5e86%0ca
xcoi 8r||j.coi-
8e%?a0ai
Thv Qecopiav xrjv 7tapayeyevr| xhv Ouaiav Kai xfjva7iap%r|v ilevv\veiq xo i?pov 7iapd xou 8r||ioi) xou 'Iaoxcov Kaxd xd e\|rn 5
cpio juiva
?7c' ?uxuxtoci
xcov ?v xfji vriacoi, oai
Kai
ax?9avcoi
xpuacoi
Kai
uyi?iai
?7taiv?aai Aiovuaicov
xcov x? d7toax?i^dvxcov xov 8fj|jx)v eovxcov
xov
Kal
'Iao?cov
Kai
evekev
Evoe^eiaq
ax?(pavco vacat
xr\qE\q xovq $EOvq Kai Evvoiaq xr\qExq xov Sfjjaov, ?7taiv?aai Kai
xoix;
7capay?y?vr||LL?vot)(;
0?copo\)<;
Tp-u^ov
Euka-eiSod,
8e Eukxov
10 MeveKapouq Kai eivai auxouc, npo^&vovq xfjc;7u6a^coc; jliex Exovxaq 7idvxcovcbvKai oi aXkox 7tp6c^?voi dvaypd\|/ai vacat 8e auxcov [xouc, ek\]
15
xd ovojiaxa c^?vta
Exq xr|v axri^nv
Exq xo npuxaveiov
Kai
KaAiaai
au
xo 8e dvaAxoua
Sou
[vai xoucj dpy\)poX,6^o[you(;] ?K xou Kaxaxexaypivoi)
[dpyupiou].
Habicht.
Commentary
The decree recommends acceptance of the sacrifice, first fruits, and theoria sent by Iasos to Samothrace, and praises the Iasian theoroi for their respect for the gods and benevolence toward the Samothracian demos. The Iasian demos and the theoroi are to be honored at theDionysia. This is the second document that connects theoroi in Samothrace with festival attendance, though not with a special festival of theMysteries. Line 12: On the practice of inscribing names of theoroi on stelai, see ad 22.
4
Iasian copy of a Samothracian
decree in honor of the poet Dymas
Antipatrou
Ed. Bliimel, Llasos (1985) I 153. Cf. Chaniotis 1988, no. E 68.
2nd
I
APPENDIX
254 century
b.c.
[e]8oi;?v xfji PoDArjr Pacn^enc; OeoxeAriQ Apicpdvxon eircev 87te[i8fi] 15 AujLiac;nor\xr\q xpaycoi8icov xd xe npbc, Geoix; enaepcog 8ia[y6] dei xi A^eycov] [ievoq Kod xd npoq [x]fmnoXiv oiKeicog Kai ^itaxvGpcoTCcog
Kai ypdcpcovKai rcpaxxcovdya96v Siaxe^eT reepi xfjgvriaon, 8ia [reav] [x]6g xe d7i68eic;iv e7toif|c>axo xfjganxon cpnaecogKai repayuocxeiav o[i)ve]
20
xac;ev ev 8pduocxi xcovAapSdvon repdc^ecovxaq jneyiaxag jivrjuoofiivag,] r\Se Pon^f] repopeptoJuA-eDKevanxcoi reepi ereaivoi) Kai oxecpdvon [orecocj ovy Kai 6 5fjuo<; (pawnxai xovq enepyexonvxaq auxov xijlicovdJ;ico[c;] 8id
reavxog-
dyaGfji
T\)%r\i
-
e\j/r|(pio0ai
xcoi 8r|jLLcoi'
ereaweoai
Aujia[vxa]
ereixfji npbq xr|ji reoAav envoiai Kai oxe9avcoaai anxov xpnocoi axe[(pdvcoi] Aiovnaicov xcoidycovi xr|vdvdppriaiv reoionuivo-og 6 Sfjuog axecpa[voT] 25 Anuocvxa Avxiredx[p]on xpuo"coi oxetpdvcoi dpexfjc; eveKey Kai envfoiacj
30
xr\qziq anxov xf\[q]8e dvappfioecog ereijj,eAT|6fjvaixovq npoeb[povq] xov dycovoGexnv eivai 5e anxcoi Kai aXXo dyaGov enpeoGai 6x[i av] Mai xo^i paoiAia [eiq xo] [p]ot)AT|xai reapd xon 8rijaoi) dvaypdyai 8e xo \|/r|(pie>uo: [ie]pov xfjgAGryvdc;-iv[a 8]e (pavepov fji Kai Taaeuaiv oxi 6 Sfjuog xiuoc[i xoix;]
35
[koJAoix; Kai dyaGong avdpaq d^icog xfjgauxcov dpexfjg, 5onv[ai x68e] [xo] \j/r|(piafiaTO\ipaaiAia xoTgrepcoxoiqreapayevouivoig GecopoTge[c^laaon] [Kai] xo ypatpev ereiScoaicpdvong dveveyKeTv xfp ponATji Kai xcoi 8r||Li[coixcoi] iva [xd] ['Ia]aecov, Kai reapaKeMArjaGai 'Iaae[T](; ereiU?AT|Gfjvai(piXoxijLicog [\|/]r|(piojLiaxaev xivi xcov iepcov dvay[p]a(pfji Kai oi oxecpavoi av[aKnJ [pnx]Gcoaiv ev Aio[vu]oioi<; eiSoxag 5i[6]xi reoif|aavxe<; xd fic;i[co|jiva] [xa]pionvxai
xcoi 5[r|u]coi.
Bliimel.
Commentary
The
document
contains two decrees in honor of the tragic poet Dymas forhis benevolence toward the
Antipatrou of Iasos, praised by Samothrace city and respect for the gods, but especially Only the second decree, lines 14-36, has concerns theoroi. Lines 30?31 recommend
for his poem about Dardanos. been reprinted here, since it that the Samothracian basileus
give this decree to the first theoroiwho arrive [from Iasos]. This expression not suggests that theoroi visited Samothrace on multiple occasions, and a event. necessarily for specific 5
Prienian copy of a Samothracian Herodes Poseidoniou
decree in honor of the poet
Ed. Hiller von Gaertringen, LPriene Cf. Chaniotis 1988, no. E 60. Ca.
100
(1906) 68.
b.c.
- - -a-1- -Kai
-]58lv repoao8ov
npbq
xrjv Podatjv]
Kai
xov 5fjuov
[.
.-
7
jaexd xa
]
iepd repcbxcoiKai enpeaGai dyaGov edv xi po]n^nxai xcov5uvaxcov 7iapd xoi) 8f|uoir dvaypd\|/ai 5e x65e xo xi/rjcpjiouo: eiq gxtiat|v Kai dvaGeivai ?iq xo iepov xfjgAGnvag- oncnq 8e Kai] IIpiriveTt;ei8r|acooiv xrjv xou Srijuon
OTHER
10
INSCRIPTIONS
RELEVANT
TO
THEOROI
255
[e\)%apiGTiav, r\ve%?i ziq xohq Ttpoajipoupivouq xfjvUTtdpxoDaav xaiq 716 [keoi cpiWav aiScjeiv, dei xi 7cpdoa]ovxdc; x[e] Kai Xiyovxaq nepi xovxcov [6 5' fipexepoc, Sfjjjxx; xohq dya0oi)cj dv8pac, xijlicovd^icoq (pawnxai, Souvai rcapeaoiLievoic; Oeco [xoSe xo ii/ricpioj^axojll (JaaiAJea xdiq 7tpc6xoic;
[poic; 8k npirivric, Kai dveveyKeiv aux6 xfj]i PoD^fi Kai xcoi 8r|ucoi xcoinpvnvecov Kai [rcapaKaAiaai npvnveic, yxXovq 6]vxac, Kai oiKeiouc; ?7ti|u?Ar|0fivai, 671[cocj [av xo \|/r|(piopax68e dvaypa](pfj ev xivi xcov iepcov Kai 6 axecpavoc, [dvayopei)0fi
ev Aiovdcuok;,
eiSoxac,
oxi
xama]
TCOirioavxec,
%apiouvxai
xcoi 8f|pcoi.
Hiller.
Commentary
This
document is a copy of a Samothracian son of Poseidonios, of Priene,
of Herodes,
decree (LPriene 68) in honor praised forwriting about the
deeds ofDardanos and Eetion and thewedding ofKadmos and Harmonia, as is clarified by the answer of Priene, which is inscribed on another frag ment of the same stele (LPriene 69, lines 6-8). The phrase xoic, 7tpcbxoi<; 7tap?oopivoic; 0?co|[poic; ek npifjvriq ("the firstarriving theoroi from Pri ene"), lines 9-10, closely resembles lines 30-31 of the decree honoring the poet Dymas from Iasos; see Commentary ad Appendix 1.4.
APPENDIX
II
to
Initiates
These
documents
Samothrace. The 1
Relevant
Inscriptions
Other
in Samothrace
include information relating in some way to initiates on bibliography for each is restricted to the basic edition.
Rhodes Ed. Carratelli
1942.
Date? [-]a[.] OlAXOVOC, [to koiv6]v to Eafio6pa[i]KiaaTav [NlKO?a]TpCXT?lC0V
OUVJIUOTCXV
[auvGTpa]T?Doa|i8vcov hub Tpvnpapxov 5 [-]cova OfLVjcovoc, Carratelli.
Commentary
This document was a dedication by the league of Samothrakiastai and pre sumably their fellow mystai fromNikostrateia, who fought under the com mand of a certain trierarch.The Samothrakiastai were apparently members of private clubs in theAegean islands and along the coast ofAsia Minor, n. 670. honoring the Samothracian gods; cf.Cole 1984, p. 83, 2
Tomis Edd. Tocilescu
LSCG (1969) 87.
1883, pp. 8-9; Stoian
1962, pp. 75-79;
Date? [ccyaOfjr6%]r| 6 7tpid|Li?vo<;tt|v i?pco [awnv
tco]v
jauaTcov
Oecov
tcov ev
[?ajno0pd]icr| i?pf|a?Tca 8id fKo[u Kai] 5
[A7taTou]p?covoc; ?p86ur| 7uap[?cj?i elcj [toc i?p]d axi^aq Kai ?y%??i [craov] Kai iLvaxaiq 7iou7t?[i)c??i] [8rjv toi]c, . . . auTOU[ GT?(pavcoOria?Tai 7ta]p' ?V? [7Capd] TCOV pUGTCOV (plXoTlLliac;
Sokolowski,
258
APPENDIX
II
[ke]v xfjc;eiq kavxovq, ev f\iepcxxai f|ui 10 pa -auvOuoxi 8e Kai xoix; Xifiavovq ell naaaxq
xaiq
DTCapXOVTOC, oiq
E7upaA,A,?i
gdvoSok;
jnexd xou
jcpo
l?p?CO XCOV pUOXCOV Kai ?k xou
vojuod
ktX
Sokolowski.
Commentary
See Sokolowski's commentary. The document has two parts: column I is a fragment of an honorary decree, and column II, partly reprinted here, is a sacred law concerning the activities required of the person who purchases the priesthood of the initiates of the Samothracian gods. These activities include sacrifice, procession, and libation.
3
Dionysopolis
Mihailov, IGBulg I2 (1970) 13 =V (1997) 5006.
Ca.
48
B.C.
20
dva?uxp[cbv] [xov ax?cpavo]v xou Oeou xdc, xe noimac, Kai Qvaiaq [8718] [xe^eae KaAJSq Kai jLieya^ojiepccx;Kai xoic,noXhaxq p?[e] [xeScoKeKpe]cov acpOovcoc,,Oecov xe x[co]v ev Za|ao0paK[r|]
[axe(pa]vov dvei^rjcpcbc;8id pun) xdc, xe noiinaq k[ai] [xaq Qx>aia]q ekixeXei irnEpx? xcov jliuoxcovKai xr\qn[6] [kEwq, kxX.
Mihailov.
Commentary
a a bibliography and discussion. This is decree honoring at of various deities Lines inform 19-21 priest worshipped Dionysopolis. us that as a lifelong priest of the Samothracian was organizing gods he processions and sacrifices on behalf of the initiates and the city ofDiony See Mihailov's
sopolis.
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einswesen, Leipzig. 1906. "Cyriacus Samothrake,"^M31,
von Ancona pp. 405-414.
in
CONCORDANCE INSCRIPTIONS
Cat. No.
2 4 6 8 10 12 13 16 18 19 20 21 22 24 28 30 32 33 34 35 36 37
IGXIL8
164 3 165 168 5 170 171 161 9 162 163 169 160 176 175 177 166 167 172 216 196 178 195 and
JGXII SuppL, p. 149
OF
PREVIOUSLY
Samothrace 2.1
PUBLISHED
CIL
1 23
7 24
14 173 1 581,12 667, III 716 15 174 1580,12 671, III 715
22 25 app. Ill A 13 46 47 58
266 Cat.
CONCORDANCE
No.
IGXII.8
Samothrace 2.1
209 I2666, III 12319 215 III 7368
38 40 41
220
42 43 44 45
217 218 221
42
190 III 12323
47 48
54
186 184 183 206 223
56
188
50 51 52 53
59
app. IV
57 58
CIL
29
191,192,
189 III 12322 III 718,719,721
211,212,
259
59 60
194 222
64
25 I2 662a-b,
65 67
28
68
30
31 I22505 I 578,12663, III 713
69 70 71
205
72
32
I2 665, III 12318
73
17
76 77 78
33 34
79 80 82 87 88
36
89 90 91 92 93 97 98 99
100
219
III 7367
41 40 39 51 52 53, SZbis
208 207
I2 669, III 12320 I2 668, III 7369
210 III 7370 214 III 717 III 7372 III 12321
III 7371
I
PREVIOUSLY
Cat. No.
PUBLISHED
IGXII.8
INSCRIPTIONS
Samothrace 2.1
101 50 102 54
117 118 119 121 122
103 106 107 108 112 113 213
180 181 182 185 iGXII Suppl.
129 130 132 134 135 137 139 141 142 143 144 145 149
344 204 26 27 37
19
197 201 179 199 224 225 203 7GXII.8
60
Suppl.
150 152 153 154 155 156 157 159 161 162 163 164 165 168 169 170
35 48 49 55 56 43 57 61 62 63
171 6
346 193
200 202
187 198
156
267
app. I
CIL
I2 664, III 720 I 579,12664, III 714 III 7373 III 7374 III 722 III 7375
OF
CONCORDANCE MUSEUMS
Archaeological Inv. No.
01.1 38.355 38.376 38.380 38.393 38.401 39.12 39.16 39.23 39.79
Museum Cat No. 63, a
100 22 99 102 169 150
58, a 58, ? 98
INSCRIPTIONS
of
Samothrace
Inv. No.
50.632 51.98 51.501 52.779 53.2 53.560 53.616 53.7 53.73 53.74
39.83
33
53.84
39.332
34
39.338
154 101 161 48 79 107 28 92 89 7 68 97 93 36 134 144 69 130 149 171 162
56.2
39.348 39.545 39.547 39.548 39.549 39.914 39.1071 39.1072 39.1131 49.4 49.418 49.437 49.438 49.440 49.441 49.442 49.444 49.445 49.447 49.995
IN
56.5 57.856 60.559 61.502 62.1 62.1464 62.2 62.885 65.981 68.354 68.55 68.56 68.673 68.700 68.856 68.857 68.858 69.556 70.456 70.771 70.939
Cat.
No. 76 80
168 1 64 67 155 137 156 152 42 91 163 72 167 4, a
128 74 127 104 123 126 47 133
115, a
151 124 114 95 96 27 158 147
CONCORDANCE
270
Inv.No.
Cat
No.
Inv.No.
71.950 166
Cat.
93.576 115, ?
71.953
109
C81.249
71.954
86 see 93
C81.355
71.956
-
-
140 136
71.957 71.958
-
see 93
71.960
71.961
-
-
46
61 50 16666 12582 116 84 75 85 105 90 146 110
71.962 71.963A,B 71.967 74.83 76.16 76.18 88.510
89.2 93.47
-
160 63, c
-
63, ?
93.48
93.49
-
63, of Greek,
du Louvre, Department Musee and Etruscan Antiquities Inv.No.
Cat.
No.
Ma.
4189 53
4183
Ma.
419038
Ma.
4184
15
Ma.
419130
Ma.
4185
18
Ma.
41 4192
Ma.
4186
16
Ma.
4193 45
Ma.
4196 83
4182
Ma.
Ma.
4187
19
Ma.
4188
118
Ephoreia
of Prehistoric
Inv.No.
Cat.
No.
25 68 69 C 80.105
Inv. No.
Museum Cat.
No.
29
31
35
117 129 148
170
No.
Antiquities Cat.
No.
C 80.106 17
-
138 39 131 62
Archaeological
Classical
Inv.No.
81
02.50
A 70 (old465)
and
11
12 21
Roman,
Cat.
Inv.No.
20 6
Ma.
No.
of
Kavala
9 - 14 - 121
II
OF NAMES
INDEX
Theoroi -
AycceoK^fic; AI10AA[Aya0OK?ifi(; API[[A]yoc0[6]crcpaTO(;
-], 6.ii
ApiGTOpo-ulXloc;
-], 4 9
ripa^icpdvo-u, 10
Ayetaxoc; E\)|jiSovTO<;,
E-ucppovoc,, 5.ii Bockxcu, 9 6.ii 08padv5[po\)],
AyriaiKpdxriq A5r|pixo(;
Apiaxcov
n-oBifcovoq], 10 . -c*1?. . . .], 23 [A]va^5r,u{o<;. 11 'AvSmrcoc, Tiuo^evo-u,
A>,?^i|Liaxo(;
Xkotuou,
Avxi7iaTpO(;
AvTutdxpoD,
8
BaaiXeiSric, 5.ii 14 5.ii
10
A7toA^cov{5ou, A7rotaov(8r|<; Ar|ut|TpioD, 4 A7to^Acovi8r|<; Kvcbaoot), 23 A7toMx>(pdvr|<; A7ioAAo5cbpoi),
5.i 11
-], 17.ii
MHN[-],
7 3
xcru
5.ii Apiaxofxevoi), 'Ayioq, 13.i
BlAAapcx;
rEp(j.io\), 5.ii
Bia0a
AnoXka,
2
Bpucov lepoK^eioix;,
5.i
Topyiaq
9
Apiaxcovoq,
TpvXkoc, E\)kA,?i8o\), Appendix 26 AocjjaSOoivck; AeovxojjivoDC,, 13.i
Ar||j,oaxpd[xo\)], Ar\\ieaq A[. . .]v[.]jadxoi), -], 19 Ar||ir|xp[io<;
27 8
Aruirixpioc, Apxeficov[o<;], 6.ii Ar||Lir|xpiO(; Euiuivoix;, 5.ii
13
<Ap?>uevo\),
-], 4
Ae^iOeoc,
'Apaxoc; STPAT[-],
ApiaTuntcx;
NOf-
AeupiXoc, Mrivicu,
3
Me^aivecoq,
Apicrcayopaq
8
BeAAepcxpovxrjc,
5.ii
[- -]oq ApiSeiKcu,
3 13.i
A7to^Ao8copOD 3 rioa>i8covio\),
A7i[o^Acovi5r|<;?]
Apeix; Oi^oKpaxof-u-
10
Ka^iaxpaxcro,
BaKYTJ^oc Baai^8i8r|(;
to\)
AeivoK^eoix;,
A7to^A
8
Apiaxovo[t>], ApiaxcovaKxoq,
AcncXr|7tid5r|c, AnoXXo[-], [- -]YPOI BctKxun), 10
[A]7ioAA68copo<; NiKT|adv8pot), 23 [. .cf-.6.JAjcoMoScbpoM, AtioaAotijjxx;,
5.ii
'ApxiTCTioqApicxicovoc,,
Oavi7C7io\), 8
A7taToiL)piO(; ArcaTcrupun), Atco^AoScopck;
Apx?jai8copo\), Si^rjvo\), 13.i
Ap%ay6pa<;
15
'IaxpoK^eiouc, 'Hcdocioticovck;, 5.ii
AvTiTiaTpoq
10
Apxejaiocopoc;
KpxinoXiq
AvTi7taTpO(;
-], 4 AnoXXatvibox),
Apx^aoq
[A]vTiyovo<; 0epai7i7io-u, 1 AvTi^ecov MeveKpoVcou, 5.ii Avxioxoc;
1
ApxEjjiScopoc, Apx?(ii8(opo(;
16
0eo8cbpoD, [- -Av]TT|vopO(;, 5.i
AvxavSpcx;
Topyiot),
Apxe|ji5cflpcK;[-
23
v(a<; A^e^otv8po[\)],
13.ii
-], 4 9
AI[-
ApiaxoqnAoc,
5e AN[
Ka6'
Apiaxouivo-oc; 5e Acopo0?ot>,
[. .]PAI Apiaxouivouc,,
Arj|ioKp6Vco\)c;, 23 A0t|vikcov SaT\)p[o-u], 10 'EpuoyevoD, 9 Ai'aiuo<; A0r|vaio<;
. .
Apiax6tax[oc,--], 17.ii Apiaxojjivric, \)o6eaiav
Ayrjaiuevric;
-], 8
Apurx[-
AvTupdvecoc,, 16 -] Ka9' uoGealav
ApiaxoKpcVrnc,
7
Ar|(iT|xpiO(; MENE[-], Ar||jTixpio<; Mrivoqxxvxoi),
10
1.3
INDEX
272 1 AriuriTpioc, NiKoXdoi), AioSoxoc, Zrivcovoq, 5.ii 10
Aiovuaioc,
E[.
7
.]Y[-], 0eo8cbpot>, 9 [Aio]vuaio<; Md6<;, 6.i Iko7t(o\), 15 Aiovuaioq
8
5.ii AopKoq Mr|xpo86xoD, . [. .5:\?. .],23 AcoaiGeM.
5.ii MdvSpcov, [. .] .AI .OS Maxp(o\),
9
[. .]ONATOY, 8 'EjciKpocTric;A^idp%ou, ['Elmyovoc;
[-],
3
rEpjjicx<; AajJx>Kpdxe
7
0E[-],
Mev8Kpdxr)c;
10
[- -]POI MeveKpdxoD, 5.ii
Mev[.
MeviaKoq
9 Mevxcop AaK^r|Tcid8oi), 7 .ca.5..]X MH[. [A]rju.Ti[Tpioa)], Mr|v68oxoc, Atto^Acdviod, 2
5.ii
Appendix 11
1.3
ZwiXoq Aio8copo\), ZdriXoq ZcoiAod tox> Apiax[o](j,8vot), Z&'iXoq ZtiiXov, 5.ii
5.ii
MrjxpoScopot;
AcopoOecyo, 10 [- -JScopoc;MiSio-u, 13.i 5.ii Moaxicov Ava^itan),
5.ii
-], 4 'E7ciKpdxoD, 23 NA[. .? .6. .], 23
13.i
'Hyriaiaq MHTP[0-
Mog%o<; Moo/co,
'HpaK^eiSrjc;
NeavSpcx;
NedvSpov,
10
NiKavcop
Mr|vocp(ta)t>,
2
NiKia[(;]
Mf|xp[co]voc;,
UpaiaeiSric;
1
[-],
'HpocK^eiToq
[. . . .c*:l?. . . .], 23 10 fHp6cpiAo<;A0r|vaio\),
0eo8eKTr|(;
BaSpouioi),
0e68copo<;
Auwccru,
NiKO(nri8r|(; Aio8copo\), No-u^rivioq AA[-], 11
5.ii
npcoxaiSo-u,
0e68oxo<;
5.ii
A7io^covi[o]i),
?eoScopoc;
OiAoSo^od,
9 5.i
tov 0-upaoD, 13.i
npicovioc; Mivvicovoc;
N^iLKpotSJcbpfo]!), 5.i 8 Akpigiod, 0e6uvr|oxo<;
nduxpiAxx; AtcoAAxoviov, ndjacpiXoc;
YP.
[. .5:\?. .], 23 2 0eo(pic; NiKoaxpaToa), [. . .]IOY, 7 0eo[cpco?]v
BaO-uk^eiotx;,
26
Apiaxecoc,,
10
IlapiaeviaKoq Flapjaevicov
0euiGxay6pa<; 0?Hagcov
npaCji^evrii;
lepoK^fjc;
Ar|ur|TpioD
xot>Moo%[-
'IepOK^fjc; 'IepOKXekroc, xov 9 Meveaxpdxoi),
13
n[pe]7ccov n-uOayopac,
...--],
npa^fj,
Appendix {uJN}\)5cbpot), 5.ii
FIpcoxlcov Naicovoq, -], 13
10
Uapii?vioy[voq], 15
nocuaaviac, AvpxXov, [- -]NOX noo8i5eo[v
2 EveXQovxoq, 9 0euiacovo<;, [- -]v 'Idaovoq, 6 (puaei Mivvioovot;, 'IepOK^fjc; ArijiriTpiot), 9
-], 4
I10AYKAEI[HevoKpaxnc; "0\xiXo?, 15
0eoK^f|(; ?eo^evo^
8
N-ujacpcovKaM.iKpdxo[u],
9
0e68copo<;
'Epfioyevo-u vecbxepoc;, 9 5.ii
NiKoyevnc;
6.ii
fHpaKXe(8o\),
9 9
NiKoyeVnf; AxxaXox),
pH]paK?t?coxr|<; SaXr\c,
11
AGrjvayopot),
Mr|xp68oopo<;
9
[Z]co7i\)poc; MrixpoScbpoD, 'Hy?Kpdxr|<; AiovDaioi),
Avxfjvopoc,, 13.i .c.a.6. .], 23
[Mejve^aoq
1
Avxiyovou,
E\)K^8i8r|(;
-], 4
Mev8Kpdxrj(;[-
5.ii
[EiS]5r|jj,oc; E\)8r|um),
xou
MeveKpdxoi) 2 Mr|xpo8[cbpo\)],
Mev?Kpdxr|<;
5.ii 'Epjaoyevrn; AyaGoK^eioxx;, 'EpjxoKpaTri^ Zrivcovoq, 5.ii
Eukxck; MeveKocpoix;,
9
13.i [- -]via<; MeXdvxcu, . . [. .5r1.0..], 23 MejivoviSric; 10 [- -MlevavSpoa),
23
'Epaaivvi8o\), 1
5.i 14
A-Daijjivrjc, AnoXXwviSox), . . .] M[. Avxuidxpcn), 9 Ayfjvopoc;, 9 MaidvSpioc;
9
Aiocpavxoc, MocyeSdxou,
4
ApxejaiScapot),
10 [K]xfjaur7t;o<; [-], Atjkigkoc, BaGuK^euyuc,, 26 tov Avgiov, Avoiov Avoiaq
Aiocpavxcx; Ar|UT|xpuyu, 9
E\)dpocxo<; E\)apdxou,
6.ii
Oi^i7C7ii[8ot)], E\)kA,8i5od, 5.i
Kpdxrjc, KpcVrnxoc;, 13.i Kpaxivoc
APTEMI[-], 5.i
"Ep|Licov KdSiod,
KaM-iKpdxrjc, KdXXinnoq
Aiocpdvric; ZoaiXov,
'Epjjxxyopaq
1
'Ig68iko<; XA[-], 9
Aiovuaux;
'Epaaivvi8r|<;
5.i
'IepoK^fjc, ?au.id5oi),
8 Aio[v]dcjio\), tov Aiovdctiov, Aiovvaiov
AiovDao8copO(;
8
'IepoK^Jfjc; Mevoixou,
Aiovuaioq
Aiovuoicx;
xo\)
'IepoKXfjc,Meveaxpdxoi) YlepiKXeiovq, 9
Aiour|8r|(; Mr|Tpo?copo\), 7 Aiovogioc; [-],
NAMES
9
lepoK^fjc, Meveaxpdxoi),
'Hyr|uovo<;, 7
AioKAfjq
OF
9
'HpaK^eixo-u,
n-60ep|LiO(; Oavo7r6?iiO(;, 10 ITuOiac; A|idp5i5oc,,
6.i 11
12 1.2
5.i
INDEXOFNAMES
273
63
ITuGicgv 'Ep|ioy?Vo[\)<;], 4 11 n-uGcov Me[.]covoc;,
Ata^ccvSpoc,, A?t?Cjav8po<;
ApxeuiScbpoi),
[- -]rh)ppixo\), 13 . [. .]AZ Apiaxeot), I.
A^ecjocvSpoc;
Auxopcovxog, 'iKocpoi), 120
8
A^ecjcxvSpoc,
8
Xijjxdv K^eopo\)Xo\),
2
Icoaiyevriq
Ahocxokoc,
. [. . .]IO[Y],
1
'iKeaioi),
[0]aevvr|<;
AruxoKparfot)], [- -Oa?]v62t?co, 10
Oavotaccx; QiXeaq
1
8
12
[J..OIHZ
OlA.OKpdtT'nq TlJIOKpiTOD, 9 Ol^OVlKOq OlXl7t7lOU, 26 ApaKovToq,
5.ii
OiXo^evou,
10
XaTpiq
Xp-uodcap
[-]q
5.ii
Initiates Greek (including Roman and Thracian names written in Greek) 118
50 [AyJaGdvye^oq, Aya0T|vopo(;,
46.i
E-6p[o\>tan)], 61.i 'Aya0{e}o<; AydOou, 119 46.i Aya0cov\)|LLO(; X(oai5duot>,
Ayd0ivo<;
50
Ayaa[-], Ayye^f|(;,
49.i,
ii (six people)
49.ii [A]yye^fj[<;],
A5pi[av6]c?, 143 60
A0r|vaioc,,
49 A (two people) 49.ii, 71, 91 37
116 r.'A'aioci-], 63 n .AXX .0apo\>va>v, 120 A[-], Aia^wac; Akegtgop
[-],
[A]vxcov(a
Euktt|uovo<;,
AaK>,r|7iid5ri(;,
[-],
[A]vxcov[ia
119
49.i
[A]aK^r|7ud8ri<;, 49.ii 61.i AaK>.t|7rid5r|[(;], -], 130 AaK^Ti7c[-
53 53 44
[A]vxi9cov[xocJ, 46.i
AaKXrmid5nc
AxxdAxru, 56, 58.?3 119
,AoKXr\nid8r\q Aiovumcn),
46.i
AaK^rj7rid8r|(;
46.i
[A]vxcov[i-],
46.i
Baai^eiSoi), 47.ii
Aioyevot),
Axxivaq
MapKO<; Avxcb[v]ioc, 'Hyrjaiac,, 53 M. Avxcbvioc, '07txaxoc,, 48
A-opri^ioc, AxiXXevq,
63
AuxoKArjc; Xuaupo-o,
131.i
[M]apKoc, Avxcovioc,, 46 A7te^AiKcbv, 49.i
TaToq A"6pr|A,io<; MdpKOD 46.i 'I(p[l-],
130
B[-], [A]noXX6S(i>poq
[Aii)]xoue5cov,
. . .]ou, 41.iv A7roM,6Scopoc, 14 A7roAA68oopo<; AewoK^eoix;, [A]7toM-68copo<; E\)8[- -], 118 TOA[.
AcppoSiaiog, [-]oc,
[A]7toAAo(pdvr|<;, 49.ii AnoXXcxpav^c,
AioScopou,
AnoXX&vlioc, 47.ii
14
A7ioAAcovioc,, 49.i
(two people) 119 A7toM*covioc; A7co^(ovio\), 53 ArcoAAcovioc, AvxupdvoD, 37
Ei58a[i]uovo<;,
51
[-Be vel 134
BiOoq
rtaxuKiou,
-],
Boicoxoq
Ae6vxi8o<;,
37 52
Bpuxpecoc,, 53
[. .]ecov [Bo]a7iop(xo[\>], 63 Boupatax;, Td\ioq, 41.v [-]A
Tepdvioq,
67
120
THPOYI?-,52
A7ioM-[cov]ioc, Arj[jj,]eou, 52 58 AteoAAxdvioc Aiovugio'd, AnoXX&vioc,
A(ppo8iaio\),
Bi[0]tx;
Mrjvo(pdv[-
Arco^Acbvioc, rA,aD[K]iou,
122
Bi0u<;,
Ze-ocjiSoc,, 119 vel-i8r|cj
vibq
125
Me]v5i5copo[\)], 19
52
OA.ue'uc,, 30 39
Mr|vo8copo\)
AaK^rj7ri65oxo(;
Tptxpai]va,
A7ioM,covi8r|<;
A0T|va'iq,
[A]0r|vicov Bi0do<;, AiA, TeijmxToc,, 63
[Ajvxcovia
E\)rju_epao, 14 66 navKpaxot), ri\)0eo\), 119
ApxeTio^ifcJ NiKO7r6?iec0(;, 37 121 AokXcxtuwv Mr|xpo5copo\), 129 KoKkaq,
137
[xo\>
A7ioM,covi8r|c; AX^ill&xov,
Aypeocpcov Arj[- -], 157
A0r|vta)v,
ApxeuxScopcx; Apxejicov, 49.i
[A^e]^dv8poD,
[-]ION
[.]v
139
Avxi]a9evo\),
xov rtaxuKioi),
A(3aTo<; AvTi5copot>,
ApxeuiScopoc; ApxejuiScopoc,
Avxicpavrjc, Aioc?Ko\)p[i]8o\), AvxicpiXoc, Avxicp(Axn), 53
xov
Apx?(j,i5copou 62.i
noaei5covio\),
52
Mr|vo86xoD 17.iii
[A]vxia9evr|(;
'Ijjipo-D, 120
ApxeuiSwpcx;
AvxiJtaxpoc,, 49.i
tov
117
Aplaxcovoq, 118
Appi5aicx; 118
AvxiScopoM,
Avxicpdvr|<; AtioAAcoviod,
'IaTpoK^ei{oD}oD<;
Ka6' Apiaiojaevriq Apiaxouevotx; 13.ii -ooGeaiav 5e Acopo0eoD, 79.i Apiaxcov ApiaTO0e[(]o-u, Apiaxocpcov,
Avxi7cax
ApxeuiScopoi)
5e
17.ii
AN[-],
52
AnoXXwviov,
[- -]pexr| Avxioxod, AvxixcaxpofcJ, 49.i
28
TiuoScopou, Kprccovot;, 28
47.ii
Kpjaxepcu,
Av[x{](lkx%o<; N[?i]kcovo<;, AvXlOXOq SK07ClOt), 15
11
ADKovpyou, <^\)Xr\q 'EpjxioD, 2 Xaipecpcov AY[- -], 4 OpaaiSrjc,
Xaipixric;
Apiaxotax[o<;-
16 'AvxavSpoc, 0eo5cbpoi), 78 Avxiyovoc, T([xo\)?],
3 9
50
16 Avxicpdveax;, -] Ka0' \)o6ealav
ApiaxoKpax-nc,
Ari|Lir|xpio'd, 58
127
5.ii
[0]{[^i]7uro<; NiKTipaxoi), [- -]MOI Oao8rmo[\)],
OitaS^evoc;
Avct^iKpdxerucL 60
AvSpoviKoq
48
EiaiScbpoi),
NiKou]dxo[i>], 51 Apiaxo8duo[u],
[-]q
[-A]v9iui[o<;?-],
OiXioc; 0paa<\)>PoiL)^o\),
OiAo^evoc,
50
49.ii,
Av8p6jia%0(;,
-], 17.ii
ApiaTo[yevr|(;
127
Icoaut6^[i8oc;], 5.ii
Zcoi^od,
Apiaxayopac;
Ava^iKpaxnc
117
AnoAAoofviou],
Apeix; Oi^oKpdxo[\)135.iii Apia[-],
[-A]v8poviKo[c,-],
KpdTT|to<;,
OOuvvoq
47.iv
49.i
Ava^(8ox[o](;,
[x]ox>
[Ai]o66t[od],67 [A7t]oM.a>[<;]
Ajjxpicov, 142
[A]vSp6|Liax[ocJ
6.ii
Oaivuuioq
[- -]MQN A7toAAcov([o\)] 136 ApxeuiScDpo-o, [-]q
[A]r|ur|xpi[o'u],
AvSpojiaxot; xov Ikeoiov,
Oaevvoi)
120
67 [A]^t(pi8oxo[cJ,
10
koc0' -ooGeaiav Tiua7roA,i^ Etxppayopoi) 8e TiumtoXioc,, 5.ii . . [. .5:\?. .], 23 Ti|AoicA,e{8a<; A [- -]ac; Tijicovoc,, 13.i Oaevvric,
[-]A7ioA,A,covun), 31
53
A?tecjocv8po(; TKeaiov, "AXvnoq Aeovtck;, 37
Lx-opaKcx;, 9 I[\)|i]|j.axo(; Xotaov 'Appcovoc;, 11
41.iii
A7io^covio\),
[-]Soxo<; 119
[r]Xoa)Kiac, TXavKiaq 119
[rXa]\)Kia(;
A7coA,A.o8cbpo\), 37 37 TXavKiov, [. . Jvxoc,, 67
INDEX
274 .
[r]taxDKi[occJ
oXcovoq, 67
"E^Evoq,
rAacpup[i]8[r|]9,41.v
Avxutdjxpol/u], 50 57.B.ii Aocjaayopac; OiAiaKOD, 50 Aaujocaa[-],
Aaoc;, 19 Adcpvoc;, 142 Ar||uea<;, 49.i
'ETtiroyxdvcofv], 63
(two people) [A]r|[|Lifix]pio<;, 49.ii Ar||ar|xpioc; AtcoAAcoviod, 53
["Ejpjjxov Ar|(ir|Tpio\), 52 41.iv Aiovuaioi),
E\>Po-6^a
Ar||Lir|xpioD, 159 OuA?id8o"u, 119 koc6' [-]Xr\<;Ak[8e Ar|uov[iKoi)],
113.i
141
Ai^daaKoq,
79.i
E-dvod[(;],
[E\)7c]opio3V Kuaiov,
Aioyevouc,,
AioK^fjc; E\)dv8poD,
E\)axf|(j.cov XpuaepcoToq ExKppoa'uvoc;, 125
51
Aiovuaioc;, Aiovuaioc;,
49.i
138
Aiovuaioc; Aiovuaioc;
AioS6xot>,
79.i
Aiovuaioc;
AioScopoi),
14
[Ajiovfuaioc;]
Aiovuaioc;
Xko7uod,
Aiovuaioc;
TiixofcAJekruc;,
15
[-]ION
'HpotK^ecofv], 49.ii [fH]paKA,ecov, 49.ii
-], 128
'HpaK^ecoTrn;, 49.ii [fH]paKA,f|[<;] pH]paK^e[o\)cJ, 63 [. . . .]'HpdoTpaTo[<;?], 149 "Hpcov 'Yyiaiv[o]v[xoq],
44
49.i
79.i Mr|xpo8copoD, 49.i, ii (three people) AioaKoi)pi8r|<;, Aioxiuoc; Aioxi|ao\), 120
Gaaicov,
.ca.5..g xo-u EiaiStcopoiV-oxo-u], EiaiScopoc;, 41.v
Arco^oScopo-D, 118
Geuiaxayopat;
130
?eoyerccov
AcoaiGeoc;, 19 Eipf)vn, 35.ii AI.
67
"Hpcoq, 125 49.ii
AiovuaoK^fic;
Aiocpdvnc;,
['Hp]aKA,eo[DcJ, 67 49.i, ii (two people)
'HpaK^ecov, 119
117 Aiovuauyu,
49.ii
'HpaK^eiToq, [.] . oXXd[q]
Aiovuai[oi)?117 Aiovuaiov,
AiovuaoScopoc;,
. . . ], 49.ii 'Hpaicftfic,?], 49.ii 'HPock[?i
67
[-]v8po<;
[- -A]iovuaio\),
62.i
120 'Hpaioc; AXe^dvSpoi), 117 [-]'HpoeK?i?i8(x,
37
Mavxocc;,
[Z]an'A,oc,, 122 Zco7U)po<;, 127 Zco7rupo<; Mevi7i7io\), ['H]A,i68(op[ocJ, 67
[A]iovi)a[{oi)], 50
Aiovuaioc;
[-]
141,143
(two people),
ApxeTco^ecoq, 37 131.i Aioyevou,
Ileipaieix;,
-], 141 Zr|voScopa[Zfivcov Zfivcovoc, 58
57.B.ii
'ETtiKpaxoD, 49.i 49.ii
31
Ex>cjmitjr\q, 49.i E\)cr6r|(;, 50
118
[Ai]oy?vn<; Aiovuaioi), 124
Aiov[-uai]oc;,
63 121
Eimopicov, 79.i
Aioye[v-,
Aiovuaioc;
144
EimopiGTcx;,
Aya6[-], Aioyevnc;, 53
118
[E]i5vouo<;[-],
138
Aivapxoq
Aiov6ai[ocJ,
52
Eirriuepot; A?ov[t]iSo(;, E-urjvoc;, 142 E[\)](j.8v[ri(;], 79.i
Auxyopa[c;],
61.i
Ap%i7c6^io<;, E-uriiaepoc;, 19
E-opoD^o[<;]
Ar|jaoKpdx[r|](;
Arijaoxdprn; Adujtcovoc;, AiSDjLioq AiS-uucu, 53
A^rjvietx;,
pEpljaiocc;, 122
Anurixpioc Aninnxpuru, 58 42 [-A]r|ar|xp{o[D],
uio0?a(a]v Arijjxovacj, 49.i
'Epewioc, Aeovxeix;
n6(7iXio<;) 30
119
Ar|jir|xpiO(; ApxeuiScbpou,
Aiovuaiac;
119
'Emyovot; MeveaTpaxot), 'Emyovot;, 49.ii 'EjciXoyoq, 63
Ar||Ltr|xpiO(;, 49.i
[-]<;
41.v
'E7ia(pp658[iTO(;], 'Eniyzv^q, 79A
50
A|ii(poT?po\).
[-]oq
146
19
T7iajiivcbvSa<;, 'E7ra(ppa<;, 121
Aa^i[dSac;
Aamdxpioc
vel -u-],
["E]v8r||jx)(;?, 47.ii ['E]^r|K?aTO<;, 49.ii
122
AaXeivoq,
NAMES
79.i
'E^7:i5ri(p6p[o(;
49.i
Topyiat;,
OF
[08o]S6oio<; GeoSoToq, 144
Eax'upfo'u],
[MevoiKecoc;, 49.i
GeoScopoq,
118
08OKpixoq,
49.i
46.i
31
30
INDEX
118
?eocjevoc,,
0eo8cbpo\), 55
0e6cj?vo<;
Mr|xpo8(opoD,
[0]e6(ivr|(;
KAEY[-]
79.i
NiKaaipoutam, 6 Kai Mapeiq,
vel -
vel0?-68[cop]o(;, 120 0?i58oL>poc, 0?t)5copot), 0?t)8(opoc 'Hpayoprocl, 50
58
KoTvq
KpaxiSajioq Kpdxcov,
Gfjpcov, 50 144
. [- -], 118
'\epoKXr\qAri^iriTpiot) xo\) Moax[13.ii . . .OY, 31 ['I]?po|Jxxxo[<; vel -v] Ax[x]dta>d, [-]q 'Iepcovoc;, 51
-],
41.iv
['I]o-uAia rnTtauTDpov, 44 T. 'Iov^ioc, A\)(pi8iav6c; Ti((3ep(o\)) 97 abe(\q>6q), 'IouAioc, f,EpjjA7t7io<;,30
rd'ioq
'IotljAioc; Pcxg[kocJ, 46.i 53 'Iouvioc, Avciiiaxoq,
'Inmate, AiG%vXivox>, 'InnoSaiioq
61.i
Ava^dv8pi8[o(;], 170 50
[-],
'IaiSoxoc,
29
[. .]voq 'Ia(co[vocJ, 122 ' Ta Ixvpioq Uox>C)r\q, 34 Kd8|ioc,, 53 KaipeMaoc,
TaXXoq, 49.ii [KlaMuK^fjc;,
46.i
.
.]oq, 49.ii 35.i MevavSpoc;,
['Olxp-oac; IrnaiK^eo-uc;, OvXnia AAecjdvSpa, Ox>X A^KipidSric;, 63
118 Mev[-
[-M]evdv8poD,
-], 136 117
52
Meve8r|n,oc, MeveSrjum), 49.i MeveKpdrnq,
50 Aa|u?xp(oi), 44 KaMiKpaxoD, Kdp7toc, Ylana, 39 Ilo. KaaxpiKioq Anyovq, 39
Mrivo(pav[-
KepScov KXapoq KAdpoi) Aitqcovzvq, 30 " Ti 34 Ktax-65ioc; EijXaioq, KAat)8ioc; KX-eoTidxpa
E-ujjxpopoc;, 36 37 0eo56xo"u,
53
MriTpoScopo-u,
Texvcovoc;, -], 47.ii
[na7i8i]p(ioc;) ria7ieip(io<;) 14
napdfiovoc;,
MriTpo(pdv[ri(; vel -ocpavToq], MiKa, 51 [-]tcov
34
63
AiokAxuc;, 49.ii
'YdKiv0[ocJ, 34
63
33
ZcniXov,
napajjxSvoi) 41.ii
[r\]Kcti
49.ii
ApigTecokl. 35.i riapideviaaKoc;, FIAT . . .OZ A?ie^i^idxo\), Ylavaaviaq
63
'EAjuv[ikocJ,
FtapiLievlaKoc 118
120
'Icmcrcotc;, 63
llapdjiovoc;
napjievtaKoc;, 37
36 118
[-]t?ijj.ioc Zcoa(|ir|,
122
Bi9do<;, 118
46.i
-], 135.iii
[.]na7ieipioc;
49.i
MrjTp6Scop[o<;], MrjTpcova^,
IlavTe[-
119
OiX-OKpdxotx;, MTiv6
46.i
49.i
ndvToruxoc;,
35.ii
MrivocpavToq
MrjTpoScopoc;
OiSpiog,
na^alaxpiKoc;
Mr|v6Scopoc;
'E7tiKpdx[oD<;, 156 [A]v[x]ijadxo\), 52
OvX Apeicov, 63 OvX 'EipKeTvoc;, 63 ' Oil)X E\)TDxiocv6[cJ, OvX Xeipl [-'-],63
[-Bevel 134 Me]v8i8<Mpo[/u],
-,167
Kdaxco[p]
53
['0]7cxdTa PAN[-], 52 "07t[T]r|<;? MeviaicoD, M. 'Op(pi8to<; Ky-qaiXaoq,
57.B.ii
'iTwioaTpaxoD, Mevoov, 49.i
[-]IA
57.B.i
. [-], 'OA\)(X7iio8a)po\), 117 "OfxiAog, 15
36
KaX[X}-'H]paK^e[ KaXAiKpdxnc
38.iv
[-]o<;
Mupiauoq, 55
Meveuax0^ MevvXXa
[Nl-ujjxpiKoc,, 48 [N]\)(X(p68copoc;, 118
'OKxao-uioc; Bdaoc,, [Ko(v]toc; 'OKxdpioc; Atie
MeiA-daioc,,
[Me]vav8poc,
-?], 128
44
Nkcovoc;, 49.ii
[-'0]Ppi|aoD,
-], 115
[Me?]vav8pO(;,
No\)(ir|viO(;,
TaXoq
. .],49.ii
MapKioq
Mev[.
AyrjaiAocoi), 'I717t;o|l188cov] 'Ia(8copo<; NiKoaxpdxot), 'IaiScopoc;, 143
Mduicx;[-
-
Nt>|jxp68copocJ N\)(icpo8[copo\)], Sevcov, 49.i
48
Mayiavoq,
Me^dviTC7ro(;, Mejavcov, 63
120
[-]lIH 79.i
14
Auaiuivric; A7to^covi8o\), 32 AdcKcgv E[-],
MAN[.
Ti(3e]pioc; 'Io-u^ioc; [E\)(p]p6or>vo<;, 53 T. 'Io-u^ioc; Niyep, 45 TaToc;
53
(A9r|vicov), 91 131.i
Aoukioc, MdpKOD, Aouraioc,, 125
143
NiKour|8[cn). .N, 142 Nik6gtp(xto[cJ
Nufujcpioc;,
[-]
[A]ovkioc, 67
59
AxxaXov,
[.-]0)N
Ae-uKioc; 'AKai[o]<; AiocpdvoDq,
'IepoKAfjc; A
Avxioxod,
Titoc, Aemdoq
[NiK?]oyevr|(; N[iKo?]Aaoc;,
44
K-u'ivxia Mitaovoc;, Kvpoc,, 142
62.ii
qyuosi 5fel [N]iki<; MvnGiarxpldcTQD, 56 AGK^n7iid8nc Arra^ou,
58
KuPepvTiTrjc; Mrivocpitaro, 118 [.]av9oc, Ku8([um)],
135.H
49.ii
N[i]Kiac;, 67
[A]vK6(ppov[ocJ, 'HtaoScopou, 53
Kp6v[i]o<;
0r|pcov g xou M[evdv5?]pou, edaq, 49.i
lK[e]aioc;
49.i
[K]poiao<;
49.i
NiKT|(popO(; MrjTpo8a)po\), NiKiaq, 49.i
31
A7to^Ao8(bpoD,
45
41.v
Xcoxetanx;, NiKricpopoc;, 19
37
TXavKiov,
.OY,
OAI
NeiKotaxoc;
N?ik6gt[p](xto[cJ, Necov, 49.i NiKT|aiAecoc;
91 [- -Kop]W|A,io[c/],
0?cov Ar||xr|Tp{oD, 52 34 enpaic,,
lloA\)5
63
llo>,\)8(op[o(;],
Tp6(pi|j.o(;, 39
M-upcov npoK^ou NeiKTixric;, 63
NiKtipaxoc,,
Kopvt|>,(iO(;)
51
49.ii
Mupjari^,
OiXoxpocpov A^rjviecov, 30 A5eiu cvTo<;Ava9A,iL)GTio<;,
Kopvri^ioq 30
0?cov, 49.i
Opacr6|iaxo<; 0p?7TCOC,, 63
[MoiPlpayevric;, 57.B.ii Mogyoc MeveKpaxoD, 58
125
Kopvri^ia
0?1)8[ot]oc;
Mikoc Qaoioq,
53
KopvrjA-ia A^e^dv8pa Kop(vr|^{o'D) A5eiudvTOD 9u(ydTr|p), 30
59
'Hpoyeix-
61.i
130
Kovcov, KopivOia,
Geocpdvnc;, 49.ii 0?paicov
275
KoXXicjoq 143 Kowjiv[i]oc,,
120 ApiaTo5djio\), 0?o(pocvr|<;, 49.i, ii (two people) 0?o(pdvr|[c;], 49.i oq 0?oxdpo\),
NAMES
KoXXiq
?eoxijioc,
[...].
OF
Aicpi^oi),
15
58 14
63
neioaioc,, nEiaiKpdxnc
60
riepSiKaq,
79.i
Ilepiyevric; OiAo%dpoi)(;, llepuac; MevdvSpoD, T. nepTrevva Oogkoc;,
rioaiSecx;
AeovxiSoq, IloGi5cbvio<;, 40.iii
rioai8covio(;
Tijir|Gi7roXic;, 49.i Tiodtoc 'EvxijuoD, 41.iv 46.i
OiXepcoc;
45
OiAiGifjc;,
6 Kal EiGiScopoc; 'OfjGev, 30 Oi^oKpdxoix;
79.i
[- -], 46.i
'Poa)<po<;, 53 tag, 91
46.ii SxpaxoK^eotx;, 51
ExpaxoK^eotx;,
51 119
Zupoc,, 63
118 [Z]?KA,fte,
Zcbaapxoq,
Xp\)G07CT8pO(;, 126
-----],
79.i
LL)7rnveiL)[cJApiGTOK^eioix;, 'GOpojisScov Xaivovxcx;, 120
51
14
Alexsander,
Q^l.
African[-],
[-]US
15
95
40.ii f. eq(ues)
Sab(atina),
P. Aninius
P. 1. SA|.[-
T. AnnaeusT.
l(ibertus) Gem[inus?], 104 Orestes,
Anteros
T
Anthimius, Antiochus 61
names
104
Abascantus, Qi Acorenus
P. Anteius
67
0EY[Xcxn(3io<;, 49.i Zcoa0evr|(;
67
[Xa]pi8djj.o[i)], 119
XapiSrijioD, 143 XpT|aiii[oc,?], [X]priGi|ioc;, 91
[A]maranthus(?), C. C. Aninius(?) 49.ii
XxpaxoveiKti,
ZcoK^fjt; X^uuTtioScopoi), 118 XcoK^fjc; Oia[-],
[Tjo-ucpoc;, 91
(including Thracian written inLatin)
49.i
Sxpdxcov'E7ciKpdxo\), 2a)uxpopo<;, 63
-], 32 42
Latin
Excc^dc,, 34
XxpaxoK^eoix;, 40.iii
19
Xapi8r|jaoc;
71
Eikwioc, MadpicoD, -], 91 [- -]L6amoq[143 Zxax[iXio<;?],
Aeukioc,
[-]q
Oi^oGTpaxoc;,
[Xa]pi8ajLiocJ 41.iv
ZeXevKoq, 71 A. Ze7ixe(|LiiO(; Kpdaoq (sic), 55 'Pcojaaio^ AvXoq ZiKivioq Aedkiod A0r|v(cov, 71
[-]oq
48
[K6i'v]xo(; O^doDeioc; 143 Ooipoc;,
122
Aiovugik^eiod,
[-]xouec%0(;
Oi^oGTopyoc;,
43
ZKa|iidv8po\),
58
OiAocxvod,
[-0]ltaoTOD,
[T]o-u(po<; fEp|Li....
[-'Po?]iq>oa>[-?-], Zapoc7i[(co]v, 49.ii
49.i
^iX6[^e]voq, [OiAol^evoc
Oi^oiL)fi8voc;, 48 ORcov, 49.i
[- -Jvexioc,TriyeTvoc;, 63 37 'Potxpicov eovxoc,,
?]x?(pavo<;,
49.i
^>iXoKpaxr\q
40.iv ITD065cGpo<; Ar|uoa[xpdx]o'u, i)[i]6(; [K]o[(]vxcx; 'PaniXXioq Kowxou
Zxecpavoq,
49.i
OiX68r||j,oc;,
nt)0i(X)v ApiGTOK^eioDQ, ITu0icgv ITuOicovoc;, 120
XEI[-]
51
OiAdypou,
BiGuoc;, 37 63 Oi^tjgioc;, OiAivoc, OiAwod vecbxepcx;, 52
53
67 [n]To^e|ia[TocJ, ITu0ay6pcc(;, 57.B.iii
Edropoc,
135.iii
Xru4-],
Oavea[q] [-jK^fjc;
79.i
EaAAotxmoc,
135.ii
60 OiAdpyopofcJ,
AnoXXmviov,
IlpoK^oc;, A. npo-uaioc;, npcoToc;, 121
-], 158
OY[-
TiiLiayopac; OeoK^eiSoi), 122 [T]i^apxo<;,
49.ii
[njpa^ayopac;,
30
Scoxac; BoxpDoc; Aai8ocA(8ri<;, 19 Tata>[-u]pa<;, Tip
52
TeiuoicpdxoDfc;], 49.ii
noDta)8duoc<;, npeiuoc,
[Tcojuoaoq
[- -], 118 119
AnoXX.
[n]oXi)8copO(;
-]o<; riapiLievicofvoc;], 32 [?]coGTpaTo[cJ npoK^eiol/DcJ, 67
Zcoaif-
63
UoXvxctpiioc, Xdpum), 63 novTiKoq,
49.ii
IcoaiGTpaTOc;,
37
Koivtod
[Z7to]pioc, Flepaioc; Aecovi8rj(;, 71
NAMES
YIoXvkXeov, 118 [I]coaiPioc; EcogikAtk E\)KpocTet)c, 50 49.ii [?]cooiGTp[aTo]<;,
50
Tifiapdxop,
OF
INDEX
276
Antonia M.
M.
Antonius
-], 61.ii
s(ervus), 107
81
Pac[ci], 1. [-],
79.ii
Cn.
f. [-],
69 69
81
INDEX
f.V
Cn.
P. Antonius
[A]poUoni[u?]s,112 Appius, 104
277
Eutychus Siger[us], 99
69
[-],
NAMES
OF
M.
66
C. Modius
[- -], 84
Nearchi,
14
C. Fictorius
Aurelius
Verinus, 107
104
A. Fl(avius) Threptio, 104
Asclas,
[A]stymeno[s],47.i 100
Auctus,
C. Axsius M.
Baebius
Iulius Lupercianus,
C.
Claudius
[-]OR
QA Agacles, 14
QiClodus
40.i Longus, L. Comenius L. f.... M Clodius
Considius
... anus, 55
-. L], 67 [... JUS Cornel[ius-. 1.], 67 Corne[lius[.]0 67 L. f. Cornelius Lent[ulus], [.] L.
l(ibertus) Alypus,
[L .CJorneliusL. 1.Phil[o], 67
P. Curtilius
100
Commodus,
P Curtius P. l(ibertus)I[- -], 78 M.
[- -], 84
Cusinius
108
[-]DaphnusTH[-], C. Decimius C.
f. Felix,
L.
Dionysius 107 Dorus, Eoc[-], 89
107
Epaphus,
se[r](vus),
99
107
Euporus,
100
[-E]utyches,
QiLucciusQi[?],69 Lucumo Vateri,
15
Lycorus,
107
89
Pamplus,
47.i
81
Peregrinus, P. Petellius
Philodamus
Philomusus, 89
66 -], 81
79.ii
Pac[ci], 78
96
Philoni[s?-], Pho[e]bus, 89 A[-
C.Magul[-],72
[Q^PlaJnius
100
67 [.Mjanius Demetrfius], C. l(ibertus) Herode[s C. M[arc]ellus [tor?- -], 104
(two times), 89 L. ? Ste(llatina) Schinas, 68 [C. Mar]tius, 81
Thermus,
89
[-P]ompo[nius-], 104
Pontius,
100
[-Prjiamus, * L f Ter(etina)
89 ? Ar(nensi),
89 Stephanius, Sardus Varius Ambibulus,
104 Pompeianus, L. Pomponius Maximus Flavius 98 [Sil]vanus, . -], 84 Pomponi[us-
Pretiosus,
96
[-'-], 104
-],96
Clinias
Fructus
C.
Norba,
Phileys, 104 Philipp[us],90
70
[- -]Pisidius
Q^Minucfius-]
100
Q^f.
l(ibertus) Persicu[s107
96
l(ibertus),
104
Phaestas,
Pilinus
Sp
-], 108 Tullittianus,
L {velT}) PetroniusL (w/T?)
104
.
1.,47.i
Parthenopae[us], 104 Pasiphilus,
40.i
94
[Me]nander, C. Menenius
108
Paideros,
104
Lydus,
-], 78 78
Sabinus,
101
1.Artemidorus,
[-] Lusius,
Menan[der],
Euprepe[s], 100 Eusebia[-],
M.
Lucceius
-
[-Pa]ntonicusTOH[Sex. Palp[Jllius Candidus
Livius, 47.i 70 P. Livius M. 1.Pal(atina), L. Lucceius M. ? leg(atus), 70
M.
-], 78 -], 78
-
Paneros,
M.
Q^Masonius Memno SE
100
Euanthes,
81
[.]Marius C Marius
[Epic?]TETUS, 110
Eros,
D. s(ervus), Lepidus M. Licini[us-], 84 Litus, 107
-L81 Marcius Felix Vic
89
Epaphroditus,
89 Laetus, 61.ii Cn. Lentul[us], Leontiscus [L]eon[t]isci,
. . iu[s-
Oes
S[abinus?
[P]amphilus M. 89
-], 95
72
Lutacius[-],
Diodo[t]us A[th]enogenis, 14 [-Di]onysides, 104 Dionysius,
Labeont[-
55
Diadumen[-],95 vel-tus -], 78
[-].US Diodo[r-
-
[. L?]aberi[us-], 100
--],81
L. Cornelius
64 [?] Thalna, .P f. Stel(latina) CE[
Lacon,
Aristonifcus
- -
. [. .
58 Oppius Ne
M.
[- -Iu?]ventius -], no
D[-],92 107
[- -Clejmens, 89 Clenas,
M.
Iunius, 104 L. Iu
66
? Masso,
l(ibertus)
.] 1.E
M.
L. Iulius Sp. ? Pap(iria) Niger, 89
57.C.iii
A. Claudius
[_]ni[.
Jus, 14 L. Ofalius M.
T. Ofatulen[us-] 104 Onesimus,
104
.
N(umerius)
T. Ofatulenus 70
1.Archelaos, Q^Hortensius 94 C. Iulius Augu[rinus],
107
Chresimus, C. Cestius, Ti.
110 M.
100
100
"L81 T. Ofatulenus[T. Ofatulenu[s
100
Horatius,
89
Cedrus,
86
[l....],67 -], 67
104
Numenius,
66
1.Erun[-
14
Nicephorus,
Furius
Hermes,
[-],78 101 Bato Batonis, Beitus, 78
Callistion,
L. Ne[.]ius,
78 [-], P. Gadienus P ? Clu(stumina), * Gavius[-], C(aius) . [-],96 Heraclio MUC A.
-], 84
??-
C[. 47.i
Babullius,
111
H [-], l(ibertus)0[-],
[-Au]fideius M. AureliusM 81
101
C.
[------JR.Muti C. [C] Mutius
104 Fl(avius) Theodorus, 107 Fortuna[tus-], L. Fourius L. ? Ou[f(entina)] 73 Crassupes,
96
s(erva?),
Asclepiades, 104
Moschus,
Artemo
96
Mnesima[-], C. Mnesima
104
Felix Augustor(um), Felix, 89
89
[.] Aristopus Stephanius, 92 L. Arrunti[us-],
106
C. Mispius,
100 Endymion, ? Cor(nelia), Fannius M.
C. Fadius
Purpurio,
66 72
107 Proculus,
101
100 Restitutu[s], Rufus praetorius,
88
85
111
INDEX
278
f Quinta, 89
[RupilijaQj
C. Rustius
C. F[57.A.i
Seleycys,
104 Septimius Tigr[a]nes, M. Servilius M. l(ibertus) Sextius
Lippinus
[-]US
80
Philo,
1.Pamp[hilus], 80
[M. S]e[rvilius?]M.
P
KX Aiovvaioq,
87
Tarquitianus, 95
Truxevou, 59, 1st century b.c.? Ev^iaxoq 14 Oocoicov 0aAxxaicovo<;, 87, a.d. 113 34, a.d. ?eoScopoc;
78
.va?, 55
Thimotheos, L. Tullius M.
Zelotus, Zoticus,
104
?], 46.i,
Ayr|aap%oc; Ayrjfadpxou a.d. 40-45?
22, after b.c.?
Air[-], [-]v68copo<; of 3rd century middle Ai'Aioc;
166
104, a.d.
'EtuuocxouC?),
Avx{[y]ovo[(; century
1st
37, 38
-
-], 167,
131.i, AjteAfjc; OiAoKpaxoix;, b.c.-2nd century a.d.? -] EY[-], tury a.d.?
08o5copou,
1st century
Aio8copo'u, XtcoA,Axmp(xvt|c, 90 b.c. Oi^ocjevo-o, b.c.?
1st
71, after
57.B.iii,
2nd-lst
century Ap(5r|ta)<; century
[-]
[-Kyou, b.c.?
58, 2nd-lst
ApiGTcov TcpiKpaxouc;, 14, June 3, 66 b.c. 86, a.d. 6 Axxd^ou, Aewcov ArcoA,A,cov{8oD, 56, 2nd-lst century b.c? AriuoK^fic; n-uOoyevotx;, tury b.c. [-]
Aioyevoix;, century a.d.?
47.iv,
1st cen
123, 2nd-3rd
b.c.-2nd
century a.d.
[NjoDiLiriviou, 77, 50 or 49
Nodutivioc; b.c.
npoK^fic; b.c.?
ASpiocvo\)
riuOicov [- -], 13.ii,
163, date? (sic), 24, ca. 100
1st century b.c.? 50, early 1st cen
M. Tot)Pio<; Opovxcov, 2nd century a.d.
45,
late lst-early
M. THoupioq)
Op6v[xco]v, 41.iv, a.d. lst-early 2nd century 160-180 30, a.d. lapeTvoq, Teunac; Kpixcovoc;, b.c.?
Oi?i6^8vo^ b.c.?
Tiaiou,
16, 2nd-lst 62.i, 2nd
late
century century
95, Tixoq <J>[^domo<; Kxr|GKpiAo(;(?)], late lst-early 2nd century a.d.? T((toc,) QXafiioq Kxr\ai(piXoqy 41.ii, late lst-early 2nd century a.d. O^.. TrjyeTvoc;, 154, 2nd-3rd century a.d.? ZeKo\)v[8o<;], century a.d.?
Op6v[x]cov
b.c.
[- -]a(pdvxo\),
riu8(cov ApiSfi^ou, tury b.c.
cen
17.iii,
61.i, 2nd
39, 1st century
NiKoaxpaxoq,
nep[iK]^fj<;
lst-2nd
91,1st
AkoX\o[-
A7i
AiAioc,
Aioyevoix;, 39, 1st century century a.d.
Mouacovioq b.c.-2nd
century
of 134, after middle [-]8copoc;, 2nd century b.c.-lst century a.d.? [- -]ocpcov, 114, Roman period
97, lst-2nd
'Emuxxxou(?),
AnoXXodcopoq
19
26,170-140 'OpOeix; 'E7ii%dpo\), 121, 1st century b.c.?
27, 2nd
[-] Av[century a.d.?
89, a.d.
Mvr|a(a[xpaxo(;] K^eopot^ov, century b.c.?
N-ojjxpoScopoc; 08cov8o-o,
43
AvTupdv[r|<;-], century b.c.?
Api8r|ta)c;
165 or
161, Mv]t|gikA?0'd[cJ, b.c.-lst century a.d.?
[AvfriuiScov[_]AEIAOY, b.c-a.d.
[- -]MrjxpcbvaKxoc;,
ca.
lst-3rd
Agoranomoi
147, 2nd cen lepoK^eo-oc;, b.c.-2nd century a.d.? tury cen 'Iouvioq rHpco8r|<;,48, 2nd-3rd
54, MrixpoScoploc;] Mr|xp[o]8cbpo\), b.c. 41/30-27/12 -], 6.ii, 2nd [Mrixpcova]^ A0HNA[century b.c.?
Eponymous Kings
[- -JaGicovocJ-?-], 43, a.d.?
1st century
5.ii, ca. Ar|[xoy]8vr|(; Icoaa[v]8pi8o-u, 150 b.c. or shortly thereafter 6.i, 2nd century b.c.? [- MejveaOecoc;,
L.f.,58 104
after
'I(piKpdxr|(; [- -], 15, 1st century b.c. ? 149, 2nd-4th K6$Ai7uto<;, century a.d.?
15
84
(iVisellius
46.ii,
tury a.d.?
L. ? Pollion, Felix, 101
A. Vereius Verus,
66
? Cor(nelia), 99
Tyrannu[s], L. Veneilius
century b.c.?
131.ii, Zcoi^oq Apiaxo^evoo), b.c.-2nd century a.d.?
P Teidius P ? Pom[p(tina)], 73
Tertia,
1, 2nd
0e68copo(;,
89
Tarula,
42, 1st [-]o5copo'D, b.c.-1st century a.d.? century
Opuvi%oc;
164, date?
Mr|xpcovaKXoc;, 0e6Scop[o<;?] a.d." 40-45
Success[-],
NAMES
century a.d.?
33, 2nd
A03[-],
-], 84
OF
104
3 rh)6apdxoD, 89 Aio56xod,
AnoXXl-] [- -?- Ap]%iK^eouc;,
51 56
'EpuoKpd[xr|cJ n\)9oyeiKou, OiAixcapoc; OiAoOeoc;
Ar))ir|xpio[u], [- -], 121
T((xocJ O^dpioc;
37
KxriaupiAoc;,
45
INDEX
GEOGRAPHIC
5, 8, 22
Abdera,
Kos,
Abydos, 46, 52 Aigai/Aigeai, 9, 53 Ainos,
4, 5, 7,13, 31?, 53
Alexandria, Alexandria
23, 24 Lampsakos, Larisa 1?, 26 (Thessaly), 53 Magnesia,
23
47
Maroneia,
5, 8, 40, 41.iv, 22
Amphipolis, 37
Methymna,
Antioch,
51
Miletos,
62
Arsinoe,
51
Mylasa,
12
Aspendos, Astypalaia,
31
Myra,
4
Myrina,
23?, 29, 30 35 Azorion/Azoros, Beroia,
Nysa,
II.3
21?
Pergamon,
5, 89
Perinthos,
39,132?, 63
Pessinus,
1,2, 4, 5,23,24?, 32 Epidamnos, Eresos, 9,10, 24? Ephesos,
50
Erythrai,
2, 8, 13
9
Priapos,
51 3, 5, 8,10, Appendix
5, Appendix Ilion, 53 Ionia, 10
36
dix IL1
Rome,
44-49,
14,15,
158?
22,134? 35
Sardis,
3, 5, 6, 22 17.iii
5,13, 22, 60 13.ii
Sirrhai,
33, 53,
Kassandreia,
Klazomenai, 61
4, 8,11,
22
Knidos,
2,10,
53, 56-58,
64-116,125,131,137,140,148?, Samos,
Kalchedon,
20, 22
1.5
5, 23?, 24, 50, 51, 57?, Appen
Rhodes,
apo Strymonos, 1.3,1.4
Iasos,
26
Phokaia, Priene,
10
Hellespont, Herakleia
Pherai,
145?
Philippi, 38, 48
25?
Halikarnassos,
Kolophon,
46,171 22
5,18, 27, 28
Patara,
Appendix
Elis, 16
Keramos,
Paros,
9,13-15
Dionysopolis,
Kaunos,
Parion,
89
9, 38,49,
Dardanos,
9
Odessos,
39, 53, 67?, 134? Byzantion, 66 Catana, Chios,
6, 9, 25 5 5
Naxos,
5,11 34, 37
57
24
Mytilene,
Athens,
Bargylia,
56-59
9,10,12,13,23,
Kyzikos,
54, 55
Troas,
Alopekonnesos,
1.2,120?,
LI,
Appendix
1, 5,10
Kyme,
42-45
Alabanda,
4-6,11,
122?
Smyrna, 63 Stratonikeia, Styberra, 53 Tarentum,
5, 7, 17.ii
11?
61, 63,
28o
Tegea, Teos, Thasos, Thera,
Tomis, Appendix IL2
31 6,10,22
Torone,
8,24,41,48, 31
Thessaloniki,
GEOGRAPHIC
36, 37
51, 53, 62
Tralles, Xanthos,
31
47 50
INDEX