The Greek epigram published in this article was discovered in 2016 in modern Turkey, at Kibyra in southwest Asia Minor, during excavations under the directorship of Assoc. Prof. Şükrü Özüdoğru of the University of Burdur. Six lines preserving 3 elegiac distichs are carved on a stone that also features a relief showing a round shield with two greaves on either side. The epigram probably dates between the 1st century BCE and the 1st century CE and evokes the classical ideal of both physical and civic excellence in commemorating a man who died fighting as a citizen-soldier
This article offers an edition of 19 Greek inscriptions from the Museum of Malatya (ancient Melitene...
The article offers editio princeps of a Greek epitaph discovered during the archaeological work of t...
The first known representation of Artemis from Ephesus in Dacia was recovered in the spring of 2006,...
This study introduces five new epitaphs of cylindrical form found in Cibyra and the Gölhisar, distri...
The 23rd issue of the Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion presents a selection of the epigraphic ...
In the article discussed here, two new epitaphs discovered in the necropolis area called E3 during t...
This article offers a brief introduction to the most frequent type of inscription: funerary inscript...
This article discusses a Late Roman Greek Christian epitaph discovered in ancient Tomis (now the Rom...
P. 173-176Since November 1997 the Bierzo District Museum in Ponferrada (León) in Spain has held a fu...
As a result of the epigraphic studies carried out since 2007 in the “Karadeniz Ereğli Museum” with t...
The article is dedicated to the new epigraphic finds of the Hellenistic kingdom of Commagene and to ...
The subject of this communication is a funerary altar discovered in 2022 during archaeological field...
This study introduces eight epitaphs found during the field survey and excavations carried out in bo...
The past ten years have been particularly prolific for research in Boeotian epigraphy: excavations a...
FUNERARY RITUAL OF GREEKS IN ANTIQUITY AS REFLECTED IN FUNERARY EPIGRAMSThe author discusses the Gre...
This article offers an edition of 19 Greek inscriptions from the Museum of Malatya (ancient Melitene...
The article offers editio princeps of a Greek epitaph discovered during the archaeological work of t...
The first known representation of Artemis from Ephesus in Dacia was recovered in the spring of 2006,...
This study introduces five new epitaphs of cylindrical form found in Cibyra and the Gölhisar, distri...
The 23rd issue of the Epigraphic Bulletin for Greek Religion presents a selection of the epigraphic ...
In the article discussed here, two new epitaphs discovered in the necropolis area called E3 during t...
This article offers a brief introduction to the most frequent type of inscription: funerary inscript...
This article discusses a Late Roman Greek Christian epitaph discovered in ancient Tomis (now the Rom...
P. 173-176Since November 1997 the Bierzo District Museum in Ponferrada (León) in Spain has held a fu...
As a result of the epigraphic studies carried out since 2007 in the “Karadeniz Ereğli Museum” with t...
The article is dedicated to the new epigraphic finds of the Hellenistic kingdom of Commagene and to ...
The subject of this communication is a funerary altar discovered in 2022 during archaeological field...
This study introduces eight epitaphs found during the field survey and excavations carried out in bo...
The past ten years have been particularly prolific for research in Boeotian epigraphy: excavations a...
FUNERARY RITUAL OF GREEKS IN ANTIQUITY AS REFLECTED IN FUNERARY EPIGRAMSThe author discusses the Gre...
This article offers an edition of 19 Greek inscriptions from the Museum of Malatya (ancient Melitene...
The article offers editio princeps of a Greek epitaph discovered during the archaeological work of t...
The first known representation of Artemis from Ephesus in Dacia was recovered in the spring of 2006,...