EpiDoc XML:
IGCyr0163002
Trismegistos ID:
5998
Source description
Support: White marble rectangular block with two holes for feet on the upper side, which was certainly adjacent to one or more other similar blocks, now lost, to form a large base (w: 0.725 × h: 0.305 × d: 0.60).
Layout: Inscribed on front face in two (or more) columns of two lines with a final line on the whole width of the original base.
Letters: 0.025 at ll. 1-4; 0.035 at l. 5.
Date: Probably second century BC
Findspot: Found in 1928 at Cyrene ➚: Sanctuary of Apollo (see commentary).
Place of origin: Findspot.
Last recorded location: Seen by C. Dobias-Lalou in 1983, placed on the unidentified temple W of the Temple of Artemis.
Text constituted from: Transcription from stone (CDL).
Bibliography
Oliverio 1930, p. 190, n. 14, whence SEG, 9.67; IGCyr 016300 ➚.
Text
Apparatus
French translation
Phainippos fils d'Akestas.
[Un tel fils d'Un tel].
Akeusilea fille d'Ake[--- a consacré] (scil. les statues).
English translation
Phainippos son of Akestas.
[So-and-so son of So-and-so].
Akeusilea daughter of Ake[--- dedicated] (scil. the statues).
Italian translation
Phainippos figlio di Akestas.
[Il tale figlio del tale].
Akeusilea figlia di Ake[--- ha dedicato] (scil. le statue).
Arabic translation
فاينيبوس بن أكيستاس. [فلان ابن فلان]. أكيوسيليا ابنة [---] أكي [كَرَّسَتْ] (التماثيل).
Commentary
Oliverio published the stone as found N-W of the Roman Propylaeum, but it should be an error, because an ancient photograph (Department Archive D.501) shows the stone at the very place where it was still in 1983, with the Greek theatre visible in the background, as if Nikodamos' Wall was not yet unearthed.
Oliverio did not introduce a hierarchy between the preserved names, because he did not notice the different heights of the letters nor the different placement of l. 5 vs. ll. 1-4. He did not thus suspect the layout of the latter in columns.
At l. 5, Oliverio restored the father's name as Akestas and thought this woman to be the sister of Phainippos. However, a name in Ἀκευσι- would also be possible. The feminine name Akeusilea has now another occurrence at Cyrene (see IGCyr1211002).
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