260 112 4MB
English Pages 40 [52] Year 2009
Greek and Latin Inscriptions from Sinope and Environs
A n a l e c t a Gorgiana
282 Series Editor George Kiraz
Analecta Gorgiana is a collection of long essays and
short
monographs which are consistently cited by modern scholars but previously difficult to find because of their original appearance in obscure publications. Carefully selected by a team of scholars based on their relevance to modern scholarship, these essays can now be fully utili2ed by scholars and proudly owned by libraries.
Greek and Latin Inscriptions from Sinope and Environs
David Robinson
1 gorgia* press 2009
Gorgias Press LLC, 180 Centennial Ave., Piscataway, NJ, 08854, USA www.gorgiaspress.com Copyright © 2009 by Gorgias Press LLC Originally published in All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning or otherwise without the prior written permission of Gorgias Press LLC. 2009
1
ISBN 978-1-60724-511-7
ISSN 1935-6854
Extract from The American Journal ofAjrchaeology, vol. 9 (1905).
Printed in the LTnited States of America
American of at
[/x] éSovros Miôpaêari/ç
MIGPAAATHS
'X.oprjyiwv as àcn-wo/xoç occurs in W. Jahrb.
f . kl. Phil.
V , p. 491, no. 59, and X.opr)v TOV Aew/iéBoi'toç
Suppl.
ibid. no. 60,
which has the same symbol as our vase-handle, the name of the fabricant being EùcuWtoç.
MlOpaSdrrjs as the name of
the fabricant occurs in Becker, Mélanges p. 485, no. 14 ; iV. Jahrb. f . kl. Phil.
Gréco-Romains,
T,
Suppl. I V , p. 465, nos. 4, 5 ;
p. 466, no. 1 2 ; p. 480, no. 26 a ; ibid. Suppl. V , p. 478, no. 11. T h e combination of these two names has not previously been found, so far as I know.
B u t all three names were known in
Sinope (cf. Nos. 31, 40, and Strabo X I I , 5 4 5 ) .
Hence it may
be we have here the stamp of a Sinopean manufacturer. 8. An oblong stamp:
length, 0.05 m . ;
Letters, 0.004 m. in height.
width, 0.015 m.
T o the right a dolphin in the
claws of an eagle, the same symbol as in No. 1. ETIENAIMQ P I 0
hTL Ti]/Xft)/3tOÇ
N. Jahrb. f . kl. Phil. Suppl. V , p. 478, no. 13, from Olbia, and ibid. Suppl. X , p. 27, no. 9, from Kertch, are identical. The symbol is also the same, but we can draw no argument from that, since it occurs on coins of Olbia as well as of Sinope. F o r the omission of CI TOC K VVI 6eu> 'Iipa/cXeZ j rovSe fia>fibv | 'lepo-
| EUX>?? X^P iV I aveOrjice. I give the correct text from my copy and squeeze. It is not surprising to find a cult of Heracles at Sinope, for Autolyeus, its mythical founder, was a member of the expedition of Heracles against the Amazons (Plut. Luc. 23 ; Appian, Mithr. 83; Apoll. Rhod. II, 9 5 9 ; Val. Flaccus, Y , 1 1 6 ; Hyginus, Fab. X I Y ) . And it was Heracles who took Sinope and established Greeks in it, cf. KOVSOol eii^dfievoi 30. Syllogos, ibid. p. 44, no. 1. 6ea> | 'H\io\oyiq> AeajfieSmv is known as a Sinopean name. Atu/xeSmy or Acofiebcov is not. Phlogius was a companion of Autolycus, the mythical founder of Sinope (cf. Plut. Luc. 23 ; Apoll. Rhod. II, 956 ; Yal. Flaccus, V, 115 ; Hyginus, Fab. X I Y ; Anon. Peripl. Pont. Eux. sec. 22 = Müller, G-eogr. G-raec. Min. I, p. 407 ; Ps. Scymnus, Orbis Descriptio, 945 = Müller, op. cit. p. 236). 32. Syllogos, ibid. p. 47. Fragment of architrave built into wall of the acropolis near No. 33. B ] oiWo? M o v a i . . . . The name is probably to be restored as Botaicos, which occurs in oriental inscriptions (cf. Dittenberger, Orient. Grr. Insc. 20, 26, 27, 29). 33. Syllogos, ibid. p. 4 7 ; Le Bas et Waddington, Voyage Arch. I l l , 1814; Hommaire de Hell, Voyage en Turquie et en Perse, I Y , p. 350, pi. xii, 2. ov e/c rSiv ISi'wv aved-q/cev /cal ttj 7raT/)t'8[t] ¿[¿a rou] T/3o[^>e]&>? ai)Tov Aiiciviov Xpvcroyovov 'OXv
INSCRIPTIONS
FROM
SINOPE
307
34. Built into the north wall, near No. 36, an architrave upside down, with the following inscription. Length, 1.85 m. ; width, 0.58 m. Letters, 0.06 in. in height. Broken at both ends.
jlQN 1< AI A Y T O Y Z M E T A T Q N Z T T E I P Q K j O èeîva àvédrjKe TOÙÇ «IBVAS ek TO 7repuTTvXjiov, ical avrovs ¡¿erà TWV aireipoK [e(f>d\