corinth viii 1

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7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1 http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 1/186 CORIN  H RESULTS OF EXCAVATIONS CONDUCTED BY THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS VOLUME VIII, PART I GREEK INSCRIPTI 1896-1927 EDITED BY BENJAMIN. DEAN MERITT 0PUBLID FO PUBLISHED FOR THE AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CLASSICAL STUDIES AT ATHENS HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS 1931

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Page 1: Corinth VIII 1

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CORIN

 

H

RESULTS OF

EXCAVATIONS

CONDUCTED

BY

THE

AMERICAN

SCHOOL

OF

CLASSICAL

STUDIES AT ATHENS

VOLUME

VIII,

PART

I

GREEK

INSCRIPTI

1896-1927

EDITED

BY

BENJAMIN.

DEAN

MERITT

0PUBLID

FO

PUBLISHED FOR

THE

AMERICAN

SCHOOL

OF

CLASSICAL STUDIES AT

ATHENS

HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

CAMBRIDGE,

MASSACHUSETTS

1931

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PRINTED AT

THE

HESTIA PRESS 3571

ATHENS,

GREECE

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THIS

publication

of the results

of

the

excavations carried on

at

Corinth

by

the American

School

of

Classical

Studies

at

Athens is

in

charge

of

the

Publication

Committee

of

the

School.

The

general

editor is

Professor

Harold North

Fowler.

Opinions expressed

are

those

of the individual contributors.

GEORGE H. CHASE

HAROLD N.

FOWLER

DAVID

M. ROBINSON

Publhcaton

Committee.

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PREFACE

THE

preparation

of

this

volume

was undertaken

in 1926

and

the

manuscript

was

completed,

except

for

some minor

changes,

before

my

departure

from

Greece in

1928.

I

have endeavored to

give

the

text,

with

photographs

or

drawings,

of

the

inscriptions

found

during

the

course

of

excavations

at

Corinth

from 1896

to 1927.

Many

small

fragments

listed

in the

following pages

were

not

discovered

during

actual

excavations,

but

were

brought

to the

museum

by

inhabitants of

Old

Corinth

who

chanced

to

find

them in the

neighboring

fields.

Such

accessions were

noted

in

the

regular

inventory

as

soon

as

possible

and with

such details about time and

place

of

discovery

as

seemed

reliable,

but

for

many fragments

of

this

kind

there is

naturally

no

satisfactory

record.

Where

the

place

and

date

of

fiding

are not

known

I

have indicated

the

uncertainty

in

the

text.

This volume

includes, therefore,

the

Greek

inscriptions

of

Corinth now

preserved

at

Corinth,

even

though they

were not all discovered in the American excavations. It

does

not,

however,

include

inscriptions

on

terracotta nor the

most recent

discoveries

made

by

T.

L.

Shear

since

1925

in

the area

of the

theatre. The

inscriptions

are all

now

in

the

epigraphical

collection

at Old

Corinth,

unless

some

other

location

is

specified

in

the

commentary.

I

am

indebted to

many

people

for

help

in

editing

this collection. The

work

at

the

press

has been taken

over almost

entirely

by

Mr.

and Mrs.

Oscar Broneer.

Miss

Dorothy Cox assisted in the preparation of many of the drawings of individual

inscriptions.

In

preliminary

studies

I

have

had

the

help

of

A. B.

West

and

Miss

B. P.

Mc

Carthy,

who devoted considerable time to

the

organization

of

material

at

Corinth.

I

should not

neglect

to mention also that earlier

studies

by

the late

Professor K. K.

Smith

greatly

facilitated

my

own

compilation. Finally,

I

acknowledge

specific

obligation

to A.B.

West

for the restorations

proposed

in

No.

76,

and to

Campbell

Bonner

for

the

restorations

proposed

in

No.

1

30.

Professor

West

informs me that

the

reference

given

on

p.

74

should be

to

Latin 80

instead

of

to

Latin

108.

Ann

Arbor,

Michigan

February

14,

I93I1

B.

D.

MERITT

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ABBREVIATIONS

J.A.

............

American

Journal

of

A

rchaeology.

'A

Q

.

e2x

.........

Aaooytxov

Aei2tov.

Ath.

Mizt

.

.......

..

littezlungen

des

Deutschen

Archdologischen

Instituts,

Athenzsche

A

bte'lung.

B. 3.

A.............

Annual

of

the

British

School at

Athens.

C.I. L. ............ CorpusInscritzionum Latinarum.

Daremberg

and

Saglio

Darenberg,

C.,

et

Saglio,

E.,

Dictzonnaire des

Antzquzies

Grecques

et

Romaines,

5

vols.

in

Jo,

Paris,

1877-1919.

Dessau,

H

.

........

Inscrzi9tzones

atinae

Selectae,

3

vols.

in

5,

Berlin,

1892-1916.

Dittenberger,

Syll.

..

Dittenberger,

W.,

Sylloge

Inscrzitionum Graecarum

second

edition],

Leipzig,

I898-1901.

Dittenberger, Syll.

..

Dittenberger,

W.,

Sylloge

Inscritzionum

Graecarum

[third

edition],

Leipzig,

1915-1924.

G.

D.I.

........

Collitz, H.,

and

Bechtel, F.,

Sammlung

der

griechischen

Dialekt-

Inschrzften,

4 vols. in 7, G6ttingen,

I884-1915.

I.

G

........... Inscrztbiones

Graecae.

Larfeld,

W...

Handbuch der

griechischen

Epzfiraphzk,

Leipzig,

I898-I907.

Latin

............

Corinth. Results

of

Excavatzons conducted

by

the American

School

of

Classical

Studies at

Athens.

Vol.

VIII,

Part II.

Lat/iz

Inscritzions.

N.

T

.. .... .. ..

N.ovum

Testamentum.

1Iao .............

.

IIaQa-Qraa.

Pauly-Wissowa .... .. Real-Encyclopddieder classischenAltertumswissenschaft,Stuttgart,

I894-.

Pros.

Imp.

Rom

......

Prosopographiz

Imfperzi

Romani;

edited

by

E.

Klebs,

H.

Dessau,

and

P.

von

Rohden,

Berlin,

I897-I898.

R.

E. G

.........

Revue

des

Etudes

Grecques.

S.

E.

G

...........

Supplementum

Epigraphicum

Graecum.

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CONTENTS

Page

LAWS

AND

DECREES

......................................

..

1

CATALOGUES

AND

BOUNDARY

STONES

........................

11

PUBLIC MONUMENTS

AND

DEDICATIONS. ........... ..

32

SEPULCHRAL

MONUMENTS

GREEK

AND

ROMAN

.................... ................

86

BYZANTINE ..................

.........................

..

92

BYZANTINE

INSCRIPTIONS

OTHER THAN

SEPULCHRAL MONUMENTS

...

.

119

MISCELLANEOUS .... ...... ...... ............ .. .......... . ....

132

IN D

ICES .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. ..

.

169

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LAWS

AND

DECREES

(Nos.

1-10)

1.

Fragment

of

a

stele

of

pale

brown

poros

stone,

found

in

1898

during

excavations

on

the terrace

of the

temple

of

Apollo,

about 25

metres

southeast of

the

southeast

corner of

the

temple.

Inv. No. 1.

Height,

0.25

m.;

width,

0.19

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

(only

one

upper

corner

of

the

original

block

is

preserved).

Height

of

letters,

0

-

0.033

m.;

M

=

0.063 m.

I

G.

IV,

1597; Dickerman,

'Archaic

Inscriptions

from

Cleonae and

Corinth',

A.J.A. VII, 1903, pp. 154-156 (with photographic reproduction).

Face

A

IOWLtv[--

-

-To]so]Qg

XOXQO-

Face

B

[-

-

]a

x[-

-

-]h[-

i]

X

No.

i

The letters

of this

inscription

belong

to

the Corinthian

alphabet,

and

the

boustrophedon

order

of

writing

on

both

faces

indicates

a

relatively

early

date,

not

so

early

however

as that of

the

Deinias

monument,

I G.

IV,

358

(Dickerman).

To

the

left

of the final iotapreservedin the first line of Face A the line of breakage of the stone

follows

for

about

one centimetre

the

edge

of

a

bevelled

cutting

characteristic

of

the

deeply

incised

letters

of

the

inscription,

which

I

interpret

as

part

of the letter K.

On

Face

B the

first letter

following

the

E

in

line

2

seems

to have been

M,

for

it

exhibits

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2

CORINTH

the same small

inset

stroke near

the

top

of

the first vertical bar which is

characteristic

of the

M

preserved

on Face

A.

The

contents

of the

inscription

remain

obscure,

though

the

readings

on

Face

A

support

Fraenkel's

conjecture

that the

inscription

dealt

with

regulations concerning

sacrificial

ceremonies.

Perhaps

the first

word is the name of

a Corinthian month

(cf.

No.

2).

Some

of the

letters show traces

of red

paint

2.

Three

contiguous fragments

of

grayish

marble,

which

together

form

the

upper

right-hand

corner of a slab surmounted

by

a

pedimental

decoration.

Found

in

1902

behind

the

shops

on

the Lechaeum

Road and

in

the

filling

beneath

the north

end of the

Basilica.

Inv.

No.

259.

Height,

0.31

m.;

width

(across

the inscribed

field),

0.277m.;

the thickness

(through

the inscribed field) varies from 0.032 m. at the top to 0.051 m. at the bottom.

Height

of

letters,

0.007 m.

-

0.009

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

336,

No.

62;

R.E.G.,

1921,

p.

432.

.'E

r

-

- -

QGLcr-a,OlvLxacOiv

(FuqV6S),

['EntaiNL

]

Lxa8 gAkxdvoQot

AiyLui)

[_v

taV]avtl

aL@6)QL

latsXs: EvoVS

?-

[]o

XO

L]

YVdL

S

TEL

wESL

MX

C(v

[8

av

voov

5

3J(FPtaLI~O6iktLv

xaL

XQEiL(XV

'O1IcJLV

1X-

xvJoiaL

xvtaIL]v&asoILL

Lx86av

'Ake-

_

\

R[vu,]T0o)~, ~oXcav,

ook

':ta[

C[dvoQog

AiyLTi

Ti

TLat

EVO].

L

atL

XoV

''/

'ba[Stai

lT

^

xtlT,.

- --

-

No.

2

Line

1:

The

name of

the

eponymous

magistrate,

either

secretary

(cf.

Nos.

7 and

8)

or

prytanis

(Kern,Inscrziften

von

Magnesia,

42 and

44;

G.D.

1

389,

31

80,

3199

ff.;

cf. Anthol.

Gr.,

VII,

619)

may

have been

OeQaiXag.

ADoLvLxaLov

s

recognized

as

the

name of

a

Corinthian

month

from the

Corcy-

rean decree discovered

at

Magnesia

(Inschriften

von

Magnesia,

No.

44).

Line

6:

dE?T?Q@ov.

On

the introduction

of the

first

person

cf.

Larfeld, I,

pp.

528-529.

'Soe

T

atL

fxxkr(ial.

The formula of

decree

is

omitted

at

the

beginning and

placed

after the

statement

of facts.

Cf.

Smith,

l.

c.

Line

7:

exxhroiaL.

Restored from

Inschriften

von

Magnesia,

42,

line

10.

Cf.

Smith,

l.

c.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

3

The forms

of the letters indicate a

date

for

the

inscription

near the

first

half

of the second

century

B.C.

3.

A

slab

of

Acro-Corinthian

limestone,

broken on all

sides

except

the

right,

found

in a late level near the east

end of

the Northwest

shops.

Inv. No. 248.

Height,

0.168

m.;

width,

0.246

m.; thickness,

0.074 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.008

m.

-

0.01 5 m. Omicronand theta are small.

Smith,

A.J.

A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

340,

No.

63;

R.E.G.,

1921,

p.

432.

['ETsLr1

-- ---

-]

(unknown

number

of lines

lost)

[

] -

-t]5

E

[

- - - - -

-

]aaav

?zL-

[lX4Elav

xJOL1i]OaTO

80otE

5 [ati

Exxyyo]

a

XalQeoi(aov

[ -

- -

-]aLia

vvv jQ6oteVov

[sElFv

x]al

EfEQYytaV

TaS

[6XLoos]

T-iv KOQLviOiV

iv-

[t6v T].?

xal

exy6voig?

vt3jaQ-

10

[X6LV]

8s avlTc

L

Xal T-c&

XOL3[a C(pL]-

[avfo]0o)a

xai

TilLLa

a[(vTXa]

[oaa

xal

toLgs

iXoLs

J3Qote]-

[vo1g

XaL

EvEQYtaLS

-

-

Xtk.]

~~~~~?

"Jr

I*"

..?

f~':'

r ' _ . . ' , ~ , ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

~ ;

. . r .

t

/'J...t,,,~.~:'

. ..."'.:'

.?~ i(?f;ft>>

iX7.l:

No.

/

,:,~.l...

.,

-....~..~.......... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

....

....:'?'.~

,r

,':i'

'.~r

. ''

. .

..'"" :

'

No.

3

The

inscription

seems to

date from

the

first half of the second

century

B.

C.

The

letters

are

not

all

of uniform

size

and are

very unevenly

cut There

are

no

real

finials,

but the

wedge-shaped

hastae

produce

a similar

effect

The restoration is

that

suggested

by

Smith.

Line 3:

[t]&aav

'txL[F?aXELav

ErToJil]oaTo.

Cf.

Larfeld, I,

494.

Line 4:

bo0tE.

The

formula of decree

is

omitted at the

beginning

and

placed

after the

statement of

facts. Cf. also

Inschriften

von

Magnesia,

42.

Parallels

are cited

by

Smith,

op.

cit.,

p.

339.

Line 5:

[exxrjo]aaL.

Restored

from

Inschriften

von

Magnesia,

42,

line

10. In literature

we

hear

only

of a

Corinthian

ysQeovoa.

Cf.

comment

by

Smith,

op.

cit.,

p.

339.

Lines

10-1

1:

[(py^LkadvQ]pUla.

his

forms

part

of the usual

Hellenistic

formula ra korua

cpLkavfQCO)ca

xal

tiUlLa,

and

means here favors

or

privileges.

Cf.

Larfeld,

I,

521 ff.

The

inscription

has a

peculiar

interest as

being

the

only proxeny

decree

known

from

Corinth,

and in

fact

it

is

the

only

direct

evidence

for the existence

of

this

consular

institution

in

that

city.

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4

CORINTH

4. A

bluish-gray

marble

slab,

broken on all

sides

except

the

left,

found in

1902

under

the north

end of the Basilica

to

the

west

of the

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv. No.

255.

Height, 0.245 m.; width, 0.108 m.; thickness, 0.082 m. -0.085 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.006 m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

343,

No.

65;

R.E. G.

1921,

p.

432.

.~..7'-:?~

'?~;~'i~?gii?;-:~~ .:'::~~.,,i~

~".

':

i

,

C

y.

..

''

::.

i.....2.,:

No.

4

???:";:~

=

=============

,:'~ :

:~

i

,.. .~'~. ,99

?*?,i,.

..

i~~~~~~~~*i

:~:,.

...

No.

--- -

--

---

xai

II[E]Lu

[-

-

-

-

ov xal 6i[o; - -

TOSg

sVX.t

--

-

5

V8galL(

[

--

-

otscpavoL

[

----

xatl

?ta0oo[t

----

arcS

av

[

-

-

-

LOV

Xal

TV

Y[

-

-

[

10

Ct

.a8

bLx[a

--

pavoL

xaXox[

-

qpdvoIv

dvayo[Q

- -

-

[A]LovVo

[ - -

..

TOL;

xa

[---

The

only

variation

which

my

text shows

from

Smith's

reading

is

really

confirmatory

of

his

interpretation,

or the second

kappa

of

xaXoxayaftiag

in line

11

is

partially

preserved

on the stone. The letters

are

shallow

and

carelessly

cut,

and

a

few

have

finials.

Some

traces

of

alignment rulings

are

visible,

but

only

above the

lines.

The

date of the

inscription

may

be about the middle

of the second

century

B. C.

Smith

has restored

the

general

sense

of

the

decree,

taking

his

departure

from

the

significant

words

eawtoo[TelsaL]

(line

7), [8Lxa]oTag

line

8),

and

8ix[ag]

(line

10),

and

also from the fact that the

inscription

shows

dialectical forms

foreign

to

Corinth,

viz.,

8Altos

(line

3).

The stone

probably

records honors voted to the Corinthian state

and to

ambassadors sent out

from

Corinth for the

settlement

of

some

dispute

by

arbitration.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

5

I

repeat

here

the

more

elaborate

restoration

proposed

by

Smith

by

way

of

example,

with

some

of his

comments

on

the

individual

lines:

sauv[4toi5

?)-

-]

xal

n[?]io --- -- - -- --

ov

xal

6

[o

-- - - - - --

TOS ?XZa[[QLGTOivaSEi

TOY

oV

TOV

- -

- - -

ESoXCL0aL

col

8biLL

C

ta-]

5

vEoaL

&?V

rov

?6iov

T'OV

Tiov

KOQLvtcov

xcal

oT?qpavoaaL

avtbv XZvoG(OL

oT?pCvEoL

xal

avayoQeoa

V

tl

6

85itog]

oTEcpavol

[tov

ITV

tov

T'v

Ti)v

KoQltvf&Ov

ZXQ@)voi Teqdvcol

CiTL

O- -

xal

ajoo[e[TELXac

avSQac

og

cakov

T

ya0o

- -

-a

-

-trLveoaL

xal

TOgS

8Lxa-]

aUrt

Hav[a- (?) -

xl

II

Eto'kov- -

@QETlg e'vxa l

a

lLxaLovvoV rgTi ELgTOV

8-]

xov

xal

tOv

y[[Qaalcxta

.-

-

-

-

oteqavaL

e

avtovU

-

- - -

-

10

Tov

[t]a;g

8bx[aX

- -

-6

i

x1iQVt

dvayOQE'VETO

TL

6

64O

g

O

TOV

- -

-oTE-]

wpavoT

xahXox[ayacia(g

Evexa

HIava - -

--xal TET1AVXo

- -

-"'

T

&g

tCOV

a(T-]

:pdvmov

Ydvao[QgeUioo

EJCTg

?LEXt1

val

-

-

---]

[A]

lovVicov

[TCOV

JAEYaXov TQayO)l8&v

T(OL

dyo'

V'aQX6LV

8e

atotg

- -

-

-]

[a]ijTo

xal

[xyovot;S

atcv

-- - - -

-

]

Line 2:

HI[?]

Lnl[Xov].

A

hypocoristic

proper

name

which

is found also

in

Rhodes

(ZG.

XII,

1,

788).

Line

3:

b8p4[oS].

Contrast

JraQEcLQ8a[toafLV

No.

2,

line

5).

This

XOlvri

form

probably

did

not enter

Corinthian

inscriptions

until after the Roman

rebuilding

of the

city.

Without

exception

the colonies use

ba[tog,

and this

is

the

form

employed

in

the

Corinthian

decree

at

Magnesia

(Inschr-iften

Zion

Magnesia,

42,

line

1).

5.

Two

fragments

of

bluish-gray

limestone

found at different times

and in

different

localities,

but not so far

apart

as to

preclude

any

attempt

to associatethem.

The

larger fragment

(a)

[Inv.

No.

401]

was

found

in

1907 in an

accumulation above

the

Agora,

south of

the Northwest

Stoa.

The smaller

fragment

(b)

[Inv.

No.

432]

was

picked

up

later

in

the same

year

near

the

Propylaea

on

the late

Greek

pavement

of

the

Agora.

Fragment

a is broken from the

lower left-hand

corner of

the

inscription

and

contains

the

beginnings

of nine lines.

Height,

0.255

m.;

Width,

0.264

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Fragment b is a small piece from the last two lines of an inscription and

contains

ten letters.

Height,

0.14m.; width,

0.07m.; thickness,

0.031

m.

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6

CORINTH

The

letters

in

each

fragment

are ca.

0.005m.-0.007m.

high.

The

original

thickness of

neither

fragment

is

preserved.

Smith, A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

333,

No.

61;

R.E.

G.,

1921,

p.

432.

1FL.~

~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~.

I,

1*~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~?

~.::,..

~.~-

"

'~A~\ ~ 4

,K?:~,.-...

~~~~~

~~~~v4

No.

5a

No.

TolTl

[

- - - -xa

v 8s xal

eISg

jQO8QiLav]

avi6v

xa[l

EXYOvoZSg

v

Toig

day4ixL olt

da J6XO

-i]-

ftqTL,

oXcoS

[xa

d

?6LoS;

cpaivTlTal

3tdavrtaS

TOS

eilg

]-

avITTv

Ev8Q

[y5TOfJVTag

xaTaiacg

xal

QXQitag]

5

Xal

TLf[g

dGM

[o8iLovaa'

av

e

a

v

XL&Lvav

?y86]-

T[oJ]

6

?Y8OTQ-

ayV[ayQaRal

8?

Eig

aUTaV

T1O

daqWLOLa]

xal

ava?tsEv

EiS

[tav Eiao8ov

t6a]

aYOQa[S

Tav ?]-

tci

IEILQTVCal'

T'O

&8dyV[

oRa

b6To

E'v]

vTrTS

6o

aria;].

The two

fragments

have been associated because

they

have

exactly

the

same

quality

of

stone,

and

because the letters

in

both have the

same

size,

shape,

and

peculiarities,

viz.,

the main

strokes

are

merely

short,

disconnected

wedges;

the

middle

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

7

horizontal strokes

in

A

and

E

are

missing;

and it is

almost

impossible

to tell

apart

0,

O and fl.

The

restoration above

is that

proposed by

Smith,

and

portions

of

his

commentary may be appended here. For a complete discussion cf. Smith, op.cit.

Line

4: The

eta

in

FavTniv

is

clear,

giving

an unusual

xoLVoi

orm.

But the

Doricisms

of

this

inscription

are not of the most

marked

variety.

Cf. the form

HIlQ1vaL

in

line 8.

Line

6: The

'ybso-qQ

was

responsible

for the

shaping;

inscribing,

and

setting

of the

stone. Cf. LG.

XII,

5,653,

line

59;

Tillyard,

B.S.A.

XII,

1905-1906,

p.

443.

Line

7:

ig

trav ?'o080ov

trig

dyoQ&g.

The

restoration s

rendered

more

plausible by

the

fact that

fragment

b

was

actually

found

by

the

Propylaea,

which

are in

fact

i

tIELQrqVaL.

Line 8: The formula restored

in

this line

is

sufficiently

common.

Examples

are

cited

by

Smith.

6.

Fragment

of

bluish

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1925

in

the

area

west of the

Lechaeum

Road and north

of

the Basilica.

Inv.

No.

764.

Height,

0.07

m.; width,

0.087

m.;

thickness,

0.072 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.007

m.

-

- -

-

']aavto

-- -- -- - --

--

-

-

UXQLVaV

dxoX[oifh(og

- -

--

--

--

FLO)V

cpaLVTITaL

- - - -

-

vtQo

}c

u s

ol

No

6

Enough of the stone is preserved to indicate that the inscription is from a

decree,

or

perhaps

from

a

diplomatic

letter. There

is

little, however,

on

which

to base

a

restoration,

and

I

have made

no

attempt

in that direction. The

letters

are

small

and

well

cut,

and

may

belong

to the

late

third or

early

second

century

B.

C.

7.

Fragment

of

a

poros

block,

partly

curved,

which seems to have formed

at

one time

part

of

an

architrave

of

Corinthian

order,

discovered

in

1900 built into a

foundation wall

just

southwest of the

Propylaea.

Now

in

the excavations at

Old

Corinth. Inv. No. 6.

Height,

0.48m.;

width,

0.72

m.;

thickness,

0.42 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.05 m.

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8

CORINTH

Powell,

A.JA.

VII, 1903,

p.fI33,

No.8; Smith,

A.JA4.

XXIII,

1919,

pp.

346-347.

...

'..:'

NO.

?.

No.

7

[-

]

as

Qa[l4aLe<

LJ(?)

-

-]

['EELS]ij

6

IV.'

o

[

-

-

]

The

restorations

are

those

proposed

by

Smith,

who considers

that

the

inscription

may

have been

part

of a

decree.

8.

Fragment

of

yellowish

Acro-Corinthian

limestone. Inv. No.

11 3.

Height,

0.12m.;

width, 0.06m.;

thickness,

0.045 m.-0.055m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 S5m.

Powell, A.JA.

VII, 1903,

p.

41,

No.

16;

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

347.

'4

No.

8

['E3l

yeJ]alC[w[Tio

--

(name)

-

['EteLbS]

180

[TO

o

-- -

]-

The

inscribed surface

of

the

stone

is

surmounted

by

a small

gable,

which

slopes

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

9

in

such

a

way

that the left

margin

of

the

inscription

is

determined as

given

above.

The

restoration is

that

proposed by

Smith.

9.

Fragment

of a marble

slab,

preserving

the

original

right

edge

and

portions

of the

original

back

surface,

found in 1905 in the

precinct

east of Glauce. Inv. No. 391.

Height,

0.21m.;

width,

0.1

5m.;

thickness,

0.054

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.031 m.

-

0.037

m.

Smith,

A.JA.

XXIII,

1919,.

p.

346,

No.

66.

-

a

_- _- - - - - -- - - s E

No.

No.

9

That at

least two

more

lines followed

the word

E'SotE

s

proved

by

the

ruling

of

lines

to

guide

the

stone cutter

in

his

alignment

of

the letters on the stone.

Smith

conjectures

that

we have here the

fragment

of an

honorary

decree.

10.

Inscription

on reverse side of

a

water basin

of

white

marble,

broken

away

at the bottom. Once

in the

possession

of

OsoEpdvqS PeVTql;

at New

Corinth.

Now in

the museum

at

Old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

902.

Height

of

the

inscribed

surface,

0.45

m.;

width,

0.61

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

Milchh6fer,

Ath. Mitt.

IV,

1879,

p.

160;

Schmidt

and

Koehler,

Ath. Mitt.

VI, 1881,

p. 353; Dittenberger, Sylloge2,422; I.G. IV, 364; Dittenberger, Sylloge3,904;

Philadelpheus,

'AQX.

skT.,

918,

HIaQ.

,

5,

No.

8.

(with

photograph);

SE.

G.

1,

64.

ODX(d3Log)

OVX:(LOg)

MaxaQLOg

kaY(XQ6otatog)

dvt(ktaT0o)

X8y8L'

cp60og

xai

c/yvola

Tr)v

8LxaXoOv?tov

QEtJQraiOo

xal

8LiTSe

0

VOtLo)V

pa3aL-

o&al,

?eL

TOfO

iLxaatOTi-O-JEQ

ol8a

ovJPalvov-

5

Tjg

TCOV

o6CLvO

jtooTEQLoOC

orqias,

[ ]ir:E 6 pouvX6dLevog

eXQ@ataL

8L'

aYVOLCa

[IVn]b

nri djSeLQiag

tjLSEi(rLo.

dLq)oxTQ@ov

[8%El]ueT?V

alt

lG T

el

1o

8xaatroi

2

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10

CORINTH

[ex

T]oD

JtQoOtacLT0g

vop3j

fi

TEE

TO

v6-

10

[iOVt

- - -

-]

N d

Y A

n

MAlAPIOCO

N

A N

A t

E c r

C

OOBOCKAIAFNO1AT

NLIKAZOlWN H

E C z -

HCUJKAil T E O N

O M I

Z

L U N A

C C A cAEEITOYIKACIT

Y O n c

C o t i

ACYnMBAl

O N

T H

C

T W U n

N

O H

tNAnOCT

P l C e I

W B O H

e l A C

\ h

T E O B O Y

OneNOCK

g t

XHCeAl

A I A

N

O A N

,THCAncH

IACnIEZ(CC eWaAP

T E W U K

V C n

NECTNAY

Y

N

F

n

F s T

HrN

H H

T

T O

Q

No. Io

Schmidt

and Fraenkel

(A.G.

IV,

364)

agree

in

assigning

the

inscription

to

the

fourth

century

A.D. I have followed the restoration of

Dittenberger except

at

the

beginning

of lines

8

and 9 where the

spacing

of the letters has

necessitated

a

slight

change

in

the

orthography

and

in

the

arrangement

of the words

within

the line.

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II

CATALOGUES

AND

BOUNDARY

STONES

(Nos. 11-22)

11.

Fragment

of bluish

marble,

with left

margin

preserved,

found built into

a

modern

wall near

the

southern

side of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

734.

Height,

0.35

m.;

width,

0.30 m.;

thickness,

0.1 28 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.008m.

'A..

I

I~~~~~~~I

x',

/

j7

No

ii

1 .

...<

3;i _

x r

N II

Ar?

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12

CORINTH

AI-

n

Kaqc)lo60QoO;

'AQL-T[-

-

liodX0XaQlg

l0oaO[Evov;]

AaLoftFQQ@T

OQavlaxo[v]

5

'AQXlt-:XI;

'AQXlUovu

laprQ@?ag;

N

lxoSvo

[i]

AE-E

AaxaivsTos

Aatovvio[v]

AE-

n

10

'EXE[vr;

'E[--

--]

Oevpvaaoto [-

-

-]

XdalOg

Ao

[

-

-]

KY- F

'AQLaTY[vl-

- - -

-

15

-___

_

-

The

left

edge

of

the

stone

is dressed

with

anathyrosis

for

the

reception

of

another

block.

The

rear surface

is worn

smooth,

as

though

by

water

or

long

exposure

to friction,and near the right hand side there is a deep hollow. The stone was probably

re-used at

some

time as

part

of

the

coping

of a

well,

with the

original

face

downward.

The letters

are well

cut,

and

indicate

as

a

probable

date

for

the

inscription

the

latter

half

of

the

fourth

century

B.C.

In

line

12

the name

XdaQoog

A[-

-

-]

was

inscribed

in a different

hand,

and

with

lighter

strokes.

The

letters are

of

approximately

the same

date,

however,

as

those

of

the

rest

of

the

inscription.

The

meaning

and

purpose

of

the

rubric

headings

remain

obscure.

In

line

13

the

digamma

s

worthy

of

attention.

12.

Two

fragments

of

white

marble found in

1908.

Although

they

have no

point

of contact

they may

be

associated

because

of

the

similarity

in

size

and

character

of

the

letters,

and

because

of

the

identical

quality

of

the stone. Inv. No.

460.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No. 460

b):

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.043

m.;

thickness,

0.01

8

m.

Height

of

letters

varies from

0.007

m.

to

0.01

3m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No. 460

a):

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

.0.04

m.;

thickness,

0.012

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.008

m.

Fragment

a is broken

on all

sides

and

seems to

contain letters

from the end

of one column and from the beginning of another.

Fragment

b is broken

away

except

at

the

left,

where the

nlargin

is

preserved.

Fragment

a

has

been

placed

above

fragment

b

because

of

the

slightly

larger

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

13

letters.

It

is also somewhat

thicker than

fragment

b

and

its

position

higher

in

the

inscription

is determined

by

the fact that the stone

diminishes

gradually

in thickness

toward

the bottom.

-,AII

'o

No.

I2

Br

c~r

'Ac*p?N.

-2

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14

CORINTH

13. Corner

fragment

of

a

white marble

plaque

with a

raised border

0.04m.

in

width,

found

in

1899 east

of

the

temple

of

Apollo.

Inv.

No. 3.

Height,

0.24m.;

width,

0.255

m.;

thickness,

0.04 m.

Height of letters,

0.01 5m.

1.G.

IV, 1605;

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903

p.

54,

No.

30;

R.E.G.,

1904,

p.

247.

Z4',i

^KVrx

P

AEXTQQoy

I

KQ

P

W

N H

\

KoQOV

[T

KE

AAA\IHN

A$

Ke(paXUrv

[t

B

i

T\

BoLai

T

K\ITLUP

T

S\

KXtop

;7

M

E(CHNH

T

iY

MrqOvr

e

No.

13

The

inscription,

which

is

cut

on

the sunken

field

in

the

centre,

records the

names of

states

belonging

apparently

to

a

confederacy,

though

for

what

purpose

they

were

associated we do

not know.

Fraenkel

suggests

(I

G.

IV,

1605)

that the

enigmatic

letters

ET

may

perhaps represent

the

word

Et(XEsaav),

nd

that

the

numerals

which

follow

may

represent

contributions

of

money.

For a

similar

list of

states

cf.

also

.G. IV, 619.

14.

A

headless

marble

herm

with

inscriptions

on

three

sides,

found in

1917

in

the field of

Constantine

Roumeliotis near

the

<<Gymnasium>>.

ow in

the

Museum

at

Old

Corinth.

Inv. No.

751.

Height,

1.34m.;

width,

0.32m.;

thickness,

0.26m.

The

height

of

the

letters varies

somewhat. In

the

first

line of

Face

a the

height

is

0.022m.,

and in

the

other

lines

ca.

0.013

m.

On

Face

b the

average height

of

the

letters is 0.01

3 m.

On face c

the

average

height

of

the

letters

is

0.01

m.

There

may

still be

seen on

the

top

of

the block

the

cuttings

by

which

the

head of the

herm was

attached,

and in

the

centre

of

Face a

is a

square

hole

into

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

15

which the

phallic

emblem,

carved

separately,

was

inserted.

The

inscription

on

Face a

E

T

O Y

A . A n F O T H

ENACT

I<A1EAPOZ

NIKH

Z

mrAPknRFEPoY

Aln

IAEYKin

AIA

n

A

A

n

AT

Z

-ni-

-N

OYI

MinN

l(AIZAP

OYNh

SO

N

N

IIIno'

El n

E

EN I

nnIA

E

0

-

HI

ArFnNO

ZO

AN

.pA

IE ta

tnnoi

I

AMIOS

nAlAA

E

E

TAl

0

AFEN

E

-

A

Tl

A

/

A

iE

TOMAx

AN p

Al

OrE

N HZ

ATE

IN02

ArE

NE

NT

I 0

X

0

2

A

ANAPA

xInn

O

_

A

FENE

IAO

ENO

IAI

A

A Yr

I

On

Po

Z

n

T

AF

ENE

OY

F

A

NAPEY

A

E

AH

FAH

A

AAE

A

AN P

A

Y

'A

\A/\A$TYPANNbYAE

_AN lnPE

Y

5

Tor

Nt<PATiloTn

FNfTAi

ItNIEPON

TOrANiPATIONTn.NAFENEinNIE PON.

AN

APAC

F

P

-ENH

2

O

A

E

ITHN

MAPkO

:

A

n

n

N O

nAE

-ZANPEY-

No.

I4

Face a

nOOAhEMXTHP ON

n

TY

PPANIOZ

i

YO?OtAAoo

tbO

NE:nTEPO'Z

ATOBATH

N

r

O0 YA/NOI

.

/QOn

Po

KAc,

ZYN

nPLAL

nQ

AlntH

No.

I4

Face

b

IAAnlEF

A

JAT

PO A Hr

E

TPAT

r:OY/

o z

HPYKA Z

I

INOHHP

nTINOHPO.

GOE

FIOIHTA:

T

0

1H

TA

E

l<ATIO

fYTO

ZI

<AA

Z

YPA O'

C

ENkn MiU,.FPA1K-

AN

TINIO

EYM

C

-1t

AYAHTA

_

r rE

N

TKIOY

Z

HN

NNI

KIOAPI TH

O'iHFf

. I,1.

<I

OA

Pn

LOY

I

\N

Tt

OXO .SANT1OXOY

KA

I

A

No.

I4

Face

c

has

been

almost

obliterated.

Only

Face

b

and

Face.c

are

moderately

well

preserved.

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16

CORINTH

Face a

"ETOsg

Al

d6o

Tfis

ev

'AxT[CiO]()

KaiaaQos

yixqr

MaQXWo(t)

QOZ)[iL]Xio(L)

[xaCl

Aie,uxic(t)

Ai;[ilo(L)

Aa[Lq]a(L)YldAT[o0ls

5 'Eail

da]yovo[}Ta]ov

I[,],ltiLov

KaLoaQ[iv-

- -

?]ovS[ou]

Ztev[

-I-,-.]vtno

'E[hUrvoS].x&[v

S]?

25

---

vacat

0.20m.

'Ev[tEx]loav]

30

nralSes

o-

-

-

- -

- -

-

.0

?

ayvog

o- -

- -

--

"AvSQag

otd&lov]

[IHo]os?il?ltog-

-

-

-Eadtos

lHaClas

ota8to[v]

35

'AYE[,vVIu]a[t]b[Lov]

['Ayeveiovs iavXov]

40

IlaT8a[s

Mbauvov]

['AQ]at6IAaX[og

-]

"AvQ[as

icautov]

AlOyS

--

-- --

--

- -

45

IIallas

[tevrna'&ov]

[Kp]aTTvog

-

'Ayevs[ios

atsvTaaov]

['A]VTioLoX

Aa

-

-

"Av8Qa[s evtaRXov]

50

- -

-tXessv

- --

Hais8a

[?rdrv]

--7lTJtO9-

-----L---

o

- -

- -

'AYFvF[L'oitaXkv] 55

[D]i

6teXvos

A--_

_

"AvbQag

?daYxv]

-

-apox-

-

- - - -

- - - -

HIasbas

4'UY[Euv]

60

AL6OoQos

n[okXtaioLu

AkstlavbQEsv

'AyevFeiouS

[Viu]Y[l

nV]

'AoxTlEtdSb1;'Ao[x'LdLbo.u]

'AAkXav[bQ@s1]

"AvbQas

nv[^y/i'v]

laSadXca

TvQdvvou

AkXlavsbQeis

65

To

j4[a]vxQlLTpLv

OWVai8o)v

iEQOV

TO

3avxQaTlOV

Tv

a&

YsViov

ieQOV

"AvfQas

ilaV]xQ[adTov]

-

-YVT;-

-

O&uFeIT'tV

70

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

17

MaQxog

A(oQOVOgo

AXetavsQs6g

Face b

vacat

0.

1

35

m.

JOXEtI,TT]QlOV

H.

TuQQaLdvLog

.

VbU;

K6oi[obo[]

V?(OTSQOS

75

dTop[3d,tv

r.

OVetpoiAXXLoS

.

vb0

QO6xXo

auvo)iQLbl

3OkLiX(L)

vacat 1.08ni.

Face c

H

aQOXj t]d[y;]

-

IIaT[@oAXg

ET:aT[dO

--ov

-os

80

xqQvxas

[27i]YvQ

EJIv0NQOS

E[]-

:OLqTTag

[r.]

Kda6oos

r.

6oS

Rd[xxos]

85

ZvQax6oLo[g]

Evxo

tLOyQadcpo

ug]

r.

'AVTOVLO;

ESlu[L]iQo[S]

3

r.

FsvvuXLO

ivolv

N-

-

-

90

xfitaQLot

g;

ox

riycoviooa[To]

xt(aLo(Lt)8oS

'AVTioXOS

'AvlrtL6ov

Kaloa[QEs'g]

vacat

0.96m.

Lines

1-2:

The

date of

the

inscription

is

given

as

33

years

after the

victory

of

Augustus

at

Actium,

i.e.,

in

the

year

3 A.D.

Lines 3-4: The

consuls

for

the

year

3 A.D. are also

given,

Marcus

Servilius

and

Lucius

Aelius Lamia.

Line 5:

Following

the date

by

consular officers is the name

of

the

agonothete.

Unfortunately

the stone

is

so

mutilated here that the

name

cannot be

restored,

but the name

of

the

games

can

still be

deciphered.

The

inscription

records a

list

of victors in

the Isthmia

Caesarea.

Line 8:

After the name of

the

agonothete

followed the names of

the

hellenodikae,

introduced

by

the

phrase

'EUr.voSbxCio

8e.

Cf.

No.

15,

line 3.

Lines 33 ff.: The

contests here described were

arranged

in

three

groups,

for

boys,

youths,

and

men,

and

this

sequence

recurs

throughout

as far

as line

69. For the

names

of

the

contests cf. notes on No.

16.

Line

45:

A

Samian

boy ALOY'VTq; loy&vouv

s recorded

as

having

won

the

TrabTov

and the

ciauog;

at the

Isthmia

in an

inscription

which has been dated

appro-

ximately in the first century B.C. Cf. S.E.G. Vol. I. No. 380 d.

Lines 66-67:

The

contests

of

the

boys

and

youths

in the

pancratium

were

draw-

matches and

the

prize

of

victory

was

given

to the

god.

For

the

formulae cf.

Gardiner,

Greek

Athletic

Sports

and

Festivals,

p.

206. The

existence of

these

matches

at

the

Isthmian

games

is also

attested

in

Inschriften

von

Magnesia,

Nos.

180-181.

Line 76:

The

Vibulii were

a

prominent

Corinthian

family.

Cf.

Latin,

No.

95;

also

C.LL.

III,

543,

544.

3

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18

CORINTH

Line

77:

The

inscription

on

Face b

was never

completely

cut.

Line

85:

Cf.

No.

19,

line 11.

Cf. also

the

commentary

on

No. 16.

15.

Triangular

pedestal

of

white

marble,

inscribed

on

all

three

sides,

found

in

the

neighborhood

of

the

<<Gymnasium>.

Now

in

the Museum at

Old

Corinth.

Inv. No.

750.

Height,

1.

0

m.;

width of each

face,

0.46m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.023 m.

i

Akrl

IAN

O

cAAI-NOAl1KlUWNAC

)YkIOYnOhYMlNOYY

*\YA I

OY

A7

IOY

TW\i

i

'

IYII-ITOY

"

AI-I

/ \

,

\

I

AA

O

y

)YIOA

IANOY

rc U

NJ

Q

Y

OPkCC

A

liOY

I<OPIN(

-11-llOY

,

.

n,

.A[AA

NTIOY

\

TCC

N

\1x

ON

JN

:O

IUWN

C

\

TAC

Ur?N -ICI

CP(

h,

\PEYC

HPY

AC-

AIC

CXAPI

A/l-(CA

A'

l

K

No.

15

Face

a

KIO

UPAOYC

nAlA'l0 CA\Yn IN

OC

HC

PINOIOC

nn

IK

ON

noACu

I

CTI-IH?O

FKA^WAiOC

,

i\UJNKOPIN

0

AnBATlKOCnlKACAYIY

CCEC

Ty

hKAWAI

CB

-POC

AY( TE

IA

NOC

'

KOPINOIOC

CYNUJI~A

n

IKI-I

.I

nok

I

c

AN

TN

CE I

'T

N

KCAXIlTif

O

Al

K

\1

i

NI

CCTX

AI.CTO

C

KO

CYNUP I ITCACIA

AI\IOC

'

'OCKQ

FOC

A

NTIN

CI

THC

TrCOP

nnW

F

TA

I

KW

TC

M

O

ATI-iC

Al.

IANOY

I

PO

CA

I

CA

-ITI

TCACI

U

rNKOP

NI-i

A

10

C

n

OYAX

C

PN'

wr

CnII

AAY?

O

CO

A

IAIFC

OC

TCOP?FIFnnlre

CA

n

Oun

-'lOCKAC

0 C

c

CI-CA

P

c I

oc

Cn

iB

A

T-P

I

N

KUJJ

0 C

?i

A

A

I

OC

KOPINOioC

No.

15

Face

b

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

19

N C

U)

\

NI(

I

u3JNIETAOAC

JN

AC

APUEIOC

A\',_,

U\IC\

\

.n\

rAACIAN

i1

CE

A~Cfic/\

A

C

dFcc

\

KiA

,

,

ClCNIN' C

No.

i

Face

No. 15

Face

c

The

stone is broken

away

at the

top,

though

it

is

probable

that

not

many

lines

of

the

inscription

have

been

lost.

The

greatest damage

has

been done

by

the

wearing

away

of

the

surface

of the

marble.

Only

Face b

is

well

preserved.

Face

c

is

almost

wholly

destroyed.

The

character

of

the letters

and the contents

of the

inscription, especially

the

names,

indicate

a

date

during

the

latter

part

of

the

second

century

A.

D.

The

inscrip-

tion

is

a

record

of

victors

in

the

Isthmian

games.

Face

a

IIcaxxlavoi

'EEXXvo0iixcOv

8s

[r.

'I]ovkioiu IoAvuaivov

(toi)

[-

-K]XavLovu

MaiCLov'

5

[-

'Av]rCovio

KvLl`TOv

-

-

jaavov

'AvaCij'ov

_-

o)v

'IovXiavou

-

rsuivov

-- --

O

OQaoa

1

0

-

-

-

oiov

KoQLv[iLov]

[-

-

Io

]

tnCou

.

au8lay[o]

[-

-

'Io]EioV-

V

-- -

vacat

[Oi

VE?LXiIa]

TS

1

5

-

N..4..

IKON

[ro;S

adyl]Ovaj

TCOV

I]ja1oicov

Zca[XLGio]Td

-

-[AL]oY?vn;

IEQQ--

-

K[aLo]aQE;v

20

rQuvxags

- -

-

ao[g] XaQixXig

Aavu8x[eIs;

vacal

0.28m.

Face

b

[K]oQViCvOg

xdLaQO(L)0So

25

H.

Ai(;kos 'Akjtvavos

IleQolVtlO

vacat

nOktp,LLGoTQl@OV

30

r.

KXklos

L

koov

KoQivft[lo;]

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20

CORINTH

dJrojpaTLcov

etJ

A.

KaLiaaQis

2spacoz3o

[loi]

A.

KXcoios

BiQog

FavoatTLVLa-

35 v6o

KoeQvLIoS

UvVcOQibL

ncO)?llX(L)

I

nt6oL

'Av-rvoELTO)v

Xs'TITL

7t(OXLXCO(L)

AtxiUvol EZdXQLGTios

oQ(ivitoc)

40

avvco@)QL

T?XsLa(l)

AtXlos

Al6oxoQog 'AVTLVOsiTlg

t8e'Q@LJrCo(L) ao)aXLXO(L)

TEltoxQdTqg

AiXlavoi

Hflovoa(evg)

X?1qtl

TrEico(l)

45

rv.

KOQV'XLogHIoi)iXy

arbT(EQOg)

'EjtL8a'Q

og

6

xai

'AQyt0og

T80fQCiXo)(l) TEX?SiO(L)

IloniL0og

K4eoa{hev1jg

'AQyeFog

?jTLParTiQLOV

50

A.

KXc)8Los

'AQQl8aiOg

KoQivftos

vacat

0.25

m.

Face c

[jaacrov

jrevraiov]

---------

VEWC[t(EQOC)]

'A[yj]veCcov r6vTafiXo[v]

'Ova-

-

A/QYeLo;

'AVbQIwV

Ev[T]a[aXov]

55

r.

AxiLoS-

A-

- -

AvtL(ozXSg)

na[iov-

]----

r.'Ahe,av[~os- - ]

n[

- -

-

-]

60

['Ay7veiov-

- -

]

II.

rF[Q-

---- -

'A[vSQcv-

-

-

-

]

[HIai8cov

avyntIv]

65

['Ayevsicov

avytYvv]

Aat-cov-

- ----

70

'AVaQCOV

uY,yv]

'AvsQ6v

[javxQdtlov]

- - 'EQ0vvl[ - - - -

o6jX

iTrTv]

75

I.

'Q^x[T]]d[I]to(?)-

Ko@Lvtogva

vacat

Line 2: This

line

contains the

cognomen

of

the

agonothete

IIaxxiav6s,

derived from

the

family

name

IIdxxog.

The

fact that

this

name is

in the

genitive

case,

as

are

also

the

names

of the

hellenodikae

below,

indicates that

it

belongs

to

a

formula

of

dating.

Cf. also

No.

14,

lines

5-8,

and

note on

line

8.

Line 3: The hellenodikae were ten in

number,

as

they

were also at

Olympia

at this

time.

(Cf.

Paus.

V,

9,

4

ff. and

the

Scholiast on

Pindar,

Olymp.

III,

22.)

1

G.

IV,

587

records also a list of ten hellenodikae in

the

Nemean

games

at

approximately

this

same date.

Line

14:

The

preamble

of

the

inscription,

giving

the

names of

officials, etc.,

was

separated

from the list of victors

by

a blank

space

of

one

line.

Line 18: The

contests were

divided

into

three

groups,

and those

listed

first

are the

trumpeters,

heralds,

musicians,

etc.

These were

followed

by

the

victors

in

the

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

21

horse

and chariot

races

(lines

29

ff.).

And

finally

came the individual

athletic

contests

par

excellence

(lines

51

ff.).

For

the

order of

record cf. also Nos. 14 and 16.

Lines

32-33: The

daof3aTxov

was

given

in

honor

of Lucius

Caesar,

the son of

Augustus, whose memory was being kept alive a century and a half after his death.

Lines

37

and 41 :

'AVTLvoeiftr

appears

as the 0VLXo0V

of

'AVTLvo1`OnLk;S

r

'Avtlvoela,

the well known town

in

Upper Egypt.

Line 45:

Gn. Cornelius

Pulcher

the

Younger

I

identify

as the

son

of

Gn. Cornelius

Pulcher

known to

us

from

other

inscriptions

of

Corinth

and

of Troezen

(I

G.

IV,

795;

cf.

also

below

Nos.

80-83).

The father's

political

activity

fell

during

the

reigns

of

Trajan

and

Hadrian.

Line

55: The

men's

contest

in the

pentathlon

at the Isthmia is also

mentioned

in

Paton

and Hicks,

Inscritlions

of

Cos,

No. 105.

Line 75: 6jie[iTqv]. Cf. Pauly-Wissowa, s.v. Hoplites. The entry is paralleled in

No.

14,

line 70.

Cf.

also

the

commentary

on

No. 16.

16. Two

mutilated

blocks of

white

marble which

originally

formed

part

of

a

monument

in

the

shape

of a

triangular

prism

surmounted by a pyramidal cap. The larger

fragment

(Inv.

No.

49)

was found in

a

Byzantine

level

northwest

of

Peirene in

1898. The smaller

fragment

(Inv.

No.

549)

was discovered

in

1914

built into a

late

wall

in

the

northeast

corner

of

the Peribolos of

Apollo.

Inv.

No.

49:

height,

0.52m.;

width, 0.295m.;

thickness,

0.163

m.

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.03m.;

in

other

lines,

0.01

7 m.

Inv.

No.

549:

height,

0.24

m.;

width,

0.205

m.;

thickness,

0.11

5

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

7

m.

Inv.

No.

49 has

been

published

by

Smith,

A.JA.

XXIII,

1919,

pp.

348-351,

No.

67;

cf.

also

R.E.G.,

1921,

p.

432.

i'

'~"

'

J ....',

....:

JR

?,i,:

t~

~;;':

~

)?

'

;':

r,

'

?

:Ji;",

.?

.

:?

Noi?

F?e

No'i

a

c

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22

CORINTH

41

No. i6 Face b

Face a

AFAOH TYXH

'EtL

&IuTwov

Av3[o]-

xQaTOQOg

[KJ]aioa-

Peo

(M.

AvQTXALouv)

5

(Koqi6bovu 'AVTo)-

(VEiCV)Q()

:(?(SaT)

[xa]l

r.

'AvacL[(TCou)

Bo1VQ]-

[QO]vu,

Ayovo[teTov]

I86

T]iLp.

KXau[(8ou)

... .]

1

0

[...]

oi

ve.Lx[Tiav]-

TS3s

t'al]

'ET[voL]-

(x&?v?

-

Face

b

Q.-

G

.. .QC.a

vacant

i//bllhllllb

rasura

WlUl

iii

15

....

;i.

..- -

- - .

( Z S ~ I

C h 3 r Y 8 ]

"rC~~~~~~~~~~~~~~j~~~~~~~~y--~~~~~~~~~

,,.e

,,

, .;

;,

'

..

,'

..-,.o~ v. ...

:," .. ~,

?~/~l'~'~ll~

,~,

,

. .,.

~

~ ;

,.. : ..

15~~~~~~~~~':

..."

"~

~"?

"''~ ....'

.. "'

l .

No.

I6

Face c

III// I//

I10

////

raa

I

I

I

*

.

..

(

[o]

NcpoQo[]

20

I/

I11I

/

llh

11,

Ih

r

/111

l///l i

'Dlh

llh

/I1l

- -

-

s- LOl

vacat

.. O

vacat

(the

letters of

the

smaller

fragment

are

illegible)

Face

c

-?---

-

25

30

lacuna

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

23

[iLJrjCtov]

acat

[3roXe ]

]T

QO1

v]

35

[

--

-

] Koeiv0t[oS]

[uIvoQi]bL ao^hLX[](l)]J

[-

--]6vov

'AO[rlvaiog]

[xX1qTL 1r]cXLxo)(L)

40

The two

fragments may

be

associated

because

of

the

proximity

of

the

places

of

discovery

and the

identity

of

size

and

character

of the

writing.

The

three

faces

of the

larger

fragment

are

in

part

preserved,

though only

Face a and

Face

b are

shown

in

the

photograph

above.

Portions

of

only

two faces

of the

smaller

fragment

are

preserved,

but the

angle

which

they

form with each other shows that

they

must be

identified

as

parts

of b

and c of

the

original

inscription.

Face c alone is

shown

in

the

photograph.

The

readings

of Face a

are

given

as

by

Smith,

with

some

variations,

under

the assumption that the date of the inscription was 181 A.D. when the consular

colleague

of

Commodus

was

L.

Antistius

Burrus Adventus.

Cf.

Smith,

.

c.,

for the

confusion between

L. Antistius

Burrus

and

G. Antistius Burrus. The

letters

given

in

parenthesis

in

lines 4-6 were

erased

from the stone. Traces remain

only

of

the rho

(doubtful)

of

AQ)jk(iov

in

line

4,

of

the

omicovn

(quite

clear)

of

'AVTcovewvou

n line

6,

and

of the

initial

sigma

(quite

clear)

of

PGCGaoTroi

n line

6.

The stone

was fractured

apparently

before the

record

which

it

contained

ceased

to be

of

value,

and

the letters

given

in

italics

in

lines

1-3

were

replaced

in

paint

on

the broken

surface

of

the

stone.

Traces

of the

same

paint

are clear

in the

letters

of

the

inscription

proper.

Lines

5-6:

The official

order

of

words

in

the name

of

Commodus

must be

preserved

here,

Commodus

preceding

Antoninus,

for the

omicron in the second

letter

space

before

the

sigma

in line

6

does

not allow

that letter to

be

interpreted

as the

second

sigmza

of

e3Fartou,

as

proposed

by

Smith.

The word

esj3aoctoi

itself

must

have been abbreviated.

Line 9:

There are

two

spaces

for

letters

before

Tt3.

I

restore

&k.

Line

11:

Instead

of

interpreting

this line

as

referring

to the

'EacoJtla

at Corinth

(as

by

Smith)

I

prefer

to

read the letters E&

as

part

of the

word

'EXk*voSlXw)v.

Line 33: For the restorationcf. No. 15, line 29.

Lines

34-38:

For the restorations

cf. No.

15,

lines 30-38.

With

the restorations

as

given

above it

may

be noticed that the

introductory

formulae

follow

in

the same

order

as

in

Nos.

14 and

15:(1)

Date

by

consuls,

(2)

Date

by Agonothete,

(3)

Date

by

Hellenodikae.

This

inscription

and

the two

preceding

increase

considerably

our rather

meagre

knowledge

of the

Isthmian

games.

Cf.

Gardiner,

Greek

Athletic

Sports

and

Festivals,

pp.

220-221

;

and

especially

Pauly-Wissowa,

s. v.

Isthmia.

We find here also

additional

epigraphical

confirmation

of data collected

from

literary

sources. The recurrence

in

Nos.

14

and

1

5

of the words

rcaibSc;,

dysviovs,

v8Qac

shows that there

were

separate

competitions

for

boys,

youths,

and men.

Boys

and

youths,

as well

as

men,

contended

in

the

pancratium

(No.

14,

lines

66-67),

and

yet

the fact that the contests

of

boys

and

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24

CORINTH

youths

in

this event were

both declared a draw indicates that the event was

not carried

to the

extremes

possible

between

men

contestants.

Furthermore,

the

large

number

of

cities

represented

in

these lists indicates

the

cosmopolitan

character

of

the

festival,

at

least

in

the

first

and second centuries

A.

D. In

3 A.

D.

all three

of

the

boxing

contests

(boys,

youths,

and

men)

were

won

by

Alexandrians,

a

fact which indicates that even

the

younger

groups

were rather

well

represented

from

various

points

in

the

Roman

world.

It

is

but

natural,

perhaps,

that

Corinthians

predominate

in

the

victor

lists,

especially

in

the

more

expensive

competitions

with

horses.

In

No.

14 a

complete panel

of

the

musical and

literary

contests

at the

Isthmia

is

given,

in

which

we

find

the

following

events:

ZaXatotds

Trumpeters

(cf.

also

Olympia,

Die

Ergebnisse

er

Ausgrabung,

Vol V.

(Inschriften),

No.

2

32.

First

century

A.D.)

KQV^xas Heralds (cf.also Olympia,Die ErgebnissederAusgrabung,

Vol.

V

(Inschriften),

No. 237.

Second

century

A.D.)

IlolYdg

Poets

'EvxcotoyQdcpovSEncomiographers

Av6hrxdtg

Flute-Players

(Paton

and

Hicks,

Inscriptions

f

Cos,

No.

58)

K&0a(Qlodsg

Lyre-Players

KtLaQqp8oii5

Bards

who

sang

to the

accompaniment

of

the

lyre.

That this

list

is

complete

is evident from

the fact

that the one event

(xLfa-

Qloadg)

which

was

not contested is so indicated. The

list is

paralleled

by

a similar

list

in

No.

15,

of which

only

the

beginning

and end are

preserved:

Lines

18-22

axaTloxdag

KfQ'vxa;

Lines

25-27

KALaQcooogS

One

may

note that the order in which these events were listed had not

changed

in almost

two

hundred

years.

The

records

of victors

in

the contests with

horses

were

listed under the

general

caption

iTe;LXOV

and in the following order (No. 15):

aOXLsLoTIOQLOV

da0opatLxov

(which

apparently

had

been

dropped

by

the time of

Commodus

[cf.

No.

16].

I

assume that

this

is

the

same as

the

entry

d3opa&drlv

in No.

14.)

ouvooQiS&

cokXiLx

(cf.

also No.

16)

XErITL

WcoXxiP (cf.

also

No.

16)

tnd1Qisq 'T(Oli)

TSEQUlI[CpC0oXIXO)

XXuTLQ

TEE

LC(

TEQl_

EoEQCO

?r3lparri@ov

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

25

Finally,

we

have the list of athletic contests

proper,

though

the

damaged

condition of the stone makes

the

reconstruction

of a

complete panel

difficult.

The

number

of

the events

in 3 A.

D.,

however,

may

be determined

from the

space

available

on the stone

in

No. 1 4. After the word

'Ev[six]o

[cav],

which was

cut in

larger

letters

than

the rest of the

list,

there was

apparently

some sort of

introductory

formula (lines

29-32).

Then

follows the record

of victories

in the stadium

race,

in which the name of

the

winner

in

the

men's

competition

(Posidippus

of

Samos)

was

given

first,

in

violation

of

the

usual order

(ralSac, dyeveioiv,

GvCQag).

he victors in

the event

following

were

also

given

out

of the usual

order,

for we must

restore in

lines

39,

41,

and

44

the head-

ings

['AyEveiomS],

a bca[c],

Av8o[ag].

From this

point,

however,

to the end

of

the

list

the

names

of victors were

regularly

recorded under the

recurring

designations

caliag,

dysveioiv,

vc

6Qag,

n

the

proper

order. From No. 14

we

cannot

identify

the

2nd,

3rd,

and 4th events. The fifth event was the boxing contest (for this event at the Isthmia

cf.

Pauly-Wissowa,

I.

.,

and

Insc/hrifen

n

Magnesia,

No.

153);

the sixth

event

was

the

pancratium;

and

the seventh and

last event was the

hoplite

race

in

full

armour

in

which

only

men

participated.

From

No.

15 we

may

determine

that

the

third

event

was

the

pentathlon

(cf.

lines

53

and

55).

I

assume

that the

pancratium,

which

was

not

seriously

contested

in

3 A.D.

(No.

14),

was

open only

to men in the

middle of

the

second

century

and

line

73

of

No.

1

5

has been

restored

accordingly.

The

number

of lines

missing

above

the

preserved

portion

of Face c

in

No. 15

may

be

estimated

as

approximately

10.

This number also

allows the

restoration

of

a

complete panel

of

musical

contests,

the record of which extended from the bottom of Face a to the

top

of

Face b. And

it

allows room also for

the

formulae

of

dating

at the

top

of

Face a

such as

we

find in No. 14.

In

one of

the

inscriptions

of

Cos,

published

by

Paton and

Hicks,

No.

105,

there is an

indication that the

biavao;

should

occupy

the

second

place, coming

between

the

stadium and the

pentathlon.

Cf.

SE.G.

I,

380 d.

We

also know of the

existence

of

the

wrestling

match at the

Isthmia

(Olm01zpia,

Die

Ergebnisse

der

Ausgrabung,

Vol.

V

(Inschriften),

No.

161

[Fourth

century B.C.]),

and

I

propose

that this

should

be

restored as the fourth event in the official order of the Isthmian records, which is, in

fact,

the

only

place

left available for

it.

On

the basis

of

the

foregoing

observations we

may

draw

up

the

following

tentative list

of

athletic events at the

Isthmian

games

under

the

Empire:

(1)

ETd&lOV,

(2)

[Aliauov], (3)

nlvtaclov,

(4)

[FIda'rv],

(5)

rlvy^v, (6)

Hav-

xQOTLOV,

7)

`Oj2EiTTiV.

Of

these

the last was

open

to

men

only.

It

will

be noticed

also

that the order

of events in this

list

corresponds

to the

traditional order

of

precedence

in

which the

games

were

introduced at

Olympia (cf. Gardiner, Greek Athletic Sports and Festivals,

p.

51),

except

that

the

8o0lX65

is

lacking.

17. Four

fragments

of

white

marble which

belong

to

the same

inscription.

4

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26

CORINTH

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

167)

was found in

1900 near

one of

the

Doric

columns

which

are

still in

situ on a

stylobate

near

the

southeast foot of

the

terrace

of

the

temple

of

Apollo. Height,

0.38

.;

width

of left

face,

0.07

.;

width of

right

face,

0.045

m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

192)

was

found in

1902 at a

high

level

above the

eastern

part of the Northwest Stoa. Height, 0.1 53 m.; width, 0.033 m.; thickness, 0.10 m.

Fragment

c

(Inv.

No.

198)

was

found

with

fragment

b.

Height,

0.105m.;

width,

0.062

m.

Fragment

d

(Inv.

No.

829)

was found in

1927

among

the

miscellaneous

frag-

ments

of

the

epigraphical

collection at

Old Corinth. The

place

and

time of

discovery

are not

recorded,

but

the

character of

the

writing

and

the nature of

the

stone

leave

no

doubt that

it

belongs

to

this

inscription.

Height,

0.1

5

m.;

width,

0.12

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Fragment a: Powell, A.JA. VII, 1903, p. 39, No. 12.

Fragments

a+b+c.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

353,

No.

69.

Face

a

Face

b

-

OS9

_Ap: \ ~

-

tavos

5 - yaC

\

M

-a

Ma

--

,:5-

f

H

......

'A-

-

- -

0NT[Z

:

i [oi

V6LXqYa]aVT6g

_ _

_

'A-

CLy-oyE1

A

10

-Tlog

'

HQ

-

5

n

,

_HP

-.

...

lacuna

-

V

15

lacuna

A

AL

-

--10

No.

17

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

27

The letters on Face a are 0.02 m.

in

height;

those

on Face

b

are 0.01

5 m.

in

height.

The

letters on

Face

a show the ends

of

names

(except

perhaps

line

8)

and

are cut within

carefully

ruled lines. The letters on Face b also show the

beginnings

of

names. Lines

3 and

4

of Face

b

have been

erased

with the

chisel,.but

Powell

reads,

even

in

the

erasure,

the

name

TYVL[xf]i]

n

line 3.

The

two inscribed surfaces

meet

at

an

angle

which indicates that there

may

have

been

another

inscribed

surface which

is now

entirely

broken

away.

In

other

words

the

monument is

in all

probability

to be

reconstructed

as a

triangular

block,

with

inscriptions

on the

three

faces.

The

angular edges

were

bevelled back

(like

the

edge

between Face a and

Face

6)

and

this

narrow surface

was left

uninscribed.

A

similarly

shaped

monument

may

be

seen

in Nos. 15 and

16,

and it

is

significant

that these

stelae

both record the

names

of victors in

games.

I

suggest

that

the presentinscriptionbelongs in the same category.The ends of names which appear

in

Face

a,

lines

1

6,

belong

to the list

of the

hellenodikae,

while

the

rest

of

the

names

in

Faces a and

b record the victors

in

the

games.

The

names of

the

contests in

which

they

won

occupied

the

intervening

lines. The

fact

that

these

designations

are

short

and do not

occupy

the

full

width

of the

stone accounts for the

fact that

many

of

the

alternate lines

appear

to be

uninscribed.

18.

Two

contiguous fragments

of

white

marble,

broken

from

the

left-hand

edge

of a

plaque.

Place and

date

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

Nos. 813

and

832.

Height, 0.33 m.; width, 0.165 m.; thickness, 0.05 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

M.

'A[v-ovov

- - -

TLp.

'An[

---

M.

ooukpi[ov

-

r.

'ACovLo'U

- -

5

r.

'Iouxio[v

--

r.

Movo[utbiov

- -

-

-no[

2 . - _ . _

4'

O (

1K('.

.,:

.I

'

N.. . 8

"

I

No. i8

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28

CORINTH

The men listed here all bear

distinguished

Roman

names,

but

it is

impossible

to

identify

them.

The

inscription

may

record the hellenodikae for one of the athletic

festivals at

Corinth,

perhaps

in

the first

century

A. D. The

names indicate

a date for

the

inscription

sometime

during

the

early

empire.

Line 7: Perhaps the restorationshould be

Hov[T1xiovl].

The family of the Puticii were

prominent

in

Corinth

during

the first

century

A.

D.

Cf.

Latin,

No.

106;

also

C.IL.

III,

542.

19. A thick

marble

block found

in

1904 one

metre

below the modern

level

south of

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

*

i

rI

, i i

t

;;.

'% ~ ~

'

.'?:....,

e.,...'

...<..

.::

}

a

,:"llu;??

,,

a

X

; "'

j

1~:iS

;'le i

;

;

s

e

1

''

.r

?

?*s 5, ,.$ '^

'."

.:?.

. :

'

..

*I~,"

?No.

9:,:

.j-

.~

~

..

~~~~~

~~~~~

'..,...?,.,.*,

~:

.

'

..

i?:~~~~~

o y p f i r . .

2a

1

~N.

9

);i ~ ~ ~

r~~~~~~~~ r

No 19

No.

379.

Height,

0.59

m.;

width,

ca.

0.25

m.;

thick-

ness,

0.165 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.01

m.

(cp=0.02

m.)

Smith,

.J.A.XXIII,

1919,p.

351,No.

68.

o0

veILXiavte5 Ta

Kalod@e[a'

E

g]

KaioaQa

f0oV vuLv

EEpaaTOv

Aoytx)l

'EvxwcotCoW

raFio

'JIoViXto

Icov

KoQivtIoc,

6 xal

'A[Qy@iog

?)]

eit

TLitQLOV

aioa@Qa

EOD

sEpaalTO

)U

[i6v]

5

L:?es

Tov

Aoylxcil 'Evxco[ticl

raiog 'IovlXog

"Icov

KOQivIO;t,

6

xal

'AQ[ysEIo

(?)]

EIg;

av

'I[o]vXlav

Ee3aatTiv

Iolti

laTl

10

raiog

K[d]oaaog

OkaXxxog

vuQa[xoLtog]

The block has been

re-cut at the

right

for

use

as a

Byzantine

capital,

and

at

a

still later

period

it

was

apparently

used as a door-step with the inscribed

face turned

upward.

The

result is

that

all

but

the

first

eleven

lines

of the

inscription

have been obliterated.

Line 1 : For

the

Caesarea

cf.

Daremberg

and

Saglio,

s.z. Mention of

the Cae-

sarea

at

Corinth

is made

in

several

inscriptions:

I

G.

IV,

795 and

1600

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

29

(No.

80

in

this

publication);

I

G.

VII,

1856;

No. 81

below;

Dean,

'Latin

Inscriptions

from

Corinth,'

A.J.A.

XXII,

1918,

p.

195.

Line

2:

Competitions

were often

held

eulogizing

the

imperial

personages

in

whose

honor the

games

were instituted.

Cf.

Daremberg

and

Saglio,

s.

vv.

Ludi

and

Laudatio.

Line

1

1:

Cf.

No.

14,

line

85.

The

appearance

of

this

name

here,

as well as

in

No.

14,

which

is dated in

the

year

3 A.

D.,

indicates that this

inscription

must

be dated

in

the

first

century

A.D.,

perhaps

soon

after the

deification

of Livia under

Claudius.

Cf.

line

9.

20.

Fragment

of white

marble

broken

on

all

sides

found

in

1925

in

the

Greek stoa on the southern side of Temple Hill. Inv. No. 771.

Height,

0.1 1

m.;

width,

0.12

m.;

thickness,

0.03

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.01

m.

--

Tow--IO

--

-

-

8llo

,.

No.

20

The letters

preserved

seem

to

belong

to

the ends of

names,

and

the

relatively

large uninscribed space between the names suggests that the inscription may be from

a

list

of victors

in

the

games.

The

relatively

shorter names

recording

the

particular

contests have

been,

of

course,

entirely

broken

away.

21.

A slab of

greenish

white

marble,

six

pieces

of which

are

preserved,

found

in

1926

at

the eastern

end of the

temple

of

Apollo.

Inv.

No. 839.

Height,

0.69

m.;

width,

0.31

m.;

thickness,

0.05

m.

The

inscription

is on the

edge

of

the slab

and contains the initial

letters

of 26

lines of text. It proves that the slab in its present form was sliced off from a larger

block,

but

no

traces

of the

rest

of

the

inscription

have so

far come

to

light.

Cf.

A.J.A.

XXXI, 1927,

p.

71.

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30

CORINTH

AaL

-

Height

of

letters

in

lines

1-9,

0.01 m.

TAX

TaX

--

OEO

Q

__o

EY

'AQl

- -

)

E

0-'

O

o

Height

of letters, 0.018m.

71

-

IIQa

- -

Height

of

letters,

0.01 5

m.

n

A

II

-

- -

Height

of

letters,

0.01 8

m.

IIa

- -

Height

of

letters,

0.01 5 m.

A - - -

Height

of

letters,

0.015 m.

/\

(

1

5

At

-

-

Height

of letters

in lines

15-17,

0.03

m.

- - -

Jww,

Ri

///i

EQ

-

-

Height

of

letters

in

lines

19-22,

0.02m.

_s

20

o

-

NU

(

Nix

--

Z

-

-

-

Height

of

letters

inlines23-25,0.023m.

25

Zo

--

No.

2I

The

character

of

the

letters

indicates

that

the

inscription

should be

dated

in

the

fourth

century

B.

C.

The

slab

which is still

preserved

was

used

in

the

Roman

pavement

of the

precinct

in

front of the

temple

of

Apollo.

22. A

poros

stele

found in situ beside the

ancient

Greek road near the

Sacred

Spring.

The

stele has

since been transferred

o

the

museum.

Inv.

No.

226.

Height,

0.71

5

m.;

width,

0.48

m.;

thickness,

0.1 74 m.

(average).

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

31

The

letters

vary

in

height

from

0.034 m. to

0.06 m.

Smith,

A.JA.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

353,

No.

70.

[h6Qos]

[htLQ6S,]

AT1

aTa-

5

pLpaoorX-

erco'5aRi-

a 11111111

';?'

..,.

?

f?....

h~~~~~~~~~..~

~,,

.

.?

~~

~...

~..

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~?

~,.' ~~~,~,?, '?'' ?~..".?.:~

""~~~~

.~

,

l l, .

.

. ~ ~ l b?..~

.~~,,

~

~.,

.~.,,,.,. :~.....

'.,.,

.,

,~,

~:.'i~.::

,

,.~.~.

..~~,,.,:~?~,L,~?',

~::i,~T"....~:''.''.~~? . ? ~~ .'>,,.~ ~~~

.',

~..,~. .:.

~"?.....? .k...'

;

. .

:i~ ~ ~ ~

~O

2s

The

stele

narrows toward

the

top,

its

width

at the

original ground

level

being

0.44

m.,

and at the

present

top

0.39

m.

At the

bottom of the left

side

there

is

an

irre-

gular

cutting

in

the

stone like a

pry-hole.

The

shapes

of

the letters

agree

with

the

topographical

data

in

assigning

the

inscription

to

the

early

part

of the

fifth

century

B.

C. The

characteristic Corinthian

letters of the

sixth

century:

M=g,

(=L,

rK=

have

been

displaced

by

(=;,

=iL,

and

V=v;

but

R=?,

al;

>P-

,

and

V'=[p.

The

restoration

of

the

inscription

is

that

proposedby Smith,

with whom

I

also

agree

in

the

interpretation

of

the

numerical

signs

in

the last line as 8 obols.

The

inscription

was

placed

at

that

point

on

the road which

gave

access

to a

secret

underground

passage

leading

to a

point

beneath the

altar

in

the

apse

of a

small

Greek

temple

near at hand.

The

use of this

passage

in

oracular

deception

will be

described

in

full

by

Mr.

B. H. Hill in

his

discussion of the

temple

itself

in

the

first volume

of

these

publications.

It is

sufficient

to note

here that the

public

was

forbidden,

under

penalty

of

a

fine,

to

approach

too close to the

entrance of

the secret

passage.

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III

PUBLIC MONUMENTS

AND

DEDICATIONS

(Nos. 23-125)

23. A broken pedestal of grayish-blue limestone, found in 1907 in the

foundations

of an

early Byzantine

house

just

south

of the

church of

St.

John.

Now

in

the

excavations

at

Old

Corinth. Inv. No. 431.

Height,

0.31

m.;

width,

0.91

m.;

thickness,

0.905

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

362,

No.

75;

R.E.G.,

1921,

p.

432.

No.

23

[-

--

-

-

]

lo)tai

Ko[

--

-

[-

-

dbr6

tov]

ei

d[

- -

- - -

[--

--I-

]

xLTGT-Qa

[

-

- - -

[

- -

--- ]

XQtoaaWva

------]

5

[

-

-

ev]EQiaS

E?[a

- -

- - -

-]

[-- -- --

-

]

d

The

inscription

has been

well

interpreted

by Smith,

and

his

conclusion that

we

have

here

part

of a

pedestal

for

a

statue erected in

honor of

Timoleon

seems

to

me in all

respects

essentially well founded. The

epigraphical

indications

point

to the

middle of the

fourth

century

B.

C.

(or

soon

after)

and

agree

well

with

the

known

date

of the

exploits

of

Timoleon.

The

words

[djio

c6v]

OtoEiiov

in line

2,

xtlot.rQa

in line

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

33

3,

and

[E,ev]?ueQiag

in

line

5 also

point

to some event of

importance

in the

military

history

of

Corinth

-

but

Smith's

argument

deserves

study

in detail.

Line

1 :

We

may

restore

either

[ZLxsEX]tal

or

[asQat]

L)TaC.

In the latter case

Ko-

-

is

probably

to

be

restored

as

Ko[QiviWov].

Line

3:

xTlomiTQa epresents

a Doric

nominative

form

XTKLT1IQ

s the

equivalent

of

the

Attic

xTioTris.

For

a

study

oofsuch

forms cf.

Fraenkel,

Geschichte .

griechischen

Nomina

Agentis

au/f

-TTQ,

Q

-q-S.

Subsequent

to its use as a

pedestal

this block was

given

the usual

anathyrosis

on either end and built

with

others

into a series.

On

the

top

of the

stone

can be

seen

two

cuttings

for

clamps

and others

for

the

pry

and

dowel.

These

cuttings

date

from

the

period

of re-use. The

Roman

numeral

VIIII

appears

also

on

the

reverse

of

the

block,

cut

upside

down. The

excavations

have

revealed

nearby

two other

blocks

of

the

same limestone, similarly numbered VIII and X respectively,but without inscriptions.

Perhaps

these

numbers,

and

the re-use

of

the

blocks,

date from

the

period

of

the

Roman

rebuilding

of

Corinth

in

44 B.

C.

24.

Two

contiguous

fragments

of

white

marble,

broken from the

upper right-

hand

corer

of a

block,

found

in

1925

in the

Greek

stoa

on

the

southern

side of

Temple

Hill. Inv. Nos.

780

and

781.

Height,

0.325

m.;

width,

0.125

m.;

thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of

letters

in line

1,

0.04

m.;

in line

2, 0.038m.;

in line

3,

0.037 m.

6

8i'-

[fo-

--

-

TOv

KoQtv]tiov

[

-

-

-

y

or

Tlov

[dQSi

sg

'v xa

i

dv8oay4a]&ta

x l i

No.

24

The

inscription

is

evidently

from the

base

of an

honorary

dedication.

25. A fragment of bluish marble, broken on all sides except the bottom.

Inv.

No. 85.

Height,

0.235

m.;

width

(at

bottom),

0.20

m.; thickness,

0.26

m.

5

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34 CORINTH

The inscribed

band is 0.08 m.

in

height

and the letters

vary

from

0.02m. to 0.035

m.

in

height.

Powell, A.J.

A.

VII, 1903,

p.

59,

No.

38.

V O

I C

n Kolv' da[o

TcOv

To0e)CXov(?)]

No.

25

The restoration

given

above was

suggested

tentatively by

Powell. The

frag-

ment

formed

part

of

a

column

or round

base.

26. A

poros

block,

broken at the

left and

bottom,

found

before

1900,

but the

exact date and place of finding are not recorded. Inv. No. 301.

Height,

0.41

m.; width,

0.227

m.;

thickness,

0.27 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.039

m.

Smith,

A..A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

359,

No. 72.

No.

26

The

letters are of

the

first half of the sixth

century

B.

C. On

the

upper part

of

the front face

is

preserved

the finest

type

of

early

Corinthian stucco. The

monu-

mental

character of

the

letters

indicates that the

inscription

relates to a dedication.

27. The

upper part

of

a

pedestal

in the

shape

of

a

small .Doric column of

soft

poros stone,

once

coated with

fine

stucco such as is found at

Corinth

only

on

monuments

of

the

sixth and earlier centuries

B.C. Found

in

1902 between the

scarped

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

35

rock on

Temple

Hill and the

shops

on the western side

of Lechaeum

Road,

in

a

stratum

of earth

characteristically Byzantine.

Hence

its

original

location

is

largely

a

matter

of

conjecture.

Perhaps

it should

be

assigned

to the

precinct

of

Apollo,

whose

temple stood close by on the west.

Inv.

No. 1 76.

Height,

0.345

m.;

diameter,

0.33

m. There

are sixteen

channels,

of which each

measures

0.065m.

in width.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

3

5

8,

No. 71.

'AQTatc.O

[-

-

-

or

'AQTao[v

-

-- -

4:;

L. i ?

~~~"-

"~

No 2

A moulding 0.07 m. wide once encircled the top of the column, but it is now

so

mutilated

that

it is

impossible

to tell whether it

had

the form of

a Doric

echinus.

In

the centre of the

top

is

a round hole 0.05

m.

in

diameter

and 0.075

m.

deep, apparently

for the dowel

by

which the statue or other

dedication

was fastened

to the

pedestal.

The

inscription

is

cut

in

one

of

the

channels.

The

letters,

written

retrograde,

read

from

top

downwards

in

the usual archaic

fashion.

The

height

of

the letters

is

0.035

m.,

excepting

0,

which is

0.01 7 m.

high.

The

material,

the

stucco,

the

direction

and

shape

of

the letters

are all

characteristic

of the sixth

century

B.

C.

28. An

oblong

block of

poros

stone found in 1902 in the late top course of the

terrace wall

between the

shops

along

the

Lechaeum

Road and the

Propylaea.

Inv.

No. 22.

A

,,~~~~~a

'

7

. rr -' . ?ie ,s S

-o.

8

- - - -

vi4ov

_

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36

CORINTH

Height,

0.223m.; width, 0.705m.;

thickness,

0.96m. The stone has been broken

or

cut down

on all faces

except

the

front.

Height

of

letters,

0.07m.

Smith, A.J.A. XXIII, 1919, p. 361, No. 74.

The block on

which the

inscription

was cut

evidently

formed

part

of some

important

archaic

Corinthian

monument,

and the character

of

the

letters

indicates

that

the date

of its erection was near the end of the

sixth

or the

beginning

of the

fifth

century

B.

C.

(Smith).

29.

A block of

white marble found

in

1899 at the

eastern

side

of the fountain

of Peirene.

Inv. No.

145.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.92

m.;

thickness,

0.44

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.05

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

29,

No.

3

(cf.

also

./.

A.

III,

1899,

p.

685);

Smith,

A.J.

A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

392.

?

- -

--

Kvutxav6o

No. 29

The inscribed

face

describes

a

gentle

curve,

and

this,

together

with

the two

square

holes

in the

upper

surface,

tends toward

the

conclusion that

the stone

formed

part

of a

base

erected,

as the

inscription

shows,

by

a

native of

Cyzicus.

The

forms of

the letters

place

the

inscription

in

the first half

of the

fifth

century

B.

C.

(Powell).

30.

Block of white marble

found

in

1925

during

the

removal

of

the

Byzan-

tine

ramp

which led from Lechaeum Road to the

Propylaea.

Now

in

the excavations

on the western side of Lechaeum Road. Inv. No. 790.

Height,

0.26

m.;

width,

0.63

m.;

thickness,

1.19

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.

"A'to'

dv[x --

*-

~"Eotalo'

E

I

X[

--~-~--

Mvfil;u

My[

-

{--w-

No.

30

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

37

The stone on which the

inscription

is cut

has

a

contact surface

at the

right

for

the

reception

of another block.

If we

assume

that the

original

pedestal

was

com-

posed

of

three

blocks

of

approximately

the

size

of the

one

preserved,

the

inscription

may be restored with an uninscribed surface at the right-hand side of block 3, sym-

metrical with the

uninscribed

surface

at the

left-hand

side of block

1. The

appro-

ximate

length

of line can

be determined

from

the

fact

that the

inscription

is

metrical,

consisting,

in

all

probability,

of two

elegiac

couplets.

The

forms

of the

letters

indicate

a

date for the monument

in

the

fourth

century

B.C.

31.

Block of white

marble

found in

1925

during

the

removal of

the

Byzantine

ramp

which

led from Lechaeum Road to the

Propylaea.

Now

in

the

excavations

on

the

western

side

of the Lechaeum Road. Inv. No.

791.

Height, 0.22 m.; width, 1.10m.; thickness, 0.64 m.

Height

of letters

varies from

0.01 5

m.

to 0.022

m.

Cf.

Hill,

'Excavations at Corinth

1926,'

AJ.

A.

XXXJ,

1927,

p.

79.

Taylor

and

West,

'Latin

Elegiacs

from

Corinth,'

A.A.

XXXII,

1928,

pp.

9-10.

- -

-_

- - -

"-

ovas

o

'-

No. 31

The stone

was

re-used

in Roman times

and

what

was

once

the

upper

surface

now contains

a

Latin

inscription

in

honor of

Hirrus

(Latin,

No.

1).

The

letters of

the

Greek

inscription

are

beautifully

cut,

and

indicate

a date

early

in

the

fourth

century

B.

C.

32.

A

poros

block

found in

1903

in

the

foundations

of

a

terrace

wall

built

during

the Roman restoration of

Corinth,

between the

Propylaea

and

the

Northwest

Stoa. Now in the excavations at Old Corinth.Inv. No. 337.

Height,

0.347

m.; width,

0.91

7

m.;

thickness,

0.756m.

Height

of

letters varies from

0.025

m.

to

0.03 m.

Smith, A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

375,

No.

80;

R.E.G.,

1921,

p.

432.

KaXLUOL*YVqN

A[.

.......

No.

32

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38

CORINTH

A

worked

contact

surface on the

right

hand end

of

the

block

indicates,

as the

inscription

itself

does,

that

this is

but one of

two

blocks which

originally composed

the front

of

the

pedestal.

Kallisthenes

and Eusthenes are otherwise

unknown.

The

letters

of

the

inscription

indicate

a

date

during

the latter

part

of

the

fourth

century

B.

C.

33. A

marble

block,

broken

away

on

the

left,

once

in

the

possession

of

the

priest

Athanasius

Sakellarios..Inv.

No.

125.

Height,

0.26

m.;

width,

0.1

75

m.;

thickness,

0.205

m.

Height

of

letters

varies from 0.01m. to

0.01

3

m.

Skias,

'Ecp.

AQX. 893,

p.

121,

No.

8;

LG.

IV,

359.

I

AIAE

No.

33

The surface

of the

stone

is

much

worn.

Skias

attributedthis

inscription

to

the

third

century.

I

agree

with Fraenkel that it

belongs

rather to the fourth

century

B.

C.

34.

A

statue

base

of hard dark-blue

and

gray

limestone found

in

1901

upside

down

on

top

of

the southern

triglyphon

face of the

Sacred

Fountain. Now

in

the

excavations

at

Old

Corinth.

Inv.

No.

29.

Height,

0.30m.;

width,

0.705m.;

thickness,

0.705m.

Height of letters varies from 0.02m. to 0.025 m.

Richardson,

A.J.A.,

Suppl.

to

Vol.

V,

1901,

p.

28;

A.J

A.

VI, 1902,

p.

316;

Powell, A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

30,

No. 5.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

39

o?.'; AaLiog4[6os

No.

34

Although

the

stone

was discovered bottom

upward

and so not

in

its

original

position,

yet

it fits a

cutting

near

at hand and

probably

formed one of a series

of bases

for

statues

which

were

placed

in

the

cuttings

on

top

of the

triglyphon

podium

about

the

Sacred Fountain. The statue

supported

by

this base was

certainly

of

bronze, probably

representing

a nude male of about life

size

(Powell).

Considerable

lead

was

found

near the

block at the time of its

discovery.

35.

A block

of soft sandstone found

in

1901

immediately

in

front

of

the

west

wall

of the vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops,

not far below the

surface

of

the

ground.

Now

in the museum at

Old Corinth.

Inv. No. 160.

Height,

0.73

m.;

width,

0,53

m.;

thickness,

0.355 m.

Height of letters, 0.02 m. to 0.025 m.

Powell,

AJ.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

29,

No.

4;

R.E.G.,

1904,

p.

247; Smith,

AJ.

A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

392.

AYI

Y

X

r

r

.E

r

u

E

No.

35

AmuctJEos

6'oae

Smith

attributes

the

inscription

to

the latter

part

of the

third

century

B.C.,

but

I

am

inclined

to

agree

with Powell

that

it is

contemporary

with

Lysippus.

36.

A re-used

block

of

poros

stone

found

in the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Now

in

the

excavations

at Old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

879.

Height,

0.32

m.;

width,

0.97

m.;

thickness,

0.67

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.06

m.

A

r

H

M

A y C

[ A o

No.

36

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40

CORINTH

37.

A

limestone

block,

broken

away

at

the

top,

bottom,

and

rear,

found

in

1908

in a

late

Roman

pavement

near

the

apsidal

Greek

temple

west

of

the Lechaeum

Road

shops.

Inv. No. 479.

Height, 0.28 m.; width, 0.21 m.; thickness, 0.18m.

Height

of

letters,

0.022

m.

JX'-

No.

37

38.

Fragment

of a

pedestal

of

dark blue limestone

found

in

1902

in

the

Roman

filling

near

the

south end of the

Basilica.

Inv.

No. 204.

Height, 0.22m.; width, 0.30m.; thickness, 0.255 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

(o

=

0.01

5

m.).

Smith,

AJ.

A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

378,

No. 83.

Q,

['Avatayl

6Qa

[l]

No.

38

The restoration

s

given

merely by

way

of,

example.

For the

arrangement

of the

names

cf.

also

No. 61.

The stone has

been

broken

away

on both

sides,

but the

original

height

is

preserved.

At the

bottom

may

still

be seen

the difference

in

weathering

due to the

setting

of this block into a lower one. The character of the

lettering

indi-

cates

that the

inscription

should

be dated in the latter half of the third

century

B.

C.

The

strokes

of the

letters

show

the transition

from

wedge-cuttings

to

apices.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

41

39.

A

pedestal

of dark

blue limestone with

anathyrosis

at the

left,

found

in

1902 on the

ancient

Greek

roadway

leading

from

the

Lechaeum

Road to the

small

apsidal

Greek

temple.

Now in the

excavations at

Old Corinth.

Inv. No. 205.

Height,

0.275

m.; width,

1.1

8

m.; thickness,

0.541 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.014

m.

Smith,

A. A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

372,

No. 76.

J:

. _.

....

No.

39

In

the immediate

neighborhood

of this

inscription

many

tiny

inscribed

frag-

ments

of

blue

limestone

were

found.

They

are not

sufficiently

similar

to

be

grouped

together,

however,

or

to

be

assigned

to

any

one

pedestal.

Perhaps

the

Greek

street

leading

from

Lechaeum

Road to

the

apsidal temple

was

bordered

by

a

row

of

statues

erected at intervals throughout the city's history on bases of blue limestone. If this is

true the street must

have

been

an

important

thoroughfare.

Even

the

largest fragment

now

preserved

from this series

(that

shown

above)

has been

badly

damaged,

and

when

discovered

only

four

and

a

half letters

of

the

inscription

were

preserved:

.~-

- -

-

lo.-v- --

As the

photograph

shows,

there

are

now

only

two and a half letters.

They

stood 0.05

m.

below

the

top

surface

of the

stone,

and so there was room for

another

line of text above

them. The letters

are

of the fourth

century

B.

C.,

clearly

cut,

and

inscribed between lines on the face of the stone which are still clearly visible.

The

cuttings

on

the

top

of

the block

bear witness

to the existence of a

group

of at

least

two human

figures.

The

anathyrosis

at the left

end of the

stone

indicates

that the

pedestal

itself

consisted

of at least two

blocks,

and the

group

which it

sup-

ported

should

probably

be

restored

with

at

least three

figures.

The

weathering

on the

front

face of the

pedestal

has

produced

near the bottom

a

line

clearly

indicating

the

depth

to

which

the stone

was

set

into a

lower

block,

viz.

0.017

m.

40. A small fragment of dark blue limestone found in 1902 near the preced-

ing

(No.

39).

Inv.

No.

206.

Height,

0.035

m.;

width,

0.1 78

m.;

thickness,

0.145

m.

6

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42

CORINTH

Height

of

letters,

0.014 m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

373,

No.

77.

-

-:

-

aCL

-

-?

No.

40

The letters are

from the

first line of

an

inscription,

for the

top

surface

of the

block is

preserved

immediately

above them.

They correspond

in

every way

to

the

letters

of

No.

39,

and

perhaps

belong

to

the first

line

of

that

inscription.

The

two

fragments,

however,

do

not

join

and

there is

no

trace

on this

fragment

of

horizontal

lines ruled on the face of the stone for the

alignment

of

letters,

as in No. 39.

41.

Fragment

from

the

upper

left-hand corer of a

pedestal

of dark

blue

limestone,

found in

1902

in

the

same

place

as No.

39.

Inv. No. 207.

Height,

0.128

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

0.068 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.014

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

374,

No.

78.

0Qaa&LT(oV

No.

4

The stone

has

a

smoothly

dressed surface at the

left,

and differs

in

other

respects sufficiently

from Nos.

39

and

40 to

prevent

its

being

associated with

them.

The character

of

the letters

indicates a date near the middle of

the

fourth

century

B.C.

42.

A

small

fragment

of dark blue

limestone,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1902 in the same place as No. 39. Inv. No. 208.

Height,

0.04

m.;

width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height

of

letters

(estimated),

0.025

m.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

43

No.

42

I

have

been

unable

to

connect

this

fragment

with

any

of

the

other

pieces

of blue

limestone

found in

the same area. The

inscribed surface

seems

to

show a

slight

curvature,

indicating

that

this

particular

base was circular

in

shape,

and of

considerable

size.

43. A small

fragment

of dark

blue

limestone,

found in

1902 in

the

same

area as No. 39. Inv. No. 209.

Height,

0.1

8

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.09

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

o-

-

--OS.

Y-

-

-

No.

43

The stone is

broken on all sides

except

the

top,

where

part

of

the

original

surface

is

preserved.

The

inscription

is

apparently

of the fourth

century

B.

C.

44.

A

fragment

of dark blue

limestone,

found

in

1902

in

the

same

area

as

No. 39. Inv.

No. 210.

Height,

0.085

m.;

width,

0.105

m.;

thickness,

0.065

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.016 m.

?_

_

_?

-

Eav?

yNo.

44

No.

44

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44

CORINTH

45.

A

fragment

of

dark blue

limestone,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1902

in

the same area as No. 39. Inv. No.

211.

Height,

0.1

2

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.05 5

m.

Height

of

letters,

o

=

0.01

2

m.; r

-

0.01

4

m.

Only

two

letters are

preserved,

which

may

have

r

{

jW

formed

part

of the word

[e,]

6r[o?].

No.

45

46. A small fragment of dark blue limestone, broken on all sides, found in

1902 in

the same area as

No. 39.

Now lost.

Inv.

No.

212.

Height,

0.03

m.;

width,

0.045

m.;

thickness,

0.041

m.

The one letter

preserved,

an

epsilon,

is

0.01 4

m.

high.

47.

A

fragment

of

dark blue

limestone,

found

in

1902

in

the

same

place

as

No.

39. Inv. No. 220.

Height,

0.055

m.;

width,

0.08

m.; thickness,

0.075 m.

Height of letters, 0.024 m.

No.

47

The

top

surface

of

the stone

is

preserved,

showing

that the

letters

belong

to the first

line of the

inscription.

48.

A

small

fragment

of

dark blue

limestone,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1902

in

the

Roman

filling along

the

ancient

Greek

way

between

Lechaeum

Road

and the

apsidal

Greek

temple

to

the

west.

Inv. No. 222.

____

_-__-

_

Height,

0.03

m.;

width,

0.09m.;

thick-

ness,

0.09

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.014 m.

-- .;. ,..

N

.. ...

8~....

No. 48

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

45

49.

A

small

fragment

of dark blue

limestone,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1902

in

the same area

as

No. 48.

Inv. No. 223.

Height,

0.032

m.;

width,

0.065

m.; thickness,

0.065

m.

The fragment contains only the one letter theta,

perhaps

from

the word

dv6xev

xv.

No.

49

50.

Fragment

of

dark blue

limestone

found

in

1907

near the

apsidal

Greek

temple

at the eastern

end of the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 420.

Height,

0.033

m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

0.038

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

7

m.

63TL

-

-

.

No.

50

The

fragment

is broken on

all

sides,

but

enough

of the

face

is

preserved

to show

that the letters

given

belong

to the

beginning

of a line. After

the

iota

there

appears

on the stone the left curved

stroke

of a

letter

which

may

be taken

for

omicron

or

theta.

51.

A

small

fragment

of dark

blue

limestone,

broken

on

all sides

except

the

top

and

front. Exact

place

and

date of

finding

unknown. Inv. No. 286.

I

Height,

0.065m.;

width,

0.27

m.;

thick-

ness,

0.1 8

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

376,

No. 81 a.

No.

I

The

first letter

may

be

either

E

or

E.

The

second

is M. The

fragment

cannot be associated

with

No.

52,

as

proposed

by

Smith.

Cf.

No.

52,

note.

52. A fragment of dark blue limestone, found in 1902 in the Roman filling

near the south

end of

the Basilica.

Inv.

No. 237.

Height,

0.21

7

m.;

width,

0.16

m.;

thickness,

0.1 5

m.

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46

CORINTH

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.02

m.;

in

line

2,

0.01

5

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

376,

No.

81 b

-

-

-

-]oi(Ye

-

-

_

.*;

.^

~Portions

of the

top

and

bottom

surfaces

^j

^''-;,"

,,-,

are

preserved,

but

the

fragment

is broken

away

l_

l-

^^

~on

both sides.

The forms of

the letters indicate

a

^

date

near

the

end

of the fourth or

the

beginning

of

the

third

century

B.C.

The

fragment

cannot

_?\

*

Jbe

associated with

No.

51,

as

proposed

by

Smith,

because the inscribed

surfaces have been

given

a

No. 52

different treatment with the chisel. The surface of

No.

52 is

quite

smooth and

polished.

No.

51

shows

still

the

marks

of the fine

tooth

chisel and

was never

thoroughly

polished.

Also

the

letters

of

the first line

in

No.

52

are

only

0.03

m.

below the

top

of the

stone,

while

the

letters

of the

first

line in

No.

51 fall

0.046m.

below

the

upper

surface.

And

it

is

impossible

to

read the letters of

one

fragment

as the

continuation of

those

of the other.

53.

A

fragment

of dark

blue

limestone,

broken on all

sides,

found in

1902

in

the

Roman

filling

near

the

southern end of

the

__..

~

Basilica. Inv.

No.

238.

Height,

0.05

m.;

width,

0.095

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

No.

53

54.

Fragment

of

dark blue

limestone,

broken on all sides. Place and date of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv. No.

266.

Height,

0.07

m.;

width,

0.05

m.;

thickness,

0.038

m.

No.

54

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

47

55.

A

small

fragment

of

dark

blue

limestone,

top

surface

preserved,

found

in

1907

beneath

a

late

Roman

pavement

south of

the

vaulted

chamber of

the

North-

west

Shops.

Inv. No. 439.

Height, 0.075 m.; width, 0.135 m.; thickness, 0.065 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.02

m.

No. 55

56.

A

small

fragment

of dark blue

limestone,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in 1907

in

one of

the

shops

of

the Northwest

Stoa.

Inv. No.

446.

Height,

0.04

m.;

width,

0.045

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.015

m.

No.

56

57.

Fragment

of dark

blue

limestone,

found

in

1907

in

the

filling

of

one

of

the

shops

of the Northwest

Stoa.

Inv.

No. 433.

Height,

0.088

m.;

width,

0.05

m.;

thickness,

0.085

m.

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.016m.;

in line

2,

:

...:

0.02 m.

Smith,

A.JA.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

375,

No.

79.

The

letters

of

the

inscription

in

form

and

arrangement

(stoichedon)

belong

to

the

fourth

century

B.

C.

No.

57

58.

Fragment

of

a

base of

bluish

marble,

broken

away

at

the

top

and

at

the

right,

found in

1915 in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No.

685.

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48

CORINTH

Height,

0.285

m.;

width,

0.21 8

m.;

thickness,

0.1

74

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 5

m.

.:?i

.ANTI

AOYA

AAt

Avnloriov

Mat[tov

- -

--

No.

58

Antistius

Maximus

is,

so far

as

I

know,

otherwise

unknown.

59.

Base of

bluish

white

marble,

broken

away

at the

right,

found

in

1908

in

the

filling

under

the

pronaos

of

the Roman

temple

east of

Glauce. Inv. No.

456.

Height,

0.1

72

m.;

width,

0.36

m.;

thickness,

0.19 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.1

6 m.

....X

?

;..~' 9't,

, _..

...

_

/

..

'.

.

?

.

.

j?.'

,

E'T':'[

.......]

|~:

. F.

AJ

"?'.,';,

la

ev

exa]

'v&q

[xsv]

No.

59

The

third line is

spaced symmetrically

on

the stone

with

regard

to

the

two above.

The

letters

indicate

a

date for

the

inscription

in

the late

third

or

early

second

century

B.

C.

60.

A

pedestal

of

white

marble,

broken

away

at the

upper

right-hand corner,

found in 1902 in the easternmost of the Northwest Shops. Now in the court of the

museum

in

Old Corinth.

nv.

No.

245.

Height,

0.149

m.;

width,

0.637

m.;

thickness,

0.51

7

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

49

Height

of

letters

in

lines

1-2,

0.01 5

m.-0.021

m.;

in line

3,

0.01

3

m.-0.01

5

m.

Smith,

AJ.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

37

7,

No. 82.

No. 60

Kayptoot?XT

[s]

TLtOEvEOg

'AQi(TCOV

EntOilqG

The

letters

belong

to

the third

century

B.

C.,

and

in

spite

of the

earlier

shapes

of K and

I

show

the

conscious

attachment of

finials.

The

top

of

the

stone

is cut

for

fastening

the

feet

of

a bronze

statue.

The work itself

was

by

an

otherwise

unknown

sculptor

Ariston.

Survivals

of local dialectical forms

are found

in

the

alpha

of

Kacpl-

coteXrf[q]

and

in

the uncontracted

genitive

form

TtpLO0YTvEog

f line 2.

61. A block of

poros

stone found

in

1902

near the north end of the

shops

on Lechaeum Road. Inv. No.

256.

Height,

0.214

m.; width,

0.472

m.;

thickness,

0.484 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m. The

omicron,

which

is

made with

compasses,

is

only

0.022 m.

Smith,

A.J.A. XXIII,

1919,

p.

359,

No. 73.

T-

-

]QO

10

a[a

- --

- --

--

q1jog

a.

VSTeOL

No.

6I

The

readings

are

those

given by

Smith.

The stone

is broken

along

the

top

of

the

front face and

worn

at

the

right

edge.

Careful

cuttings

for

Z-clamps

in

each

of

the sides and a concave cutting 0.07 m. deep and 0.15 m. in diameter in what was

originally

the bottom

prove

a

re-use

of

the stone

in

very early

times. The

inscription

is

only

partly legible.

Traces of red

paint

may

be seen

in

a few of

the

letters.

7

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50

CORINTH

62.

Fragment

of

grayish marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in

1914

in

the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 574.

Height,

0.19

m.;

width,

0.1 8

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height of letters, ca. 0.05 m.

y

1

-

v

No. 62

In

the line above

dve]r

[xe

may

still be seen the lower

strokes

of

letters

of

the

same

monumental

size.

There is not

enough

preserved,

however,

to

make an

interpretation possible.

63. A small fragment of bluish marble, found in 1898. Inv. No. 302.

Height,

0.032

m.;

width,

0.085

m.;

thickness,

0.1

1

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.007

m.

.I

V

. 'T ?

.:..

...

a'

[Ho]X1vxQadtn

dv?Ahjxej

No.

63

The

top

of

the stone

has

an

oval-shaped depression

which

indicates

that it

may

have

served

as

a

base for some

small

offering.

The

letters of the

inscription

are

too

poorly

cut to

give

much

indication of

date. For

a

similar

small dedication cf. No. 64.

64.

A

small

rectangular

pedestal

of

white

marble,

raised

on

low

square

feet

at

the

corners,

all

surfaces

original

except

at the

right

where

the entire end has

been

broken

away.

Found

in

1903 between

the

West

Shops

and

the church of

St.

John.

Inv. No. 350.

Height,

0.1035

m.

(including

feet);

width,

0.1 73

m.;

thickness,

0.19

m.

Estimated

original

width,

0.241

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

51

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.-0.025

m.

Smith,

A.J.

.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

386,

No. 93.

'Avtoz[?]

No.

64

A

square

cutting

in

the

top

contains

a

dowel

hole at the

back for

affixing

the

dedication.

For a

similar

small

dedication

cf.

No. 63.

65. Two fragments of blue limestone, found in 1900 and 1901. Inv.

Nos.154

and

312.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

1

54):

height,

0.09 5

m.; width,

0.085

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

312):

height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.095

m.

Height

of

letters

in

both

fragments,

0.045 m.

Powell,

A.J.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

53,

Nos. 28

and

29.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

393.

/

Fragment

a

apparently

belongs

in

the

A

W r i

first line of the inscription, because of the

relatively

large

uninscribed

space

above the

letters.

Fragment

b

is from

the

left

margin

No.

65

of the

stone,

and

contains

portions

of

three

lines of

text.

In

the

second line

the

name

F.

'IoloX[Lov]

an be

distinguished.

The

two

fragments

belong

together,

but

have no

common

point

of

contact.

66. A

Greek

building

block of

poros

stone

discovered

in

1907 built

into

a

shop

of

the

earliest

Roman

period

at the

western

end of

the

Agora.

Still

in

situ,

in

the south wall of

Shop

No. 2. Inv. No. 453.

Height,

0.35

m.;

width,

1.225

m.;

thickness

indeterminable.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

-

0.03

m.

Smith,

A.J.

A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

342,

No. 64.

---T'YZ7

PATHVC7YTI

-i~n'y6

_o

-

Z

PAT

H

I r

Yl

onaTly?S

m.[aTos

-

-(- E

TF,

\

]

f-/ /

.(oaTQaT[o]v

Aycz-

-

KoQevaLo

ov T[ov k O f 1N l

N 0 1 0

TO NAY T

5

xaPl

Toalovo[

--

p

P

A

0

N

I

OIS

No. 66

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52

CORINTH

The words

belong

to the

concluding

lines of

the

inscription,

for

there

are

traces of letters above

atQarqyobg

n

line

2,

but none

below

line

5.

In

line 3 the

letters

avi'T

are doubtful.

The block was used as second-hand material in one of the earliest buildings

of Roman

Corinth,

and so

antedates

the

destruction

by

Mummius

in 146 B.

C.

The

letter

forms

are

typical

of the

second

century

B.

C.

For the

designation aoQarlyobg.C[atos]

in

line

2,

cf.

Holleaux,

1TQatqiybo

incarog,

Bibl. Ec. Fr. d'Athenes

et

de

Rome,

1

91

8,

30-31.

67.

Three

fragments

of

dark

blue

limestone found in

1900.

Inv.

Nos.

124a,

124b,

and 304.

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.225

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

Height of letters, 0.025 m.

Powell,

A.. A.

VII,

1903,

p.

39,

No. 11.

Smith,

A/.

A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

393.

.Av

-oa

0[Oor

Q

No.

67

Part of a broken

letter

beneath

the

alpha

may

possibly

be

interpreted

as

kappa.

68.

A small

fragment

of dark blue

limestone,

found in

1902

in

the lower

part

of the Roman

filling

of the

court

between the

Basilica and

the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 221.

Height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.07

m.;

thickness,

0.038

m.

Height

of letters

in

line

1,

0.024

m.;

in

line

2,

0.008 m.

Smith, A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

378,

No. 84.

-

'

'~

-

--

No. 68

The

inscription

was

not

well

cut,

and the letters

appear

as

though merely

scratched

on

the surface of the

stone.

The strokes all have

broad

apices

at the

ends.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

53

69.

Fragment

of

a

cylindrical

pedestal

of

poros

stone,

surmounted with

mouldings

and once

covered with

a

white

limy

stucco.

Original

faces

preserved

only

in front

and at

the

top.

Found

in

1902

just

east of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 240.

Height, 0.305 m.; width, 0.28 m.; thickness, 0.245 m.

Original

diameter

(estimated),

1.14

m.

Height

of

letters

varies from0.036m.

to 0.042m.

Smith,

A.J.

A.

XXIII,

1

919,

p.

380,

No.

86.

No.

69

The

heavy

finials of the

letters,

the

limy

stucco,

and

the once elaborate

mould-

ing

are

the

only

indications

of

date. It

may

be of the

first

century

A. D.

70.

Pedestal

of

yellowish

(Acro-Corinthian)

imestone,

found

in

1902

in a late

wall

in

the

southern

part

of the Basilica.

Now built

into the

east wall

of the court

of

the museum

in Old

Corinth.

Inv.

No. 178.

Height,

0.267

m.; width,

0.445

m.;

thickness,

0.35

m.

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.045

m.;

in

line

2,

0.037

m.;

in

line

3,

0.038

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

379,

No. 85.

avOTa]TLOV

Ibvg~'

~~''

~orsNo.

70

No.

70

The back and

bottom

of the stone

are

entirely

broken

away.

The

top

was

finished to receive an upper stone which probably supported a statue of Spartiaticus.

Line 3: I

agree

with

Smith

that

neither of the

possible

names

'AyacoxijSg,

IHvuo-

xkr\,

or

'OQe(oxYW

is

satisfactory

from the

purely

epigraphical

point

of

view.

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54

CORINTH

Line

4:

The letters

before

and after the nu seem to be omicrons.

The

inscription

dates

from

the

time of

Claudius,

when

C.

Iulius

Spartiaticus

was

prominent,

not

only

in

Achaea,

but also

in

Athens

(cf.

L

G.

III, 805;

Ditt.

Syll.,3

790). A statue was also set up in his honor at Troezen (. G. IV, 1469). For the pro-

minence

and wealth

of

Spartiaticus

cf. Musonius

(in

Stobaeus,

F/ori.

XL, 9,

p.

750

16

[Hensel).

This wealth

was lost at the time of his

banishment,

not

later than

the

time

of Nero. The father of

Spartiaticus

was C.

Iulius

Laco,

and we

possess

the

base of

a

statue

bearing

an

inscription

in

his honor

(A.J.

A.

XXX,

1926,

pp.

390ff.;

Latin

67).

A

Latin

inscription

in

honor of

Spartiaticus,

and

giving

his

complete

cursus

honorum,

has

also

been found at

Corinth

(A.J.

.

XXX,

1

926,

pp.

393

ff.;

Latin

68).

The

uncle of

Spartiaticus,

C. Iulius

Deximachus,

was also

prominent

in

his

day,

but

the

most

distinguished

member

of the

family

was the

grandfather,

C.

Iulius

Eurycles.

In

the

early days

of the

reign

of

Augustus

he was the most influential man in Greece

and

endeared

himself to the

people

of

Corinth

by building

for

them

magnificent

marble

baths'. These

probably

stood

in

the

neighborhood

of the

spot

where

the

pedestals

for

his

grandson

have been

discovered.

The

family

name

Iulius

was

adopted by

Eurycles

when

he

obtained

Roman

citizenship.

Cf. Paus.

II, 3, 5;

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.

v.

Eurykles;

B.S.A.

XII,

1905-1

906,

p.

468,

No.

23;

Weil,

Ath.

Mift.

VI,

1

881,

pp.

10

ff.;

Paton,

Transactions

of

the American

Philological

Association,

XXVI,

1

895,

pp.

30 ff.

71.

A broken slab

of white

marble, probably

the veneer

of

a

pedestal

of

cheap

local

stone,

found

in 1902

near

the

centre of

the

orchestra of the

partially

excavated

theatre.

Inv. No. 251.

Height,

0.31

3

m.;

width,

0.25

m.; thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of the

Greek

letters,

0.01 7

m.

-,:'^

^

Smith,

A.JA. XXIII,

1919,

p.

381,

No.

88.

t~~tt)4-

-

dedica]VI[t]

?

;

'

*i

[ ?

- g'

-4

A'vaNoVO

FROiLEL

No.

71

The

stone is broken on all

sides,

leaving

only

at the

bottom a small

piece

of

the

original

edge.

It is

possible

that

'At1qvatiog

is a

cognomen.

Cf.

-

-LIO

ATHENAEO

in

Latin 139.

'

But

cf.

AJ.A. XXX,

I926,

p.

390,

note

4;

and

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.v.

Iulius

221.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

55

72. A

block of hard blue limestone found in 1901 on the level of the

Byzan-

tine

pavement

in

front of

the vaulted chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

141.

Height,

0.245

m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.11 m.

Height of letters, 0.02 m.

Powell,

A.J.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

40,

No. 14.

'ATo

-

... .

:g.-

dQst-T;

WV?['xt

xElL LxaLOavcLav

?)agI

No.

72

The

original

smooth surface is

preserved

on the

face,

top,

bottom,

and

left

side;

the bottom is cut backward

in a

curve,

both at the front and at the side.

The

back

was left

rough

and was not intended to

be seen. The

inscription

is too

brief

for

a

decree,

as

suggested

by

Powell,

and should be

interpreted

rather as a dedication

in

honor

of Titus set

up by

Aristaeus.

The

last

letter on the stone in line 2 seems to

be

omicroln.

73.

Pedestal

of

blue

marble,

broken

away

at the

right,

found in

191

5

in

the

southeast comer of the Agora. Now in the excavations at Old Corinth. Inv. No. 748.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.45

m.;

thickness,

0.77

m.

Height

of letters in lines

1-2,

0.01 7

m.;

in

line

3,

0.012

m.

KQtoWv

um."vou

a't

N"xa[

- - -

TLAasoi'v[(a

TvO

'UIOv

d[QET.i

.]

XXa] .

'AXxLza[oo

KOQv&LtOS

'[oioae]

No.

73

The

Inscription

should

probably

be

dated in the

first half

of the second

century

B.C.

The

personages

mentioned in

the

inscription

are

otherwise

unknown,

and Alkidamos

appears

before

us

as

a new

name

in

the

history

of

Greek

sculpture.

74. A thin disk of

lead found in

the earth

removed from

the

eastern side

of

the

Agora

in

1914.

Now in

the

collection

of small

finds at

Old Corinth.

Epigraphical

Inv. No. 546.

Diameter of the disk, 0.042 m.

eyiO

vUQLavog

&dv[]hrxa

evXZaQLaTo)v.

The letters are

stamped

on the face

of the disk around the

margin.

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56

CORINTH

75. Three

contiguous fragments

of

a

white

marble

pedestal,

found

in

191 5

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Now

in

the

court

of the

museum

at

Old Corinth.

Inv.

Nos.

643,

675a,

and

675b.

Height, 0.77m.; width,

0.35

m.; thickness,

0.44m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.035

m.

[..]LXL.CQiXO'V

[Xysw]os

B'.

IaULaVoOQy,[Ov' EiL]tQO3TOV

g, Ho[A]iToxQdroQosg N[kpBa

T]QaiavOi

[KaxJ|

aQosg

Z1?ETpaoTO*

Eq

[avVtxoiV]

4axtxo'v

B5

[to]O

EV

hE'AXetav8QELa(L)'

i(p

of]r

xai

[TaQ];(Fag'

'AXa'ag'

xai

ALXa[LO]&0ThV

No.

75

The

pedestal

is

broken

away

at the

top,

and

its

original

height

cannot

be

estimated. The

bottom

surface

is in

part

preserved,

with the

cutting

for the

dowel

by

which the stone was secured to a larger block of the basis below. The inscription is

to be dated

probably

not

long

after

103

A.D.,

when

Trajan

assumed

the

title Dacicus.

Unfortunately

we do not know

the

name of the

man

to whom the

statue

was

erected,

but the record of

his

public

career

has been

in

part

preserved.

Lines 1-2:

The 12th

legion

is otherwise

known to have

been

stationed

in the

East

during

the

reign

of

Trajan.

The

cognomen

fulminata

is

of

course translated

into

the

Greek

as

xesQauvocpOQOg.

f.

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.

v.

Legio.

Lines 2-7:

Following

the

military

offices

were

listed the

civil offices

open

to

the

Equestrian

order which

were held

by

the

man in

whose honor

the statue

was dedicated.

&IoTQoJT

- - -

ro

Ev 'AkstavsQica(L) (piaxou is the equivalent

of

procurator

-

fici

Alexandrini

(cf.

Dessau,

1

51

8).

Line

6: For

the

restoration

laQoneiaci

Aoaias

cf.

also

L

G.

IV,

588.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

57

Lines

6-7:

ALxa[to]860T1v

yiytlou

=

i2uridicus

Aegypti.

Cf.

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.

v.

Iuri-

dicus.

He was

appointed

from the ranks of the

Equestrian

order.

Line 8: The

praenomen

is lost. Claudius

Speratus

is

otherwise unknown.

76.

Fragment

of

white

marble with

the left

edge preserved,

found in

1915

near the

southwest

corner of the

Basilica

in the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 681.

Height,

0.203

m.;

width,

0.135

m.;

thickness,

0.083 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

7

m.

[-

- .

.

- -

..- ...l]-

[E?TX.]TrIv

eFnvhlia;,

dcovo0E11v

KaLaC0QIcov

NEQovavroWv]

[TQata]vwcov

'r[EQ[avtxLicov

xatl

'Iortiov

xai

KatoaQov,]

[rEtVT]atlrQILx6[vGTQaT-lyOyv

ij;5

6?XEW

KoQitvjiov]

5

[xai

'E]XkabdQxr[v

xad

dQaiQLa

avroxQaCToQ0o

Kaioa]-

[Qog

T]Qaiavoi

'AS[QLavoi

ePs3actoi0

db

toi

xot]-

i

XO

[vo

T]O)v

'AZaL[)ov

(TjV5EQLioJ'

La

BPo,

iTi

QQOCOV

HE-

l-

[QOU,

8Ix]aJto[6Ttv Aiy{{tov

xal

'AkEXav8bQfL-

-

xT.]

No.

76

Although

the

name

of

the

man honored

in

this

inscription

has been

lost,

there is

little

doubt that

he was

the same

Cornelius

Pulcher

who

appears

also

in

Nos.

80-83.

The

character of

the

lettering

is the same as that in Nos.

80 and

81,

and

the

internal evidence

of the

inscription

points

to the same

date,

namely,

the time

of

Hadrian.

The restorations

proposed

above

give

also

approximately

the same

czursus

honorum which

appears

in

Nos. 80

and

81.

Lines

1-2: For

the restoration

[?i

EX?lT]i1v

[Evr1vTa;]

cf. 1. G.

IV,

795.

Lines 2-4: It will be noticed that the agonothesia (line 2) is recorded before

the

duumvirate

(line

4)

and that the

inscription

differs

in this

respect

from Nos.

80

and 81.

The

order is

substantiated, however,

by

Latin

72,

which must also

be

ascribed

to

Cornelius

Pulcher.

As

in

Nos. 80

and

81,

the word

aEVTasrTtlQLX6ov

should

be construed

with

otQaTcrlyOv

o mean IIVIR

QUINQUENNALIS.

The

name of the

games

for which Pulcher was

agonothete

is

given

in

abbreviated

form

in

Nos. 80

and 81. The

expanded

and

complete

form

is

given

above

in

lines

2-3.

Cf.

also

Latin

71 and 72.

Lines

5-7:

The offices

of

'EXXcaXaQXrg

nd

'AQXiQ?E?ii;

oth

belonged

to the

Achaean

Koinon. In giving the name of the emperor with the title of 'AQXLEQ?E'Shis

inscription

resembles

Latin

71.

Lines 7 and

8 have been restored

on the

analogy

of Nos. 80

and 81.

8

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58 CORINTH

For other

inscriptions

from

Corinth

in

honor of Pulcher cf. Nos.

80, 81, 82, 83,

and Latin

71,72.

Pulcher also

appears

in an

inscription

from

Troezen

(L

G.

IV,

795).

Another

Cornelius

Pulcher

was

agonothete

of the

Isthmian

games

between

41 and 47 A.D. Cf. Ditt.

Sy/.3,

802.

77.

Two

contiguous fragments

of

white

marble,

broken on all

sides

except

the

right,

found in

1915

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No. 673.

Height,

0.24

m.;

width,

0.1

7

m.;

thickness,

0.24 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.033 m.

[-

- -

-- -

-

dayowotEi'v1

^^^^y1j^^

[KaoaaQicov

NsQouavi'ov

TQaiaJ]yio0v

,E,^J~i%^

tY

[4Ipa(Fm7ov

rEQociavLx'iJv]

J

ax|owv

.

..

[xaL

'IoC&ILvO

al

KaLaa(Qijov

xal

No.

77

The

stone

is from the

pedestal

of a

statue

and

records the

honors of

the

man

for

whom

it was erected. The date is

early

in

the second

century

A.D.

after

the

assumption

of the

title Dacicus

by

Trajan

in 103 A.D.

The

restoration

above

is

given

e.g.

on

the

analogy

of

Z

G.

IV,

795.

78.

Two

fragments

of

white marble found in

1915

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

652)

is from the

upper

left-hand

corner

of the

inscription.

It

has

no

point

of

contact

with

fragment

b,

but the

two

pieces

may

be

associated

because of

similarity

in

the

quality

of the stone

and

in

the

lettering.

Height,

0.1

55

m.;

width,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.076

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.027 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

641)

is

broken from a block

which

originally

served as a

base

and

the

present

inscription

is cut on the

original

under

surface. At

the

right

may

still

be seen a

portion

of

the

quarter-round

moulding

which

was near

the

original top.

Height,

0.25

m.;

width,

0.1

3

m.;

thickness,

0.1 58

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025 m.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

59

Frg.

a

-

tLOg

A

,

Frg.

b

No.

78a

No.

78b

79. Fragment of white marble, broken on all sides, found in 1914 in the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

601.

Height,

0.65

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.25 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.031

m.

-

I]o L0[t-

.

-

--

dycwvo]Jnl[-

- - -

?_

-]

[-

- - --

P.,

No.

79

The

inscription

is

apparently

from the

pedestal

of a statue dedicated

in

honor

of

some

public

man

of

Corinth,

and

containing

the

record of

his

career.

80.

Two

fragments

of

a

white marble

base

found

in

1899

and 1900 west

of

the

shops along Lechaeum Road. Now in the museum at Old Corinth. Inv. Nos. 2 and 128.

Height,

0.335

m.;

width of inscribed

face,

0.70m.;

thickness,

1.32 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

7

m.

-

0.02m.

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60

CORINTH

1.

G.

IV,

1600; Powell,

A.J.

A.

VII, 1903,

p.

49,

No.

24;

R.E.

G.

1904,

p.

247.

rNKOrNHAIONTIBKOPNHAlOYnOTAX

O

TION

BIAO

i

ON

TPATHrON

THlOATEQoKOPINeIO ENTAETHPiONAFONOGETHKA PE

INlIOMIQNAPXIEPl

THZEAAAO

AIEALAAAPX

NAOTOYKO

NOYTNAXNAION-

IOYAIABIOYHEIPor

E? TrPoONAi

TOYrKAIAAETANAPEIAAIKAIOAOTH

APXO

ANEAAHNIOYKAIIE

AAWIANOrnANEAAH

IOYAAATEME

FAAAAQOFAE

nAONTAKAITHAT

,

THnOAE

APAAXONL

KAATn

YPN

IA

PONTEINA

I

IAAh/

\

No. o8

rv(cciov) KoQveilLov TLP(EQ(O'u)

OQvr(i'oV

IIno6ZyoQ

viov

a3.ia(cr)

IIov[?]XQov

oTQatlyov

Tsi

JTr6cogs

KOQ'tOv

3

jvTstaESTQLtx6O,

dy0ovoOtrTv

KKaoaaQ?Lov

'IoJitov,

dQXZLSQ[a]

Trg

ERkd0og

xal

;LasaQXZIV

O

TOD XOlVOV

vo

V

AX'Alacv

Go[v?e]QLoiv

8t

i

ov,

'HSpilQOV

EiTQO3Tov,

AiytTovu

xal

'AketavsQEiag

8LxCaLto6X'1v,

aQXov[Ta

TO]

I1aveXXlvov

xai

i[sEa

5 SQlavo HoavXYEUroviov,X.kal- T?

FyodXac;

&)c8QS&

ftS86Oa xal

TTIV

tEr[XELav]

-i(l)

jC6XSl

aQaoX6vra

KaxkrovQvia

DQovTSeva

iq

dSaE[pq]l

The

date of the above

inscription,

from

the time of

Hadrian,

must

be

after

the

institution

of the

Panhellenion

(lines 4-5).

Comment

on

Pulcher's cursus has

already

been

made

under No. 76.

In

line

2,

II?vTaETarmQi6v

must

be

construed

with

oteaT'lyov

to

mean

IIVIR

QUINQUENNALIS. Also,

I

do not

agree

with Fraenkel

(. G. IV, 1600) in considering the Caesareaand the Isthmian games mentioned here

as distinct.

Cf.

No.

14,

lines 5-6.

This

inscription

gives

in

abbreviated form

the name

which

appears

in

more

extended form in

the

inscription

in

honor

of Pulcher

at

Troezen

(LG.

IV,

795)

and

in

other

inscriptions

from

Corinth

(Nos.

76,

81,

and

Latin

71,

72).

For other

inscriptions

in

honor of

Pulcher cf.

Nos.

82 and

83.

81.

Two

contiguous

fragments

of a

pedestal

of

white marble

similar to No.

80,

found

in

1902

and

1903

in

front of

the

shops

along

the

western side of

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

Nos. 358

and 262.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

358):

Height,

0.255

m.;

width,

0.363

m.;

thickness,

0.14 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

262):

Height,

0.1

.;

width,

0.30

m.;

thickness,

0.073

..

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.02

m.;

in line

2,

0.01

7 m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

61

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

382,

No.

89.

No.

8i

[r]v(aiov)

KoQvrkllov

TL(6QIovu) KoQvrkloHv Hov[X%HQOo

]iv

L

aO3ia(l)

IIo1XXQov

oTQ[ar[qyov]

Tn;s o6Xreos

KOQLtv'COv 3tEVTa?TnQlx6v,

d[ycovoT-]nqv KaLoaQseiov

'Icrt[iaov,

dQXL^Qea]

[Tri

'EXXUdog

ac

S

XXaSdaQXv

danb

roV

XOLVOU

rOVAXaLt)v

ouvse8Qgov

8ia

LiOV,

HTiEIQO)]

[itLTQOjtov,

Aiyijtovu

xai

'AkXtavQe@iag

8Ixaio86trlv,

(aQovta

Txo

HavEXknViov

xal

isQ@a]

['A8Qlavov

IlavsXXTviov,

kkXa

tE

ysyadX

8boQ?a0LSlvTa

xal

xiiv

daerXLav

T(i(L)

Jo6XEL

JcaQaoaovTa]

[(name

of

the

dedicator)]

The

inscription may

be

restored

from

No.

80,

which

is

the

exact

counterpart.

Only

the

name of the

dedicator

is

uncertain.

Pulcher

was honored

by

two

smaller

dedications

as well

(Nos.

82 and

83)

set

up

by

different

men,

and

It is

quite

probable

that

someone

other than

his

sister,

Calpumia

Frontina,

dedicated

the

statue

which

once

stood on the

pedestal

described

here. The

inscription

is

from

the time

of

Hadrian.

Cf.

also

Nos.

76,

80,

82,

83 and

Latin

71,

72.

82. A base of white

marble,

broken at the

right,

found in 1901 in

a

late wall

built

on the west

buttress of the

Propylaea,

immediately

to the

right

of

the

entrance.

Now

in

the

excavations at

Old

Corinth.

Inv.

No. 9.

Height,

0.305m.;

width, 0.54m.;

thickness,

0.57m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII, 1903,

p.

52,

No.

26.

Fv(aiov)

KOQvrJLOv Ioi)XQo[v]

A. Fr2XkLo;

Fv"av[8QoS]

'No.

82

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62

CORINTH

Cf.

also Nos.

76,

80, 81,

83,

and

Latin

71,

72. L.

Gellius

Menander was the

father of L.

Gellius

Iustus

mentioned

in

No.

83.

Cf.

Latin 93.

83. A

rectangular

base of white

marble,

with

mouldings

at

top

and

bottom,

found

in

1899

between the

enclosure

of

Peirene and

the

Propylaea.

Now

inq

the

excavations at

Old Corinth. Inv. No. 16.

Height,

0.30m.;

width,

0.60

m.;

thickness,

0.58

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

L

G.

IV, 1601;

Powell,

A.J.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

51,

No.25.

Fv(atov)

KOQvktLov

HoUI3XQov

A.

rFFtog

'Iovazog

No.

83

The

first

letter of the

second

line is

clearly

a

lambda,

not

alpha,

and there

is

no possibility of

identifying

the man who dedicated this statue with the famous

author

of the

Nodes A/ticae

(Powell).

This

inscription,

and the one

given

as No.

82,

were

cut

on

bases

of

approximately

the same

size,

and each

supported

a

statue of

Gnaeus

Cornelius

Pulcher. These

statues

were

apparently

set

up

on

either side of

the

entrance to the'

Propylaea.

Cf.

also

Nos.

76,

80,

81,

and Latin

71,

72.

L.

Gellius Iustus

is to be identified

as the son

of L.

Gellius

Menander

men-

tioned

in

No. 82.

Cf.

Latin 93.

84. Two broken slabs of white

marble,

the former

(a)

found in 1907 in the

filling

of one of the

Northwest

Shops,

the

latter

(b)

found

just

above the

late

Roman

pavement

south of a

neighboring shop.

Inv. Nos. 429 and

440.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

429):

Height,

0.265

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

0.055 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

440):

Height,

0.28

m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.075

m.

The

height

of

the letters

varies from

line to line:

Fragment

a,

line

1,

0.052

m.;

line

2,

0.045

m.;

line

3,

0.04 m.

Fragment

6,

line

1,

0.035

m.;

line

2,

0.035m.;

line

3,

0.027

m.

In

line

4

the

letters are larger again (ca. 0.04 m.) as in line 3 of fragment a.

On both

fragments

the ruled

alignment

lines

can

be

seen.

Smith,

AJ.A. XXIII, 1919,

p.

383,

No.

90;

R.E.G.

1921,

p.

432.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

63

Fragmenta

[AmATOxQ].aToQaKaicaQa]

[OfEO

TQa]Lavo[i,

aQfIhxo]

[t6ov,

tEOi

NQgI9jo

[vi(,ov6v,]

[TQaiavo6v

CA8QLavbv

EPacoTOv,]

Fragment

b 5

[aQXLeQEa

FLoYltOV,]

F.

a.Q[XLXr]

'

[touvoag

TO

i,]

vuaTov

TO

yTov]

'

O

[acOTipa

xae E]E6QYTT1TV

[5k iXEo]5

*4T

..?

['H

KoQt]y?.[olov

oLktg;

No.

84

The restoration

above is

that

proposed

by

Smith,

with

the

year

of

tile

tribunicia

potestas

restored

on

the

assumption

that

the

honors

were accorded to

Hadrian

soon

after

his visit

to

Corinth

in 126 A.D.

Cf.

von Rohden in

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.v.

Aelius,

No.

64.

Although

there is no

point

of contact

between these

two

fragments

they may

with

reasonable

certainty

be

associated

because

of the

quality

of

the marble and

the

size

and

character of the

lettering.

Another

inscription

in

honor

of

Hadrian

has

been

found

at

Corinth

and will

be

published

as Latin

21.

85.

A herm

of

white

marble,

with

a

portrait

head

of

Herodes

Atticus,

found

near New

Corinth

in

1919. Now

in

the Museum

at

Old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

870.

Height,

1.84

m.;

width,

0.29

m.; thickness,

0.2 55

m.

Height of letters, 0.023 m.

B.C.H.

XLIV,

1920,

pp.

170-180;

A.J.A.

XXVII,

1923,

p.

352;

'AoQ.Aet.

1919,

IHaQ.

p.

38

ff.;

S.E.G.

II,

No. 52.

'HQ6@sr0i

The character

of the

lettering

and

style

of

the

sculpture

indicate

that

the

herm was

set

up

during

the

second

No.

85

century

A.

D.,

perhaps

during

the lifetime of Herodes. For

the benefactions of

Herodes at Corinth

cf. No. 86

and

appended

commentary.

The

father of Herodes

was also

honored

at

Corinth

(Latin

58),

and

we have

a

further

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64

CORINTH

inscription

recorded

on a

dedication

by

the

Corinthians

in

honor of

Herodes

himself

which

was

set

up

at Eleusis

(Ditt.

Sll.3,

854).

86. A base of white marble,with a rude moulding at top and bottom. The

right

side has a

relief with

representations

of

musical

instruments. Found

just

in

front

of the

middle

of

the eastern

apse

of Peirene in

1899.

Now

in

the

museum at

Old

Corinth. Inv.

No.

62.

Height,

0.35

m.;

width,

0.67

m.;

thickness,

0.67

m.

Height

of

letters

in line

1,

0.035

m.;

in

line

2,

0.03 m.

Richardson,

A.J.A.

IV,

1900,

pp.

235

ff.;

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

43,

No.

21;

I.

.

IV,

1599.

No. 86

[N]?46cTL

L(tU1)(piL

Poi.rlSg

aQ(a

yZ6UaTL

j'ny?ov

'PTliYXav

[i'

?oo@(0Q(),

eix6va

ooGpoo6vqr

V(YqTcolacTL)

(ov'0.<g)

The

base on which

this

inscription

was cut

supported

a

statue of

Regilla,

the

wife

of

Herodes

Atticus

(cf.

No.

85),

who died

about 161 A.D.

The

statue

is

impor-

tant in connection with

the

history

of

Peirene

because

it

indicates that

the

so-called

"second

marble

period"

is to

be

connected with

Herodes

Atticus,

who

is

otherwise

known to us

as a

benefactor of

Corinth

in

connection

with the

Odeum

(Cf.

Philos-

tratus,

Vit.

Soph.,

ii,

1,

9;

Paus.

II,

3,

6;

A.JA.

XXXI,

1927,

p.

460;

and

especially

A.J..A.

XXXII,

1928,

pp.

461-464).

The base

itself

originally

served

some other

purpose,

and

was

inverted before

the

statue

of

Regilla

was

placed

upon

it

and

before

the

inscription recording

the

honor

to

her was

cut. This is clear

from the

low

relief

representing

musical

instruments on

the

right

lateral

face,

which

is

now inverted.

87. A

large

block of

coarse-grained

bluish-white

marble,

found in

1915 in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Only

the

top

part

of

the

inscribed

surface is

broken

away.

Inv.

No.

670.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

65

Height,

1.22

m.;

width,

0.513

m.;

thickness,

0.495

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.086

m.

No.

...87.

No.

87

Both the upper and lower surfaces of the stone have dowel holes for the secur-

ing

of

other

blocks of

the

pedestal.

88. Two

fragments

of

a

base

of bluish

marble

'

which

join together,

found in

1901.

The

upper

section

(frg.

a)

was

discovered on

the

marble

steps

north

of

the

'^

Propylaea.

The

lower

section

(frg.

b)

was

discovered

at

the foot of these

same

stairs. Now in

the

excavations at

*;

<

Old

Corinth,

on the

eastern

side of

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

Nos. 17 and 18.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

17):

Height,

0.95

m.;

width,

0.70m.;

thickness,

0.65 m.

Fragment

6

(Inv.

No.

1

8):

Height,

0.65

m.;

width,

0.70

m.;

?

thickness,

0.65

m.

Fragment

a:

I

G.

IV,

1604;

Powell,

AJ.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

45,

No.

22;

R.E.G.

1904,

p.

247.

Fragment

b:

1

G.

IV,

1602;

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,L

3..

p. 52, No. 27.

No. 88

'ATiSog

EiltL

dtaQrlg

Ile8QLXXiiov

I

lta

.eYoyXd;,|

'EEQLoXdov

'vibO

oiUvoFa

LOYEVl)S.

9

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66

CORINTH

rtae

8s

a

Ei

'Ep5oQ[]|n

ILQvlbo0s

aYX[oa

vnY's]I

Tfi(L)8SE

>2EXO[v8EvoS]|

I

EX6vL

Xai[vE]

5

i(cpqiollaAa)

j(ou?iS)

I

have

followed Powell

in

the restoration

of line 3.

In

line

4

the

restoration

ZExoVu[v8sTvo]

s

necessary

to the metre. Traces of letters

given by

Powell

(and,

following

him,

by

Fraenkel)

at the

end

of line 4 I have been unable

to

distinguish

on

the

stone,

and I am convinced

that the restoration

Xail[vsl

is

possible,

after which

the stone

was

uninscribed.

89.

Statue

base of

bluish

marble found in

1900 at the foot of the

stairway

leading to the Propylaea.Now in the excavations at Old Corinth. Inv. No. 19.

Height,

1.34m.;

width,

0.73

m.;

thickness,

0.70m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

LG.IV,

1603; Powell,

A.J.A.

VII, 1903,

p.

47,

No.

23;

R.E.G.

1904,

p.

247;

Wol-

ters,

Rh.

Mus.

1904,

p.

157;

Wilhelm,

B. C. H

XXIX,

1905,

p.

415.

*oOQCPriv

Xaort6loS

jAEv

i(t)

0(

LElato

tO

TXvi(t)

'EEX;d&l

6oujovoXov

ILTtQI

XZaQLO6AEvoS,

[B]Z^j

~'I0

dyaaadlpEv6i

FALV

d(lAp?ov

EuTZULavb6

[d]vlti

XaWoLYVvtov

S

&8EUov

ECp15Qjv.

No.

89

Line

1

'Io'voQoc,

Wilhelm;

'ITvoQO?,

Powell;

'I09v(T)oQoS,

Fraenkel.

Lines

1 and

2

are

restored as

suggested

by

Wolters.

Lines

4

and

5;

Eutychianus

was

the

brother

and successor of the

proconsul

honored

in

this

inscription.

Wilhelm

suggests

that the man

in

whose

honor this

dedication

was

made

is

to

be identified with

the

proconsul

of

Achaea

mentioned

in

C.LL.

X,

3723:

Ti.

Cl(audius)

Me ....

[P]risc[us]

Ruf[inus] [I]un(ior).

Cf.

Pros.

Imp.

Rom.

I,

p.

388.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

67

90. A

small

fragment

of

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found in 1908.

The

place

of

finding

is

not

recorded. Inv. No. 489.

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height of letters, 0.014 m.

--

-

T]ILPQ[ov(?)-

-

rA

-

---

Lav---

-

No.

go

91.

Fragment

from

the

lower

right-hand

corer

of a marble

slab,

the

greatest

thickness

of which is at the

centre,

diminishing

almost to a

sharp

edge

at the

top

and

bottom.This fact means undoubtedly that originally the slab was only a little higher

than

at

present.

Found

in

1903

in

the

area

of

the

theatre.

Inv.

No.

353.

Height,

0.246

m.; width,

0.21

5

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.024

m.

Smith,

AJ.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p. 386,

No.

94.

-[T]OU

?[L]O'.

I6;

: :

L7T

I

- - - - - tLO]vLog

The

haracter of

the

lettering,

as well

as

the

The

characterof the

lettering,as

well as

the

content,

indicates

the

date

as

Roman.

No.

9g

92. A

fragment

of

white

marble,

with

surface

badly

worn,

found

in

1901

south of the

vaulted chamber

of

the

Northwest

Shops, very

close to the

surface of

the

ground. Inv. No. 146.

Height,

0.30

m.;

width,

0.27

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

nnT

Height

of

letters,

0.04m.

T

ONE

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

60,

No.

39.

-----

av]inraov

xs

'AQI-

AQ\

-I

----- --

e-

'Haios

ave-

GPHUXL

[XE

- -

EV

tOXSE

'E]qicQU

w

/H

The restoration

above

differs

from

that of

Powell,

No. 92

for

the

first letter

preserved

in

line 3

is

certainly

aphi,

not

kappa.

I

suggest

tentatively

the

restoration

BEv

OXEL

E]Jq

Qi

Ovv

KOQpv'p.

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68

CORINTH

93.

Two

fragments

of

marble

veneer,

broken

on all

sides,

found

together

in

a trench

dug

to determine the

dimensions of the theatre

during

the

spring

of

1903. Inv. Nos. 355

and 362.

Fragment a (Inv. No. 3 55): Height, 0.267 m.; width, 0.1 07 m.; thickness, 0.01 6 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

362):

Height,

0.212

m.;

width,

0.12

m.;

thickness,

0.01

6

m.

The

height

of the letters

varies

with the

different

lines

of

the

inscription

from

0.037m. to

0.04m.

Smith, A..A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

384,

No. 91.

94.

A

_fFragmtFragment

a

*^'''

Sj

5

H

or

eay

or-

Fragment

6

.- . ,w~ A- - - p. t9

- -

No.

94

--

- -

- -

- -

etQ[a

(?)-

No.

93

Smith's

notes record traces of other

letters which are

not included in

the

transcript given

above and

which are not

clear in

the

photograph.

They

may

be

ascertained

by

reference to

Smith's

publication.

94. A

fragment

of white marble, found in 1901 in the first chamber to the

west of the vaulted chamber

of the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

139.

Height,

0.24

m.;

width,

0.27

m.; thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04m.

Ly(s)J4 Powell, A.J.A. VII, 1903,

p.

39,

No.

13.

5?-

-

RoO

No.

94

..QL

- -

The

fragment

is

broken on

all

sides,

except

at the

left,

where there

appears

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

69

the

end of an

egg-and-dart

moulding,

with a

scale

pattern adjoining.

These

are

probably

from

a

later re-use of the

stone.

For the

restoration

EiUhvvi[ag;

te^XErT1V]

cf. IG.

IV,

795.

This

title

corresponds

to the

Latin curator annonae.

Cf.

No.

76,

lines

1-2, above,

and

Latin

83,

86-91.

95.

A

broken

slab

of

marble

veneer

found

in

1905

in

the

north

apse

of the

open

court

at Peirene.

Inv. No. 388.

Height,

0.31

m.;

width,

0.23

m.;

thickness,

0.023 m.-0.034

m.

The

height

of

the letters

decreases

in each

line,

in

line

1,

0.065

m.,

in

line

3,

0.051

m.

Smith,

A.JIA.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

388,

No.

97.

AoxioL ov - - -

-

vt

atQaTTlyo[V

t

XM

qTQT[yov

-

?

No.

95

The

upper

left-hand

corer

of

the

plaque

has been

preserved.

The

letters

have

particularly

thick finials

and

heavy

horizontal

strokes.

96.

A small

fragment

of white

marble,

found

in 1908.

Inv.

No.

494.

Height, 0.07 m.; width, 0.11 m.; thickness, 0.03 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

[AU'To]QaOQa

o

-

-

No.

96

The stone is broken on all sides, but a small portion of the left-hand face is

preserved

behind

the

original

surface

of

the

marble,

determining

the

left

margin

of

the

inscription.

This

fragment may

be from the

first

line of

the

inscription.

Cf.

No. 84.

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70

CORINTH

97.

Fragment

of

a

marble

base,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in 1908 a

short

distance

northwest

of

the

temple

of

Apollo.

Inv. No.

459.

Height,

0.35

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

0.165

m.

Height of letters, 0.03 m.

No.

97

Parts

of

the first

two lines

of the

inscription

are

preserved,

and

they

show

sufficiently

well

that the

base

supported

a

statue

of one

of

the

Roman

emperors.

Above the

first

line

may

still

be seen

part

of the

crowning

moulding

of the

base.

98.

A

fragment

of white

marble.

Exact

place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv. No.

321.

Height, 0.23m.; width, 0.194m.; thickness

0.08 m.

F/^tTC

T

(J

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.

~~~~/

~Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

387,

No. 95

/

IT

~

A T r

r^(with

photograph).

/^

---?]

Emt

aIovS

?-

]

____ _ ].;' dao'sT;.

,T

,f y

----

-

- - -

05?]

o

Sv

EaUT[cv]

No.

98

I am unable

to see

on the

stone

any

trace

of the vertical

bar before

the

epsilon

noticed

by

Smith

in line

1.

99.

Fragment

of white

marble,

with

right

edge preserved,

but broken

on

all

other

sides,

found

in

191

5

in

the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv. No.

684.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

71

Height,

0.1 4

m.;

width,

0.11 4

m.;

thickness,

0.058 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.026 m.

5

No.

99

The

inscription

is

probably

from

the

base

of a

statue dedicated

in

honor

of

some benefactor of

Corinth.

100. The

upper

right-hand

cornerof a block of white

marble,

found in 1915

in the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No.

697.

Height,

0.1

5

m.;

width,

0.275

m.;

thickness,

0.11 8 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.04 m.

-_____? --

[.Lov

No.

Ioo

Part of

a

pedestal

for

a

statue.

101. Block

of

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in

1900. Inv. No. 63.

Height,

0.27

m.;

width,

0.1 5

m.;

thickness,

0.27

lm.

Height

of

letters,

0.05

5

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

43,

No. 20.

-

-

- ]M.

'Av[TvLo

-

--

-

-

T

p[lOV-

--

*

[

No.

IOI

Powell's

interpretation

of line

2

is

surely

wrong,

for

the mark

over the M

is

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72

CORINTH

the

customary

mark

of

abbreviation.

Following

the

M

is

also a

mark of

punctuation,

and the letter is to

be

understood as the

initial

of the Roman

praenomen

Marcus.

The stone

is

probably

from the

pedestal

of

a

statue

dedicated

to Marcus

Antonius

(?)

by a friend.

102.

A

large cylindrical

base of white

marble,

badly

mutilated,

with

a mould-

ing

0.13

m.

high

at the

top

and

bottom.

Found

in 1900 and now

lying

in

the

ancient

Roman

Agora.

Inv. No. 4.

Height,

0.88

m.;

diameter,

1.38

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.05 m.-0.06 m.

.G.

IV,

1598; Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

55,

No.

31;

Smith, A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

393,

No.

31.

1- ---VA

/\1']

"O[tPQLov

IHt6Q8QoO

r

--'-:Av-

"]

'T,.i, ,

Evexa.

No.

I02

The

present

top

of the base

was

originally

the

bottom,

and the earlier

dedica-

tory inscription,

now

erased,

consisted

of four lines of Latin.

Enough

of this

earlier

inscription

can be

discerned,

however,

to

indicate

that one M.

Iustitius

Priscus

dedicated

the

original

statue.

The

later Greek

inscription,

which

is

given

here

is in the

form

of

an

elegiac couplet.

103. Fragment of a plaque of bluish marble, found in 1901 in one of the

shops

along

the western

side

of Lechaeum

Road. Inv.

No.

157.

Height,

0.27

m.;

width,

0.43

m.;

thickness,

0.03

8

m.

Height

of

letters varies

from

0.025m.

to

0.055m.,

the

average

being

about

0.035

m.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

58,

No. 37.

-,_

v

-O

E

---l-

pt

( ?---/

No.

--v _AV(V,

0Y

FU&EQ

_

-

'-i

--C[E

[trxxxov

EQ@509

-w--

5-4-

]LXEEWV,

O.iOS

?-

-.-

No.

I03

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

73

The

inscription

is

in

elegiac couplets,

as

indicated

above,

but

its content is

not

clear.

The

stone

itself

is broken

away

on all

sides,

but the letters

are well

cut,

and

many

of

them show

traces of red

paint.

104. A

block

of white

marble,

discovered

built into

the

house

of

Panteles

Pantazes.

Inv.

No.

177.

N E

Height,

0.39

m.;

width,

0.12

m.;

thickness,

0.23 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

32,

No.

6.

I

-

NEiv[lo;]

ALoy[?vo]

I

No.

I04

When

the stone

was removed

from the house

wall

in which it was

immured,

it

was

discovered

to

be

a

fragment

of

a

herm.

The

left

edge

is

preserved.

105.

A block

of bluish

marble found

in 1901 near

the foot of

the

steps

lead-

ing

to

the

Propylaea.

Inv.

No.

21.

Height,

0.77m.;

width,

0.435

m.; thickness,

0.335

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.055

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

57,

No.

35.

The stone

probably

served

as the

base

6

for a statue

of

the

personage

in

whose

honor

the

inscription

on

the

principal

face was

cut.

Later

it was

used as

a

paving

block,

and

the

constant

wear

to

which

it was

subjected

T(\

accounts

for

the

poor

state

of

preservation

of

the

inscription.

Powell reads in line 1

IIo-

L J N

c[iLkov

N]LVVLOV,

nd

suggests

also

for

the

fourth

line which

appears

in the

drawing

No.

IO5

The first

line

especially

is

subject

to

question,

and

I

prefer

to

attempt

no

restoration

of it.

106.

Block of

white

marble,

found

in

1925

in the area

north of

the

Basilica

on the western side of Lechaeum Road. Now in the excavations at old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

798.

Height,

0.50

m.; width,

0.50

m.;

thickness,

0.39

m.

10

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74

CORINTH

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.075

m.;

in

line

2,

0.065

m.;

in

lines

3-4,

0.06 m.

Broneer,

AJ.A.

XXX,

1926,

p.

52;

R.E.G.

XXXIX,

1926,

p.

266.

A.

I(dMELov

(I)XapLavo'

'OV

XQdTLYTovxaL

ayv6raTrov

a[tMav

No. o06

The

block was

re-used to

receive

the dedication

in

honor

of

Flavius,

and

beneath the

present

Greek

inscription

the

traces

of

an

earlier

Latin

inscription,

now

erased,

can be

discerned

(Latin 108).

The

tenor

of

this

inscription

indicates that

Flavius was

a man

of

senatorial rank

(quaestor),

not

merely

a

local official

of

Corinth.

107. A

fragment

of

white

marble,

found

in

the

early

excavations,

but

the

exact place and date of finding is not recorded. Inv. No. 314.

Height,

0.027m.;

width,

0.22

m.;

thickness,

0.073 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.038

m.

Smith, A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

388,

No. 96.

[- - r- :iw rov KoQL@vft]0ov

oii'

o.

[

a

' vr '

No.

I07

Part of the

original

right edge

is

preserved,

but the stone is

broken

on all

other

sides. Red

coloring

matter

is found

in all

of

the

letters.

108.

A

large

base of white marble

found

in

1900

north

of the

Propylaea.

Now in the excavations at

Old

Corinth.

Inv.

No. 12.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

75

Height,

1.47

m.;

width,

0.735

m.; thickness,

0.76

m.

The face

of

the

block on which

the

inscription

was cut

measures

0.565 m.

by

0.90m.,

but all of the

inscription

has been erased

except

the last

line,

which is

given

above.

109.

Nine

fragments

of

a

plaque

of white marble which

vary

in

thickness

from

0.02m. to

0.035m.,

found in 1903

and 1908 in

the

northwest

comer of

the

Agora.

Inv. Nos.

344, 461,

464, 465,

466,

467, 468, 469,

482. The

fragments

may

all

be associated

because

of the

iden-

tical character

of the

lettering

and

the

similar

rough-picked

dressing

of the

re-

verse.

Their

disposition

may

be

determined

within

limits

by

the thickness

of

the

stone,

which was

greater

toward the

upper

left-hand

corner

of the

plaque

and less

toward

the lower

right-hand

corer.

The

height

of

the letters

throughout

is

0.047

m.

Fragment a (Inv.

No.

344)

is

apparently

from

the

upper

left-hand

portion

of

the

stone.

TO

B

Height, 0.146m.;width,0.19m.;

hick-

ness,

0.035

m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

466)

is

from

the

left-hand

portion

of the

stone,

but

lower

than

fragment

a.

Height, 0.1 7 m.; width, 0.1 3 m.; thick-

ness,

0.028 m.

Fragment

c is made

up

of five

pieces

(Inv.

Nos.

464,

461,

467,

468,

and

482)

arranged

as shown

in

the

drawing.

The two

lower

pieces

have no

point

of

contact

with each

other,

or with

the

main

group

of

fragment

c,

but

their position is determined by

the

No. 1o9

tapering

thickness

of the

stone.

This

group,

I

assume,

is from

the

centre

of the

inscription.

Height,

over

all,

0.57

m.;

width,

0.50m.;

thickness,

0.027

m.

(on

the

left),

0.02

m.

(on

the

right).

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76

CORINTH

Fragment

d

(Inv.

No.

465)

is from

the bottom line

of

the

inscription.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.06

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Fragment

e

(Inv.

No.

469)

is from the

bottom

line

of

the

inscription,

to the

right

of

fragment

d.

Height,

0.13

m.;

width,

0.155

m.;

thickness,

0.022

m.

Fragment

a

-- -

o---

- --

-EV-

-

- -

- - -

-

-m-

- - ----

lacuna

Fragment

b

----

-------

5

-

T

---------

lacuna

Fragment

c

----

--- -

-

10

-

ovr]o

- - - -

-

OV

-

-

-

-

-

--

-

-

-

-

ev

[d]jTO

O

X

- - -

?_--

v

aroSa-og

15

- - -

- - -

oyo

- - -

-----

------o

ov.,

--------.

---- [av]mc[a]To[s] -----

?______?_______-_

20

lacuna

Fragments

d

-

and e

-

- -

-v

-

- - la

[or

o

or

.]

vacant

The

drawing

shows

the

various

fragments

in the

approximate

relative

positions,

though

no claim

can be made for

certainty.

110.

Six

fragments

of

slightly

bluish

marble,

found

in

1925

in

the

Greek

Stoa

just

south

of

Temple

Hill.

Inv.

Nos.

773-778.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

77

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

774):

Height,

0.12m.;

width,

0.135m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.055 m.-0.06 m. The

top

surface is

preserved.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

7

76):

Height,

0.22 5

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.06

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.057

m.

The

right edge

is

preserved.

Fragment

c

(Inv.

No.

775):

Height,

0.205

m.;

width,

0.1

5

m.;

thickness,

0.045

m.

Height

of

letters ca. 0.057 m. The left

edge

is

preserved.

Fragment

d

(Inv.

No.

7

77):

Height,

0.135

m.; width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.055 m. Broken on all

sides.

Fragment

e

(Inv.

No.

778):

Height,

0.11

5

m.; width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.024

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.055 m. Broken on

all

sides.

Fragment/(Inv.

No.

773):

Height,

0.245

m.;

width,

0.15

m.; thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.038 m.

Broken

on

all

sides.

The

original

thickness

of no one

of

the

fragments

is

preserved.

L

OCr?(

'

w

"\ /VI/

L

\ \

\ \ 1 0

f y

X

]W l

i H

No.

IIoa

No.

Irob

No. iioc

No.

IIod

No.

IIOe

No.

IIOf

.

..-

-

-?...-

-

?xo;

____________

_Q8Q-

-

- -_

YO)_

_ _ _ _____ _

og

T

- - -

- - - - - - - - - - -

5

6

Cota[trYO?

----- -

-

---]

KoQVJ[Rlos

------

-

- -

-]

lacuna

10

-

-

-

ov

oX

- - - -

ov *

X-

-

- -

- - -

ov

ro[

- -

-dv]Bi5caT[ov

-]

lacuna

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78

CORINTH

acoo0

vacat

The fragments have been associated because of the similarity of letter forms

and

the identical

character of the marble.

All

fragments

were

found

in

approximately

the same

place

within

a

period

of ten

days.

The

surface

dressing

of

the stone on

which

the

inscription

was

cut is

also

the same

in all

the

fragments.

The

transcript

gives,

however,

only

the

approximate

disposition

of

the

fragments,

as

determined

by

the

height

of

the

letters,

etc. As is

often the

case

in

monumental

inscriptions

of the

Imperial

period,

the letters

in

the initial lines are

larger

than

those

in

the

lines

following,

where

a

gradual

diminution in the size of the

letters is

accompanied by

a

closer

spacing

within the line.

Fragment

a is

clearly

from

the

first

line

of

the

inscription,

for the

upper

edge

is

in

part preserved.

Fragmentfis

from the

last

line of

the

inscription,

and below

the letters

monto

he stone

was

uninscribed. The

size

and

spacing

of

letters indicate

that

fragments

d and e are from the same

lines,

though

it is not clear in

which order

they

are to be associated.

Perhaps

the

original

stone

on which

the

inscription

was

cut formed

part

of a

base

supporting

a statue

in honor

of,

or dedicated

by,

Cornelius

(line

7).

This

same

Cornelius

may

also have been

proconsul

(line

11).

111. A

block

of white

marble,

found in 1898 on

the

Lechaeum

Road

at the

foot

of

the

marble

steps

leading

to the

Propylaea.

Now in

the

Museum at

Old

Corinth.

Inv.

No.

123.

Height,

0.22

m.; width,

0.93

m.;

thickness,

0.42

m.

Height

of letters

varies

from

0.065

m. to

0.095

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

60,

No.

40;

R.E.G.

1904,

p.

247.

F.J.M.

de

Waele,

Studia

Catholica,

V, 1928,

pp.

163-166.

[Evva]yoyi

'EPet[atoov]

No.

iii

<<The tone

is

broken at

the

right,

and at

the

left

the

inscribed surface

is

muti-

lated.

The

block shows

an ornament of dentils

and

spaces

underneath

and

was

prob-

ably

a cornice block

originally.

The left end was afterwardtrimmed and chiselled to

fit

another block

which

joined

this

one

diagonally.

The stone

then

formed the

base

of a

tympanum

or

pediment,

and,

with

each

end built

into

the

wall,

it

probably

formed

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

79

the lintel

over

a

doorway.>

(Powell).

The

inscription

is

of

peculiar

interest

because

of

St.

Paul's

connection with Corinth and the

fact that he

preached

there in the

Syna-

gogue

of the Hebrews

(N.T.,

Acts.

xviii,

4).

But the

style

of

lettering

indicates

that

the

inscription s considerably ater than the time of St. Paul. The block may well have come,

however,

from

a

later

synagogue,

the

site of

which

we

may

assume

lay

on

Lechaeum

Road not

far

north

of

Peirene and

the

Propylaea.

And it

is

perhaps

a fair

presumption

that

the

synagogue

in

which

St.

Paul

preached

may

be

located in the same

area.

112.

The left end

of

a

poros

building

block,

place

and date

of

finding

unknown. Inv.

No.

170.

Height,

0.282

m.;

width,

0.225

m.;

thickness,

0.1

36

m.

The

single

letter E

is 0.093

m. in

height.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

381,

No. 87.

The

fragment

is broken

at the

bottom and

at the

right,

but

a

portion

of the

original

top

is

preserved.

The

left face

has

anathyrosis

for the

reception

of another block.

The break

at

the

right

follows

the curve of

a

rounded

letter,

perhaps

No.

II2

theta,

and the

restoration

dv]E[rxsE

s

a

possible conjecture.

The

inscription

is

clearly

from the dedication of

some

Corinthian

building.

On the

front of

the stone

are

traces

of

a

thin

stucco.

113.

Two

architectural

fragments

of

bluish white

marble

found

in

1908 in

the

western

part

of

the

Agora.

Now

in

the

excavations at

Old Corinth.

Inv.

No. 475.

Fragment

a:

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

2.20

m.;

thickness,

0.56

m.

Fragment

b:

Height,

0.40

m.;

width,

1.84

m.;

thickness,

0.62

m.

Height

of

letters on

both

fragments

ca. 0.20 m.

No. II3a

No.

113b

The

inscription

is cut

on the lower

moulding

of

a

block of

entablature.

Frag-

ments a and

b

clearly

belong

together,

because of

the

character of the

letters and

the

shape

of

the

mouldings

on the

stone,

but

they

have no

point

of

contact.

Fragment

a

is

broken

away

at

the

top

and at

both

ends,

while

fragment

b

is broken

away

at

the

bottom

and

at the

right.

Fragment

a was

subsequently

inverted

and used as

a

thres-

hold

block. The

pivot

holes for the doors

may

still be

seen on

what was

originally

the lower

surface.

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80

CORINTH

114.

Two

fragments

of

marble veneer which are

shown

to

belong together

by

their

similarity

in

thickness,

color and

grain

of

the

marble,

and

shape

and

size of

the

letters.

They

have no

point

of

contact Inv. Nos.

264 and

339.

Fragment a (Inv. No. 264) was found in 1902 in the Northwest Shops. It is broken

on all

sides.

Height,

0.234

m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

ca.

0.043 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.098 m. The

uninscribed

space

above indicates that this

was the

first line

of

the

inscription.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

339)

is

broken on all sides.

The

place

and

date of

discovery

are

not

recorded.

Height,

0.1

7

m.;

width,

0.102

m.;

thickness varies from

0.039

m.

to

0.047 m.

Height

of

letters

varies

from

0.065

m.

to 0.07

m.,

in

exactly

the

same

style

as

those

of

fragment a,

but

smaller,

indicating

that the

fragment belongs

to

the

lower

lines of the

inscription.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

389,

No.

98.

No.

114

The

inscription

is

very

fragmentary.

I have

given tentatively

in

line

1

Smith's

restoration

IToa

Kvacpeiov,

hough

I

agree

with

him that more

evidence is needed

before

we

may identify

the

Northwest

Shops

as this

portico.

[--

'-[-

l

N l 1

l/&\I/I115.

The

upper ight-hand

orner

f a

white

marble

Ab

A Tase,

found

in

1915

in

a

stratum of

mediaeval

debris

\l

/\

l\in

the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv. No.

698.

XT

CTI

N

Height,

0.32m.; width, 0.21 m.; thickness,0.12 m.

Height

of letters in line

1,

0.045

m.;

in line

5,

0.026 m.

n/

T

r

The

base

apparently supported

the

statue

of

a

Y

I

woman,

whose

name, however,

(in

line

1)

we are

not

able

{ \

^^ Ato

restore. n

line

2

the

word

MaQxo'

is

clear.

No.

I

15

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

81

116.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1910

in

the

field east

of the theatre.

Inv.

No. 513.

Height,

0.09

m.;

width,

0.1 5

m.;

thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04 m.

I

M.

AUQ.

'I

No.

II6

The

surface of

the

stone is

badly

worn,

and

today

no

mark

of

punctuation

can

be seen

between

the M

and

the

A.

The

punctuationfollowing

the

P

is, however,per-

fectly

clear.

After

this

is

part

of

a vertical

hasta,

perhaps

iota.

117.

Ten

fragments

of

a

plaque

of white

marble

veneer,

found

in

1910

in

the

area

immediately

east of

Peirene.

Inv. Nos. 522-531.

The

inscription

is

painted

in

black on the smooth surface

of

the

stone,

which

has been worn in

many places

so that

the

letters

can be

distinguished

only

with

the

greatest

difficulty.

The

accompanying

drawings

('/8

natural

size)

give my

readings.

The

thickness

of

the

plaque

varies from

0.01

1

m.

to

0.026

m.;

but the

variation does

not seem to be regular enough to allow a systematic arrangement of the fragments.

Nor

do

the various

pieces join,

except

as

shown

in

fragment g.

No.

II7a

No.

II7b

No.

II7c

No.

II7d

No.

II7e

No.

II7f

No.

II7g

No.

II7h

No.

I17i

The

inscription

refers

apparently

to

a dedication

in honor

of

one

of

the

11

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82

CORINTH

emperors

who bore the name of Marcus

Aurelius,

and

it must

in

consequence

be

dated in

the second

half of the

second

century

A.

D.

or later. The

following readings

are

significant:

Fragment a, AirT(o)x[QaToQa];Fragment e,

[a]oTr[rQL;

Fragment g, Esyi[aTOv]; rag-

ment

g,

M-

AV6QqXi'o[vu];ragment

g,

oap(aurtoi).

In

fragment

i the word

KoQLv-

Oicov s

clear,

and

perhaps

in

the

line

following

we

may

restore

[I]ovXu^avoi.

The connection with the

body

of

the document remains obscure.

118.

Base of

a

statue,

with the lower

part

of the

statue itself

carved also on

the

same

block.

Found

in 1927 west

of the

i

H

E

Odeum. Inv. No. 877.

Height,

0.25

m.; width,

0.40

m.; thickness,

\J

BAC

^

w

CIL

;0.35

m.

pniA)

.

JC

UJjT

Height

of

letters

in line

1,

0.027

m.

E^^^<

GNAW^:~

~The

surface

of

the

stone

is so

badly

No. II8

worn

that a

restoration

seems

impossible,

except

in

the last

line,

where

the

name

Sexov.8og

appears.

119.

Fragment

of

white marble

moulding

found in

1915

in the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

700.

Height,

0.125

m.;

width, 0.17

m.;

thickness,

0.074 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.08 m.

w

:-

-

]ELVav

l.TTmE8QlOTdT[v-

-

No.

ii9

The

stone is

broken

away

at both

sides,

and the

inscription

is cut

in

only

one

line on what was once the

upper

taenia of the

moulding.

120.

A

block of

white

marble,

badly

broken and worn. Exact

place

of dis-

covery not recorded.Inv. No. 161.

Height,

0.72m.;

width,

0.48

m.;

thickness,

0.1

7

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04 m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

83

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII, 1903,

p.

42,

No. 17.

The

smoothly

worn

surface

of the

block

indicates

that

it was

placed

at some time

face

0

upwardin a pavement.

'

H

121.

Three

contiguous

fragments

of a

white marble

screen,

found at different

times near

Peirene.

Inv. Nos.

335, 831,

and

534.

Height,

0.1

8

m.;

width,

0.485

m.;

thickness,

0.063

m.

Height of letters,

ca.

0.03 m. ((p=0.05 m.)

One

of

the

fragments

is

published

by

Smith,

AJ.A.

XXIII, 1919,

p.

392,

No. 102.

No.

I20

i . ..K....

1

:[

No.

121

The

right-hand

side

is broken

away.

The

place

of

discovery

indicates

that the

inscription

refers

to the fountain

of

Peirene,

as

is also made clear

by

the mention

of

the

name Peirene

on

a

similar

fragment

found

near the same

place,

and

belonging

to

a similar screen

(No.

122).

122. Fragment of a white marble screen found in the neighborhood of

Peirene,

broken

away

at

both sides and at

the bottom.

Inv.

No.

735.

Height,

0.1

6

m.;

width,

0.27

m.;

thickness,

0.05

7

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.038

m.

No.

122

This

fragment

has

mouldings

similar to

those

of No.

121

and

evidently

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84

CORINTH

belongs

to the same

series.

There is

enough

difference,

however,

in

the measure-

ments of

the

mouldings

and the

thickness

of

the

fragment

to

prove

that

they

are

not

from

the same

original

stone.

123.

Fragment

of a

white

marble screen found in

1914

in

the

neighborhood

of

Peirene. Broken

away

at both

sides

and

at

the bottom. Inv.

No. 554.

Height,

0.16

m.;

width,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.057

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.036 m.

Tou

-

No.

123

The

mouldings

are

preserved

in such a

way

as to show that this

fragment

comes from

the

upper

left-hand

corner of the

screen,

in

spite

of the

fact

that

the left

edge

is not

preserved.

On

the reverse the

vertical

return of

the

moulding

is

quite

clear,

and a faint trace

of

the return

may

also

be seen on

the

obverse

(cf.

photograph).

The

fragment

cannot

be

associated

directly,

however,

with

any

of the other

pieces

of

this series

(Nos.

121, 122,

and

124).

124.

Fragment

of a

white

marble screen found

in

the

neighborhood

of

Peirene.

Inv. No.

844.

Height,

0.16

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.06

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

Ga

No.

124

This

fragment

comes

from

the

upper

right-hand

corner

of

the

original

stone

and

belongs

in

the same series

with

Nos.

121,

122,

and

123,

although

it cannot be

associated

directly

with

any

one

of

them.

125.

Fragment

of

bluish

marble,

broken

away

on

all sides

except

the

top.

Found

in 1926

on

Acro-Corinthus.Inv.

No. 837.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS 85

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.21 5 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

-t z :_ (05 XOQ[V

( ? )

Oy

No.

125

The

doubtful letters

in

the second line

are

indicated.

The

first letter

may

be

either

o or

0;

those marked

as

doubtful

sigmas may perhaps

be

epsilons.

The

reading

given

above

is,

I

think,

more

probable,

and

it

is

tempting

to restore the line

in

such

a

way

that it

may

have

some connection

with

the

Sisypheum,

which

is known

to

have

existed on

Acro-Corinthus

near

Upper

Peirene

where this

inscription

was

found.

Cf. Paus.

ii,

5,

1;

Strabo,

viii,

p.

379;

Diodorus,

xx,

103.

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IV

SEPULCHRAL

MONUMENTS

A. GREEK AND ROMAN (Nos. 126-134)

126.

Fragment

of

the

top

of

a

white

marble

grave

stele

found

in

1902

in

the

area

north

of the

Basilica.

Inv. No. 171.

Height,

0.082

m.;

width,

0.1 38

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.013

m.

(P=0.01

5

m.;

0=-over 0.025

m.).

Smith,

A.JA.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

391,

No.

100.

FLP1TQiaXaiv[aL

jo

.'

L

oQ

....

No.

126

"The

neat,

if

somewhat

irregular,

letters

have

finials.

This

fact,

with

the

shape

of

the

M and

the

0

in

particular,

suggests

the

middle

of

the

second

century

B.

C.

as

the date

of the

inscription"

(Smith).

127.

Fragment

from the top of a small white marblestele, broken at the right

Found

in

1907

in

a ravine

west

of the

church

of

Hagia

Paraskevi,

some

metres

?i

j, ,?,

.....Hi

No.

127

south

of

an

ancient

quarry,

and

presumably

from some

ancient

cemetery

outside

the

walls

toward

Sicyon.

Inv.

No.

400.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

87

Height,

0.073

m.;

width,

0.1 53

m.;

thickness,

0.049

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 m.-0.01

2

m.

Smith,

A.J.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

390,

No.

99.

Nothing can be made of the letters in the third line, traces of which may be

seen

in

the

photograph.

Sosibia

was

probably

a

tFrw,

from one of

the several towns

bearing

the

name

of Heraea

(Smith).

128.

A

block

of

soft sandstone

found

by

one of the inhabitants

of

Old

Corinth

near

an

ancient

grave

in the

neighborhood.

Inv.

No.

316.

Height,

0.34

m.;

width,

0.23

m.;

thickness,

0.12

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

. G. IV, 397; Powell, A.J.A. VII, 1903, p. 32, No. 7.

?ENAAI\

K

IoS

[MI

oo

E

I A

A

[]laoia

No.

128

The stone was covered with a light stucco, and

the

inscription, together

with

the

place

of

finding,

indicates

that

it

was

a Hellenistic

grave

stele.

The name

is

unusual,

but Menalkis must

have been

a

|?vq

from

Phlius.

For a similar

monument

cf. No. 127.

129.

Fragment

from the base

of a

sepulchral

monument,

found

in

1904,

probably

south

of the

church of

St.

John.

Broken

on all

sides,

but

preserves

the

original

height

and

right

front

edge.

Inv.

No.

381.

Height,

0.105

m.;

width,

0.305

m.;

thickness,

0.247

m.

Height

of letters, 0.05

m.,

cut in the

elegant

Roman

style

of the first or second

century

A.

D.

Smith,

AJ/.A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

391,

No.

101.

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88

CORINTH

A circular

depression

in the

top

of the

block is

the

only

indication

of

the

type

of

monument

supported

by

this

pedestal.

If

it

was

in

the

centre of

the

stone,

and

if

No.

129

the

inscription

was

spaced symmetrically

with

it, only

one

word

is to

be

restored,

as

shown above.

130.

A

stele of

white

marble,

broken

at

the

upper

left and

lower

right-hand

corners. Traces of moulding may still be seen along the upper edge of the stone.

Place

and date

of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv.

No.

747.

Height,

0.67

m.;

width,

0.57

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Height

of letters in lines

1-2,

0.027

m.;

in

lines

3-8,

0.014 m.

AS:

LUPPPMA-LAsTi\

.

NOlTINOZHPIONEIOT

nIE

I

M

AZ

_"r

NA

IKA

A,OON

T

E

MATIZE

/iENlQXAPITAS

FAMETAIAEXOZ YEI AMAN

fO-ON

E i

nYMATANAOENE

r

AM ENA

ENEkEY

--E

nNME

AOIE

PONA

A

E

Xx

1ON

EPMA

1I

Z

AI

A1N

N

l

NXONI

OZ

Y

N

A

No.

I30

-__--____

_ NUMISIA.NUMIS ----

---

- - - -

- -

LIUS:

L.L.

PRIMA

L.L.

ANTIGON[A]

[Toiaov

dveLQOJi]EvoLg

IVOg

q@QIOV

pq)

0t

HnQEiLfag

[a

Piov

ti]V

adyvaL

Xab8o6vt

TQ@aTloG,

5

[yEtva](lLvcoL

XdaQLag,

yaLT,al

Xsoc

,

'usi

cp)dav

aCoyov

Eg

t

uAdicTav

ao

SvEyxaXEva,

[T]ov

.VEX

E1aGpSTE

V

>E

xatO

iLEQov

yayEs

X(Qov

'EQ[tag

-

aLVSTico

xal

'v

Xovi

oo(pQoovVa.

The

letters

of

the

inscription, though

late

in

date,

are

beautifully

cut,

and

resemble

closely

those of

No.

1

6,

which

must be

dated

in

the latter

part

of

the

second

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

89

century

A. D. The

Greek

is cast into three

elegiac couplets

of

Doric

style.

The choice

of

restorations

is limited

by

the

space

available

on

the

stone

at the left

edge

of the

inscription.

It is

a

reasonable

presumption

that the

alignment

of lines 3 and 5 should

be

determined

by

line

7,

and that lines

4,

6,

and 8 have also

a

common

margin.

Below the

inscription

the stele is decorated with a basket in low

relief,

with two

butterflies

on

the

upper

rim.

131.

A

grave

stele

of

white

marble,

found in

1911

in

the

area

north of the

Basilica. Now

in

the collection of

inscriptions

and

sculpture

at

Old

Corinth.

Epigra-

phical

Inv.

No.

541;

Sculptural

Inv. No.

1026.

Height,

0.285

m.; width,

0.28

m.;

thickness,

0.09

m.

Height of letters, ca. 0.01 5m.

TvQav'a

1()3ixYaTQa

Htoks?ltaklo(L)

XaLQSLV

No. I31

The

stele

is broken

away

at the

back,

and

at the

bottom

and

upper

right-

hand

corner.

Two

draped

figures

may

be seen

in the

field below

the

inscription,

with their

right

hands

clasped

in

the

familiar

gesture

of

parting.

132.

Fragment

of a relief

of

white

marble,

found

in

1898

near the

steps

lead-

ing

to the

Propylaea.

Inv.

No. 84.

Height, 0.295 m.; width, 0.31 m.; thickness, 0.10 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025 m.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

56,

No. 32.

12

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90

CORINTH

II

_,,

4

1Y

'",

,

.

?

"

Evxaeno

'Ex[

]

No.

I32

The

feminine

name

E1uxaQ@rtc

s

unusual,

but the

masculine

form

EixaQTog

occurs

frequently

in

i

nscriptions.

133.

A

grave

stele

of

limestone, slightly

broken at the

top

and

bottom,now

in

the museum

at

Old Corinth.

Inv. No.

874.

_-_-

'AjAXowvLa

'EOTTU7OQ

Ua

No.

33)

i?:":."t.,.:.,.,~.

~~~~~~~~~~~:...~;~":

? '~"

'

.i":

'A~~~~~~~~cohhwvh~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~~:~

:

,.

:

No. ~3

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

91

Height,

0.55

m.;

width,

0.46

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

5

m.

Philadelpheus,

'AQZ.

AsT.,

1918,

IIaQ.

I,

7,

No.

9;

SE.

G.

I,

No. 65.

The

stele is

decorated

in

low

relief

below

the

inscription,

with

representations

of a

reclining figure

on

a couch and an attendant. In the

lower

right-hand

corner

is

also the

figure

of a

dog.

Line 1:

'AxtoWovaa=-'AxtoUrWovca.

ine

2:

'EovoQia--ErnooQL'a.

Philadelpheus assigns

the

monument to

the

third or

fourth

century

A. D.

134. A

grave

stele

with

crowning pediment containing

a

representation

of a

vase.

In

the

pavement

of the church

of

St.

John

at Old

Corinth. Inv.

No. 881.

Height,

0.51

m.;

width,

0.43

m.;

thickness

indeterminate.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

5 m.

Le

Bas-Foucart,

Voyage

Arc/heologiqzie,

I,

p.

91;

Dragatsis,

HaQpvao6a;,

881,

p.

341;

Monceaux,

Gazelltte

rche'ologique,

1

885,

p.

409;

1.

G.

IV,

398.

Z\OME

T

I4,

i/\I

AotESTLa

LX

U(tca(\)a()

K

AIl/\\OYk

I

?Y

o

/oME

TIY

oY

xail

Aovxiov

AoT?CTiov

AOY

loy y

I

o c(,/\ E PN/ Aouxiouvio(i), ()aeQva(L),

ZEl

T

0

P1

I

A

A

/

n

o

/\f

N

I

ScaToeQXa

'Aaok(ovi(;)

No.

I34

The

restoration

follows that

in

I G.

IV,

398

with

the

following

two

excep-

tions:

In line

1

the

final

szgwna

must

be

restored

in

parentheses,

for the stone

at

this

point

is uninscribed

after the

alpha;

in line

4

the

final

sigma

must also be restored

in

parentheses,

for

there

is

no

letter on the

stone after

the

iota.

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B.

BYZANTINE

(Nos.

135-197)

135.

A

slab of

grayish

marble,

found in

1899.

Inv. No. 156.

Height,

0.28 m.; width, 0.36 m.; thickness, 0.05 m.

The letters

vary

in

height

from 0.02

m.

at the

top

to 0.01

m.

at the bottom.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

62,

No.

42.

['Eav

8]E

ad[ov

al-

oaytv

pouv6-

DJ

;

.E)4iVOL EVVt

G

ILOL

I l.. %\*i

"A

C()J 5

XQOVE-,

(v)t8' dyovTS

.v.(L)

F

.'.o cpE.og

-S

No.

I35

a

LOL

Uv

?

La

/L'vE-

...

7y

-

- -

- -

-

a

avcMv.

The stone is broken both at

top

and

bottom,

though

apparently

very

little of

the

inscription

has been lost.

In line

1 Powell

reads

[Eti

b

E]s dX[daT]ToaLv.

The

affectation of

epic

diction

is

apparent

in the

document

and

the

forms

yenS

(lines

6-7),

feXioov

(line

8),

and

cpdoS

line

8)

are

especially

indicative

of this

archaizing

tendency.

So

also

is the choice

of words

in

general,

where

many

phrases

fall into

the

rhythm

of

hexametre

verse,

e.g.,

Exyova

EvxatraCtivrY(L)

nd

Ad8'

EioAOvd

cpdos

Egoxa

Xad([t)4nT(l).

The

inscription

as

a whole

is not metrical.

136. A

plaque

of white marble found in one of the houses at Old Corinth

about

300

yards

southeast

of

the

Agora.

Exact

provenance

unknown.

Inv. No.

848.

Height,

0.47

m.;

width,

0.26

m.;

thickness,

0.04

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

93

The

height

of

letters

varies,

as shown

in

the

drawing,

from 0.025 m.

in line

1

to 0.008

m.

in

lines 6

ff.

XaQe?

KvQia'

ya-

j

PKi P

i

A

A

Fvr

'

XaToF,'

KAY

QL

dya0St?v?d

a-

|

C.)M

NH

A

I

P

E

c5o[aL

Rc,as

KeQboV

P

I

A

FAT

C

M

E

N

E

A

C

5

abXP6s

TA

Z M

OM

I

H

M

KEPKww

Tic.

av

d

voiI(l)

Trv

krvo6v

Ol-

0

\

b

OC

Tov xal,

oxltb(L)

Ta

6oTa

avtv

Til-

I

r

c

e

A

N

,

NN -

H

T)H

N

h H

N

O

N

TOT

T?

aJT(o(L)

Y)

CTLY?

^aaXaa

yiaQa;bv

|

T

WNKA

ICKY1\T&O

CTA

,YT7(jjNUH

V

,

e

- I rTeNY-TrMr-HTe eA\,CCrA KfnON e

v?vxaltto'

oAllSgnaovc4alg

ol-

-

1]

0O

NeNKNITo

e

ZW,\HCTTAW

S

HCOOI

10

XOS

aUTCOVv

??jAOLTo'

?LT?

TExva

K

O

AY

TwN

MAe

O

TO

e

T

TK N

?'XEl

XaTOQ'uaLLTO

T&,

?'LTe

e

- e xelK

STOPY-Ai

0,YT,

eiTeePej

a

~ta

Q av

z

1A

kT

TTACTePHeOITO kYTTW)N

K,\

MT'

O

ROITa

oT?ontvOITO

a[ucTv'

xai

atio

de

0IT0C

-O

, ,

.ALnk

e

Noceeov

eAeoTv

T

xo Toc

A

'~v6s

0'?0Vi ?lk8?0V

T;XZOLTO'

2

a-

TAN

AC

ANVTUN

e

I

T

NO

0

e

C-

Tavag

avr,ov

?Slg

TOY

olxov

?to-

eNe-OITO

KAI

eO?/\eGPeYCe

I

TO-

'5 ~a

'

t

t

O

To"C

ex

e

r

e

\\,X~,C

H

4ovc

5

Ek O0ITO

aC

?tOX

Q?6AiLTO

aV-

-TOYC

e

YxeTekNH

c

NheoYC

TOVS. TAYTHCR-TeCe e-

:??T?

dka;

kTlVOs

\

TdTagS

RhI

jl:T?'O?

No.

I36

The

stone

on

which

this

inscription

was

cut formed

originally

part

of

a

larger

plaque

with

a

round

hole

in

the

centre,

the

exact

purpose

of which is

not

clear.

The

inscription

was

cut,

however,

after

the

original

stone

was

broken,

and

is

preserved

entire. The curse embodiedin this inscriptionis one of the more vigorous employed on

grave

monuments,

but

it

may

be

paralleled

in

its

essential

provisions.

Cf.

C..

G.

989,

2664;

also

Minns,

Scythians

and

Greeks,

p.

319.

Line 4:

fa

g

must be

a

mistake for

vijsig.

The

confusion is due to the

similarity

of

pronunciation.

Line

1

5:

?oe?O?eQF?aiO=ao?tooXoOQeGaLTO.

137.

The

upper

right-hand

corner

of a

slab of

white

marble,

found in

191 5

in

the eastern part of the Agora. Inv. No. 707.

Height,

0.1

35

m.;

width,

0.122

m.;

thickness,

0.027 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 8

m.

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94

CORINTH

X[\

XOLt]q1TiQLOV

T H P I O H

] x

v

Eo

K K T O H E i

No.

137

Part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele. The letters

n

the third line

cannot be

deciphered.

138. Fragment of bluish marble of poor quality, broken on all sides except

the

top.

Exact

place

and date

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No.

730.

Height,

0.088

m.;

width,

0.06m.;

thickness,

0.021

m.

Height

of letters varies

from 0.01

6

m.

to

0.025

m.

['X]ol0A[r'1TiQ1ov]

0

1I/v

[9v]

a

x[aTdXSTaL]

\

No.

138

Part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

139.

Fragment

of a

white

marble

plaque,

broken on all

sides.

Place and

date

of

finding

not recorded. Inv. No. 746.

Height,

0.053

m.;

width,

0.055

m.;

thickness,

0.02 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.022

m.

r|[n

[XOLvLrpT]Q(Lov)

1E[-

- -

No.

I39

Part

of a

Byzantine grave

stele.

140. Fragment of white marble, broken on all sides, found in 1925 in the

area

north

of

the

Basilica,

on the

western

side

of

Lechaeum Road.

Inv.

No.

801.

Height,

0.1

55

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

95

xvlT(T)Q(Lov).

'Afi-

---

U

1

T M

-

-

ycov'

xal

(?)-

-

No.

I40

Fragment

of

a

Byzantine grave

stele.

141.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

greenish marble,

broken

on all

sides. Place and

date of finding unknown. Inv. No. 819.

Height,

0.105

m.;

width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.01 8 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

4\

,[/ 1xolp1T]Ql

to[v-

-

No.

v4

No.

141

Part

of a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

142.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken from

the

upper

left-hand

corner of a

plaque.

Found in

1927

in

the

fields north

of

the

present

village

of

Old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

872.

Height,

0.055 m.

;

width,

0.10

m.; thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.026

m.

X

t

--]

T

Lov

]

No.

142

Part of

a

Byzantine grave

stele.

143.

Fragment

from

a

slab

of

reddish

stone,

with

part

of the

upper

edge

preserved.

Found

in

191 5

in

the

area of the theatre. Inv. No. 828.

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96

CORINTH

Height,

0.073

m.;

width,

0.18

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 7

m.

/

[XOl]

TMQLoOV

<MTI-|PIO @-'

-

QT-

No.

143

Part of a

Byzantine grave

stele.

144.

Fragment

of a

white

marble

slab

found

in

1910

in

the Peribolos

of

Apollo.

Inv.

No.

514.

Height,

0.22

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

0.04 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

XOLA[11QLOV?-]

X?r iEt[4?

X?

XR

:]-

.

6I&

ataxLt~jaL

?

-:.

No. 144

Line

4:

xaTaxll[aL] =xatdaxsL[aL]

Part

of

the

top

surface is

preserved.

The

left

edge

of

the stone

appears

broken,

but the

inscription

is

complete

at the

beginning

of

each

line,

and it

is

possible

that

the

left

edge

was never

dressed smooth.

145. A

slab of

bluish

marble,

broken

away

at the

right.

Found

in

1915

in

the eastern side of the Agora. Inv. No. 624.

Height,

0.305

m.;

width,

0.41

5

m.;

thickness,

0.02 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.035

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

97

1

XOLtLriTTQL[OV

CLa(PEQ]-

IL1LvT

I

V

-

-

-]

X

6

Ba[-Io

- -

- -

-]

No.

145

A

Byzantine

grave

stele.

146.

A

thin

fragment

of whitish

marble,

inscribed on both

sides,

found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv. No. 630.

Height,

0.085

m.;

width,

0.088

m.; thickness,

0.02

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.025

m.

No.

146

Face

a No.

I46

Face b

Face

a

Face

b

x[[lTToQLOV

8La]-

-

ov - - - - -]

- - - -

-]v v-

_____---

_ [yp

v

---- -]

Part of

a

Byzantine grave

stele,

twice

used.

147.

A marble

Byzantine capital,

0.29 m.

high,

with

an

inscription

cut on the

top surface (0.44 m. long by 0.238 m. wide). Found in 1903 near the surface in the

northwest corner

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No.

345.

Height

of

letters

in

lines

1-2,

0.037

m.;

in

lines

3

ff.,

ca.

0.025 m.

13

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98

CORINTH

,44

8fii

,,

fl

d

- (Vi) Matco(t) F19(v5)

.. "

'

''~'

'

A'

?~E]~~~~:~ ;L[]

Lines

2-3: xaTa

xatdxtQ(Lv)'

F a-

Line 5:

Z~eqdvt-

-Xeqdwvrl,

the name of

the

deceased.

148.

A marble slab found in 1902

near

the northern end of the

Lechaeum

Road

shops.

Inv. No. 261.

Height,

0.30m.;

width,

0.23

m.; thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025 m.

TaoXE

'

,T-

V

.

-::L.Q(LCL) iYl-

~~~No,

47~~~~No.

148

Lines -2-:

XVITClcXLT

-

XOaiXPTitat

Lines 2-:

atqcp)vt

,

a

commopV,

he name of the

deceased403

and

examples

there cited.

149.

A

fragment

of slate-like

arble

slab found in

1902

near

the

northroken

on allsides

except

Road

shops.

he

left

argInv

o.

261

Height,

0.30

i.;

width,

0.23

i.;

thickness,

0.05 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

in.

QOVT&Mau-

QLXolO

Fov-

5

LaQiovU

No.

148

Lines

1

-2:

X14L1qTL'QLOWV

oL[qT'qQLOV

Lines

2-3:

LaccpF1ov,

common

formula on

Byzantine

grave

stelae.

Cf.

J

G.

IV,

403

and

examples

there cited.

149. A

fragment

of

slate-like

marble,

gray

in

color,

broken

on

all

sides

except

the

top.

The

left

margin

of the lines is

preserved,

and

probably

the

sides

of the

stone

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

99

were never

dressed

smooth.

Probably

found

in

1901

in

the

excavations near

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

76.

Height,

0.09

n.;

width,

0.11

m.; thickness,

0.01 5 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.026

m1.

o

0.03

m.

Powell, -.4J.

l.

VII,

1903,

p.

67,

No. 50.

9

Xo[tlTtq'tiLOV

.Scp.]-

-

Qov

Ta

[rto

--

-]

TOy

El-

--

--I

.

No.

149

The

slab

forms

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

For tlhe restoration

cf. No.

1

48.

150.

A

fragment

of

gray

marble,

broken at

the

right

side

and at

the

lower

edge, probably

found

in

the

excavation

of the

Christian

cemetery

east

of

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

78.

Height,

0.20m.;

width,

0.33m

.;

thickness,

0.035mn.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

n.

-

0.01 5

m.

Powell,

AlJ.,.

VII, 1903,

p.

66,

No. 49.

~THp

01<

[KiVtijT

QLOV

K--

ji

EYT

>.

C

C

T? ETuXiZcaT[o;

--

-

g

IH

;,4

"

\

5

Eotrfl

Qj[TlrYO

s(?)

- -

-]

No.

150

The

surface

of the stone

is

very

badly

weathered

and

broken,

but the

ortho-

graphy

of

the first word

xviUrrQiQlov

is

sufficiently

clear.

151.

A slab of blue

marble,

broken

in

three

pieces,

found

in

1900

north

of

the fountain of Peirene. Inv. No. 87.

Height,

0.325

m.; width,

0.22

m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

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100

CORINTH

Powell,

A.j.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

64,

No. 44.

I XOltTliQ[LOV

E]-

8b\r

I

I\

N

Iaf

aTrir|

TT]V

t[axae]-

IANMs

Ns^^

ihQ

tav

FithV

[aVx]-

n [ < 1

? h

5

taviaaTo

[^((vi)

'Io]-

Y N CU S

I

N

'vyiwo()

s

rv[8(lxTrvo;)]

IL

No.

I5

A

Byzantine

grave

stele.

152. Fragment of slightly bluish marble. Exact place and date of finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No. 296.

Height,

0.095m.;

width,

0.20m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 6

m.

-

0.032

m.

-

XOlpttLqQL[OV

Lta]-

cpg.oy

.An[

- -

-]

No.

152

Line

1:

XOIlltiQLQ[[ov]

-XOIrTnQL[oV]

Part

of

a

Byzantine grave

stele.

153.

A

grave

stele

of

grayish

blue

marble,

found

in

two

pieces

in

1908.

Slightly broken on both sides and at the bottom. Inv. No. 458.

Height,

0.27

m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

101

[o.l

ti

iv

w,

xa-

-

I

[.

.

]sFpQ3toi.

[- #-iJ

t

[tHou

Tate[...]

[

---1

I4U[tl

-

-1

r'vi;4

No. 153

154.

A

plaque

of

gray

marble,

almost

complete,

but

with

the surface

badly

worn,

found

in

1908.

Inv.

No. 473.

Height,

0.19m.;

width,

0.24m.;

thickness,

0.038

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.022 m.

?E

ILTIn

Q(LOV)'[l-

cp

Q(ov)-

(t")

'Av8QEoU

t[oi]

,i

'*;~5~~

FtaxaQ(o?v)

IHQoyakk

-

-

No.

154

The

peculiar

marks

of

abbreviation

should be

noticed

in

this

inscription.

155.

A slab of coarse

crystalline

white

marble,

found in

1899

near

the

fountain

of Peirene.

Inv.

No. 83.

Height, 0.41 m.; width, 0.245 m.; thickness, 0.145 m.

Height

of

letters varies

from 0.012 m. to 0.025

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII, 1903,

p.

58,

No.

36.

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102

CORINTH

The text follows that

given by

Powell,

though

the

stone is

so

badly

worn that

I

'

ir-

-

LO-

rI

,V'A

I

HC

-

xOL

l[t QLOV

?)

I

OpIN

| ' /

- -

- -

]ov

a

xs

o

1

-

--

VYC

I

0

P

0

I

C

I|

I

Y

{

-

- -

EtOt

OQOI

mU[6bvO

g

-

-

-

-

cov

.OQeaoxo

-

- - -

CQ

N

I

O C

J

--

-

xjai

yvos

v

- - -

\

rc

O

c C

v6

Ei

()

- -

h

-

10

-

-

-

a.g

xail

oa

-

-

0

I

NC

NC

A

H

A

CC

C

C

No.

155

I

have

been unable to

confirm

all

of

his

readings.

In

line

5

Powell

reads

a'i]axQv

tV

xaxo[T;.

156.

Fragment

of a

white marble

slab,

broken

away

on all

sides

except

the

left. Found

in

191 5

in

the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

628.

VTo}W

-

-T

EV6pa[EoUTa - - -

CyI\/vy

Tov

-

--

- T

Y

ax. a

[-

- - - - -

No.

I56

Height,

0.19

m.;

width,

0.1

5

m.;

thickness,

0.053

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

157. White

marble

plaque,

broken

away

at the lower

right-hand

corner.

Place and

date of

finding

unknown.

Inv.

No. 821.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

103

Height,

0.1 7

m.;

width,

0.21

5

m.;

thickness,

0.01 8

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

3

m.

FlaVLa TOU

EV-

5

(L?ol&lLOV

vi-

44$

JLJ

X~

V

OmfT-

No.

157

Lines 6-7:

ado

atQXov

=

expraefectus. Cf. .

.

.2593,

2594,

2596.

158.

Two

contiguous fragments

of

a

white marble slab

which form the

upper

left-hand corner of the original stone. Found in 1902 near the northern end of the

Lechaeum

Road

shops.

nv.

.No.

260.

Height,

0.225

m.; width,

0.37

m.; thickness,

0.04

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

8

m.

I

+[v1VH1Iv1,

'

0

A

A

i )D_

_

tva

gv&a

xatd[xsLtal

- -

N

H

C

O

v

D

1

CT

AO

A

v

ov

'Io(U);.TOV

Ai8[

- -

-

-

.?

7

C

/

.OY

7

H C

EYFOCTATOYTHC

-

?

\

\

')

Y

7QYH

_

_avTOvr

-.

I

r

....

X

\

\-

--

o

-

-

-

CoV-

- -

-

No. I58

The surface of the stone is very badly worn, and the letters are almost obli-

terated.

Enough

is

preserved

merely

to show that

the

inscription

belongs

to

a

grave

monument.

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104

CORINTH

159.

The

upper

left-hand corner

of

a

grayish

blue

marble

slab,

found

in

1907

built

into

a

modem wall above the

theatre. Inv. No.

442.

i

[ tv[l[a

TroVi

l vI

id

MAa

Aa[xaQiav

[vI]-

V

/

~~[,uv

- - -

-]

No.

159

Height,

0.09

m.;

width,

0.10m.;

thickness,

0.037

1m.

Height

of

letters varies

from 0.01 m. to

0.01

5 m.

160.

A

small

fragment

of

bluish-gray

marble

found

in

1896.

Inv.

No.

291.

Height, 0.11 m.; width, 0.19 m.; thickness, 0.048m.

Height

of

letters varies

from 0.01 m.

to 0.025

m.

XQE

o-

No. i6o

The

left

edge

of the

original

plaque

of

marble

is

in

part

preserved,

but

the

alignment

of

the

letters has no relation to this earlier edge. The inscription was cut

after the marble

plaque

had

been

broken,

and

is

itself

complete

on

the

broken

stone.

161. An

irregular

fragment

of

blue

marble. Inv.

No.

120.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.28

m.;

thickness,

0.10m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.025 m.

Ross,

Inscr.

Graec. ined.

I,

p.

62;

1

G.

IV,

405;

Powell,

.J.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

66,

No. 48.

gk A0

y\

I JU P 0 Y

'EjaqtpQoob&ra

a4

'A^T]-

V08(OQO'U

1F0s6-

No. 161

The

inscription

was

found,

broken

at the

right

as

shown in

the

drawing

above,

during

the

clearing

of the

vaulted

chamber of the

Northwest

Shops

in

1900.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

105

In all

probability

it is

a

grave

stele

from the

Christian

cemetery

once

lying

to

the

east

of the

church

of

St.

John

and

immiediately

south of

the

vaulted chamber. But it

is

curious that

the

stone should

have

been found

in the chamber

in

1900,

because

it

was

seen

by

Ross

many years

before

in

the

village

of

Old Corinth. When seen

by

Ross the

inscription

was

complete,

and I have indicated

by

underlining

those letters

which have

been lost

since his

day.

Powell's

publication

was

made

without

know-

ledge

of the

previous

discovery.

In

the

lower left-hand

corner

of

the stone

may

be

seen

the

monogram

for

XQIGtT0.

162.

The lower

left-hand

corner of a slab

of

white

marble.

Place and

date

of

finding

not recorded. Inv. No. 742.

Height, 0.15 m.; width, 0.14 m.; thickness, 0.03 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025 m.

'Iv8(LXTLtVOS)--

-

-

No.

162

Traces of letters

in

the

first

line

appear

in

the

drawing

which

are not

recorded

in

the

transcript.

163.

Fragment

of a white marble

plaque,

broken on all sides. Place

and

date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv.

No. 743.

ML

Height,

0.073m.; width,

0.083

m.;

thickness,

0.025 m.

_/1

<

Height

of

letters,

0.014

m.

A-_y

~

The

letters NA

in the last

line,

which are to be

restored

NO.

63

as

['I]vb[(LxTllCvog)

],

indicate that the stone is

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

164.

Plaque

of

bluish

marble,

broken

away

at

the

top

and

at the

left,

found

in 1914 in the eastern part of the Agora. Inv. No. 577.

Height,

0.30m.; width,

0.22

m.;

thickness,

0.03

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.-0.036

m.

14

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106

CORINTH

No.1e1:~~~?:

164OTaT(?)

(

?E

ax-'

'Iv

(tXtLx)Vo)'

A

"

No.

I64

The numeral

%7'

n line

3

gives

the

day

of the month.

165.

Fragment

of

bluish

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in 1914 in

the

northeast

comer

of

the

Peribolos

of

Apollo.

Inv.

No. 559.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

(.1

5

m.; thickness,

0.068

m.

The letters

are

very

poorly

cut,

and

vary

in

height

/

from 0.02

m. to

0.033

m.

-

-

-

vi

-N

)

e

-

-

IV8(LxTWvo)

'

g

/

No.

I65

Traces

of

letters

in

the

first

line

are

given

in

the

drawing

which do not

appear

in

the

transcript.

166.

Fragment

of

a

stele

of

white

marble

with

bluish

veins,

found

in 1907

in the region of the Agora north of the church of St. John. Inv. No. 399.

Height,

0.1

2

m.;

width,

(.11

m.;

thickness,

(.0(3

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.0(22

m.

cT

-

-

.-

.vlN.QiEii-L).

--

No. I66

Indistinguishable

traces

of

letters

are

visible in the

third

line.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

107

167.

A

slab

of

crumbling

gray

marble,

broken

on

all

sides

except

the

bottom,

found

in 1904

in

the area

south

of the church of

St.

John.

Inv.

No. 378.

?W(v)

'A-4QL(xvto()

'

L)

--

'Ivb(LxTLwvos)]

xs' @'

w

Height,

0.20m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

0.019 m.

No.

I67

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

to 0.032

m.

168.

Fragment

of

a white

marble

slab,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1904

near

the

southern

side

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

375.

Height,

0.13

m.;

width,

0.1

1

m.; thickness,

0.05

m.

I

- -

LT]vl MaQ[TL((L)

-

-

No. i68

The letters are

deeply

cut,

and

vary

in

height

from

0.01 5 m.

to

0.02 m.

169.

Fragment

of

a

white

marble

slab,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in

1903.

Exact

place

of

discovery

not

recorded.

Inv.

No.

352.

oQos

x(al)

K

- -

45

-

v- E

-

-

-

-

\ N

-(-

VO)

-

-

-

-

Height,

0.1

7

m.;

width,

0.19

m.;

thickness, 0.06 m.

No.

I69

Height

of

letters,

0.032

m.

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108

CORINTH

170. A

fragment

of white

marble,

broken at the

top-

and on the

right

side.

Date and

place

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No.

71.

Height,

0.1

7

m.;

width, ().3()m.; thickness,

0.08 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

Powell,

A./A.

VII,

1903,

p.

65,

No.

46.

0oaE[

YEJ-

~

O.AC

14kvdla,

d[vYesava]-

~I

W k

1<11'to

i:]/[

a

VIbLtXTLOV[OC-- -

-

No.

170

Line

1

:

..

Olt

(Powell).

Line

3:

Powell

gives

the month as

Ma~t

(?),

but the

space

on

the

stone

is better suited

to

the

restoration of

MaQT0io(L),

Iovio'(l),

or

'Iovico(L),

if

the

length

of line is

correctly

determined

by

the

restoration in

line 2.

171.

A

plaque

of

grayish

marble,

broken

on all

sides

except

the

bottom,

found

in

1915

in

the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 662.

Height,

0.205

m.;

width,

0.11

m.; thickness,

0.058 m.

/

Height

of

letters varies from

0.01 m.

to 0.025 m.

In the last line

may

be

distinguished

the words

/

U

yi;

[

lXF

l[

172.

A small round

fragment

of

white

marble

revetment,

with the

original

surface broken

away

on all

(S

(

\

A

sides. Found

in

1925

south of the

fountain of

Glauce.

r~c

I

Inv. No. 765.

Height,

0.0

m.; width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.025 m.

)

Height

of

letters,

0.043) m.

N.

- -

-

No.

I72

The

character of

the

lettering

indicates that the

stone

was

originally

part

of a

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

109

Byzantine

grave

stele.

It was

subsequently

cut

away

on all

sides and

rounded off

into

the

shape

of a disk. Parts of five letters

only

are

preserved.

173.

A

small slab

of marble

revetment,

broken on all

sides,

found in

1926 on

the western side of Lechaeum Road. Inv. No. 796.

Height,

0.1

35

m.;

width,

0.206

m.;

thickness,

0.01 5

m.

Height

of

letters varies

from 0.01

6

m.

to

0.022 m.

H

TA

-

- -

a

XaTdXl[T?

-

-

[r[JX'

m

M

\

|

)

No.

I73

Line

2:

xaTGxL[T-e]

-

XLTdx[TaL].

174.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in 1926 west

of

the fountain

of

Glauce.

Inv.

No.

806.

P-\

(ox.aiL

KoQv[-

-

-

T(OY

K

AITE

K

Tov.

xa

TXVO[V

-

No.

I74

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.13

m.; thickness,

0.04

m.

Height

of letters

varies

from 0.01 5 m.

to 0.02

m.

175.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of bluish

white

marble,

found in the earth

removed

from

the

excavation

of

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

No. 816.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.02

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

l

--

f P - ~ 1

EOV

--

-

-

C

[

5

- --

aXL

--Q

No.

175

The

character

of the

lettering

indicates

that the

inscription

was

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

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110

CORINTH

176.

Fragment

of a

slab

of

shale-like

marble,

broken on all

sides.

Place

and

date of

finding

not recorded.

Inv.

No. 818.

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.13

m.;

thickness,

0.025 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

.-

-..

o

[fta[xaQ(ov-

No.

176

Part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

177.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of bluish

marble,

broken on all

sides. Place and

date of finding not recorded.Inv. No. 898.

Height,

0.085

m.;

width,

0.10m.;

thickness,

0.018m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.025

m.

-

- -

-pLoS

-

-

- -

-

-]j0J

-

--

-

No.

I77

The character of the

lettering

and the

quality

of the marble indicate that the

inscription

formed

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

178.

Fragment

broken

from

the

upper

right-hand

corner

of a

marble

slab.

Place and

date of

finding

unknown.

Inv.

No.

826.

Height,

0.1 5

m.;

width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.022

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 5 m.

(AY

Y^\

-

---

-

a

)AM

\

--

o

tmi

-

--

-

- -

1

No. 178

179.

Fragment

of bluish

marble,

found

in

1927

in

a

Byzantine

level above

the

Lechaeum

Road. Inv. No.

840.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

111

Height,

0.1 7

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

IIA11AY

E

E

Q J

--dvdnas

Co

.-

-

No.

179

Part of a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

180.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

bluish

marble,

broken

away

on all

sides

except

the

bottom. Found in 1927

in

a

Byzantine

level

above

the

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

No.

847.

Height,

0.20

m.; width, 0.12m.; thickness,

0.05 m.

Height

of

letters varies from 0.01

3

m. to 0.02 m.

\

-- --

TOVO

--

--

TOY

T

OxrwLtb

--

a

--7--

K ~

\

--

-

?0~TOU

OX-

- - -

No.

I80

Apparently part

of a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

181.

Fragment

of

blue slate-like

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found in

1915

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

619.

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112

CORINTH

Height,

0.13

m.;

width,

0.065

m.;

thickness,

0.01

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

\

HH

----

No. I81

182.

Small

fragment

of

grayish-white

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found in

1908.

The

exact

place

of

finding

is not recorded.

Inv.

No.

463.

Height,

0.13 5

m.;

width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of letters

varies

from 0.012 m. to 0.026

m.

--x

_

_/CT

-aeo-

-

No.

182

The character

of

the

writing

indicates

that the

inscription

formed

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

183.

Fragment

of

dark

marble,

found in 1914

in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

563.

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.125

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.026

m.

0^

)

/\

>(

[axa[QLav

vV

-_^

^

//

Io?

[-

- -

-ovX[-

No. I83

After

the chi

in

line

3 there is

a

vertical

hasta

which

may

belong

either

to

iota,

rho,

or

nu.

Certainty

is

impossible.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

113

184.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

gray marble,

right

edge preserved,

found in

1908.

Inv.

No. 454.

Height,

0.10m.;

width,

0.07

m.;

thickness,

0.022 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023 m.

LT

- - - - - -

^ -

1 r i

No.

184

Traces

of

letters

in

lines

1

and

5

cannot be

interpreted.

185.

A small

fragment

of

marble,

broken

away

at both

sides

and

at

the

bottom,

found

in

1907 on

the

site of

the

present

museum.

Inv.

No.

451.

Height,

0.1 3

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.047 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.032 m.

No.

185

186.

Fragment

of

a

thin white

marble

plaque,

broken

on

all

sides,

found in

1907

immediately

east of the

church of

St.

John.

Inv.

No. 430.

Height,

0.093m.;

width,

0.122

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.04

m.

No. i86

Probably

a

fragment

of a

grave

stele from

the

Byzantine

cemetery

near

the

church

of

St.

John.

187.

Fragment

of

inscription,

broken on all

sides.

Found in

1898,

but now

lost. Inv. No.

393.

15

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114

CORINTH

The

fragment

is known

only

from

photographs

and

its dimensions

cannot

No.

I87

be

given.

I

suggest

that

it

was

part

of

a

Byzantine grave

stele,

and that the

word

appearing

in

the

last

line

is

([v]rpiv.

188.

Fragment

of

inscription,

broken on all

sides.

Found

in

1898,

but

now

lost. Inv. No. 392.

No.

i88

The

fragment

is

known

only

from

photographs,

and its dimensions cannot

be

given.

I

suggest

that it

was

part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele,

and that the last

line

should be

restored

as

xaTdx[e6raL].

189.

Fragment

of a marble

slab,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1904

by

one

of

the

inhabitants

of

Old

Corinth near the church of

Hagia

Paraskevi. Inv. No.

382.

Height,

0.

14

m.;

width,

0.1

45

m.;

thickness,

0.03

5

m.

Height

of letters, 0.028m.

?LO

..IOU

aAQ[

E

LaQ[iov

ToV

l]

ukl:-~

wbl~~[RIIV-

No. 189

The

stone was used

as

a

grave

stele for a certain

Eustathius

in

the

Byzantine

cemetery

near

Hagia

Paraskevi.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

115

190.

Fragment

of a

marble

slab,

badly

broken

and

worn,

found

in 1904

in

the

neighborhood

of the

West

Shops,

southeast of the church of

St.

John.

Inv.

No. 376.

Height,

0.127

m.;

width,

0.125

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height of letters, ca. 0.015 m.

tl

hucCf

Et. Jh-

)

-

-x..

-- -

U (IV K(

\

\/

E

C r r

a i

No.

I90

The stone was

probably

used

as

a

grave

stele in

the

Byzantine

cemetery

near

the

church

of

St.

John.

191.

Two

contiguous fragments

which form

part

of a marble

stele,

found

in

1903

in the

western

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

Nos. 346

and

351.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

346):

Height,

0.43

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

351):

Height,

0.14m.;

width,

0.145

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height

of letters varies from

0.02 m. to 0.037

m.

L'axaC[t

-'

5- - - - - oVty

- -

-

-E7t

-

No.

191

Apparently part

of

a

Byzantine

grave

stele.

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11 6 CORINTH

192.

A small

fragment

of white

marble,

found in 1900 in the loose

earth

taken

from

the excavations.

Inv. No.

311.

Height,

0.095

m.; width,

0.13

m.;

thickness,

0.03

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

66,

No.

47.

r^i~lll

ZlvoLV

[--

LcxaeQac]

a

I-

roil

pV1(T])5

fila[

- - - -J

-s

yEylval(vont)

tr[

- -

-I

No.

I92

Powell reads

in line

3

yevati(Ev)wo()

Ten[..

193.

Fragment

of

grayish

slate-like

marble,

found

in

1901 near the

vaulted

chamber

of

the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

153.

Height,

0.21 5

m.;

width,

0.1

64

m.;

thickness,

0.03

im.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

Powell,

A./.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

67,

No.

51.

No.

193

The

inscription

is

broken

away

at

the

top

and at

the

right-hand

side,

and

probably

forms

part

of a

grave

stele

from

the

Byzantine

cemetery

which

lay

to

the

east

of

the church

of

St.

John.

194. Fragment of bluish marble, broken from the upper right-hand corner of

a

plaque.

Probably

found in

1901

in

the

excavation of

the

Christian

cemetery

east

of

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

77.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

117

Height,

0.155

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.02 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

Powell,

A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

64,

No. 45.

01

No.

194

The

words

r

hvyY[T'l]

may

be

distinguished

n

line

4.

195.

Fragment

of

a slab of marble

pavement,

broken

away

at

the

left,

found

in

1907

built

into the wall

of

a

Byzantine

tomb

east of

the

church of

St

John.

Inv. No.

435.

Height,

0.36

m.; width,

0.37

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters

in

lines

1-3,

0.01

5

m.-0.02

m.;

in

lines

4-5,

0.03

m.-0.06

m.

-

-

I L(a)

aLTL

o

QLO'U

T-

-

veoi.

KcowvTXavtiv

ou

TCO

V

6Oto86OwV.

N

OY

K)

CT

TlNT

X

aMQts

Mdvo-

N

o o

0

O

O

O

N

5

5.

KoQ

C

(v)t

ocS

C

M

No.

195

The first

three

lines

of

the

inscription

are

cut in

a

different

style

from

the

last

two,

which

are

little more

than

rude

scratches.The

first

three

lines

are

incomplete

and

must

have

been cut

before

the stone

was

broken

away

at

the

left.

They

are

also

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118

CORINTH

cut

within a field

roughly

marked out

by

a border line near the

edge

of the stone.

On the other hand the last two lines seem to form a

complete inscription,

which was

cut

after the stone was broken. It

may

be noticed also that the last two lines

disregard

the

bounding

line

at

the

right

which delimited the field for the

earlier

inscription.

I

interpret

these last

two lines

as a brief

epitaph

on a

late

grave

stele.

196.

A

large

block

of white

marble,

found

in

1899

built into a late

wall

at

the

top

of

the

steps

leading

to the

Propylaea.

Now in the

excavations

at

Old

Corinth.

Inv. No. 10.

Height,

0.53

m.;

width,

0.805

m.;

thickness,

1.33

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035 m.

-

0.05

m.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

63,

No.

43.

'q

C\rjillQlOS

. ?

'-

:~

bo.io(?)

X(Q

LGTo)v.

No.

j96

197.

A

fragment

of white

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in

1900 inside

the vaulted

chamber

of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

310.

Height,

0.105

m.;

width,

0.10m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height of letters, 0.025 m.

Powell,

A..

A.

VII, 1903,

p.

71,

No.

60.

-

LNo.

9

- -

No.

197

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BYZANTINE

INSCRIPTIONS

OTHER THAN

SEPULCHRAL

MONUMENTS

(Nos.

198-220)

198.

Block of the

marble entablature from

the

Byzantine

decoration

of

Peirene.

Found

in

1899

and

now

in the

enclosure of Peirene at

Old Corinth.

Inv.

No.

24.

Length,

2.47

m.;

depth,

0.45

m.;

height,

0.44

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.125

m.-0.1

55

m.

LG.

IV,

1606;

Richardson,

A.J/.A. 1899,

p.

683;

A.J.A.

IV, 1900,

p.

238.

No.

T98

-TiOy

OOCO[tEVOV

jTaVTa

XOG[LOV

PT(L)

nELQiv(L)

ja

-

-

The

inscription

is

painted

in

red on the

curved

surface

of

the frieze

course

which

in

earlier times

had

borne

a

Latin

inscription,

now

erased. The

word

advta

is

certain

instead

of the

earlier

ovra

which

appears

in

Richardson's

reports

and in

L

G.

IV,

1606.

The

letter

forms

indicate

a

date for

the

inscription probably

in

the

fifth

century

A.

D.,

certainly

not later

than the

sixth

century

(Hill).

199.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

white

marble which

came

from

a

late

pavement,

found in

1901

near

the

vaulted

chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

127.

Height,

0.62 5

m.;

width,

0.72 5

m.;

thickness,

0.06

m.

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120

CORINTH

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.03

m.

t ~

tJ WJ

\ ?Yw

E(TXOVE

(crude

representation

of

an

ear)

t

_

|<_

__

[ i^^^/

/ /

K(V'QL)E, OtL

TOV

8-

C

/^B

/\

O

y

I

\

^

oaou

oo().

No.

I99

The letters of

line 1

are written one

above

the

other, though

sometimes

turned

in the

direction of

the

writing.

In line 2

poOilt

is for

po'ftieL

The

inscription

is

complete

on the

broken

stone,

and dates from

some

period subsequent

to the use

of

the

slab

as

a

pavement

block.

200.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

white marble which

came

from a late

pave-

ment,

found

near the vaulted chamber of the

Northwest

Shops

in

1901.

Inv.

No. 130.

Height,

0.47

m.;

width,

0.51

m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01 5

m.

tI1K<

T

Y

xlrC

Op

oYk

-

,)^

c

+

~

n

v

\/

0

?

-A~\no

A

(

0

N

/~

_

NQ,

A\A\/

TINO

(

(H/\?

A

Nc

J

A

r

No. 200

1

vLxa

f

tnUXt

FoQyiov

X'

E'"uo-

2

@qpiag

3

- -

-

OMY.Oe

-

-

-

4

P

K(iQt)s,

dao36aov

Alcov[i]av,

6

86a

5 Tivot

ioh6xatsv

68?;

The

curse

was written on

the

stone

after it had

been broken from the

original

paving

slab.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

121

Line

1

:

vitxaL

vt,

nXtXL

-

t

,

FeoQY/ov

=

rFoQyiov,

x'

=

x(al).

Line

3 I

have

been unable to

decipher.

Line

4:

65

=.

Line

5:

-io(i1?a?V=i

sai'iLo[tEv,

68s

=

)sE.

201.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

white

marble

paving,

found

in

1901

near

the

vaulted chamber

of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 131.

Height,

0.46

m.;

width,

0.365

m.;

thickness,

0.07 m.

Height

of

letters

averages

about 0.02 m.

AS

P

fiCA@S

N

A

at/

No. 20I

The

inscription

may

be

broken

away

at the

left.

202.

Fragment

of

a

white marble

paving

slab,

found near the

vaulted

chamber of the Northwest Shops in 1901. Now lost. Inv. No. 132.

Height,

0.23

m.;

width,

0.21

m.;

thickness,

0.054

m.

-

IcsQT

-

-

- -

be

-

-

iv

- -

This

fragment

probably belonged

to

one

of the curses

found

on the

slabs

of

late

pavement

near

the

Northwest

Shops.

203.

Fragment

of

a marble

slab

belonging

to a

late

pavement,

found in

1901

near

the

vaulted

chamber of

the Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No. 133.

Height,

0.33

m.;

width,

0.34

m.; thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.045

m.

This

inscription

probably

belongs

with

the series of

curses found on

the slabs of late

/

r

pavement

near

the

Northwest

Shops.

No.

203

16

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122

CORINTH

204.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

white marble

belonging

to a late

pavement,

found

in 1901 near the vaulted chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 134.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.33

5

m.;

thickness,

0.05 m.

Height of letters, 0.015 m.

4 t

o

C3

]

r

>

,

0

(E6)g

T15

8LXg

Tf

-

-5

'\

yoOQvg

6QftC(og

[

-

?

]

X

IbH

StO

grTvos

"E;L(X)rIva;

TI

- - -

- adJ-

r

N

iM

c7

[z]EOOV

1TO5

E?Qy,Vlo

- -

-

_

O-

?(

T5

Ci

5

- - - -

.

Nto'

.

_-__[Qoi

-

-

N7<u^(

5 ------IW N'.

? ?

No. 204

Line 1:

6=

c),

the

particle

of

invocation.

Lines

3-4:

[dio6X]eov.

Cf. No.

200,

line

4.

The

inscription

was

cut on

a broken

fragment,

but

subsequently

the stone was

broken

again,

and the

right

side

and

bottom

of the

inscription

are now

lost.

205.

Fragment

of

a

white

marble

paving

slab,

found in

1901

near

the

vaulted chamber

of the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 135.

Height,

0.44m.;width,

0.52

m.;

hickness,

0.06

m.

_

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.013 m.

\

[

?p

via

f]

tV] -

-

K-

1

------------- r< r1

-- -- K- - -

-

-

-

X l -

-5

-

KnoY-

-

5

A-

-

IM

- - -

APA

~(xa-

f

[oa]ov

dva

RpEGO

f.iOV

X"E

TOV

XfctQeOV

[O.

Nt<

?

i(

1?

'T

0p

N

)

No.

205

This

inscription

is one of the

curses

which

appeared

during

the

excavations

near

the vaulted

chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Like the

others,

it was cut on

a

broken

plaque

of marble

pavement.

The

surface of

this

particular stone, however,

is

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

123

badly

worn,

and

the

fragmentary

nature

of the

inscription

is due to

corrosion

rather

than

to

subsequent

breakage.

The field

of the

inscription

was

marked off

by

crudely

scratched

lines in

the

shape

of

a

rectangle,

and this

field was further subdivided

by

horizontal

scratches

for the several lines

of the

inscription.

The

whole document

was

very

carelessly cut,

and the

inscription

itself

bears witness

to

the

illiteracy

of the

scribe.

Line

6:

dva&

Eoo(v)=

?TCLi

(cf.

Sophocles,

Glossary

of

Later and

Byzantine

Greek,

s.v.

to?ao;).

Line 7:

?XfeQOV

?XfQXoV.

The

letters

Ex

were

added

above

the

line,

when

their

omission

had been

discovered

by

the

stonecutter.

206.

Fragment

of

a

late marble

paving

slab,

found

in

1901

in one

of

the

shops

west

of the

vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

136.

Height,

0.34m.;

width,

0.46

m.;

hickness,

0.0

5

m.

Height

of

letters

varies

from

0.03

m. to 0.05 .

/

r

.

AeAy-

--

-

(ol

v

-

--

o-ovro

Y

'AvbSeav

rowo[yio

-

-

-]

5

COUdt6kEsao[v

?

-] \

No. 206

207.

Two

contiguous

fragments

of

a

marble

slab,

found

in 1901

near

the

vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

138.

C

C-

C

^

LN

207

I - - o

x C

?

x D -

N

No.

207

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124

CORINTH

Height,

0.51

m.; width,

0.61 5

m.;

thickness,

0.06

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.035m.

i

K(VQL)E,

f(E6)

,

xal

bix[r,

%a]aQa

XhuTQOo)

OD

Jov TOmTOv

ToS

8io

d8sQpoMSe

'

0

ic BovSLv

xal

'Icoav-

5 VLV

TO/S

povxesXaQio1S

ToD

ejaQXgou.

duv

Line

2:

'uTQogo=

TrgQoaE.

Line

3:

d8EQ(povi

=

d8eXqpoGs.

his

substitution of

rho

for

lambda

s

a

common

pheno-

menon

in

modern

Greek.

Line 4: The symbols at the beginning of the line seem not to be the part of any

name,

but

magical

symbols

introduced

to

heighten

the

efficacy

of the

curse.

Line 5:

'IcodVVLvA=

odvviv.

The

PouXeXXaQLoL

ere

a

special

group

of

soldiers,

body-

guard

and

personal

attendants

of

their

master,

in

this case

the

praefectus

urbi

(FtaQXog)

f

Corinth.

Cf.

Pauly-

Wissowa,

s.

v. Bucellarii.

208.

Four

fragments

of

white

marble

found

in

1900

and 1901

in

and near

the

vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

Nos.

74,

75, 137,

and 224.

Fragment a (Inv. No. 137): Height, 0.155 m.; width, 0.35 m.; thickness, 0.055 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

224):

Height,

0.073

m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Fragment

c

(Inv.

No.

75):

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.1

8

m.;

thickness,

0.055 m.

Fragment

d

(Inv.

No.

74):

Height,

0.1

5

m.;

width,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.055 m.

Height

of

letters

on

all

fragments

is

0.025

m.

Fragments

c and d

have

been

published

by

Powell,A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

70,Nos.

57 and 58.

O c

o

ck

(

O.// 20

No. 208

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

125

- -

o

ayLos

-

--

-

-

ova

- -

- -

To]V; povxs[[aQiovS-

-

-

5

- -

- -

-

'Atha[v^Qog

-

-]

tloS)

-----]

vacaf

The

four

fragments

shown

above

clearly belong together,

in

spite

of

Powell's

unwillingness

to

associate

fragments

c

and

d. All

fragments

have the

same

thickness,

the same

white

marble,

and the same

characteristic

ruling

for the

alignment

of

letters

across

the face of

the

stone.

Fragment

c,

in

fact,

joins

both

fragments

a and

b

as

shown

above,

and

we

are able to

determine

thereby

that

there were

six lines

in

the

inscription.The sixth line was uninscribed where the lower portion of the stone is

now

preserved.

Line

4:

PovxeX[XaQ(ioV1].

f.

Pauly-Wissowa,

s.

7v.

Bucellarii.

Cf. also

No.

207,

line

5,

which is of

approximately

the same

date as this

inscription.

209.

Fragment

of a

marble

slab,

found

in

1901 near the vaulted

chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

140.

Height,

0.77

m.; width,

0.795

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.012

m.

I

noH1ON1(E'O

uiKcK

<

l<

,

n,

&hNETOYCi

No.

209

1

6ryoov

K('QL)E-

6[Yy]c(L)

xax)(L)

ad

[6]ave

TOS

|

This curse

is similar

to others

found

near the

vaulted chamber mentioned

above.

The verb

adj[6]

ave

seems

in the

present

instance to

have

transitive

force

=d&6-

aeoov.

Cf.

Nos.

200,

204,

206.

210.

Fragment

of

a marble

paving

slab,

found in

1901

near the vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

143.

Height,

0.75m.;

width,

0.85

m.;

E

Y

x

KE,

l?

4,

,

thickness,

0.08m.

O

IAcwAo

A,

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.\

-\

No.

210

K(QLt)eI(0oo)v X(QLoT)?,fori1TO) bo0XoU v

F

M

?

dajqv

The stone

on

which

this

inscription

was

cut was used as

part

of the

Byzantine

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126

CORINTH

pavement

near

the vaulted

chamber mentioned above.

Subsequently

it was

transformed

into

a

gaming

board.

Later still

it received the

inscription

recorded

above.

211. Fragment of a marble paving slab, found in 1901 near the vaulted

chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 144.

Height,

0.22m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.06m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

No.

21I

The stone

is

broken

away

above

and at the

left,

but

the bottom

and

right

margin

seem

complete.

212.

Fragment

of a

paving

slab

of

white

marble,

found

in

1901

near the

vaulted

chamber of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 273.

Height,

0.71

m.;

width, 0.58m.;

thickness,

0.056m.

Height

of

the letters

varies

from

0.025

m.

to 0.07 m.

N \\s

H

T

V

HTO

N

1<

\o

l<

0

p ,

C

I o

vMa

Ta

TO,-

XTo

TOV

XaXoV

T

o

1 (

I /\

O

X

xoQasiov

TOY CTLXOV-

T r

o

T

0

/

5 TOV

OV5

ayyiOV5.

A o

r oyA

o

o

No.

212

Only

a

portion

of the

original

left

edge

of

the

stone is

preserved,

but

the

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

127

inscription

was cut after the

fracturing

of

the

block,

and is

itself

complete

on

the

broken

stone.

Transcribed,

it reads

as

follows:

vix

T

Trv-

z*i Tr6Oa~cLv

xoQaoicov

TOY

(p

oiv-

5

TOV

TO?;

5

[to.

adyov;.

213.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of white marble which

came

from a

late

pavement,

found in 1901 near the vaulted chamber of the Northwest Shops. Inv. No. 129.

Height,

0.42

m.; width,

0.55

m.; thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

'1

v

wX/I

T

Ot1

-TA

\

VLXXa

TVUXL

OVaLtaT-

N

N

0

\

\

\

OVOVU[VOVEVATO

A

H

"

0

MO

Y

T

O

T

o

X

O

'

(

dv6tovU

6Iror

To-

-

0

-

M

I

C/

6

C

I

T

T0,

K(i?Qu)?,

[,l

?^kt1.g

ToV A C

5

Pako6Ta

ag

O65[E].

A

O

A

C

No.

213

The

above

curse

was

evidently

written

by

an illiterate

man,

and his

almost

consistent

use

of iotain

place

of eta is

worthy

of

attention.

Transcribed,

he

inscription

reads as

follows:

VLXa

/1

TVXUl

TOV

xataor-

OVOIt6V(COV

EV

TO

dv6dco o6jro ooi-

Tc,

K(UQL)E,

Lt

'S

k6GIg

TOV

5

pak6(v)Ta

kr|dS

d)?[e].

The

inscription

is

complete,

except

for one

letter,

and

was cut

on the

broken

slab

of

pavement

when it

had

ceased

to

serve

its

original purpose.

214.

Fragment

of

a marble

plaque,

broken

on all sides.

Exact

place

and

date

of

finding

not recorded.Inv. No. 272.

Height,

0.32

m.;

width,

0.21

m.; thickness,

0.052

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

5

m.

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128

CORINTH

CONTP-\\Xo

c

o

------

ov

xa

-

-

)

PO Ah "1

N O

y

/

- - - -

aov

vo

xoa-

C

4

-a--

-

OrsiooT

(aL)

yo-

-

-

-

OQO

x(al)

MaQivoU

5 - - -

OVQ?

No.

214

The

inscription

was cut

after the

original

fracturing

of

the

stone,

and has

been

mutilated

only by

subsequent breakage

at

the

left.

The

stone

may

have been

found

near

the vaulted chamber of the

Northwest

Shops.

215.

Fragment

of a

paving

slab of

white

marble,

found

in

1901 near the

vaulted chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

274.

Height,

0.645

m.;

width,

0.79

m.;

thickness,

0.07 m.

The

letters

vary

in

height

from 0.01 7

m.

to 0.06

m.

@

K(iQi)e,

6

f&6o,

do

T6

x6-

TOq; LaXOQLGaag6

TpoS

LdvaXoqag

8

&

tq;

?ixo0uvrli,

dn_6-

5

8os

-

fOTO6xe

as6-

0og

MaQCvov

oOi

PaX6tos

it6sg

86

XE

noAO

T0b

iLas X

via-

10

s

Tr1V

ISTpQOV-

viav

+

The

original

edge

of the slab is

preserved

at the

top

and

at

the

right,

and

the

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

129

inscription,

which was

cut

subsequent

to the

fracturing

of

the

slab,

is

complete

on

the

tpo bLaxoQil...

.

aX6v)o

;N.

21

216.Fragment

of

a marble

slab,

broken on

all sides, probably found in

xo901

roc,ia^copK:Kxf

.nearhe vaulted chaber of the Northwest

Shops. In. .324

Me?

.'.al

'?jt"...

o

(8)7'

1

1

0

<;

TT]V IETQO

U-

v iav

216.roken

tone The inscription ismarble

slab,

okemhe hand of an

l

siterate

man,

roband

preserves,

n

1901

near

the

vaullted

chamber

of the

Northiwest

Shops.

Tnv. No. 324.

17

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130

CORINTH

Height,

0.19

m.;

width,

0.185

m.;

thickness,

0.05 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

No.

216

217.

Fragment

of a

marble

paving

slab,

found

in

1901

near

the vaulted

chamber of the Northwest Shops. Now lost. Inv. No. 336.

Height,

0.19

m.;

width,

0.17

m.;

thickness,

0.06

m.

----

o

-

-

- -

_ __e

xa1

The

fragment

is broken

on all sides.

218.

Fragment

of

a

thick

white marble

slab,

broken

on

all

sides.

Found

in

1907 in one of the Northwest Shops. Inv. No. 447.

Height,

0.328

m.;

width,

0.16

m.;

thickness,

0.10m.

Height

of

letters varies from

0.025

m. to 0.045 m.

No. 218

The

reverse

face of the

stone

is

very roughly

tooled.

219.

Fragment

of a

slab

of

white

marble,

probably

found near

the vaulted

chamber

of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

833.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

131

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.1

8

m.;

thickness,

0.033 m.

Height

of

the

letter

alpha,

0.08

m.

No.

219

220.

Fragment

of

a

paving

slab of white

marble,

found

probably

in

1901

near

the

vaulted

chamber

of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 275.

Height,

0.32

m.;

width,

0.40

m.;

thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of the

letters

varies from 0.01

5

m.

to 0.03

m.

[

A Y T N , L T

Y

No.

220

The

stone

is broken

on all

sides,

and

the

inscription

also is broken

away

above

and at the left.

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MISCELLANEOUS

(Nos.

221-331)

221.

Fragment

of white island marble,broken on all sides, found in 1914 in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

593.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.085

m.; thickness,

0.04

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.012 m.-.0 1

6

m.

No.

221

The

first

letter of

the

last line

may

be

either

alpha,

lambda,

or delta.

The

characterof the lettering indicates that the inscription is to be dated in the latter part

of

the

fifth

century

B.C.

222.

Small

fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides

except

the

left

Found

in 1900 at

a

considerable

depth

among

the

foundation

walls

in

the

Northwest

comer

of the

Agora.

Now lost. Inv.

No. 31

5.

Height,

0.076

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.011 m.

Powell, A.J.A. VII, 1903, p. 34, No. 9; R.E.G., 1904, p. 247.

The

character of

the

writing,

with

strongly

marked

finials at

the ends

of the

strokes,

indicates

that the

inscription

should be

dated

in

the

late

third or

early

second

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

133

century

B.

C.

Powell has

suggested

that

the

document

should

be

connected with

the

I T I -

ica[QX

-P-----

P

QaS (pv[AaS

(?)-

- - - -

5

tov

'AQi[Tovo

(?)

--

ToY

^

No. 222

hipparchy

of

Polybius

(Polybius,

xxviii,

6)

and

restores the

inscription accordingly.

I

prefer

to leave the

inscription

without

restoration,

although

lines

4

and

5 above

are

in

part

taken

from Powell.

223.

Fragment

broken

from the

upper

right-hand

comer

of a

white marble

slab,

found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 671.

Height,

0.075m.;

width,

0.162m.;

thickness,

0.063m.

Height of letters, 0.012 m.

- -

QayLog

No.

223

The

letters

are

lightly

cut

and the strokes

have

apices.

The forms are charac-

teristic

of the second

century

B.

C.

224.

A

block

of

poros

stone,

found

in 1896.

Now lost

Inv.

No. 298.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.50

m.;

thickness,

0.28

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

EOLO-

a.

Richardson's

notes indicate that

the

inscription

was

cut

in

'good

Greek

letters'.

225. A base of poros stone, one of four resting on the foundations of the

Greek

temple

below the western

side

of the Peribolos

of

Apollo (Temple

A).

Now

in

situ

in

the

excavations

at Old Corinth. Inv.

No. 28.

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134

CORINTH

Height,

0.41

m.;

width,

0.75 m. The

inscription

is cut

on a taenia

along

the

top

of

the

block

0.019 m. in

height.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.04 m.

Powell, A.J.A. VII, 1903, p. 68, No. 55; Smith, A.J.A. XXIII, 1919, p. 393, No. 55.

C

U

E ( C

E

- o

X i

No.

225

The

inscription

is

upside

down

on

the block

as

it

rests in its

present

position,

and

is

very

difficult to

read because

of the

weathering

of the

soft stone.

Powell

conjectures

that

the letters

may represent

a

proper

name,

and reads

OaeoE[8]ob(=))xLS

(?).

I

have no

suggestive

restoration

to

offer,

but call

attention

to the

drawing

and

to

the

fact that the letters which I have read from the stone do not in all respects agree with

Powell's

transcript

226.

Fragment

of

slightly

grayish

marble,

broken

on all sides. Place

and

date of

finding

not recorded. Inv.

No.

762.

Height,

0.075

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.01

5

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.03 m.

f

ABA

- - -

No. 226

The

inscription comprised

the letters of

the

Greek

alphabet,

the first

four

of

which have been

preserved.

227.

Fragment

of white

marble with

part

of

the

right-hand

edge

preserved.

Broken

away

on all

other sides. Found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

640.

Height,

0.22

m.;

width,

0.24

m.;

thickness,

ca. 0.25m.

Height

of

letters,

0.032 m.

- - -

-atov[.l

No.

227

The letters are monumental

in

character

and indicate

a date for

the

inscription

in the

first or second

century

A. D.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

135

228.

Fragment

of

bluish white

marble,

now

lost.

Inv.

No. 73.

Height,

0.1

7

m.;

width,

0. 14

m.;

thickness,

0.075 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

Powell, A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p. 68,

No. 53.

4 w N

No. 228

The

drawing

is

taken

from Powell.

229.

Piece of

moulding

of

white

marble. Place and

date

of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv.

No.

86.

Height,

0.11

5

m.;

width,

0.24m.;

thickness,

0.09m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

Powell,

/.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

61,

No.

41.

Fs6EOg

v_

_

-

No.

229

The letters

may,

however,

form the

ending

of a

proper

name.

230.

Fragment

of

gray

limestone,

broken

on

all sides

except

the

top,

found

probably

in

1901

in

the

Christian

cemetery

east

of the church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

99.

Height,

0.1

6

m.; width,

0.21

m.; thickness,

0.025

m.

Height of letters,0.025 m.

\ ( E N b ?

N T SL

No.

230

231.

Plaque

of white

marble,

broken

on all

sides

except

the

top.

Place

and

date of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv.

No.

114.

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136

CORINTH

Height,

0.26

m.;

width,

0.21

m.;

thickness,

0.065

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

H

N

-PN

No.

231

232. Fragment of blue limestone, broken on all sides, found in 1901 near

the

vaulted chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

126.

Height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.1

05

m.;

thickness,

0.039 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.075 m.

Powell, A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

42,

No.

19.

No.

232

The

drawing

is

given

as

by

Powell.

233.

Fragment

of

bluish

white

marble,

found in

1901 a

short

distance

south

of the

vaulted

chamber of

the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

147.

Height,

0.12

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.1 7

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.07 m.

Powell,

A.J.A. VII,

1903,

p.

57,

No.

34.

0?-

-

Y

No.

233

The

stone

is broken

away

on

all

sides.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

137

234.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

crumbling

marble

found

in

1901

in

one

of the

buildings

on the western

side

of

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

No.

155.

Height,

0.1

8

m.;

width,

0.19

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

Height of letters, 0.035 m.

Powell, A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

42,

No.

18.

I T

i A

?ve..

T T A N

- -

-GlL[dxor(?)

-

-

No.

234

The

stone

is

broken on

all sides

except

the

top.

235.

Two

fragments

of

blue

limestone

which seem

to

belong

together.

Inv.

Nos.

168 and

187.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

168)

was

discovered

in

1901,

but

the

place

of

finding

is

not

recorded. Cf.

Powell, A.J.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

41,

No.

15.

Height,

0.135

m.;

width,

0.1 5

m.;

thickness,

0.23 m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

187)

was found in 1902 east of the first

shop

on the western

side

of

Lechaeum

Road.

Height,

0.095

m.; width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

(broken

on all

sides).

No.

235

The

complete

thickness

of

neither stone

is

preserved.

Height

of letters

in both

fragments,

0.045

m.

236.

Fragment

of

a marble

slab,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1902

east

of

Temple

Hill and at

the

northern

end

of the

Basilica.

Inv.

No.

1

75.

18

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138

CORINTH

Height,

0.21 5

m.;

width,

0.1

5

m.;

thickness,

0.05 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

No.

236

237.

Fragment

of

a marble

slab,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in

1902

in the

fill

above the

Doric

portico

of

the

North

Shops.

Inv.

No.

179.

Height,

0.09

m.; width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.02

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

No.

237

238.

Fragment

of

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1902

near

the

eastern

end

of the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 188.

Height,

0.12

m.;

width,

0.1 5

m.;

thickness,

0.038 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.052

m.

No.

238

Parts of three

letters

may

be

distinguished

-

-

QOTL

239.

Fragment

of

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1902

near the

eastern end of the Northwest Shops. Inv. No. 189.

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.1

7

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.037

m.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

139

Parts

of

three

lines

may

be

distinguished,

as

follows:

---io

-

(L3L 1i-/

No.

239

The

last letter

may

be

either

gamma, epsilon,

or

pi.

240.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1902

near the

eastern

end of

the Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No. 191.

Height,

0.035

m.;

width,

0.095

m.; thickness,

0.09

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023 m.

No.

240

241.

Fragment

of

crumbling

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in 1902

near

the

rear wall of the

shops

along

the

western side of Lechaeum

Road,

west

of the

Propylaea.

Inv. No. 203.

Height,

0.075

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.033 m.

Height

of

letter,

0.043

m.

No.

241

242.

A block of

poros

stone

found

in

1902 built

into

a late wall

in

front

of

the Northwest

Shops.

Now lost Inv.

No.

249.

Height,

0.47

m.;

width,

0.36

m.;

thickness,

0.34 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.068 m.

- -

ov

-

-

-

The

right edge

of

the

fragment

is

preserved,

but

it

shows

no

anathyrosis

for

the

reception

of another

block

Remains of stucco were also

apparent

on the

surface

of the stone

at

the time of

its

discovery.

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140

CORINTH

243. Four

fragments

of

coarsely crystalline

white

marble,

found

in

1901.

The

place

of

discovery

is

not

recorded.

The

fragments belong

together,

though

no

point

of

contact

can

be

found

between

any

two of

them. The

marble

is

so

fractured that

the

original

thickness cannot

be

determined.

The

greatest

thickness

preserved

is

0.075

m.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

268):

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.10

m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

270):

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.1

3

m.

Fragment

c

(Inv.

No.

269):

Height,

0.09

m.; width,

0.12

m.

Fragment

d

(Inv.

No.

267):

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.075

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.075 m.

The

left

margin

of

fragment

d

is

preserved.

Otherwise

the

fragments

are broken on

all

sides.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

69,

No.

56.

c

d

No.

243

The

drawings

are

by

Powell.

244.

Fragment

of

a

marble

plaque.

Inv.

No.

271.

Height,

0.1

5

m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

0.037

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

--C

( -o -

No.

244

No.

244

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

141

245.

A

broken slab

of

crumbling

grayish

blue

marble. Exact

place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv. No.

276.

Height,

0.52

m.;

width,

0.47

m.;

thickness,

0.035 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

5

m.

-0.045

m.

(

- - -

oto..tL

Ual xov

- -

</o

A

-

-

- cL- L

eESOu

- - -

-

Q

5

-

--

-

vave,(towcTO

-

?-

r

KoQLvfou

a

X

- -

K

o VooXV

-

-

-

.

Y

X

C

O

(

-

S

xai

xavluax

--

ANh iX uTa

n

No.

245

The

inscription

is broken

away completely

on both sides

and at

the bottom.

The

fragments preserved

are

all

contiguous,

with

the

exception

of

one small

piece

which shows

the head and one

wing

of a bird.

The

drawing

above shows the

disposition.

246.

Small

fragment

of

a marble

slab,

broken

on all

sides.

Place and date

of

finding

not

recorded.Inv.

No.

277.

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.16

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

No.

246

247.

Small

fragment

of marble found

in

1896

in the

neighborhood

of

the

Gymnasium.

Now lost. Inv. No. 287.

Height,

0.082

m.;

width,

0.102

m.

-io

-

-L

--

to

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142

CORINTH

248.

Fragment

of bluish

gray

marble,

found

in

1896 near the

southeastern

corer of the

Agora.

Now lost. Inv. No.

292.

Height,

0.075m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.235m.

Height of letters, ca. 0.035 m.

-

-

Ea(u--

- -

The

inscription

was

cut

in

only

one

line,

for both the

upper

and

lower surfaces

of the stone

were

in

part

preserved

when

found,

and there was no room for a second

line

of

text

on that

part

which

had been broken

away.

249.

Fragment

of bluish white

marble,

of

poor quality,

found in

1898.

Inv. No. 54.

Height,

0.1 8

m.;

width,

0.21

m.;

thickness,

0.14 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

Powell,

A.JA.

VII,

1903,

p.

56,

No. 33.

,N

TOTT

--

-

-o-)V

To()

a-

-

-

-

No.

249

The

stone

is

broken

at

each

end but the

upper

and lower surfaces are worked

into

mouldings

which

meet at the

back

in

a

surface

0.07

m.

wide.

250.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken on all sides. Place and date of

finding

not recorded.

Inv.

No.

303.

Height,

0.145

m.;

width,

0.085

m.; thickness,

0.06

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.

No.

250

The

letters are

apparently

from

the

beginning

of

a

word.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

143

251.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on

all sides. Place and date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv. No. 305.

Height,

0.08

m.;

width,

0.09

m.; thickness,

0.045

m.

No.

251

Portions

of

the

three letters

- -

-

-c

--

can

be

discerned.

252.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all sides

except

the

left.

Found

in

1900

inside the vaulted

chamber

of the

Northwest

Shops.

Inv.

No.

309.

Height, 0.055 m.; width, 0.07 m.; thickness, 0.023 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

Powell,

A./.

A.

VII,

1903,

p.

71,

No.

59.

No.

252

253.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

of

which

only

the

upper

edge

is

preserved.

Inv. No. 72.

Height,

0.08

m.; width,

0.1

5

m.; thickness,

0.075

m.

Height

of

letters, 0.04

m.

Powell,

A./.A.

VII,

1903,

p.

68,

No.

54..

253

No.

253

The

stroke of the

first

letter is

clear,

though

not

given by

Powell.

254.

Fragment

of a marble

slab,

broken

on

all

sides.

Place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded,

but

probably

discovered

in

1901

near

the

vaulted

chamber of

the Northwest

Shops,

where

many

other

similar

pieces

were

found.

Inv.

No. 327.

Height,

0.10

m.; width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of

letter,

0.025

m.

No.

254

255.

A

round

and

polished

piece

of

white

marble,

flat

on

one

side,

and

with

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144

CORINTH

the

inscription

cut in the centre

of the convex surface.

Apparently

a

weight.

Exact

place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No.

329.

Diameter,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.072

m.

Height of letters, 0.015 m.

No.

255

The actual

weight

of

the

stone at

present

is 2256

grams.

256.

Fragment

of

marble,

containing only

one letter

of

highly

ornate

Byzantine

style.

Exact

place

and

date of

finding

not

recorded.Inv. No. 330.

Height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.10

m.

Height

of

letter,

0.045m.

No.

256

The

stone

is

broken on

all

sides.

257.

Fragment

of

marble

with

leaf

and

tongue moulding along

the

upper

edge.

Place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded,

but

probably

discovered before

1900.

Inv. No. 326.

Height,

0.075

m.;

width,

0.355

m.;

thickness,

0.06 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

5 m.-0.02

m.

No.

257

ZC

'

KO AC

NC

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

145

The

letters,

or

rather

numerals,

are

cut in

one

line

along

a

smooth

taenia

below the

moulding.

258.

Fragment

broken on all

sides,

discovered

in 1898. Now lost. Inv.

No.

331.

Height

of

letters,

0.1 3 m.

-

- -

ITO)V

- - -

Richardson's

notes

record

the fact that the stone

was broken at both

ends,

and

that

the

letters were

very

poorly

cut

and of

late

date.

259.

Fragment

of a marble

slab,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1903

in

the

northwest

corner

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

343.

Height,

0.11

m.;width,

0.06

m.; thickness,

0.019

m.

Height

of

letter,

0.055 m.

-A-

No.

259

260.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

with an

inscription

on a

band

of

round

scale-

like relief. Found

in

the area of

the theatre

in

1903.

Inv.

No. 361.

Height,

0.1

lm.;

width, 0.085m.; thickness,

0.03m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01m.

ENAA

eV Aa

No.

260

261. Fragment of a slab of crumbling gray marble, broken on all sides.

Found

in

1904,

but

the

exact

place

is

not

recorded.

The

stone was

found in

three

pieces,

of

which

fragments

a and b

have

been

lost.

Fragment

c

is

preserved

in

the

epigraphical

collection

at

Old Corinth. Inv.

No. 367.

Height,

0.1

7m.;

width,

0.1

4m.;

thickness,

ca.

0.023

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.026m.

No. 26I

19

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146

CORINTH

262.

Fragment

of a marble

plaque

found

in

1904 near

the

southern

side of

the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

368.

Height,

0.085

m.;

width,

0.15

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.-0.042

m.

No. 262

The

fragment

is broken

on all

sides.

Indistinguishable

traces

of

writing

appear

in

the lines

above

and

below

that

shown

in

the

drawing.

263.

A

fragment

of

white

marble found

by

one of

the

inhabitants

of

Old

Corinth

on the road between the theatre and the church of

Hagia

Paraskevi.

Inv.

No.

374.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.16

m.;

thickness,

0.065 m.

Height

of letter

0

-

0.065 m.

No.

263

The

inscription

is

broken

on all

sides,

and

portions

of three

letters

only

are

preserved.

264.

Fragment

of a

marble

plaque,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in

1905 between

the

temple

of

Apollo

and the

fountain of

Glauce.

Inv.

No.

384.

Height,

0.085

m.; width,

0.042

m.;

thickness,

0.024

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025 m.

Y A

No.

264

265.

Fragment

of

a

marble

plaque,

broken on

all

sides,

found

on the

surface

in

1905 in the southern

section

of the

Agora.

Inv. No. 387.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

147

Height,

0.06

m.;

width,

0.05

m.;

thickness,

0.023

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

No.

265

266.

Lower

right-hand

corner

of

a

plaque

of white

marble,

found

in

1905

east

of

the

church of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

390.

Height,

0.135

m.;

width,

0.095

m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02 m.

---^

>T

---

LVe

N

No. 266

267. A plaque of white marble, found in 1898. Inv. No. 396.

Height,

0.155

m.;

width,

0.20m.;

thickness,

0.075 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023m.

No.

267

The

inscription

is

recorded

only

by

photograph,

and the exact

place

of

discovery

is

unknown.

268.

Fragment

of a

marble

plaque,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1907 in

the

Agora,

north

of

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

398.

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148

CORINTH

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.1

3

m.;

thickness,

0.04 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.035

m.

(r/J~r^ - - - Keo_ _

-

(~

- - wai

,

o.68Q

No.

268

269.

Fragment

of Acro-Corinthian

limestone,

broken on all

sides. Found in

1907 near

the

Northwest

Stoa.

Inv. No. 404.

Height,

0.1

1

m.;

width,

0.22

m.;

thickness,

0.1

m.

Height of letters, 0.035m.

No.

269

270.

A

small

fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1907

north

of the

church

of

St

John.

Inv.

No. 413.

Height,

0.095

m.;

width,

0.14

m.;

thickness,

0.1

0

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.045

m.

No.

270

The two letters

preserved

are K-

-

-

271.

A

round

marble

disk,

found

in

1907

near the

Northwest

Shops

between

the

church of

St.

John

and

Temple

Hill.

Inv.

No.

424.

Diameter,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.028

m.

Height

of

letters

in

line

1,

0.021

m.;

in

line

2,

0.01

m.

-

-

W

LrQ

----

..6a.

---

o

No.

271

The

inscription

antedates

the

present

shape

of

the

stone,

and

its

fragmentary

nature is due to the

fact

that the

original

plaque

has been

cut

down to the

present

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

149

circular disk.

I have been

unable to

decipher

the letters in the last

line,

except

as

indicated

above.

272. A small fragment of white marble, with original surfaces preserved at

front and

back and also at the

top

and

left-hand

sides.

Found in

1907 east

of

the

church

of

St.

John.

Inv.

No.

425.

Height,

0.082

m.; width,

0.082

m.;

thickness,

0.039 m.

Height

of

letter,

0.031

m.

No.

272

273.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found in

1907

a

few inches above the

late

Roman

pavement

in

the

northwest

part

of

the

Agora.

The back

is

roughly

tooled.

Inv.

No.

441.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.19

m.; thickness,

0.058 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.039 m.

Smith,

A..

A.

XXIII,

1919,

p.

385,

No. 92.

No.

273

Line

1:

The

first

letter

is

certainly

an

alp/ia.

Between

the

two

sigmas

there is a

mark

of punctuation. Beyond the second sigma is the vertical hasta of a letter which

cannot

be read.

Line

2: The

second

oblique

stroke

of the

upsilon

is on

the

edge

of

the

stone.

274.

A

small marble

fragment,

broken

on all

sides,

found

by

one of the

inhabitants

of

Old

Corinth. Inv. No.

449.

Height,

0.066

m.;

width,

0.06

m.;

thickness,

0.034

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

No.

274

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150

CORINTH

275.

Fragment

of

bluish

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1907

by

one

of

the

inhabitants

of

Old Corinth. Inv.

No. 450.

Height,

0.13

m.;

width,

0.07

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of letters indeterminate.

No.

275

276.

Fragment

of

grayish

white

marble, shaped

like

a

Byzantine capital,

found

in

1908

in

the

precinct

of

the

temple

east of

Glauce. The stone

is broken

away

at

the

right.

Inv.

No.

455.

Height,

0.16

m.;

width,

0.28

m.;

thickness,

0.09

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.032 m.

~

TnY-Tvos-

--

No.

276

The letters

are

in

relief on a narrow

panel

sunk into the

face of the

stone.

277.

Fragment

of

marble,

broken

away

except

on the

left-hand

side,

where

there

are

remains of an

egg-and-dart

moulding.

Found

in

1908,

but the

exact

place

of

discovery

is not recorded.

Inv.

No.

474.

Height, 0.17 m.; width, 0.16 m.; thickness, 0.055 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.042 m.

otl

-

-

_

No.

277

After

the

alpha

in

line

1

is a

vertical

hasta

which

may

represent

pi.

Other

interpretations

are,

however,

possible.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

151

278.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found in

1908

in

the

western

part

of the

Agora.

Inv. No. 480.

Height,

0.105

m.; width,

0.145

m.;

thickness,

0.055 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.045

m.

-_

AN

No.

278

279.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found in

1910

in the

earth removed

from

the

excavated

area.

Inv.

No. 512.

Height,

0.05

m.;

width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.022

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.03 m.

No.

279I

No.

279

280.

Fragment

of

gray limestone,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1910

in

the

Peribolos

of

Apollo.

Inv. No.

516.

Height,

0.1

1

m.;

width,

0.12

m.;

thickness,

0.1

8 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.045

m.

No. 280

It will

be noticed

from

the

drawing

that

the

letters

are

very

much

like

those

of

No. 94

in

shape

and

style.

The

upsilon

s

especially

characteristic.

281.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

bluish

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1911 north

of

the

Agora

near

the

southern

end

of

Lechaeum Road. Inv.

No.

538.

Height,

0.06

m.;

width,

0.1

8

m.;

thickness,

0.125 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

No. 28I

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152

CORINTH

282. Two

contiguous

fragments

of

coarse-grained

white

marble,

found

in

1911 in

the northern

part

of

the court

of Peirene. Inv. No.

543.

Height,

0.1 3

m.;

width,

0.175

m.;

thickness,

0.03 5

m.

Height of letters, ca. 0.02 m.

7-

\

AC

TLIpila-

I,-- L

0

\

VTl

AEr

HAIAAO

No.

282

The

stone

has unfinished

edges,

and it

is

difficult

to

say

whether

part

of the

inscription

has

been

broken

away

at

the

right. My feeling

is that the

inscription

is

complete,

though

I

have

no

interpretation

to

offer for the last

two

lines.

283.

Fragment

of white marble found

in 1914.

Inv.

No. 550.

Height,

0.14

m.;

width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.021

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.049

m.

No.

283

The

left

edge

of

the stone

is

preserved,

but it is broken

away

on all other

sides.

284. Three

fragments

from a thin

slab

of

bluish

marble,

found in

1914

in

one

of the

chambers east of Peirene. Inv. Nos.

553a, 553b,

and 557.

Fragment

a

(Inv.

No.

553

a):

Height,

0.16

m.;

width,

0.24m.;

thickness,

0.035m.

Fragment

b

(Inv.

No.

553

b):

Height,

0.06

m.;

width,

0.1 3

m.;

thickness,

0.035 m.

Fragment

c

(Inv.

No.

557):

Height,

0.1

5

m.;

width,

0.16

m.;

thickness,

0.035 m.

No.

284

The letters are painted on the marble in red paint. Fragmenta preserves the

lower

half of

an

alpha,

and

fragment

c

the

lower

part

of

a

mu.

As

nearly

as can

be

determined the

height

of

the letters

was

about 0.1

5

m.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

153

285.

Small

fragment

of

white

marble,

found

in

1914 in

the area

northeast

of

Peirene. Inv.

No. 561.

Height,

0.06

m.;

width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.062

m.

Height

of

letter,

0.03 m.

No.

285

The

stone

is broken

away

on all

sides

except

the

left,

where

part

of the

lateral

face

is

preserved.

286. Fragment of white marble,broken on all sides, found in 1914 in the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No. 569.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.095

m.;

thickness,

0.128

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.045 m.

No. 286

287.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1914

in

the

eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv. No.

609.

Height,

0.055

m.;

width,

0.104

m.;

thickness,

0.05

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

-

0.03 m.

-

XaO

-

at-Q

No.

287

288.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found in

1915

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No. 621.

Height,

0.09

m.;

width,

0.10

m.;

thickness,

0.026

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

5 m.

-

0.03

5

m.

- -

(po-

--

- - -

Xla-

- -

-

v | 2

No. 288

20

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154

CORINTH

289.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken

away

at the

bottom

and

at

the

right.

Found

in

191

5

in the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No. 648.

Height,

0.315

m.; width,

0.22

m.; thickness,

0.104

m.

Height of letters, 0.03 m.

Eov )(

No.

289

The

fragment

is

part

of a

flat

Byzantine

capital,

with

the

inscription

on the

top.

290.

Fragment

of revetment of

white

marble,

broken

away

except

at the

right. Found in 191 5 in the eastern part of the Agora. Inv. No. 672.

Height,

0.1

1

3m.;

width,

0.041

m.;

thickness,

0.01 4m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.025 m.

-

- o

--

--a

A~V

No.

290

291.

Fragment

of

white

marble with

left

edge

preserved,

found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No. 719.

Height,

0.11 5

m.;

width,

0.1 5

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca.

0.05

m.

No.

291

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

155

292.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

with the

right

edge

in

part

preserved,

found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of

the

Agora.

Inv. No. 724.

Height,

0.20

m.;

width,

0.20

m.;

thickness,

0.20

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.038

m.

9

a

m

-

.

.

- - - - jtQoQ

..

P 1l

?vo

...

No.

292

293. Fragment of bluish white marble,with

part

of the

right edge

preserved,

found

in

1915

in

the eastern

part

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

728.

Height,

0.095

m.;

width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.075 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.04m.

No.

293

294. Two

contiguous

fragments

of

bluish

marble,

broken

on

all

sides. Place

and date of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

Nos.

732

and

740.

Height,

0.135

m.;

width,

0.1

75

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.025

m.

No.

294

The

lettering

shows

the

inscription

to be Christian.

No restoration

s

attempted.

295.

Fragment

of

bluish

marble,

broken

on

all

sides. Place and date

of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No.

733.

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156

CORINTH

Height,

0.1

8

m.;

width,

0.1

7

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.038

m.

No.

295

296.

Small

fragment

of

a

plaque

of

white

marble,

with the

left

edge

preserved,

but

broken

on all other

sides.

Place and

date

of

discovery

not recorded.

Inv.

No. 736.

Height,

0.1

3

m.;

width,

0.11

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.023

m.

-

0.029

m.

N

n p o

No.

296

The

appearance

of the

letters

suggests

that the

inscription

is

Byzantine

in

date.

297.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

grayish

marble. The left

edge

is

rough,

but

seems

original.

Broken on all

other sides. Place and date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv. No. 741.

Height,

0.12m.;

width,

0.1

75

m.;

thickness,

0.066m.

Height

of

letters,

0.032

m.

NO.

A

al

29

No.

297

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

1

57

298.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken on

all

sides.

Place and

date of

discovery

not recorded.

Inv.

No.

745.

Height,

0.125

m.; width,

0.103

m.;

thickness,

0.027

m.

Height of letters, 0.05 m.

No.

298

299.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides

except

the

top.

Place

and

date

of

finding

not

recorded.Inv.

No.

754.

Height,

0.26

m.;

width,

0.31

m.;

thickness,

0.14 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.072 m.

- - -

-

-TO

e:t@

No.

299

Part

of the

original

top

is

preserved,

with

very

faint traces

of letters

in

the

first

line which

seem

to be

-

-

-

lo.

300.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on all

sides.

Place and

date of

finding

not recorded.Inv. No. 757.

Height,

0.1

35

m.;

width,

0.053

m.;

thickness,

0.085

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01

7

m.

N/f

-- -

-

No.

300

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158

CORINTH

301.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken on

all

sides.

Place

and date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv. No.

763.

Height,

0.068

m.; width,

0.048

m.; thickness,

0.019

m.

Height of letters, 0.04 m.

To

-

No.

30I

302.

Fragment

of a marble

bowl,

found

in 1926

in the area

north

of

the

Basilica

on

the

western

side

of

Lechaeum Road.

Inv. No.

803.

Height,

0.1

3

m.;

estimated

original

diameter

of

the

base,

ca.

0.20

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04

m.

'INo

- - - -

No.

302

303.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of white

marble,

found

in 1926 in the

area north

of the

Basilica

on the western

side of Lechaeum

Road.

Inv. No. 804.

Height, 0.32 m.; width, 0.28 m.; thickness,0.095 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04

5m.

/YCA

--

- -

05^*.

-

oI

-- --

al

No.

303

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

159

304.

Fragment

of blue

limestone,

broken on

all

sides,

found

in

1907. Inv.

No.

809.

Height,

0.072

m.;

width,

0.1

38

m.;

thickness,

0.02 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.01m.-

0.01

8

m.

- - - -

Q

o.

/

No.

304

305.

Fragment

of

a

white

marble

plaque,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in

1907

in

the

vaulted chamber

of

the Northwest

Shops.

Inv. No.

811.

Height,

0.16

m.;

width,

0.205

m.;

thickness,

0.09 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.05

m.

----A---

No.

305

In

the first line

an

alpha

or lambda

is

distinguishable.

306.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

on

all

sides. Place and

date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv. No.

814.

Height,

0.03

m.; width,

0.105

m.;

thickness,

0.035 m.

No.

306

307.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on all

sides.

Place

and

date of

finding

not

recorded. Inv.

No. 81

5.

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160

CORINTH

Height,

0.1 7

m.; width,

0.06

m.;

thickness,

0.10 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.037 m.

J

- -

QO

-

- -

- -

-

-[a

-

-

-

No.

307

308.

Fragment

of a white marble

plaque,

broken

on all sides.

Place and

date

of

finding

unknown.

Inv.

No.

817.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.06

m.; thickness,

0.403

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

N O

----

V-

0

\

No.

308

309.

Fragment

of a

greenish

marble

slab,

with

part

of

the

upper

edge

preserved.

Place

and date of

finding

not recorded.

Inv.

No. 820.

Height, 0.105 m. width, 0.17 m.; thickness, 0.02 m.

Height

of

letters

indeterminate.

No.

309

Portions

of

three

letters are

preserved,

the

second

of

which

may

be

alpha,

delta,

or lambda.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

161

310.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken on

all

sides,

found in

1927 near

the

enclosure

of Peirene. Inv. No.

822.

Height,

0.065

m.;

width,

0.065

m.;

thickness,

0.04 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

No.

310

311. Fragment of white marble,broken on all sides. Place and date of finding

unknown.

Inv. No. 823.

Height,

0.1 35

m.;

width,

0.11

7

m.;

thickness,

0.045 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03 m.

No.

311

312.

Disk of white marble.

Place and

date of

finding

not recorded.

Inv.

No.

824.

Diameter,

ca. 0.12

m.; thickness,

0.045

m.

Height of letters, 0.055 m.

No.

312

313.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken on all

sides.

Place

and

date

of

finding

not recorded.

Inv. No.

825.

21

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162

CORINTH

Height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.07

m.;

thickness,

0.04

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.035

m.

- -

zo

No.

313

314. Fragment of white marble, broken on all sides. Place and date of

finding

not recorded. Inv.

No. 827.

Height,

0.10

m.; width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.045

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.032

m.

No.

314

315.

Fragment

of

blue

limestone,

broken

away

on all

sides

except

the

top.

Place and

date

of

finding

not

recorded.

Inv.

No. 830.

Height, 0.045 m.; width, 0.07 m.; thickness, (.05 m.

Height

of

letters indeterminate.

T_-

No.

315

316.

Small

fragment

of a

moulding

of white

marble,

broken on all sides

except

the

top.

Place and dateof

finding

not recorded.

nv.

No.

834.

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GREEK

INSCRIPTIONS

163

Height,

0.07

m.;

width,

0.085

m.;

thickness,

0.035

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

No.

316

The

letters

are

in

relief.

317.

Fragment

of

a

coping

slab of

white

marble,

formerly

in

New

Corinth.

Inv. No. 835.

Height,

0.085

m.;

width,

0.30m.;

thickness,

0.22m.

Height

of

letters,

0.027

m.

- - -

-

1

6E05

No.

317

318.

Fragment

of a

coping

slab

of white

marble,

formerly

in

New Corinth.

Inv. No. 836.

Height,

0.1 35

m.;

width,

0.32

m.; thickness,

0.23

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

|_- - -

'V

KQou

-

- -

-

NQ.

318

319.

Fragment

of white

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found in

1926

on

the

eastern end of

Temple

Hill. Inv. No. 838.

Height,

0.26

m.;

width,

0.40

m.; thickness,

0.13

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.02

m.

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164

CORINTH

The

stone is so

badly

worn that a

restoration is

impossible.

Those letters

e

I

v

I

Z O

V

r6

A

T

LECYC

I

AC I I

p

MAA

Ccki

C

A

'

Oit

No.

319

which

can

be read with

any

degree

of

certainty

are indicated

in the

drawing.

320.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken at both

ends,

but

with

the

upper

and lower surfaces

preserved.

Found

in

1927

in

a

stratum

of

Byzantine

deposit

above

the

Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

No.

843.

Height,

0.10

m.;

width,

0.13

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

Height

of

letter,

0.065

m.

No.

320

321.

An

architectural

ragment

of

white

marble,

found in

1927

between

the

church

of

St.

John

and the

south

stoa of

the

Agora.

Now

in

the Museum

at Old

Corinth. Inv.

No. 875

(Sculpture

Inventory

1

325).

Length

of

the

block,

2.04m.;

thickness, 0.21 m.

Height

of

letters, 0,03m.

No.

321

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

165

The

block is

decorated

in

panels

of low

relief of

Byzantine

workmanship.

In

one

of the

panels

appears

the

inscription represented

here.

322.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

the

eastern

part

of

the

Odeum

in

1927.

Inv.

No. 883.

Height,

0.075

m.; width,

0.075

m.;

thickness,

0.023

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.05m.

-

- - -

oL

No.

322

323. Fragment of white marble moulding, broken away on all sides except

at the

top.

Found

in

1927

in

front of the

shops

on the

western side of Lechaeum

Road.

Inv.

No. 886.

Height,

0.1

4m.; width,

0.1

2m.;

thickness,

0.07

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.04

m.

No.

323

The letters

appear

to

be-

-xa

- - -

324.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of

bluish

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found

in

1927

in the Odeum.

Inv.

No.

890.

Height,

0.09

m.; width,

0.09

m.;

thickness,

0.01

7m.

Height

of

letters,

0.015

m.

IN

-

- - -

-

l

e

o.

A

- - - V - - - -

No.

324

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166

CORINTH

325.

Fragment

of white

marble,

with

the

top

surface in

part preserved,

found

in

1927

near

the

middle

of the

Agora.

Inv.

No.

896.

Height,

0.10m.;

width,

0.25

m.;

thickness,

0.08

m.

Height of letters, 0.07 m.

-

--

-

Tjhv

xhX[Cav

- -

-

No.

325

The

letters

are of late date

and

carelessly

cut.

326.

Fragment

of

a

plaque

of

green

marble,

broken

on

all

sides,

found on

the

surface

in

1927

near the

eastern

gate

of the

city

wall.

Inv.

No. 899.

Height,

0.11

m.;

width,

0.08

m.;

thickness,

0.03 m.

Height

of

letters,

ca. 0.05

m.

-

-

z--

/-

No.

326

327. The

upper

left-hand

corer

of

a

slab

of white

limestone,

found

in

1927

in the

Odeum.

Inv. No. 900.

Height,

0.38

m.;

width,

0.1 8

m.;

thickness,

0.055

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

'EX[Q

r

-

a:k

No.

327

The letters

are in relief.

he lettersare in relief.

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GREEK INSCRIPTIONS

167

328.

Fragment

of a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken on all

sides,

found

in

1925

on the south

side

of

Temple

Hill. Inv. No. 901.

Height,

0.07

m.; width,

0.06

m.;

thickness,

0.025

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.03

m.

No.

328

329.

Fragment

of

a block of white marble

found

in

1898.

Inv.

No.

69.

Height,

0.13

m.;

width,

0.125

m.;

thickness,

0.33

m.

Height

of

letters,

0.045 m.

No.

329

330.

Small

fragment

of

a

plaque

of white

marble,

broken

on all

sides,

found

in

1907

within

the

south

apse

of the

church

of

St.

John,

close above

a

late

Roman

pavement.

Inv.

No.

414.

Height, 0.08 m.; width, 0.075 m.; thickness, 0.025 m.

Height

of

letters

indeterminate.

No.

330

331.

Fragment

of

white

marble,

broken

away

on

all

sides

except

the

bottom,

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168

CORINTH

found

on the surface

in

1910

by

one of the

inhabitants of

Old Corinth.

Inv. No. 511.

Height,

0.112

m.;

width,

0.1 66

m.;

thickness,

0.025 m.

Height

of

letters,

0.028

m.

N A A s vO

- -

- - - -

I- -

- LO'V

ACPQ[8

-

- -

No.

331

The

inscription

is

well

cut,

but

exhibits a curious

inconsistency

in the

forms

of letters used. As may be seen from the photograph, the alpha of line 2 is different

from

the

alpha

of

line 4. Letters which

I

have

interpreted

as nu

in line 3 are also

different from

the nu

preserved

in

line

4.

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INDICES

NAMES

OF

MEN AND

WOMEN

'A

- - - -

-, 174,

321.

'Aylto - - -, 36.

'Afqv6CoQoS;,

61.

'Afi

- -

-,140.

At

-

,

17

lo.

AiXlavo6,

1

5

43.

Ai2Los

AL6oxo

Qog

'AvTlvoeisq,

1

5

41.

r.

AtLos

-Av

- -

-'Avl(oX

),

1

5

56.

I.

AiLkLoS'Akmlavoi

HQIIEQVllOC,

5

26-27.

AsiXLOS

AiXSog

aciag,

consul

3 A.D:

14

3-4.

'Ak

-

-

- -

-,

12 5.

'AkclavSQos,

208.

r.

'AkgavSoqc,

1

5

58.

'AXsedvwQ,

2

2,

7.

'AkxiC8a[o

KoQivfto;,

73

3.

'AkvXtav6o,

1

5

26.

'Av , 12 11.

'Avaay6Qas

IIokvoTTQatov,

8.

'AvdalXoS,

1

5 7.

'AvyQoas,

154,

164,

206.

Antigona,

130.

'AVTIOX

-

-,

64.

'AVT'Avoo

AvTLO6XO

aLaaQEs5u,

4 93.

'AVtIXOzo 'A

- - -

-, 14

49.

r.

'AVTWiotLo

BoioQQg,

16

7-8.

'AVTLirtOS

MdtLLOS,

58.

r.

'Avr')vtog

Eiio[to:,

14

88.

M.

'AVToVLOS,

18 , 101.

[

- -

'Av]-xOV?OS

KVfLTOS,

15

6.

TLP.

'AT

-

-

--

,

18

2.

'AcocuXovia

'EovuoQia,

133.

'AQ

- - -

-,21 7,

92 1.

'AQIGT

-

,

11

2.

'AQlTalOS;,

72 2.

'AQLGTOY?VrqC,

1

14.

'AQlaoto6aX,o

14

42.

'AQ(TCov,

0,

222.

'AQQLba&og,

5

50.

'AQTaOc

or

'AQTxcov,

27.

"AQtlkog;,

11 5.

'AQzLT'E,Xq

AQXLXkko,

1

5.

'A

- - -

-,

14

49.

F.

'Aoivlog,

18 4.

'AoxkartdLbg

'Aaxk:rtldaov

'AktSav-

bQEvg,

14

63.

M.

A . I

- - -

-,

116.

M.

A0vQr1hlos,

1

7.

'Ac

- - -

-,

12

13.

'AcpQoS

-

-

-

-,

331.

(k. Bak

- - -

-,145.

BTQos,

15

34.

22

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170

INDICES

Boi8Lg,

207.

BovQQog,

16 7-8.

BQ

- -

-

-,

12 12.

A.

FreUlo;

'Io0TTog,

83.

A.

rFeXXLo

MevavSQos,

82.

rFl,vog,

1

5 9.

r.

rFsvX1og

Zqvwov

NL

- -

-,

14

90.

FEoQyLOS,

00.

H1.

rFQO

-

-

-,

15

62.

reJQyloS,

206.

rovvaQiog,

148.

A -

- -

-,

21

14.

Aa[

- - -

-,

21

1,

5.

Aa[taiveTog

Aalcoviov,

11

8.

AaLo0,FQQTS

QaaoUXXov,

1

4.

Adcoyw,

1

5

69.

Aa[Ldvtoq,

11 8.

Ae

-

-

-,

11

12,

21

10.

Deximachus,

p.

54.

At1

-

--

--,

152.

Arltq'iQoSg,

196.

A

-

-

- -

-,

21

17.

AO

- -

-,

21

15.

ALoy?Vrg,14 45, 104, 157 7.

ALoy?vYg

EQpoAodov,

8

2.

AloyevTI'Ielo

-

-

-

KaltaQe';,

1

519-20.

AlO66SoQo0

TO?XsuioO

AXseav8Qes',4

61.

AL6xo@oQg,

5

41.

AoL?TLa,

134.

Aoixos

AoTo

g

Aovxiov

voig,

134.

A4OQ(ov,

14

71.

'E

- --

-,

121.

Ela

--

-,

12

8.

'EovuoaQia,

133.

'Eovuo

- -

-,

289.

'E ?

--,

132.

'ETaq@po8iTa,61.

eEQ?vvLOS,

5

74.

'Eot

-,

21

19.

'EQoL6aos,

88

2.

EixaQcnt,

132.

EIu'gIvqS,

8.

E/3oX0ros,

14

88.

E6.oQcpia,

200.

Ev

-

- -

-,

21

8.

Eurycles,

p.

54.

Eog

vlqs,

32

2.

EvoI'arfos,

189.

Ev'T?Xrg,

9.

EvTvrqXQvosco)to,

160.

E'vtvXLav6g,

9 5.

EvXadQloTOS,

5 39.

'EXsptEvTg

EX

-

-

-

-,

1

0.

Zilvcov,

14

90,

192.

Zo

- -

-,

21

25.

'Hli68coQo,

102.

'HQ - - --, 172.

eHQa

--

,

17 5.

'HQo)8bq,

5

1.

'HaoXIos,

92

2.

)

-

-

- --

-,

17

8.

so

-

- -

-,

21

4.

Oosooa

-

- -

-,

245.

OeQoiRag,

1.

O()eFvaotos,

11

11.

OL60oTo;,

8

2.

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INDICES

1 71

OQacoasac,

5

10.

O(QdoaLtog,

41.

OQdovuXo;,

11

4.

'IQo

-

,

15

19.

'Io

-

,

126.

[

- -'IOv]

t6VIOS,

1

5

13.

'IovLavog,

1

5

8,

11 7

F.

'IoJlog,

1

8 5.

raiog

'IoXkLog

Icov

KoeQLvlo;

6 xal

'AQ-

yeiog,

19

4,8.

r.

'IoXulos

IHovaivou

v6io,

1

5

4.

ralio

'IovAtlo

EJaQtlaTLLxog,

70.

'IovcoQ,

89

1.

'Ioiotog,

83

2,

1

58.

'IQlVcLOS,

1

57

3-4.

C.

Iulius

Deximachus,

p.

54.

C.

Iulius

Eurycles, p.

54.

C. Iulius Laco, p. 54.

'IodvvLg,

207.

"Ico,

19

4,

8.

KaLtoa0?vrs'A

-,

32

1.

KakxtovQvia (<QovT?iva,

80

6.

raLiogKdaoLoogadxxog

Evuax6otog,

19

11.

r. Kdoooqs r. vos oX(dxxog vuQax6los;,

1 4 85-86.

Ka(pql68co

;g

AQLT-

-

-

-,

11

2.

KaqCPaoLT?t'r

LtoOGOvEsog,

0.

KEQCov,

1

36

4.

Kkavu8Lav6,

1

5 12.

[

-K]kaStlog

Mdit[os,

15 5.

[

-Kka]S.lo;g

En'iQa-rTs,

5

8.

TLt.

Kkal8Log,

16

9.

KksoonEvqg,

1

5 48.

r.

KXk6&os

o

kov

KoQiv'IOg,

15

31.

A.

K

&Stog

AQQL&alogKOQivOIoO,

5

50.

A.

K%oA8Log

qQog

(avotLvwavog

KoQiv-

0'OOg,

1

5

34-35.

K6o[tog, 14 73.

KoQvqrL

--

,

174.

KOQVkLOg,

10

7.

rv.

KoQv'iLOg

IHoVXEQ,

2

1,

83

1.

Fv.

KoQvrikiLo;

LI3.

KoQvrqLiov

Hloi,-

ZQov

i6uS

Da3a(L)

oijkXeQ,

0

,

81

1.

rv.

KoQVXlo

O

J

IIokXZQ

VEOTEQOg

EJL-

aVUQLOg

xal

'AAQyitog,

15

45-46.

KQcaTelVOs,

4

47.

KQiTcov

Alvxivo,

73.

KvliLTOc,

15

6.

Laco,

p.

54.

Aa=aoQ?ag

Ntxo|evov,

11 6.

Aeoviag,

200.

ALxilvLOSXaQLtoGTOOQivltIOS,5 39.

Aoxlo

-

-

--

Aovuxiou

vi6s,

95.

AivxIvog,

73.

Av- ---,

21

9.

Auaosag,

67.

AlJoETOg

(sculptor),

34,

35.

Ma

--

-

-,

17

1.

MaXdQlog,

10

1.

Mdalog,

195.

MdL~Lo;g,

15

5,

58.

MaQvo;,

214,

215.

MaQxog

A@QcovoS

AeXsav8Qeusg,

4

71.

MaQxos,

11 5.

MaivQLatos

o'vvd@tog,

48.

MEvaxilg

Xtasiaoia,

28.

M{vavQos,,

82

2.

r.

Movaooitog,

18

6.

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1 72

INDICES

NeiVlos

Aloyevovs,

104.

N-

- -

-,

21 16.

Nlx -

- -

-,

21

21.

Nlxa -- - -, 73.

NiLxdaas

AetadvoQOS

AiylEts,

2

2,

7.

Ntxo6svog,

11

6.

Numisia

Numis

-

-

-,

130.

vukXXog,

8.

'Ovaa

-

'AQyog,

15 54.

r.

OVIo3UhIog

.

Vbo

IQOXkog,

4

76.

?<X.

Oi

ogiO;S

MaxadQlg,

101.

I

- - -

-,

21

12.

Ha --

-,

12

1o.

fIa

---

,

21

13.

HIaXXIav6g,

1

5

2.

HaTQox3Xg Z;Qatayov

-

-

-

S,

14

79-80.

-

- -

-,

139.

eIIsovog,

4 2.

IIfTQog,

321.

'g TQOg

ats

-

-

-,

153.

IIsTovvia,

21

5.

HoXuaLvos,

1

5

4.

HIoXvxQadXS,

3.

IJIoXvoTQatog,

8.

0LoX)

-

-

-,

183.

Iloin0Logs KksoaoiEvris

AQyeaog,

15 48.

I

- -

Hnol]ijLoog

KXavu8av6g,

15

12.

H6vtLog

2(oyevqg;,

87

2.

IlooGiSL:rjTog

dalLog,

14

34.

Ilo --

,

187.

nIIoaseQ,

15

45,

80, 81,

82,

83.

lQa

- - -

-,

21

11.

IIQEsFa,

130

3.

Prima,

130.

IIQ6xkog,

14

76.

ItoXe?paios, 14 61, 131.

nIlvo

-

-

-,

7

2.

IvQoyaXX

- -

-,

154.

'PY

- -

-,

127.

'PTyYia,

86

2.

a

- - -

-,

12 9.

2a8dkag

Tvoavvov'AXetavQevS,

14 65.

-aToQvika,

134.

Es

- - -

-,

15 66.

-exoVVsivo;g,

88

4.

Eexoiv8o;g,

11

8.

EA)

-

-

-,145.

MaQxog

EQovC'iLXLO,

onsul 3

A.

D.,

14 3.

v - - - -, 14 7.

-lIF-

- -

-,

21

3.

EasaQtLatLxog,

70.

nri@QaToc,

5

8.

E2Tl'v0qQ EClv0Qftog

O?(TLEZVS,

14

82-83.

?T

-----,21

23.

T:Ecpavl

(XTqcpadv)),

47.

TQcdTayos,

14 79.

uQlav6;g,

74.

2o

- - -

-,

21 20.

ow)yvnrS,

7 2.

Eoo ija

CHQadioa,

127.

wSooicaTQa,

31.

5xotTQaTog,

6

3.

Ta

-

-

-

-,153.

Ta

---

-,

21 2.

TELaoxQ@dt;g

Ai.LaVOi

IHQOwVaasU,

15

43.

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INDICES

173

Trvog

--

-,

276.

TiPeQLog,

90.

T

- - -

-,21

6.

TLCaoicov,73

2.

Timoleon,

p.

32.

TltoaOtevTg,

0.

TuQavia

EcooiaaTQa,

131.

T'QavvoS,

14

65.

1.

TuvQvvvog

H.

6bg

K6otloboS

vECOTE-

QoS,

1 4

73-74.

aCQt;5

MdvLOs

KoQ,(v))fto;,

195.

av6OTELvlavos,

1

5

34.

ilD

- - -

-,

21

22.

Olkij(:c)a,

134.

LOivo6tv

-

o

- - -

A

-,

14

56.

Ci)loaToEVig,

11

3.

DlAooxdaQog

lkooftsvov

S,

11

3.

Oiwcov,15 31.

A.

Xod(3Log

Xapaavog,

106.

O(Idxxog,

14

85,

19

11.

Do

-

- -

-

-,

12 4.

M.

(Dol6XLog,

1

8 3.

(DQOVTrsia,

0

6.

XaQsoiRaos,

3

5.

XaQllx)S,

1

5

22.

XaQlGoo

A

--,

11

12.

XQuvoEQcg,

60.

II.'QxTdtg-

-

-

KoQivotg,1

5

76-77.

a-

-a

XaQLxf.

;AaV8bLxeE6,

5 22.

-- -

-aQpox

-

-,

14

59.

-

--

-y

?vr];,

1

4

69.

-- -

-yvr^g KoQ'iVIOS,

7.

-

-?

-

-,ox,is,

70

3.

-

- -

ihLto,

100.

V

oog

'

TIoirog,

158.

-

-

-

-via,

115.

- -

-VLJTCtO5,

14

7.

-

?-

-

-6vov

'AtqvaLio,

16

37.

- - - --0o;'Iov'lav6O, 15 8.

-

-ov-

6os,,

14 6.

- -

-

xtdXrNVO

AvdjtkloS,

1

5 7.

-

- -

tog

KoQ@vVIOog,

5 11.

-

- t

-

-

-o - -

- -

-

-

-,

14

53.

EMPERORS

AND THEIR

FAMILIES

Augustus: KaioaQa, 192;

KaioaQoS,

14

2.

A,ToxQadTQ,

16

2-3,

75

3,

76

5,

84

1,

96,

97,

117.

Commodus:

M.

ATIqkRiovo

Koo6bo'v

'AvTrcveivov

sepaoTroi,

16

2-6.

Hadrian:

A'rTOxdQao@Qa

aioaQa

O?so

TQaiavov

IIaQ@Lxou

viov,

OEoi

Ne-

Qova

vuiov6,

TQaiavov

'AGQLavov

sEpaoYTOv,

4;

'AQLavoi,

80

5,

81

5;

Av'oxQad'oQo

KaiCaQog

T@aiavo5

'A8Qlavoi

YeFaoroib,

76

5-6.

Iulia:

OEav

'IovXiav

~EpacxTiv,

19

9.

Katloa,

16

3-4,

19

2,

5,

75

4,

76

5-6,

84

1,

97.

A

KacLaQ

Espaatol

vt6g,

1

5

32.

Kovo-av-wvog,

195.

E4paoTri,

9

9.

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174

INDICES

2eiaot6g,l

5

33,19

2,5,6,

76

6,

84

4,1

05,

117.

TiLPoQos,

195.

Tiberius:

TtLeQLOv KaicaQa

e0eoui

EE-

Paotoi

viov

lepBaOtov,

19

5-6.

Trajan:

A6ToxQdoeQog

NEQf3a

TQaiavofi

KaioaQog

eSpaaoToi

Fe@Qavlxoi

Aa-

XLxo1,

75 3-4.

GEOGRAPHICAL

'Ahlvaiog,

16

37,

71.

AiyltSg,

2

2,

8.

AiLywvos,

75

7,

76

8,

80

4,

81

4.

"AxtLov,

14

2.

'AkeagvSQea, 75 5, 80

4,

81

4.

'Ae8tavbQe(g,

14

61, 63,

65,

71.

'AVTLvoiTTls,

15

37,

41.

'AvTLOXEg,

1

5

56.

'A;okXcovis,

34.

'AQyE?oS,

15

46,

48,

19

4,

8.

'AT&ig,

8

1.

'AXaia,

75

6.

'Axaloi,

76

7.

Bolai,

13

4.

A

-

-,

1457.

Ekkds,

80

3,

81

3,

89

4.

"'ERkv, 04.

'EjTLSavQLo,

5 46.

'Ecp?iQr,

8

3,

89 6.

'EqpUQeiLO,

'Eq)p^Qog),

92

3.

"HaTQoog,

76

7-8,

80

3,

81

3.

eHQadiooa,

27.

OeoaalEsg,

14

82-83.

Ioa'to6g,

0

1.

KalaaQE'c,

14

93,

15

20.

KerpaXXvia,

13

3.

KXiToQ,

3

5.

KoOQvlLoS,

8,

111,

24,

31,

35,

39,50, 77,

16

35,

19 4,8,24 2, 37,66 4,73,76 4,80 2,81 2,

84

8,

99,

107

2,

117,

195.

Ko6QLvog,

245.

KoQcvq,

13

2.

KQovo

-

-

-,318.

Kvtxavos,

29.

AavuSLxeI;, 15 22.

AesXTQOV,

3 1.

MesaivIn,

13 6.

NL

- - -

-,

1490.

HesLQr'vn,

198; nIlQtjva, 58; IIHLQriv,

22.

HIeQLiVlO',

1 5

27.

HILQqvig,

88 3.

Hov

-

-

-,

14

54.

IIQovoaaEs,

15

43.

ePcoTato,

66

5.

-a

-

-

--,

208.

Zdalto,

14 34.

:LXVOV,

155 6.

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INDICES

175

LovqepIov,

125.

loJcu(piq],

6 1.

vUQCaxOGLOo,

4

86,

19 11.

i?Elatoia,

128.

--

- -

oS,

1 4

80.

_--

^

TE?_;,

14

51.

FESTIVALS,

MONTHS,

GAMES,

AND

DEITIES

'AJQoXlO,

167.

ALOVmJLa,

13.

'EQ

dc,

1 30 8.

ZE

S,

102.

'lIQoaxsj,

69.

'I7oigS,

210.

'Io,vioS,

145,

151.

"IlOLLUa,

15

17,

76

3,

77

4,

78

2, 3,

79

1,

3.

"Icrfla

KaLodaQEa,

14

5-6,

80

2,

81

2.

KaCoid@Qla,

19

1,

76

3,

77

4;

KaLoacXQT@v

NeQovavjcov

TQaiavilcov

reQF(avl-

x4rov,

76

2;

KaloaQ@wov

eQouav1iov

TQa'avwcov

-

paoriov

rFQFavl-

xC)(ov

Aax1jov,

77

2.

K(VQL)E,

99, 200,

207,

209,

210,

215.

Mdiog,

147.

MdXQTLO,68.

NoF8lPQLOC,

66.

'O13oQLoS,

102.

EaTavdg,

136 13-14.

(IOLVFLX -, 1.

OolvLxaiog,

2.

XQoITO',

96,

210.

-

-- EiPQLS,

153.

GENERAL

dyaado):

dyaCuoVEtsV,

136

3;

dyaccjtovrl

136

1-2.

dyaooca[tvoS,

89 5.

dy?vELos:

'dyvSCO);,

1 4

37, 39, 48,

55,

62;

d-

VELOi),

14

67,

15

53,

61,

68.

ayLio,

208.

day[tog,

212.

ayvog:

dyvaiL,

130

4;

dyvOtarov, 106

4.

dyoQa;,

5

7.

daypov,

88 3.

ayo: yays,

130

7;

ayovres,

1

35

5;

dycooLv,

135

2.

aycovioRaL:

ryYoviGato,

14 91.

dyovot?lTig:

aycovoot&rTv,

6

2,

77

l,

79

2,

80

2,

81

2;

dycovowtov,

14

5,

16

8.

d8&?Xp,

80

6.

dasqp6og,

1 36

5;

dc@QcpouSg,

07.

ais?atlov,

157 5, 158 2.

atlta,

88

1.

aitvsicco,

130

8.

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176

INDICES

dpiv,

210;

daFv,

207.

dpaultov,

89 5.

dva&

?ao,

205.

dvanao'c:

dvdaxav,

179;

dvejraUoaTo,

151,

170.

avaTwiXag

avaTeiXag),

15.

dv8QayaOfa:

[dQEflTg

?vExa

Xl

dv8sQaya]-

{iaS,

24

4.

dvlQO?tVOLg,

1

30 3.

dvijQ:

dvSQaS,

1 4

33,

44,50,

58,

64,

68;

davQCOI,

15

55,

63,

71,

73.

dv'TaTOg,

0

0,

109

15,

18;

dvVf'wrdTolo,

89

1;

avfturaTov,

92

1,

110

11.

dvor,l(L),

136 6.

dv6oFov,

13.

dvTloTQaTn'y6v,

95

2-3.

drTXOolro,

136

10.

dQaop3d'rv,

4

75.

dao0paTlx6v,

15 32.

da68og,

215.

dao

t

aQdov,

157

6-7.

dat6O'ave,

09.

adrotsoov,204,

206.

dXzsoTFe,

36

18.

daQ?TSg

F'vsEXa,

72 3.

aQLdoeiTLaS,9.

aQ:da(co:

Q3taos,

89 2.

dQXLiQeUSg: [daXL?Qga

aXtoxQaTOQOg

Kai-

oaQog

T]Qaiavoi

'Ab[Qlavofv

2Esa-

oTov

adro

Toi

XOLVOi

T]COv

AXal[cov

oavsSeQov

L8a

Pi,ov],

76

5;

dQXLEQsa

TiS

'E&XXdbog,

0

2,

81

2;

dQXlEQsa

EytlGTOV,

84

5.

diQXovTa

o

IInavexrvlov'u,

0

4,

81

4.

doTrdoalt,

1

36

3-4.

doroSgs,

98

2.

aovXog,

22

3.

dtElElav,

80

5,

81 5.

ai'qTrdg,

14

89.

adioyov, 130 6.

dac):

Es

vucldrav

c),

130

6.

PaXo'ra

(fa36ovra),

213;

paaXorto (3a-

kovTro),

21

5.

PaoLXhFos,

95.

LiOS:

P'3ov,

1304;

6&

piov,

76

7,803,81

3.

POi0fl (P/O0el),

199,

210.

P3ovxaXXaQi(ov,

207,

208.

ipour

:

L(Uvcp(iT]S

O

O ]g,

86

1;

[xriq

TOV

KoQlv(i]o)v

povuAg,

107

2;

V(Xycplo-

[tatL)

P(o'uvXs),75

,86

3,

87

5,

88

5,1

08.

yalTqr'g:

ya1caLt,

130

5.

Y?TI,

f.

yi.

yE?vo

[al:

yELVa

p[tE(o,

13

05;

y?Vapvwo

,

1

92.

yevEOkla,

1

70.

y?vo,

1

55

8.

yi,

136

8;

y?S,

171;

y?fi

,

135

6-7.

yQatptaT?ii,

7

1;

yQc@alla

oc,

8 1.

bTwQXLtx

?tovouiag,

84

5.

8i[osg, 24 l.

ltaxQivc(:

8b?LXQLvav,

2.

8(iavov,

14

39, 41,

44.

biacpQov,

145,

148,

149,

152,

154.

[laXOQiaas

LaXgco@Qoa),

1 5.

6LEICTV,

9

6.

8lxalo86orq':

i6xalo6OTrqv

Aiyvtrov,

75

6,

76

8;

AtyiYTto'

xal

'AXeaavQe(ias

tL-

xaiLOS6rv,

80

4,

81

4.

&ixaoov,

205.

ilXq,

207;

iLxqgS,

04.

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INDICES

177

SoiXos,

196;

bovkov, 199,

210.

(odQ?edc,

0

5,

81

5.

'EPQalol: [oUva]Jyoy

'EQ[aicov], 111.

;yy?q)(o':

?vg?yXu?,

89

2.

?Y80otQ,

5

6.

?itxv:

?ix6v

a

Go(pQoaovvq,

86

2;

iLxoVL

ka'iv?,

88 4.

EikEQo60vra,

89 1.

EiLWQXOLaL:

iJGWOLTO,

1

36

14-15,

ioriXka-

ItEV,

00.

sxyovog:

exyova,

135

7;

sxyOVouV,

9.

?X{QOV,

cf.

XO'6gS.

.xxklo

a:

ExxkroiaL,

7,

35;

FxxkqoaCav,

25.

Ek??o(:

?is?lV,

103

5;

?k'toYL

(2s?arn;),

21

3.

Ek0ov,

136

13.

??&a?

QXqv,

765;

kXXa8d@QXqv

ao Tov

XoL-

voiJ

T

v

'Axalti

v

orV?8Qiov

La

PLov,

80 3, 81 3.

F?O

VVO8ILXXV,

14

8,

1

5

3,

1

6 11-12.

v?Eyxau?Fva,

cf.

cp?@o.

EV?EykXP?,

f.

Eyyk'cpw.

EV?l?s)c:

?V?lpTa?,

155

9.

FV?VXalTO,

cf.

cp?Q@o

Evdbs?,

85

2.

?VXCaTa?iLVT(l),

135

7-8.

?VX(oF1OYQaCPdqO,

4

87.

EVx([tLO)L,

19

3,7.

?oXsftosQ?GaoLTO,

136

15.

?tovo(a:

8

taQXLizxq

?toviag;,

84 6.

{?oZa,

1

35

8-9.

iO5,rl,

1

36

9.

?xaQXEiag

Axa'ag,

75

6.

d@aQXov,

07.

?dIaQxov,

f.

daji

?daQXcOlv.

?

QtlPa.TQlOV,

15 49.

aELi6ovTa,

80

5,

81

5.

L;:l,?X1TqTlV

Omuvicag,

76

1-2,

94

2.

;jaLrqSElOTaT'dV,

19.

f;atTQOaOV

HatEiQOV,6 7, 80 4, 81 4.

EQCog,

103 4.

8oxovu,

199.

Ts

eXsav,

cf.

tAEeo.

?T?kXjTlue6?V,

cf.

teevT6aO).

EToV,

4 ,

147.

sE,

89

6.

EeQYTTqg'

:

sU6lQYtaV,

3

7;

E?@Qty?tqV

Trg

jT6oeog,

84

7.

EVfiVLaS

?;jL;18?TTrV,

6

1-2,

94

2.

eiahoap

dGTlTOV,

157 1-2.

Es6i?o'ov,

130

7.

ae3?[(irsg

Y'vxa,

02.

ESivtXo

aTgog,

1

50.

EXZ@QLoTo;)v,

4.

8XfQo6g:f?xO@v,

205;

fXiQOVg,

204.

atxia,

22 6-7.

Sovogr

204.

'iycoviaaTo,

f.

adyovCto,Lal.

EikO,Iov,

35 8.

|p-ag(4Faig), 136

4.

i@(ov,

130

3.

Q]jaosE,

f.

dQ@:daco.

qT(o;,

f.

ddo;.

dahaaooa,

136

8.

aravov,

f.

'vvfaxco.

ftdnto:

dtTn(l)S;,

1

3510;

Od'ttLv

(fdtxtELv),

135 4.

fstdv,

19

9.

so5g,

207,

215;

eotSg,

17;

0eob,

1

36

13.

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178

INDICES

O'pxI,

1

56.

vfivoxo:

avcov,

135 12.

OvydtrrQ,

194.

iLi8(),

91

4.

ieQaOC

SQiavo

IHavEsXXqvlov,

0

4,

81 4.

iQ6OV,

4

66,

67,

1

30 7.

iLa<S;

S),

215.

iLv8lXTlOV:

LV8lXTlOVOg,

170;

Ltv8lXTl)VOC,

147,

151,

162,

163,

164,

165,

167,

LJTJLXOV,

5

29,

16 33.

iofXtaLEv,

cf.

Eio

EQXO(aL.

Lio

6oc,

0

l.

loT

lT:

oTzioE,

88

3,

89 5.

xataQad,

207.

xaQo6v,

1 36 8.

xa(iyvrloTc,

191,

896.

xatappl(aooxETco,22 4-6.

xaTadxsllal:

xaTaXELTal,

138,

158;

xaTa-

XLtal,

144;

xardxlTs,

147,

151,

173.

xaTarovov'uvov

(xaTaroovoiu[

ovo),

213.

xaToQI'talTo,

136

11.

X?2

Tl,

1

5

38,

44,

16 38.

xsQavvocpoQog,

75 2.

x@Qvxac,

14

81,

1

5

21.

XLtaQLoT'r,

14

91.

XL&aQ@o(L)o0o1C,

4

92,

15 25.

xr.,8iov:

xka86LO,

130 4.

xvaqEps6:

xvaqpEov,

1 14.

XOltl'rIQLOV,

1

37,

1

38,

139,

141,

143,

144,

145, 147,

149, 151,

153,

155;

xoL-

LiTriQlOV,

1

52;

x'uVTL'rQIov, 140,

142,

146, 150,

1

54;

xVuptiQl@Ov,

48.

xoLvog: XOIVOI,

76

6,

80

3,

81 3.

xoQdaGov:

xoQaoGov

(xoQaGicov),

212.

x6oaov,

89

4,

198.

xQaLlatloc,

1

06

3.

XTLaTfl(a,

23

3.

X'vnpTTlQlOV,cf. XOllTriiQLOV.

xv'U],TLQL(ov,

f.

XOLrT;IQLOV.

UQia,

1

36

1.

xUQLO;:

X1'Ql,

136 2-3.

xyXay'dvo:

XEloy?;?,

88

1.

atveog':

EiLXOVL

'CLvW,

8 4.

XatQ6TaroC,

10 1.

ld(L)pTrl(t),

35 9.

:aolTO6oc,

89

3.

aXoyXc;),

cf.

rayXdvcoo.

gXjog;,

130

5.

Av6s:

Xr v6v,

136

6;

TlvoOg,

136

17.

XoylX)(l),

19

3,

7.

X6TQooe

(Xtl@ooe),

207.

axdQ

og:

[axaQ

av,

1

47,

1

51,1

53

2-3,1

59,

183,

189;

[axaQi(ovu,

154.

maQtaQaQidLL,

45.

E:ylto

Sg,

11 7.

tE[tLLoaLTO,

f.

tiE4o atL.

?FgE6QLov,

161.

Fv:

Lr]vi,

147, 164, 165, 166, 167, 168,

169,

170;

[tv6g,

145,

153.

l]TQi,

89

4,

126.

[t

L0LLo

aLt:

Loflt'

GaTO,

83

3.

vflta,

157

1,

158,

159.

l

:

vrIv,

145

146,

45,

146

147,151, 153,

157

5-6,

181,

1

84,

189;

MiFtSg,

92.

I6yoS:

O'6[y]co(),

09.

Foqpri:

'lOQpadv,

126;

FLO@qqpv,

9

2,

89 3.

VeXQOV,

135 4-5.

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INDICES

179

VauEtiaa

86

1.

VE(OTeQS

1

5

45,

15 52.

vIxdCo:

EvLCxqiav,

4

28;

VELXriaavTS,

5

15,

16o10-11,18,1

91;vIxa(t),200,21

2,21 3.

vCiXl,

4

2.

oiXE&o:

xovtFLvrS

(oixovuevqg),

215

4.

oIxo;,

136

9-10;

otxov,

136

14.

O6At

qTv,

1

4

70,

1

5

75.

o6Qexxo,

155 7.

OQo60,otov,

195.

OQo&'g,

204.

OQo0,

22

1;

OQOI,

155

6.

OQt?Evov,

198.

6ota,

1

36 7.

cags:

jcaT6ag,

1

4

35, 41,

46,

52,

60;

talteg,

1

4

31;

r(ai8ov,

14

66,

15

51,57,65.

dl1v,

1 4

52,

55, 58.

HavewiXVlov:

'A8Qlavoi

HIaveXkqvL0o

,

80

5,

81

5;

aQXovTa

to'

HavXUrqV'ovu,

80

4,

81

4.

JaVXQatLOv,

1 4

66, 67,

68,

1

5

73.

tav(iokg;,

136

9.

iaQd8boog,

87

3.

raQaaoY6OVTa,

cf. nraXQEwo.

JtaQeLsTak'o:

TO;g

[rtaQe]lbL8aLtooaLv,

5.

jtcaQXow:

t]V

ta

Vd

Tf

av

t

tX

il

a@aao(vTa,

80

5,

81 5.

dxdtQ:

''Arftios

EtiL

JiQrqg,

88

1.

3EYVTaTT-rTQXOV,

76

4,

80

2,

81 2.

Ja:vta0X.ov,

1 4

46,

48,

50,

1 5

51,

53,

55.

HIsQLAxilov

lta

1te0oyXog,

8

1.

.cEQlJa~O:

H'

'HQ

s

qg

Evtd?

@

etQL8Eta;tl,

85

3.

?

_?t

_?yr~iS,

88

3;

.J.T.y.

v,

86

l.

JOlk(O):

EjroLEL,

71

;

7t0oiTqe,

52,

68;

'Axi-

6atto;

KoQivfoitog

0oiToas,

73;

'AQ(-

oM()v

sjroaes,

60;

AuiJi0To

g

t6rs,

34, 35; ?6OTaov,209.

:jOtirta:

atotlatl,

19

10.

sOlT1Tas,

1

4

84.

3Oe[tOlaT1QlLOV,

1 4

72,

1

5

30,

16

34.

16XL;,

1

5

37,

63

8;

T6XLog,

3

8;

;r6Xes,

05,815.

rtoOeEaToE

1

0 9.

tQo6evov,

3

6.

V?YyIYv,

4

60,

62,

64,

1

565, 68,

71.

jn

jaTO':

E;85

vlaTv

dO,

130 6.

mVao

--'

oco,

21

5.

cto)kXgL

XtOXfLX(l),

1

4

77,

1

5

36,

1 6

36;

JTO-

XllX(l),

1

5

38, 42,

1

6

38.

XaLrYoTadc,

4

78,

15 18.

o([ta,

61.

aosvoTdTrlv,

145.

ax6oos,

21 5.

oxkh'o:

ox6,(i),

136 7.

aladtOV,

14

33, 35,

37.

oTsrEQTrOLTo,

36 12.

OTecpavol,

4

6,

9.

oToa,

114.

aTQaTrlyO6,

1

06;

ar@QaTqy6v,76

,80

1,81

1,

95 4;

oTQaT@ryO;

b atoS, 66 2,

ovaidXovc,

234.

o6iqcpoQoc,

16

20.

orvacyoyl

'EEQafov,

111.

oluvSQtOV:

[daoT

ToD

xoLvoO

T]jOV

AxaL[&v

orvs8Qiov],

76

7.

aoV(i)Qois,

1

4

77,

1

5

36,40,

1

6 36.

(coTltQ:

oo)TjQa,

84

7;

cortrQL,

11

7.

oocpQooaIva,

130

8.

tadas:

rTakava,

126.

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180

INDICES

-aiLas,

5

8;

Taflav,

106

4.

TstQLTaco)(l),

1

5

42,

47.

tExva,

1

36

10;

TErcov,

1 74.

TEELO'

: TsEXEa(),

1

5

40;

T8eA?lO(l), 5

44, 47.

TEXsEsdo:

ETEs

EVnIV,

1

53 5-6.

TEAEkO:

'T(EEoav),

13

1-6.

TEQ

AtlaEL,

130

4.

TrXV1(l),

89

3.

T

rmoavLt,

282.

Tig,

89

1,

89

2.

Torog,

135

10;

TOzov,

206,

207;

T6omo

(Or6,o1),

13.

TvyXZvco):

'XolTo,

1

36

13.

TV'

TO:

TUtOV

SLE@QO6EVTa,

9

1.

Oa3ia(),

'80

i,

81

i.

JDa,

Qva(L),

34.

(pdalav,

130

5.

cpdog, f. (p)g.

pq)?Qc:

EvEyxaY

val,

30

6;

EV?XaLTO,

136

8-9.

(pldav?Qcoa:a,

10.

qcpov,

75

9,

87

4,

101

4.

cpioxo'u:

TOO

Ev

'AXtavSesia(l)

cpio(ov,

75 5.

cpcs*:

cpdog,

135

8;

cp5S,

15.

cqpvu:

qpvXag,

22.

(aLQ(o:

XaClQ,

129,

136;

XaiQEsv,

131.

XQLa@Q6Lsvog,

9

4.