IGCyr2 | GVCyr2
Inscriptions of Greek Cyrenaica | Greek Verse Inscriptions of Cyrenaica

Dedication to Apollo

EpiDoc XML: IGCyr0220002
Trismegistos ID: 738243

Source description

Support: Limestone altar with two compartments (the right one broken off); left part of front side now missing (w: 0.48 × h: 0.14 × d: 0.33).

Layout: Inscribed; written in correspondance with both compartments.

Letters: 0.035; smaller circular letters, asymetric nu.

Date: Late fifth or early fourth century BC (lettering).

Findspot: Found before 1923 at Cyrene: under the vestibule of the Byzantine Baths.

Place of origin: Findspot.

Last recorded location: Seen by C. Dobias-Lalou in 1982 in the the vestibule of the Byzantine Baths.

Text constituted from: Transcription from stone (CDL).

Bibliography

Ferri 1923, p. 9, n. 8c, whence SEG, 9.141; also SECir, 212; IGCyr 022000 .

Text

Interpretive

Ἀπόλλωνος.

Diplomatic

ΑΠΟΛΛΩΝΟΣ

French translation

(scil. Autel) d'Apollon.

English translation

(scil. Altar) of Apollo.

Italian translation

(scil. Altare) di Apollo.

Commentary

Known through a simple mention by Ferri, it belongs to the series of altars with compartments of the so-called 'agorà degli dei'. Neither illustration nor dimensions were given then.

With help of ancient photographs, Pugliese Carratelli and Morelli (SECir) were able in 1960 to identify the altar and added description and dimensions.

When seen by Dobias-Lalou (1982), the stone, already broken on the photograph, had lost its left part.

The use of omega shows that the inscription cannot be older than the end of the fifth century BC.

CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 Deed Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

All citation, reuse or distribution of this work must contain a link back to DOI: https://doi.org/10.60760/unibo/igcyrgvcyr2 and the filename (IGCyr000000 or GVCyr000), as well as the year of consultation.

Maps

Cyrene general plan

image