This article offers a brief introduction to the most frequent type of inscription: funerary inscriptions or epitaphs. The article offers a chronological overview from the Archaic period to late Antiquity, with an emphasis on Athens. It opens with a brief discussion of the archaeological and ritual contexts in which funerary inscriptions were set up, followed by a discussion of archaic epigrams and the social strategies that lay behind them. This is followed by a discussion of public and private graves that shows how epigraphic habits changed over time. The article continues with a discussion of funerary epigraphic habits outside Athens and closes with a few examples of Christian epitaphs
My thesis intends to carry out a linguistic analysis of the archaic epigraphic sources of Argolid by...
This thesis investigates the expression of identity on funerary gravestones from 3 inland regions of...
Chapter 7 of Dynamic Epigraphy: New Approaches to Inscriptions This volume, with origins in a panel...
This article offers a brief introduction to the most frequent type of inscription: funerary inscript...
International audienceThe aim of the article is to analyze a type of exogenous documents that both c...
This survey offers a brief introduction to the main bibliographic and heuristic tools for the study ...
This article focuses on the so-called 'Eppo stone': a beautifully hewn tomb-cover dating from the mi...
The article is concerned with the problem of distribution of verses in ca. 200 late (late 3rd to ear...
First paragraph: Since the advent of printing, the publication of epigraphic texts and, accordingly,...
The article deals with inscriptions on the floor mosaics of a residence in Skala on the island of Ce...
obscuur, omdat slechts een klein aantal graven aan deze periode kon worden toegeschreven en omdat de...
In the study and edition of ancient inscriptions, a non-secondary part is dedicated to the analysis ...
The Greek epigram published in this article was discovered in 2016 in modern Turkey, at Kibyra in so...
P. 173-176Since November 1997 the Bierzo District Museum in Ponferrada (León) in Spain has held a fu...
International audienceThis article presents the various cases in which one or more literary epigrams...
My thesis intends to carry out a linguistic analysis of the archaic epigraphic sources of Argolid by...
This thesis investigates the expression of identity on funerary gravestones from 3 inland regions of...
Chapter 7 of Dynamic Epigraphy: New Approaches to Inscriptions This volume, with origins in a panel...
This article offers a brief introduction to the most frequent type of inscription: funerary inscript...
International audienceThe aim of the article is to analyze a type of exogenous documents that both c...
This survey offers a brief introduction to the main bibliographic and heuristic tools for the study ...
This article focuses on the so-called 'Eppo stone': a beautifully hewn tomb-cover dating from the mi...
The article is concerned with the problem of distribution of verses in ca. 200 late (late 3rd to ear...
First paragraph: Since the advent of printing, the publication of epigraphic texts and, accordingly,...
The article deals with inscriptions on the floor mosaics of a residence in Skala on the island of Ce...
obscuur, omdat slechts een klein aantal graven aan deze periode kon worden toegeschreven en omdat de...
In the study and edition of ancient inscriptions, a non-secondary part is dedicated to the analysis ...
The Greek epigram published in this article was discovered in 2016 in modern Turkey, at Kibyra in so...
P. 173-176Since November 1997 the Bierzo District Museum in Ponferrada (León) in Spain has held a fu...
International audienceThis article presents the various cases in which one or more literary epigrams...
My thesis intends to carry out a linguistic analysis of the archaic epigraphic sources of Argolid by...
This thesis investigates the expression of identity on funerary gravestones from 3 inland regions of...
Chapter 7 of Dynamic Epigraphy: New Approaches to Inscriptions This volume, with origins in a panel...