EpiDoc XML:
IGCyr1283002
Trismegistos ID:
738830
Source description
Support: Fragment of a white marble block, broken off at right, below and partly above; the rear side has a recess, either original for attachment to a wall or related to a re-use (w: 0.14 × h: 0.135 × d: 0.6).
Layout: Inscribed on the face, beginning at 0.04 form the upmost point that seems to belong to the original upper edge.
Letters: 0.018, with forked serifs; broad mu, pi with two long hastae.
Date: Perhaps end of second or beginning of first century BC (lettering).
Findspot: Found before 1977 at Cyrene ➚: exact findspot unrecorded.
Place of origin: Findspot.
Last recorded location: Cyrene Museum, 307. Seen by C. Dobias-Lalou in 1977 in Shahat: Cyrene Museum.
Text constituted from: Transcription from stone (CDL).
Bibliography
Not published before IGCyr 128300 ➚.
Text
Apparatus
1: ΑΠΟΛ: ἁ πόλ[ις]; Ἀπόλ[λωνι]; Ἀπολ[λώνιος]; Ἀπολ[λόδωρος]
French translation
Intraduisible (voir le commentaire).
English translation
Not usefully translatable (see commentary).
Italian translation
Intraducibile (vedi commento).
Commentary
This fragment raises many questions. That the main aim of the inscription is a dedication is shown by the verb at line 3. Demeter should not be the deity to whom the dedication was made because her larger sanctuary, the extra-mural one, had not been investigated between 1915 (Ghislanzoni published two inscriptions) and the period 1969-1978 (American excavations, the finds of which were published by Reynolds 2012). Anyhow those finds would not have been kept in the main epigraphical collection of the Cyrene Museum. As to the small urban sanctuary of Demeter, situated on the agora, it has been excavated by the Italian missions (Stucchi, Bacchielli) from 1957 on and its finds are also kept in other storerooms. It is thus highly plausible that we have at line 2 a form of the personal name Damatrios.
At line 1, three main readings may be explored, as given in the apparatus. 1) If we read ἁ πόλις, the dedication (sc. of a statue of Damatrios) would be made by 'the city'. This word-order is known elsewhere, but hitherto unattested in Cyrenaica. 2) If we read the name of Apollo, it should stand at the dative case as receiving the offering from Damatrios, but the place of the god's name at the beginning would be very unusual. 3) A third possibility would be a personal name referring to Apollo (Apollonios vel sim): the relation between the two personal names should then remain unclear, for we do not know how much of the stone is lost.
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