Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #EpigraphyTuesday

Most recents (20)

#EpigraphyTuesday A hole new world. For many visitors, a trip to the Roman Forum often begins with a spectacular monument (15.4 X 13.5m): the Arch of Titus. It's beautifully inscribed: you can still see the holes where bronze letters were embedded to sparkle in the Sun.🧵1/7
📷Me Image
The marble text (CIL 6.945; EDR103961):
"The Senate & People of Rome (dedicated this) to Divine Titus Vespasianus Augustus, son of Divine Vespasianus"
Whether or not you could read, the lettering, spacing & centred margins are exquisitely executed, illustrating control &order.2/7 Image
The experience of walking through the arch is a fascinating reversal of the transient triumphal procession. As you pass through, you are surrounded by triumphal images: Nike flies above, soldiers carry spoils towards an arch; the space shapes you.
📷Me; Carole Raddato. 3/7 ImageImage
Read 7 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday – The rather magnificent tombstone of Longinus Sdapeze, a member of ‘ala I Thracum’, a unit which may have played a role in the Claudian invasion of Britain AD 43. #Latin 🧵

Image: Colchester & Ipswich Museums (COLEM:1928.345). Link – cim-web.adlibhosting.com/ais6/Details/c… Image
Discovered in 1928 and showing evidence of ancient damage, including the break across the main inscription panel, the actual head of Longinus was not found until subsequent excavations in 1996.
Text:

“Longinus Sdapeze
Matyci (filius) duplicarius
ala prima Tracum pago
Sardi(ca) anno(rum) XL aeror(um) XV
heredes exs testam(ento) [f(aciendum)] c(uraverunt)
h(ic) s(itus) e(st)” Image
Read 8 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday It's my birthday, so here is one of my favourite inscriptions, still in situ, leading onto Tiber Island: the Pons Fabricius (62 BCE). The oldest bridge in Rome is 62m x 5.5m with 2 arches 24m wide in lovely travertine; built to last! #Roman #Archaeology 1/5
📷Me Image
The bridge, beautifully drawn by Piranesi (1756) was reworked by consuls after a flood (21 BCE) (Dio 53.33.5). A central chamber with a stone prow let high waters to pass: illustrating the innovative technology behind Rome's majestic architecture 2/5
📷metmuseum.org/art/collection… Image
Texts on both sides (CIL 6. 1305) read: L(ucius) Fabricius, son of Gaius, curator of roads, oversaw & approved it." Smaller texts, carved in situ = repairs: Marcus Lepidus, son of Marcus & Marcus Lollius, son of Quintus, consuls (21 BCE), approved by decree of the Senate." 3/5 Image
Read 6 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday – something different today with the so-called ‘Tabula Rondanini’, an example of the ‘Tabulae Iliacae’, where scenes from the Trojan Cycle are depicted: ca. 1st Century AD. #Myth

Image: National Museum, Warsaw (147975 MNW). Link - cyfrowe.mnw.art.pl/en/catalog/611…
These tablets – some 22 are known – were long dismissed as being intended for “a clientèle unacquainted with Homer himself” (Horsfall, 1979: 34), seen as the type of object appreciated by characters such as Petronius’ Trimalchio. However, more recent work has questioned this.
The designs on this tablet are drawn from Book 10 of Homer’s Odyssey, focussing on the encounter of Odysseus with Circe. Thus, we see Circe’s palace with the key actors meeting. They are clearly named with Greek dipinti.
Read 8 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday Spring has Sprung!🌷 This delicately punched piece of copper alloy, 8cm (ca. the width of a credit card) shows how #Roman soldiers on Hadrian's wall measured the passing seasons.
But what is it? 🧵1/4
🏛️📷 @VindolandaTrust
@VindolandaTrust @DocCrom @roamintheempire @AncientRomeLive @TheClassicalCo Answer: We're not entirely sure. It was probably part of a larger ring (ca. 35cm in total), which roughly labelled the days (K), weeks (N), mid-month (Id) & the equinox (Ae). Some suggest that it was a clock, others a calendar... 2/4

📷Labels added.
cambridge.org/core/journals/…
@VindolandaTrust @DocCrom @roamintheempire @AncientRomeLive @TheClassicalCo Found in a granary, it could have helped to time night watches, but the precious timepiece was likely in the principia (headquarters), used as a celestial calendar (horologium) or an anaphoric clock. This image of control was also in Rome: showing the same equinox (in Greek) 3/4. This small fragment of Augustus "horologium" or &q
Read 5 tweets
Este pasado verano tuve la oportunidad de visitar el MASMO (Museu Arqueológico de S. Miguel de Odrinhas) en Sintra (Portugal), que contiene una interesante colección epigráfica.

¿Os apetece ver alguna pieza?
#PequeñasPerlasDeEpigrafía
#EpigraphyTuesday Entrada al museo
L(ucius) AELIVS L(ucii) F(ilius) GAL(eria tribu) AELIANVS H(ic) S(itus) E(st)
L(ucius) AELIVS SEX(ti) F(ilius) GAL(eria tribu) SENECA PATER H(ic) S(itus) E(st)
CASSIA Q(uinti) F(ilia) QVINTILLA MATER H(ic) S(ita)
E(st)
▶️ Placa de marmol con la insc...
▶️
L(ucius) IVLIVS L(ucii) F(ilius) GAL(eria tribu)
AELIANVS ANN(orum) XIIII H(ic) S(itus) E(st)
L(ucius) IVLIVS L(ucii) F(ilius) GAL(eria tribu)
IVLIANVS AN(norum) XXV H(ic) S(itus) E(st)
AELIA L(ucii) F(ilia) AMOENA H(ic) S(ita) E(st)

📸H.Ep. 21320
Read 18 tweets
Para el #PequeñasPerlasDeEpigrafía de hoy traigo la inscripción de un legionario con problemas legales para reconocer a su familia. Atentos a la historia de Marco Septicio.

#EpigraphyTuesday Inscripción funeraria de la...
M(arcus) SEPTICIVS C(ai) F(ilius) PAP(iria)
AQVILIFER SIBI ET SABINAE
CONTVBERNALI SVAE ET M(arco) SEPTICIO
M(arci) LIB(erto) MARTIALI FILIO NATVRALI AN(norum) X
ET MENSVM VII
H(ic) S(iti) S(unt) S(it) V(obis) T(erra) L(evis)
POST EORVM OBITVM
HOC MONIMENTVM HEREDEM
NON SEQVETVR
Marco Septicio, hijo de Cayo, tribu Papiria, aquilifer. Para él y para Sabina, su contubernal y Marco Septicio Martiali, hijo natural, a los 10 años y 7 meses. Aquí yacen, La tierra les sea leve. Tras la muerte de ellos, este monumento no pasa al heredero.

📸HD004124 Inscripción funeraria de la...
Read 13 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday🧵– The Insus Tombstone

Discovered in 2005, this inscription and relief sculpture served as the tombstone for a Roman auxiliary cavalry soldier: ca. Late 1st Century AD. #Roman

Image: Lancaster City Museum. Link - lancashiremuseumsstories.wordpress.com/2021/02/12/the…
The piece is a fine example of the ‘Reiter’ (‘Rider’) style of monument, with a representation of a mounted soldier. Standing some 2.25m high, the overall piece is both impressive and energetic.
Inscription:

Dis
Manibus Insus Vodulli
[fil]ius cive(s) Trever eques alae Aug(ustae)
[ t(urma)] Ṿictoris curator Domitia [? h(eres) f(aciundum) c(uravit)]
Read 10 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday - The Water Newton bowl, a silver Romano-British bowl, ca. 4th Century AD, bearing a rather fabulous little Christian inscription. #Latin #Inscription

Image: British Museum (1975,1002.5). Link – britishmuseum.org/collection/obj…
Discovered in 1975 as part of a collection of precious metal items – the Water Newton Hoard – which included elements decorated with Christian symbols, including the 'feather-plaques', though these forms are also found in non-Christian contexts.
The bowl bears an inscription of the name 'Publianus' on its base and the following inscription around its rim:

SANCTUM ALTARE TUUM DOMINE SUBNIXUS HONORO
Read 8 tweets
Peekabo! Examples of epitaphs in situ in the catacombs of #Rome (examples are from Catacomb of Priscilla, open to the public). In 3 cases, hidden behind later retaining piers; last one is painted on wall of a chamber within a tabella ansata. Source: ICS, #DAPICS #EpigraphyTuesday
more frequently, epitaphs & other funerary artifacts in catacomb settings secured in modern displays - first & foremost, so that they stay there. Displays tend to be clustered in accessible areas so that you & I can see them. All catalogued in @EdbUniba. #EpigraphyTuesday
examples I've shared are older, grimier versions of many epitaphs on marble, which have since been cleaned & documented in better lighting than a flashlight beam. Virtually all found in disturbed context, making it necessary to remount them, often thematically #EpigraphyTuesday
Read 8 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday – The Foss Dyke Mars: a statuette of Mars, nude apart from his rather flamboyant helmet: found on the course of the Foss Dyke in 1774, though the original find-spot is not specified. #Roman #Mars

Image: British Museum (OA.248). Link - britishmuseum.org/collection/obj…
This ca. Late 2nd – Early 3rd Century copper-alloy figure is well executed, highlighting once again the popularity of Mars as a Romano-British cult focus, as shown in other artefacts such as the Barkway Plaque.

The inscription runs across two of the panels on the base:

Deo Mar(ti) et
Nu(mini)b(us) Aug(ustorum) Col-
asuni Brucci-
us et Caratius de
suo donarunt
Read 9 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday - A cracking piece today, with the bronze tablets preserving elements of Claudius' speech to the Senate in AD 48 on admitting Gauls to the Senate.

Image: Lugdunum Museum (AD012); ILS 212. Link - lugdunum.grandlyon.com/fr/Oeuvre/1209… Image
Discovered in 1528, the bronze panels record Claudius' response to a request from the leading citizens of Gallia Comata that they should be allowed to hold public office in Rome.
Claudius' attempts to convince the Senate of the sense of this proposal include historical examples of 'foreigners' who had brought great benefit to Rome, including the early kings Numa Pompilius and Tarquinius Priscus. Image
Read 6 tweets
Another quick #EpigraphyTuesday thread with this funerary inscription for the daughter of Blescius Diovicus. #Roman

Image: Museum of Archaeology & Anthropology, Cambridge (D 1970.11). Link - collections.maa.cam.ac.uk/objects/468494
The inscription was discovered prior to 1601 in Risingham, the site of the Roman fort of Habitancum, on Dere Street - which ran from York to Corbridge.
Text:

"D(is) M(anibus)
Blescius
Diovicus
filiae
suae
vixsit
an(n)um
I et die(s) XXI"
Read 6 tweets
A quick #EpigraphyTuesday thread to get my day going, with this dedicatory statue group of Dionysus from the Mithraeum in London: ca. 4th Century AD. #Roman

Image: Museum of London (18496). Link - collections.museumoflondon.org.uk/online/object/…
The group shows Dionysus accompanied by typical members of his retinue: Silenus upon his ass; a Satyr; a Maenad holding a 'cista'; and a panther.
But as this is and epigraphy thread, what really interests us is the brief inscription on the base:

"hominibus bagis bitam"

'(Give) life to wandering men'
Read 5 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday - a second piece spotted on my Edinburgh jaunt, with this relief dedication to the goddess Brigantia, from Birrens: ca. Mid-Late 2nd Century AD. #Roman

Image: National Museum of Scotland (X.FV 5). Link - nms.ac.uk/explore-our-co…
Inscription:

"Brigantiae s(acrum) Amandus
arc(h)itectus ex imperio imp(eratum) (fecit)"

Translation:

'Sacred to Brigantia: Amandus, the engineer, by command fulfilled the order'
The damage to the text of the inscription has led to some speculation about its reconstruction: an alternative reading of the damaged section could be "ex imperio ipsius" - 'by command of the goddess herself'.
Read 6 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday - spotted on my recent Edinburgh rambling, a lovely little altar dedicated to Mercury from Castlecary ca. AD 140-190. #Roman

Image: National Museum of Scotland (X.FV 32). Link - nms.ac.uk/explore-our-co…
Inscription:

Deo
Mercurio
milites leg(ionis) VI
Victricis Pie F(idelis)
(a)ed(em) et sigillum
cives Italici
et Norici
v(otum) s(olverunt) l(aeti) l(ibentes) m(erito)

Image: Author's own photograph
Translation:

'To the god Mercury, soldiers of the Sixth Legion 'Victorious, Dutiful and Loyal', being citizens of Italy and Noricum, set up this shrine and statuette, gladly, willingly, and deservedly fulfilling their vow.'
Read 5 tweets
#EpigraphyTuesday - Kicking off with a bit of Nero and Poppaea graffiti from Pompeii, with these verse inscriptions from the House of Gaius Julius Polybius (IX.13.1-3). #AGOTD #Graffiti

Image: Authors photograph of Année Epigraphique (1985) 283 and 204 (2004: 404)
The inscriptions themselves would seem to commemorate gifts offered by Poppaea and Nero to the goddess Venus, perhaps at the time of the emperor's visit to Pompeii in AD 64.
The first records a gift of Poppaea:

"munera Poppaea misit Veneri sanctissimae berullum helenumque / unio mixtus erat"

'Poppaea sent as gifts to most sacred Venus a beryl, an ear-drop pearl - oh, and a bloody big pearl besides!'
Read 7 tweets
So I went to the #NeroExhibition @britishmuseum... Image
You cannot have a #NeroExhibition without the back story. Cue Augustus (and his swooshy locks), Caligula (and his cute eyelashes) and a few of the other Julio-Claudians before we meet the protagonist: Nero. #NeroExhibition ImageImageImageImage
From a curtain fringe to full on foppish curls (and a fuller chin) #NeroExhibition ImageImageImageImage
Read 19 tweets
#Roman inscriptions can make history individual and personal. Many are not merely an abstract description, but rather a close encounter with the everyday life of the people of that time. A good example can be found in this votive altar: 1/5

#EpigraphyTuesday #RomanArchaeology
It was set up by the merchant Lucius Licinius Divixtus for the Boni Casses, fulfilling a vow after he survived a shipping accident. The Boni Casses were probably Celtic or Germanic deities, who were supposed to protect travellers. 2/5
IN H(onorem) D(omus) D(ivinae)/BONIS CASSIBV[S]/EO QVOD POS[T]//SVMMERSAMM/BON(a)E SALVT[I]/SIT REDDITV[S]/ET SVI(s) L(ucius) LICINIV[S]/DIVIXTV[S]/NEGOTIATO[R]/EX VOTO POSV(it)/ABBINO/ET MAXIMO/CO(n)S(ulibus) L(aetus) L(ibens) M(erito) 3/5
Read 5 tweets
Oh, sod it... I can't stay non-ancient all day, so for an #EpigraphyTuesday thread here's a very quick little offering.

So here's a bronze Etruscan helmet that was dedicated in the sanctuary of Zeus at Olympia.

Image: British Museum (1823,0610.1)
The piece is thought to be a trophy dedicated at the sanctuary in the aftermath of the Battle of Cumae in 474 BC, where the Syracusans under Hieron defeated the Etruscans.
The inscription in Syracusan Greek would translate as:

"Hieron, son of Deinomenes, and the Syracusans, [dedicated] to Zeus Etruscan [spoils] from Cumae."
Read 7 tweets

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