corinth viii 1
TRANSCRIPT
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 2/186
PRINTED AT
THE
HESTIA PRESS 3571
ATHENS,
GREECE
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 3/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 4/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 5/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 6/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 7/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 8/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 9/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 10/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 11/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 12/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 13/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 14/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 15/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 16/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 17/186
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?
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 18/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 19/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 20/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 21/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 22/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 23/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 24/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 25/186
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;]
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 26/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 27/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 28/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 29/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 30/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 31/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 32/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 33/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 34/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 35/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 36/186
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).
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 37/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 38/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 39/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 40/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 41/186
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
_
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 42/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 43/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 44/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 45/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 46/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 47/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 48/186
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<(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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 49/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 50/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 51/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 52/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 53/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 54/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 55/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 56/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 57/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 58/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 59/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 60/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 61/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 62/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 63/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 64/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 65/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 66/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 67/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 68/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 69/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 70/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 71/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 72/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 73/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 74/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 75/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 76/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 77/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 78/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 79/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 80/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 81/186
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).
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 82/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 83/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 84/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 85/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 86/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 87/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 88/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 89/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 90/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 91/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 92/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 93/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 94/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 95/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 96/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 97/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 98/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 99/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 100/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 101/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 102/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 103/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 104/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 105/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 106/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 107/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 108/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 109/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 110/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 111/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 112/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 113/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 114/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 115/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 116/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 117/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 118/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 119/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 120/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 121/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 122/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 123/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 124/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 125/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 126/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 127/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 128/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 129/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 130/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 131/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 132/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 133/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 134/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 135/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 136/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 137/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 138/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 139/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 140/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 141/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 142/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 143/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 144/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 145/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 146/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 147/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 148/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 149/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 150/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 151/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 152/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 153/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 154/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 155/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 156/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 157/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 158/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 159/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 160/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 161/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 162/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 163/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 164/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 165/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 166/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 167/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 168/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 169/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 170/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 171/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 172/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 173/186
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,
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 174/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 175/186
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
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 176/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 177/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 178/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 179/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 180/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 181/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 182/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 183/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 184/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 185/186
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.
7/23/2019 Corinth VIII 1
http://slidepdf.com/reader/full/corinth-viii-1 186/186
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.