Dedications to Zeus Drymon from Lyrboton Kome
Öz
During the field work at Lyrboton Kome near Perge in 2012 three altars were discovered that stand side by side on the edge of a well-type cistern located in front of a monumental building in the eastern centre of the settlement. Two blocks feature Greek inscriptions, whether the third altar also bears an inscription is uncertain owing to the block’s present position. The first of said two inscriptions mentions a weapon (lancea) presented as a dedicatory offering by Aurelius Demetrios after retirement from military service as cornicularius in the Roman Army. The place where the name of the God was given in line 1 is broken away, probably because of the stone’s reuse at a later date. However, the word next to the damaged area is Drymon, which is believed to be the god’s epithet. In a comment on the Hellenistic poet Lykophron, the Byzantine scholar Ioannes Tzetzes mentions that Zeus was worshipped in Pamphylia with the cult title of Drymnios. Since said gap accommodates not more than four letters, we assume that the deity in question is Zeus. The se-cond inscription gives only the name of the dedicator (Sulla). The fact that the two dedicatory inscriptions and the other altar were all found in the same place in front of a large structure sug-gests that these monuments were related to said structure, which was probably dedicated to Zeus Drymon.
Anahtar Kelimeler
Kaynakça
- Adak – Wilson 2012 M. Adak – M. Wilson, Das Vespasiansmonument von Döşeme und die Gründung der Doppelprovinz Lycia et Pamphylia, Gephyra 9, 2012, 1–40.
- Bonneau 1983 D. Bonneau, Loi et Coutume en Égypte: Un exemple, les marais du Fayoum appelés drymoi, JESHO 26,1983, 1–13.
- Clauss 1973 M. Clauss, Untersuchungen zu den principales des römischen Heeres von Augustus bis Diokletian. Cornicularii, speculatores, frumentarii, Bochum 1973.
- Chaniotis 1991 A. Chaniotis, Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion, Kernos 4, 1991, 287–311.
- Chaniotis – Mylonopoulos 2006 A. Chaniotis – J. Mylonopoulos, Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion 2003, Kernos 19, 2006, 343–390.
- Çevik 1996/97 N. Çevik, An Olive Oil Producing Center in Pamphylia: Lyrboton Kome, Lykia 3, 1996/1997, 79–101.
- Hellenkemper – Hild 2004 H. Hellenkemper – F. Hild, Tabula Imperii Byzantini 8: Lykien und Pam-phylien, Vienna 2004 (Denkschriften ÖAW, phil.-hist. Kl. 320).
- Hornblower 2014 S. Hornblower, Lykophron and Epigraphy: The Value and Function of Cult Epithets in the Alexandra, The Classical Quarterly 64, 2014, 91–120.
Ayrıntılar
Birincil Dil
İngilizce
Konular
Dilbilim
Bölüm
Araştırma Makalesi
Yazarlar
Yayımlanma Tarihi
31 Aralık 2017
Gönderilme Tarihi
4 Haziran 2017
Kabul Tarihi
-
Yayımlandığı Sayı
Yıl 2017 Cilt: 3