This paper deals with the reading and the reception of Greek epigraphic epigrams in Late Antiquity. Inner features of the texts – repeated allusions to the ‘voices’ of the poems, frequency of dialogic structures –, as well as aspects of the mise en page, combined with literary testimonies, lead to conclude that in Late period also epigraphic epigrams were read aloud, through an ‘oralised’ reading. The high literary language and style of many late epigrams were obviously not accessible to a wider audience: from the point of view of reception, we should distinguish between the cultivated élite, able to properly understand the literary content of the epigrams, and a semiliterate audience, which probably ‘read’ the texts through the intermediat...