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Mar 28, 2023 8 tweets 4 min read Read on X
#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.
Here we can also see Odysseus’ companions already turned into zoomorphic figures through Circe’s magicks. The dipinto underneath (ΕΤΑΙΡΟΙ ΤΕΘΗΡΙΩΜ[ENOI]) notes that his “comrades have been transformed into wild beasts).
The compression of scenes within the space is quite striking, as below we also see the meeting of Odysseus and Hermes, where the god offers Odysseus the protective moly.
The dipinto on the base reads (I believe):
ΕΚ ΤΗΣ ΔΙΗΓΗΣΕΩΣ ΤΗΣ ΠΡΟΣ ΑΛΚΙΝΟΥΝ ΤΟΥ ΚΑΠΠΑ.
This would mean ‘From the narrative [told] to Alcinous, that of [Book] Ten’.
For Horsfall’s article (cited above), see:

Horsfall, Nicholas. “Stesichorus at Bovillae?” The Journal of Hellenic Studies 99 (1979): 26–48.

doi.org/10.2307/630630
And for a more recent assessment of the Tabulae Iliacae, see:

SQUIRE, MICHAEL. “TEXTS ON THE TABLES: THE ‘TABULAE ILIACAE’ IN THEIR HELLENISTIC LITERARY CONTEXT.” The Journal of Hellenic Studies 130 (2010): 67–96.

jstor.org/stable/41722532

#EpigraphyTuesday #Myth 🧵

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More from @DocCrom

Jul 24
#LatinForTheDay – 24 July #Propertius 🧵

“errat, qui finem vesani quaerit amoris:
verus amor nullum novit habere modum.
terra prius falso partu deludet arantis,
et citius nigros Sol agitabit equos,
fluminaque ad caput incipient revocare liquores,... Image
"...aridus et sicco gurgite piscis erit,
quam possim nostros alio transferre dolores:
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quod mihi si interdum talis concedere noctes...
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si dabit et multas, fiam immortalis in illis:
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Sep 5, 2023
#EpigraphyTuesday – The Tombstone of Prima Florentia: ca. 2nd Century AD. Discovered in 1930 at Portus, a heart-breaking inscription, which also reflects the all-too-common domestic violence of the ancient world. #Latin

Image: Parco archeologico di Ostia antica; AE 1987.0177k Image
The stone was set up by a girl’s parents to commemorate her short life and brutal end: as the text refers to the murder of a teenage wife by her husband.
Text:

"Restutus Piscinesis
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May 30, 2023
#LatinForTheDay – May 30 #Ovid 🧵

“[...] dum talia secum
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May 30, 2023
#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
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May 30, 2023
Ancient Coin of the Day: A gander at some coins from Britain prior to the Claudian invasion of AD 43, in particular those of Cunobelinus, the origin of Shakespeare’s Cymbeline. #ACOTD #Numismatics #Britain 🧵

Image: British Museum (1977,0434.6). Link - britishmuseum.org/collection/obj… Image
Cunobelinus was a local British ruler who exerted control over a large area of south-east England, ca. AD 10-40, with a capital at Colchester. He claimed to be the son of Tasciovanus, who had ruled a kingdom centred to the north of the Thames.
The Obverse of this coin shows an ear of spelt, with the flanking Legend CA-MV, i.e. ‘Camulodunum’, Cunobelinus’ capital. Strabo (4.5.2) notes that grain is a major export of Britain, so the emblem could refer to Cunobelinus’ international trade. Image
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Mar 29, 2023
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Virgil, Aeneid 9.107-121
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