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AN INTRODUCTION
TO
GREEK EPIGRAPHY
CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS WAREHOUSE,
C. F. CLAY, Manager.
Hontron: FETTER LANE, E.C.
lasgofo : 50, WELLINGTON STREET.

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ILnpjtg: F. A. BROCKHAUS.
#efo gorfc: THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Bombag anti Calcutta: MACMILLAN AND CO., Ltd.
[All Rights reserved.]
AN INTRODUCTION
TO
GREEK EPIGRAPHY
PART II
THE INSCRIPTIONS OF ATTICA
EDITED BY
E. S. ROBERTS, M.A.
MASTER OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE
AND
E. A. GARDNER, M.A.
YATES PROFESSOR OF ARCHAEOLOGY AT UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, LONDON
;
LATE FELLOW OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE,
AND FORMERLY DIRECTOR OF THE BRITISH SCHOOL OF ARCHAEOLOGY AT ATHENS
(ambrifcjge
:
AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS,
1905
rox or ,,
t
(Eambrfoge
:
PRINTED BY JOHN CLAY, M.A.
AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS.
PEEFACE.
The present volume, for which the two persons whose names are
undersigned are jointly responsible, is in continuation of the plan
outlined in the Preface to Part I of the Introduction to Greek
Epigraphy edited by E. S. Roberts in 1887. The design of this
work was that of a Handbook to a complete Corpus Inscriptionum
Graecarum. Part I dealt mainly with the history of the Greek
alphabets in the period ending with the closing years of the fifth
century B.C. and was illustrated by inscriptions from all localities of
the Greek world. The volume now edited contains a representative
selection of Attic inscriptions and follows closely the arrangement
of the Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum. For this purpose the work
of collecting the material both for text and for commentary was to a
great extent completed by the editor of Part I before the collabora-
tion began. In so far as the work may be justified by its usefulness,
the editors have hopes that others may be induced to extend the
plan so as to cover the whole range of the volumes henceforward to
be known as Inscriptiones Graecae, about which a few words are
said below.
The study of Greek Inscriptions at this day needs no defence.
Though we may be warned by those who would minimise the
importance of this branch of letters that its evil tendency is
"
to
encourage the habit of conjecture" and that it induces a "temptation
to convert the uncertain and indefinite into the definite and certain,"
yet these are faults of which we are less and less likely to be guilty,
as the monuments are multiplied and the ground of inference becomes
safer and the basis of proof is extended. And if we concede that in
such an inscription as that of the Tai< <j>6pov (no.
17) and the long
series of Quota Lists, of which nos. 106

108 are types, we have a


singularly incomplete record of the Athenian system of tribute, yet it
is no slight compensation that these Quota Lists parade before us the
greatness of the Athenian Empire more vividly than the continuous
narrative even of a Thucydides. If inscriptions bring nearer home
viii
PREFACE.
Vol.
Fasc. ii. Inscriptiones Lesbi Nesi Tenedi.
W. Paton. 1899.
Fasc. in. Inscriptiones Symes Teudussae
Teli Nisyri Astypalaeae Anaphes Therae et
Therasiae Pholegandri Meli Cimoli. F.
Hiller de Gaertringen. 1898.
Fasc. iv. Inscriptiones Coi et Calymni.
Fasc. v. Inscriptiones Cycladum.
Pars prior. Inscriptiones Cycladum prae-
ter Tenum. F. Hiller de Gaertringen.
1903.
Pars altera. Inscriptiones Teni insulae.
Indices.
Fasc. vi. Inscriptiones Chii et Sami.
Fasc. vn. Inscriptiones Amorgi.
Fasc. viii. Inscriptiones insularum maris
Thracici et Hellesponti.
Fasc. ix. Inscriptiones Euboeae.
IG xiii xiii Inscriptiones Cretae.
IG xiv xiv Inscriptiones Siciliae et Italiae additis graecis IGSI
Galliae Hispaniae Britanniae Germaniae
inscriptionibus. G. Kaibel. 1890.
Even this long list does not include the inscriptions of Asia Minor
and of Egypt
1
. And as in 1877 it was decided to furnish with
Indices and to abandon any idea of completing on the existing plan
the original Corpus Inscrip>tionum Graecarum of August Boeckh
and, instead, to undertake the enterprise of re-editing the whole
store of ever-multiplying texts; so again we learn that in 1903 it
was determined to bring to a premature completion the Corpus
Inscriptionum Atticarum and to issue no further Supplemented If
an apology were needed for fresh editions of Selections on a reasoned
plan and intended for purposes of orientation, it would be found in
the confessed inability of the great scholars to grapple with the
overwhelming mass of their material.
In the printing of the texts restored portions appear in Clarendon
type as in Part I, and these portions have been enclosed in square
brackets. Occasionally within the square brackets a letter or letters
are given in ordinary type when so much of the letter survives on
the stone as to leave no possible doubt of the form originally en-
graved. Letters in curved brackets are substituted for forms which
are on the stone, but obviously due to the engraver's error. Angular
1
Of these we have a foretaste in the recently published Orientis Graeci
Inscriptiones Selectae of W. Dittenberger, To students of later Greek history
Dittenberger's work is little short of indispensable.
PREFACE. ix
brackets denote letters found on the original, but clearly superfluous.
In the case of inscriptions written in the Attic alphabet a complete
list of alphabetic forms is given at the head of each. In later or
'
post-Euclidean
'
inscriptions the alphabetic forms are either referred
to one of several types illustrated on Plate iv at the end, or
individual letters are explained by reference (a
1}
a
2
etc.,
ft, ft)
to
varieties of forms given on Plate in. A few facsimile reproductions
are given either in the text or on Plates I, II. Some of these
reproductions, as well as some of the inscriptions, are repeated from
the Attic Section of Part I, as representing certain categories of
subject-matter; while in Part I they were intended to illustrate
only the successive phases of the Attic alphabet.
Where the spiritus asper is expressed by an alphabetic symbol
in the original it appears in the text spaced off from the word :
thus
HOP05
pre-Euclidean, is given as
c
6pos,
OPOZ,
post-Euclidean,
as 6po<s.
The original lines as they appear on the stone are printed
separately and not continuously, as in Dittenberger's Sylloge or
Michel's Recueil, where the separation between lines is marked by
a vertical stroke. The object has been to show as far as possible
the general local relations of the various parts of an inscription, and
with this view sometimes an inscription with unusually long lines is
printed on two facing pages (cf. nos. 70, 106, 109).
In the Commentary following each text the editors have
endeavoured where it was possible to treat the particular text as
typical and as illustrative of others of the same class. In many
instances, with the view of avoiding repetition in the notes, a
prefatory
'
Remark ' introduces a special category of inscriptions,
such as no. vi
(p.
127) on the formulae of decrees after 307/6 B.C.,
or no. viii
(p.
145) on the Ephebic inscriptions. It happens not
unfrequently that an inscription may be classed under more than one
head. Thus a document which may be technically a decree or a
pendant to a decree falls more naturally under another head, such as
that of finance ; the so-called
'
Hecatompedon ' inscription (no.
132)
is a case in point.
As regards the enumeration of authorities, when, as for instance
in the case of inscriptions discovered half a century ago or earlier,
the list of previous editors and commentators is very long, it has
been deemed sufficient to refer to the original list in the Corpus or
other collection. Those students to whom the use of this work may
possibly prove an incentive to further research, will as a matter of
course and as the next necessary step turn to the longer works
R. II.
b
vi rREFACE.
to us the Greek political institutions, the great struggle for freedom,
the writings of Herodotus, Thucydides, Xenophon, and if they realise
to us the innumerable details of private life about which history is
silent ; if in the search for new matter or the investigation of old
they take our younger scholars to the scenes in which these documents
once played a living part and stimulate them to a yet more determined
attempt to unravel the tangle of the past ; then we may persuade
ourselves that the humble task of introducing the classical student
to this branch of archaeology, which in its serious aspect is hardly
half a century old, may reasonably claim a measure of indulgence
for inevitable shortcomings in its execution.
In the selection of inscriptional texts no attempt has been made
to give an exhaustive series under any one category. The aim has
been to represent each class of subject or type. The work is in no
sense intended to take the place of the Corpus
;
it will indeed have
partially failed in its object, unless the genuine student of Greek
Epigraphy is encouraged by it to make use of the larger works and
the literature of which even those larger works do but contain a
summary. Of those larger works the most important for the present
purpose is naturally the Corpus Inseriptionum Atticarum. Such at
least till recently was its title
;
but a footnote on
p.
322 draws
attention to a change in the mode of reference to that and to the
parallel volumes containing the inscriptions of other parts of the
Greek world. After our 20th sheet had been printed off, there was
issued to all known possessors of the Corpus, which is still in
process of completion, a notice to the effect that the nomenclature
was henceforth to be changed. It will be convenient here to give
the full list of titles by which the volumes of the Inscriptiones
Graecae are now to be known. In the right-hand column is given
the abbreviation hitherto in use, in the left-hand column the new
abbreviation :
Inscriptiones Graecae.
Vol.
IG i i Inscriptiones Atticae anno Euclidis vetus- CIA i
tiores, A. Kircbhoff. 1873.
IG i Suppl. Supplementa and Indices 1877, 1887, 1891. CIA iv 1
(Hitherto called Corpus Inseriptionum Atti-
carum. Vols, i and iv.)
IG ii ii Inscriptiones Atticae aetatis quae est inter CIA n
Euclidis annum et Augusti tempora.
U. Koehler.
IGv V
IG vi VI
IGvn VII
PREFACE. vii
Vol.
IG ii 1 Part I. Decrees. 1877. CIA n 1
IG ii 2 Part II. Public Accounts etc. 1883. CIA n 2
IG ii 3 Part III. Dedications etc. 1888. CIA n 3
IG ii 4 Part IV. Indices. J. Kirchner. 1893. CIA ii 4
IG ii 5 Part V. Supplementa (hitherto entitled Corp. CIA iv 2
Inscr. Att. Vol. iv, Part II). 1895.
IG in in Inscriptiones Atticae aetatis Romanae. W. CIA in
Dittenberger.
IG in 1 Part I. Decrees, Dedications etc. 1878. CIA in 1
IG in 2 Part II. Sepulchral Inscriptions etc. Indices. CIA in 2
1882.
IG in 3 Part III. Appendix. Defixionum tabellae CIA in 3
in Attica regione repertae. R. Wuensch.
1897.
IG iv iv Inscriptiones Argolidis. M. Fraenkel. 1902. IG Pel.
(Hitherto Corp. Inscr. Graec. Peloponnesi et
insularum vicinarum. Vol. i. Inscriptiones
Graecae Aeginae Pityonesi Cecryphaliae
Argolidis.)
Inscriptiones Arcadiae Laconicae Messeniae.
Inscriptiones Elidis et Achaiae.
Inscriptiones Meguridis et Boeotiae. W. IG Sept. i
Dittenberger. 1892.
(Hitherto Corp. Inscr. Graec. Graeciae Sep-
tentrionalis. Vol. i. Inscriptiones Graecae
Megaridis Oropiae Boeotiae.)
IG vin vin Inscriptiones Delphoram : edentur consilio
et auctoritate Academiae Franco-Gallicae.
IG ix ix Inscriptiones regionum Graeciae septentrio-
nalis voluminibus vii et viii non compre-
hensae.
IG ix 1 ix Part I. Inscriptiones Phocidis, Locridis, IG Sept. in 1
Aetoliae, Acarnaniae, insularum maris
Ionii. W. Dittenberger. 1897.
(Hitherto Corp. Inscr. Graec. Graeciae Sep-
tentrionalis in. Part I.)
IG ix 2 Part II. Inscriptiones Thessaliae.
IG x x Inscriptiones Epiri Macedoniae Thraciae
Scythiae.
IG xi xi Inscriptiones Deli
;
edentur consilio et auc-
toritate Academiae Franco-Gallicae.
IGxnl,2etc. xn Inscriptiones insularum maris Aegaei praeter IG Ins.
Delum.
(Hitherto Inscr. Graec. insularum maris
Aegaei.)
Fasc. i. Inscriptiones Rhodi Chalces Carpathi
cum Saro Casi. F. Hiller de Gaertringen.
1895.
cri
350
viii
PREFACE.
Vol.
Fasc. ii. Inscriptiones Lesbi Nesi Tenedi.
W. Paton. 1899.
Fasc. in. Inscriptiones Symes Teudussae
Teli Nisyri Astypalaeae Anaphes Therae et
Therasiae Pholegandri Meli Cimoli. F.
Hiller de Gaertringen. 1898.
Fasc. iv. Inscriptiones Coi et Calymni.
Fasc. v. Inscriptiones Cycladum.
Pars prior. Inscriptiones" Cycladum prae-
ter Tenum. F. Hiller de Gaertringen.
1903.
Pars altera. Inscriptiones Teni insulae.
Indices.
Fasc. vi. Inscriptiones Chii et Sami.
Fasc. vii. Inscriptiones Amorgi.
Fasc. viii. Inscriptiones insularum maris
Thracici et Hellesponti.
Fasc. ix. Inscriptiones Euboeae.
IG xiii xni Inscriptiones Cretae.
IG xiv xiv Inscriptiones Siciliae et Italiae additis graecis IGSI
Galliae Hispaniae Britanniae Germaniae
inscriptionibus. G. Kaibel. 1890.
Even this long list does not include the inscriptions of Asia Minor
and of Egypt
1
. And as in 1877 it was decided to furnish with
Indices and to abandon any idea of completing on the existing plan
the original Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum of August Boeckh
and, instead, to undertake the enterprise of re-editing the whole
store of ever-multiplying texts; so again we learn that in 1903 it
was determined to bring to a premature completion the Corpus
Inscriptionum Atticarum and to issue no further Supplementa. If
an apology were needed for fresh editions of Selections on a reasoned
plan and intended for purposes of orientation, it would be found in
the confessed inability of the great scholars to grapple with the
overwhelming mass of their material.
In the printing of the texts restored portions appear in Clarendon
type as in Part I, and these portions have been enclosed in square
brackets. Occasionally within the square brackets a letter or letters
are given in ordinary type when so much of the letter survives on
the stone as to leave no possible doubt of the form originally en-
graved. Letters in curved brackets are substituted for forms which
are on the stone, but obviously due to the engraver's error. Angular
1
Of these we have a foretaste in the recently published Orientis Graeci
Inscriptiones Selectae of W. Dittenberger. To students of later Greek history
Dittenberger's work is little short of indispensable.
PREFACE. ix
brackets denote letters found on the original, but clearly superfluous.
In the case of inscriptions written in the Attic alphabet a complete
list of alphabetic forms is given at the head of each. In later or
1
post-Euclidean
'
inscriptions the alphabetic forms are either referred
to one of several types illustrated on Plate IV at the end, or
individual letters are explained by reference (a
lt
a
2
etc.,
/?
1? /?2)
to
varieties of forms given on Plate ill. A few facsimile reproductions
are siven either in the text or on Plates I, II. Some of these
reproductions, as well as some of the inscriptions, are repeated from
the Attic Section of Part I, as representing certain categories of
subject-matter; while in Part I they were intended to illustrate
only the successive phases of the Attic alphabet.
Where the spiritus asper is expressed by an alphabetic symbol
in the original it appears in the text spaced off from the word :
thus
HOP05,
pre-Euclidean, is given as 'opos,
OPOZ,
post-Euclidean,
as o/oo?.
The original lines as they appear on the stone are printed
separately and not continuously, as in Dittenberger's Sylloge or
Michel's Recueil, where the separation between lines is marked by
a vertical stroke. The object has been to show as far as possible
the general local relations of the various parts of an inscription, and
with this view sometimes an inscription with unusually long lines is
printed on two facing pages (cf. nos. 70, 106, 109).
In the Commentary following each text the editors have
endeavoured where it was possible to treat the particular text as
typical and as illustrative of others of the same class. In many
instances, with the view of avoiding repetition in the notes, a
prefatory
'
Remark ' introduces a special category of inscriptions,
such as no. vi
(p.
127) on the formulae of decrees after 307/6 B.C.,
or no. viii
(p.
145) on the Ephebic inscriptions. It happens not
unfrequently that an inscription may be classed under more than one
head. Thus a document which may be technically a decree or a
pendant to a decree falls more naturally under another head, such as
that of finance ; the so-called
'
Hecatompedon ' inscription (no.
132)
is a case in point.
As regards the enumeration of authorities, when, as for instance
in the case of inscriptions discovered half a century ago or earlier,
the list of previous editors and commentators is very long, it has
been deemed sufficient to refer to the original list in the Corpus or
other collection. Those students to whom the use of this work may
possibly prove an incentive to further research, will as a matter of
course and as the next necessary step turn to the longer works
R. II.
b
x PREFACE.
themselves. On the other hand every effort has been made to note
the latest serviceable contributions to the elucidation of the texts.
As a rule the reference to published collections of Inscriptions has
been confined to those which are accompanied by Commentaries;
thus in the headings there appears no mention of C. Michel's valuable
Recueil des Inscriptions Grecques, though this work is included
among those which are noticed in the Comparative Tables,
pp.
527 sqq.
In the Commentary much has been omitted which is clearly
accessible to the student by reference to the various Lexicons and
the Dictionaries of Classical Antiquities
;
and admirable as is the
desire of Dittenberger to attain thoroughness, it has not been thought
desirable in every case to imitate him, e.g., in tracing through a
tedious variety of references the pedigree of some person or official
historically unimportant. Sufficient examples however will be found
in the notes to illustrate the method which may be followed by
students whose object is historical research.
The Index follows the plan adopted in Part I. It is not
classified, but the entries are alphabetic throughout, whether the
words are Greek or English. For speed in usage this arrangement
seems to the editors unquestionably the most convenient. No
attempt has been made as, e.g., in Dittenberger's Sylloge (in which
the Index occupies 462 pages, or about a quarter of the bulk of the
whole work) to include every proper name, personal or geographical,
but only, as a rule, those which find mention in the notes. The
student is recommended in any case where an explanation already
given is not repeated in the Commentary to refer to the Index.
A study of the Index will reveal the great variety of subjects treated
of in the inscriptions or the commentary and will, the editors believe,
fully justify the ample scale on which it has been compiled.
In the Preface to Part I the editor tendered his thanks to the
Syndics of the University Press for the trust they had placed in his
hands and pleaded in explanation of the tardy appearance of the
volume the pressure of onerous official duties. He also expressed
his sense of grateful acknowledgement to the authorities of the
University Press for their invaluable assistance in lessening the
difficulties incidental to the printing of a work of this kind. The
joint editors of the present volume desire in no way to fall short of
the acknowledgements freely made by the single editor in his former
Preface.
E. S. ROBERTS.
E. A. GARDNER.
INTRODUCTION.
The Attic Alphabet.
A brief history of the Attic alphabet from the earliest times to
the archonship of Euclides, 403 B.C., was given in Part I of the
Introduction to Greek .Epigraphy,
pp.
74107. Its evolution was
traced through thirteen successive periods, each illustrated, where
it was possible, by inscriptional monuments. Though in the history
of the Greek alphabets as a whole the lapse of seventeen years since
the publication of Part I renders it necessary that much should be
re-written or re-stated in the light of later discoveries, there is
nevertheless singularly little to alter in what has been said of the
Attic alphabet. A complete and detailed description of the Attic
alphabet does not come within the scope of the present volume.
But it will conduce to the usefulness of the following pages if we
repeat in the barest outline the substance of what was said under
the head of Attica in Part I. And for this purpose we may condense
the thirteen periods there suggested into a smaller number, while we
add the caution that as in the case of the larger number the border
line between period and period is necessarily more or less arbitrary.
The distribution then into the following periods will be found
convenient.
I. Before 625 B.C. Retrograde (and /^ovo-rpoc^SoV) writing.
Letters resembling the Phoenician, e.g.,
^>
= a,
Q
=
h, crooked iota
;
[Koppa,
Q]
; the form of A is
1
not i .
II. 625575 B.C. (approximately).
Q
= h
}
iota is straight,
U
= A,
Q
is in use. There is no example of doubling of consonants.
The direction of writing varies between R. to L., f3ov<TTpo<f>r)$6v and
L. to R. A solitary example of
Q
for in a retrograde inscription,
IG i Suppl. 373
2
p. 79, indicates a very early struggle between the
old and the new form.
III. 575525 B.C. (approximately).
H
takes the place of
g
O
frequently appears for
0,
M towards the end of the period yields
62
xii INTRODUCTION.
t
M) ^
once, and strangely in a retrograde inscription no.
336,
supplants
^,
indicating a very early acquaintance with Ionic forms.
Besides this,
X.
is on
h
T
once found IG I 485. By the middle of the
period the retrograde and f^ovarpo^^ov styles appear to have gone
completely out of use and the practice had been begun of doubling
consonant signs. The slanting forms


had almost disappeared
before 560 B.C. The cttoiy^Sov arrangement had begun by 560 B.C.
IV. 525480 B.C. (approximately). <g) or before the end of
this period finally gave way to
Q
; the form
/v\
is firmly established
;
X.
appears once (IG I Suppl. 373
7
)
and -|- finally yields to
X-
V. From about 480 to 445 B.C. By the end of this period the
letters had become established in the forms which, with the characters
adopted from the Ionic alphabet, they maintained unaltered, except as
regards
/\
=
y
and
[,
= A, long after the Archonship of Euclides. These
forms were
ABA[r]AElHlK
or
KU[A]M
(not
AA) NOPP^TY^
(no longer
) X-
Of
A
the only form after 460 B.C. is
A;
after
447
g
and
21
appear only instead of

and
$.
The period is
characterised further by great uncertainty in the use of (-j
= h, which
is frequently omitted or wrongly added. Sporadic examples indeed
of this misuse appear in very early times, e.g.,
gfcXfl
IG" I Suppl.
373 a (about 600 B.C.),
^OHO^IAH
(Sigean monument, circ.
470 B.C.), IGA 492. In this period the Ionic symbols for double
consonants begin to show themselves, e.g.
J/
in a decree IG I 13
belonging probably to the period 464 457 B.C. (cf. no.
5, p. 11, note).
YI. 445403 B.C. The principal characteristics of this period
are
(1)
the increasing fluctuation in the use of the sign for spiritus
asper,
(2)
the encroachment even in public documents of Ionic forms.
The inscriptions in the Attic alphabet given in this volume fall
under the several periods as follows :
I. No. 390 only.
II. Nos. 173, 174, 189, 332334, 363, 391.
III. Nos. 1, 175, 176, 187, 364-368.
IV. Nos. 3, 132, 177, 178, 188, 191, 193, 336, 392394.
V. Nos. 2,
48, 181, 192, 194, 196, 197, 335, 337345, 359.
VI. Nos. 927, 9799, 107110, 114118, 179, 180, 182,
183, 185, 186, 195.
INTRODUCTION. xiii
The post-Euclidean aljihabet.
1
The decree which makes the archonship of Euclides indissolubly
associated with the history of the alphabet marks the end rather
than the beginning of an era of transition. During the closing
years of the fifth century the characteristic letters of the Ionic
alphabet, [~,
f-|
= rj,
/\
= h-,
^, % fl
are frequently found even in
official inscriptions, and the full system of Ionic writing was not un-
common in private documents (cf. Ro. I
p. 1,
103 sq.). Amongst the
administrative reforms which mark the archonship of Euclides was
a decree proposed by Archinus, a well-known statesman who was
also famous for his grammatical studies ; this decree ordered that in
future all official state documents should be written in the Ionic
script ; and, probably, also that the same Ionic alphabet should be
used for instruction in writing in all schools. How general the
demand for such a change must have been, and how universal its
acceptance when once made, is sufficiently attested by the fact that,
while Ionic letters are common in pre- Euclidean inscriptions, early
Attic letters in post-Euclidean inscriptions are unknown. The only
apparent exception is offered by such conventional formulae as
HOPOS
on a boundary stone.
The regular Ionic alphabet of 24 characters may be taken as the
starting point for the history of the post-Euclidean alphabet, and
the influence of the older Attic script need not be considered. The
normal forms are those given as alphabet type 1 on PL iv.
ABrAElHOIKAMNOPPTY4>xy.fl
But for some slight modifications, to be noted later, these
remain the forms in regular use throughout the fourth and the
third centuries, the only real alteration being the occasional appear-
ance of ["] (with equal limbs) after the middle of the fourth century.
As to signification, the only change that calls for notice is the
gradual discarding of the use of
O
anc^
E
fr the spurious diphthongs
ov and 64, After about 376 B.C. the use of

for ei became unusual,
though it continues to occur sporadically in inscriptions down to the
close of the fourth century. The similar use of O
for ov lasted a
little longer; but it almost disappears about 353 B.C., though also
occasionally found in inscriptions of the latter part of the fourth
century, especially in proper names, in the article, and in the case
terminations.
1
For a fuller treatment, see Larfeld, Gr. Ep. n.
pp.
450-564.
xiv INTRODUCTION.
Deviations from the normal forms of the letters, other than
that already mentioned, are to be regarded as belonging to the
style and technique of the cutting rather than to any essential
change in the form intended. The commonest of these is the
omission, either from carelessness or for the sake of simplicity
and rapidity of cutting, of unessential parts or sometimes even
of essential parts of letters. Thus
A E H N =E P
have the cross
bar omitted and become
A C I I I I H I
'
;
similarly the dot of
the
O
occasionally disappears, leaving only
O >

is simplified
to
0>
and' in the latter part of the fourth century, to
+
or + . In
some cases there was no harm in this; in others it leads to great
ambiguity, as in
AOHNAIRN^'A^aiW,
POAAATAOA
= va\X
ayaOa. It is hardly worth while however to chronicle all such
forms
;
they really represent a tendency which always invades any
system of writing that is extensively used, and which is only
checked by the fear of complete illegibility. This tendency appears
as early as the beginning of the fourth century, though it naturally
increases in later periods as the style of cutting grows more careless,
and is common down to Roman times, when it disappears.
In the fourth century, as in the fifth, the strokes of the letters
are usually of even breadth throughout their length. It is true that
when the chisel is held obliquely, as it is in rapid cutting, the
strokes tend to become thicker and deeper at one end than the
other ; but this tendency remains incidental, and is not in any way
conventional or recognised during the fourth century in Athens,
though a few marked instances occur
1
. We also find, occasionally,
an inclination to curve some of the strokes
;
but this tendency is
commoner elsewhere than in Athens, and never had any strong
development
2
,
but for an occasional
T".
The style of cutting in the earlier part of the fourth century
does not differ essentially from that of the fifth ; in the best examples
it is wonderfully even and perfect in form ; and the o-toiy^SoV
arrangement is almost universally observed. The official inscriptions
belonging to the time of Lycurgus (338326 B.C.) have a character
of their own, which consists chiefly in the neatness and minuteness
of the characters. The forms of the letters are not essentially
different from those of the earlier part of the century ; but the
tendency to simplify characters by the omission of minor strokes is
1
e.g. Loewy IGB 64, 65, 69, 83.
2
cf. IGB 69 with 89 (Sicyon). The wedge-shaped strokes also occur at
Sicyon IGB 86, 400380 b.c.
INTRODUCTION. xv
prevalent. Towards the end of the century the tendency to wedge-
shaped strokes receives a check. Prof. Loewy notes that about this
time a conservative influence seems to come in, which prevents the
style of cutting from further degradation or development for a
century or more; and he attributes this arrest with much probability
to Demetrius Phalereus, whose influence upon such things at Athens
cannot easily be exaggerated. It follows that there is but little
change to chronicle in the Attic alphabet during the third century;
it is indeed very difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish by its
appearance an inscription of the close of the fourth century from an
inscription of the beginning of the second. The only facts worth
mentioning are that (~| is occasionally found and
~JE
becomes fairly
common, though
p
remains the usual form, and = is by no means
unusual.
The second century, on the other hand, is an age of changes
both in the forms of letters and in the style of cutting. The greatest
of these changes is a formal and conscious adoption of an ornamented
system of cutting, in which the open ends of strokes and the angles
where two strokes join are adorned with what are called apices

that is to say, minute cuts set at an angle of


45
to the main stroke,
usually one on each side, thus
J
;
where two strokes meet, the
apices sometimes take the form of a prolongation of each of the
strokes. The origin of this system of apices, or, as they are
sometimes more correctly called, swallow-tails, is not difficult to
trace. We have noticed that there existed already in the fourth
century, in Athens and more still outside it, a tendency towards
wedge-shaped strokes. When these were cut deep at one end, the
form naturally produced was
<^^7
;
and in this we have the
essential form of the apex-writing clearly indicated. The desire for
such a decorated and florid system of writing is of course in accord-
ance with the taste of the period. The earliest example of systematic
apex-letters that can be dated belongs to about 210 B.C.
1
;
in IG n
1,
307 however, which is probably to be dated shortly after 290
2
B.C., it
is noted that minute apices are used as part of an affected elegance
in cutting.
The system does not however become usual until about the
middle of the second century B.C.; from this time forwards we find
the apex forms, side by side with the simple forms which they never
1
IGn 5, 1161b.
2
Larfeld,
p. 476, says 240 (possibly a misprint).
xvi INTRODUCTION.
entirely supersede, down to the end of the second century a.d. The
apices vary somewhat in shape; sometimes they consist merely of a
short stroke at right angles to the main one, and so are not unlike our
printed capitals, except that in
^
and
y^,
for example, they are not
parallel to the line of the writing. The extent to which apices are
used varies in the different letters of the same inscription
;
some,
B for example, rarely have any apices except in a few late and very
florid examples
;
but, the general principle of ornamentation being
given, the stone-cutter probably exercised a certain amount of
discretion as to how far he should apply it to individual letters.
The following are the changes in the actual shape of the letters
that accompany the introduction of apex-strokes. Some, such as
P
or V
(about 220 B.C.), are merely decorative
;
others, such as II or TT,
show an essential change in form. \^\
and
,
with parallel end
strokes, come to replace those which have all the strokes sloped
equally. The earliest recorded instance of
[^
dates from 284 B.C.
;
but it did not become common until about a century later
;
nor does

seem to be used before the end of the third century,
though the lunated or cursive form
C
is found on boundary stones
and like documents as early as the fourth century.
A
or
/\
with the cross-bar bent or curved, comes in about the same time as
the apex writing, with which it harmonises.
~J_
also, for
x>
makes its
first appearance about 180 B.C. The later forms soon met with
general acceptance, and were recognised as normal by the end of the
second century B.C., though the earlier forms were never entirely
superseded ; as soon as they became unusual, they were for that
very reason preferred in inscriptions of an affected archaism. The
only letters which show any independent development are
<,
which
appears about the middle of the century as 4, and towards the end
of it as <, extending above and below the line, and
0,
which now
occasionally appears as
0,
a form which in the next period becomes
prevalent. In the first century, beside the continuation of the pre-
ceding tendencies, a new one comes in, which from this time forward
has a very considerable vogue
;
this is the prolongation upwards of the
right-hand stroke of
}\ )\,
of
\
and sometimes of
A>
thus opening
the way for the development of the now familiar cursive forms.
We also find about the beginning of the century the first appearance
of

=

; and e occasionally has the middle stroke separated from
the stem, especially in apex writing,
^
. ^ is now universal.
In inscriptions of the Imperial age we find a variety and
inconsistency of writing which makes it often impossible to date
INTRODUCTION.
xvii
them approximately by the forms of the letters, and sometimes
causes confusion with inscriptions of an earlier date, owing to
conscious imitation. In monumental inscriptions large and florid
examples of apex writing are found
;
in others we find the system of
prolonging the strokes above or below the line in
)\ A,
(fee, to
which
}\
was now added, cb and
y,
and even, occasionally,
|\^.
For
6 we find in addition to earlier forms, and
Yx(
for rj, on the
analogy of
J^
. There are also fanciful variations such as 2 for w,
g
for
J3,
and
j
or
^
for . Cursive forms,
C
and occasionally
Q),
which had existed in script as early, probably, as the fourth
century B.C., now come to appear sometimes also on stone. By the
end of the first century A.D., the system of apex writing disappears,
though cross strokes at the end of the main ones are still found ; and
cursive forms intrude still more into inscriptions ; in addition to
those already mentioned we find L
= A.,
1L= fi
f
and
^
=
.
The Hadrianic age is a time of revival and imitation, in epigraphy
as in everything else. Consequently we find not only imitation,
usually inconsistent and eclectic in character, of all sorts of earlier
forms of letters, but even an attempt to revive, in a few instances,
the obsolete alphabet of pre-Euclidean times ; this occurs, for
example, in some inscriptions set up by Herodes Atticus. On the
other hand, we also find in this same period many new and fanciful
forms. The apex strokes are sometimes revived, with the addition
of such exaggerated forms as
]>?;
we find square or diamond shaped
letters, such as $
=
0, Q
or

=
a, <t> or A =
<f>, [^
= w, not to speak of
other variations too numerous to mention, in which individual fancy
ran riot. For the latest period of ancient Attic epigraphy there is
little to chronicle, except a continual and chaotic use of all sorts of
forms, earlier and later. Apex writing disappears entirely soon
after the Hadrianic age. On the other hand, forms belonging to MS
cursive intrude more and more, including
^
= a,
{^
rj, b
=
p
and
JL
= <o. The development into Christian and Byzantine epigraphy
lies outside the scope of the present volume.
LIST OF FREQUENTLY OCCURRING ABBREVIATIONS
USED IN THE WORK.
Abh. Abhandlungen.
Ah. Akademie.
'A#.
y
Adrjvaiov.
AJA. American Journal of Archaeology.
Anecd. Anecdota.
Ar. Aristophanes or Aristotle.
A.Z. Archaeologische Zeitung.
BCH. Bulletin de Correspondance Hellenique.
Blass Ausspr. F. Blass, Aussprache des Griechischen (English Translation
by W. Purton).
B.M.I. Greek Inscriptions in the British Museum.
Boeckh >S^.
3
A. Boeckh, Staatshaushaltung der Athener. Ed. 3 by M.
Frankel.
Bull. d. Inst. Annali (Bullettino ed Annali) dell' Instituto di Corre-
spondenza archeologica di Roma.
Ca. P. Cauer, Delectus inscriptionum graecarum propter dialectum
memorabilium. Ed. 2.
CIA. Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum. (See Preface
p.
vi.)
CIG. Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum.
CI. Classical.
Corn. St. Cornell Studies in Classical Philology.
C. R. Classical Review, or Comptes rendus.
D. W. Dittenberger, Sylloge inscriptionum graecarum. Ed. 2.
D.A. Dictionary of Antiquities.
Bar. and Sagl. Daremberg and Saglio, Dictionnaire des Antiquites
grecques et romaines.
AeAr. AeXriov dpx<uo\oyiKov.
D. L. Deutsche Litteratur-Zeitung.
Droysen Hell. Droysen Geschichte des Hellenismus.
Ecp.
dpx-
y
E(prjfxep\s apxaioXoywr).
Frazer Paus. J. G. Frazer, Pausanias's Description of Greece. Vols. I

VI.
Froehner Inscrr. Musee National du Louvre
;
Les inscriptions grecques,
interpreters par W. Froehner.
G. and H. Grenfell and Hunt, The Oxyrhynchus Papyri.
G. and J. P. Gardner and F. B. Jevons, Manual of Greek Antiquities.
Gesch. Geschichte.
GGA. Gottingische gelehrte Anzeigen.
Gilb. C. A. Gilbert, Greek Antiquities (Tr.).
Gott. Nachr. Nachrichten v. d. kgl. Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu
Gottingen.
xx LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS.
Gr. Grammar, Grammatik, Graechisch, Grecque.
H. and V. Harrison and Verrall, Mythology and Monuments of
Ancient Athens.
Head H. N. B. V. Head, Historia nummorum.
Hdb. Handbook or Handbuch.
Herm. Hermes : Zeitschrift fur classische Philologie.
H. G. History of Greece.
IG. Inscriptiones Graecae. (See Preface
p.
vi.)
Inscrr. jur. Dareste, Haussoullier and Eeinach, Recueil des In-
scriptions juridiques grecques.
Jalirbb. Jahrbiicher fiir classische Philologie.
JUS. Journal of Hellenic Studies.
Kirchhoff Stud. A. Kirchhoff, Studien zur Geschichte des griechischen
Alphabets. Ed. 4.
Larfeld Gr. Ep. W. Larfeld, Handbuch der griechischen Epigraphik :
II die attischen Inschriften.
Lb., Leb. P. Lebas, Voyage archeologique en Grece et en Asie Mineure,
with continuation by MM. Waddington and Foucart.
L. S. Leipziger Studien.
Loewy. E. Loewy, Inschriften griechischen Bildhauer.
M. and S. Meier und Schoemann, Der attische Process (J. H. Lipsius'.
Meisterhans Gr. K. Meisterhans, Grammatik der attischen Inschriften.
Ed. 3.
Mich. C. Michel, Recueil descriptions grecques.
Mitth. Mittheilungen des deutschen archaeologischen Instituts in Athens.
jSIommsen. Heort. or Feste. A. Mommsen, Heortologie or Feste der Stadt
Athen.
Monatsb. Monatsberichte.
Mtiller Hdb. J. Muller, Handbuch der classischen Altertumswissen-
schaft.
Newton Essays. Charles Newton, Essays in Art and Archaeology.
ITaX. Hakiyyeveaia.
P. and B. Pape u. Benseler, Worterbuch der griech. Eigennamen.
P. and H. Paton and Hicks, Inscriptions of Cos.
Parth. Parthenon.
Philol. Philologus, Zeitschrift fiir das classische Alterthum.
Reinach Ep. Gr. S. Reinach, Traite d'Epigraphie grecque.
Rev. Arch. Revue Archeologique.
Rev. Ph. Revue de Philologie.
Rh. Mus. Rheinisches Museum.
Sb. Sitzungsberichte.
Schaefer Bern. Schaefer, Demosthenes und seine Zeit. Ed. 3.
Schmidt Chron. Adolf Schmidt, Handbuch der griechischen Chronologic
St. or Stud. Studies or Studien.
Swoboda Volksb. H. Swoboda, Die griechischen Volksbeschlusse.
Szanto Biirgerr. E. Szanto, Ueber attisches Burgerrecht.
Yerh. Verhandlungen.
CONTENTS.
(The figures in black type here and throughout the book refer
to the inscriptions.)
PAGE
Preface v
Introduction :
The Attic Alphabet xi
The post-Euclidean Alphabet ...... xiii
List of abbreviations xix
Errata xxiii
Inscriptional texts and commentary :
Section I. Decrees of the Senate and People
1
69 . . . 1-190
Remark i. Formulae of decrees ...... 2
Remark ii. Formulae of Honorary Decrees, Proxenia-decrees
and Euergesia-decrees 33
Remark iii. On Attic numeral signs 44
Remark iv. Post-Euclidean formulae of decrees . . 85
Remark v. On the public Secretaries (ypapparels) . 89
Remark vi. Formulae of decrees after 306/5 B.C. and re-
arrangement of the prytanies ...... 127
Remark vii. The Ephebic Inscriptions .... 145
Remark viii. Decrees of the Imperial period . . . 183
Section II. Decrees and letters of Foreign States and of the
Amphictyonic Council 7073 191-204
Section III. Decrees of Tribes, Demes, Cleruchs, Clans, Phra-
triae, Guilds and other Associations 74 91 .... 205-243
Remark ix. Formulae of Decrees of Tribes, Demes etc. . 205
Note on (pparpiai, yevj], O'kmtol etc. ..... 227
Section IV. Imperial Ordinances, Laws, Edicts and other
documents
92
96 244-255
Section V. Finance 97131 256-376
Treasure lists
(97,
101
105); Disbursements for state-
purposes
(98, 99) ; Accounts of Sep\ixiti <d
(100)
; Accounts
of the Logistae (106
109)
; Accounts of the Poletae
(110
112); Accounts of the eKaroaral (113); Accounts
of the Curators of Public Works (114
118)
; Accounts of
XX11 CONTENTS.
PAGE
the Curators of Dockyards (119, 120) ; Accounts of the
Delian Ainphictyony
(121, 122) ; Accounts of other
public officers (123
125) ; Contracts and leases (126

131).
Remark x. i. The Treasure Lists ; ii. Public Accounts
Remark xi. The Tribute Lists ......
Note on contracts for buildings at Eleusis ....
Section VI. Administration of temples, regulations for ritual,
oracles, edicts of priests, foundation of a sanctuary, erection
of a taurobolic altar 132143 ......
Section VII. Official lists of various kinds ; magistrates,
prytanes, ephebi, arbitrators, ships' crews, mercenaries,
agonistic lists, didascaliae 144172
Remark xii. Lists of Prytanes ......
Section VIIL Dedications, public and private, including
Agonistic and Choragic Dedications, and inscriptions on
statue-bases etc. 173245
Remark xiii. Choragic dedications ....
Section IX. Inscriptions on the seats of the Theatre of Dionysus
246307
Remark xiv. The later numeral alphabet .
Section X. Artists' signatures, Inscriptions on Statue-bases
and other Honorary Inscriptions 308331
Section XI. Boundary Stones and Mortgage Stones 332358
Remark xv. Mortgage Stones .....
Section XII. Sepulchral Monuments 359389 .
Section XIII. Miscellaneous : inscription on Dipylon vase, on
a ahrrjp, on ostraka, tesserae judicum, list of demes, list of
books, memorial inscriptions, defixiones, tachygraphy 390

409
List of Demes, with Demotics
Comparative tables
Addenda
Plates
Index
256
288
369
377-390
391-430
396
431-466
434
467-475
475
477-489
490-497
494
498-513
514-524
525
527
535
537
545
ERRATA.
PAGE
7 no. 5 1.
4, for
'Apre/xi'5i read 'Apre^uSt.
12 1. 33, for irb\iv read ttoKlv.
42 1.
30, for
38 read 37.
44 1.
2,
/or setting read settling.
47 col. 2, frg. t

v, 1.
4, for
a|xa read
dfj.a.
47 col. 3, frg. z, 1.
15, for
['
A\(a]7r[i]KouvrjaLo read -<tiol.
54 no. 21, in list of alphabetic forms,
for also
X
read also y.
57 1.
5,
/or 'A0. tto\. read Ar. and Ath.
58 1. 3 from bottom, for ftiov read
filov.
60 no. 23 1. 4, for Aeovrls read Aeuvrls.
61
,,
1. 31, for Nea7ro\?Tai read Neo7r-.
62 1.
22, for
Aeovris read Aecovris, and for CIA 188 read CIA i 188.
68 1. 26, for
Fraser read Frazer.
69 no. 26 1. 3, before 8e dele the point.
80 no. 32 A 1. 19, for ovs read os.
94 1. 10, for
Isontas read Tsountas.
122 1.
14, for 10 read 9.
124 no. 47, in the preliminary note, after Koehler add ^tolxv^ou.
134 1. 19, for aplastre read aplustre.
135 1.
5, for 98 read 99.
137 1. 3 from bottom, for P
read
p.
155 no. 59 1. 5, after e/^PoXufAO) insert a comma.
161 1. 29, dele the sentence See...Epidaurus.
168 no. 62 1.
10, for 'Apre/mldi. read 'Apre/Mdc.
181 1.
12, for 1887 read 1877.
182 1.
25, for
Schaeffer read Schoeffer.
188 1. 21, for 91 read 92.
193 1.
6, for
auTwi read avTu.
223 no. 84 1. 71, after Tpeii insert a comma.
226 1.
17, for
92 read 91.
235 no. 90 1. 6, for Ai/[tcovivov read 'Av\TU)veivov.
236 no. 91 1. 14, for avaKTrjaai read avaKTwcai.
1. 15, after doy/xara insert dash.
241 dele the note on 1. 14.
243 1. 4 from bottom, after 633 insert
(
=
141).
251 1. 5, before 5 insert comma.
xxiv ERRATA.
PAGE
258 The letters a, b in the margin should have headed the left-hand
and right-hand fragments of the inscription respectively.
279 1. 10, for xitwWotcos read x^uvlcwos.
294 1. 8 from bottom, for by read to.
330 no. 118 col. 2, 1. 48, for
^w/xdv rbv read ^oj/jlov tov.
336 no. 119 col. 2, 1. 3, for w^eiXov read uHpetXev.
337 no. 119 col. 2, 1. 69 for Kaiva[<s' read Kaiva[<$
366 1.
21, for 66, 167 read 167, 66.
368 1.
21, for the arddiou eiri tov dedrpov read to diarpov to iirl tov aradiov.
377 1. 6, for 'Ad. read
'
'Ad-nva.
382 1. 4 from bottom, after doubting insert whether.
388 1. 24, after 1061 insert E; after dyadwv, dele E.
400 1. 4 from bottom, for IG i read IG n 1,
401 no. 150, in the note on the alphabet, for eKT-rjs read cktvs ; after
irpeo-fix/Tepos, add iv 8.
407 1. 22, after c. Polycl. insert 1208.
432 no. 175. In the facsimile,
for $ OA$
read
50CDIA5.
447 no. 212. In the note for Phlyae read Phlya.
448 1. 19, for Antigonius read Antigonus.
454 1. 3, after ItidovLcov add full stop.
463 1. 15 from bottom,
for Antonius read Antoninus.
ATTICA.
Section I. Decrees of the Senate and People.
1. Six fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis, forming
probably only the left half of the original and the right end of 11. The
dimensions of what remains are : H. 0.215 m.
;
Th. 0.13 m. The letters
retain traces of red and blue colouring in alternate lines. Koehler Mitth. ix
(1884) p. 117 sqq.; Ko. i 45
;
CIA iv 1 a p. 57 (cf. p. 131 n 373
229
and p. 164)
;
Lolling AeX-r.
'Apx- 1888, p. 118; Wilhelm Mitth. xxm 1898, p. 466 sqq.; Judeich
ibid, xxiv
(1899), p. 321 sqq.
A..
AS (=e, ei, t?) .
H
(=h)
01 . UM/V [+5
=
?]
O
(=o, ov
y
to)
PI^TV..+
:
;
The first six lines are o-toixtjSoj/, presenting the oldest Attic example of this
style, in which the letters when scanned upwards or downwards appear to be
arranged in a series of vertical columns.
"~E]Soj;v Ttp Stj/jLO) t[ovs l(s) 2]a\a/x[iva
or r[ois 2]aXayLt[iva or -ivi . . .
oiicelv ia(s) ^aXafuvc
[
. . . .
J\.ev
or ^a\afjLivi[ov<s
an t[(\]lv teal arpar[iva-Q]ai
[p,-
r) /jLl[o-Q]ovv, ea(fi) firj oZ/c[fj
]
o
[
ea-
5
v oe [pijcrdoi, a7TOTi\vnv tov (jLur8ot>p.vov Kal tov p.-
utOovvtcl 'eKare[p
e? S[ii]/AOcrto[v
a-
PX\y\
Ta
^
v
[ t-
a $e [']o7rXa 7r[ap4xtT]0a[i t-
io pid[K]ovTa : Bp[a\\i. . . . .
]
f
o[
V hk \r\hv ap^o[vra
6V
:
[cirjt T?}? /3[ov\i]s
'x\
{or 'ore) 'o 8iva irpwTos CYpa|x(iaTVv.
R. II.
1
2 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[1
This ancient decree has been thought to contain provisions for placing the
Attic cleruchs in Salamis on the same footing as Athenian citizens with reference
to financial and military requirements. But, as Wilhelm remarks, the
enactments in 11. 2 and 3 are fitter for subject allies than citizens, and so may
refer to the original inhabitants of Salamis. The leasing of lands appears to be
prohibited. The uncertainty as to the length of the stone on the right makes
any restorations very doubtful. Several complete restorations have been
attempted, but all are very uncertain and some have been disproved by new
fragments as they were found.
To judge from the alphabet the inscription should not be older, or much
older, than 535 b.c (see Ro. i 45 and notes) ; but historical considerations
incline us to push the date back as near as possible to the period of the final
establishment of the Athenian claims to the possession of Salamis, according to
Duncker (Gesch. des Altert. vi
3
p.
244 sqq.) between 575 and 559 b.c. Thus
the decree will be earlier by a century than any hitherto known
; but cf. a frag-
ment CIA iv 1 b, where in any case the form
X
for
x
bespeaks a later date than
that of our inscription.
It is remarkable that the formula in the opening lines is in the name of the
People only. It may be assumed that the Senate in the sixth century had not
yet taken the leading part which it assumed after the reforms of Clisthenes.
2. ea(s)
= eai> (v assimilated to a following) is suggested independently by
Lolling and Wilhelm
;
for oUeiv iav cf. Thuc. in 48, Arist. 'A0. iro\. 22. 4, D
1
.
158, 49 {Ilium ;
letter of Antiochus I Soter) : avvereraxo-^v
'
ApL<jTo5u<i5ri eav
avrovs oineiv.
3. The later (4th century) formula is (XTpareveaOai rds arparias /ecu rds
elacpopas elacpepeiv fxera 'Adyva'uov : cf. CIA n 176, 29 sqq.
4. 5. The cleruchs sent out to Lesbos after its subjugation in 427 b.c
appear to have been compelled to reside: see 16
7;
cf. Foucart, Mem. s. les col.
Atheniennes, p. 347. For documents concerning cleruchies see Index s.v.
9. r& 8e oir\a Trapex^a-daL. W. compares Thuc. vin 97. 1, Arist. 'A0. 7roX.
4. 2; also CIA iv 1 p. 6, 22 a 1. 11.
12. W. notes that the punctuation implies the beginning of a fresh clause,
which can hardly be anything but the date ; for the formula cf. CIA iv 1
p. 125,
557 : ftovXi)
VPX

\.V
8e7va 7rpcDr]os iypap.fxa.Teve 'Pa[puovaLOs]
;
also 3 1. The
date clause is at the end also in the Hecatompedon inscription CIA i 18, 19
(iv 1 p. 57, 58, 128, 138).
Remark i. Formulae
of
decrees. From the middle of the fifth
century B.C. at Athens a more and more regular documentary style
began to prevail, which to a large extent formed the pattern for the
other states of Greece. A normal Attic decree before 375 B.C.
would contain a heading or prescript comprised of the following
elements
;
(<x) decretory formula : c$oev
rfj f3ov\f}
kcu t<2 Sy/xtp, or
cSo^ev
rfj fiovXfj
or &oev ro> SrfjU-o) ;
then the names (b) of the
1
prytanising ' tribe, (c) of the Secretary of the tribe, (d) of the
2]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 3
President of the Ecclesia, (e) of the eponymous Archon (frequently
absent) and
{/)
of the proposer of the decree. For the purpose of
marking the date sometimes the name of the Secretary or of the
Archon or of both appears in a superscription in larger letters, or
is separated by a space from the remaining parts of the prescript.
After the prescript follows the substance of the decree. For more
or less complete examples of formulae see nos 4 B,
7, 9, 10, 18 etc.
;
and see for further developments, Rem. iv, below. The mention of
the Archon's name did not indeed become usual till after 421 B.C.;
but it is also found occasionally on earlier documents, e.g. 12, 13,
also probably 14.
2. On three sides of a stele of white marble, found near the Theseum.
H. 2 ft. 10 in.; Br. 13 in.; Th. 8 in. A fourth side probably contained the
beginning of the inscription. The top is lost. Side A is incomplete on the left
margin ;
side B is nearly complete
;
side C very imperfect. CIG 71 and Add. i
p. 890 ; CIA i 1; iv
p. 3, 4 and
p. 133 where a new fragment is given of side C,
first recognised by A. Stscbukarev and edited by Novossadsky Mitth. xiv
(1889)
p.
410 sqq.
;
B. M. i 2; D. 646. Cf. L. Ziehen Leges Graecorum sacrae, diss.
Bonn. 1896, p. 10 n. 3.
AA&AAE
(= e, L,
v) IH (= h)
OI^UMN
(%o- =
f)
o (= o, ov, co)
PPSTYCDX ($
=
ir)
:
2rotx^56f : except at the end of C, where the crowding of the letters and the
omission of the spiritus asper seem to indicate the end of the inscription.
Side A
(5)
(io)
. . . .
P
6
8p*[x]f*y<r-
. . . . Ka0d]7re[p] rovs . . .
fxe[v]os . 5i . .
tQjv 7r6\ea;[v
OK KO.va.ep
kav tls rcD[v
o^ 17 '6[<r]a
. . 'A0T]VT]](T[t] ifx. [ir]6[\]e
as HiVa .
avr ivc
Side B
[ t-
d] /uev
'
a.Kovai{a.
'^CLTrXr} to, 5e
"
dJKouaia 5(7tX[t]-
i . (T^-rrovdas elv-
CU] TOtCTl jXVCTT-
T]<riv] Kai ro[ts
(tr]6TTTr]cni> [k-
-al tJois dtfoX[o-
vQ]oiaiv Kai [d-
\\<n]crii> t)[v ir-
Side C.
6]/3oX[6v irapd
tov |av<ttov eKao-rJoi; 'iep[oKT]pvx-
S \ap.(3avTaj
r\]/uuuf3[\iov Ka-
0'
i]p.]epaj> [irapd t]o0 fxvarov ftKOio--
rov "\ev. 'ie[po$&]vT7)v 5t /j.i[<rQ6v
\~]a(i[fia]i>eiv fx[varr]r]piois r[ois |x-
]io<riv 7rap[d too) p]i/a-rou '[Ka<r-
t~]ov 6f3o\bi> Kai [tois 6X]ei^[o<riv
\iv]<TT7]p[ois [6poX6v irapd tou
p-
vor]rou 'eKaarov. a
. . . tolv 6eo\lv
.... oxiovi . .
... o 5^ TOV
.
'.
. lov
5pax[p
12
GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
12
(15)
rQi\v irb\\eb)v ir .
XP
e . /3o
<?X
deo
x

v5
(20)
a[ T]ct[s 8i]/cas
. ad .
av ml .
l . . ire
aa[v] tt)v .
(n)
.... aeia a/a[
ep. ir]6Xei . a . a . V6
. . . otol 01 . ea^ 5e
(30)
lit)
[xP
T
i
<^
]
a,
'
^LI' ^ l
"
K]ara raura raura, ecu*
'
ko\otov [ica/rd] rr\v bvva-
(xiv 6<j)Xiv] irpa^ai
5'
^/C7rpa|-
iv, lav 8e jxtj] eyb& rbv bcpXbvra ll-
(35)
t]u) tepcp' eav 8[l . .
]i, 6. XrjdrjvaL ifx Tro[\e-
.... t]^ eXdovaav [/ca]i
'varepov
'
ea
1 rbv
'
Kdrjvalou fir]
(40)
toJ^to;*' tcD^ 7r6\ea>j/ /a-
aadai, eav lit]
iirixwpiav e to
dtvTOL. 't)tls av [t-
div iroXewv] lctj ed^Xrj b[(Kas 8]t
Sovai Kal] dexevda-i [p.T] etj^afi \-
pT)<r0ai. tw t
PV
To
x]
(r
^[v]^0I/
o]^[ir^]a;z//fat ['A0-
T]]i>[a]i'oicrii/ ['d-
iracnv.
dpx^i\y
8-
6 TO**
X^O^ofv
T
"
WI' 0"7TOJ'5ci;j' [tov
Mera7etrj't[a)-
vos /j.Tjvbs d.7r[o
bixoLLrjvias [k-
ai ro^ Botj5/)[o-
fjuuva Kal rod [II
vavoxf/cQvos
fiexpt- beKarri
-
s \o~raixevov . r-
ds be arrovbas
elvai ev rr/cr-
1 irbXecnv 'o[l
av xpcD^rat t<D-
1 'tepy /cat 'A-
drjvaloiaiv e-
K? iv rfjaiv
avrrjai. irbXecr-
iv. roiai be bX-
el^ocri /j-varrj-
pioiaiv rds [o~-
Trovbas elva[i
rod TaicqXiQvo-
s /iirivbs dirb b[i-
\]o/JL7]vLas /ca[l
rbv 'Avdecrrr)[p-
i]cDi>a Kal rod 'EX-
a<prj[3o\iu)vos
LiexPL beKarrj-
s
'
iffrafievov.
av]aXw/xara . . .
veboroL .
s Xap.fiav
. . . . as to . .
. . . evov deXei
re. /XT] e
\ev rb d<^>'
. . . 0. KrfpvKas be yUi/[oue'vovs T-
ovs |x]i;o"Tas '[eK]ao"Toi'
as /cara rdfSje" ae
. TrXijdos evd\y~\veo-8a[i (Jtvpia<r-
l Spa\]fxrjai. p.lv^v b' eT[Vai tois
odai [J.T]]puKU)v [Kal] Ei}[(io\in.8ci)v
t]o0 5e \epov apyvpi[ov to (tev K Ttov
0]77cr[civpa)v yv6u]ev[ov Tap.iii-
cjcr^at [ev 7TpiP]6Xw[i Tta voto-
Q]ev rod rrjs ' Xd-qvaia^s dpx.aov v-
i](b ep. TrbXer t[o] 5e dp[)(CUOV toi-
s 'iepo7roto[i(ri] to[iv 0<hv fc-
u] irbXei raLiievea6[ai
. .] 5 . . . . xev ^ r<2 [icpw
.]
ft
. . . ev rov\s 6]p0[avovs
.] rovs bpcpavovs . 1
\i\varas eKaarov 11
tou]s fujaras rovs 'EXe[v<rivt (ivo-
\i4]vovs ev rrj avXrj
[
tov
ijfpou, rovs be ev darec [p.vouvov-
s]
ev rep HX[i]vaLviu}. [UpOTrototls
r]bv iirl r<3 [3iolic3 iepta Kal t[ovs
t]o(i)j' deolv Kal rbv lepea ro[lv 0Otv
(xio-06v [Pe'Xiov irapd
\]av(3aveiv ^Kaarov rovroj[v tjjjllw-
tov (i]uo*[tou CK^aarov v . . . .
The document appears to be a decree of the People regulating details
connected with the celebration of the Eleusinian Mystery-festival, and in
particular the Mystery-truce, its duration and sanctity, the custody of money
accruing from fines etc., and the payments to be made to priestly officers. It is
evident that a decree like this was not necessary every year; all that had to be
done for the Mystery-truce (Muo-T^ptarrtoes airovbai Poll. 1 36) was to send out
heralds to proclaim it to the neighbouring states.
There is little beyond the forms of the letters to indicate the date. The
combined use of
A, B, P, $, CD
makes improbable a later date than about
450 b.c. and it may well be several years earlier. See the table Part I p.
106
7.
Side A seems to deal with offences against the Holy Truce and consequent
penalties. If D.'s restoration of the last lines may be accepted, any city which
in case of dispute declines arbitration is excluded from participation in the
2]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 5
festival. The first words of side B continue the subject of fines or penalties
;
the remainder (8
47)
specifies to whom the truce both at the Greater and at
the Lesser Mysteries shall apply.
A. 33
HPAXI5
:
the
15
occupying the space of one letter. Lines A 30

33 are restored by Ziehen I.e.


B.
4
8. aKovena : sc. ftXafir).
This was a common maxim of Athenian law.
Cf. Dem. Meid. 527 : dV \ikv eK<hv (3Xa\{/r), dtTrXodv av
5'
clkuv, airXovv to (3\&l3os
KeXevovaiv (sc. oi vo/jlol) eKrlveiv. On d/cotfcria and the unaspirated resolved form
aixwv 25 34 see Meisterhans Gr. p. 57 and 66, and the remarks in Part I
p. 104 sq., on the fluctuation in the use of the splritus asper during the latter
half of the fifth century B.C.
8 sqq. specify the persons for whom the truce secures safe-conduct. In
1315 dXXotatv tCjv irovTrcwv (for the v cf. C 45 Xavfiavetv) complies with the
conditions of space and fits the extant letters. B.'s dov\ot<xtv tCov 'Adrjvaioov
is a letter too long, even if, which is doubtful, the diphthongal ov could be
written
O-
For the sense of 7ro/x7re?s 'participants in a procession
'
cf. 42 14
and Thuc. vi 58. Usener (apud Ziehen I.e.
)
reads /ecu
[x\pV/
xa
]
<7L1/ t&{v
)
[6|0]i'[e]iwj'. Note two grades of the initiated :
(1)
nivarat those who after the
preliminary attendance at the Lesser Mysteries in Anthesterion (February)
had been admitted to the first stage of initiation at the Greater in Boedromion
(September) ; these became
(2)
{ttotttcu
'
beholders' only after a further interval
of at least a year. See Dar. and S., art. Eleusinia, G. and J. 274 sqq. On the
fluctuation between -ots and -otat in the oldest prose inscriptions see Meisterhans
Gr. 98. With the exception of
'
Adr)va'tot<jt in accounts of eVio-rdTcu CIA i 301,
a, 7 (434 b.c.) and oaotcrtv in a deme-decree CIA n 570, 34 (c. 403 B.C.), -otat
appears not to be found after 444 b.c
17 sqq. apxetv 5i kt\. For the formula cf. Thuc. iv 118. 9, v 19. 1, Decree
ap. Andoc. de Myst. 96, Dem. c. Tim. 713 and in inscriptions, e.g. Ko i 291 3:
(Elis) apxoi di kcl rot
(
= r68e, sc. Zeros). The truce begins with
'
the day of full
moon in Metageitnion and (continues) over Boedromion up to etc' The full
moon preceding the festival was fixed as a signal to foreigners that they might
journey in safety to Athens for the Mysteries (Mommsen Heart,
pp.
223 sq.).
The full moon,
8t,xoix.Tivia, would be the 14th or 15th according as the month
was a
'
hollow
'
or a
'
full ' month (Miiller Hdb. i 726). Cf. Hesych. dtxofiyvia'
rb ijfii(rv tov fx-qvbs [tjtol] rrjs aeXrjvrjs, ore TrXrjpoo-eXrjvds 4<TTi.
25. Hvauo\pLU)vos. Meisterhans Gr.
p. 9 cites 22 instances of this form
against one (Ilotavexf/iwva) of the form with e from a late inscription, CIA in
1197, col. ii 17 (238244 a.d.); add ILvavexpi&vos CIA in 77, 9 (not later than
Hadrian).
28 sqq. The local limits of the truce are extended. It is to hold good in
the various cities which join the festival. D. refers ol 1. 30 to an antecedent
'
inhabitants
'
implied in iroXeis. H. explains
'
(for those) who etc'
36 sqq. The duration of the truce for the Lesser Mysteries is specified.
dXdfafft was recovered from the stone by H. and independently conjectured by K.
Meisterhans Gr.
p. 67 quotes three more instances of the form from Old Attic.
This appears to be the only place in which the name rd oXet^u /xvar^pia is given
to rd fiiKpa fx. (Plut. Demetr.
26) or rd iv"Aypats or"Aypas.
Side C. Lines 22 sqq. are given according to the text which K., with the
B. M. edition before him, ventures upon
"
si divinationum lusibus detur venia."
6 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[2
yevbp.evov 1. 29 and roiv deoiv 1. 33 are due to D. Ziehen is responsible for
1

3
and 44-46.
1 sqq. The words \av[/3a]veiv, 6(3o\6v, [av]a\wfxa.Ta, 8pax[/J. . show that
these lines contained directions for payments of various kinds. On the functions
of the iepo(pdvT7]s see G. and J. 275.
11. toIv deoiv. i.e. Demeter and Kore. So far as the evidence of inscriptions
goes, the forms -a, -aiv of the feminine dual were altogether foreign to the
article both in Old and Later Attic: see Meisterhans Gr. p. 50.
13. The
T
is written as a correction over a
A-
22 sqq.: apparently provisions for initiation into the mysteries, an office
which was the privilege (/xveiv
5'
elvai 1. 26) of the K-rjpvKes and the Evp.o\Trl8cu.
From the family of the K'qpvnes came the iepoKrjpv^ and the dadovxos. D. refers
to Andoc. de Myst. 132, where the speaker, evidently belonging to this family,
states that several persons had been initiated by him.
28 sqq. These lines seem to contain directions for the administration of the
sums of money, distinguished as to yevop.evov or interest and to dpxaiov or
principal.
30. By the
'
ancient temple of Athene in the Acropolis ' is probably
meant the old Erechtheum : see Frazer J. H. S. xni 153 sqq. The building in the
precinct to the S. of it was probably a temporary treasury erected before the
present Parthenon or Erechtheum existed. Dorpfeld (Mitth. xn p. 39) would
restore oTriadev, not vorodev, and understand the
'
ancient temple ' to be the one
recently found S. of the Erechtheum ; he then quotes the passage to prove the
existence of its opisthodomus as a treasury at this time. But the mention of
the peribolus seems to exclude such an interpretation. Cf. Frazer I.e.
31. For 7r6Xts = d/cp67roXts cf. the express statement of Thucydides n 15.
The usage is common in inscriptions.
33. On iepoiroioi see G. and J. 276. They helped to maintain the police
at the Mysteries under the supreme control of the Archon Basileus. For other
kinds of iepoiroioi see Index s.v. and Gilb. 262 sq.
37. tovs opepavovs. In the mutilated state of the text the reference to
orphans is wholly unexplained.
3942. These lines refer to some ceremony, probably of preliminary
purification, which the mystae at Eieusis are to perform in the
'
court of the
temple,' and those in the city in the Eleusinium. This last Eleusinium is
doubtless the one below the Acropolis, of which the exact position is still
uncertain. The expression ij av\r]...Tov iepov is peculiar, and it is possible that
the words are not to be immediately connected ; we might restore e'/cros (or
ivTos) tov iepov. For the regulation cf. Lysias c. Andoc. 4: inrep rjfxwv ko.1
dvaidaei ko.l euxds eiercu /card tcl iraTpia rd p.ev ev ry evdade 'EXeucrt^iy rd 5e ev
Tip 'EXevaivi iepi2.
43. This is an enactment as to the payment or perquisites of certain
priests. The iepevs 6 iiri ry /Sw/x.y, who is frequently mentioned in inscriptions
of the Roman period, e.g. CIA in 10, 1031 sqq., 1278, 1279, D. 411, probably also
belonged to the family of the K-qpvKes, as D. has shown. The iepevs toIv deoiv
(tQv must be a mistake of the engraver; cf. 1. 11) may have been the priest of
the Eleusinium at Athens : the title is too vague for an Eleusinian priest.
3]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 7
3. Three fragments of a base of Pentelic marble (evidently forming the
support for an altar-table), broken on the right and on the left; found at
Eleusis. On the upper surface are two round holes with a square hole between.
H. 0.23 m.; L. 0.88 m.; Th. 0.49 m. Pittakis 'E0.
'Apx- 3798; Lenormant
Rech. arch, a Eleusis, 1862, p. 70, no. 25 ; A. Mommsen Heort. p. 257
;
CIA i 5; Eo. i 65. Cf. Michaelis A. Z. 1867, p. 9; H. von Prott Mitth. xxiv
(1899)
241 sqq., who in his restorations has utilised the two fragments unknown
to the previous editors.
AfcAAE
(=e[ei\
97). H
(=/>) OlkUM/V.O {= 0,
ov, co)
"ESofjcJv
[
:
tt)
PovXfj]

zeal [r]co Stj/jlo)

o|V]e Tlapai(3aTr)[$ eypajxyua-reve
irpoT']A,em
j
[0ueiv] rov9 tepcnroiovs
\
EXevatvicov

teal
[

. . . .

k\v
t<S 'EX]eucrt[via)
I T]fj \ Qppbf)
'Evaycovlay

Xdptcnv alya
[

]ov
Hoo-eihjwvl
:
[Kpiojy
;
'Apre/xlSc alya TeXecriSpofMq) \ Tp[nrro\4\i.<a
[
olv ?
5
H\ovT<a\vi
:
A[. .
.]% : eotz^
j rpcrroav
]
ftoapyov \ ev
rfj

eop[Tfj.
This is a decree regulating Eleusinian ritual. In Part I p. 101 it has been
referred to a date somewhere near 475 B.C.; the forms of a and v are old and
the writing is not aroixv^ov, a method which seems to have been firmly
established in the period 468461 b.c. Of the deities named, all but those in
1. 5 were deol TrpoTnj\at.oi, i.e. were deities of the second rank in the Mystery-
rites and had no place in the sanctuary proper. Cf. Rubensohn Mysterienheilig-
thiimer in Eleusis p. 33. For Triptolemus and Artemis this is expressly
attested by Pausanias (1 38. 6). For the whole list of Gods cf. Ar. Thesm. 295.
2. Prott joins irpoTeXeia with 'EXevcxivlw. For the use of the word he quotes
Bekker Anecd. p. 293, 5: 7rpore\etd eari ra du/xara ra irpb (ot)ov drjTrore irpa-yiAaros
dvbfxeva. Aeschylus Ag. 226 calls Iphigeneia 7rporeXeta vaCov.
3. On the epithet evaywvtos applied to Hermes see Pind. PytJi. 11. 10 Schol.
For the gap at the end of the line Prott suggests 'iTrirodowvTi Kpi\6v. Hippothoon
had a heroon outside the precinct at Eleusis in front of the temple of Trip-
tolemus (Paus. 1 38.
4)
;
5. Prott proposes AoXLxy as an epithet of Pluto. There was a hero AoXlxos
at Eleusis, Homer Hymn. Dem. 155. GeoIV : Demeter and Persephone. See
2 11.
rpLTToau fibapxov.
Cf. 9 37, where the form is TpLrrota (so probably in CIA
i 534). The form with -ot- may explain the corruption by the lexicographers
into TpiTTva in times when ot and v were confused in pronunciation. The
grammarian Theognostus (Anecd. Ox. n p. 103) writes the word proparoxytone
;
so also Foucart B. C. H. iv 248. The Tpirroia
fioapxos
was an offering of three
victims of which the chief was an ox. Cf. the expression eKard/m^T) ^ovirp^pos
(Plut. 2. 668 c), i.e. an offering of 100 (or 99?) sheep and one ox. On the
possibly allied rptKreva nrjiia see Index s.v.
8 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[4
4. A block of marble inscribed on two sides; found on the north side of
the Acropolis. Cavvadias 'E<p.
'Apx- 1897, p. 177 (with photograph); S. Keinach
C. R. Ac. Inscr.,
1897, p. 549 sqq. ; D. 911. Cf. Haussoullier Rev. Ph. 1898,
p. 61; v. Wilamowitz D. L. 1898 n. 10
p. 383 sqq.; A. Furtwangler Sb. Ah.
Miinch., philos.-philol. CI. 1898 i p. 380 sqq. ; E. Meyer Forschungen n p.
136.
ABAAE (=e, ei,7f). H(=/) OIKUMN [X*
=
]
O (= o, ov, to)
rP*TY4>X [<P$
=
f]
Side A is trroixydou, but side B only partly so. On side B <r is
^
and in the
last four lines
[~
=7, H
=
??, A
= A-
Side A.
/co? elire [ttj
'AGTrvcua tt} NiK-pJt
'
tepeiav *r) a[v da-
-ttj l doTTtov ij] e 'A07)vaia)v ' aird\yT-
a)v KaTao-rrjo-Jat al to
'
tepov Ovpcvaa-
5
/caOoTt av KaWLKparrjs ^vyypdyjr-
tj, air [jug dco crat Be roi/? TrcoXrjTas enrl t-
?}? Aeo^rtOo? Trpvraveias,
(fcepeiv
Be r-
7)V
'
tepeiav irevrrjKovra Bpa^fia^ /cau
ra crKeXrj ical ra Bep/xara (pepetv rcov Brj-
10 /jLoctlcov, vecov Be olfcoBofirjcraL kclOotl
av KaX\,iKpdr7)<; vyypdyjry /cal /3co-
fxov \l6lvov.
f
Eo-rtato? elire' rpels dvBpas ' eXecrO-
ac ey /3oiA?)?, tovtovs Be /xera KaXXt/cpa-
15 tov]? ^uyypd-^ravTas e7r[i8icu ttj-
1 pov\]^ KCLUOTl airo/x [i<r8a><rai avrolcr-
iv 86jt, tovs [8 irpv-rdvcis h
tov Stjji-
ov ^ve-yKtiv
(?)
Side B.
"EBoj^ev
rfj fiovXf}
kcu tc5 Brj-
ixw. Alyrji? 7rpvrdpev6' Neo/c-
XeiBrjs eypap,pareve'
(
AyvoBr)-
lAos eireardrei. KaAAia? eare' T-
5
fj
' cepela tt}?
'
Adrjvdas T77? Nt-
/a;? irevTrjKOVTa Bpa-%/jLa<; r[d-
4]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 9
9 <y6<ypafx[p\evas ev
rfj
arijX[r\
diroStSovat toi/9 K(o\a/cp[iTas
oi] av KCdkatcpercoat rod
[.
. . .
10 . .]i>09 /jltjvos,
rfj
lep\_d<x. ttjs 'A-
0T]va]/a9 T779 Nt/C7;[s
These two decrees relate to the temple and priestess of Athena Nike, whose
name, occurring on side B, makes the restoration certain on side A. The
earlier decree on side A orders that a priestess of Athena Nike shall be
appointed, that the iepdv shall have a door put to it, and that an altar and a
temple shall be erected. The form ^ on side A indicates a date not later than
446 b.c. while the type of the remaining letters, e.g.
Y
and
|\J>
precludes an
earlier date than 460 b.c. Cf. introd. note on 2. Thus we learn
(1)
that the
hieron existed already, though apparently it was not in good condition,
(2)
that
this famous little temple (rebuilt from the original fragments in 1835) was
designed by the architect Callicrates, who was associated with Ictinus in the
construction of the Parthenon, and also built the Long Walls (cf.
6), (3)
that
the temple was one of the earlier works of the administration of Pericles, being
earlier than the Parthenon, and considerably earlier than the Propylaea; for
the decree is earlier than 6, which is dated for good reasons about the time
when work was beginning upon the Parthenon (447 b.c). Furtw. would place
the actual building of the Nike temple about 425 b.c. after the death of Pericles.
The decree on side B arranges for the payment of the sum assigned to the
priestess on side A
;
it is evidently some years later, as is shown by the
X!",
and
the symbols in the last five lines for
7,
rj, X, w seem to imply a date later than
404 b.c The change occurs after N/c?7s 1. 6, where a letter has been erased
;
and Cavvadias suggests that a decree passed soon after that on side A was
transcribed on to side B after 404 by two different hands.
Side A. 3. chtttj it- olgtQv. The restoration is taken from D. 601, 7
(
Halicarnassus).
4. to lepbv dvpQaai. This may imply either that the entry of the hieron
had never properly been closed, or that the door needed repair; cf. CIA 11 489 b
Add.
p. 420, 16 (putting door to Asclepieum, dupQaai to o\px<xiov Kpbirxfhov). The
hieron was clearly the bastion projecting on the S. of the entrance of the
Acropolis, and surrounded on three sides by the Cimonian wall, on the fourth by
the Pelasgic wall of the precinct of Brauronian Artemis; the entrance must
have been, as now, on the N. side. There are traces of an earlier projection of
the Pelasgic wall on the same site, which may also have been sacred to Athena
Nike.
5
6. ^vyypdxf/ac is the verb corresponding to vyypcupri, the technical term
for the specification in a building contract ; cf 6 6, 19 16, 215, CIA 11 1054, 1.
airo/Mo- 6uxxcu: the regular word for letting out a contract; cf. 6 6, 21 6; the
TrwXrjTal were officers whose business it was to arrange such contracts for the
state.
7, 10. For the perquisites of the priestess cf. D. 601 {Halicarnassus)
; the
same inscription
(1. 22)
gives us the interpretation of t&v 5r)ixo<riui> = TQv dvo/xevcov
d-nnoffiq. ; cf. also D. 627 {Miletus), 632 {Athens), etc.
13. Three commissioners are appointed by a supplementary decree ; the
10 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[4
construction of the temple is considered too great a matter to leave to the
architect and the TruXrjTai.
15. Wilam. compares Arist. 'A0. iroX. 49 : tKpivev 8i irore kolI to. irapaSei-
yfj.a.Ta Kal rbv iriirXov rj ftovXrj.
16. The restoration given fills the space. The Kadon air ofxiad'wcrat av
avToh 86^7} of Caw. assigns an improbable position to the av, unless the
restored ol 8i p.77 <pQ>a[tv av of CIA iv 2, 135 e, A i 6 affords sufficient support.
For avToiatv see 2 B 8 sqq. note.
Side B. 4. This is probably the same Callias who proposed the decree
no. lO, in 435 b.c. ForWd-rjvdas 1. 5 see Index s.v.
8. KcoXaKpercu. These officials appear to have had the control of the public
treasury in the fifth century ; ol KCoXaKperai. ot av /cwXa/cperwcrt means the
/coAa/cperat for the time being; cf. CIA I 51 tovs re o~[tpartlyov\s ot av eKaarore
dlpxovres Tvyxdvcocriv] /cat rot's apx[ovT~\as tovs 'Adrjvalcov ol av K[d<JT0T
apxwcri. The verb KooXaKperw is found also in CIG 3660 (Cyzicus). The ten
dwodeKrat appointed by Clisthenes gradually ousted the /cwXa/cperat from their
functions, and in the fourth century entirely superseded them. Cf. Arist. 'A0.
7roX. 7 with 48.
10. Uo<rec8Lui]vos : the payment would naturally be made at the end of a
semester: D.
5.
"
Athenis olim prope Erechtheum. Marmor, quum traiiscriberetur, fuit
maxime oblitteratum ; hoclie ne superesse quidem videtur. Nos habemus ex schedis
vetustis Koehlerianis, hand dubie Fauvelii" Boeckh CIG 73
b
(Add.
p. 890 sqq.).
CIA i 9; D. 8; H. 23. Cf. Busolt Gr. Gesch. in 1 p. 225 sqq.
ABA
(and [")
AE (= e, ec,
v) [\ H (= h)
OIKAMN [X*
=
fl
O
(=o,ov,co)
P
(and
n) RSTY
[>] [<M
=
f]
[The forms
[~
and
f~|
are obviously errors of Fauvel's copy, which has also
H
for
I
in 11. 10, 18.]
eweo-rarec, A[. . .] t [. . ctirc
-
'Epv0pai]ofj d7rd[7]ei|>] cr to' [is] Tlavadrjvaia to. p[e7]d[Xa d][ia fit]
\clttov]os 7) TpiQv p.vdv Kal v[i]p\_eC]v ~E,pvdpaiu)v [t]o[i]s Trapovo-[c Ttov
Kpewv T]oi)<t>s 'te[p]o7ro[t]ot)s [8paxfJ-v1v
['eK]d[ffT]u)' [i]dv 8[e] d[7r]d,77?[rai |iV
5 [py]
ata [8]e r[pt]tD[i/] fiv[Q]v /ca[r]d rd<s> el[pr)/j.]ev <r)> a, 7rpi[aa]6aL [rovs'ie-
poiroiovjs '[iep]e[l]a, tov [8e hr\]p.ov [r]cD[v] ['Ep]i>[0pa]tw[i/] 6[<pctXet]i> a[v]a[y]pa[(pe<rQa.i
twv 8c K]pzCov oa oao~ . . . \ov ru[i f3]ovXofj.evcf.
'T&pudpaL&v [a]ir-
6 K]vdfxcov (3ov\ri[v] [el]va[i] e[t]/co[cr]t Kai [']eKaTov tiv[8]pas' tov Si [kv<x-
p.e]v[6]iv[T]a [8oKLiJ.d'<;eC\v iv [t]t? [(3]ovXrj Kal [pl]t] [6e/xtT]6v elvat /3ouXe[viv p/r|86
lO ?va] 6\([tf]ov rj Tp[t]dKovTa e[rrj y]eyovoTa' Sloo^iv
8'
elvai [Kara
t]u>[v i\X]e[y]xo[^C\ivu{y]. ftovXeveiv 5e fir] ivr[o]s TeTrdpuv i<L>Tu>v. [d-
Tro]KvafAevo-a[i] [8]e /cat /caTao-jV^crat [vv]v p.iv [tt]]v fiovXrjv [t]ovs [eVt-
cr/c67r]ous /cat tov [<p]p[ovp]apxoi', to 8e Xotirbv Trj[v~\ fiovXrjv
Kal tov [<ppovp~
apxov [TtDJp, (3ov\ev<r6v[TUJv e/c]a[o-r]ov ['E]p[i^p]dcrt Trfpiji' [ejcrtei'at [Is fr\v
15
dp\]7ji' opvvvai [fiev A]ta /ca[l] 'AttoXXw /cat A7?u?7[Tpa, i~\irapCo[p.z\vo\y k%-
5]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 11
(ak]etav e[cfUT<3 eiriopKovvn k]cu 7rat[o~]ti> e[ai/T]ou' 6[jxvvvat] 5e \t]6v o[p-
ko]u /ca[r]d [']if[p]wv [/ca]to[yae]fw[f]* [r^]*/ 5e (3ov\r]v [ttj]v (3ov\[euovaav] ra[5-
ra [ai>
ay
]Kd[ei]u' [ia]v 8e /ultj, elvai [f]?7//,ttD<rat
[x
t
]^[
t
'
a
]
<r
[
t
]
I/
[^P
a
XK
,i
n
<rt
rj] 6 av [']o dijjmo[s] 6 ['Eipudpai^wv [avr]ov[s] /cara[j3]a[X]eti> [i//]?7[0tcr]^r[at.
-2o 6yt'[(.']va[i] <5[e Ta]5e [tt]V /3]ou\t7I'* [BJoiAetfcrw ws av [5i>]//w[p.at d/)]t<ra"7-[a Ka-
i] 5[i]/ca[t6ra]ra 'Epu#pattof tu TrXrjdei /cat
'
Adrjvaiojv /cat twi/ [-
v]pyud[)(Juw, []at ou/c [dtroo"]r77(ro
/
aat
'
AdrjvaLwv tov Tr\X\f)dovs ovde [tco-
v] ^vvjLL&xtev twv ' Adrjvaiojv ovt' avros eyih o[i']r' d[XX]a> [7r]e[t]croyu[at,
otj8'] av[T^ofJLo[\rjaco^ ovt' avros iyw o6t' dXXw[t ir]et[(ro[Jiat ovSe
c
evi'
25
ou8] Twv [0V"y6]z'[t]wi/ [Kar]a5^o,uat ou5[] '^a o#r' [ai)r]6[s 700 ovt'
aX.\to]i 7ria[o/x]a[\., twv Is] Mrjdovs [(pvy~\6[vTU>]v
,
dfeu tt^s
[y]H~
4
^
u,
?
s ttjs
>
A0T]]^atajj' /cat roO [St^uoi/ [o]u5 tow fxevovTuiv <?eXw [d']^[eu] r[^]s [7Vwjjl-
T]s t]?5s
'
Ady]vaicjv /cat [rou SJ^/xoi;
-
eav 8e r[t]s d7ro/cr[et]//??[t 'Epv-
0pat]oj erepov 'Ep[v0pcu]oi>, Te#[v]dra;. edz> [de tov~\ [d]et[0i7ta
30
Ka.Tcvy]/' <e> wcr^^t, <p~\evye"TOj [/cat]
'
A[9rjv]as /cat tt)[v~\
'
Adrjvaiwv w/xax[t8a,
Kal T]d
xPW
aTa Sr]/j.6o-[ia ^<tt]w 'JZpvdpaiuv. eav 8[4 r]t? [dX]u)[i irpo-
8i8]oi)s ro[t]s rupdi'j'ots rr;^t [ttoXij' ttjv] 'Epi/#pat[w]i> /cat . . os . .
, Tedvaroo [/cat] 7rat5e[s ]ot e e[/c]e[t]i>[of], ea\y p.~\rj 0. .
. . . .ov[s]
^x
o
[
VT^
'
OL
]
7r[ct]toes [']ot e [i]/ce[t]vou [es tov 8t}|xov
35
tov] 'Epvdpaiw[v] /cat [to]v 'Adrjvaiwv d7ro[0]ai'[^]tu[crt]j'. rd oe xpfv^uara
[
Tov 'aX-
ovto]s /cara[^]eVr[e]s a7r[a]/'T[a
'01
Tr]atoes r[6 'T^ata]); [a7roX]a[pdvTa>v
(?)
to
8 8T]fji-u]f(T^a; (?). /ca[rd] ravra /cat [edv tis 'aXw tov
8]?7[i
a]oj' tov 'Adrjvaiwv [irp-
o8]t[5oi)]s
7}
[tt|v <j>poupdv ti^v] 'EpvOpacri. t
eo tov [7"]6|[apxov(?) t]6[^]
'
Adrjvaicov ....
40 VTa oe . 01; eye[a] a7re[p tois k"nC\r)ix< t > oDcrt [r]u;!> ^i'/u.[
i
a]dxw[i'
j^a fxtveiv to \_<fip]ovp[C\ov [r]o^[6r]as 5e/ca
oveas . . . LoaaooGifxaGTOseivevKTavo
irap/x . ovTovyj- ovKadevavec 'opoiraoKiyy
aipeicrGai ti^v (3ovX-qv tt)v] /3ou\e[vovcr]a^ ai>[8p]as [']f[7rr]d e[/c] t[?}]s (pvXrjs 'eKacrTrjs .
x
45
4
>
P^P
a
]PX[
I/
]
7
,
Adr}vai<T><j}v tov OKOptv tovs i/m. . oeox
The corrupt state of this most interesting inscription is sufficiently indicated
by the type. Our only authority appears to have been a very inaccurate copy
by Fauvel. The text is that of Dittenberger, who has to some extent improved
upon the text of the CIG and CIA (Kirchhoff)
;
but the restorations must in
very many cases be accepted with great reserve.
The inscription is a decree, probably belonging to the age of Cimon (circ.
464457 B.C.), concerning the establishment of a democratic constitution for
Erythrae, which had it seems become subject to Athens. It was just about this
period that several allied states, which had been up to that time autonomous,
were reduced to the condition of vtttjkool. That the date was previous to 446 b.c.
is shown by the use of
$
(Table Pt I,
pp.
1067).
1. Kemains of the prescript. See Rem. i, p. 2.
2 sqq. Text of decree: 11.
2
7 contain instructions for contributions to be
made by the Erythraeans for the Panathenaic festival, just as we learn (Schol.
on Aristoph. Nub. 385 ev tois YiavaOrjvaioL^ iraaai at awb tlov 'AdtjvQv airouaadelaai.
irbXeis
fiovv Tvdrjaofxevov eirepurov) that the Attic colonists used to send oxen
;
11. 728 deal with the constitution of the Senate of Erythrae including
12 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[5
(11.
20
28) the oath to be sworn by the individual senators
; 11. 28 sqq. contain
the sanction ; nothing can be made out of the utterly corrupt lines 38end.
2
7. The contribution of the Erythraeans is to be worth at least three
minae ; the sacrificial priests are to distribute to each Erythraean present a
drachma of the flesh of victims. If the contribution is worth less than three
minae, the priests are to buy victims and the Erythraean demos is to be
registered as indebted for the amount spent.
7 sqq. The Erythraeans must elect their Senate in democratic fashion dirb
Kvduwv (cf. Kva/meva), airoKvafjievui). Each person so selected by lot must undergo
SoKL/uaaia
;
he must be at least thirty years of age (a regulation also of Attic
law). Unqualified persons may be prosecuted and if convicted are debarred from
acting as senators for four years.
11 sq. On the ewiaKOTroi. sent out by Athens to the subject states see
Boeckh, St.
:i
i 480 sq. Frankel (ib. n
3
note 643) holds that their office was only
temporary and that they were despatched only on special emergencies; cf. 16 7.
"EattIukoitol and cppovpapxos are mentioned together on CIA i 10 (also a decree
concerning Erythrae). The words vvv p.h ttjp (3ovXr)v are the correction of D.
(based upon the frequent substitution by Fauvel of
O
for
E
and
^
for
f\|)
for
Boeckh's and Kirchhoff's tt)v p.ev rews fiovX-qv.
The meaning of the passage is
apparently as follows : the iirio-Koirot and the <ppovpapxos are in the first instance
to select by lot and appoint the (BovXr), but in future the j3ovXr) for the time being
and the (ppovpapxos are to undertake that duty.
14, 38. 'Epvdpacn. (cf. 1. 18). This form (and -rjac) of the dative plural of
a-stems survived in Attic inscriptions down to about 420 b.c
;
see Meisterhans
Gr. p. 94.
15. For the practice of swearing an oath by three deities cf. CIA i 2 b, 12 sqq.
and for the general formula of the oath cf. 7 21 sqq.
17. /card hpGiv Kcu.op.tvuv. Cf. the Andaman mystery-inscription DI. 4689.
2, where however the genitive absolute is used without the preposition.
20. apiavTo.. Meisterhans Gr. p. 68 notes that before k,
x,
t, 6 a sigma,
medial or final, may be found doubled in the most diverse periods.
21, 22. w/xdxw. On the frequent non-assimilation of v in composition
(in the words e*i>, avv, wav, itoXlv, eKarov) in early times, see Meisterhans Gr.
p. 87 sq.
24. ovde kvl : 25 oudt eva. These resolved forms are common in the sixth
and fifth centuries B.C.; cf. 7 12 and fiyd' 'evt CIA I 77, 6 (before 403 b.c)
; 30 11
(394387 b.c).
25. Karade^ofxaL'. i.e. receive back from exile. See reff. in L. and S.
27, 28. tov drjfiov: i.e. of the Erythraeans.
29, 33. redvaTU}. For a collection of examples in Attic and other dialects
of perfect and pluperfect forms of dvriaKw without k and tense-vowel, see Kuhner
Gr. i
2, p. 443.
32. rots Tvpavvois. By this expression may be meant the oligarchs alluded
to by Aristotle, Pol. vill (v) 6. 5 (kclI iv 'Epvdpals de iirl rijs r(bv Baai\{.5Qv
6\(."yapxi-as iv ro?s dp%cuois xpo^cus, Kaiirep /caAcDs eTLp.iKofiivwv tCjv ev rrj
7ro\treig, ojjlojs 5td to U7r' oXLywv apxecrdai. ayav
a
ktwv 6 8tj/j.os /nere^aXe ttjv tto\l-
Teiav) and others. See Grote H. G. Pt n ch. xiii.
6]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 13
6. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken above, found in the Acropolis.
Foucart B. C.H. xiv
(1890) p. 177
;
Lolling Ae\r. d
Px
. 1889, p.
254
;
CIA iv 1,
26 a p. 140. Cf. K. Wernicke Harm, xxvi p. 51 sqq. ; Wilamowitz Aristoteles
u. Athen n p.
202 note 5 ;
D. 16.
A.. AE
(=e, 6L
)V)
. H(=/0 OlkUM^ [X
=
f]
O (= o, ov,
g>)
ire
r\rjv iroXtv . \_cl\o ....
OLKo[S]o/jL7]aaL
I
o\ir<a-
9 av \
hpairerT]^ par] e[<r-
5
C\r) : firjSe \o)7roBvr[r]-
s]
;
ravra 8e %vyyp[a-
-v/ra[i] fjuev Ka\\L/<p[d-
t]t/
\
f
07ra)9 aptara /c[a-
l evreXearaTa ovc[e-
io vacrai [drr^opiLaOcoaa-
i] Se rov[s] 7rcoX?;T[d]?
c
o-
a)? av
:
evros e^r]-
vl\ovtcl rjfjbep6)v eiTLcnc-
i\vda6rj.

(fivXafcas 8e
15 &\vcll rpels fiev Tofo-
r]a9 Ik tt}?
<frv\f)s
rfjs
T^pvTavevovar}^.
This is the concluding part of a decree ordering the erection of a building in
connexion with the police-protection of the Acropolis. This building may have
been either
(1)
a wall barring access to the Acropolis or
(2)
a temporary or
permanent guard-house at its entrance. D. observes that the word i-maKevd^eLVy
1. 13, indicates a repair (perhaps of the wall) rather than a new structure, and
the time-limit of 60 days, 1. 12, precludes the idea of a large undertaking. For
the architect Callicrates see 4. The character of the letters
/VV
beside
^
(see Pt I, p. 107) well accords with a date not far from 447 B.C., in which year
the building of the Parthenon was begun. Probably the police precautions of
our decree were designed to protect from depredations the building material and
other stores, not enclosed in special treasure-houses, accumulated for the
construction of the Parthenon; and the exclusion of SpaireraL also from their
natural asylum in the temple-precincts may have been a (perhaps temporary)
measure rendered necessary by the difficulty of distinguishing them, especially
at night, from XunroStrrcu.
2. F. [iv ry iaodu) ttj is t~]t}v ttoKlv [(pp]o[vpiov] olKodo/jirjaai. L. [nad* ciTTa^]
oiKodo/uLrjaat.
6. vyyp&ij/cu: see 4 5.
14 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[6
14 sqq. The fact that the ro^oraL are to be taken from the prytanising tribe
shows clearly that they could not have been Zicvdai; in fact, as Wilamowitz I.e.
points out, in the fifth century the To^brat might be taken from the roll of Attic
citizens. Cf. Andoc. in 7, CIA i 54, 17 : [/card] <pv\as Toxicrorai 5e/c]a; 79, 2 rovs
ro^oras toijs re d(rr[t/coi)s /cat rots ....]). For the /xh not answered by a 5e in
1. 15 see Index.
7. Found in the Acropolis in 1876; a companion stele was originally
attached on the left. Kumanudes "ftpa 19 June 1876; 'A0. v p. 76 sqq. ; Foucart
Rev. Arch. 1877, i p. 242; Koehler Mitth. i 184 sqq.; CIA iv 1, 27a; H. 28;
D. 17. Cf. Wilamowitz Phil. Unters. i 87 sqq.
ABAAE (= e, L, rj)
ZEH
(=h, once 1. 11
= r/)
OIKU
(slightly
leaning)
MN [X
=
f]
O (= O, ov, a)
PPPTY*X [<PZ=^]
1tolxt)56i>. The form
P
in Attic seems to be confined to inscriptions
belonging to about the middle of the 5th century. See Table in Pt I, p. 106
;
and for the early encroachment of Ionic forms, as
H^^,
see ib. p. 103.
'
Ej8o^6p
rfj [fijovXfj
Kal too hrjjxcp. 'Ai/rto^t? e[irpvT-
dveve, Apa/c[ov]Tt5^? iireardreL. AioyvrjTOS elire'
Kara ra8e [r]6v op/cov Ofjuocrai \\6rjvaiayv t-
r)v /3ov\r)i> Kal tovs SiKacrrci^' ovk ie\(o Xa-
5
\fci8eas %
XaX/c/So? ovSe rrjv ttoXlv dvd-
crrarov ttotjcfco, ovBe 18lcot7)v ovheva drc/Jb-
ooaco ov8e
(f>vyfj
^ficcoaa) ovSe ^vWTJyjro-
ixat ovhe diroKTeva) ov8e %pr)p,ara dtyaiprj-
aofiai dfc[p]iTov ovBevbs dvev rov StJ/ulov tov A0-
io 7]vcll(ov, ovS* iirf^rrj^LOi Kara dirpoaKXyrov
ovre Kara rod kolvov ovre /card ISlwtov ovB-
e evos, Kal Trpeafteiav eXOovaav Trpocrd^co
7Tj0O9 /3ovXtjv Kal hrjfjiov heKa rj/juepcov, orav
7rpvTavevco, Kara to hvvarov ravra Se i/nir-
15 i\Swo~(o XaXKiSevaiv ireiOopbevoi^ tQ>
Stf-
p.]a> rw 'Adrjvaleov. 'opKcocrao [8]e irpeo-fieia-
v] iXdovaav e^ XaA,/aSo? fxera
rcov
(
opxa)T00-
v
'
AOrjvaiovs Kal diroypd-yfraL toi><? 6p,6aavr-
a<$.
f
07r&)9
3'
dv [6]fi6o-(oo-Lv diravres, iirifJieX-
20 6ct0(dv 01 cn[p]aTr)>yoL
Kara rdSe Xa.A./aSea? ofiocrar ovk d7ro\cr]rt]-
7]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 15
GOfxai dirb tov []t]/jlov tov AOrjvalbiv ovre Te[x]^-
y
ovre piiyavf] ovhepaa ovh' eirec ovhe
epycp, ovhe rw a^icrrafxevw iretcropat, k-
25 al idv d(f)iary T9, Karepco WOr/valoicrL, k-
al tov <popov 'vTToreXco WOrjvaloLcriv ov
av ireiOco
"
AOiivaiovs, Kal ^v\x\xayo<s eao/na-
L 'ot09 CIV hvVWpai apLCFTOS KCU hiKatOT-
<zto9, teal ro5 hrjpbcp rep
'
AOnqvaicav /3o7]$ija-
30 ft) tcai dpLvvdo, iav T9 dhiKrj rov hrjpuov rov
'AOrjvaiayv, Kal ireio-ofjuau tco hr)pb(p tg5 'A#-
rjvaicov. bpbaat he XaXxihecov tovs 't]I3covt-
a9
'
airavras. b<> o' a/n p,r/ ofioarj, cltl/jlov avr-
bv elvai /cal ra
XPVf
jL
{.
a
1
Ta uvtov hiipuoaia, teal
35
TOV A/09 TOV 'OXvpUITLOV TO TTL&KaTOV C6pO~
v] ecrTCt) twv Xpi]p,aT(Dv. 'opicaoaai he irpea/3e-
iav 'AOrjvaLcov iXOovaav 69 Xa\/aS[a] peTa t-
cov 'opKcoTojv tcov iv Xa\/acH Kal diroypdcf)-
crai roi/9 opLocravTas XaXKihecov.
40 'AvtikXt/s elire' dyaOf) Tvyr) tj}
'
AQrivai-
oyv, iroeladat tov optcov ^AOrivatovs Kal Xa\-
Kiheas KaOdirep QpeTpcevo-c iyjr7](f)Lo~aT-
o
r
o hijpos 'o AOrjvalcov.
?
07ra)9 S' av Ta^iaT-
a yiyvrjTac, iirupieXoaOwv
'
ol aTpaTrjyoL
45
oiTives he eI;op/cGoo-ovcrL dfyucopuevot i-
9 XaXxiha eXeadac tov hrjpov irevTe avhp-
a9 avTLtca pdXa. irepi he toov 'opbrjpwv dirofc-
pivacrQai ^LaXKihevcruv, otl vvpu fiev ^AOrj-
vaiois ho/cel iav Kara tcl e^jriic^LapLeva,
50
or[a]i> he hotcr), fiovXevcrupLevoi irorjaovat ttj-
v htaXXa[y]r]v icaOoTi av hoKrj eiriT7][s]e(,o-
v elvai
'
AOrjvaiois real XaXtcchevcrLv. tovs o-
e %evovs tou9 ev XaX/aSt, 'oaoi oltcovvTes
pur) TeXovcrcv
'
A6i]va^e teal el tco hehoTac
55
virb tov hrjpbov tov
'
A6rjvai(ov aTeXeta, tol'9 he a-
\Xou? TeXelv e'9 XaXtciha KaOairep 01 aXXo-
l aXicihe7)<;. to he yjnjipca^a Tohe Kal tov
opKOv avaypatyai Adjjvrjcrt fiev tov ypa-
ppb[a\rea t^9 /3ovXtj<; iaTqXr) XiOivri Kal k-
60 aTaOelvat 9 iroXtv TeXeai to?9 Xa\/aSe-
16 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[7
0)1 w iv 8e XaX/aSt iv roj
'
tepoj rod Ato9 rou
OXv/jlttlov
'
t) /3ovXr) XaXfuSecov dvaypd-^raa-
a KaraOerw. ravra piiv yjr7](pLaaa0ac XaAvc-
bhevGLV.

rd Be
'
tepd rd e/c rwv ^pijapi-
65
wv vrrep Ei)/3o/a9 Ovaav co? rd^iara /jl6t[&
iepo/cXeovs rpeis avSpas '01)9
a^ eXrjrai
7]
j3ov\r)
a<f)o)v avrcov.
'
07r&>9
8'
dv rd^iara rvO-
fj,
01 crrparrjyol crvveTU/ueXocrOwv ical r-
apyvptov e? ravra [Tr\ape)^6vrcov.
70
Wp^eorparo[s] elrre' r[d]
fiev aXXa KaOdrrep ['A-
vri/cXr)$' ras [8]e evOvvas XaXfci&v[<r]t tcar-
a G(f)oi)v avrcuv eivac iv XaX/aSt KaOdrrep A6-
7]VY]glv
'
AOtjvcllois, rrXr/v
(fivyfjs /cat Oavdr-
ov teal drip, las. rrepl 8e rovrcov e(f)eaiv elva-
75
1
'
'Adrjva^e 9 t^ rjXiaiav rrjv rwv deapLod-
erwv Kara ro y}rij(f)icrpLa rod 8r)p,ov. irept Be
<f>v-
Xafcrjs Ei)/3ota-9 rovs crrparrjyovs irnpbeXea-
6ac 'cos dv hvvcovrai aptara, oircos dv eyr\-
1 'cos fleXncrra W6r)valocs.
p
k o 9.
"0
This decree has a special interest as describing the conditions imposed by
Athens on her tributaries in the most powerful period of her empire. It
gives the terms of a convention between the Athenians and the Chalcidians of
Euboea shortly after Pericles had reduced the island, of which Chalcis was the
key, to submission 446/5 b.c. Kumanudes ('A0. I.e.) notes that it is not part of
the 6/xo\oyia mentioned Thuc. 1 114. 2 but gives rather certain modifications of
that bfxoXoyia conceded by the Athenians upon the petition of the Chalcidians.
1, 2. The absence of the name of the ypa/mfiare^s is remarkable at the period
to which this inscription belongs. See Rem. i, p. 2. Possibly it was inscribed
on a lost pediment or other head-piece.
339. Kesolution of Diognetus formulating the oaths to be sworn by the
contracting parties. 4069. Kesolution of Anticles concerning time of taking
the oath, appointment of extra commissioners, hostages, exemptions from
06pos, inscription of decree, and sacrifices. 7079. Amendment or supplement
to the resolutions of Anticles, carried by Archestratus. The amendment provides
for the accountability of the Chalcidian magistrates to their own courts, with
certain exceptions, in which there must be an appeal to Athens. The arpaT^yoi
are responsible for the safety of Euboea with due regard to Athenian interests.
Note that the two resolutions and the amendment must have been passed in
one day by both Boule and Ecclesia; for only one i-maraTr)? is mentioned, i.e.
the wprjTavis who presided for 24 hours over both those bodies.
3. rbv opKov. The article seems to show that the oath had formed the
subject of some provision in the lost decree. The form of the oath (cf. Foucart
7]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 17
I. c.) differs widely from that of oaths interchanged between autonomous states.
Cf. 20 and CIA 11 19, 49, 52, 66, 333, CIA iv 2, 59 6.
4. ovk e'eXw. The Boule had recently dealt otherwise with Hestiaea
(Thuc. 1 114 : 'Ecrrtcuas de e^oiKiaavTes avrol tt]v yrjv elxov) and otherwise with
Chalcis itself in 5094 b.c. (cf. the notes on CIA 1 334). In the terms of the
oath the /3ov\r) and the diKaaTaL pledge themselves for the whole of the people.
9. The words aKpirov oudevos must be understood with all the verbs, though
depending grammatically only on
xpvi
J' a- ra- a<paiprj(ro[jLai, which is used in the
judicial sense of
'
condemning to confiscation ' as diroKTevQ is of
'
condemning
to death,' cf. [Xen.] Resp. Ath. 1 14. The restrictive clause avev tov drj/xov tov
'
Adrjvaiuv applies to all the preceding.
10. Compare the action of Socrates (Plat. Apol. 32 b) in refusing to put to
the vote an unfair \prj(pL<jp,a. With ov8' eiri\pri<piG) begins the oath of the Senators,
who according to Arist. 'A0. iro\. 45, 1 {ij de j3ov\ij irpdrepov p.ev f,v Kvpla ko1
Xpv^o'-o'
1- $t)[uG)0(u /cat drjaaL /cai airoKTeivai) anciently had the power of inflicting
extreme penalties. This power they now swear they will not exercise in the
case of tbe Chalcidians. Cf. Stahl de sociorum Ath. iudiciis
p. 18; Wilamowitz
Phil. Unt. 1 p. 56.
11. ovde evos. See the note on 5 25.
1214. A provision not without value; irpvTaveis were not always above
suspicion of abusing their power by taking bribes or by repelling unpopular
applicants. Cf. Arist. Pax 905, Thesm. 936;
[Xen.] Resp. Ath. in 3. There is
a saving clause /card to 8vvo.t6v.
16 sqq. The oath had to be taken by the fHovh-q and the 6000 dicasts as well
as by all the adult male population of Chalcis (1. 32). For dp/cQcrai 8e kt\. cf.
D 122 (Treaty between Erythrae and Hermias, Tyrant of Atarneus, circ. 350 b.c),
1. 19 : opKuicraL o[e dyyeXovs e]\66vTas 7rap"Ep
/
iuou.
19. eirLfAeXbcrduv. According to Meisterhans Gr. 168 the proportion which
the usage of this form of the 3rd plur. imperative bears to the ordinary ms
form in -taduv is 7 : in the period 450424 b.c and 3 : 4 from 424 to 403 B.C.
In the fourth century only one instance of the 3rd plur. imperative is quoted,
and that is in -dadcov, CIA 11 92, 5 (378 b.c, but perhaps before 402).
25. 26. ' AdrjvaioL<n. Elsewhere in the inscription only the shorter form in
-ols occurs
; see 2 B 8.
26. 8u av Treidu). Thus the right of appeal was recognised. The
Methonaeans and others did actually obtain a diminution of their tribute quota:
cf. 15 2932. And in fact the Chalcidians, who paid 10 talents before the
revolt, did not pay more than 7 or 8 from 439 to 426; the number of 10 talents
reappears in 425 (CIA 1 Indices p. 233). The speeches of Antiphon concerning
the tribute of the Lindians and Samothracians deal with cases of this kind.
27. ^6/mp.axos. A contingent from Chalcis formed part of the Athenian
army in Sicily (Thuc. vn 57, 3).
32. Cf. the similar provision in a treaty between the Rhodians and the
Cretans of Hierapytna, DI. 3749, 86 sqq.: Kvpwdeiaas 8e rds avvdrjKas eX[^0-]|0a>
6 8ap.os TrapaxpTJP-o. dvdpas irivre' rol Se aipedeures fiera tQu Trapayeyevrjp.e'vwt' e
'IepaTruTv[as]
|
TrpeaftevTav bpKiai>T(dv tov v6p.ip.ov bpicov 'Fodiovs diravTas tovs 6Was
iv dXi/cta.
35. tov Aids kt\.: sc. at Chalcis; cf. 1. 61.
40. Anticles may be the strategus who, with Tlepolemus, commanded
R. II. 2
18 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[7
20 vessels sent to the siege of Samos 440 b.c. (Thuc. i 117, 2). Portions of
this second decree (as regards the oath) would have seemed more in place in
the first decree ; but as each orator was liable to the charge of illegality and
was responsible for his own measures, it was usual at Athens to inscribe each
of the propositions separately with the name of the mover, even when they
related to the same object.
41. The i in iroieiv, -rroieiadai etc., may be omitted even in the earliest times
before e and 77,
not before a following o-sound. In the Imperial period 71-01- is
almost always found in both cases. Meisterhans Gr. 57.
4547. The inversion of the clauses (the relative clause preceding) is
unusual in the simple style of inscriptions.
47. The hostages had probably been dealt with in a lost decree
;
cf. 1. 49
Arard rd e\j/T)(pLafxeva.
54. re\ov<nv : cf. Soph. O. T. 222 : iiarepos yap darbs els darovs reXcD. To
complete the construction we may understand dreXeis elvai after dreXeia. Cf.
D 123 (Ilion) 1. 44 sqq. : rods be dyiovoderas, oh p.ev av avrol xp^crwircu, rd be
dXXa
xpyf
xaTa QewaL els to iepov (Wilhelm G. G. A. 1898 p. 220). The 6V01 ktX.
must mean the Athenian cleruchs settled at Chalcis, who as citizens of Athens
paid no tribute; cf. Aelian Var. H. vi 1 (H).
57. XaXKiderjs : so D for the XaX/adVes or XaXKiberjs of others. Cf. CIA 11 1673
otbe iinre'-qs diredavov, on which Dittenberger refers to his article in Herm. xvn
34 sqq., where he ranks iTnrerjs (whence the contraction 'nnri)s) as an Old Attic
form parallel to iinreus, lirired, iirireds. The monosyllabic nominatives in -77s
prevail down to 350 b.c. and appear occasionally down to 325 b.c.
;
those
in -eh are found from 378 b.c, are frequent from 350 b.c, and after 324 b.c
are exclusively found. (Meisterhans Gr. 140.) The accusative plural has -eas
down to the Macedonian time; cf. 25 12.
58. On the various ypa/xfxareh see Rem. v, p. 89.
59. io-rrjXr}. For other examples of* this assimilation of ev, or loss of v
before otc, <tt, see Meisterhans Gr. Ill, and Index.
60. 7r6Ais = the Acropolis. For WAe<n rots XaA/aSeW cf. 30 27.
62. H. inserts r) before XaA/a<5ea' ; but there is no gap on the stone.
66. 'IepoK\eovs. Cf. Eupolis fr. 212 Kock 1 p. 316 : 'Iepo/cAees ^eXTiare
Xpr)<T[xuu)v dva. From the description of him in Ar. Pax 1047 as 6 xpve/J-oXoyos
ov 'flpeoD K conjectures that he had received a grant of land at Oreos as a
reward for his successful predictions in the Euboean expedition ; cf. Thuc. vin
1 (on false prophets), and the remarks of Foucart I. c.
70. Archestratus may be the strategus mentioned Thuc. 1 57, 6 as in joint
command of a force sent out against Perdiccas 432 b.c The formula rd /iev
d\Aa naddirep 6 beiva was the usual introduction to an amendment proposed in
the Ecclesia to a probouleuma
;
if adopted, the amendment was appended to the
probouleuma (which in our inscription ended with 1. 69) when written out as a
psephism. See further instances in 28 31, 316, 40 33. Or a new resolution
might be based on the probouleuma : see 45 46
50 and cf. Swoboda Volksb.
13 sq., Gilb. 295.
74. tyetjLv. The meaning is made clear by Arist. 'A0. 7roX. 9 : 77 eis rb
bcKaffTTipcov tye&is ; 45, 2 : tyeo-is be ical toijtois ecrlv eh to biKaar-qpiov, idv olvtwv
i] fiovXr)
Karaypy; cf. 42, 1 ; 53, 2
; 55, 2
; and CIA 11 841 b Add. 1. 30.
80. Kirchhoff remarks that in the vacant space after 6'0/cos, which is
8]
DECREES OE THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 19
inscribed in larger letters, there ought to have followed the oath, but as it has
already occurred in Diognetus' motion the engraver has omitted to repeat it,
though enjoined to do so in 1. 57 sq. above.
8. Two fragments of Pentelic marble, found at Athens in 1833, 1847 in the
Erechtheion ; Boeckh Opp. vi
p. 167 sqq.; Sauppe Ber. d. k. sdchs. Ges. d. Wiss.
1853 p. 33 sqq.; Boehnecke Dem. Hyp. Lyk. u. ihr Zeitalter p. 334 sqq.
;
CIA i 31; H 29; D 19. Cf. G. Busolt Gr. Gesch. in 1 p. 417 note 1.
ABAAE
(=e,
1,7}) lH(=/&) OIKUMN [X
=
f]
O (= o, ov, co)
PPTY0X [4>
=
^]
Utoixv^ov. Fragm. A had 35 letters in a line, frag'm. B had 17. Once (A 26)
.: : occurs as a mark of punctuation or division.
e/co?
(
rfv av
<f>a\_
....
eo-]ayerco. edv he eadyy, eVe^[vpa-
to> avrov] o
cf)7]va<;
rj
r
o ypayfrdfjuevos, 7ro[iuvia
8e al7c5]^ avrols irapaa^ovrfov ot a7r[otKto-T-
5
al KaXkjtepfjaat virep rr/s airoiKta^, ['oirocra
av avTojt? ooktj. yecovofiovs 8e
r
e\ecr6[ai SeKa
avSpas], eva i% cj)v\f}<;. ovtol he veL/judvT[u>v rr\v
yfjv. Ar]\}.]oK\ei$7]v he Karaarrjaai rrjv a[iroiKi-
av avroj/cparopa, kclOoti av hvvrjrai a[pio-Ta. r-
io d 8 Ta]e^7; rd e^rjpr]fxeva edv Ka6d\-Kip &tt-
i Kal aX]Xa
fir) refievi^eiv. /3ovv Be kclI [7rp6para
8vo dTr&]yeii> e? YiavaQijvaia rd /neydX[a. Kal Is A-
lovvo-tja (paWov. eav he Tt9 eiriarpa [tcvtj eir-
X tt|v yr\]v rrjv rcov aTroifcodv,
fior\6eiv t[s -n-oXas
15 ws o%v\tcitcl Kara ra? %vyypafyds,
(
a\\ lirl . .
]rov ypafjLfjLarevovTos eyevov\ro ircpl t-
wv Troki\(jL)V twv eiTL %paKrj^. ypdyfrac h\s ravTa
4v o-t^XJt; Kal KaraOelvai e'/x TroXec, 7ra[pao-xov-
Twv 8e rjrjv (TTT)\r]v ot diroiKOi acf)(t)v a[vT<av ri-
20 Xeo-iv. k\dv he tl$ e7Tiylrr](f)L^rj irapd rr)[y a-rrX-
t\v rj pi^jrfop ayopevrj r) irpoaKa\ela6a[y
YX
6tp-
Tj a.<xC\pela6ai rj \veiv n rcov ' e^r)(^L\ary.iv(av,
arip.ov] elvai avrov Kal iralhas rovs e' [ckcivov
xal tcI
\]pr)fjLara hrj/jLocria elvai Kal rrjs [Ocov to k-
22
20 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[8
25 iriSeKajro^, eap, [xrj tl avrot 01 airoiK\o\. ircpl
<r<j>wv hi\(ovrai : : ocroi K av ypayjrcjvra^i cuoik-
TJo-eiv t(o]v crrparccoroov, ewetBav * r)K.wa\y 'AG^va-
c, Tpia.]/covra rjfiepwv i/j, ftpeq elvai e[iroiKii<r-
ovTas. kj^dyecv Be rrjv airouciav rpia^Kovra r\-
30
[icpcov. A\la^ivr}v Be aKo\ov6ovvra a7ro[8i86va-
t to. xpr^j/nara.
B.
$]avTOfc\r}<; elire' rrepl
\i]ev 7*179 e? l&peav clitol-
K]ta? KaOairep At]fio/cX
i\t8r]^ elire' QavTo/cXe-
5
a] Be irpoaayayelv rr)v E-
p]

X^V^
a Trpvraveia-
v] TTpO^ TY)V f30V\r)V iv Tjj
irpajTT)
r
eBpa. e? Be
B]peav
%
6r)T(ov kol e-
lovjycrcov levai T01/9 cltto-
The decree (A) with its supplement (B) contains provisions for sending out
a colony (dtroLKia) to Brea in Thrace, and curiously confirms the brief statements
of Steph. Byz. (Bpea irokis [QpaKrjs] els -qv airoiKiav iareCKavTo 'Adrjvcuoi) and
Hesych. (Bpea. Kpar?pos
fie
fxvyrai rrjs els Bpe"av airoLKlas). The document itself
then is one of a kind to which the Athenians gave the specific name airoada
(Harpocr. s.v. diroiKia : diroLKia Idiws ra ypdfifxara Kad' a diroLKovai Ttves ovtus
(hvbixaaav 'Tirepeidrjs Arj\iaKc3). The limits of date are fixed by the fact
(1) that
^
is not older than the middle of the fifth century
(2)
that Cratinus died in
423 b.c. And if we may accept Preller's conjecture that the mention of Brea by
Cratinus occurred in the Qparrai, the date of the colony cannot be far from the
assigned date of that play, 444 or 443 b.c. Further if Brea is the colony
alluded to in Plut. Per. 11 (wpos 8e to6tois X'Xious fiev ^crreCkev els Xeppovqaov
KXrjpovxovs, els 5e Ndcw> irevTaKocriovs, els de "Avdpov rjfiiaeLS to6t(i)i>, els de Qp^Krjv
^tXt'ous BtcdXrats avvoLKr}<rovTas' dWovs
5'
els 'IraXLav olKiofJ.evr)s 2u/3dpea>s, y\v
Qovpiovs Trpoarjyopevaav), the order there observed being clearly chronological,
the date of our decree cannot be before 446 nor after 444 b.c And the language
of 1. 26 sqq. may well have reference to the events which took place in Euboea
446 b.c.
2. eaayeru) appears to be part of some prohibition with regard to the
introduction or importation of something into the colony. The word can
hardly refer here to the elaaywyrj of an action.

idv de eadyrj kt\.


*
if a person
(or the person specified in the lost lines) nevertheless introduces (the forbidden
8}
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 21
articles), then the person informing or prosecuting may seize them.' The
offender is here proceeded against by a (pdats or a ypacprj. So in CIA n 546, 18
(Treaty between Athens and Ceos) a person who unlawfully exports vermilion is
prosecuted by means of <pdacs or ^5etts (6 (prjvas rj evbei^as).
3. Troi/xvia Se aiywv ktX. The text is that of CIA but the restorations are at
best uncertain. By avroh may be meant the officers appointed to perform the
sacrifice, or more precisely, to make a favourable sacrifice. diroiKLOTai perhaps
are the leaders of the dwoiKio~iAbs. The word is elsewhere found only in Menand.
Rhet. 85 (Heeren) : oi diroLKio-Tal fvbo^oi.
6. yewvbfxovs. The meaning here is plainly that which is given to yewvbfxrjs
by Phrynichus (App. Soph. Bekk. anecd. 32, 14): yeo}vbp.r]s p.ev 6 biaKpivwv ev rats
aTToiKicus eKdaTCf) rbv KXrjpov; cf. Hesych. s.v. yewvo/j.01. Sauppe remarks that the
ten commissioners who founded Thurii (Schol. Ar. Nub. 331) were probably
yeojvofiOL.
7. The abbreviation e\ (pvXrjs for
ex <f>vXiis eKdaT-rjs is noteworthy. On
ex
for eK in Attic inscriptions of the 5th and 4th centuries b.c. see Meisterhans
Gr. 116. There appears to be no positive rule for this occasional aspiration of
eK (it;) to
ex
before
6, <p, x-
No example is found after 292 b.c.
9. At Brea, the inhabitants as it seems having been ejected, certain portions
in the distribution of the land were to be left as reserved (e^rjp-qp.lv a) for
sanctuaries, according to a custom noted by Thuc. iv 98, 2 : rbv be vbfiov rots
"EXXrjaLv elvai, cbv dv
y
to apdros rrjs yrjs e/cdcrr^s

tovtwv kclI rd iepd del yiyvecrdai,


rpdwocs depa.irev6p.eva oh dv irpbs ro?s eiwdbai /cat dvvoovTai. Where the land was
assigned to cleruchs, as Sauppe points out, while the inhabitants remained, the
procedure was different, cf. Thuc. in 50. 2 (the occupation of Lesbos).
11. Boeckh read 8vo irpbfiara, but the remains of a
P
are clear on the
stone. The practice here prescribed is well illustrated by Schol. Ar. Nub. 386 :
ev rots Hauadrjuaiois wdaat al virb t&v 'Adr/vaicof diroLKLadetaai irbXeis
fiovv
TvOrjabp-evov ^ire/j.Trou. For the use of dirdyeiv B compares Ar. Vesp. 707
:
dirdyeiv <pbpov, Xen. Gyr. n 4. 12, in 1. 10: tt)v dirapxw
dirrjyayov, CIA n 12:
dewplav dirdyeiv els AtjXov, Plat. Phaed. 58 b, Hdt. v 82. See also 5 4.
13. A (paWayuyia is mentioned CIA n 321.
14 sqq. rds irbXeis : i.e. the states of the symmachiaa current expression,
cf. 15 44. For /caret rds vyypa(pds see the note on 9 3. The ypa/xfiarevs (1. 16)
was probably the ypap.p.aTevs not of the League but of the Prytanes, by whose
name in the earlier inscriptions the date was given, without mention of the
archon. See Rem. i, p. 2.
19. So D for K's 7rapa (adv.) 5 iju dv aWrjv o-TrjXrjv oi dirotKoi o-<pdv avrdv
dvadCocri.
20. edv M tls ktX. For the formula cf. 32 51 sqq. The expression
d(paipela
6
'at \f/r)<pLo-/j.a occurs Andoc. De red. 24.
21. From the space K conjectures that the stone had
PHETO P.
25. ed^t firj tl ktX. An exception to the general prohibition contained in the
preceding lines is made in favour of the colonists themselves, who may make
application on their own behalf for alteration in the law: cf. for a similar
exception 15 56: idp. p,rj tl oi arpar^yol de'tovTai.
26 sqq. All soldiers who shall have given in their names as
'
e'lroixoi
'
shall
within 30 days after their arrival at Athens, present themselves at Brea for the
purpose of taking up residence. For the order of the words eireibdv ktX. cf. a
22 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[8
Cretan inscription, Comparetti 152 iv 9 : 1j /c' d7reA#77, tQ iviavrG), i.e. 'within a
year after he has gone away.'
30 sq. Aeschines must have been a rafiias (perhaps a Hellenotamias) ; and
by
xpVf
xaTa we must understand the expense incidental to the founding of the
colony. Libanius (Introd. Dem. Cher*.
88)
gives it the name <p65iov, though
there it concerns a KXypovxta-
B. 1 sqq. On the formula of this supplement see 7 70. D observes that the
prytany of the Erechtheis could not have been in office at the time, otherwise
tovs TrpvT&veis would have been used. For the practice of drawing colonists
from the lower classes of citizens see Thuc. in 16, 1: ivX-qpcoaav vavs eKarbv
ecrj3dPTs avrol re rr'\r]i> iinreaiv kclI irevTaKoaLop-ebiixvoyv /cat ol /xerot/cot, and Libanius
(Introd. Dem. Chers. 88) : Zdos 8e -qv tovto 7ra\cu6j> rots 'AdrjuaioLs, 6<j<h irevvjes
Tjcrav avrCov /cat anT-qiAOves o'ikoi, tovtovs ire/JLTreiv iiroiKOvs et's rds e^w 7r6Aets rds
eavrQu.
9. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Eleusis in 1880; now at Athens.
H. 1.33 m., L. 0.49 m., Th. 0.085 m. Eustratiades IlaX. 1880 Febr. 18 and 28
;
id. ' A0. vin p. 405 sqq. ; Foucart B. C. H. iv 225 sqq. ; CIA iv 1 27 6 p. 59 (L. Ziehen
Leges Gr. Sacrae, diss. Bonn. 1896 p. 16 n.
4);
D 20. Cf. I. H. Lipsius L.S.
in 207 sqq.; H. Sauppe Ind. led. Mb. ac. Gbtt. 1880/81 (Ausgew. Schr.
729 sqq.); O. Rubensohn Mysterienheiligthiimer 36 sqq.; J. W. White 'E0.
'Apx-
1894 p. 35; L. Ziehen Rh. Mus. li 219 sqq.; A. Korte Mitth. xxi
(1896) 320 sqq.
ABAAE
{=e,i,
v)
iH
(=h)
Ol KUM H [X>| O
(=o
>
ov
>
ay)
rPTY<t>X
[>
=
^]
liToix^ov. In some places, e.g. 1. 42
OIN
{deoiv) and 54
TON
three
letters occupy the space of two. In 53 and 58 a letter has been effaced and
replaced by

There is great fluctuation in the use or omission of the sign
for spiritus asper (see Pt I p. 105).
T i ji o] t e \ [i|] 9 'A
^
a
p
e [v s] eypafifidreve
"E8o]e^
rfj
/3ov\rj real to3 BrjfMp, Kefcpo7rl<; eirpwrdveve, Tt/nore-
\t\<$ kjypa/jLfidreve, K.v/cvea<> eTreardrei. rdBe ol ^vyypachas
%VV-
ypjatyav' airapyeo-Qai rolv Oeolv rov Kapirov Kara rd irdrpca
KCLI TTj-
5
v fiavrelav rr/v ey AeXcfxSv
'
'A6r)vai,ov<; diro rcov ' eKarov fieBl/jL-
vcov [k-
ptOwv
fir) eXarrov r) 'e/crea, 7rvpcov Be diro rwv 'eKarov ixeBl/x-
VWV
JjL-
r] eXarrov (i/) 'rffxiefcrecov. edv Be tls 7rXetco Kapirov ttoltj
* r
tj
tLoo-ovto-
9]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 23
v, rj oXei^o), Kara rbv avrbv Xoyov dirdpyeo-Qai. eyXeyetv
he [tovs 8]?7/u.-
dpyovs Kardrovs hr^fxovs Kal rrapahihbvat rols ' tepoTroiols rots
io 'KXevcrcvbOev 'EiXevaivdSe. olKohofirjaat he cnpovs rpels
'YLXevcrlv-
l Kara rd irdrpia oitov dv hoKj) rols lepoirotols Kal rco
dp[
x
]cr-
ktovi eirtrrjheLov elvai drrb rov dpyvpLov rov roiv Beolv.
to[v 8 Ka-
prrbv evOavOol e/ji/3dWeiv 'bv dv irapaXafiwcri irapd rwv 8tj-
p,dp[
X
u>v.
airdpyeo-Qai he Kal rovs ^v/jb/md^ovs Kara ravrd. rds Be
iroXeis [ky]\[o-
15
yeas ' eXeaOai rov Kapirov, KaOori dv hoKj} avrrjai dptara
r
o Kapirb-
s]
tc\eyrjaeo~6aL. erreihdv he eyXej(6f), diroirepi^dvrcov *A0r)-
vat,e.
rovs he dyayovras irapahihbvai rol<;
'
lepoiroiols rols ^QXevcri-
vodev 'EXevaivdhe. e[aJ\v he
fir)
irapahe^covrai rrevre
rjfjbe-
pwv ....
eireihav eirayyeXfj, irapahihbvrcov rwv i/c 7-779 7rbXecos, '66ev dv
20
1]
6 /ca[pTr]o?, evOvvoaOcov 01 leporroiol yCXiaiaiv hpa^/jbrjai ['
Ka(r]ro9. Kal rrapd ro3v hrj/jbdp^cov Kara ravrd rrapaheyeaQai.
[icijpju-
Ka]9 he 'eXo/ievrj 'rj fSovXrj rrefx^drto els rds 7roXeis d[y]y&X-
\ov\r]as [to,
vvv] e^Tjcpio-fjLeva rco hrj/JLco, to
fiev vvv elvai cos rd^icrra, ro
he [X-
olitov orav hoicf) avrfj. KeXeverco he /cal 6
'
iepo<j)dvrr}s Kal
[0
25
hahov^os /nvcrrr]piois airdpyecrQai rovs
f/
EAA??i>a9 rov Kaprrov
Kara
ra irdrpia Kal rr]v puavrelav rrjv ey AeXcfrcov. dvaypd^ravres
he e[y
mvaKico rb fierpov rov Kapirov rov re irapd rcov hrjfjbdp^cov
Kara rb[v
8-
r\\fxov
r
eKaarov Kal rov rrapd rcov iroXecov Kara rrjv itoXiv
eK(ia\ry\v
24 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[9
K}ara0i>rcov ev re too 'TLXeuo-tvioj 'EXevaivL Kal ev too {3ovX-
30
pjtqo. eirayyeXXeLV Be ttjv /3ovXr)v Kal rrjac dXXrjcrL iroXeauv
[]
'
E-
^
\]krjvLKrjcnv
'
airdarjai,
(
ottol av Bokyj
avrfj BvvaTov elvat,
\\iyo\v-
tcls fiev Kara 'a
'
AOrfvaloL airdpyovTat Kal 01 ^v/x/jba^OL,
e'/cet[voi-
s] Be fjurj e7rtTaTT0VTa<;, KeXevovTas Be dirdpyeo-QaL edv
flovX-
covrai
KJara ra irarpia teal ttjv fxavrelav ttjv ey AeX(f>oov. irapaBe^'
eadav B-
35
e Kal irapa tovtoov toov TroXeoov, edv Tt9 awayy, tovs ' tepo-
itoiovs Ka-
ra ravra. dveiv Be diro fiev tov ireXavov tcadori av JLv/jloX-
TTLoai [co"t]"y^-
o-wji/Ttti, rpcrroiav Be Boap^ov ^pvaoKepoov tolv Oeolv
(
eKa[rip-
0. d]7T0 TOOV fCpidoOV Kal TOOV TTVpOdV Kal TOp TpL7TT
oXe
fJLW Kal
TOO [0-
o3 Kal ttj Sea Kal tg> Qv/3ovX<p
'
tepelov etcaaTop TeXeov Kal
40 Tjj
^
AOr\vaia
ftovv
^pvaoKepoov. Ta? Be aXXas Kpt6d<; Kal
7rvpov<; air-
oBofxevovs tou?
'
uepOTTOiovs fierd ttjs /3ovXr)<; dvaOrj/juaTa dva-
TiOev-
ai tolv Oeolv iroirjaapbevov^ drT av tw Br)/jL(p too
'
AOrjvaLcov
BoKTJ-
1,
Kal e7nypd(j>eiv rots avaOrjLuaaLV, otl diro tov Kapirov tt}?
awap'xfj-
9 dveOeOrj, Kal JLXXrjvoov tov dirapyoLievov. [toi]? Be TavTa
TTOLOVCTL
45
TroXXd dyaOd elvat Kal evKapiriav Kal 7roXvKap7ria[v, oiJTLves
av
p.]?)
dBtKoocn 'AOrjvatovs Li7]Be ttjv ttoXlv ttjv
''
' AOrjvaioov firjBe
too Oeoo.
A]dfjL7roov elire' t p,ev aXXa KaOdirep al vyypa<pal T779
airapyr]^ tov
Kapirov tolv Oeolv Ta$ Be vvypa(f>d<;
Kal to
ifryjcf) tafia ToBe
avay-
9]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 25
payjrdrQ) 'o ypa/jL/xarevs 'o tt}? ftovXrjs ev arr)\atv hvolv Xi-
Oivai-
50 v teal Karaderco tt)v fxev EXevcrivt ev T(p
r
iepa>, ttjv he ^erepav
[*
fi
iroXei. ol he irwXrjTal aTrofMiaOcoaavTcov to> arrjXa. oi he
/CftjX[aKp-
erat hovTCOv to dpyvpeov. ravra
fiev 7re[p]i ttjs dirapyr]^ tov
Kap[ir^ov [t-
oiv deoiv avaypd^ai e\ rco aT7]X[a]' \xr]va he ::: efJb(3dXXeiv
*J^kcltov(3-
aiwva tov veov dp^ovra, tov he /3aa[i]kea ' opicrai rd ' tepd rd
ev t[w-
55
1 UeXapytKO). teal to Xoittov
fxr) ev chp veer Oat fiw/AOvs ev ra>
YieXa-
pyiiccp dvev tt}? /3ov\tjs koi rov hrjfjbov fxr/he toi/? XlOovs
refjuveuv k tov [II-
eXapytKov /jLrjhe yrjv e^ayeiv /j,7]he \160vs. edv he Tt? irapa-
{3alvr)
t:::ovtcov to, dironveTW irevTaicoo-ia^ hpa^fid^' ecrayyeXXeTQ)
he
(
o] ftacriXevs eh ttjv /3ovXr}v. irepl he tov eXaiov Trjs dirap-
60 era? Adp,7rcov eirihei^dToa tj)
ftovXj} eVf tt}? evdTT}<; irpvTaveias,
r) he fiovXrj 69 tov hrjfiov e^evevtceTco eirdvayKes.
The decree prescribes the consecration of firstfruits (dirapxal) to the goddesses
of Eleusis. The alphabet points to a date not earlier than 446 b.c. (see Table
Pt I
p. 106) ; the -rjert of the dative plural forbids a date later than about 420 b.c.
(see Meisterhans Gr. 120). With regard to the exact date the most probable
view seems to be that of Foucart who, comparing what is said of the HeXapyiKdv,
Thuc. 11 17, assigns the document to the years immediately preceding the
beginning of the Peloponnesian War. For a summary of other views see D.
3. According to Schmidt (Jahrb. 1885 p. 681 sqq.) the vyypa<peis,
before the time of Pericles, were a
'
codification-committee,' the tjvyypacpal
systematic compilations of existing statutes. Lysias (c. Nicom. 17
XPV
dvetv rds
dvaias rds k tG>v Kvpfiewv kclI tlov (tttjXQi* /card rds <rvyypa<pds) expressly recognises
in the <rvyypa<j>ai a third form of legal enactment beside the Soloniau K6p/3ei$ and
the post-Solonian stelae, and on the other hand distinguishes them from the
stelae of the period after Pericles, or at least the end of the fifth century (ib. 21
orav fiiv Kara rds i;vyypa<f>as iroiG)ixev iireiddv 5 Kara rds arr}Xas ds oSros
dv^ypaxj/e). The title of our inscription was doubtless, as 11. 44 sq. , 52 show,
(rvyypa0al ttjs or irepl rrjs dirapxv* Tv Kapirov toiv 6eolv. So in 8 15 the
phrase /card rds ^vyypa<pds expressly refers to the vyypacpal irepl tQv irSXeutv tQv
26 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[9
eVt GpaK7)s. Compare also CIA i 96 ( = 16), 8 and 533. In CIA i 283 (434/3 B.C.)
the words /card ras ^vyypacpas are used in a different sense. See further Foucart,
I. c, D. A. s.v. Nomothetae.
4. roiv deolv. See the note on 2 C 11.
ttjv /xavreiav. Cf. Isocrates Panep. 31 at p.ev yap irXelaraL tQsv iroXewv
VTrd/xvrj/xa rrjs iraXatas evepyeaias airapxas rod ahov /ca#' enacFTOV rbv iviavrbv ws
i]fxas airOTre/xiroven, rats eKXenrovaais ttoXX&kis r\ Ilf^ta tt povera^ev airocpe'peiv
ra ptepv t<2v KapirCov /cat iroielv irpbs rr\v ttoXlv ttjv r\p.erepav rd irarpia. Two
passages of Aristides the Ehetorician (Aristid. Eleus. ed. Dind.
p. 417, Panath.
p. 167 and Schol. p. 55),
cited by Foucart, attest that at the time of Hadrian the
practice was still in vogue. Cf. also CIA in 85 (temp. Hadr.) Ot llap^Wrjves
\
apiarav (Lat. aristam), napirov airapxvs (but see Dittenberger ad loc).
5. The proportions are a e/creus

th of a pLebip-vos to 100 fj.e8Lp.voL of barley,


and of wheat not less than a 7]/j,iktwv or r\p.leKrov ^th of a p.kQ~Lp.vosto 100
fi5ip.i>oi. Ace. to the table in I. Miiller's Hdb. i 843 the p,ebLixvos = 51*84 litres,
the KTetis 8*64, the rjp.leK.Tov 4-32. For rj/xieKTecov see Meisterhans Gr. p. 128.
7}p.uKTeiov also occurs CIA n add. 834 b 1, 15 (329 B.C.) and in Imperial times
t)Pllktov (cf. CIA in 98 note). The syntax requires that E (rj) should be supplied
in the text after ZXarrov.
8. oXet^w. See 2 B 36. On iyX^yeiv etc. Meisterhans Gr. 107 sq. shows
that k becomes <ry regularly in pre-Euclidean Attic, but remains e/c from the
first century B.C., before
/3, y, 5, X, p. (except in ey MvppLvoijTTr/s etc.), v.
9. (Cf. 17) rots iepoiroLois tols 'EXevaLvbdev. The IepoiroLoi or Sacrificers
(not a priesthood but an administrative board) at Athens were of several
kinds;
(1)
annually appointed, iepo-rroiol /car' iviavrbv (Arist. 'A0. iro\. 54, 7),
ten
in number,
(2)
appointed for special festivals or particular deities, as here, or
temples, as in lO 13. See Boeckh St.
3
i p.
273 sq. and n note 398. Besides
these Dittenberger on CIA n 872
(
= D 496) distinguishes
(3)
lepoiroioi appointed
by lot for the performance of sacrifices enjoined by oracles (Arist. 'A0. iroX.
54,
6), (4)
iepoiroLoi ey (3ovXr}s, appointed by the
fiovXr)
for performing sacrifices at
public festivals
; cf. CIA iv 2, 834 b (=D 587, 285 sqq.). Dittenberger observes
that the adverb 'EXevaLvbdev merely denotes the locality where the officers
exercised their functions, and not that they were of the Eleusinian deme.
Thus 'EXevaLvbdev (not 'EXeixru't) is used as in r]
fiovXr] r) i% 'Apeiov irayov,
lepevs Trvpcpbpos e'| aKpoirbXecos CIA in 264, 721a, 774 6, (paibvvTys Acbs e/c Hearts
in 283, lepevs Ni/ctjs e aKporrbXecos in 659, 6 rrjs Bpavpcovodev iepelas irarrjp Dem. c.
Con. 1264.
10. atpovs.
"
Quidam granaria habent sub terris, speluncas, quas vocant
aetpous, ut in Cappadocia et Thracia," Varro R. B. 1 57, cf. 1 63. Cf. also
Dem. Chers. 101.
13. ivdavdoi. The termination -01, which some disclaimed for Attic (cf.
Shilleto on Dem. F. L. 441, where he defends the reading evravdol), is fully
vindicated to the dialect by the evidence of inscriptions. See Meisterhans
Gr. 103. For the aspirate in consecutive syllables cf. avededr) 1. 44. Meister-
hans Gr. 102 gives several examples from inscriptions before 403 b.c
18. For the last four letters at the end of the line A. Schmidt Jahrbb. 1885,
681 sqq. proposes 6Xcov (for oXcov)
'
within four complete days from the time when
its arrival shall have been announced. ' For the construction see 8 27 sqq.
20. evdvvbadw. See 7 19. 22. ra I vvv. So Usener.
9]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 27
26. e/x wiva/dip. Cf. 10 11 where similarly iri.ua.Kia or tablets, deposited in
temples, are used for keeping accounts.
29. ev rip "EXevo-ivlip 'EXevalvi. Foucart seeks to prove from Aristid.
p.
421 Dind. that the temple at Eleusis was also called 'EXevalviov, but D,
maintaining that ev rip 'EXevaivlip 'EXevcrtW (for rip 'EXevcrivi) is an improbable
expression, would transpose the words 'EXevcrtvi /cat; i.e. 'in the Eleusinium,
(sc. rip virb T7J
irbXei : see CIA in 5, 11 sq.) and at Eleusis in the Council-
hall.' Of. 38 27 and CIA n 176, 16 sq., where for tov aradlov /cat tov dedrpov
tov lIava9wvai'Kov of the stone-cutter the original was probably rod aradiov tov II.
nai rod dedrpov. Cf. however Rubensohn op. cit. 77 sqq.
36. dirb rov ireXavov: 'from the produce of the TreXavos.' The ireXavos was
the best part of the grain, which was set apart for the use of the gods. See
P. Stengel Herm. xxrx 281 sqq. Ziehen I. c. has shown that it was a mixture of
barley and wheat. D quotes from the accounts of 329/8 B.C., D 587
(
= CIA n 2,
834
6),
1. 280, cf. 285, where els tov ireXavov iepoiroioh ey povXrjs e/c/cai'5e/ca p.e5ip.voi
Tpt[(b]v
x
OLV ^ KWV diroXeiirovres shows what considerable amounts under this
head were at the disposal of the temple authorities. The comic poet Sannyrio
ap. Harpocr., s.v. ireXavbs, says: weXavbv KaXov/mev Pixels oi deol
|
a /caXetr' acre"fivers
#X0t0' v/meis oi ftporol.
The accent is given on the authority of the text of Herodas
Mim. iv 91 (where the ms has xeXavos).
EvfioXiridai. To this gens as a whole, to the exclusion of the KripvKes,
belonged the right of e^-qy-qais. Sometimes they appointed a special officer to
perform the functions (^777777-775 e| EvpioXwiddiv CIA in 720, 2). Cf. the retort
Andoc. de Myst. 116: wp&rov p.ev e^rjyn, KwpvKiav div,
oi>x baiov (6v) o~oi e^v-
yeiadai.
37. rpiTToiav ktX. See 3 5. The epithet xpu<r6/cepw// shows that the
animals were horned (ox, ram, kid) and that the sacrifice must not be confounded
with the Roman suovetaurilia.
38. rep Qecp /cat 7-77 0e$. D quotes CIA 11 add. 1620 c. AaKpareibns
liwarpdrov 'I/captei)s lepehs Qeov /cat Qeds /cat EvfiovXe'us. The deities are probably
Pluto and Proserpine. For Eubuleus see Frazer Paus. 11
p.
118.
39. iepelov. i.e. a sheep. Cf. D 629, 14 (Olbia).
44. dvedtdrj. See 1. 13; and cf. for the sense the inscription quoted 1. 4.
47. For Lampon cf. Ar. Av. 521, 988, Schol. Nub. 331, Pax 1084, Eupolis n
p. 545, Mein. i p. 338 Kock. Eupolis calls him ov^yrfr-qs ;
hence Sauppe with
probability conjectures that his title was irvd6xpr)o-ros e^rjyrjrrjs, a title found on
one of the seats of the Dionysiac theatre (Index s.v.). It is natural then to find
him advising the Athenians in obedience to the Delphian oracle. On rd p.ev
dXXa see 7 70.
51. d7rop.Ladio(xdvTCJv. The more usual word for these transactions of the
poletae was TrcoXew : see Index s.v. For too 0-7-77X0 (the normal usage) see
Meisterhans Gr. 123.
53. pirjva de ktX. Whatever may be the precise explanation of these words,
the general meaning seems to be that the new archon was to extend the period
within which the dirapxo.1 had to be brought in, or according to Schmidt I. c.
1
to grant a month of grace, to wit the month Hecatombaeon.' e/j.ftdXXeiv, he
says,
if
unqualified, never means 'to intercalate.' The expressions for this
sense are, in the 5th century B.C., only e'irep.pdXXeiv and eirdyeiv, and later also
dyeiv, ride'vai, irpoaypdcpeiv, trpocrridivai, ep,(3oXdeiv, e/j.f3oXieiv, Trapep./3dXXeiv and
28 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[9
iinfiaXhuv, Tidhai and e/n(3o\i/uLeveiv. That however (as against Schmidt's view
Chron. 403 sq.) an intercalary Hecatombaeon was not an impossibility seems to
be shown, as D points out, by CIA iv 2
p. 181 no. 733, 5, where Gamelion, and
CIA iv 2 p.
101 no. 385 c (D 242,
1),
where Anthesterion, is duplicated instead of
Posideon. On the function of the Archon Eponymus in intercalation see Index.
54. eV t UeXapyixu). So it is spelt in Ar. Av. 832, where the spelling has
generally been put down to a freak of the poet, and in Cod. Laur. Thuc. n 17.
F supposes (against Schmidt and Ziehen 11. cc.) that the aKporeXevTiov quoted by
Thucydides (to JJeXapyitcbv apybv afieivov) was in the oracle which gave occasion
to this decree. For pajde robs Xidovs ktX. with reference to the HeXapyiKdv cf.
Poll, vin 101, Luc. Pise. 47. J. W. White I. c. points out that if the Pelargicum
had been enclosed by a wall at this period there would have been no need for
these regulations and the threat of a fine.
lO. A slab of white marble inscribed on both sides, which had been used
as an altar-slab in a church of the Attic village Charvati ; now in the Louvre.
CIG 76; CIA i 32 and iv 1
p. 63; D 21; H 37. Cf. E. Cavaignac Rev. Ph. xxiv
135 sqq., who argues for the later date for the decrees
(p.
31 below).
ABAAE (=,
ei,
v) j:H (= h)
OIkUMN [X
=
f]
O
(= o, ov, to)
P P ^T Y ^ X
. 2rotx^56j'. Spiritus asper often omitted.
A.
"E8]ofei>
rfi
(3ov\fj
koX toj Brj/jua)' KeKpojrls eirpvrdveve,
M.vr]crl0eo<; i-
y]pa/j,fjLaTve, ^vireiOr)^ eireo-raTei. KaWta? elire* dirohov-
vai rots 6eol<;
t]cl xprjfiaTa
rd otyeiXofJbeva, eTrecSrj rrj ASrjvala ra rpecr-
^tXta rdXavr-
a] dviyveyfCTCU e? ttoXlv, ' a eylrt](f)caTO, vofjulafxaro^ rj/JbeB[a]-
irov. airoht-
5
h\6vai he diro rcov ^prj/jbdrcov, a et? dirohoaiv ecmv tols
6eol<> iyjrr)<f)L(7/jb-
i]va, rd re irapd tols EiXXr}vora/nLac<; ovra vvv /cat rdXXa,
a eari rovrcov
t<3v] xprj/jLaroov, teal rd eic tt}? hetcdrrjs, e-neihav irpaOfj.
XoytadcrOcov he
ol XJoyccrral * oi Tpcd/covra 'olirep vvv rd 6<petXo/uiva tols
deols d/cp-
ipw]?. o-vvayo)ryrj<; he rwX Xoyco-rcov rj ftovXr} avroKpdrcop
ecrray. dirohovrodv
10]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 29
10 h\ r\a %pr}{Mara 'oi irpvrdvei^ fiera ttjs /3ov\r]<; Kal eaXei-
<f)0VTC0V,
7Ti-
8dv] airoScocnv, t,r\Tr]aavTe^ rd re Trivd/cia Kal rd ypa/x-
/jbarela Kal edfi
ir-
ov ak]Xo0i
y
yeypa/jLfieva. diroc^aivovTCOv Se rd yeypa/i-
fxeva oi re iep-
x\s k]clI
*
oi
r
tepoTTOLol Kal el tls aXXo<; oiSev. ra/JLias he
a7ro/cvafjLeveL-
v to]vt(dv tcov ^prj/jidrcDv, 'ordfi irep to.? aXXas dpyds,
KaOdirep tov<? tcov c-
15 cpcSjz/ tcov tt}? AOrjvaias. ovtol he TayaevbvTcov i/x iroXei
iv TCO OTTLCrd-
o%6]/jL(o rd tcov Oecov ^prjfJLara, ocra hvvarov Kal ocrtov,
Kal avvavoiyov-
tcov Kal avyKXrjovTcov Ta? Ovpas rod OTnaOohofJuov Kal
o-vaarj/xaivoadco-
v Tois tcov rr}?
'
AOrjvaias rafxtat^. irapd he tcov vvv
\ 5
Tayacov Kai tcov eiricr-
rareov Kal tcov ' iepoiroicov tcov ev toIs tepois, ol vvv Sca-
^eipi^<w[a-i-
20 v, airaptQ(AT) ada6gov Kal aTroarrjadcrdcov rd ^prjfxaTa evav-
tlov tt}? /3ovX[r-
9 i/JL TroXei Kal irapahe^daOcov
'
01 rafjuiat 'oi \a\6vTes
irapa rcov vv\y
dpyovTcov Kal ev o-TrjXr) dvaypayjrdvTCOv [p]ia diravra Ka0
y
'eKacrrov re
rhv Oebv rd ^pijfiara oirocra earlv 'eKaaray Kal <tv/ul-
irdvTcov Ke<pdXato-
v, %ce)/9t? to re dpyvpiov Kal rb y^pvalov Kal to Xolttov
dvaypa(f>6vrcov
25 ol aet ra/jLiat e<? arrjXrjv Kal Xoyov hihovTCOv tcov re ovrcov
%pr)fiaT(DV
Kai tcov irpocnovTcov toIs 0eol<$ Kal edv tl d\Tr\avaXicrKr)Tai
Kara tov e-
viavTov 7rpo9 tou9 XoyiaTas Kal evOvvas hihovTcov, Kal ck
UavaOrjvai-
(ov eh Tlavadrjvaia toX Xoyov hihovTcov, KaOdirep 'oi Ta
t?79 A6r)vala<; t-
30 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[10
o]/j,ivovt<$. ras Be arrjXas, ev at? av dvaypd-^rwau ra
-^pij/utara ra cep-
30 d, Qi]vT(ov e/Jb iroXei
*
01 Tafxiai. eireiBdv Be airoBeBofxeva
77 Tot? 6eols
to, xp]r}/jLara, et? to veoopcov /ecu ra rei^rj rocs irepiovcri
-XprfcrOcu xprjfjbaa-
ml
B.

;
- [...
ra XC0]tz/a /c[a]i ras Nt[K<xs Tas
xp]^
"^?
^^ ra
7r[o|rrria . . .
eirel 7ravre\(os i . pea . a ra 7r[opima dvi]ve\Q-
r\ tt) 0u KJara rd e"^^^>t[<rji.eva eir]t r^ a/cpo7roXt[v
5
. . . . KoAicn]dfieva /ecu eirl .... 7r[l n]ept/<;\[eov]?
e/cacrr^a] EW[-r]voTap.i] at /cat eTrtcr/eefa^ovTCDv avTa
(JLT(X TttV ^TTLO-TCLTWV t\jo\v at'[l OVTWV, 'o]t [Se] TCV/JLLCU [t](2
LXP
T
H
LaTa
P-

P
l
~
^ovtwv |iTci] tcG^ dp^LT^KT6v<av .... 'to]a*7re/3 tol>[s] 7rp
.... A.e .... yLteTa tc5[v eirio-r] arcov 'ottcos dpcar[a teal tcaXXur-
10 Ta Koo-|AT]0]?7creTat '77 a/e/)[oiroXis] /cat e7rto
_
K:eL'acr#^[a-Tai tcI
irop-ir-
ia rots 8]e aWots
^prj
fxacr\\.v irapja t?;? A07)vaia<;, ro[is tc
vvv ovoriv -
p,
iroXci Kajt aTT ai^ to Xo[iirov dv]ct(f)epr)TCU, /uurj ^prja[Qai
[XT] 8s dirava-
Xio-Kiv d]7r avroov et? dWo
[
p.T]8] et? ravra
'
virep /xu[pias
Spaxp-ds
Sovvai KeXJefetz/ eap Tt Se?7[i. els dXXJo Be /xr/Bev ^pfja6a[i,
tois
xP
r
V
a(r
"
15 tv, idv \ir\ r]rjv ClBeiav ^7]<^[i<ry\rQ.\. o] Bfjfios edvirep
'
7}
[x|/f<pos
8i8(ot-
at 7rcpl lar<|>]o/)a?. eav Be Tt? [citttj rj] e7rf\jrr](f)La7], /xtj e[\|/r]-
<pl<rpVT]S
irw tt)s dSciJa?, 'Xpr/crOat, to[is
xP^K-]
acriz; Tot[s] T17? 'AOr)-
[vaias,
VX(T-
0 tois av]Tot? olairep ea[v . . .
.] (j)epetv eiirr) f)
e7rt[\J/Tj<p(TT].
K 8-
10]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 31
Ttav <|>6pcov] KararuOevai k\o.to. t6\v evtavrov ra /cd[a-roTe
irepio-
20 vra irapd t](H9 TCLfJblacU TGOV
[ttJs
'AOj^ata? TOl/9 EXA.77Z/0-
[rap.ias. iri-
8dv 8 Ik tw]^ Sia/cocTLcov ra\\6.vT(a\v, a et'9 airohocnv e<p-
[o"T<JH<TTai
*0 8-
Tjfjtos tois] clWols Oeols, a[Tro8o8]
(
v
t<z ocpeoXo/uLeva, Ta[p.iVa-8 tci
piv ttjs
,
A0T]]zva/,a9 ^prj/xara [lv
tJ
eVt Seized rov oirua [0o86p.ov,
to. 8e t-
v d\Xwv 0]e&Si/ eV tco eV >[urTp]a .
25*Oir6o-a S tw]^ ^prujbdrwv rcov ['tepwjz/ darard eanv r] av-
[dpiGfia, Tavr-
a dpiGp/fjo-aJt vvv /juerd Tft)/- r[trTdp]coi' dp^wv al eS[So[<rav
ai TOV A.0-
-yov Ik ~n.av]a6r)vaLG)v e'9 ria[va0T|v]<xia,
'
oiroaa
fiey
%pv[<r&
<TTLV X\ 'OTTO-
<ra dp-yvpd] 7] i>\Tr\dp\y\vpa crr^Jo-avTas
The inscription contains two decrees, one on each side of the block. The
first (A) orders the repayment of moneys due to the treasurers of certain gods,
after repaying to Athena 3000 Attic talents borrowed by the State; and arranges
for the future custody of these moneys. The second decree (B) contains
further regulations as to their disposal and administration.
The datives in -cus (except ra/xiao-i B 20) make it improbable that the decrees
were inscribed on the stone before 420/19 b.c (Meisterhans Gr. 121) ; but it has
been shown by Kirchhoff (Abh. Ah. Berl. 1864 and 1876) that the decrees them-
selves must have been passed in 435/4 and 434/3 b.c. respectively, for
(1)
the
first decree must, from the changes it enacts, have been passed at the beginning
of a Panathenaic pentaeteris, and therefore in the second year of some Olympiad,
(2)
it must have been passed shortly before the end of the year, for 1. 14 shows
that the date was just anterior to the dpxcupecrtcu,
(3)
the second decree is shown
to belong to the beginning of the following or third year of the Olympiad, because
the new raniou are already in office (B
26), (4)
the character of the provisions in
the second decree relating to the weighing and numeration of sacred properties
implies that it is not later than the beginning of the series of Treasure-lists (see
below, the section on Finance), i.e. 434/3 b.c.
A 2. KaMicts. Busolt (Philol. l p. 86 sqq.) seeks to prove that both here
and in 12 8, 13 15 Callias is the person who in Thuc. 1 61, 1; 63, 3 (cf. Plat.
Ale. 1 119 a) is said to have commanded the Athenian army at Potidaea and to
have fallen in battle there in 432 b.c By tois deois is of course meant 'the other
gods
'
; see Index s.v. ra/ucu and below 13 sqq.
3.
rfi
'Adrji/alq.. The form
'
kd-nva did not come into regular use till after
362 b.c (Meisterhans Gr. 32). On the state of the Treasury at the period of
this decree see Thuc. 11 13, 3.
32 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[10
4 sqq. The sources from which the moneys are to be repaid are three
;
(1)
the funds in the hands of the Hellenotamiae brought in by the <pbpos,
(2)
future sums falling under this head,
(3)
the produce of the
'
tithe,' when it
has been sold, i.e. farmed. The tithe in question appears to have been the rent
from public lands let to individuals.
8. On the duties of the XoyLaral see Boeckh St.
3
i 239 sqq.; J). A. s. v.
Euthyna (and Appendix) ; Sandys on Arist. 'A0. iroX. 54. It is clear from this
inscription that there existed before Euclid a special board of 30 Xoyia-rai,
though at a later period the number was diminished. The same board is meant
by 7/
dpxv
in the initial formulae of the Tribute-lists, e.g. CIA i 240. The words
otirep vvv indicate that the existing board was required to complete the transaction
within its term of office.
9. The
ftovX-f)
had the right to summon a meeting of the Xoyiarai. Cf.
Andoc. de myst. 15 (xf/rj^Laainevrjs 5e rijs ^ovXrjs^ r\v yap avTOKpdrwp, $x<>vto k"K
avrbv Meyapdde) for another instance in which the
fiovXr) acted independently of
the eKKX-qaia. The aw- (in avvaywyrjs) is much less common than %vu- at this
period (Meisterhans Gr. 220). For the assimilation of v to X in twX XoyiarCov
see 9 8.
13 sqq. For iepoiroioL see 9 9. The rafiiai who are to be appointed (annually)
dirb Kvdp-ov are the rafiiai ru>v tiXXuv deQv. The ra/xt'at rrjs 'Adrjvaias were
ten in number appointed annually by lot, one from each tribe, the penta-
cosiomedimni alone being eligible. Boeckh thinks the same limitation is
indicated by the words naddirep ktX. If the words also imply that the number
of the Tct/ucu tQv aXXup deQv was originally ten, it is strange, as Kirchhoff
observes, that in a Treasure-list of 429/8 b.c. (CIA i 194) the number of names
is certainly less than 10.
17. For the opisthodomus see below. With baa bvvarbv /ecu baiov cf. CIA n
1059 : oaa olbv re /ecu de/jurou iari. On avaarjfjLatvoaduu see 7 19.
18. Kai tQiv eTricTaTQi>. The kiriardrai here meant must be the etnaTarai of
temples. Besides its well-known use to denote the chairman of the irpuTaveis
the word is found in several other connexions. See Index s. v.
20. dirapLdix-qadadoov Kai aTToarr\adaQb3v . 'They are to cause to be counted
and weighed.' /u in 1. 22 is due to K.
25 sqq. Xoyov diddvTwv must be joined with -n-pos roi/s Xoytards.
27. evdvvas bibbvTwv, 'they are to submit their proceedings to examination.'
Xbyos refers to pecuniary accounts, eiidwai to the discharge of official duties.
This audit and examination is to take place annually for the period i< Hava-
Qr\va'uav is YLavadfyaia. Every year there was a Panathenaic festival, for three
successive years the Lesser, in the fourth year the Greater.
B 2. tol Xid]iva. So D, who remarks that S.Va (final) is alien to the language
of inscriptions of this period; see 17 30, 35.
2, 3. r& 7r[ojU7rea /crX.]; restored by D ; so also 6
8. For ixepi^bvrwv see
37 42, 39 44.
11.
x/
3
W
tao'[ 11' to?]s B, but Froehner (Inscr.) reads a on the stone ; thus 7rap]a
tt)s 'AdTjvaias is a pregnant construction.
12. avacpipo) (cf. the restored dvrjvex^V 1. 3 above) is the regular word to
denote the introduction of treasure to the Acropolis.
15 sq. idvirep ktX. Kestored by Keil Herm. xxix
p. 56 note 1.
17. ivex^doj ktX. The penalty for making the proposition or putting it to
10]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 33
the vote without having secured the &8eia or indemnity-bill (as e.g. for imposing
a special contribution, elcr<popd, upon the people) was to be the same as in other
cases of illegally proposing or putting the question to the vote.
18 sqq. Up to this point the decree has been concerned with the sacred
treasure of Athena; it now passes on to the public funds of the Athenians,
more especially the annual proceeds of the tribute, which are here directed to be
deposited in the Opisthodomus, and entrusted to the protection of the goddess.
They are in fact a -rrapaKaTaO^K-r) and do not become the property of the temple.
They are administered not by the Ta/niai rrjs
'
' Adnvaias but by the Hellenotamiae
and the Boule, the chairman of the prytanes having an official key to the
treasure. As compensation for the use of the Opisthodomus the Hellenotamiae,
from 454 B.C., paid to the goddess an dirapxv of
^V*
n (/-"^ L7r ToC tclX&vtov) on
the amount of tribute money annually deposited. See Index s.v.
dwapxv-
19. TrepLovra. So J. Christ de publ. rep. Ath. rationibus
p. 14 for the
yevdfxeva of others. It was not the whole, but the net, proceeds of the tribute,
after disbursements by the Hellenotamiae for public purposes, which were
deposited with the goddess. Cf. Busolt Gr. Gesch. in 1 p. 214 note 2.
20 sqq. exprjcpicrrcu 6 drjfAOS. So K.
22 sqq. This passage is quoted by Dorpfeld (Mitth. xn p. 39) to show that
the Opisthodomus in question is the back chamber of the old temple of Athena,
S. of the Erechtheum, which has two separate smaller chambers opening out of
it. But if so, one would expect these ot'/c^/xara to be expressly mentioned, as in
the Hekatompedon inscription, CIA iv 1, 19, 1. 17 p. 137. The arguments that
6iu<t068o{ios always means the Opisthodomus of the Parthenon are :
(1)
that the
word first appears in this inscription, which is dated just after the completion
of the Parthenon, and after it in a succession of inventories which mention
the compartments of the Parthenon
; (2)
that the four compartments mentioned
in these inventories are the Pronaos, Hecatompedos Naos, Parthenon and
Opisthodomus ; of these the first three are universally admitted to be parts of
the Parthenon, and unless the Opisthodomus is also that of the Parthenon, the
back portico of the Parthenon is unaccountably omitted. The back portico
of the Parthenon is adapted to hold treasures by being provided with gratings
from top to bottom between the columns. Cf. also 2 C 30.
26. The treasurers are to act in conjunction /xerd twv TeTrdpoov
dpx&v kt\.,
i.e. with all former ra/xtat who are living and present in Athens, del is due to
K. at rirrapes dpx<*-L are the four successive boards of each pentaeteris; see
Index s.v. dpxai. For virdpyvpa see CIA i 170, 8.
Remark ii. Formulae
of
Honorary Decrees, Proxenia-decrees
and Euergesia-decrees. A discussion on the duties and position of
the 7rp6$voL, or political patrons, would pass the limits allowable for a
note. It must suffice to define the 7rpo$vta as an honour which
imposed on the recipient the duty of taking care of the citizens of
the state which appointed him, when they came to his city. The
R. II.
3
34 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I
[R. ii
7rpo^vos was not a political agent as such. He was entitled to no
material privileges unless these were expressly specified in the decree
conferring the irpo^via. Works to be consulted on the subject are
Schubert, de Proxenia Att., Leipzig, 1881; Monceaux, les Proxenies
grecques, Paris, 1886.
Proxenia-decrees and Euergesia-decrees (by which the title of
UpyeT^9 is conferred) fall under the general head of Honorary
Decrees. And in no other department of epigraphy has the
influence of Athens made itself more widely felt than in the
elaboration of the formulae of these Honorary Decrees. We begin
at Athens in the fifth century with a very simple form (cf. no. 18).
After the introductory formula follows immediately the substance
of the decree : kira.ivk(Ta.i rbv Selva, sometimes with a brief statement
of reason, and then the enumeration of the honours conferred. An
exhaustive statement of grounds introduced by lirzihri (on) belongs to
a later development, and at first, as being an expansion, followed
the list of honours. The earliest example of a decree in which the
statement of grounds precedes the substance of the decreean
arrangement
characteristic of the later styleis, possibly, the frag-
ment CIA iv 1,
22c (about 450 b.c). From this older formula was
gradually developed a later, in which the name of the proposer
was followed
(1)
by a detailed statement of grounds with oreiS??
(e7rei8^ avSpe? ayaOoi etcrtv ircpi tov $rjp,ov ktA..),
(2)
a hortative section
the earliest example is no. 39, shortly after 350 B.C. (cf. 1. 11 sqq.
[o7r(os a\v etStocriv a7rav[Te]s
^\j\
l $r}p.o<; [o 'A^Orjvatuiv aTroSiSojcrLv
vapiras ja[ey]aA.a? rot? evtpytTovcnv ctavro[v] ktA..),
(3)
(after a transition
formula, e.g.
rvxfl
aya0# SeSo^cu tw Stj/xio) the commendation (e7rcu-
via-at) and the specification of distinctions or privileges. This later
formula asserted itself not only in Athens, but gradually also from
the fourth century onwards throughout the other Greek cities, though
in Northern Greece and the Peloponnesus a simpler form held its
ground (see Index). As time went on the language of these decrees
became more and more tedious, fulsome and discursive, till in the
Imperial period it reached its most degenerate stage. (Swoboda,
Gr. Volksbeschl. 50 sq.) For examples of the various material privi-
leges conferred see the references in the Index s. v. irpo&via.
11]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 35
11. The lower part of a stele of white marble, found in the Acropolis.
Lolling Sb. Ah. Wiss. Berl. 1888 p. 241; Mylonas BCH xn (1888) 129 sqq.; CIA
iv 1, 27c, p.
164.
ABAAE
(=e, ei,7j).H
(=h)
OIKUMN [X
=
f]
O {=
o, ov, a>)
pp^yy^X [4* *L
=
^]
Stoix^^v
' after d5t/cwPTcu 1. 9.
These decrees appear to be the
earliest extant Attic examples of
the class of honorary decrees, if
we except the fragment CIA iv
1,
22c. See Rem. ii, above. The
services rendered by Leonidas
of Halicarnassus may well have
been anterior to the Peloponnesian
War. The datives rrjac dW-qai 1. 5
(cf. no.
9)
preclude a date as late
as the time of the Sicilian Ex-
pedition assumed by Mylonas
BCH xn p. 129.
8. ada2i>Ta.i. Here ends the
fragment of the first decree on
the stone. The plural seems to
show that, if Leonidas was the
subject also of this decree, others
were associated with him in the
honour conferred. With the con-
cluding words cf. CIA iv 1,
62 6 p. 166, 1. 16 sqq. : oirus dv
/j.7] adiKrjTai cTTLixtXeadou. ttjv re
(5ov\r\v ttjv del (3ov\euovaav Kal
tovs cTTparrj-yovs Kal rov apxovTa
rov iv 2/ad0oj 6s dv
f/
eKdaTore.
For the title
apx^v applied to
Athenian governors of allied
states cf. 35 19 tw [dpxovri tw iv]
"Avdpip
;
D 112 (Amorgos) : 'Av8po-
Ti(j3v...dpt,as rrjs TroXews
;
Aesch.
c. Tim. 107 : r,p^e
5'
iv "Avdpw
irpt.dp.evos TpidxovTa pvwv ttjv apx^v.
These are examples of the fourth
century, but the words of 32 21 sq.
(378/7 b.c.) imply that the practice
dated from the preceding century.
14. ev tCov iroXewv. With this
strange expression, which, as Mylonas I.e. points out, appears to recur CIA n
33, 8, we can only compare the familiar iv "Aidov, ev
,
Ap(p)i(ppovos (Plat. Prot.
320 a). D adds the bold iv -rj/neripov of Herodotus (i 35, vn 8, 4)
for iv -qaQv or
iv rip.ere'puj.
32
eav ahlKelv /JL7][Ti AOrjvqo-i
piT-
e
'00-779 WOrjvaloi Kparovau e[ir-
ijjbe\ea6at he avrov Aurjvrjcri fi-
k]v tovs irpvrdveis Kara rrjfi
{3ov\rj-
5
v, iv he rrjac aWijcri iroXeat o-
irives
'
A6r)vai(DV apyovai ev r-
y
'v-rrepopia, 'o rt av eicaa-
roi hvvarol coaiv, co? dp, pr) dh-
iKwvrat

"Eoofej> rfj
{3ov\y
io Kal t<w Srjpio).
'
AvTioyls eirpv-
rdveve,
Xapocdhr}? eypafipaT-
eve,
'
Ylyrjo-avhpos eTreardreL. X-
acpearparos elrre' Aecovlhrjv
idv Tt9 diroKreivr) ev twv iro\-
15
(ov, gov 'Adrjvalot Kparovai rrj-
v
rtpcopiav elvai KaOdirep eav
Tt?
^AOrjvaicov aTroOavrj. eirai-
vecrai he dyaOd oaa iroiel 7r[-
pl
'
A6r]vaiov<; Aecovlhrj^. irepl [8-
20 e Aecovihov rd eyfrricfrKT/jLeva
a[v-
aypaylrdro) 'o ypap,fiaTev<; rrj-
9
/3ov\fj<z reXeao Tot9 Aeayvihov
ev OTr\Kaiv hvolv. Kal rrjv puev
r
erepav errrjerat e'/x nroXei, rrjv
25 hk 'erepav ev
'
AkiKapvaaaw-
i ev tm
'
tepaj rov 'A7roA,Xft)z/o9.
avbpa 8e TrpocreXeaOco AecovlS-
779,
t
oo"Tt9 d^ei Trjo-rrfkrjv Kal
(TTrjo-eL.
36 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[11
15 sqq. rrjv Tip.uplav kt\. Cf. 40 37 sqq. and Dem. c. Aristocr. 650: tarco,
(prjaiv, inrep avrov 77 0.1/7-77 rifMupia, nadairep av tov 'Adrjvalou d-rroKTeiur}.
22. reXeai rots Aeuvidov. Foreigners in whose favour a decree was passed
had to bear the cost of the inscription themselves; so also states on concluding
an alliance with Athens ; cf. 7 60.
25. It appears also from Ro. 1 145 45 that the temple of Apollo at Halicar-
nassus was used as a depository of state documents.
12. One of the Elgin Marbles in the British Museum. The upper and
right-hand portions only are entire. CIG 74 ; CIA 1 33 (cf. iv 1
p. 13) ; BM
5;
H 39; D 25. Cf. Foucart Rev. Arch, xxxvn
(1877) 384.
ABAAE
(=e, ei,
y). H
{=h)
OIKUMN [X
=
f]
O (= o, ov,
g>)
PPTY4>X [<&Z
=
ir]
Xtoc
XV
56v.
QioC. ripeo-pets ck 'Ptvyiov *]ol rrjv %v/jL/uLa%iav
eiroi/jjo-avTo Kal tov 'dpKjov KAeaz/o/po? dev-
]tlvov, ZtXrjvbs <>ookov,
B c
'Eir' 'A$]crv8ovs apyovros k-
5
al ttjs Pov\t[s
'
fj
KptTiaJS^? irpooTos eypa/JL/J,-
aTV, 4'8o|V TT) Pov]Xl7 fCCU T(p $7]/H(p 'A-
KajxavTis errpvTaveve XJapta? iypafi/jLarev-
e, Tip.6^vos 7To-TaT]et, KaXXi- (vacant space)
as etirc' vp.p.axav ctvjat A07)VCLiOtS KCtX
10 'PtyvCvois. tov 8e
c
6pKo](V) Ofioaaprcov 'AOrjva-
toi KaTa Ta8* &ttch Trijcrra /cat aoo\a kcli
airXd 'diravTa to. aV
>
A0t]v](a)t^ r)<yivoLS KCL-
l Kal vp.]/za^ot eao/xeOa itig-
toI Kal 8iKaioi Kal
\<r\xypo\
Kal a/3Xa/3et?
15
Kal] oo(f>e\r](TO{ii>
This is a fragment of a treaty between the Bhegines and the Athenians.
Some of the restorations in the text depend upon a comparison with a similar
fragment of a treaty with the Leontines, no. 13, concluded in the same prytany.
The treaty with Bhegium was probably the
'
old-standing treaty ' referred to by
Thucydides in 86, where, speaking of the first interference of Athens in Sicilian
affairs 427 B.C., he says: ol yap ~ZvpaKocnoL Kal Aeovrluot es irokefxov aW-ffhovs
KadidTaaav. ^v/uL/maxoL 8e (rjcrav) .... reus Aeovrlvois . . . 'VrjylvoL Kara to ^vyyeves
AeovTivwv. es ovv rets 'Adyvas Tre/xipavTes ol t&v Aeovrlvojv ^vju-fxaxoi Kara re
TraXaiav u
/
u.
y
a<xxiai' /cat on "Iawes rjaav ireldovo'L tovs 'Adrjuaiovs ir(iypai a<plai
vavs kt\. On the formula 1. 4 and 13 8 see Rem. iv, p. 85.
13]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 37
6. 'AKafiaurU eirpvTaveve. This was not the first prytany of the year 4332:
see CIA i 179, 10. It is probable that the alliances with the Ehegines and
Leontines
(13)
were concluded shortly after the despatch of the two fleets in
aid of Corcyra as described in Thuc. i 45 and 50 ; and in fact the alliances may
have had a causal connexion with the success of those expeditions, as clearing
the way for access to Italy and Sicily; cf. Thuc. i 36 and 44 and the notes to
CIA i 179.
8. KaWLas. See lO 2.
10. The letter on the stone before 6/j.oadpTwv is
H
; which may indeed
be meant for that word. Cf. note on 21 9.
15. After ci0eA?7<ro/xez> there are remains of a
P ;
qu. Travri adfrei? Cf. 32
51.
13. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Athens. CIA iv 1, 33a p. 13; H 40;
D 24. The letters as in 12; but twice /V.
0]ot. Ilpeafiets ey Aeov[r- This is the fragment of a
ivcov
(
ol rrjy
f*V(AfJLax-
treaty between Athens and the
it \ \ t Leontines alluded to in the notes
av eiroiTjaavTO /cat top
r ,
on no. 12. In 1. 10 after Kpt-
op/cov 1 ifirjveop Ayadofc-
^
TLd8r]S the word rptSros is omitted
,
5 \eovs, X&)(79 TXavfciov, Ye- doubtless accidentally, on the
\o)v 'EgrjfceaTOV. ypap^xa-
stone. In 1. 22 perhaps we should
v /r\ ' rri i continue : ttmttoI kclI 51k<xloi /ecu
reu? lyeoTt/xo? lavpta-
400,0
,-c,
, , . , ,*
ta
X
vpol /ecu a/3Xa/3ets. Cf.
12
<ooj4
K0V y^^ Ayjrevoovs apyovT-
13 sq
B. C.
""
09 kcll T779 /3ov\r}<;
fj
Kp-
10 LTid&rjs iypa/jb/bbdreve,
eBo^ev
rfj /3ov\fj
tcai
irpvrdveve, Kaplan eyp-
afifidreve, Tifji6i;evo<;
15 67r6<Trdrec, KaXXia? e-
17T6' rrjfjb fiev ^vpupbayla-
v elvai A6r)vaioL<; koX
KeoVTIVOlS KCLI rbv o[p-
ko[v 8]ovvat kcu
Sefafcr-
20 8ai. 6|x6cr]at he
^
A6r)va\l-
ovs rdSe' |v|^|xa)^]ot 60"[o[i-
0a
38 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[14
14. A fragment of Pentelic marble ; the right margin only entire, H.
0.24 m.; L. 0.15 m.; Th. 0.09 m. Found at Athens CIA iv 1, 35c p. 65; D 27.
A . AAE
(=e, e^rj)
iH(=/0 Ol KUMN . O
(=o, ov, co)
PP
F Y 4^ X . ^Toixvdb"-
"E8oev tt} PovXtj Kal T]t
8r}fjL(p 'A/ca[(ia-
vrls eirpvrdveve, . . . .]Xef? [eYp]a/i[p.]aT[ei>-
428
)
'Eirajieivtov
-qpx
6
? 2ip]upTto[s kjireard [ti*
el-ire* els rjrjV 7ro[iT)]crt^ tgov [ve-
5
a>v 8avi<ra<r0ai <TTpa]T7)<yov<; t[ov]? /uLera Tl [d-
\t]tos dp7vpiov irapja TWV [vv]f OVTtoV 8-
T]p.apxcav tois o-Kevovp-yJot?* o o az> oavet-
(rwo-iv, diroSovTiov avrojt? 7Ta[\]ti> Ot Tpt-
TjpoiroKH* tovs 8e TeTa-yJ/xez/Of? ir\elv iirl t-
io t)v ttjs Aeo-pov ^vXaK-^v ']a)9 TayjLGTCL airo-
crmXdvTwv 'ot o-TpaTTj-yJor el oe /nrj, iaayo-
vtwv avTovs GavaTov els &]lKaaTi]piOV o[i
irpvTaveis, a><nrep dv el
p.]??
rjueXov TOVS aiTl-
ovTas e|e\0iv. tt]s 8e] KO/.Lt8r}s twv ^e[<3-
15 v i]y ^AaKehovLas a . .
irip.]e/V[T]]#^i>a 07r(w?
Kop.io-0<5o-iv 'ws Ta^io-jTa Aurjva^e Kal ir-
apacrKvacr8wo-L, 'oirws] OV KO/jLL^r)Tac 7]
o-TpaTid 't] els Ae'o-pov $v]\a/cr}V Tr/v aptcrT-
20 tjv. edv 8e tis [ir\ ttoitJo-t)] Kara ravTa,
o(f)t\-
eiv \tXias 8paxp.ds avToJjv lpa<>
rfj
A.6-
ijvaia. Tip 8e irptoTU) k\ti\oVTl Kal KOfx\l-
<ravTi \a O o[T]p.os
The restorations are mainly Kirchhoff 's {Sb. Ak. Berl. 1886, 303 sqq.). He
has shown that the document is probably a decree ordering the equipment and
despatch of a naval force to watch and suppress the outbreak at Mitylene in
428 b.c. The Archon's name, if the restoration is correct, comes before that of
the President, and therefore the inscription is probably earlier than the
establishment of the formula in 421 b.c, cf. Rem. i, p. 3. The almost certain
restoration of 1. 1 gives the number of letters as 31; and so the Archon's name
must have 9 letters
;
this indication would suit many archons in the period to
which the characters of the letters must belong; but in only two years, that of
Epameinon 428 b.c. and that of Antigonus 406 b.c, were affairs in Athens and
Lesbos in the state implied by the inscription ; and the words seem to imply a
threatened danger like that of 428 b.c rather than the defeat and blockade of
the town by Callicratides in 406 b.c, before Athenian efforts resulted in the
15]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 39
battle of Arginusae. Busolt (Philol. l
p. 583 sqq.), who from Thuc. in 18, 2
supplies the name Tldxns in 1. 5, argues, against K, that an examination of
Thuc. in 3, 2
; 5,1; 15, 1 ; 18, 3 makes it clear that the expedition with which
our decree is concerned is the one alluded to in the last-quoted passage, and
must have taken place as late as the September of 428, and not earlier in the
year, as K held.
7. daveiaojcriv: sc. oi 8rj/j.apxoc.
9. rpiripoTroioL. Cf. Arist. 'Ad. tto\. 46, 1 : Troielrai 5 {tj (3ov\r)) tols Tpirjpets,
deKa ai>8pas e' [airavTWv~] eXo/xevw TpLrjpowoiofa, and Dem. c. Androt. 598 : 6 tQv
Tpi7]poTrouKu>v Tafias. The same officer is mentioned, CIA n 799 d 20, and in a
similar naval document given below (see Index s.v. TpL-qpoiroiol).
9 sq. eiri ttju rrjs Aeaftov (pvXaicqv. The restoration naturally stands or falls
with the correctness of the inferences made in the notes on the subject of the
inscription.
12 sq. For the functions of the prytanes in such matters see M. and Sch.
Att. Pr. Bk i, ch. 3.
15. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Theatre of Dionysus. H. 1.00 m.;
Br. 0.51 m. At the top is a relief. Boeckh St.* n 499 sqq. ; Kirchhoff, Abh. Ah.
Bed. 1861
p. 555 sq.; CIA i 40 ; H 44
;
D 33. Cf. A. Schmidt, N. J. 1885 i
p.
728.
ABAAE (=, i,
v) iH
(=h)
OIKUMN (X
=
?)
0(=o, ov, co)
ZroixySov, except lines 1, 2. In 1. 51
T =7, 1. 2.1, 41, 52 \-\ =
y.
MeOcovaiojv i k II iep[i'as.
<t>]a/iU7T7ro9
<
$>pvvL'%ov
y p
a /jl /jl dr[eve.
:
'E8]oe7;
rfj
/3ovXrj ical rS hrjfxcp. ^Epe^OrjU eirp\yr6.v-
V,] Xkottcls iypa/x/jbdreve, Ti/jLcovlSjjs iireardreL. [Aiott-
5
ei]6r)s elire' 8t[a])LpoTovfi<Ta[, top Stj/jlov avTL/c[a. irpo-
s M]e6a)vaiov<; etVe
<fiopov
So/cel rdrreiv rbv 8t}/jio[y avr-
ik]<x fjudXa rj i^[<r]apKtv clvtoZs reXelv ocrov tj) #e[u> dir-
6 r]ov (popov eyiy[y\eTO, *6v rots TTporepois Ila^[a0rivaio-
ts] irerd-^aro
(fiepeLv,
rod 8e dXXov dreXeis elva[i. t*Jv 8e d(j>-
io a]\r)/jL'tTa)v, a yeypdtyarai rep Stj/uloctlo) t[<3 tv 'AQr\-
vai](o/jL ^leOcovacot, ocpeiXovres, edv wctl eVrrjjrjScioi 'A-
Qr\]vcuois coairep re vvv /cat en dfielvovs, eTr^rpiTx-tiv t-
r]aiv irepl rf/s Trpd^ecos AOrjvaiov^' kcli ea[v koivo-
v] yjrr}(j}t,<rfJLa ri irepl icov o^etXruxdrayv rcov ev t/}[o-i o-ttj-
15 \t\\<jl ycyvrjTai, ixrjhev irpoayKeroy Me0(ovaio[is, edp. p.-
r\ \](opl<; ylvjjTat yln}(j)oo-/jLa irepl M.e6o)valcop. 7r[p<rpci-
40 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[15
s 8]e Tpels Trepu^rat vrrep irevTrjKOVTa errj <ye7o^[oTas
'w]? IIe/oSi/c/ea[v]. eiirelv Se TlepSlfCfca, on Soice\l 86<a-
iov] elvai idv M.e0(ovalovs
rfj
OaXdrrr)
/
%prjcr0a[i,
p.rfik
20 e~]eivai ' opiaaadac, /cal iav elcrepiiropevea0\oii ko.0-
dtre]p Tea)? e[s] r\rf\v yjapav, ical purjTe dSacelv ^[r\]re [d]8[iKio--
0cu], p,r)Se aTpa\r]idv Sid rrj<; yj>pa<$ rrj^ Me0[(o]vaia)v [8id-
7iv d]fcovTco/jL [Me]0(ovaLcov. /cal edpu p,ev 6/jLo\[o]yaJ<Ttv [*k-
aTep]oi, v[[Lfii]f3acrdvTQ)v 01 7rpecr/3eLS' idv Se firj, [irpco-
25 Pci]az^ e;aT[p]o[i] 7re/ui7r6vTa)v e? Acovvcrta, TeXos [%\ov-
Tas] Trepl
c
co[v] hv
OLCufi^tjpwvraL, 7rpo? ttjv
ftovXrjv tca\\ tov
8T|p.]oz/. 6[l]7re^ Se [Ti.]epSi/c/ca otl, idv 01 <JTpar[i(aTai
'ou] ifjb
TVoaeiSicp eiraiVGoai, yvcopas dyaOd?
f
e[ovo-i
irpl] avrov A07][y]alot. ^K^ecpoTOv^aev 6 &7/X09 [M0a>v-
30
aiovjs" TeXelv [o<ro^v rrj 6eca airo tov (popov iyiyve^ro, ov
toi]> 7r[p]oTepo[is] YlavaOrjvaLots irerd^aro (^[e'peiv, tov
hi &]XXov aTe[\ls &\vai. "JLSo^ev
rfj fiovXrj /cal [tu> Stjjx-
.]
c
l7r7ro[0]&)[vTis k\irpvTdveve, MeyafcXeiSrjS [c^pafjipd-
T6t)]e, N/[k]o[ kjireo-rdreo. KXeoovvpos elire' MfcOuvai-
35
ots] e[t]^[at t kd]yecv ey JSv^avrlov alrov p,e^[pi . . . . a-
kutx]l\,l<j)v p,6$l/llvcov tov iviavTov eicdcrTOV,
(
oi [tc 'EXXt]-
<nr\oi>TO($)v\aice<; puJTe avTol kcoXvovtcdv e^dyeiv p\y\T-
c aX]Xov ioovTCOV KCoXvecv rj ev0vveo~0o)V pvpiatai
3/o[ax-
y.oX<r\tv 6KaaTos. ypayjrapuevovs Se irpos tovs
(
JLXXrja7r[ov-
+o To](f)vXa/ca<; i$;dyei\y\ pe^pt tov TeTaypuevov.
dtypuos \Z\
?<rjT&) /cat r) vavs r) e^ayovaa. 'otl S' dv koivov
yjrij(f)[ia-[L-
a irjept tcov ^vp,pud^co[v] ijrricfiL^covTai W0r)vaiOL 7re[pl p-
or\~\0 ela$ rj a[X]A,o tc 7r/9o[o-]raTTo[v]Te? Tr/at iroXeat rj [irep-
l o-<j>]c5i/ [rj] nrepl twv 7r6[\o>]7^,
'
otl dv ovopuaaTi Trepl t[tjs tt-
45
6X]a>9 t^[s]
Me0(Dvala)v yjrrjipL^oovTaL, tovto irpoa"rj[yKw
avTol]?, T[d] Se aXXa p,r)
}
dXXa (fivXaTTovTes ttjv cr(^eT[epa-
v avTcav k\v tm TeTaypevco ovtgov. a Se vtto Y\epS\j.KK-
ov rfi\.KT\<r\0ai (fcacri,
/3ovXevo~acr0ai
'
A0[7)]valov<;
*
otl d\y 80-
k\y) \0JcC\0v elvat Trepl Me0covaia)v
}
iireuSdv aTrav\rra-
50 oijat e[s r6]v Sfj/mov ot Trpecr(3eLS [']ot irapd UepSi/c/cov, [of t-

] A
66T[a- TlkjeiarTiov ot\\\6pbevoi /cal 01 /zera Aecoyo^pov. tt]-
o-]t Se [a\\]r]o-L 7roXe[o-t \]pr)/xaTLaai, eTretSdv ecre\[0T)
^
ir]/)L'[Tav]eta ?; SefT[c'pa] pueTa Ta<; ev tw vecopla) e[v0iis
^Spas]
iKfcXrjcriav [trojjcravTe^' crvv\i\^iti<; Se nroelv r[ds Ik-
55
KXtio-ta]?,
e&)? az/ Si[airp]a^^i7, a\Xo Se 7Tpo^pr}pba[Tia-ai
15]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 41
tovtco]^ fjLrjSev, id/jL
fir) re ol arparr}[y]ol Secovra[i. "E8o-
cv ttj]
/3ov\fj
koli ra> hrjjjbw. Ke/tpo7rl9 eTrpv^rdvivi, .
]?;?
iypa/xf^dre^v^e, '[i]epo/c\eiB7j^ e[iro-Ta,Ti . . .
]
eiire' eireihr) e . .
60 even,
The marble contains two decrees and a fragment of a third granting certain
privileges to the Methonaeans and befriending them in their relations with
Perdiccas. A fourth decree must have followed ordering that all four should be
inscribed on the stone. The dates and chronological order of the decrees are
determined by the following considerations.
(1)
Qaiviiriros 1. 2 is probably the
same as the person of that name who was ypafi/naTevs in Elaphebolion of
01. 89. 1 = 424 b.c, Thuc. iv 118, 8. He was ypa^fiarevs Kara irpvTavelav. This
officer changed with each prytany and in the pre-Euclidean period was re-
sponsible for the engraving of the decrees ; cf. Rem. v, p. 89.
(2)
The prytany
1. 3, in which the first decree was passed, was the first of 01. 88. 1, i.e. in July
or August 428 b.c; for (a) the decree cannot, be older than 01. 87. 2, =431/0 b.c.
when peace was made with Perdiccas, nor later than the end of 01. 88. 2 =
427/6 b.c, the date of the following decree, (b) the re-assessment of the allies,
1. 8, at the Panathenaea of the year preceding that of the decree, could only
have taken place, according to Koehler Urk. p. 138, in 01. 87. 4 =
429/8 b.c, i.e.
in the fourth year of the Olympiad.
(3)
The date of the second decree was
probably 01. 88. 3 = 426/5 b.c. for it was passed in the first prytany, as is clear
from 1. 52, 53, and the secretary Megacleides is almost certainly the same as
the person of that name in CIA 1 273, who was in office in the first prytany
(irpQiTos eypafx/xdreve : cf. Rem. v) of the same year.
7. The question is raised whether the Methonaeans are to be required to
pay tribute, or only the quota of
^
n
(
see Index s.v. /uu>d dirb toKclvtov) paid as
dirapxh to Athena according to the assessment of the preceding year.
9 sqq. Their arrears of tribute are remitted (with the condition that they
are to remain friendly to Athens) ; and a special arrangement (rdis) is to be
made in their case with reference to the collection (irpd&s). For ererdxaTo,
yeypdcparai see Meisterhans Gr. 166, who notes that after 410 b.c the peri-
phrastic forms only were in use.
11. The three letters before Meduvaloi on the stone are
HO
AA.
14. iv TTJai <TTr)\r](ri. So K for ei> ttjcti irbXecn of previous editors. The
<TT7)\ai are those on which the names of debtors to the treasmy are registered.
On the form of the datives see 9.
19. Perdiccas may not cause limits (opoi) to be set on the coast, N. or S. of
Methone, to restrict the navigation of the Methonaeans.
24. ^vfx0Lj3aadvTO3v. The usage is quite classical; cf. Hdt. 1 74, Thuc. 11 29,
5 (^we/Si/Sacre 5e K<xi rbv HepdiKKav to?s 'Adrfvaiots).
25. es Aiovuaia. The next Dionysia would be in March (Elaphebolion)
427 b.c tAos
?x
0VTa-s : so K
; Zxovaav is too short, taxovtrav (Sauppe) is against
usage. The expression reXos
^x
ovT^
"
plenipotentiary" occurs Thuc. iv 118.
28. ifj.
no<rei5i<j. An examination of the var. lectt. in CIA leaves no doubt
that this is the right reading. (yrpanQrai ol for o-TpaTevSfxevoi is due to K. The
place indicated may be either the promontory of the Pallenian peninsula
42 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[15
(II oaeib&viov Thuc. iv 129, Liv. xliv 11) or the promontory between Argilus and
Stagirus (Hdt. vn 115).
29 sqq. The decree, or rather probouleuma, has up to this point dealt with
two questions;
(1)
concerning the tribute,
(2)
concerning the sending of am-
bassadors. As the first was put in the form of two alternatives
(6, 7 eiVe...^) it
was necessary that the actual voting should be recorded. Hence the addition of
these lines 2932
;
but no express statement was required in the case of the
second proposition (concerning the ambassadors), the mere record of which
implied it had been adopted. In keeping with this resolution we find in a
Quota-list CIA i 257 (427/6
or 426/5 b.c.) the Methonaeans numbered among the
7r6Aets at avrrjv tt\v airapxh
v air-qyayov (1. 50 sqq.).
32. edo^ev kt\. Here begins the second decree. During the time of
Athenian maritime power, as during the Peloponnesian War, the Hellespont
was watched by the Athenians, and the 'EWrjcriroi'TocpuXaKes seem to have con-
stituted a special board charged with the duty of regulating the export of corn.
Without the consent of the Athenians no corn could be carried to any place
from the Euxine or Byzantium. Where consent was given the amount of corn
which might be imported annually to the privileged state was defined, and a
declaration of the amount (within the prescribed limit, /nexpi- rod Teraynevov) had
to be made to the "EWrjairouTocp^XaKes.
38. evdvveadojv : see 7 19. fivplaiat. dpaxp-a?cn : these forms (as well as those
in
-flcri)
are very rare as compared with the forms in -aai, -rjcri 9 15 etc. The
ordinary form in -ais prevails after 420 b.c. Meisterhans Gr. 121.
39. ypa\pap.evovs :
"
having declared." In CIA m 38 and CIG 1569 (Orcho-
meniisi) the word is airoypacpeadat.
43. TroXetn. See 8 14.
46. dXXa (pvX&TTovres kt\. "but they shall be held to have performed their
duty if they protect their own land." Cf. Xen. Cyr. vi 2, 37 a
5'
eirio-ravTai, T<p
ftovXo/j.eixp p.ia6ov virriperovvTes ev rip Terayp-evcp ZcrovTai. The same phrase ev rtp
reray/xevip ehai occurs 35 48, 38 63. The right explanation is due to Koehler,
Mitth. ii p. 209.
48. 'Adlrivalovs. AOINAIOC
51. T77[cr]i de [&\\r)]<n 7r6[\][<ri
x\P
7
lf
JLaT
'
l<7aL - The restoration is D's (Herm.
XVI p. 192 sq.). K had proposed Trepi 5e 'H7?7cri7r6Aea>s (or TifXTjcrnroXeus, 'Hyrjai-
iroXe'jUoi'). The Athenians will give audience to the other states, summoning
an assembly of the e/c/cXT/ata in the second prytany (cf. the note above on the
chronology) immediately after the session (of the pov\-i)) at the dockyards.
For another instance of the /3ov\r) holding its meetings at the Peiraeeus, on
business connected with the fleet, cf. CIA n 809 Col. b 11 sqq. (325/4 b.c).
K points out that the expedition which was being prepared in the second
prytany of 01. 88. 3 (426 b.c.) was that which in the winter following cruised
round the Peloponnesian shore under the command of Aristoteles and Hierophon
(Thuc. in 105).
56. ibo^ev kt\. Here begins the third decree. From CIA i 273, 6 we learn
that the tribe Ke/cpo7rts had the second prytany of the year 426/5 b.c.
16. Five fragments of dark-coloured marble, a, b (after other editors)
CIA i 96; c, d, e, Kumanudes, 'A0. v p. 168, 169. a

e CIA iv 1, p. 22;
16]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 43
D 29. Cf. J. M. Stahl Mus. Rh. xxxviii 145 sqq.; H. Swoboda Serta Harteliana
28 sqq.
ABAAE(=e, ei,v).
H
(=-'&)
OIKUMN [XC
=
f]
O
(= o, ov, to)
c
7pajjL|xaT]ei/e.
"E8ofjv tt| povX-rj Kal t<o 8rjfj.w 'AKa|ia]^Tt? 7Tp-
VT(1VV, Ypa}X(xdTV, ]u09 67T6-
<TT(XTl, tlT
J
^L
a d
5
VTCLS 6
at
"*
K6r)v\<aXo\t, Ke\evova\i
.... 8i]ac<X9 SiSoz^ras] 7T/30?
'
A6r)v[ai<av tovs errurKO'Trov-
s
Kajia Ta? ^f[jipo]Xr/9 al r)<ra\y irpos MvTiXTjvaiov-
s k]ol Tol<$ /cXrj^ovtyois, ocra 7rco[\r\QT) 6Vra eirl tov
io ay^pwv irplv a[Tro]8odrjvaL avrols [t^ yr|v viro twv
<rr\paT7]'ywv [Kal] rdov arparuoTCOv [diroSovvai MvtiX-
r\v\ai(ov tovs e^ovra^. Kal avaypd<f)[crai TavTa t6v
-y-
po.fJLix]area tt}? (3ov\rj<$ iarrjXr) \[t#ivT) Kal KaraG-
i]vat
if!
iroXet rekecrL Tot9<?> [MvTtXrjvaiwv. rav-
15
ra
fiev dvaypdtyai Kal tf[aX<rai tt\v -irpco-peCav t-
(ov M.VTl\r}vaL(OV 7rl ^[o-e'via is to irpvTavctov ds
avpiov rots Be K[\r\pov\ois
7779
dvrairoBo
eBo
20 TO
k\av 8o-
t] 'AQr\v]aloc<; or-
MvtiXtiv]^/^^ Kal diro
fJLOS
Bo 1
25
avro
. . .
I I
[.
. . . 'o Z]rj/jLO<Z 'o
'
Adr)v[al<av.
.]v Kal avro
I [
v<
f>]
44 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[16
The fragments contain portions of a decree which appears to relate to the
setting of cleruchs in the island of Lesbos, in 427 b.c. as described by Thuc. in
50. 2, 3. D adds Diod. xn 55, 10 : ttjv Ae<r(3ov oX-qv wXrjv rrjs Mrjdu/jLvaicou %wpa?
KareK\ripovxWav-
7. iTTKXKdirovs. See 5 11. 5i'/cas didovras kt\.
'
submitting their causes
to be tried before the eiricTKoiroL of the Athenians according to the international
compacts made with the Mytilenaeans (sc. before their revolt from Athens).' As
Swoboda I.e. points out, the text shows that those commentators are wrong who
assume that the cleruchs all remained at Athens and did not settle in Lesbos
(k\vpovxovs aireirefx\pav says Thucydides). In Lesbos they had doubtless, for
military purposes, to remain in the towns and this fact would account for the
cultivation of the lands by the Lesbians themselves.
810. D's text.
14. rtXeai kt\. See 11 22. ravra [xkv kt\. For a similar repetition see
32 72.
Remark iii. On Attic numeral signs. The six ground-forms of
the decimal system in Attica were as follows:
1
=
1, P
= irevrc,
A
= $Ka,
H
= exa-roV, X
=
x^ol, M
= pvpioi. The numerals
1

4
were
denoted by the required number of vertical strokes. Compendia
formed of
P
and the next four ground-forms denote multiples
:
pi
or
P
=
50, P
-
500, P
=
5000, p
=
50,000. All values not
represented by the above 10 signs are denoted by way of addition, the
higher stages preceding the lower:
p|
=
6, ANN
=
14, HP
= 105,
XXXXPHHHHPAAAAPIIII
=4999. This method of numeration
is attested by Attic inscriptions from 454 (e.g. CIA I 226) to about
95 B.C. (e.g. CIA ii 985). (Miiller, Hdbch. i 542;
Meisterhans,
Gr. 9. For other authorities see Ro. I
p. 96.)
Similarly unities
of money and weight are expressed by compendia :
T
= rdXavTov,
M
-
fxva,
C
or
5
= crraryp, \- =
Spa^fxyj,
I
=
ofioXos, C
and 3
= rjp.ua-
fiekiov
(in CIA II 834 c 8. 54
D seems to
=
rerapTr/piopLov =
\
obol).
T
= TeTapTY)p.6pLov,
X
=
x
a^K^- ^n the Roman period
X
denotes the
denarius. The sign of money value precedes the numeral signs
;
thus hPAl
= Dr. 61
;
where the former is absent drachmae are to
be understood. Frequently however the sign for drachma
(h)
is
substituted for the unit, e.g.
APhhhll I
= 18 Dr., 3 obols. Attic
compendia of money and numeral signs are
p
?
P
= 5 talents,
Q
= 10 talents,
P
= 50 talents,
H
= 100 talents,
p
= 500 talents,
X
= 1000 talents. Other compendia will be explained separately
as they occur.
17]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 45
17. Put together out of more than thirty fragments found at various times
on the Acropolis. CIG 143 ; CIA i 37 (of. iv 1 p. 13, 54, 66, 140 sq.) where is a
long list of authorities, of which the most important is Kohler Urkunden u.
Untersuchuiigen z. Gesch. des delisch-attischen Bundes, Abh. Ak. Berl. 1869
p. 63 sqq.; H 47. A new fragment Herm. xxxi 146 n. 3. For a concise
summary of the history of the League see Busolt in I. Muller's Hdb. iv 1, 210 sqq.
ABAAE
(=, l, rj)
XH
(=h, sometimes omitted)
OlKUMN
[X
=
f]
O (=
O, ov, a>)
PPTY4>X [>
=
>M-
ZrwftMn
frg. a

c. (Both the position and the meaning of frg. d, e are uncertain.)


[c] O L
T a [xl cr i 9
<&
6
p
ov
"Ebo^ev Tr)[i PovXtj Kal tw 8t](1,o). Al-ytjls] e7rp[vTa,vev, ~]cov
e7pafp.fi.d-
TU, TT-
ordret, 9o^5t[iriros tint] Xkto[ ~\av
x
L
P[
TOV *7rt TQ--
5 s 7r6Xets, btio [p.v liri rds cirl 0paKi]s] bvo be e[irl 'Iwviav, 8vo 8]e eVi
p[ij<rous, 8vo 8e irl 'EXXtjo-tt
-
-
cwto[v]. oOr[oi 8e
]
kolvol
'
eos 7ra .... [Mai-
/j.a.KT7)piQv
[
i](ra7W7ea[s t]ous be
Tea Kal %v[v ]ov (uv).
'?j be /3[ovXi] ado
pas. outoi [8c ~\ov (cov), d<p' r)s d[v
10 77s rj/xepas 'e/cacr
01 'op/cwra[l
] Tvyx[&v Ti]-
v avTT)v f?7ju.[iav %|/t|-
(piariTat [Srjpos T-
rj 7/Xtata 15 7r6Aeo"[i] /car- 16 tov]tojv.
'01
5 . . . . 17 17 oXet^ov e . . /.
18 aias
dpx^7
s 19 [d]7r6 vov/jL7]VL[as] 20
xPVI
J- aTi[<rai-
21 5e 06po 22 ed/x ti^r (/xer) 23 vovfx-qv[i
24
'0
7p[afJLjxaTvs] 25, 26 . . oire K]|AaKper
27 aXov iff 28 vaia 29 irepi 30 .... ... .
frg.
fm, 0, p.
2 crrpaTTj^yot /ca[i ']o iro\ep.ap[\os ... 3 . . Xas rtD[v r\]Xt.ao~Tu)v
4 evQv~\v(rd(x) p.\y]placn. bpa[\\ir\ari ... 5 . . . vewv Ka[Q]io-TavTwv
6 . . ]uv 7-77
[Po-u]\^
(0?' [iro]\ei) ^vvra ... 7 . . on 5e . i>os /jlt/vos
x

8 . . . 'o (po[p]os eV r<p 7ro[X(Jia ... 9 . . . es (eis) 7[]*'c<;j'Tai edtt . .
10 . . ov (ojv) pL[r\]defxia rj b 11 . . . es t[t]]s
x^P
as o.8v[yar . . .
12 . <|>]6po[s], '6s dv
rax^til
13 ev <TT]?7Xa[is ?]
\(.dlvai[s
?] . . .
14
'0
. . 7r6Xet ai'r[i .... 15 . . Ttjcrt ir]6\[]cri irepi rod 0[6pov ....
16 . . Tv[y~\x<*' v
V
i"/)UT[avvovaa 17 . . . i^viyK(a]ai e[s] rbv br)p.ov k . . . ov
18 .... to ... . ]7rt (r[<j)]wj' ai/Tiiv, 60[tXeiv \tXias
8paxp.ds 'tcpdjs r-
rji 'AQ]r/va[ia,
] p[.
. . K<x]t rcD[u] brmoaiix)
'[. . v8vveo-8a> p.vpt]ao-t
46 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[17
20 Spa\]firj[cri 'c'KacrTOS twv irpjurafvcwv Ka]t edv tls dXXws 5i[. . . .\i]t] elvat r-
as] rd[is . . .] a . . . tata . . eVi r^s ^pin-a^e^as
'"^
av] . - . ot[i irpvTaJi'etf??, ar-
i]/xos <x[t<o Kal] rd
x[p
T
lF
l,aTa
]
avrov 5[t][Jt6o"t]a &t[t] /cat tt)s deov [to ciri-
8KaTo[i/. ex]cr[ivf\yKT(x) de r-
aura ei's [tov] 5t}/j.ou ['tj Alyr]]is 7r[p]i>ra[vC]a iwdvayKes e7rei[8dv Jcrrpa
. . .] els TplTTjU 7j-
jxtpav [Trpu>r]ov ^er[d rd 'i]pd. e[dv] de [(xrj 8]ia7r[p]ax#7/ er rau[Ti],
XPT"
p.aTiJfeij' 7r[p]t tovtov TrpQ>\r-
25 ov 7-77 ['vo-]repcua[i vv]x&s ['c']ws Tdv 8]ia,7r[p]ax#77 e7rt tt7[s lpT]p.vr][s
irpvTavelas' edv d{k \i-
7] ee[vy]/cwo"i els [t6v 8t]jxo]i'
77
[|AT]] 5t[aTrpd]cri eVt o-<<2>i> a[vTwv, tvQvv[e<rdu>
fivpiaat 8p[a\\i.r\-
cnv 'e'[Ka<TT]os tQ[x [irpvTdv]ea>i' . . . po . . . . aKO}\voi> e7rid[ii% ....]. arpa-
[. . .]as. roi)s 5[ Ktjpv-
Kas 7rp[oa-K]/cX77p,e[vovs . . .] em[i ']u7r[6 r<av dr)]fjLoaL(t)v /cX^r^pwv Sck' ijp.]-
epw[v . .
.]
<re . . [4-
dp, 1X7] 6[p0c3s] do/aDo~[i . . . .]
ve . . . s 8 . . . as rots K7]pvx\_o'i
30 ov op[K . . . .]
ran . . . or . . pe . . t, 'tva /xrj ai)[r
rds Ta[]eis r^crt 7r[6X<rt . .] /ca[. .
.
'6]7rou dp Sokt^1
irt]pl tuv \y\d^eu>v /ca . . . to . . . .
XPV
X^7[civ X
|
/T
l]^
)
"
leo~6[a]i. Kal edv t .
.'0
. . pi tov 8 . . . . aird-
\]wcnv [']cu 7r6Xets s '6t[ t
]t/
1' Tai-
35 v tov 0op]oi', 'tVa et tto\
xPV
(T ^aL 7r
"
pl tov <j>]6pou Kara ddXarrau irp-
... a 5aee
[ ttjJs (3ov\r}s rrj 7rpc6-
ttJ ] r[o]uro
[
t]Qv aWwv 8iKao~Tr)plujp, edp. jx-
r\ . . . .] irpo 8t)p\o.~\ tois 8e Krjpv^c tois lovcn t-
40 ov p.urOoji'
(?)
a7ro5[ovvai tovs or diroSovTtov 01 ]
[6 8iva lir]e. rd
yu,e[v] d\Xa naddirep tt} j3ov\r}' rds
8c ToUjeis], oaac [. . . . tovs irp]uTdj'et[s], 'ot di' Tore rvyxdvojcn Trpvr-
avcvovTJes, Kal to
[
t]6 SiKao-Trjpiov, 'oTav irepi tQ>v Ta-
(ov
fl,
'Jottws dV d . . . . "E5o^[cv] ttj (3ov\rj Kal ry drj/xa). A-
Iytjis ejTrpurdj'cvfc,
YP
a
H
L
K
,0'T6V6
'
8]w/?os e'7recr[TdTt]. 0oi'5t7T7roj
et7re 'oiroc-
45 o-r]o-i iroJXecrt <f>6pos [lT<i\Qy] lirl t]t}s
[PovXtJs,
-p IIXcurTiJas vpuiTOS [f.ypa]/xp:d-
Teve, irrl 2rparo/c-
Xe'ovs] dpxovTOS, /3o[vv Kal
]
X
[
aird-yet-v els IlavaOj^cua rd
/xe["ydXa] airdaas' rre/xTrovTcov
8[k cv] T7] Trofiiry k . . . . [KaTa Ta8c '4ra~\^eu Top. cpo[pov Trj]<rt irokecFLv
'rj [p]oi/X[ij,
t) [IIXjetcrTias 7r[pc3Tos 7pajX|x]d[TV
, J7rt 2rparo/cX[OVS
d]px
oi/ro
5,
ewi \t(J]u [clo*-
a7W7[0)]j/, ots Ka[ "ypap.}idTU.
17]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 47
frg. n

8. frg. t

v. Part of frg.
p
i
N^ciwrt/cos <p6po[s]
['
OiroarTjcri twv iro]- [2]rpei^a?o[i]
$$$
nd
P
i[o]L [\ibiV MvK)(aj-] [IU]epes i[v]
4F
Nd[io]i
[pTJTO <(>]p[lV p.1]
']-
[Hep]ydp.u)[i]
4F
"Av5p[ioi] [ajxa ]i//x7r[avTas] frg. *.
4F
Mtj\lo[i] [aXXa ir]apd /^[e'pos] Neo7roXtrat
ITTT*mM
[tovs <j>6]pou?, e[irl tw] 7rapd Xeppoi/?7[<rov
]
$pi
'Eperp[w]s] [iri<j>]opd^ [tcXciv,] Ai/mvaloL
P
Qr)pal[oi] [aveu] rai/Trjs [%]i>P-tt- Tvpodifa X
4
Ket[oi] [as 'o] (pbpos irajyQf)- 5 Aapeiov irapa
A
P
Kapi/[<rTioi] Ati'Stot TT]fjL Mvffiav
A
) 4 Xa\/c[iSrjs] MtX^trtot Aep[ioi] .... peta 7rapd A
FT K\j6v[\.oi] Teixiovaaa [Bpv]XXetoi>
T
4 TiJv[t]o[i] KapLiprjs . . . . ta
X
TT ^T[v]prjs KvfJLCUOl 10 ['ApTaiou?] re?xos T
. .
M[v~]kovl[oi] 'E0eVioi [tirl tw P]iV<5a/a. XX
> . .
[Z]epi<pto[i] "EpvdpaToL frg.
g'.
XXX
. .
'Itjtcu Tyioi Muer[o
?]
. . Airjs *g 'I^Xi/crtot Z[eX]eia[T<xi] z'"
T
'
AdrjviTai
o
60
[Tlapi]apo[C]
XXX 2
T
2i/pn
2
s [T]eXe/A^<r<rio[t] [Aap8]a^?)s
) XX I>i>7x??s
g
[KX]aw5?ys * 5 [XeppJoj/Tja-ifTai] T
27r[apT<oXioi]
X Pt/i/cu^s
1
[K]ioi ~ [air* 'A.y]opas 'A0[vTaioi]
XX Aia/cp?)s a7r[6]
^
[TT]Xd]i>5pioi s
. . . uXt? (vac.)
XXX
IIe7r[apTJeioi]
.
XaX/a5cu;i> K>i'[8io]i - .... aviTai
T
\A/cdv[0ioi]
X 'Ai>a0atot KoXo[<j>(vi]ot S> [BpvXjXetaPOt Ai'[viot or Ai[veaTat
5 Kepia
Alll
'Aip[aiot]
^
10 [' EXcujot;crtoi Ko(T(r[aiot ?]
XX 4>o\e7ai/5pos Xepp[ovTJ<riot] [tv XeJppoi'T^cp IloXt . . . [o-Tjpa
HHH BAjSipa Ae/3e[8ioi] [Bl)<rPt]K'OS : L0 7rapd 2 . . . or irap
"
A<j-
X Ktp.a;Xos 4>w/ca[iT]s] [NcavJSpei??? [Q]ucr<n[oi]
X "ZtlKlPTJTai 'I5ufi[TJs]
.... K7)P0l [At]^s
)
H Hoaldeiop TiJ/w[ioi] 15
[' A.\(ti]Tr[i]Kovi>r](no [K TOV "A0tt]
ev Ei)/3oi'a KuXX[av8ioi] [MaSvJrtoi
TX X
Atd[Kp]iot 'AcrTi'[TraXaiTJ$] Aa/xTrwi/ei^s
ej> E[v|3]oia[i] 'AXi[Kapva<r<riot]
. 60 . . . rToX[ixvaioi (-T])] . . . vrjs
TTT
. o . . . 'Epu[0paa>v] 20 [Ilp]/ccocrto[t]
KXa[op.vioi] [Kiav]ot
KaX[v8vOi]
[
""l]" ^]
Ilp[lT]VTJs] .... lo[i]
IIXa5 .... . . . . L . . .
48
GREEK
EPIGRAPHY.
ATTICA:
SECT. I. [17
nirye[\TJs]
25 [Si-yet]^?
A77/ncr[cuoi]
[Stjctti]oi
Mvrj(ra[ttot]
[A . . . . ]oTe[t]xirai
Tep/i[pris]
[K.aXXi]7roX?rai
T
Ki^[8vtjs]
[IIpaTr]os
Ap...
30 ... . dpio[t]
TTT
xxx'
X
XX
[KcPpijJfioi
[IIaXai]7rep:[w(rs.ot]
frg. z"
'Apraio[v ? irl tu]
'PtfySaxt
'OrX-^oi
5 H
T
nu^oTroXiTati]
~Mr)Tp0TT0\lS
rrapa
Hpiairou
[T]T
B[i\<rav9y
'E]XX77[0-]7TOVTIOU
06p[ov]
1 *
:rg. z""
10
K]e<pdXa[i]oj>
XX
MM]F4444FF
?,
HHH 5
'Ak]tcucu
iroXeis H
KX[vai]
frg. to
. . TT
"
AvTai>[h]po[s X
'O06[pioi]
A . . .
....
'Potre[iov]
5
pi
Icracro[s]
Mi ... 15
Nt70-o[s
IIopSoo-eXTJvii] P
AioXira[i]
X
Kapua[v8TJs]
'
A\ia\]aLr6s P
Zepeia
F
fSpVKOVVTLOl
Adpi]<ra P
<>ap/3?7Xioi
5 X
Tap(3avr]$
'AxiKJkelov P
2ep/U.T7
X
MwSioi
10
h
'Hpd/cXeioj'
7rapa Tep/xepa 20
A
2177101
PT
'Eo>7)s
'T/xTjo-o-Tys
A
A
~M-7iKv(3epvaioi
TaXaioi
io TT
TijXos
T
Tpdi'Xos
TT
Ke\ev5epLS
15
X
Bop/xi(TKOS
XXXX
'Irtfpa
TT
TiUivq irapa
XXX
Sup.77
Seppeio^
XXX
IliSacr^s
T
ApCs 7rapd
15 XX
'TSaiiJs
Seppeiop
H
'EXcuoucioi
'Epu#pcuu>
20 XXX
X
SdX[t,l
IIo[Ti8aidTat]
17]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 49
. epa irapa
P44-
.... vfieas
W$
(vac.
)
20 . . . s
44T
[IIvpivJSos
p
(vac.
)
.... v\iat
4F
(vac.)
(vac.
)
A P
25
5TOKap]7ro,6lol
frg. x and y.
. . . a . . .
TTTT .
TTT
TT

;. w', CIA iv
1, p. 66,
>ms to belong to the
lie and Carian states. 5 TT
I a
rj[s] r X X X
'o .... l0,
. . . 01 X
K[i0as ?]
. . rjs r
II[o]cri5eio'
ivaijot
'AKp60yot
'lKa]pu}
10 ot e, " kd(g
. . . CFrjS
TLXevfAT]
... LOL
Qearaipos
j.vpivjcuoi
. i'wpos (m rasura)
ipa 1Lv]fxit)v
ZtVos (in rasura)
15
i.
[Tpiir]oai (in rasura)
.... 77
.... 5os
26 . . . yi . . .
In frg. z"" Koehler conj.
1. 2 Nufticpaiov] ; in z"'"
1. 13 Kt4p.pi . . ., 1. 14 Nt-
/c[a)vta], 1. 15 Ilarfpcunjs],
1. 16 Kep[curovs]; i.e. names
of Pontic states.
Another very small frg.
CIA 1 p. 23 possibly belongs
to the inscription.
Note

The spaces between the columns are diminished to suit the exigencies
of
the page, and
columns
2
4 the vertical arrangement
of
the numeral signs has not been strictly adhered to.
The document is one of the Tribute-lists (to be distinguished from the lists
of the quota paid to Athena, as e.g. CIA 1 226) and appears to be unique, in
that it contains not merely a list of the quota but a new assessment (rdts (popov)
which largely increased previous payments. The tribute from the Hellespont is
nearly tripled; that of the Islands (50 sqq. ) is doubled, cf. e.g. CIA 1 244
where the tribute of the
Tpvyxv*
is 16 dr. 4 ob. x 60 = 1000 dr.; while here
(1. 70)
it is 2000 dr. At the date of the inscription (the archonship of Stratocles, 1. 45,
425 b.c.) according to the orators, Aeschin. F. L. 337, Andoc. de Pace
9,
Pseudo-Andoc. c. Alcib. 11 (cf. Plut. Aristid. 24), the tribute was doubled (Grote
11 xlvii doubted the statement), possibly as was said through the influence of
Alcibiades.
K. II. 4
50 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[17
After the heading come two decrees of the Senate and People concerning the
assessment of the tribute. Beneath these and probably in four columns
followed a list of the tributary states, the amount of the tribute being given
in talents and drachmas on the left of each column. Col. i contained the
tribute from the Islands, Col. iv the tribute from the Thracian allies. Between
these, but in what order is doubtful, came the Ionian, Carian and Hellespontine
tribute, 'Iam/ros <p6pos, KapiKos, '~E\\7](nr6vTios. For the general mode of procedure
in the assessment see Index, s.v. rdts.
3
30. First decree a
c
3
30, d, e and /

m, o,
p
1
43.
3. Alyrjis. Bestored from frg. /
p 23, 43. As the prytanes of the tribe
Aegeis are ordered (cf. 21 sqq.) under severe penalties to bring this Trpo(3ov\ev/xa
before the e/r/r^crta within the limits of the prytany it seems probable that both
decrees were passed in the same prytany.
5. 8vo ixev kt\. The persons here directed to be appointed, whom Koehler
supposes to be the Ta/rrat or assessors (CIA i 266 : [IIoAeis as gT~\aav oi ra/rrat)
were probably, according to Kirchhoff, eight in number (not ten, as Koehler
thinks), i.e. two to each tributary province.
7. elaaywyels. These were officers entrusted with the conduct of actions to
enforce payment of the tribute ; eTri/meXrjTai acted in concert with them for the
same purpose in CIA i 38, a decree which lays down systematically the measures
for dealing with defaulting states, op/cwrat 1. 11 were commissioners appointed
to visit the allies and accept their oath of allegiance to the assessment. Cf. 7 17
and Xen. Hell, vi
5, 3. On 8\eiov 1. 17 see 2 b 36.
/

in, o,
p.
4. [xvpLavi
5paxfJ-V
cn- See 9.
18. e7rt acpQiv avrCjv : so below 1. 25 eirl tt)[s eipr)ixvri\s irpv rave las.
27 sqq. These lines seem to contain provisions for the summoning {irpbcrKk-qais)
of defaulting states by means of drjfxdaioL KXrjTrjpes and KTjpvKes. The kXtjttjp
vr)<jLWTt.K6s of Ar. Av. 1422 will readily occur to us.
30, 35. IW : see lO b 2. Meisterhans Gr. 253 quotes as certain only these
two instances from the classical period. The conjunction did not become
common in inscriptions till the 3rd century B.C.
4043 : a supplementary motion which seems to contain a provision for
hearing ajDpeals against assessments.
43 sqq. This second decree gives instructions to the states assessed to take
part in the Greater Panathenaea.
47 sqq. : an introductory heading to the list of states assessed.
Col. i 84. Boeckh conjectures 'H(pai<rTt.r)s (Lemnos).
i, u, v
1
46, w
1
25, x. The Ionian-Carian tribute. To this is prefixed a
special heading which Boeckh perceived to belong to an e7rt0opd or extraordinary
contribution. The restoration of lines
1
8,
naturally only tentative, is
Kirchhoff's.
z, z', z". The Hellespontine tribute. The total is given z" 11 as 295 talents
5300 drachmas. As an appendix (z" 12
20)
are added the names of certain
cities of the Trojan shore, which had formerly belonged to the Mitylenaeans,
but in 427 b.c. had become tributary to Athens. Cf. Thuc. in 50, 3; iv 52,
2.
p
5053, z"" and (perhaps in a different column) z'"
, y. The Thracian
tribute. In
p
51 we read [Ilijepes
[y |
Hep]ya/j,w[t.]
;
cf. Hdt. vn 112 reject r&
HXUpwv, rCov evl Qaypys iarl ovvo/xa /rat irepcp Hepya/j-os.
18]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 51
In z"" 5 "laraaos may be the same as nt<rra<Tos CIA i 243, and Tpd'CXos 1. 14
may be TpdyiXos. Tidovv 1. 16 and SdXr; 1. 20 are mentioned Hdt. vn 59.
18. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA i 45; Koehler,
Mitth. i
(1876) p. 171 sq.; D 34.
ABAAE
(=,i,
v).
H(=/0OII<UMN [X
=
f]
O (=, ov, to)
PPCTY^X [>
=
f]
ZTot
XV
56v.
B.C
Upo/c\er)s
y
Aropl3ov JLvcov-
L/x[e]L>9 [e^ypafji/uudreve.
"EiSo^ev
rfj fiovXjj
Kal rw
Srj/ncp.
f
\iT7ro6covT\<; eirpvT-
5
aveve, Upo/c\r)<; eypafxpuaTe-
ve, Tt/ua? eTreararei, 'Apiar-
iwv
tjpx
6- paavic\er)s elire'
421/0
eTraiveaai 'Aareav tov 'A\e-
ov,
(
6tl V iroel A07)valov<; k-
io al ISta kcll S7]/moala tov d-
(pCKvov/nevov, Kal vvv Kal iv
tc5 irpoaOev ^povcp. Kal av-
aypayjrdrco nrpo^evov Kal
evepyeT7)v
'
AOr/vatcov Ka6a-
15 Trep TioXvarparov tov <l>Xei-
aaiov icmjXr) \i6lvr) y-
pafifiarevs *o rrj? /3ov\r}<; Ka-
l KaraOeTGO iv iroXei. to Se d-
pyvpiov Sovtcov (o)l KcoXaKp-
20 6Tai.
This appears to be the earliest
complete extant example of an
Athenian proxenia-decree. For
a general notice of such decrees
see Rem. ii, p. 33 sq.
If Thrasycles 1. 7 is the envoy
of that name sent to Sparta and
mentioned Thuc. v 19 and 24,
the decree must have been
passed either in the spring or
in the early summer after one or
other of the journeys, in which
it would seem that the envoys
had been entertained by Asteas
(the person honoured in the
decree) at Alea in the N. E. of
Arcadia (see Index) and Poly-
stratus at Phlius, N.E. of Alea.
1. ILpoKXerjs. Below 1. 5 I7po-
kXtjs; but again 1. 7 QpaavKX^rjs.
Ace. to Meisterhans, Gr. p. 132,
the contracted -kXtjs is found
even in the oldest inscriptions
(e.g. 'Hpaq\r)s on a vase KV 39,
7th or 6th century B.C.), and
is the later prevailing form.
The uncontracted form (per-
haps a new formation from the genitive and accusative) occurs sporadically
from the 6th to the 3rd century.
8. iwaive'aa.i. It is perhaps best to regard the infinitive in these decrees as
imperatival, and not dependent upon et7re or a similar verb. So frequently the
perfect e\pri(piadai, 5er56x#cu. The usage fluctuates considerably between the
infinitive and the imperative; in CIA n 614, 12 sqq. (282 B.C.) a sentence actually
begins with the subject rbv iepea (as if an infinitive should follow) and ends
(TTecpavovTU) 6 iepetis. It is noteworthy that the aorist generally marks a single
and immediately following action: thus in CIA 11 311, 36 (286? b.c.) we have
dveiirelv tov oT<:[<pavov] but CIA n 611, 37 (300 B.C.) dvayopeijeiv 5e rdvde tov
o~Tt(pa.vov tovs lepoTroLovs tovs del Xayxdvovras lepoiroelv. Meisterhans, Gr. 244 sq.
42
52 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[18
9. iroei. See 7 41.
15. Probably there was a second decree for Polystratus, which may also
have contained more details of the services rendered by him and Asteas. The
et in <&\eid<Tiov is the normal spelling in inscriptions; Meisterhans Gr. 36, 53.
16. ear-qX-r}. See 7 59.
19. A stele of Pentelic marble surmounted by a relief and broken below;
found at Eleusis in 1887. H. 83 m. ; Br. 53 m. ; Th. 1012 m. Philios Mitth.
xix
(1894) 163 sqq., Taf. vn.
ABAAE (= 6,
ec,
v) IHOIKUMN [XZ
=
f]
O (= o
:
ov, to)
PPTY4>X [4>Z
=
ir]
ZtolxvSov.
Il\pe7rLS Qvcf)?jpov eypa\xfxdreve.
'ESo^ez^
rfj fiovXrj /cat too St^co*
Alyrjl's iirpvrdveve' Tiperns eypa-
\l\iacitV' YlarpoK\r}$ eireardret' %ei-
5
a]to? e27re. Tbv Veurov rov rrapd rov ["A
<TTft)9 ye<fivpcoo~ai \i6ois ^pa)/xe[v-
ovs '\L\vctlv[6]0v rwv /ca0r)pr){ie[v-
cov e/c rov vea) rov dpyaiov, 'ovs e\nro[y
eis ro rel^o^ avaXiafcovres, &)9 a-
io v ra lepa <f)epo)aiv au tepeiai a-
<r\<ba\earara. Il/Varo? he rrotovvrtov
Tr~\evreiroha, iva pJr\ ' dfia^at 8ie-
XavvGovrcu, aXXd rol<? lovaiv
f)
/3a-
hji^etv e7rl rd 'tepd. Aidois Se rcar-
15 aKJaXvyjrai, t? Stappods rod
<p>
f
Pe|Y-
ov] kclO* ore dv
[i\i><yy
p(d)yjrr) /\rj
fjuofjueX-
T]s 'o dpxiTKTtov. k]dv he
fjur) coatv e-
The decree orders that the stones from the ancient temple at Eleusis, so far
as not used up for repairs to the wall, shall be employed in making a causeway
across one of the 'Peircu or lagoons that are crossed by the Sacred Way just on
the Eleusinian side of the pass of Daphne. This causeway is probably to be
recognised in some remains still to be seen parallel to the line of the Sacred
Way across the 'Peiros and about 6080 paces from it. The date is given by
the name of the ypaju./j.aTevs, shown by CIA iv 1, 225 k p. 174, to have held
office in the archonship of Aristion, 421/420 b.c.
5. rov wapa rod "Acrrewsthe expression is unusual, but can hardly mean
anything but the first 'Peirds reached on coming from Athens.
20]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 53
8. tov veio tov dpx^ov : the old temple of the Mysteries at Eleusis, built
by Pisistratus, and destroyed by the Persians, and rebuilt, perhaps by Cimon.
9. to reixos is probably the wall of the peribolus of this same early temple,
of which a portion, according to M. Philios, is actually repaired with stones
from an earlier building.
10. Possibly the crowd of carts may have jostled the priestesses bearing the
sacred emblems on the Sacred Way ; or the sea and the rain-swollen lagoon may
sometimes have made the road unsafe.
14. ra lepd is here used in a more general sense for the whole of the
ceremonies.
15. ras dtappods. These may have been either the culverts in the causeway
or those in the Sacred Way. The water from the 'Peiros now turns a mill.Is
the
p
after tov really a mistake? or is it a case like g-ppeov, dta-pporj? Cf.
A. Wilhelm, GGA 1898 p. 207, who adds the Homeric dud ppQyas, /card ppbov and
rd ppicpeuTa in a papyrus (Wessely Wien. St. 1886 p. 206, Ber. il. gr. Pap. in
Paris und London
p. 31), ppvfioi CIA iv 1, 225 c B 21
p. 171, 225/ A 9 sq. p. 173.
So also probably /card ppvaiov in an inscription found at Mitylene, Mich. 25 1. 19.
16.
^vyypd\f/y,
'
specify
'
; see 4 5.
17. 6 dpx<-TeKT0jvthe state architect ; see Index s.v.
20. A fragment of Pentelic marble discovered in 1877 near the Dionysiac
theatre. CIA iv
1,
46
6, p. 14 ; H 52. Cf. H. N. Fowler (Cambridge, Mass.),
Thucydides, Book v App.
p. 188 sqq. The fragment contains the right-hand
ends of lines 1
26 of the treaty between the Athenians and the Argives,
Mantineans and Eleans, 420 B.C., Thuc. v 47.
ABAAE(=e, 0,
v
),H(=h)O\\<lMU [X<r
=
f
L 5.6] O (=
o,
OU,
&) PPCTY . X . 2tolxv$6i>.
Discrepancies between the text of
Thucydides and the stone.
1. 2. Thuc. om. irpbs dWrjXovs
1. 7. Thuc. 'HXdovs /cat MavTive'a.s : so in
S,
9 ; cf. 13, 14
1. 13. Thuc. iirl t+jv yrjv tt]v "RXduv -q
'H.\]e[l](ov
. 7T/909 aWrjXov^ -
Kara >yy)v kcli kcl-
. 9 fcal yiavroveas
vaiovs teal tovs %-
5
. . vyuayovs Te^vr)
vriveas /ecu HX-
. . Ma^T^ea? /cal
. ordrco /card to
. Koi WlavTiveva- 10
. akvetv Se
fir] i-
So/cfrjjt. /3o7j6elu Be
. . v rrjv 'ApyeLcov r)
54 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[20
i av hvvcovra-
rr)v iroXiv 'A#-
15
VTCOV TOiV 7T-
1. 17. Thuc. 0121. [|M|Scji.i$ twv ir6\t<a]v V, iav
fir)
air-
vrcov teal t-
'
airaacov r-
7roX[ts] rj ir- 20
yetXaa-
rj ttoXis
ou? Alycv-
1. 24. i.e. [L(.Tarrt[L^a\ii]ur} t^ (r\Tparia
XPV~
vr
\
T
fj
~~
adoj ijyefjLovevovcra, where Thuc. has ttjv
vye- #0
rat? 2^
, e
rm.
r
' 1
0(7a[l
8J-
1. 25. Thuc. om. [airaa-ajis
L J
In 1. 1 the heading was probably ['Ap-yeicov, MavriveW, 'HXjefijwj/. In the
complete text as restored by Kirchhoff on the assumption that the lines contain
76 or 77 letters each there are, including those indicated above, some 31 variations
between the inscription and our text of Thucydides, none of them however
affecting the sense. Either then
(1)
the variations are due to the writer or
writers of the archetypal ms and the copy of the inscription inserted by
Thucydides into his history tallied exactly with the original document; or
(2)
the copy made by Thucydides himself (or transmitted to him during his absence
from Athens) was not accurate in all particulars. The latter is the more
probable explanation.
21. A slab of Pentelic marble (H. 1.49 m.; Br. 0.64 m.; Th. 0.20 m.)
surmounted by a pediment on which was a relief, now much damaged. Found
S.E. of the Acropolis in 1884. CIA iv 1, 53 a, p. 66. See also E. Curtius, Sb.
Arch. Ges. Berl. 5 May 1885 and Sb. Ah. Berl. 1885 p. 437 sqq.; J. K. Wheeler,
AJA in 1887 p. 3849, Tab. 3,4;
D 550. Cf. Wilamowitz Lectt. epigr., Gott.
1885, p. 5, id. Arist. u. Athen. i 240, n 240, note 32.
ABAE (= e, ei,
v) IH
(=
K v) OIKUMN [X
=
?]
O
(=
o, ov, o>)
PPTY4>X [4>
=
^;
but also
X
in i^aXei^drod 1. 22]
Non-diphthongal ei is also written
El (1- 3 iirevTaTei, 1. 9 elvcu, 1. 10 elpyfieva,
1. 31 elffioforis) (for other instances in this period and even very much earlier,
see Meisterhans Gr. 20). In ^oXet^drw 1. 22, oXeifov 1. 33 the diphthongal ei is
written
E-
The spiritus asper is in general not indicated; cf. Eo. i

43
p. 104 sq. With some unimportant irregularities, the writing is aroixv^ov.
e
o i.
"E8]o^e^ rjj {3ovXf}
Kal rap SrjfMp'
Tlavhuovls eTTpVTaveve'
'ApiO-TO%-
B.C
21]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 55
418/7
o-e]vo<; eypap^xdreve' ^Avtlo^lSt]^ erreardrei' 'Avricjxov
ypx

'
'A8ovcri[o-
s
e]i7r' elp^ac rb \epbv rov Ko&pov teal rov N^Xew?
(NEU5
so throughout) teal rrj$ Bao-LXrjs /c[o-
5
I fxicrScjoaai rb refxevos Kara ras o-uwypacfrds.
ol Be ircoXrf-
ral rrjv elp%[}>-
v] d7ro/juia0a)crdvT(ov rb Be refxevos 6 /3aac\ev<; aTroLitaOo)-
adra) fcara [t-
<2? %vv<ypa(f)ds, teal rovs opicrrds eTTLire^xy^rat opicrai rd lepa
ravra
07TO)? dv eyr) a>? /SeXriara koX evcre0eara(ra)' rb Se dpyv-
piov e\ T7/z; elpyj
ctlv dirb rov re/xevovs elvar irpd^au Be ravra rrplv
'
e^ievac
rrjvBe
o rrjv ftovXrjv,
rj evOvveadac yCXiaicri Spa^/jur/ai e/cacrrov Kara
rd elprj-
fjueva' 'ABovctlos scire' rd
fxev
dXXa /caOairep
rfj
/3ovXfj, o
Be ftaatXevs \x-
ijcrdcocrdrci) /cal ol ircoXrfral rb re/aevo^ rov N^Xeo)? teal tt)?
Bao"tX^9 Ka-
r]a ras vvypa(f)ds eltcocri err}, rov Be fxcaOcoad/ixevov elp^ac
ro te-
p\ov toO KoSpof /cal rov N?7A,e&)9 teal ri}s BaaLXrjs rocs
eavrov reXecrcv ott-
15 6]arjv
8'
dv
aX(f)rj /x[i<rQ]a)ai,v rb re/xevos tcard rbv eviavrbv
etcaarov tc-
ara/3aXXerco rb dpyvpiov eirl rfjs ivdr[r\s] ir[p]vravela<; rol<;
(iTToBetc-
rai[s]. ol Be diroBeKrai Tot? rafxlacac rebv aXXcov decov
irapaBiBbvrwv
K\ard rbv vollov 6 Be {3acn,Xev<z edv /xrj 7roL7]o-rj rd e^\rrj-
<pta/xeva
1} aXX-
0J9
Tt9 0I9 irpoareratcjai irepl rovrwv eirl rr)<; AiyrjiBos
irpvraveu-
20 a?, evdvveaOco /xvpirjo-i Bpa^fxTJacv. rbv Be eoyvrjfxevov rrjv
iXvv etctco-
[LjcaaaOai etc rrjs rd(ppov eirl rrjaBe ri)<s /3ovXrj<; diroBovra
rb dpyvpiov
56 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[21
tw NrjXeo ocrov eirplaTo. o Be fiaaiXevs i^aXecyJrdra) top
7rpL(lfjLV0V T-
r]v iXvp eireiBdp diroBut ttj/jl putcrOcocnp, top Be pucrOcdo-dpLepop
to re/ji-
epos /cal ottoctov dp /M(T0c0(Tr)TaL dpTepypayjrdrci) 6 f3ao~tXev<;
69 TOP T-
25 olyop /cal tovs iyyvrjras /card top pojulop oairep iceiTcu twp
TflP(OP.
to Be yjr7](f)LO-/jLa ToBe, oVa)? dp
fj
elBepau toj[i] fiovXopiep(p,
apaypayjra-
9 ypafxparev<s o Trjs j3ovXr)s ip crTijXr) XiOipr] /caTaOirco ip
TO) N^Xet-
w irapd Ta l/cpta, ol Be KcoXa/cpeTac Boptcop to dpyvptop e?
Tavra.
/JuaOovp Be top ftacnXea to Tepuepos tov NrjXecos /cal t?)?
Bacr/A?7? /caTa
30 TaSe' top puaOayadpuevop elp^ai peep to uepov tov YLoBpov
/cal tov N^Xe-
eo? /cal ttj's BacrLXrjs icaTa Ta?
I;vpypa<f)d<; eirl t?}? ftovXrjs
t?}? eio~iovo~-
77?,
to Be t[(x]6^[os] tov NtjXG)<; /cal ttjs TiacrlXr)*; /caTa
TaSe epyd^eaOar
(f)VTevaat (fivTevTrjpca eXacop pur) oXei^op
?) BuaKoata nrXeopa
Be idp /3-
ovXrjTau, /cal t?}? Ta(f)pov /cal tov vBaTOS /cpaTelp tov ey
Ato? top pu[(r\6(0O-d-
35
puepop, oTroaop ePTOS pel tov Aiopvctiov /cal twp ttvXoop, rj
dXaBe e[x]creXa-
vpovctip ol pbVGTai /cal ottoctop eWo? ttjs ol/clas tt}? Bypuoaias
ical t-
dop ttvXgop at eVl to
"\gQ
p,opi/cov (3aXapelop e/c(f>epovcrr
puaOovp Be /caTa
ei/coai eWcop.
K X 7TT
7] [?]
The decree provides for the enclosing of the sanctuary (lepdu) of Codrus,
Neleus and Basile, and for the letting of the precinct (rtfieuos) attached to it,
called the precinct of Neleus and Basile. The Neleion is also mentioned in
1. 27, either as a separate sanctuary or as a short title for the whole, and in 1. 7
it is ordained that the boundaries of the various iepd concerned shall be defined.
21]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 57
The sanctuary, of which the exact position may be inferred from 34 sqq., was
not far from the place on the Ilissus, where Codrus was said to have been killed.
See Paus. i 19, 5. Neleus was evidently the most important person in the
cult. The name belongs probably to Hades (N^Xe^s). (Cf. Wilamowitz Led.
epigr. p. 5; Arist. 'Ad. ttoX. i
p. 240, n p. 240 n. 32.) The sanctuary as well as
the precinct must have belonged originally to Neleus and his consort Basile. The
intrusion of Codrus was probably due to confusion of this Neleus with Neleus or
Neileus the son of Codrus and mythical founder of Miletus, Erythrae, and
other Ionian cities ; and Basile may also have been confused later with Basileia,
the personification of Koyalty (cf. Ar. Av. 1536 sqq. and Dio Chrys. i p. 16 Dind.).
The rape of Basile by Echelos on a relief ('E0. 'Apx>
1893 p. 129) suggests an
analogy with Persephone (Meyer and Kobert, Herm. xxx
p. 286). Miss Harrison
suggests (H. and V. 229) that she was "the great mother (Megale Meter), the
earth, to whom by his death Kodros had in special fashion devoted himself."
The reading in Plat. Charm. 153 a tou rijs BaaiXijs iepov is confirmed by this
inscription. The tomb of Codrus was probably here; cf. the epigram (Kaibel
1083) set up (2nd century a.d. Kaib.) where he fell
:
Kddpov tovto irearjixa MeXavOeidao [avaKTOs]
%eive, to kclI /xeydX^v
'
Aaiba rei^to-afro],
ctD/xa
5'
bir'
'
AkpottoXtjl (pepwv rapxvcrev ['AStJvtjs]
Aads is adavarovs 56[1\av deipafxe[vov].
The connexion of Codrus' death with fortifications in Asia can only be
through his son Neleus as oecist.
The document furnishes a fresh illustration of the well-known right of the
state among the Greeks to let the land belonging to temples. See Boeckh St.
3
i
p.
372377, Reinach Ep. Gr. p. 94 sqq. and Newton Essays p. 147 sqq., where
an account is given of the most notable example of this kind, the Tabulae
Heraclienses.
In our decree lines
1
11 contain the irpofioi'iXeviia ; lines 11end the amend-
ment which was doubtless added in the eiacXrivLa. The TrpofiovXevfia belongs to
that class of such instruments in which the
fiovXri
did not content itself with
merely introducing a given question to the e/c/cX^cria, but also made definite
proposals on its own account (Gilbert 293 sqq.). This TrpopovXev/j.0. is complete
in itself and all that the ypa/xfiarevs had to do was to insert the words nal ry
8-qp.ij} in the opening formula and to append the amendment (Gilbert Jahrbb. 119,
p. 228). See further on irpoj3ovXv/j.aTa 15 29 sqq.
3. 'ASotfcrios. Or 'A56<nos ? Both adoixnos and addaios occur in Hesychius,
and the name 'ASovo-los in Xen. Cyr. vn
4, 1; cf. also CIA iv 2, 252 e: Kai (pvXijs
ktXeluai avrip adovcriaaaadai
;
cf. 24 15.
4. Steph. Lex. s.v. pronounces for NetX^ws rather than NryXewj. For
the accent in Bcto-tX^
(
= BaalXeia) cf. Lobeck Path. p. 43 sqq., Paral.
p. 321,
Steph. Byz. s.v. 'Ayaixeia {' Ayd/xr}) ; Curtius writes BcktiXt} after Boeckh CIG n
p. 108.
6. /caret rds owypachas (1. 13 ^vvyp.): 'in accordance with the specification of
the commissioners.' Cf. 6 6.
7. opLffrai play a prominent part in the settlement of the temple-lands in
the Tabulae Heraclienses (above). They were probably not a regular magistracy
but a state-commission
appointed ad hoc. See D.A. s.v. The use of the
58 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[21
infinitive of purpose (here bplaai) is common after verbs and substantives in
documents dealing with accounts ; see Meisterhans Gr. 249. Cf. 39 20.
8. evae^eara. Obviously a slip for eu<re/3e<rrara.
9. dirb rod refitvovs : 'from the treasury of the sanctuary.' 'e^ievaiso D,
who objects to irpiv rj as not Attic
;
cf. note on 12 10.
10. ZKaaTov : i.e. the Poletae and the Basileus. xtXiaitrt,
8paxpv
aL
(
cf- 17>
20) appear to be the latest examples of the long ending hitherto found. Probably
the draft before the engraver had x^'-o-o'l. p-vplrjcri 1. 20 for /j.vpia<ri is evidently a
mistake due to
dpaxp-v
ffLV - The short dative in -cus occurs in airodeKrcus 1. 16.
See Meisterhans Gr. 121.
15. d\(pr]. The word has been hitherto found only in poets (Plutarch 2.
668 c is merely using a poetical phrase). For /ii'cr0wcns =
/
ui(x06s or fxlcrdufxa see
L. and S.
16. The airodeKTou are not elsewhere mentioned in inscriptions of the fifth
century. The occurrence of the word here confirms, so far as it goes, the state-
ment of Harpocration that they were first introduced by Cleisthenes to succeed
the KuXaKperai. See Boeckh St.
3
i 193, whose view is thus shown to have been
almost certaiuly correct. Otherwise M. and S. Att. Pr. (ed. Lips.) i 110. On the
functions of these officers, ten in number, as receivers of public moneys, see
Boeckh St.
3
i 193 sqq.
17. On the ra/xiat tQu aXXwj> deCov see lO 13.
20. iXtiv. Hesych. ei'Xtfs elXvos' to irrjXuides rod rrorafxov. The present
appears to be the only inscriptional evidence for the spelling IXvs. See
Stephanus Lex. s.v. The mud was doubtless used for manure.
21. rdcppov. See below 1. 34. The existence of the ditch and the mention
of mud confirm the usual identification of this quarter as Limnae, the Marshes,
which however is disputed by Dorpfeld (on Dionysion in Limnae, Mitth. ,xx
(1895)
161 sqq.).
22. e^aXeLxj/droj:
'
shall erase (the name of).' So below tov /ilo-6u)o-&ijlpov :
'
(the name of) the lessee.'
28. 7rapa rd iKpia: 'beside the balustrade.' Apart from its nautical usage,
the word occurs in CIG 2139 (Aegina) in an inventoiw of temple-fittings, where
Boeckh renders it cancelli. D suggests the partition separating the lepbv from
the refxevos.
33. (pvrevaai kt\. Similar stipulations are made in the Tabl. Her. (above),
which in fact describe the terms of an emphyteutic tenure.
34. Four points are given within which the lessee of the temenos is to have
control of the rainfall for purposes of irrigation. The Dionysion is evidently
the famous one below the theatre. The oinia. 5rn.ioo~ia is not otherwise known.
The mention of two gates shows that this district must be contained in the
angle of the wall which may be seen on plans of Athens south of the Dionysiac
theatre; the temenos itself according to Dorpfeld (H. and V. p. 232)
"
must have
lain to the south, outside the city wall," for the water from this area to flow to it.
35.
77
d\a8e kt\. : dXade /xvarai was the name of the second day of the
mysteries (G. and J. Man. p. 279). This passage seems to prove that the mystae
at Athens went down to the sea in the Phaleric Bay.
37. /card eiKoai erQv. Cf. Tabl. Her. /caret fiiov:
'on a life-tenure.' The
letters
fcAEPTHG
at the end are obviously the later addition, as Kumanudes
suggests, of some /xaraioo-xoXos.
22]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 59
22. Two fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. Fragm. a
mutilated on the right ; fragm. b on three sides. CIA i 56.
ABAAE (=6, et,
v)
X. OlkUMN [X =
f|
O (=
o, ou,
) pp
CTY4>X
(4
3
^
=ss
^
r
)"
Srotx^Soi'. The \-\ = h is omitted throughout.
a.
e [o t
"E8oe^
rfj fiovXfj
/cal T(o Brj/xw. Afca/jLavrls eirpv[ra.vtvt, ....
Ypa[X|J.dTV6. Tr(TTaTl, ctlTC* T<5j-
i
fiev &rjfjL(p
to) %a/Jblcov eiraLvecrai, ore a<a? avrovs [r\\evQ(p<a<r*v ?
2-
a/jLL(ov tovs iirdyovTas JJ eXoiropvrjaiov^ irrl 'Ed/juop k
[|Xl(T0OVV-
tco/jL
fjuhv top aypop top KXeo^Seo? top ey KXa/jiaSo
7to8i86pt(ov %ci/jllol to, yiypofiepa e avTod dirdy^ovTes ?
6
8-
r)/bLO<; 6 ^a/jLicop Oclpcltop rj
<f>vyrjp
rj Brj/uuevacp %prj\y.a.T<av
T<o 8-rjp.to
t] Tft5 ^AOrjpaicop
(fivyrjp
clvtwp ical OdpdTov /cal [8-rj|iv<riv
XPT
(jtaTtov
HiolJ/jLiol caroTrey^dpT(jup AOrjva^e /cal 7rapa[&6vT<av
.... f\/Jb TToXet TpUlKOPTCL f)/jLpQ)P
i avTol teal 2 ['A(h]vafo]t9 teal Zcl/jlIols, nrepl Be ... .
3
.... c, iirecSr/ dprjp icrTC dyaOos
i /3\d7TTo(co)pTai, 'AOrjvaiot //,....
. ho/CT] TCO b\v\\fJL(p TCO ^a/jLLCQP ....
y&\vr)Tai irepi t?)? (Baadpov /ca . . . .
. at, oiTOGOi h\k\ elau i% Zafilcop
. t?, tcaOdirep [av] \djjuoi S6l>[vt<u]
ii Kal e^Op .... i2 2a[|xi . . .
.] avTOvs
13
ypa]/j,{iaT
This decree in honour of the Samians almost certainly has reference to the
events recorded Thuc. vin 21 as taking place in 412 B.C., when the popular party
in Samos rose and declared for the Athenians. For a similar rising at a later
period, 405 b.c, and a similar honorary decree, see 28.
3. For lirawtaai with the dative see 23 6, 28 7.
60 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[22
5. K\eofj.rj8eos. Note the Ionic form of the word as that in use at Samos.
Probably the same Cleomedes is meant who was honoured with a statue by the
Lacedaemonians at Delphi, as having fought with Lysander at Aegospotamos,
Paus. x 9, 10.
23. Seven fragments of Pentelic marble, found partly in the Acropolis,
partly between the Odeum of Herodes and the theatre of Dionysus. CIA i 51
and iv 1
p. 15 sqq.; D 49 ; H 57.
ABAAE (=
e, ei,
n) m H(r K v)
. I KUM N [X
=
f
] O (= o, ov, *>)
PP^TY^X
[$>+] |:
E=v
1. 38, ^TPATEAOI ; O
=ov 11. 8, 20, 22, 36 and often after 1. 39;
A
= M-35,
POAHI; T=7l. 30, EYEPrETAl2l;H
= ^is frequently omitted.
Lines 39end and the words written over an erasure in 1. 7 are by a different
hand from the rest and the writing is more compressed. Not <jtolx71^ov .
] [<
N]

H
A L T CO
[
']
(O j 7T a
P
a a <j
[-
"~E]$oev
rfj
/3[o]f[\Tj] Kal rat Stj/jLO), Aeozm? eVpvr[a.veve,
5
^,L/3vpTid(}[i]s iypa\/j,/jLdTViJ, l^aipijjbevr]^ i7rear[d.Ti, T\-
aVKLTTTTOS
VPX\-*
V ' ' ]^
60<? e^7re*
r
\_err~\aivecrai TOt? N<Z7r[oX.l-
Tais TOis
irapd %daov [irpwrov \l\]v o<v>tl o-vv$ie7ro[\4[i.r\o-]av rov iroXe-
/jlov fxerd
'
k6rfvaico\y Kal on iroXio-
p]/cov/jbevoo [wo 0ao-t<av
?]
Kal II e\o[-irovv]]cr{,&)y ovk ?;^[vjj.tj-
o-av (?)....
. .]? T7)v A .... ov avh\pi% d,7a0ol] iyevo[vTo
10 &s
T ttjv cr]r[paTiav Kal t6v SrjJyLtO^ t[wv 'AGrjvauov Kal] 7*o[t>s
onu|xdx]o[vs
]
6
[
Xp]^[t(?)
^prj/xara
]j>
y
A0r)vato[
15
yjpr\\i^\ao- lv elvat Neo7ro[\.iTais
]ov Kal
xPV
crai
TTTTXX
Joz^ eoeovro ottcos a^ e^^Lo-t
]ecr#at avTOLS k rcoy ^pTj/j^driav ....
irjoXeo)? e'/c toO Xifjuevos rov o~e[
20 kjviavrov co?
d(f)ei\7](f)6Ta<;
irapa
23]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 61
?] d7roSo0fj,
iTOielv Se ravra [e
%aaiov^ o Se StSoaacv
9 Kal fi[ov\]6{ievoL Kal iOekovr
o-TpaTKOTJou?
(?) PXXXXP'HHH
teal TrpoOvfJLOi ela[i iroietv on
Svvav-
25 Tai dy]a6bv avrol iirayyetXafievoi Kal X
. . . av ttjv 'AOr/vauwv Kal [vt]1 tt}? evepy^ea-Las Tavrr\s
&v]aL Kal iv tw Xolttco -%p6vw\C\ Trap'
'
A07]va[C(av av-
To]t9 ft)? avSpdacv ovaiv dya6o\yi\ Kal t[tjv 7rp6o-o8ov ctvai avT-
Ot9 7T/30? TTjfJL (BovXrjV KOL TOV Sr}\y^\6[y irpwTOlS UTa Ta Upd cos
30 evepyerais ovaiv AOrjvaicov ro[y Sijpov Kal to. tnrop.vrjp.a-
ra tovtcov d 01 Nea7ro\tTat eSo[o-av . . . . t<5 -yp-
a/jL/jbarec tt)? /3ovXr}<;, %copls fiev [...., x<op\<$
8e tcI dX-
Xa. Kal to yfnj(pca/jia ro&e avayp^d^iavTa tov -ypaupaTea
rrjs ftovXrjs
iarrjXr) XlOlvt) KaTa6[iivai lp iroXci re'Xeo-i toi-
35
? Neo7ro\tTwz/ iv 8e Nea TroXrj avrol [NeoiroXiTai KaraG-
evrwv iv toj ipo3 t?}? Uap6evov iarr)\[r\ Xi0ivt| Kal KaXeo-ai
iirl tjei'LarrjfjL irpea^eiav et? to irpvra\y^.ov els avpiov, 8ovvai 8
(?)
Olvofiia) AeKeXeel errpar^yo3
TTTPH [H]

'A^to^o? elire : iiratveaai rots Neo7roXtratS' rots airo [paKTjs,
'on dv8ps ctyaOol t"y'vovTO
40 1$ re rr)v arpandv Kal rrjfji iroXtv ttjv AOrjvatwv Kai o[ti
is @d<rov rjX0ov TravSTjpel o-vpiroXiop-
KTjGovre^ /juera
'
AOrfvaicov
\
Kal
(
6n ^vvvav/na^ovv^Tts] Kai
[(rvvTroXcpovvTCs SiereXccrav t6v ird-
vra %povov, Kal rd aXXa 'on ev iroiovatv A0r]vaio[ys Kal
dvrl TOJVTCDV [twv vep-yTT]pdTwv 'diravTa Trap' *A-
6r)vaLO)v elvau avroU Ka6' 'direp i^^^Lo-rac [SppvXi]e[vo-]t.
07T&)? CL/jL /a[t) dSlKWVTat pTjSt 'v<j>* *v6$ p-^T-
6 V7TO ISlCOTOV
fl7]T
V7T0 KOIVOV TToXeoOS, TOVS T Cr[TpaTT|'yov]$
t \ A t
j
/ /r
, , ,
Ot a^ KaO70T6
a[pX0VT6S Tv*yxavwo-iv irip.-
45
XeaOai avrcov 'ore av Secovrac
\
Kal tovs
<Vx[ovr]a<>
rou? 'A#-
rjvaicov OL av k^clo-tots ap\to<ri ev rats iroAco-i Tais twv <ruppa)(-
&)^, T?7yL6 ttoXlv N607roXtTa9 <^fX,aTTo^Ta[s] :ai irpoOvfJiovs
bvras TTOielv ore av [Svvwvrai d-ya06v. ctvai 8e
Kal vvv evpicTKeaOai avrovs irapd t[ov S]rjfiov rod 'AdrjvaLcov
on av $OKr} aya6\ov dXXo 'otov dv ScwvTai. ircpl
Be t^?
uTrap'xfis rfj
TVapOevco, [tjirep njat Teco? iyiyvero rrj
[GcJgG, eV to) Sr;yLtco[i av-
62 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[23
tovs. els Se to i(r^tcr/ia to 7rpo[Ttpov kjiravopOcoaai, toj
ypa/n/jbarea ttjs
fiovXrjs
[
50 . . . .]aac dvrl ttj^ <T7rot/a[as ttjs 'AQr\vai]a)v
"
'on avvhte-
TroXe/jLrjcrav to/jl iroXefjuov /x[tcl 'AGtjvcuwv
"
at : /cat
[
Kal Ai\ocf)dpT(p : eiraiveaai 'a re vvv
\yov(TLV /e[al
]
irpoOvpuoi elai iroielv
e
6rt Svvavrai a[-ya66v
Ka0]a7re/3 ro irporepov. /caXeaac Se Kal iiri ^[o-via
els to irpm-avciov
. . . etire* to, jacv aXXa KaGdirep ttj] povXfj.
TJ]
06 TlapOevb}
%atpe[
55
6 8]%to<> e[vx]aTaL.
The inscription contains two decrees, the second beginning with 1. 39, passed
in honour of the people of Neapolis, a town on the Thracian coast opposite
Thasos, and conferring certain privileges upon them in return for services
rendered to Athens. In 1. 54 begins an amendment.
2, 3. Neo7ro\iTcDj/ 7rapd Qdaov. Other appellations of the town occurring in
the Tribute-lists were Ne&woXis eu Opaicy, CIA 1 226, N. Trap'
'
kvTurapav, 1 230.
Cf. 1 242, 243, 244, 256, 257. It was here that St Paul landed in his second
missionary journey (Acts 16, 12). By the Byzantines the place was called
Christopolis; its modern name is Cavalla. Cf. Smith, Diet. Geogr.
4. AeovTLs: the sixth prytany ; cf. CIA 188, 14, also of 410/9 b.c.
6. eiraiveaai roh ktX. Cf. 1. 39 and 22 3. This (Homeric) use of eiraiueiu
with the dative appears to be limited in Attic inscriptions to the period between
421 and 350 b.c. Meisterhans Gr. 211. The usage survived in Delphian
inscriptions to the second century B.C.; cf. DI 2652, 11.
7. avudLeiroXe/nrjaav ktX. The precise events alluded to are not known. As
regards Thasos we learn that in 412/11 b.c the Thasians revolted from Athens
and sided with Lacedaemon (Thuc. viii
64);
in 408/7 b.c they were by
Thrasybulus brought back into allegiance with the Athenians (Xen. Hell, i 4, 9,
Diod. xill 72, 1),
^x
0UTes kclkQs, says Xenophon, viro re rG>v iroXi^wv Kal crdaewv
Kal Xl/hov. Perhaps among these calamities was the levying of a contribution
(TjpyvpoXoyrjKibs Xen. Hell, i 1, 12) from them by Thrasybulus in 411/10 b.c and
in the same year the expulsion of the Lacedaemonian harmost Eteonicus and
the Lacedaemonian party (Xen. Hell, i 1, 32). All we hear of 410/9 b.c is that
Thrasybulus was sent with a fleet to the Macedonian and Thracian coast and
recalled thence to proceed to the Hellespont (Diod. xm 49). Ki., CIA I.e. See
below 1. 50.
11 sqq. From the fragmentary lines which follow little more can be
gathered than that the Neopolitae had benefited the Athenians by substantial
donations or loans. 10, 11 are restored by D from 40, 41.
20. a<pei\7](p6Tas. Cf. KadeiX-rjcpdros 55 10 (271/265 B.C.), KadeiXyjcpdruv 56 14
(268 b.c). Meisterhans, Gr. 102 sq., attributes the additional aspirate merely
to mispronunciation.
28. T7]v irpoaodov ktX. On this privilege and the initial lustration see D.A.
s.v. Ecclesia. See Index, s.v. wpdaodos.
24] DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 63
30. kclI to. viro^vqixara kt\. For the technical phraseology cf. Dem.
C. Timoth. 1186 ol yap Tpcnre^iTcu eiwdaaiv viroixv-fifxara ypdcpeadai <Jov re Sidoaat.
Xpyp*OLT(i:v kt\.
34. reXeai kt\. See Index, s.v. Costs of engraving.
35. iroXri. See Meisterhans Gr. p. 137, who quotes ten instances of this
orthography on Attic inscriptions between 410 and 335 B.C., and contests the
view of Dittenberger (Herm. xvn 37) and Biemann (Rev. phil. ix 54) that the
forms exhibit a merely orthographical, and not inflexional, interchange of 77 and
et. Cf. D 96, 3 (Iasos): Trj'Iaaiiov ttoXtjl.
36. rrjs Hapdevov. Cf. D 11, 1 (Halicarnassus), where the words /cat rrjs
'Adrjuai-rjs /cat Ilapdevov show that Hapdivos is not identical with Athena.
38. OlvoftLip : perhaps the OtV6/3tos who (Paus. i 23, 9)
carried the decree
for the recall of Thucydides from exile (B. Schoell, Herm. xin
p. 441).
39. 'At'oxos et7re. That the decree was not passed at the same assembly as
the last, in spite of the absence of a separate introductory formula, seems clear,
as K points out, from the words to
\J/'/]<pLa
/ma to irpoTtpov in 1. 49. The
restorations in this and the next line are mainly by D, who observes that
Axiochus is probably the uncle of Alcibiades, son of Clinias; cf. D 39, l^CIA i
275 (a list of br/ixioirpaTa).
43. HepfxvkuvGL. The decree in question does not appear to be extant.
The name HepfxnXia (Zep/uLvXrjs) occurs in the Tribute-lists; it was a town of
Macedonia.
45. Restored tentatively by D. For ol ai> kt\. see 115 sqq.
48. irepl 5e tt)s airapxvs r
V
^-o-pdevop. K suggests that at some time or other
a portion of the tribute had been remitted on the understanding that it was to
be paid into the treasury of IlapOevos at Neapolis, and that what the Neapolitae
were now asking for was that they might be allowed to pay a further sum into
the treasury of Ilap^e^os, i.e., that the amount of the tribute might be still
further reduced.
49. The Neapolitae had apparently begged that a correction might be made
in the former decree, and their request was in fact granted. Cf. 1. 7 where
there was an erasure with 1. 50. But it is not easy to determine the actual
words which were erased. In 1. 50 K reads avTi tt)s airoii<L[as tQv Qao-l~\ui>,
supposing that the Neapolitae from hatred of the Thasians did not wish to be
designated as airoiKoi t&v Qaaioov. D however thinks that the proposer of the
first decree had confused this Neapolis with another Neapolis, also in Thrace, a
colony of the Athenians (NectTroXts aw 'Adrjvuv CIA i 230, 240, Boeckh St.
2
n 367)
and that it was desired to correct this error.
24. Six fragments of Hymettian marble. CIA i 59 ;
D 50 ; H 56. Cf.
Bohl Herm. xi
p. 379 ;
Gilbert Beitrage zur inneren Gesch. Athens im Zeitalter
des pelop. Krieges, 346 sqq.; A. Wilhelm, Areh.-ep. Mitth. aus Oesterr. xvn
(1894) 37 sq.
ABAAE (= , 1, 7)) HUH
(=h, frequently omitted)
I K U M N . O
(= O, ov, ft))
PPTY4>X [ct>^
=
^]
\: Srotx^oj/, except lines 1, 2
which are in larger letters.
64 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[24
410/9
>Eiri T\avKi]7rirov
a[p]%o^[r]o9.
Ao
p
v * K
]
K rj o go v eypa/jL/jLareve.
"E8otv ttj]
fiovXf]
ical ra> StJ/jlw. 'XttttoOgovtI-
s
kirpvTa.vi\ve, Aoj3(t)v eypafifidreve, ^lXlo-tlSt}-
5 s iro-TciTi], TXavKiTTTTos
vpx
6' QpcL<TLVihr)s; eiir-

eiTcuve'o-aJt %oao~v(3ov\ov a;? ovtcl avBpa dyaOo-


V 7Tpl TOV Bryj/jiOV TOV
'
AuTJVaLCQV Kal 7Tp66u/jLOV 7T~
oietv 'on Sivajrai aya66v
y
Kal avri gov ev ireiro-
it]Kv tt]'v re povX-rjv] tea i tov 8r}[\).o]v rep
'
A0r)vai(jd-
io v o-T<j>avw<rai avTov \pv<r<S
<rTj(f)dvG0. Trotrjaa-
i 8e tov o-T'4>avov d-n-6 ^iXigov Spjavyiiwzv oi [8e
'EXXrjvoTapiai Sovtwv to dpyvpijov. KCLl [dvciir-
iv Aiovvo-iwv
to)J
aiyoovc, gov ev-
Ka avTov 6 8rjp.os lo-T<|)dvwo-Je Ato/cX^? eliT'
15 to, p-ev dXXa Ka6a.TTp ttj PovXt}'] eivai 0 %paav-
PovXov 'AG-qvaiov, <j>vXtjs Kal 8rjpov k]cll typaTpias,
'
go-
v dv povXt]Tat diro'Ypa\|;dp.VoJ^ KCLl T(OCKa Ta -
\|/T]<(>io-p.va tw 8-qp.a) Kvpia etjz^at vypao~v/3ou\co-
i" elvai 8e Kal evpeVdai atiT<S Tr\apd AOrjvaicov K-
20 al dXXo d"ya06v idv tov Serial irjepi gov evepye-
tt]o-v t6v Srjfxov tov 'AGrjvaicov], /cat dvaypdyjra-
1 cv o-ttjXt] XiOivt) to, SeSo-ypJe^a. eXeauau o-
\ . . . dvSpas avTij/ca fxd\a, otTive-
s]
St[Kao-ovo-iv pao-vPovXw
pe'J/90?
TO ytyvo/juev-
25 oza toi)? [8e dXXovs,
'60-01
t6t cu l]7roi77crai/ to> Srj-
jxov tov 'A^[va(wv, ]iv Kal AyopaTO-
v Kal Kgo/jLgovcl [Kal
]
Kal ^Ifiov Ka-
l <1>i\lvov Ka\\ ]<z, evepye[r<x\$
[dv]aypd<f>-
aat /jL 7roXe[t cv o-ttJXtj \\161v1j tov ypap\y.a\re-
30
a t[t]]? j3ov\r)<;. [Kal ^KTT|o-t]^ eivai avTols GOfjuirep
'
AOrjvaiois [Kal "yT|ir'8ci)]^ /cat oiKias, Kal oiktjo--
iv AOrjvrjai, [Kal eiripe'X] eaOai avTGOv tyjv /3ov\r)v
T7)v alel /3[ovXvovo-av Ka]t tol9 7TpVTdvis, 07ra)9 a-
v pb\rj a8[iKc3vTai. tt]v 8^ o-^TrjXrjv d7ro/JLLO~0GOo-avTGO-
35
v 'ot 7rcaXT|Tal ev ttj povjX^* tou? Be ^WrjvoTafJb-
Cas Sovvai to dp-yvpiov.] idv 8e hoKrj aVTOVS Kal
dXXov Tvxciv d-yaGov, tt^v] {3ov\rjv irpo^ovXevaaaav
|V"yKtv els t6v 8tjp]o^ : Ei/St/co? elire' Ta /xev
dXXa KaBdrrep AiokXtjs' ircpl] Se TOj[z^] SoopoSoKTjCT-
24]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 65
40 dvTwv lirl tw \J/i]<|>i<r|xaTt] iyjrr)(f)[i](T6r) AiroW-
oSwptp, tt]v povX-qv povXev<r]at iv
rfj
rrpcorr) eS-
pa v T povXevTT]p]ft), tfal KoXa^eiV T&v [8]a)/90-
SoKi^o-avTwv KaTaxJ/J^c^t^Oyaez/'/;//, /cat et? ^[tcjacr-
Ti]piov avTovs lo-d"yi]z/, KdOoTl av SokjJ avTrj\i. T-
45
v 8c StKao-Twv tovs] TTapovras cnrofyaiveiv a\rr-
a IStKacrGr] xal lav] Tt? Tt aUo elSfj 7Tpl t[ov-
to)v. c^ivat 8e Kal] ISlcottj, eav t/9 /3of\?7Ta[L
The decree consists of
(1)
a probouleuma, lines
1
14, honours conferred
upon Thrasybulus,
(2)
a supplement granting citizenship to Thrasybulus,
(3)
a
further supplement enjoining that persons guilty of corrupt practices in connexion
with a former decree should be punished. The honours paid to Thrasybulus are
evidently based upon his alleged services in assassinating Phrynichus in 411 B.C.
Cf. Lysias c. Agorat. 71, where the psephism alluded to may be the actual
document before us.
3. 'iTrirodoovTLs. This was the eighth prytany of the year, as we learn from
the Treasure-list, CIA. 1 188, 27. The decree was passed, as we see from 1. 13
f
before the Dionysia, and therefore at the very beginning of the prytany, which
lasted from the 11th of Elaphebolion to the 16th of Munychion ; the Dionysia
began about the 12th of Elaphebolion. As Phrynichus was assassinated in
411 b.c, it is not clear why the rewards here decreed to Thrasybulus and his
associates should have been delayed nineteen months (D).
5. 'Epao-ivldrjs. Doubtless the condemned general of that name who was
victorious at Arginusae 406/5 b.c. (Xen. Hell. 1 5, 16; 6, 29; 7, 2).
11. dwo
x^'
l03V
^p\^X^
v - This formula for indicating value was very
common; sometimes we find e'/c instead of airb, e.g. CIA iv 2, 834 b, 11 1. 71
(329 B.C.) : K(f>a\aiov ti/jltjs KptdGiv . . . irpadeia&v e/c rpiQv dpaxfJ-Qv rbv fxtdi/xvov
Ka<xTov. Meisterhans Gr. 212.
12. 'E\\r)voTap.lai. On the functions of these officers other than duties
connected with the Tribute see Boeckh, St.
9
Bk 11, oh. 7. For the restoration
cf. 25 9.
15 sqq. The restorations are Wilhelm's, I. c, with the approval of D. The
formula (pvXijs kt\ . . . airoypdrj/aadai or ypaxj/aadou is a very common one
;
cf. 39 22. The remarkable variant ddovaidaaadai has been noticed above 213.
17 sq. It would seem (cf. Lys. c. Agorat.
70) that after the murder of
Phrynichus, rewards had been voted by the people for all who might have
assisted in the deed, and these rewards are now confirmed for Thrasybulus by
name (D).
23. ogives kt\. The text is Roehl's {I.e.) who gives elaborate arguments in
support of it, as against the 'A7roXAo5a>py of K, formerly read by D. The
commissioners are to determine
'
the share (of the confiscated property of
Phrynichus) which falls to Thrasybulus
'.
26. 'Aydparov. Cf. Lysias c. Agorat. 72 who argues that he did not receive
the citizenship, and his statement is borne out by the negative evidence of this
inscription.
30. ZyKTTjviv. Cf. 32 25 sqq. and see D.A. s.v. eyKryais.
R. II.
5
66 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[24
31. yrjiredoju. y-^iredov according to Eustath. p. 430 is : t6 iv ttoXcl irpo-
Kei/xevov oWias olov kt]tt18iov. Cf. Phrynich. Bekk. p.
32. 1 dicHpepec y-qirebov
olkott48oV oUowedov yap oiidas KaTppt/j.fjievr)s Zdacpos, yqireba be to, iv rats wdXecn
irpoKelfxeva olov KrjirLa.
40. 'A-TroWodwpcp: i.e. of Megara, whom Lysias c. Agorat. 71 alleges to have
been an accomplice of Thrasybulus, without having actually laid hands on
Phrynichus. The same rewards were proposed for him as for Thrasybulus, but
action had been suspended by a ypacpij irapavofxwv, and the dicasts in that case,
as having been guilty of corruption, are by the terms of this supplement of
Eudicus to be prosecuted. According to Lysias irepl too o-tjkov 4 Apollodorus
.subsequently received as his reward the confiscated property of Pisander.
45. arret. So always in Attic inscriptions ; never driva. Meisterhans Gr. 156.
25. A slab of Pentelic marble found near the Metropolitan Church of
Athens. The surface is very much worn. CIA i 61 (cf. iv 1 p. 18);
D 52.
Cf. Kohler Herm. n 27 sqq. ; A. Philippi Jahrbb. cv 577 sqq. and Der Areopag
u. die Epheten 333 sqq.; Th. Bergk Philol. xxxn 669 sqq.; N. Wecklein Sb.
Ak. Munch. 1873, 1 sqq.; R. Scholl Comm. Momms. 460 sqq.; Dareste Inscr.
jur. Ser. 2 xxi.
ABAAE
(

}
l,
7]) IH
(= h, sometimes omitted)
OIKUMN
[X
=
f]
O
(=0, ov, co- but
BOYUE) PPTY4>X [4>
= ^r].
2toix?756j',
except the first two lines which are in larger characters.
A i 6 <y v [r\] t o
s
Qpedppios i
y
p
a
/& fju
a r e [v c
].
A i o k X rj
9
V
P X
e-
"E]8oe^
rfj (3ov\fj
icai rco 8rj/j,(D[i\. 'A/ca[p\avT[\& tirpvTdvJefe,
vrjros
iypa/jL/jL(iTV
}
lLv0v8iKo[s l-KitrJTarec. [S]e[vo4>d] vr)<;
e[l]7T6' [t]o[v
5
Apd/covros vofjbov to/jl irept rod [(/>6v]oi> [d]^[a]7pa[<|>]cra[v]T[a>v
oi d]v[a.ypa](f)rj-
9 tcqv voficov
7rapa\a/3ovr<; irapa \t\ov [pao-iXe'ws juTa tov
ypap.p.aJTeeo-
9 T179
/3ov\r}<; iarrjXjj \t6lvr) /c[al K]a[T]a[06v]T[ft>v irpoo-Ocv
t]^[s] o-to-
a9 7*779 fSacriXeicis. 01 oe ircoXrjTai [dir]o/x[iar8to<rdvT<ov KaTa t6v
vo]fio-
v. ol Be 'FtWrfVora/jLLCii, Bovtcov to a[pyvptov].
10 UpCOTOS d^cov.
icai id/JL
[p.]?)
k 7rpo^o[ia]? [k]t[ivtj tis nva,
(j>V'yiv. 8jfc-
25]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 67
icd^eiv he rovs /3aai\eas atT(w[v] (o[vov] r) [lav tis aiTiaTai
'(OS PovjX-
evaavra' rovs [8]e e</>eta9 Stayv[<avai. al8l<rao-0ai 8'
lap pcv
iraTi^p] 7j-
c 7) aSe\(o[s] 17 fet?, a7ra[vras,] r) ro[v K]&)[XvovTa KpaTeiv' Idv
8e |xt| 'ojf-
15
TOi 0)a[i,
p]e[x]/9
a[v]e^)[o-i]oT[i]]TO? tf[al dv\|nov, edv 'diravTCs
al8e<raj(7-
uai i6e\(Oa\y\, TOV o[pk]o^ [opoo-avras] ' kdv 8c tovtojv prjSels
fl,
KTt~
z^?7 Se atfa>[v], 7[v]wcr[i 8]e
f
[oi irevjT^KovTa Kal 'cis 'ot ccperat
aKOVTa
KTeZvat, eaea6\ja\v Se[Ka 'oi 4>pdTps lav IGlXwaV tovtovs 8]e ['o
i 7T6VT7]/c[o]pr[_a Kal]
?
et? ap[i]cr[Ttv8T]v 'aipi<r8wv. Kal 01 7rpo]re[p-
20 0^ /CTet[v]a[vTS Iv t]&)[i8 t<3 0<rpa> lvX.<r6<*)V. irpociimv 8 tw
K<f>"
Tt[vavTi Iv
dJ^yoLpdi Ivt]o[s dvi|/ioTT]TOS Kal dv\|/iov' o-vv8u6ki]i>
oe [Kal dv]\|r[tovs Kal dvexj/ta-v iratSas Kal -yapPpovs
Kal irv0pov]s [k-
gu </>[pa]T"[<:]p[as
]
t-
09 . . .
(f)0
. . .
0[
TOVS TTCVTTJKOVTa Ka]t
25
'
kva
[
'6v dv <j>]o^of
6[\]ajcr[i lav 8c' tis] t-
o[v dv8po<povov ktc^vt) tj airtos "p <J>6vov, dircxop-cvov d-yopds
<f>jO-
/3(/[a]? [Kal ddXcav Kal 'itpwv 'ApcpiKTvovtKwv, 'totrircp tov 'A0T]vai]oz/ [k-
Tcivavra, Iv tois avTois lvlx.O"0ai. Sia-yiYVwo-Keiv 8e tovs l<pJeTa[s.
30 tovs 8e dvSpocpovovs Ifjcivai diroKTcivciv Kal dird'yeiv Iv] T^[i] ?7yU/e[8-
airrj, Xx>paivo-0ai 8e pi], pi]8 diroivdv, rj SiirXovv ocpciXetv 'oo-]o[v
n
av K-
aTapXdv|/T]
l[ lav 81 tls dpfjavT]as %6t[p-
0)[v dSlKCOV KTLVT] Idv] (16/CCDV K~
35
Tl[vT|, 8iKaiv 8 tovs Pao-iXlas alnwv <povov, Sta-yvwvai 8]e TOf9
6-
<|>6Tas. Kal Kara raviTa <{>dvou SiKas elvai SovXov KTtCvavTi] rj e\evd~
e[p]o[v. Idv 81 tis (pIpovTa rj d-yovTa pa dSiKws evGvs d\ivv]o/XVO-
9 /c[tivt), vryiroivel TeOvdvai
]
%OVTO<;.
39
av . . . . fiocrr. 40 . . . fcvo .... e/car. 41 . to . . . . Xe . . . .
42 kv . . .
43 fxv . . .
44
....
$
45
V . . . 7] . . .
46, 47
Oi 7T|[VTtJKOVTa Kal
f
et9
f
ot
i<f)Tai(J) 48, 49
pT]a7r[o]*7|[o-i
52
68 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[25
The occasion of the decree was a revision of the laws after the downfall of
the Four Hundred and the restoration of the democracy. It is enjoined that the
law of Draco concerning homicide should be engraved afresh and the law as
written on the irp&Tos &uv is actually quoted in the decree. Such restorations
as have been possible are due mainly to Kohler, after a careful comparison of
the text of Demosthenes. Lines 15, 35, 36 represent the reconstructions of
Dareste.
1. <$>pedppios : sometimes spelt Qpedpios. The deme Qpeapoi belonged to the
tribe Aeovrls.
5. dvaypa(prjs. Cf. Lysias /caret Nt/co/xdxou

2, 17, 25. They were not a
magistracy but an exceptional commission appointed along with the i-vyypacprjs
(see 9 3)
after the downfall of the Four Hundred and again in 403 b.c.
Xenophanes, the proposer of the decree, was doubtless a ^vyypacpeijs like
Demophantus in the law given in Andoc. de Myst. 96.
6. irapa\a(36vTes kt\. The restoration is due to Schaefer (de scribis senatus
populique Atheniensium) and Kiessling : cf. 26 29 dvaypdxpavTas ixerd
tov ypafx/JLareoJS t[t)s j3ov\rjs]. Kohler's irapd tov /caret irpvraveiau ypa/JL/xarecos tt)s
(3ov\t}s is doubtful, because the ypafM/xarevs /card irpvTavelav is not elsewhere
mentioned in pre-Euclidean inscriptions. See 38 14.
7. irpoadev rrjs arods rrjs /3a<rtXetas. Philippi I.e. remarks that the decree of
Tisamenus (403 b.c.) in Andoc. de myst. 84 has the words : tovs 8 Kvpov/xivovs
tGov voij.wv dvaypd<peiv els tov to?x
ov
i
'^
va 7re
P
irporepov dveypdcpTjcrav, crKoireiv r<
fiovkoixevw,
which the orator himself

82 interprets as follows : i\pr)(piaaade
5oKi/j.d<xavTes irdvTas tovs vdfiovs etr dvaypdipat ev ttj ctoo. tovtovs tu>v vbfxwv ot
dV doKi/xacrdQcn. In Aristoph. Eccl. 684 the adjective is of two terminations
:
tt]v ctoiclv tt)v [3ao-i\eiov. For the topography see Fraser Pans, i 3, 1 and
cf. 32 65.
9. 'EXX-^ora/uat. Cf. 24 12 and see Index.
10. wpCoTos atjuv. On the amoves and /ctfo/Sets see J). A. It would seem that
Solon in adopting the laws of Draco concerning homicide caused them all to be
engraved on the first axon, though the opening words /cat ect^u fir) show that here
only a part of them is quoted, cpevyeiv: 'he must leave the country.' In the
following, contrary to later usage, dixdfeiv is used of the presiding magistrate,
diayvwvcu of the jurors.
'
The archon basileus for the time being is to decide on
the motives of the homicide or in the case where any one charges the slayer as
having committed the murder with intent.' Dareste however insists that the
plural tovs (3a<Ti\eas cannot bear this meaning. He prefers to understand the
expression as including the dpx^v (3acri\evs and the 0uXo/3a<rtXets. These latter
we find at a later time sitting with the fiaaiXevs ;
cf. Arist. 'A#. wo\. 57, 4 :
5t/cd"et
5'
6 ftacnXevs /cat ot 0uXo/3a<xiXets /cat rds tQ>v dxpvx^v * T&v dAAav a>au'
(i.e. cases in which death was caused by an animal or inanimate being). The
text is D's, who altered Sauppe's tov fiovKevaavTa (CIA iv 1
p. 18),
which could
hardly be used pendente lite, to <hs (3ov\evaavTa : cf. Dem. c. Aristocr. 630 : ov ydp
o~t ov8eis virb TavTrj ttj Trpoarjyopia (sc. dvdpo<povov), wplv dv e!;e\eyx6cls dAw. The
crime indicated is that which was known later under the name fiovXevais; cf.
Arist. 'Ad. 7roA. 57, 3. A (3ov\evu)v could be at'rtos <povov without being ai)ro%etp
;
cf. Andoc. de myst. 94.
13 23. Restored by Koehler from the law quoted in Dem. c. Macart. 1069 sq.
In Demosthenes the order of the words is changed and portions (11.
1416) of
26]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 69
the law are omitted, perhaps because they were not relevant, the object of the
orator being to quote the clauses which had reference to the degrees of agnation.
The reading ol Trevr-qxovra /cat eh r\ ol ecpercu in Demosthenes is due to mis-
understanding of the spiritus asper in the original
(HOI
)
13. aldeaaadcu ktX.
'
If there be a father or brother or sons (of the deceased)
they may admit to reconciliation the slayer, provided that they are unanimous
;
but if one of them objects, his veto shall hold good.' On aldecraadai see the
Lexx.
17. yv&oi 8e ktX.:
'
and if the fifty-one, to wit, the ephetae decide that the
homicide was involuntary, ten members of the (pparpia (sc. of the deceased) may
if they choose allow the accused to re-enter (iaeaduv, altered to aibeadcdiav
Dem. I.e.) the country
;
these ten are to be chosen by the fifty-one, regard being
had to nobility of birth.' On Draco's law concerning involuntary homicide see
M. and S. Att. Pr. p. 16 sqq. and on the functions, origin, and the peculiar
number of the ephetae, 51, see D. A. and Gilbert, C. A. 378 sqq.

(ppdrepes, not
(pparopes, is the invariable spelling on inscriptions : see Meisterhans, Gr. p. 131.
20. TrpoeLireiv kt\.
'
Any one of a nearer relationship than that of first
cousin may denounce the guilty man in the market-place ; and besides this,
first cousins and their sons, sons in law, fathers in law and members of the
(pparpia may join in the prosecution.'
26
29,
3032. The restorations in these lines depend upon a comparison
of Dem. c. Aristocr. 629, 631 sq. The dyopd i<popla was a border-market on the
confines of two neighbouring states, where the borderers met for the purpose of
traffic. The words h rrj Tjixedairrj, 1. 30 (which appear in the vbfios Dem.
629),
are not quoted in the subsequent remarks of Demosthenes himself.
33end. If any complete restoration were possible, the key to it would
probably be found in the following: Dem. c. Aristocr. 637 N6/aos. 'Eai> rts
diroKTeivy 4v adXocs a/cow, r) kv bdip KadeXcov rj ev iroXe/uap dyvorjaas, rj ewi dd/xapri rj
ewi firjrpl rj e?r' ddeX<pfj rj erri dvyarpi, rj erri rraXXaicfj r)v dv err' eXevdipois xaicriv
^XV)
Toirwv eveKa jjo] (pevyeiv Kreivavra
;
ibid. 639 /cat iav (pepovra rj ayovra
fiia
ddiKCos evdus d/xvubfxeuos Kreivy, vrirroivel reQvdvai
;
ibid. 640 6s dv apx^v r) ihnhrys
atTtos rj rbv decfxbv crvyxvdrjvai. rbvde, r) /xeraTrotrjarj avrbv, drLfiov elvai /cat 7ra?5as
/cat rd ineivov. Cf. also 2 B
4
8.
26. Three fragments of Pentelic marble: H. 0.85 m.; Br. 0.39 m.;
Th. 0.19 m. CIA iv
1, 61a, p. 18 and 126; D 53. Cf. Dittenberger Herm. xvi
p.
188.
AB A AE
(= , (>,
v)
. H (=
h, but generally omitted; six times =
7])
OlkUAMN [X
=
f]
O
(=o, ov,
) nPTY4>X [4>=^]
_Q (3 times). The
U
sometimes slopes to the right. Not accurately aroixv^ov.
civ ira-y]yeXX[to<r]t
'
A6r)v[a.io-
t KJaraXoyop rear
'o\fi7]pov^' Be [']ol/? e^[ovo--
iv *A0T]vaioi diroSovvai, to 8 XJoltto/jL firj \ajx(3av-
5
iv* ctvai 8 KaTaorTTO-at '%T\\v\ip]piavov<> T7)[/jl] 7To\t-
70 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[26
TcCav avTov6|xovs Tpoirw 'Jotw av iiri<JT()VT-
ai ocra 8e u<|>]eA,e to kolvov to 2?;-
Xv|xPptavc3v
TJ
ISicoTuv n]? 2,rjXvv(3[p\iavoov too
koivw, d<}>io-0ai. Kai] el tov ^prjfxara eSeSr]fxe-
IO VTO T) e'l TtS TO) 8t]|XOO"1({)] d)(f)ei\,V
rj
L T? TJTLfKOT-
o, ^vTifiov etvai. tois 8e] (f>evyovai liTjXv/jL^piavcov
o? iroXe/bLLovs Se Kai <\>i\iov<$
oo-](a) Se dirooXeTO ev too iroXe/jbop
Xpiip.aTa 'AQt]vai]cov rj tgov ^vpbfxd^odv, r) el tl
6(f)el\-
15 ovtos tj TrapaK~]aTa07]fcr}v e^ovTO^ tov eirpa^a-
fjbrj elvai irpa^iv irXrjy yrjs Kai ol-
Kias. 00-a
8'
djAAa i;vp,{36[\~\aia irpo tov r)v tois l-
Suorais irpjo? tovs iSiQ)Ta[s] rj ISiooTr) irpos to k-
oivov rj tu koi]^c5 irpos i8icoTr)[y] r) edv tl a[x]\o yiy-
20 vt]Tat, 8ta]XuetyLt 7r[p]o? dWrjXovs' otl S' az/ d/jLtfcccrfir}-
Twa-i, SiKas] elvai otto v/ul{3oXo)v. t<? Se ^uvOtJk-
as dva7pd<j>]<ra^Ta? eh aTrjXrjv 6elvai eU to
(
iepo-
v tov 'AiroXXwvo]?
(?).
Ct)[|xo]cr<2^
'
AOrjvaioov ol CTTpaTTjyol
Kai
'01
TpiTJpapxoJi
Kai ol OTrXiTai Kai el tl-
25 s aXXos 'AGrjvauov Tr]apr)v, Kai ZrjXv/uL^pjiavol
77"-
av8r|(xi. 'AX]/ci[pid8T]]9 eiire' KaOd %vve6evTO S77-
Xv^PpiavJol 7rp[6s
y
AQ]rjva(ov<;, KaTa TavTa iroielv,
Kai K(xr<x&\elvai e'[u iroXjet dvaypd^av(r)a<$ tovs t-
opKovs Kai r]a? <rvvQr)\K\a<; fieTa tov ypapb/JuaTews r-
30 T]S PovXrjS
]
eV GTT]\7) XlOl-
vr\ Tc'XccrJt tol<; avToo[v ko]1 to
yfrr}<fiLo-/jia
ToSe.
'AttoXXoSw]poi> Se tov 'EjfiTreSov eiraiveaai, Kai
dcfrei-
vat aiirov ttj]? 6/jL7]pe(i)as, Kai [kj^aXeiyjrai tcl
ovofia-
ra T<3v 6\Lr\p]a)v todv %r)XvfJL\$]piav(ov Kai tgov eyyvrj-
35
t<3v elvai KJvpiov tov ypap\^.o.\rea Trjs /3ovXr/s, [o]7r[6-
0-01 elo-l yey^pa/JL/jLevoi, evavTiov too/jl irpvTave-
<av' \i]a^ov Se tov 1<r)\vfij3[pia\vdv avayp-
d\}/ai Iv tt)] avTrj crTijXr) irp6^e\yov 'A]0r)valcov
etvai 8 Ka]l
'
A7ro\\oSct)p(p Trj/ui 7rpo[eviav Ka-
40 Qdircp to] iraTpl avTOV. tou? Se 7rpecr/3[eis Kai] 'AttoX-
X68<opov KJaXecrat e'? irpvTavelov eV[l |v]^a e'-
s avpiovj.
This document prescribes the conditions upon which Selymbria, after its
capture in 409/8 b.c. by Alcibiades, was restored to the Athenian alliance. To
27]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 71
this event Plutarch, Ale. 30, devotes a chapter ; cf. Diod. xm 66, 4, Xen. Hell, i
3, 10. Lines
126 contain the agreement made with the Selymbrians through
the Athenian generals after the capture of the city ; in 2641 we have a decree
of the Athenians passed on the motion of Alcibiades, confirming the terms of
the agreement. The date of the decree (cf. Curtius Gr. Gesch. n
680)
probably
falls in 408 b.c. between the day of the Plynteria, the 25th of Thargelion (June),
on which Alcibiades returned, and the end of Boedromion (September), when he
left Athens after the Eleusinia were over.
1, 2. The Selymbrians are required to undertake military service for the
Athenians.
3, 4. Conditions relating to hostages. In 1. 3 for the
H
of oOs the stone has
a mutilated
[\|.
5, 6. The Selymbrians are permitted to establish their own form of
government.
7
9. Remission of existing debts to the Selymbrians.
912. Restitution of confiscated property, restoration to their privileges of
disfranchised persons, return of exiles.
1317. Land and house property which had been lost during the war
might be recovered ; but not money belonging to the Athenians and their allies
which had been taken by the magistrates (perhaps for the purposes of the war),
whether as due from a debtor or in the form of a deposit.
1721. All other compacts which existed between individuals or between
individuals and the state were to be mutually carried out (5ta\i/et/w 7rp6s aXXrjXovs)
or in case of dispute to be settled by international arbitration. On the 5i'/ccu dirb
t-v/j.j36\u)v see D. A. and the remarks in Ro. i
p. 355 (on the inscription of Ozolian
Locris dealing with crvXai) and cf. 30. Here the ajj/m^oXa or international
contracts provide not only that individuals of the contracting states might sue
one another, but also that one state (perhaps through a ttoXls ?kkXt)tos ; see note
on 58 12) might sue an individual citizen of the other state or vice versa. In
1. 17 the reading is D's for rd 5e &]XXa %v/u{3oXa [r]d irpb rod iv tols t'[5twrais of K,
in which both i//x/3o\a for vp.p6Xcua and the preposition ev are impossible.
27. iroieiv. The subject is probably Hr)Xv/ui^pi.avovs kcli 'Adrjvaiovs.
29. yuerd rod ypap-fiarecos rrjs ^ovXrjs. Cf. 25 6.
33. The stone has
OMEITA^.
Perhaps dfirjpea for ofxr/peia may be
classed with examples like Scoped, ttoXlt^o. collected by Meisterhans Gr. 40 sqq.
Cf. 28 37, 37 20 irpvTau^ov = irpvTave7ov.
34. For the iyyvyrai in this and other connexions see Index s.v.
27. A fragment of Pentelic marble found between the theatres of Dionysus
and Herodes. CIA iv 1, 116 h p. 24.
A.. AE (=6,
[>4 v) IH
(=A).
IKU. N.O (= o, ov
[]) PPZ
FY . . 2toix?756i'.
i v Tr)[i
8v
This fragment reminds very closely
o
r
vSpl\ as vl/
-
of the probouleuma of Callixenus recorded
, fL, ,- by Xenophon Hell, i 7, 9 : detvai 8e els ttjv
0^ecrl9ai .
x
, . ,
x
, ,
x
, ,.,. ,
s
'
r L
(pvXrjv eKaoTrjv duo vopias' <p eKaarr) oe rrj
A-7^9 air
<pvXrj KTjpvKa KrjpiiTTeiv, 6tco boxovciv adiKew
72 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[27
aXXo (OT -0L>) 8e irp
'
1 0"rpa.T7)yol ovk aveXop.e'voi rovs viK7}<TavTas
\ iv tti vavfiaxlg- (sc. off the Arginusae,
406 B.C.) els tt]v irporkpav xf/rjftaaadou, orip
t 6v[p
5e jultj, els TTjv varepav.
28. A slab of Pentelic marble, with a relief representing the tutelar deities
of Athens and Samos with their right hands joined. The upper fragment
contains a decree of 405/4 b.c. and a few remains of the first of two decrees of the
lower fragment belonging to 403/2 b.c, the year of the archonship of Euclid.
The decree on the upper fragment only is given here 11.
1
41. CIA iv. 2, 1 b;
D 56 (cf. CIA ii Add.
p. 393, 1 b = T>
57); J. H. Lipsius Leipz. St. xm 411.
Cf. W. Judeich Kleinasiat. Stud. p. 26 note 2.
ABTAE (= e, ev)
xH
(=v)
OIKAMNSO (=
o, ov) PR^TY^XyA
Ztoixv^w 5
Dut the lines vary in length from 58 to 61 letters.
A
and
E
frequently appear as
A
and
C,
and there are other slips, as
A
for
A
and
O
for
O.
eypafjbfjbdreve.
la/jLLOL<; oaoi fxerd rod Sij/xov rov
'
AOrjvai-
G)v eyevovro.
$
v
E>8oi;v
rfj (3ovXfj ical ra> hrjfxfp' KeKpoirls enrpvraveve,
Tiokvfjbvis Euco^uyLtev?
'
iypafjbfjbdreve, 'AXef/a?
VPX
e
> Nifccxfioov 'AOfiovevs eVe-
GTCLT6L, yVCOfjLT) K\ta6(f>OV
/ecu avvTrpvrdvecov iircuveaai ro9 irpeaj^eat tols Xcl/jllols
toI
1
^ re irporepo-
9 yfcovcri koX rots vvv teal
rfj fiovXfj
zeal rots o-Tparr)yoi<;
Kal Tot9 aXXocs
%a/jLLOL<;, otl elcriv avSpes dyadol Kal irpoOvpLOL irotelv 6
rt Svvavrac ayaOov,
io zeal rd nreTrpayfjueva avrols otl 8okovo~lv bpOws TTOLrjaat
AOrjvaiois Kal Za/jU-
ow Kal dvrl wv ev 7re7TGL7]Kao~LV 'AOrjvatovs Kal vvv irepl
iroXXov TToiovvrai Kal
iarjyovvraL dyaOd, SeBo^Oat
rfj fiovXfj
Kal tw
hrffjuw,
Xa/jbiow; 'AOrjvaiovq elvac,
7ro\cTvofjLvov<> 07T&)9 dv avrol (3ovXwvraL, Kal 07T&)9 ravra
earac 009 eirLT^heLO-
28]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 73
rara dfMfzorepois, KaOdrrep avrol Xeyovcriv, eirethdv eiprjvr)
yevrjrao, rore irepl
i^roov aXXcov
Koivfi ftovXeveaOai. tols he vo/jloc<; y^pr\<jQai
TCH? <T(f)TpOL<; CLVTCOV
avrovofiovs 6Wa? Kal rdXXa iroielv Kara rov<; opicov; teal
ra? avvOrjKas KaOdirep
^vvKeorai
'
AOrjvaiocs teal SafAiow Kal rrepl rcov evKXrf-
/jbarcov, a ay yiyvrjrat,
Trpbs aXXtfXovs, hthovat teal he^eaOac rd<; Sitcas Kara ra?
o~v/jL/3oXd<; t9 ovaas.
edv he rt dvay/caloy ylyvr)rai Sod rbv TrbXejAov teal rrporepov
rrepl tt}? itoXl-
20
rjelas, wairep avrol Xeyovcrcv ol Trpear(3eLs rrpbs rd rrap-
ovra fiovXevofievovs irotelv
r]c dv hoKjj /3e\TtcrTov elvar irepl he r^? elpTJvrjs edy
yiyvrjTat elvai Kara ravrd
KJaOdirep A.drjvaloi$ teal rot<; vvv oIkovctlv Za/xov edv Be
TToXefietv herj, rrapao~K-
v]d^ea6ac avrovs &)? dv hvvcovrao dpcara rrpdrrovra^
fierd rcov arparyyouv
ka]v he irpeafieiav rroi rrefxircoaiv AOrjvaloi, av/JLireparetv
Kal rovs etzdfjLov rrapbvra;
25 4dv] riva fiovXcovrao, teal avvftovXeveuv ore dv eywtriv
ayadov. ral? he rpir\peo~i
Tats] overate e\ Xayu-eo \py)a6ai avrol<; hovvat emaKevaaa-
fjuevois tcaO* on dv av-
tois %\otcr\' ra he ovofiara rcov rpirjpap^cov, oov i)aav
avrai at vrjes, airoypd-^rat
tovs irpe'o-p]ei9 roo
ypa/jifiarel rrj<; fiovXrjs teal roi<? arparr)-
yot<;
m
Kal rovrcov el irov
ti tti 6'<|>XT)p.a] yeypa/jL/xevov ev ra) hrjfjLoalw go? TrapeiXrj-
(f>orcov rd<? rpirjpeis,
30 airavTa 4a\ei\|/dv]TGoz/ ol vecopol arravrayoOev, rd he atcevrj
tgo hr)/jLocrL(p ea-
irpa|dvT<ov ws to-xio-to, Ka]t irravaytcao-dvrcov arrohovvai rovs
k^ovTas rovrcov
ti !vt\t]. rvwp.t] K\io-6<|>ov Kal <r\vv7rpvrdvecov ra fjbev aXXa
KaOdirep rrj
(3ovXfj,
ctvai Se T-qv 8a>pidv 2ap.ia>v tois r[\fcovcriv KaOairep avrol al-
rovvrai Kal vel/j,ai
74 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[28
avTovs avriKa udXa
h tovs Si^uovs Kal Td]?
(f>v\a<;
oeKaya'
/cat tyjv Tropeiav irapa-
35
<rKvd<rai tois Trpeo-pWi tovs o-TpaTTj-yovs
]s
rd^Lara' KCLL El-
/xa^co Kal rots
dXXois Sauwus irdo-i tois ueTd Evp,dxov t]'kovo-] 7r(LLV6(TaL ft)?
ovcriv dvhpdauv
d-yaOois ircpl tovs 'AGrpvaiovs' Ka\rai 8'
Evua]^07y e[irl 8]et7T^OZ/
6? to irpvraveov
is avpiov. dvavpdif/ai k rd e\|/T)<fnorp.eva rjoy <ypapb(JL\a.Tia ttjs
PovXJt}? fxerd twv
(TTpaTT^Yoiv eo-TrXr] XlGivt] Kal Ka.Ttx\6eivcu ? 7ToX,i[v, tovs &
'EXXiivJora/x/a?
40 Sovvai to dp-yvpiov* dva-ypdxf/ai, 8 eSdjyLtft) Kara ravra Te[Xo-i
TOIS iKii]vO)V.
"E8ov tt| povXfj Kal tw Br\\ua' IIav]8tovh eirpyrdvevev, 'Ayvp-
pios K[oXXvTei><?
ktX.
The decrees were passed in honour of the Samians, the only allies who had
remained loyal after the battle of Aegos Potamos. Lysander when he captured
their city in 404/5 b.c. expelled the democratical party (the
"
oaot fxera tov drjfxov
Tov'Adrjvaiuv e-ytvovro" of 1. 3, 4) and restored the oligarchical.
1. KrjcpicrocpQiv : cf. 32 2.
3. Sa/u'ots : a dativus commodi without verbal construction, something like
the familiar formula in Elean inscriptions, e.g. d fp&Tpa Toip faXelois Kal roils
'HppacfioLS Eo. 1 291.
5. The decree is evidently later than the battle of Aegos Potamos, and we
now know from Arist. 'A0. tto\. 34, 2 that the battle was fought in the archonship
of Alexias, i.e. after the month of June 405 b.c, but yet not long after, for the
person for whom Lysias wrote the speech xxi
( 3)
returned from the scene of
operations to Athens and was gymnasiarch at the Promethea, i.e. in Boedromion
or Pyanepsion. Lipsius therefore (I.e.) infers that the prytany to which our
decree belongs was the second or at latest the third in the year 405/4 b.c.
6. yvib/j.7] kt\. The formula as applied to the prytanes appears to be
unexampled. We find yvdbfxr] arpar-qyOiv (CIA iv 2, 11 e) and [71/440)77 tQ>v avy-
ypcupeuv (CIA 1 58, 8). If, as is highly probable, K\elcro<pos Evuvv/jlcvs is the
same as the person of that name who was Secretary to the Treasurers of Athena
403/2 or 402/1 b.c (CIA 11 642, 4) the fact that Keicpoiris here is the prytanising
tribe occasions a difficulty, because the Evwvv/j.eis belong to
'EpexQv'h-
D con-
jectures that possibly the motion (yvibixyj) of Kleisophos and his colleagues may
have been one passed on from the preceding prytany, and that this may be the
explanation of the unusual formula.
7. iircuveacu toZs kt\. See 23 6.
8. Kal tois vvv. Thus there would seem to have been two embassies sent
between the battle of Aegos Potamos and the besieging of the Athenians.
29]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 75
Diodorus xm 106, 8 appears to be wrong in saying that Lysander immediately
after the battle proceeded to lay siege to the town of Samos.
18. /caret tcls (rv/JL(3o\as t&s o&ras. On the cv/ApoXaL, avfji^oXa, SUai dirb
<rvfji.p6\coi> see D. A. It was necessary that the <rv/u,(3o\aL existing when the states
were separate republics should be confirmed now that the Samians were to
become Athenian citizens; else the matter would have been left in doubt. Cf.
the same provision in the case of laws 1. 15, 16.
22. tois vvv oIkovgiv ^dfxov. This would exclude from the benefits of the
compact anti-Athenian exiles who might be restored to Samos by Lysander.
24. iSdfiov
(3=
not
X):
Meisterhans Gr. 106. 26. es 2d,uy: 7 59.
25 sq. This permission given to the Samians to use the Athenian ships
(against Lysander) is mentioned by Diodorus xiii 104, 2.
30. veupol. Cf. Hesych. vewpds' vecopio(f>v\at;. Elsewhere in Attic inscriptions
(e.g. CIA ii 809 a, 184) the title is eirL/jLeXrjTal tuv veupiuv.
32. yuw/j.r) kt\. Cf. 1. 6. 33. dupeidv. See 26 33.
34. 5^/caxa. So Wilamowitz ; edd. Se/ca^a.
37. irrl deTirvov : not tirl 1~via, because the Samians were now Athenian
citizens (D). On irpyraviov see 26 33; but perhaps the E stands for et.
41. After this line on the stone begins the second decree (see above).
29. A slab of Pentelic marble, found in the Acropolis, broken into three
parts. CIA n
3 ; H 62
; D 59. Cf. C. Curtius Herm. iv 404.
ABTAE
(=e,
eO.HOIKAMN^O (= o, ou)
PPCTY.. y_Q.
A
appears four times written as
A. 2toix
,
>?56j', except 1. 1 which is in larger
characters.
@ O L
'A(XVVTo]/0O<?, \LvpV7Tv\0V,
'ApyeQov, Ao/cpov, AXtcifjiov.
"E8o]i; rrj
/3ov\fj- OlvtjU
5
iTrpvjrdveve, Aet#eo9 ij-
pa^j/jLareve, A^/xo/cXt}? eVe-
(rjrdret, MovL7T7rL$r}s elire' 'A-
/JLVVTOpt KCU EjVpV7Tv\(i) K~
ai ApyL(p /ecu Ao/cpco /ca-
IO t AX/CLfjLO) TOt9
\\7TrJIJi(lVT0V
iratai, iweiSr) KaOypeOrj
Tj
<JT7j\ri \i\irl TOdV TpiCLKOVT-
a iv
fj
r)[v a]uTot? rj irpo^ev-
la,
ava<ypdylr[ai] rrjv arrjXrjv
15 T07
ypafjLfjLa[T{a t]t}? /3ov\r/s
The decree (possibly on the re-
quest of Eurypylos, 1. 16) orders
the restoration of a stele, containing
a grant of proxenia, which had been
destroyed by the Thirty. The date
(cf. the alphabet) must be shortly
after the archonship of Euclides,
perhaps in 403 b.c The names
were probably those of Thasians
;
the name 'Afivvriop
'
XiryixavTov oc-
curs in CIA 11 4, a fragment con-
taining names apparently, to judge
from their peculiarities (cf. passim
the names of Thasians in the Tha-
sian inscriptions, Bechtel 72 sqq.,
with those of CIA 11
4),
of Thasians,
who had been exiled for their
Athenian sympathies. This may
have taken place in 411 b.c; cf. 23.
76 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[29
reXeac roU EvpVTrvXov Ka-
(The long inscription CIG 2448, the
x /

v
\ \ *'
i?
> so-called 'Will of Epicteta,' is
Xeaac oe kcli eiri Eevia cjv-
. ._ , ,
r
__
/ ? v m
similarly assigned to Thera on
pvirvXov e? to irpyravelo-
arguments derived from names.)
v e? avpiov. 1 sq. For the genitives in this
heading cf. 15. In 1. 4 note the absence from the formula of the words koX ry
drifjuf.
Cf. 38 6.
7 sqq. 'AfxvvTopi kt\. The dative is a kind of dativus commodi depending
upon avaypaipai ttjv arrjXrjv below. Cf. 30 5 sqq.
30. A slab of Pentelic marble, unbroken, but much worn ; now at Athens.
CIG 86, from the MS of Fourmont ; Koehler, Herm. vn
p. 159 ; CIA n 11
;
D 72. Cf. E. Sonne De arbitris externis p. 112 note 109; W. Judeich Klein-
asiatische Studien p. 98 note 1. A. Wilhelm, GGA 1898, 204 sq.
ABTAE (=, 6t, but eVeo-TflTEl).
HOIKAMN3EO (= o, ov)
PPCTY^Xtn.
Xtolxv^ov. The
N
is said to be inclined to the right, so that in the present
condition of the surface it is liable to be confused with
AAA
and even
M.
Sometimes
A
and
A
appear as
A.
"E8o]^6^
rfj
[p]oiA,?7 Kai rw
S[rf-
(jto)* 'AJKa/jLavrls \k\irpvrdvev,
y
O\vaaLiriro^ iypapp^aTevev, .
S?7? iirecrTarei, Aea)[v c]t-
5
tt* to]<? <>a<TT)\LTai$ to
V
r
[
T
l4
> ]^~
o-jia dv^aypdyjrat, otl dp, /u.e[v] 'A#-
rvT]<ri i-v\i.p6]\ai,ov ykvrjTai
Trpos $]acr(r))\LT[<ti\v Tiva, 'A6r)\vr\-
a-i tcIs 8]//C(X9 ylyveaOai 7r[ap-
iod tw Tro\]ep,dp%(p KaOdirep X-
iols Kal] dXXoOl p,rjhe d/xov. tgo-
v hi aXXwv] dirb %vp(36\(ov kclt-
d rds Xiiov
f]
uft/3oX,a<?
7rpo? <I>a-
o-T]XiTas] Ta<; Si/cas elv[a]c, t9
15 8* kk\tjt]ou[s] dfaXelv.
i[dv] Be t-
v dXXa
X
o]z} [ap]x[v]v 5[flf[ii]Ta[i]
B-
ikt]V Kara] t&acrrjXlTOOV t[i]^09,
tovto
8*
6<$>d\]Lv KCLTaBiicaar-
6f,
r \l\v 8ik?7 aKvpo]? ecrTCt). e-
20 dv h\ kPt)v<2i] 5[ok]?? ra
iyfrr}-
30]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 11
<j>i<rp.va, 6<j>6t]X[T]ft) [fjL]f/3[a<>] 8[p-
axi^as
Up]9
\j\f)
" K6r)vaia. T-
o h\
\|/TJ4>urn]<z
[t]o[8] dva[yp\a\^r]d-
to) 6
Ypap.p.]
cltvs o ttj<;
ftovXfjs
25 Io-ttJXt] \iQC]vr) KCLL KCLTaO-
Tto lv iroXet r]e\ac T0LS TW-
v ^acTTjXtTtov]
.
Koehler argues both from the subject matter and from the character of the
writing that the decree must be later than the battle of Cnidus, 394 B.C., and in
any case earlier than the Peace of Antalcidas, 387 b.c. Judeich suggests 388 B.C.,
because we know that the ships and troops of the Chians were with the Athenian
fleet, which then for the first time after a long interval was visiting the southern
coast of Asia Minor (Diod. xiv 94, 4). Wilhelm in spite of the Ionic character
refers the inscription to the middle of the fifth century b.c
The decree creates a commercial treaty between Athens and Phaselis on the
same conditions as had been granted to the Chians (Kara ras Xioov u//,/3oAds
1. 12; on the ^v/j.j3o\ai or v/j,j3o\a see the note to 26 17 sqq.). The latter after
the battle of Cnidus had expelled the Lacedaemonian garrison and rejoined the
Athenian alliance (Diod. xiv 84, 3),
along with Mitylene, Ephesus and Erythrae.
Chios had been instrumental in introducing Phaselis into the Delian confederacy
in the days of Cimon (Plut. Cim. 12). Phaselis, though a Dorian colony,
remained one of the most faithful of the allies of Athens. Its assessment at ten
talents (Plut. I.e., cf. Thuc. 11
69) shows that it must have enjoyed a prosperous
trade. Probably at the next assessment (see Index) the amount fixed was six
talents, for we find that this was the sum paid by Phaselis when the
Delian Treasury was removed to Athens 454 b.c; in 450 b.c the amount was
reduced to three talents, but in 439 b.c was raised to the original amount, as
was the case with the other towns. In the tribute-list of 424 the statement of
the amount is lost and in the fragments of later lists the name has not survived.
Phaselis naturally disappears from the list of allies after the Peace of Antalcidas
;
for by the conditions of that peace the Asiatic towns were made over to the
Persian King.
4. The letter before .... 577s on the stone seems to be cp, which is certainly
wrong : the remains of the letter at the end of 1. 3, the first letter of the name,
show that it must have been
[
or
f
or
p.
6. 6'rt aft kt\.
'
In the case of any business-contract made at Athens with
any Phaselite, the law-suits (duxl dirb vfx[3o\u>i') shall take place at Athens
before the archon polemarch.'
11. t&v 8e &\\a)i> kt\. The 5i/ccu dirb ^vfx(3o\Qiu about other subjects are to
be made in accordance with the compacts already made with the Chians, but an
exception is to be made in the case of suits brought to Athens : cf. 7 74. The
restoration in 1. 15 is by D, who cites Hesych. : ^kkX-^tol SUaL- at eirl ^vtjs
Xeyofievai, /cai ovk h rrj wdXei. Cf. Pollux vin 54, 63. On ^5^ dfiov see 5 24.
15. t[Qv
d\\axo]u. Sc. yevontvuv av^oXaioju. The upper part of the
Y
is clear on the stone, else we should have expected the ov to be expressed by
O
as in
TBjOAHl
1- 1- By
apxw
we must understand
'
any Athenian magistrate.'
78 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA ; SECT. I.
[30
18. tovto 5e 6<pei\ii> kt\. :
'
and if the Phaselite should be condemned in
this matter to pay, the suit shall not be valid.' The text is D's in place of
Koe.'s, $aar}\iTU)t> t[i]vos, \\tovtov /at) T]L(v)eiv KaradiKas; for
(1)
in 1. 18
A
and not
[\J
is on the stone and
(2)
/caraSiKcts in the plural and without the article is
improbable.
19. The offending magistrate shall be fined 10,000 drachmae,
etcfirivou, as
restored by Koe., appears to be used in the sense of irapaprjvai. The expression
eK(3i)vai rbv opKov occurs Plato Symp. 183 b.
26. Cf. 7 60.
31. A marble brought from Athens to Paris by Fauvel (' Choiseul marble ')
;
now in the Louvre. CIG 84 and Add. p. 897; CIA n 38; Foucart Rev.
Arch, xvm
(1877) p. 399 sqq. ; D 74. Cf. W. Judeich Kleinasiat. St. p. 104
note 1.
ABTAE
(=e,
et).HOII<AMNEEO (=,
ov)
PPCTY^XtA
1iTOlXV^v-
a? eve/ca [irapaSovJz;at, eav kcl-
\ t<o\l hr)fx\io\ $o/c[r Kal] TT)V Vp<y[i<riav
dv]a<y>a[\|/ai 4v o-ttjXtj] \i6lvei ev [d]-
p]o7roXei. K\o.\i\aai Se avrov errl %ev\y-
5
a] els to irpyravelov els avpiov.
KecaAo9 eiire' rd /nev dWa Kadairep [t-
fj
/3ov\el' dvaypdyjrac Be ^avoKpiro\y
rov TLapiavbv rrpo^evov Kal evep\yi-
T7)v avrov Kal rovs eKyovovs ev <xt?7[\t|
io XtOivet Kal arrjcrai ev aKpoiro\[z\.
r\by ypajuL/jLarea rrjs fiovXrjs, i7rei{h]r) 7r[a-
p]ijyyeoXe rots arparrjyols rrep\\ twv
v\ewv rod irapdifkov, Kal el ol <TTp[a]T[Tvyo-
l] eTTidovro, edXcoaav dv a[t] T^[t]7?pe[i]9
15 al TToXefjucai' dvrl rovrcov elvai []at r-
rjv rrpo^eviav Kal rr/v evepyeo~i[av k-
al KaXeaao avrov eirl %evia els t[o ir-
pyravelov els avpiov, /jLe[p]icraL Be [t-
dpyvpuov to elp7]fjuevov rovs airoBe-
20 Kras Ik rdjv KarafiaWo/jLevcov y^prip,d-
t]&)z/, erreiBdv rd e/c roov voficov fjiep\lo-<a-
<rij.
Honours are granted to Phanocritus of Parium, a town on the Hellespont
not far from Abydos (Steph. Byz. s. v.), for having indicated to the Athenian
32]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 79
generals the movements of the enemy's fleet. In 11.
1

5,
which form the
conclusion of a probouleuma (cf. the words iav /ecu tc S-qfjup 8oktj), it would seem
that a money reward (cf. 1. 18 to dpyvptov to elpr^jxivou) and the title of evepyeTrjs
(1. 2) had been granted to him. Lines 6 sqq. form a supplementary resolution
conferring in addition the proxenia and including a censure upon the conduct of
the admirals (13, 14). Foucart (I. c.) has shown with great probability that the
incident for which Phanocritus was rewarded must have occurred in the naval
operations in the neighbourhood of Hellespont a little before the beginning of
387/6 B.C. described by Xen. Hell, v 1, 25, 26, when Antalcidas by causing a
false rumour to be circulated eluded the Athenian fleet and reached Abydos.
2. Froehner, Inscr. No. 100, restores [evpyeai]as, Foucart [ayye\l]as.
[7rapadov]i>ai is Foucart's reading (i.e. with
OY
=ov) but elsewhere in the
inscription
O
= ov.
3. Xidiuet, 7 @ov\ei, cf. 10. From 380 b.c. (or earlier, as this inscription
shows) frequently, and from 300 b.c in the majority of cases the dative termi-
nation of the first declension is written
El-
The change embraces subjunctives
like 8oKei = 8oKrj and augments as in eipedr) =
ripedr). Meisterhans, Gr. p. 38. Cf.
no. 38.
6. KtyaXos : probably the well-known orator and demagogue of the deme
Collytus (cf. Dinarch. i
76),
who according to Suidas lived at the time of the
Thirty {yiyove 5e iirl tt)$ avapxlas). He appears as author of a (fragmentary)
decree concerning an alliance with Mitylene, CIA n 18, which Koehler
attributes to 378/7 b.c After
fiovKel understand doKel.
18 sqq. fiepio-at 5e kt\. For the apodectae see 21 16. The reward is to be
paid from the dues paid in (to the (3ov\evTripioi>), after they have made the
payments required by law. For the sense of KaTa^dWeiv here Hartel (Stud.
p. 134)
quotes Dem. c. Timocr. 730 : ^<xtiv iipuv Kvptos vo/xos . . . tovs
e'x
ovTas T<*
0'
lepa Kal tol 6o~ia
xPVf
JLaTa KaTafiaWeiv els to (3ou\evTrjpioi> . Cf. Boeckh,
St.
3
i 413. For fj.epi<rcu see 39 44.
32. A stele of Pentelic marble put together out of twenty fragments;
discovered in 1851 in excavations N. W. of the Acropolis. Front surface about
0.32 m. x 0.15. CIA n 17 ; D 80. Cf. A. Schaefer, De sociis Atheniensium
Ghabriae et Timothei aetate &c. Lips. 1856, Dem. i
2
p. 27 sqq. ; Busolt, Jahrb.
Suppl. B. vii 739 sq. ; Grote, H. G. Pt n ch. 77; E. Fabricius Eh. M. xlvi
589 sqq.; J. Zingerle Eranos Vindobonensis 359 sqq.; H. Swoboda Rh. M. xlix
321 sqq. ; W. Judeich Kleinasiat. St. 266, 308 ; Egger Traites publics p. 85.
ABTAE (1. 45
in a correction
) IHOIKAMNEEO (=0, ov)
npTY*xtn :
twice.
1
3 are in larger characters than the following ;
4
77 (except
69) are
written aToixy56v ;
1
77 contain a decree, 78
90 contain the names of various
states, in some cases in a different hand from those of
4
77 ;
91
96 contain
a portion of a second decree. On the left side of the stone the list of names has
been continued, but gradually, as the varying forms of the letters show. To
some extent the strata of additions have been represented by the type.
80 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[32
378/7
B.C.
B.
KepKvJpauov
'ApSfjJptrat
0d<r]ioi
5
Xa\Ki]S?7s
a7ro [0paKt]s
iS
A'lvlol
Hol/jlo 6pauses
AiKaio7roA.tTai
io AKapvave?
TlpwvvoL
'AA.KTas
Nc07TToAejUOS
15
['Ido-wv]
*AvS/3lOt
'Eo-Jrtai^s
Mv[k]6Vioi
25
E it ! Navcrti/tfcov ap^o^Tos
K<zAA,//3to9
I
}^7](f)Lcro(f)a)VTO<i
TLatavcevs

eypa/jb/judrevev.
'RtTI Tt}? 'iTTTTO^ftJ^TtSofs ipSjoyU,??? TTpVTCL-
veias eSo^ev
rfj
/3oiA[tj k<xi t]&> Stj/jLco-
1, Xaplvos 'A#yu,oz/[vs ]7recrTaTet,
'ApicrTOTeXrjs et[ir*
x]?7
dyaOfj
rfj
'A-
Orjvaiwv teal \t\(jov \_<r\)\L\i\d
r
)(wv twv
'
AOrjvaiw-
v, 07ra>9 *> Aa[K]S[ai}i6]^tot e'a;(jt toi)? "EWt/-
i/a? eXeu^efpJof? /ecu avrovopiovs r)GvyLav
ayeiv tt][v
X"P
av
]
e^ovra^ i/u, /3e/3aL(p rr)-
v lavTwv ]i/C 0<7
7)1 ab
a
30
35
0.7T . . T . . e . a cocr . V
eipr\$(\a6ai tc5 hrjfKp' edv Tt? /3ov\-
T]Tai t<ov ''EXJXrjvcov rj rcov j3apj3dpwv rcov iv
rTreipw kv\oLKOvvT(ov r) rcov vtjglwtgov, oa-
ot p,f paa-t]Xea)9 elcTLv,
'
Adr/vaucov avfi/jba^-
ovs tvcu k]cu tv av/jUfxci-^cov, i^elvai a[vr*
&)[t cXevGe'pJct) 6Wt /cat avTovofxcp, iroXt-
(3ov\r)TCLL,
fxrj'
/jbrjre apyovra
(f)povTi, iirl
Xtot kclI %7](3al-
rot? Se iTOirjcr-
'
KOrjvaiovs teal
20 Avnacatoi
T[vop.v]w TroXtretav rjv
re [<j>povp]af el^Se^o/jieva)
V7ro[ex\ofu,ev(p,
/uLrjre
cf>6pov
8e t[ols] avTols, e'0' olsirep
01 kcl\\\ 01 dWoi (TV/jL/jLa%oi.
a/jLev[oi]<; av/jL/jia^lav 77-/909
toi)? (ji;[p.|x]a^0L'? d(f)tvai rbv hrjfiov ra iytc-
rrjfjbaTa 6[ir]oo-' dv Tvy^dvrj 6v[ra rj %hi\a [rj
8-
rjfjLOGLa
' A6[r\\vaiwv iv
rfj
%[P;
twv iroiov-
fievoiv TTJV
av/JL/JLa^LaV /c[a\ irepl tovtwv it-
i<JTiv Sovvac ['A0i]vaiovs. Idv 8c TV
y]x
av
[T
t twv iroXewv [twv iroiovp.vwv t]?;^ av/jbfxa^-
iav 7rpb<; 'A^7;7^[atovs aTr)\a\i ovaac 'Adr/vija-
t dv7TLTr]Sio[i,
^Ivf
1 fiovXrjv rrjv del /3ov\e-
vovaav /cvplav e[tv]cu KaOaupelv. [a]7ro
avaivLtcov ap^ofvrjo? /u.77 i^elvac firjre
la fjLrjre
Sr)/jioa[i]a 'AOrjvaioov /jirjOevl
Se N-
IB-
iy.
32]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 81
'EpeVioi
'AcrTpouovcrioi
KciW
lovXirJTCLL
JLapOairjs
KoprjCTLOL
EA.cuoucrioi
A/xopytoi
^rjXvfx^ptavo^i
4
o
45
50
KTrjcracrOat
9 fjbrjre
vco /Jbrjre
i /uL7]0eVL
07) rat
fievco
ev T[a]t9
oIk lav /jLrjre
V7ro0e[[i]eu(p
eav Be [t]',9
TpOTTCp OTCOOVV,
TCOV aVfl/JLOL^COV
1 Hl(j)VLOL
HlKLVTjTai
55
a7ro paKTjs 60
Nco7roXtrat
65
70
75
Tft)^ avixfxaywv ^copac-
^coplov /Jbrjre Trpiaixe-
/jlt]T dWco rpoTTO)-
oovrjrat rj Krarai rj tl-
e^elvai rco /3ov\o-
<f)rjvCLL 7Tj0O9 TOU9 CTVV-
eBpovs roov GVjApiaywv' 01 Be crvveBpoc airo-
S6]uevot diroBovrcov [to piv r\]/nvav ru
[1]
(prjvavrc, to Be a-
Wo Kotjyo^
"
[^<tt]<w tc5z/ cri/[|x|x]a^(y^. eaz^ Be n-
9 t'[T|] eVt iro\efJb(p eirl t[ov]9 Troirjcrapievovs
T7]v <Tv/A/jba%iav rj Kara [yf]v rj Kara ddXarr-
ai>, ftorjOelv \\drjvalovs teal rot/9 avfjbiid'^ov^
tovtols teal Kara yrjv teal Kara Oakarra-
v iravrl aOevei Kara to Bvvarov. eav Be r-
rj e7riylrr)(f)LO'r] rj apywv r) IBccorr)-
roBe to yj/rjcpocrfia, 009 \veiv rt Bel r-
rcoBe rco '^rrjc^iafxaTi elprj/uLev[<av, v-
yLt[v] avrco dri/jLO) elvat teal [to.
av-rJoO Brjfxoaia karoo kol tt}<; [Qeov
eiriBetcaTOv teal KptveaOco ev *A6r)v[al-
tcal t[ois] av\x\xdyoi^ &>9 BiaXvcov Tr/[v
t9 earrf
9 napa
gov ev
irap^erco
XphWra
t]o
o]t9
o-v/uLfjua^ialy' l\r)/MovvTcov Be avrbv davdrco-
1 rj
<$>vyf)
ov[ttc.p\ AdrjvaloL teal 01 avfifxa^o-
Kparovcri[y' <iv] Be Oavdrov ripirjOf), ixy) ra-
cprjrco ev tt}[i 'Arrijfcfj [pJ^Se ^v T
f)
T(*>v av/x-
/jbd^cov' to B[t \|/TJ<J>t]cr^a roBe 6 ypapipiarev^
6 T579 /3ovXrj[s] [va7p]a-v|raTW ev aryXr/ Xidi-
vj] teal Kara6e[r(a] irapd tqv Ala rbv E\ei>-
av- ap\yi>\ptov Bovvac et'9 Trjv
o-t[i]Xii]9 efy'iKovra Bpa-^/jid^
to\[<xv\t(dv toi/9 ra/jilas rfj<; 6e-
rrjv err tj X[tj]^ ravrrjv avaypd-
ova[oi]v TroXecov avfi/jba^LBcov r-
[?;]rt9 civ dWrj avfJLiia^o^ <yi-
{<y)vrjTai. ravra
[p-]^
avaypdyjrac, eXeorOai B-
e rbv Brjfjbov 7rpeo-{3eL<$ Toet9 avritca /xaX,-
a] et9 rj{3a<;, [o]iTive<; irelaovcTi %r}(3aiovs 6-
Oepiov, to Be
aypacfyrjv rrjs
etc toov Betca
ov. et9 Be
(f)etv
rcov re
d oiofiara, Kal
t\l av [8vva)v]Tat dyadov.
'A]picTTOTe\ri<; Mapatfcovco?,
o'lBi
R. 11.
r)pe6r)aav
UvppavBpo-
6
82 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT /.
35
Z a K V V
[0]
L CO V
6 hfj/JLOS 8o
6 e v t a) Nr; AA-
85
90
95
9
'
Avacf)\va[T]io<i
,
\\6rjvai(DV 7roAet9 atSe
Mvri\r)[v]aioi,
MrjOvpvjaloi
f
Po3tot, IIofc^tTcrfcot
YiepivOtoi
Tieirap^BiOi
ddpaav/3ov\o<;
%7)
ft
a I o 1
XaX k tS rj
9
'EpeTp^9
'Apedovo-coL
KapvariOL
"T
II <z\[<zi(rKid6ioi
[32
KoXX,fTev9
Mapcovlrat,
Afc??9
IIap[i]ot, 'O .
'A^i/ftJTat, TI
'
ApLaroT^Xrjs et7re*
[ im-
8av irpG)To\y
endures 7r[po]sxa>pu)<7i [ \|/T]-
(picTfitva t&l Svj/xy /cat r
vqauiv els rr\v <rv/ii[[i.a\ioLV
tols rCov e'i//7;0t[<r|JLV()v
The document,
'
monumentum in paucis insigne,' provides for the formation
of a new league with Thebes, Chios, Mytilene and other states against Sparta.
It is instructive to contrast this convention with that concluded between Athens
and Chalcis more than half a century before (446/5 B.C.; no. 7). It shows how
entirely the old relations between Athens and her tributaries had been changed;
the obnoxious word <popos disappears and the contributions of the states, which
may choose their own form of government, are now styled avvrd^eis. Compare
too the large powers given to the deputies (avvebpoi) of the allies even against an
Athenian citizen, 51 sqq.
A. Front face.
1 sqq. The formula is a combination of pre-Euclidean with post-Euclidean
usage; cf. Rem. i and iv, p.
2 and 85.
2. Kri<piaocpQpTos. Cf. 28 1, 38 23.
4. (356fjL7)s. February or March 377 b.c; this refers only to the composition
of the document, which (cf. 1. 24) did not take place till after the alliance had
been concluded with several states. The decree itself was passed in 378.
Diodorus places it, as he does the events of the period generally, a year too
late. Peter.
7. 'AptaroreX-qs: Mapadwvios 1. 76. Meier Comm. Ep. 11 57 would identify
him with the person mentioned Diog. Laert. v 35 : devrepos
('
ApiaroreXrjs) 6
TToXiTevad/JLevos 'Adrjvrjai, ov kclI diKavcKoi (pepovrai Xoyoi
x
a
P^
evTes-
32]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 83
1214. Perhaps anciently erased.
16.
fiapfidpuv
kt\. : such as Alketas, King of the Molossi, and his son
Neoptolemos (B 13, 14): Neoptolemos succeeded his father, dividing the kingdom
with Arybbas (No. 40),
and his daughter Olympias was mother of Alexander
the Great.
17. 6<tol fir) kt\. Similarly CIA iv
2, 15 c (alliance with Chios) the Athe-
nians appear to be careful not to violate the provisions of the Peace of Ant-
alcidas.
22. <ppovpdv. Cf. the provision irepi <pv\a.Krjs in the treaty between Athens
and Chalcis, No. 7 76 sqq.
24. The Chians had been the first to enter the Athenian alliance ; cf. 1. 79.
D agrees with Schaefer {Be Soc.
p. 9)
in thinking that the Thebans had joined
the alliance in the summer of 378 b.c. but argues that they had not yet become
members of the awedpiou (ativedpoi 43 sqq.) and that in fact the object of the
mission alluded to in 1. 72
74 was to persuade them to do so.
2531. These lines are directed (cf. Schaefer Bern, i 31, Grote, H. G. Pt n
ch.
97)
against a return to the system of K\rjpovxia.i
;
in fact it stands to reason
that there could be no Athenian KXrjpovxlcu in the countries of their allies in
377 B.C. Cf. Isocr. Plat. 44 : tCov ixev KTTjpLaTcav tuiv vfierepiov avi&v a7r4oT7]T,
ftov\6-
/xevoi tt)v <rvfx/AaxLw ws p-eyiar-qv Troirjcrcu; Diod. xv 29, 7: eipwcplcravTo 52 Kai ras
yevopcivas /fA^pouxias diroKaraaTrjcraL rots irpdrepov Kvplois yeyovbcnv. But the pro-
vision in the text that iyKTrj/naTa were to be given up does not by any means
imply that future honorary grants of '&ynT-q<ns (see D. A. s.v.) might not be made
to irpb^voi and others. Cf. D ad loc. and 43 33.
31 sqq. idv 5 rvyxdvy kt\. The singular may be a slip of engraving which
would not have occurred if the verb had followed instead of preceding its
nominative. dveirLT-qbeLoi : unfriendly (to the Athenians).
36. /XT] 4^etvai kt\. Cf. further Diod. I. c. : Kai vbp\ov Zdevro pnjdfra tCjv
'AdrjvaLojv yewpyeiv ^/ctos t^s 'Attlktjs. The provision yu^re virodepifru) is sufficiently
stringent: Athenians may not even acquire property (eyKrrjcraadai) in the
territory of an ally as security for money lent.
43. The (rvvedpoL therefore existed before the date of this decree ; cf
.
Diodorus, xv 28, 29, who also states that they were to meet at Athens, one from
each city.
4446. d7ro56ji.voi d
<
iro56fTwj/. The letters
MGNOI APO
are written
as a correction above the line. The form of

would seem to show that the
mistake was noticed and the letters added at a much later period. Whether
Tjfivav for ijpucrv is a similar mark of carelessness or, as Meisterhans Gr. 28 thinks,
a case of vowel-assimilation, it is difficult to say. Other instances are CIA n
1055, 37 (345 b.c.
),
803, b 33 (342 b.c) &c. ;
and it is to be noticed that where
no u follows, as in r/^uVeiaz/, the t is unchanged.
4651. The alliance was defensive only.
51. iravTl odevei. Ace. to L. and S. this is the only phrase in which prose
authors use the word adtvos (in Plat. Phaedr. 267 c the word is used ironically)
;
cf. Thuc. v 23, 3 (also a treaty) and CIA iv 2, 49 b, 4, 16.
51 sqq. ea/ 5<? tis kt\. For the formula cf. 8 20.
65. top Ata tov 'EXevdepLov: near the crroa (3aaL\eios. Cf. CIA in 9, 4 and
see 25 7.
67. The usual cost of inscribing a decree was 30 drachmae; but this is a
62
84 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[
32
long one, and names were to be added from time to time. Larfeld Gr. Ep.
p. 438 gives the following examples (taken from Hartel's table, St. p. 143),
CIA ii 183 (332 b.c.) 17 lines of 33 letters each =
561 + 3 letters
69(355,,
)
27

(abt) 30
,,
=720 + 57 ,,
124(337
)25 ,,
27
,,
=648 + 4
17 = 32(378
,, ) 77 of 31
,,
=2387
20 drachmas
20
30
60 ..
and infers that the cost of engraving must have depended on other factors than
the mere length of the text, perhaps, as Hartel thinks, on the quality of the
work required.
68. Cf. CIA ii 270, 13 sqq., where two fxeroiKoi are commended as elvcpepovres
tcls elacpopas kol& eKaarou rbv evtavrbv ras els to, 5e/ca raXavra, whence Hartel St.
p. 132 infers that these ten talents (which would seem to have been some
special reserve fund for occasional expenses ; cf. Kohler Herm. v 12) were a part
of the revenue collected from certain taxes on fieroiKoi. Cf. CIA iv 2, 48 b.
rods rafxias ttjs deov. Probably the same ra/xiai are meant in CIA n 86,
17, where also they disburse to the ypa/u/naTei/s ttjs fiovXrjs 30 drachmae for the
cost of engraving from the 10 talents. The money was therefore not public
(6'cna), but sacred (lepd), and here too it was probably borrowed from the treasury
of Athena.
72. Tavra fih kt\. Cf. 16 14.
76. Hvppavdpos : CIA n 19, b 9. Qpaav(3ov\os : namesake and comrade of
the liberator, Xen. Hell, v 1, 26, Dem. de Cor. 301 ; Ar. Rhet. n 23, 25, Dem.
c. Timocr. 742, Aeschin. c. Ctes. 138.
79 sqq. and Side B. The names of this list of confederates, printed in
various type, are, Kohler says, written in different hands according to the order
in which they were admitted to the league. For oi Xn &c. cf. Diod. xv 28, 3 :
irp&Toi be irpbs ttjv drroaTacnv virrjuovaav Xtot /ecu Bv&vtiol, fiera tovtovs 'Pbbioi
Kai Mvtl\t)i>cuoi, /ecu tQiv aXKwv rives vtjcuwtwv. To these four should be added
the ~Mr]dvfAi>aioL 1. 81. The five names are written in the same hand as the decree
itself. The five states are ai vvv ovaai iroXecs av/x/xaxlSes of 1. 70. Abdera
B 3 joined after the battle of Naxos (Diod. xv. 36, 5). Hestiaea B 18 comes late
in the list (Diod. xv 30, 5). H draws attention to the absence of cities of Asia
Minor from the list : the Peace of Antalcidas had left them in the hands of the
Great King, until Alexander freed them; else we might have looked for Phaselis
in the list ; cf. 80. There are several names wanting which might have been
expected: e.g. Naxos. It is clear from this document that the estimate of
Diodorus is substantially true (xv 30, 2) : tols
'
AdrjvaioLs els avixp-axloLV awe'firjaav
e^bofX7]Kovra iroKeiS.
On individual names note further : 82 'Apedovaioi. This is the only mention
of a town of Chalcis of this name, though the spring 'Apedovaa is frequently
named. 85, 86 : Peparethus and Sciathus and other cities were brought over to
the alliance by Chabrias, 377 b.c. (Diod. xv 30, 5). 88 Atrjs : i.e. A. dirb Kvvaiov,
a town of Euboea situated near the promontory Cenaeum CIA i 244, 81 where
also 1. 80 occurs the name
'
Adrjvlrai i.e. of 'Adrjvai Aiabes. 85 Ila\[aicnaadt.oi
:
restored by D from CIA iv 1
p. 166 no. 62 b
(
= D 54, where a passage quoted
from Scylax per. 58 shows that the town was still in existence at this
time). B 13, 14 : see 40. B 15 : a name has been erased. The order shows
that the person bearing it must have joined the alliance in 375 b.c Fabricius, I.e.,
32]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 85
referring to Xen. Hell, vi 1, 7 : on koX vTrrjKooi rjdr) avrui ('laaovi tuj Qepaioj) eleu
MapctKol /ecu A6Xo7T6S /ecu 'AX/e^ras 6 h rr\ "Hirdpu) vwapxos, supplies 'Icterus.
B 16. "AvdptoL kt\. : brought over by Timotheus between April and November
373 b.c. (Schaefer De soc. p. 16, 17 comparing Diod. xv 47 and Xen. Hell, vi
2,
12). B 22. 'Aarpaioijcrioi: an unknown state. B 27.
'
EXcuoi/ericu :
in the
Chersonese. B 32. Atijs airb 6.: A. airb (Ac) rod "Adco, CIA i 240, 56; 243, 24;
244, 53 ; 257, 21. B 34: Neapolis in Thrace, opposite to Thasos ; not Nect7roXis air''
'
Kd-quCbv in the Chersonese CIA i 240, 29 which seems no longer to have existed,
or Ned7roXts in Pallene, a colony of Mende CIA i 243, 3 which could not have
come into the possession of the Athenians before the Olynthian war of
Timotheus (365 b.c). B 37. N77XX0S : probably a hill outside Zacynthus, on
which was established a fortress called 'ApKadia Diod. xv 45, 3. D.
Remark iv. Post-Euclidean formulae of
decrees. In the early
part of the fourth century B.C. and notably after 375 B.C. we can
trace a gradual alteration and expansion of the formulae described in
Rem. i,
p.
2.
(1)
There is a more exact specification of personal names by
the addition of the fathers' and the demotic names. This is observ-
able latest in the case of the Archons
;
the first example is found
in CIA ii 316 (281 b.c.)
=
53.
(2)
Besides certain changes in the phrasing there is greater
exactness in the notation of date, (a) The formula (Rem. i) : 6
Seiva
rjpx*v
gives way to : 'E7rt tov Seuos apxovros, first found even as
early as 433 B.C. (Nos. 12, 13),
and general after 375 (cf. CIA n 49
;
33). (b) The order of the prytanising tribe is marked : instead of
the simple YIolvSlovIs 7rpvT<xvev we have 'E7rt rrjs TlavSiovtSos ckt^s
Trpvravevova-rjs or TrpvTavetas, found as early as 394 B.C. (CIA II
8),
becoming more frequent after 375 B.C. (cf. CIA n 49). Then comes
the addition (c) : 17
6 8etva ipya/mfxarevev, found even in 433 B.C.
(Nos. 12, 13). (d) 'O Selva 7reo-raTet (Rem. i) is succeeded by: twv
-jrpoe&pwv 7reif/y]<j>Lt,v 6 Sctva (in CIA 11 17 6, 378 B.C. and more
frequently from 369 B.C.; cf. CIA 11 51 and no.
35) ;
much later these
words are followed by the mention of the colleagues, /ecu crvjj.Trpoz&poL
the first example occurs CIA 11 187 (circ. 322 B.C.). In fact the
iirnf/rjcf)i(TL^ which before Euclid was the function of the president of
the prytanes afterwards fell to the president of the non-tribal (" non-
prytanising") proedri, whose colleagues, o-v/jL-n-poeSpoi, are in some cases
noted by name, cf. CIA iv 2, 245 6, c
;
11 336. (e) The day of the
prytany is specified, occasionally from 368 B.C. (CIA 11
52),
regularly
after 332 B.C. (CIA 11 173; cf.
176),
preceded by the day of the month
on which the assembly is held (first found 342/1 B.C., CIA iv
2,
115
6;
cf. 11
121),
regularly after 333 b.c, CIA 11 169; cf. 176
86 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[32
(3)
The nature of the assembly, whether (SovXrj or iKKk-qa-ta, is
specified, and sometimes the place of assembly is added
;
e.g. ck-
kXtjo-icl [e]i/ [Ilcipcuct], CIA II 173 (332/1 B.C.), f3ov\r] iv /3ovkevTrjpLw,
CIA ii 179 (325/4 B.C.)
;
or the iKKXrjaia is more precisely defined as
Kvpta, CIA ii 177 (330/29 B.C.). Cf. 38, a 22 note.
(4)
The nature of the decree may be described : Stjfxov \prj<j>icrp.a
or if/r)<fiicrfxaTa (iv 2, 385 b, 3rd century B.C.), fiovXrjs \j/rjcf>L<Tfxa or
i/o7<icr/zaTa (iv 2, 373c, 3rd century B.C.). For a good example of a
fully developed formula see 49, 50, with Rem. vi,
p.
127.
33. Two fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 54;
D 100. Cf. Kirchhoff, Monatsb. Berl. Ah. 1866 p. 196 sqq., A. Wilhelm, GGA
1898 n. 3 p. 221.
ABTAE. HOIKAMN^O
(occasionally = ov)
PPZTY^XYfl
liToixydbv.
B.C.
363/2
'Eirl Xap]tK\etBov ap^o^Tofs iv\ t-
t]s
'AKa]/jLavrlSo<; Bevrepa[s -rrpv-r-
avcia]?,
f}
N iKoarparo[s * . . . .
. .]
TlaWrjvevs eypa^pdrevev,
5
Tpi\aKoary T17? irpv T[avias.
"~ES]o^ev ry
/3ov\f)
Kal to5 S[tjp.o> . . .
. .
.J?;?
Ylaiavievs e7reo"raTe[i, Kpa/rivos ?
ifiirev
irepl J)P Xeyet A<TTVKp[drr]s 6 A\<|>-
o]? fcal 01 fier
avrou hjrr)<f)i(r0[ai ttj povX.-
10
fj],
tovs Trpoe&povs, o't av \d^(o[<ri irpoeSpc-
vi\tv iv too SijfMO),
irpocrayay\ilv 'Ao-ruKp-
dr^r]v fcal rovs /jL6t avrov et? [t6v 8t]^ov
-
Is r]r)V 7rpa)T7)V iKK\j]aiav kcl\\ \pi]\iarCa-
ai, y]vo)/JLT]v 8e ^v/jL/3aX\.e<r0ai, [ttjs PovXtjs
15 ts] TOV SrjflOV, OTL SoKL TTj
[PovXfj,
7T-
i8t]] Wv&pOVlKOS @TTaXo[s iepop.VTlp.0-
vwv] irapd tou? vo/JLOV<i twv A[p.]<[iKTv6va>v
Kal] tovs Ae\(f)(t)v el(TT]yaye[v aufyvyiav ?
kut'] 'AaTV/cpc'iTOVS Kal To3v (jlT a[vrov, wo-rt
20 $vy]a8evaac A<JTVKpaTr\v /cat [tovs pt' a-
vtov], Kal Tfl? ovena? acpeuXeTO, [a-yaGrj tv-
XT|]
heho^Oai TCp Sr]/jL(p, Trt? puev [SUas rd-
S KJaTfl
'
Ao~TVKp('lTOVS KOI T(t)V /JL6T [avTOV 76-
yt]vrjfxevas iv 'A/jl^iktvchtlv [dreXeis tl-
33]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 87
25 vai]. el Be Tt? tl alridrai AarlyKpari] Ka-
l tov]? fier
avrov dSacelv AeA,[<f>a>v nva rj t-
o koivo]^ Trjs 7roXea)? 7-77? Ae[X<f>c3v . .
ov a? Kai av
v avr
30 a ira'
ayei
[liore-
7TTG)/Co[t
rai irapa
ov . KCbkeacu [Se
'
Ao-TVKpaVrjv kou tovs
h
lt
'
a
~
35
VTOV 67Tt ^eVLCL [Vis to irpvTaviov els av-
piov.
KpaTt^O? elirev [to. \ikv aXXa KaOdirep ttJ
j3ov\f)
irepL (6v Acr[TVKpdTi]s 6 AcX<|>os X-
eyer eivai Se
*
AarvKp\ixTr\v 'AO^vaiov Ka-
40 I ifcyovovs avrov, Kai eiva\y civtov <|>vXt]s
fjcrrivos \&\v diroypd'^rrjrai, [kol]l [S-quov Kal
cfaparpias.
eiri/jieXeicrOai [oY] avro\y Kal t-
tj/jl ftovXrjv
rrjv alel &o[v\\e[v]ova-av edv [tov
Serjrai. eivai he avra) kcl\\ o.r\e\eiav oi-
45
kovvti
''
'AO^vijai. TrfV Se yjrr)(f>ov
Bovvai irep\l
avrov rovs irpvrdveis rovs [|xTd] rrjv A/ca//.-
avriSa irpvrav\i\)\ovTas ev rrj[i Tr]pc6rr) e-
/cfcXrjo-la. eivai Be Kal rol[s] yLt[er]a Acrrvtc-
pdrovs eKireTTTCoKoai [l]o~ore\eiav KaOdir-
50 ep 'AOrjvaiois, ['Ajo^eSa/AGt), ['A]pi[o-T]oi;evq),
A[a]/xoTt^ot), Nt/ca[v8]/ow[i], UaTpo[K.]\el,
'
Ap^e-
\a, Mevcovi, 'E^e[. . KJpdrei,
f
H[/yTio-]ap^&>, 'EX-
ttlvlko). [t]o Be yjrrjc^cafia r6S[e] a[y]a<ypd[y\/a]i
rov rypa/jL/jLarea tt;? /3ov\rj[s] ev [<r]Tr)\r)[i \]i-
55
6lvrj [k]cu arfjaai [\v dicpo7ro\[6i]. t? [&k] t
tjv dvaypacf)r}v t^9 ctt?;X[t]s SJoOz^at toz/ Ta[p.-
iai> rov Brjfiov AA Spa(x)/uLa<s eV [t]cT^ [Ka]i ajr^c^t-
afiara dva\io~/co/jLV(ov
T[a>] Srjfjup.
tcaXea-
ai Be ^ Aar\y\KpdTrj k\oX tovs] //-[cJTa
Acrrv/cpdr-
60 ou? eVt evia et<? to irpvraveiov els avpiov.
The decree is in honour of Astycrates and others, who according to Ki.'s
suggestion were citizens of Delphi, friendly to Athens, and were the leaders of
the anti-Theban opposition in the period preceding the battle of Mantinea.
88 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[33
From Xen. Hell, vn 5. 4 we learn that there was strong opposition in Phocis to
the Theban supremacy, and the Phocians declined to follow Epaminondas in
his last expedition.
3. ^LKoarpaTos kt\. This is the earliest year, so far as we learn from
inscriptions, in which the same Secretary of the Council continued in office
through all the prytanies. For Nicostratus appears as ypap-p-arevs in this year
in the prytany of the Hippothontid tribe D 88, 29, of the Aeantid tribe CIA iv
2, 54 b and of the Oene'id tribe CIA n 55. Cf. Rem. v, p. 89.
5. rpiaKoarrj: at the beginning of Boedromion (Sept. 363 B.C.). Worked out
accurately by A. Schmidt's tables (Chronol.
p. 765, 785), on the assumption
(1)
that the year 363/2 b.c. was an intercalary year of 384 days,
(2)
that the 1st of
Hecatombaeon coincided with July 2 and that it was a full month,
(3)
that the
first six prytanies had 38 days each and the last four 39 each, the result is as
follows
:
1 Hecatombaeon = 1st day of 1st prytany = 2 July
30

= 30th

=31
1 Metageitnion = 31st ,,
,,
=1 Aug.
8
,,
=38th ,,
,,
=8
,,
9
,,
= 1st day of 2nd prytany = 9 ,,
29 ,, = 21st
,, ,,
=29
,,
1 Boedromion = 22nd
,,
,,
=30
2

=23rd

=31
3

=24th

= 1 Sep.
9 =30th = 7
10. tovs Trpoedpovs kt\. See Rem. iv, p. 85. The wpoedpoi were selected by
lot (by the iTriaTdrrjs tCov Trpvrdveuv before every sitting of the j3ov\r] and every
meeting of the ^KKXrjaia), one from each of the nine tribes not represented in the
Prytany. For the later formula, tovs Xaxovras -rrpoedpovs, see 59 13.
14. yvdofxrjv Se %vp.j3d\\eo-dai kt\. :
'
they shall communicate to the iKKX-rjaia
the resolution of the /SouX?).' This is a very common formula of post-Euclidean
TrpofiovXtTJixaTa. Cf. Gilb. C.A. 293.
16.
'
AvdpoviKos 6 BeTraXos. In the autumn of 364 b.c. the Thebans had
freed the Thessalian states from the tyranny of Alexander of Pherae. We may
assume that 'Avdpoviicos as iepop.vqp.wv owed his election to the pro-Theban party
and, according to the statement of the inscription, he violated the Amphictyonic
and Delphic laws to secure the perpetual banishment {d[et(pvyiav'] Koe., for the
k\Tnrlpv(]<jiv\ of Ki.) of Astycrates. (pvyadevaai (1. 20) may be either transitive or
intransitive.
41. rjcTivos av diroypdxprjTaL. For this formula, which varied slightly from
period to period, see Index D.A. s.v. <pv\r}, and D.A. s.v. Civitas. Cf. 24 15 sqq.
46. tovs yuerd rrjv 'AKap-avTida. Ki. notes hereon that the whole order of the
prytanies could not have been determined by lot at the beginning of the year
;
for on the 30th day of the second prytany it was not known what tribe was to be
in office for the next prytany.
49. iKvewTicKdo-i. They would appear to have been afterwards restored from
exile. It can hardly be accidental that between 351 and 346 b.c. no fewer than
six of the names appear on inscriptions as those of prominent Delphian
magistrates. D.
34]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 89
56. rbv raixlav tov Stj/aov ktA. The name of this officer occurs frequently.
Boeckh St.
s
i 209 sq. has shown that he is not identical with 6 eiri rrjs 5i(u/o7<reu>s.
He is often mentioned in connexion with t<x Kara \}/r)(pLo-jxara avaXiaKofieva r<
drjfia}. The earliest mention of which the date is certain is 368 b.c. (CIA n
50)
;
the latest shortly after 327 b.c. (CIA n 252). In 299 b.c. the office had probably
disappeared, Koe. Herm. v 12 ; Mitth. iv 325.
57. K tQv Kara kt\. Both the
fiovK-f}
and the eKKX-qaia had certain sums of
money assigned to them by law to defray necessary expenses (Heydeman De
Senatu &c. p.
12
[158]).
A not uncommon variant of the formula is k t&v els
Kara ra
yf/.
kt\. (Boeckh St.
3
i 209 sq.). Cf. 38 8.
Remark v. On the public Secretaries (ypafx^aTeU). The following
is a brief resume of the history of the various ypa/x/xareis.
(1)
ypa/x/xareix; rrjs (SovXtJs, or simply ypa/x/xareus. In the 5th
and first third of the 4th century there was only one ypapfiaTevs of
the
fiovXr},
who changed with each prytany and was chosen from the
fiovXzvraL who did not belong to the prytanes. He had to give the
authority of his name to the engraving of decrees of the Srjfxos and to
cause them to be published, and he was responsible for preparing
drafts of decrees of the ftovXrj
and inventories of public property.
He had the superintendence of the State-archives in the Metroon.
(2)
Between 368/7 and 363/2 his office became an annual one;
compare the formula in 30, 32, 34 with that of 33.
(3)
During the same period we begin to find in inscriptions a
second ypa/x/AaTcvs appointed by lot from the prytanes. Under the
title of 6 ypa/jifxaTtvs 6 Kara -rrpvrav etavat first alternating with the
ypa/uLfjLaTtvs Trjs fiovXrjs, and from the second third of 3rd century
exclusivelythis officer had to superintend the engraving of decrees
of the
fiovXij and Srjp:os and to prepare inventories. Cf. 33 3 sqq.
and 53 sqq.
(4)
After 322/1 we see no more of the ypa/x/xarc^g 7-779 /3ov\r)s in
inscriptions and his place is taken by an annual Secretary under the
title of
dvaypafcvs (no. 47 and CIA n 190192, 226229, 299
6);
who appears to have taken over. his duties and after 319/8 changed
his title to that of ypafjLp.aTv<; rrjs j3ov\r}<; kou tov Srjfj.ov or ypayu/xarc^s
tov Sy/xov. Busolt, Hdb iv
1, p.
167 sq.; cf. Boeckh St.
3
n 54*.
The avaypa<f>cv<s of no. 47 is to be distinguished from the functionaries
so named in 25.
34. Two fragments of Pentelic marble : a. (11.
1

19)
found between the
Theatre of Dionysus and the Odeum of Herodes. Kumanudes 'A0. v p. 101
;
CIA n 57 & (add
p. 403): b. CIA n 112. The two combined by Koehler
90 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I. [34
Mitth. i
(1876) p. 197 sqq.; D 105. Cf. CIA iv 2 p. 20; J. Beloch, Die att. Pol.
seit Perikl. 318; G. F. Unger PHI. xlix 121 sqq.
ABrAE.HOII<AMNOrPTY4>X. A
Utolxv^ov . O
ov in' AyaddpxO 1.
4, ['AxcuOs] 1. 27, irpOfiovXevcev 1. 16.
362/1
'E 7r t M 6 X o) v o
s
apyovTos
B.C. '
/v
^Ev/i/jLa^la W07]vat(op Kal 'Ap/ca&cov tcai W%aia)v Kal 'HA,-
eiuiv Kal (pXeiaaicov eSo^ev
rfj ftovkfj
kcli tw Btj/ju-
(p' Oivrj'l's eirpvrdvevev, Kya0apyos \Aya0dp%ov OrjOe-
5
v iypafA/jL('fTev[w], ^dv0nriros
'
Ep//,eto? iTreardrer Tle-
piavhpos eZ7re[v]' ev^aaOat fiev roy /cr/pv/ca avrifca p,-
d\a Tft) Au Tft> 'OXv/jlttio) Kal
rfj
AOrjid
rfj
YloXi/t-
Bi Kal
rfj
AijfjLTjTpL Kai
rfj
Kopy Kal rois Sd)BeK[a
0-
eot? Kal rais crejivais 0eai<;, idv avveveiyKj) ['A0t|-
io vjaiojv tw Sr)/jLa) rd So^avra irepl tt}? crv/jifMayi[a<s, 0v-
o-Lol\v Kal irpoaohov 7roir)cro~0a[i] reXovpievcov [toutw-
v ko]66tc dv ra> 8r'//j.(p
So/cfj' ra[v]ra
fiev ev\6[o.\.
y
eim-
8rj 8]e ol avfiixa-^oi Boyfia elar^veiyKav els [tt]v povX-
r\v Z]eyea0ai rrjv avfi/nayiav Ka0d e7ra/yYeA.[\ovTai o-
15 l 'Apj/cdSes Kal 'Amatol Kal 'HAeuu Kal ^Aefido-ioi Ka-
1 i] poJfA?) Trpov(3ov\evcrev Kara ravrd, SeS[6x,0ai t<3
8-
T)ua> d]vai crv/jL/jLa^ovs rvyp aya[Q^ tov Stjuov els
tov del] y^povov A6\r\vaHdv tov Stjuov Kal tovs o-vufia\-
ovs Kal 'A\pK[aoa<$ Kal 'A^cuovs Kal ^Xciao-iovs
20 . . . 8] 'A^fai
. . a]v rrjv
Tro]\ecov /jL7}
. . epav fjLrjSe
. . V
TJ]
aTrfX\r\ ravTT). idv 8e tis tr\ lirl ttjv 'Atti-
25 kt]]^, i] TOV OTJ/jLOV [KaTaXvT) t6v 'A0r|vaittv rj Tvpavvov
Ka]0LO~rfj ?) oA,t[-yapxiav, PotjGciv 'ApKaSas Kal
'Axau-
ovs] Kai HXetOU? /c[al ^Xeiao-iovs 'A0r|vaiois iravTl o
Oe'J^et Ka0OTL dv [lirayye'XXtoo-iv 'A0T|vaioi KaTa to
8-
vvJaTOV Kai eav [tis itj ctti tt)v lleXoirovvqo-ov, tj tov
30
orj/jiov KaTaXv7][i tov ^Xeiao-iwv, rj cdv tt)v iroXiTcia-
v tt)V Ayaioov i] t[i]v 'ApKaSwv rj T-qv 'HXciwv KaTaXv-rj tj
pb0i<Trfj,
i]
rf)vya\hivrn Tivas, Pot|0iv 'A0T|vaiovs t-
OVTOlS iravTl <T0\kvs.\. Ka0d eirayyeXXovo-i, del Tots a-
34]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 91
$tfCOVfJLVOtS, tfafrd to SvvaTov. ij-ycudvas 8 etvai k-
35
v
rfj
avTWV e/ca[o-Tovs
TJat?
woXecn irp ....
at. Ofioaac o\k tovs opKovs tois irpeo-peo-i tois Il\o-
ir0VV7](TLWV \rr\v PovXijv Kal tovs o-TpaTi^'yovs Kal to-
f? Ta^iap\yjovs Kal tovs linrdpxovs Kal tovs <pv\dp-
40 YOf? tcai t[ovs lirrrcas virep 8e 'ApKaScov Kal
'
Ayjcu<av k-
CLJL
[
H\ia)v Kal ^Xeiao-itov op.6crai tovs irpeVpeis tovs
tiriSrjuovvTas 'A8t]vt]o-ivJ
This is the alliance between Athens, the Arcadians, the Achaeans, the Eleans
and the Phliasians which was concluded just before the battle of Mantinea ; see
Xen. Hell. vn5,
1
3, where however the Phliasians are not mentioned, perhaps
because, as Koe. suggests, they were not present at the battle. A historical
difficulty arises from the fact that elsewhere the battle is assigned not to the
archonship of Molon but to a date prior to that of the decree, viz., the last
month of the archonship of Charicleides. Koe. passing in review the various
statements (Plut. x Orr. p. 845 e; Diod. xv 82; Xen. Hell, vii 5, 14; Plut. De
glor. Ath. p. 350 a) comes to the conclusion that the historians are wrong, and
that the battle took place in August of Molon's archonship.
3. $\eLa.<Tiiov. This is the normal orthography in the older inscriptions.
Cf. ^Aeacrtois in an inscription found at Magnesia ad Menandrum, D 258 (about
207 b.c).
4. The prytany was obviously the first in the year ; see above.
5. "E/^etos: of the deme "Ep/m.os, tribe Acamantis. Uepiav5pos was son of
Polyaratus, of the deme Cholargeis (Dem. c. Boeot. de dot. 1009 and CIA 1 188,
20) ; cf. Schaefer Dem. 1 128 note 2. In 358/7 b.c. he brought forward a law
concerning trierarchic symmoriae (Dem. c. Euerg. et Mixes. 1145, Boeckh, St.*
1 649).
6. evtjaadai fip rby KrjpvKa kt\. The same duty is assigned to the KrjpvSj
apparently in the fragment CIA iv 2, 510 i.
8. On the 5w8eKa 6eoi, i.e. at Athens, Zeus, Hera, Poseidon, Demeter, Apollo,
Artemis, Hephaestus, Athena, Ares, Aphrodite, Hermes, Hestia : see G. and J.
Man. 107. They and the Heaved deal have similarly a vow made to them with
other deities in CIA n 57 = D 104 (as restored by Foucart), a decree concerning
the despatch of cleruchs to Potidaea also belonging to the archonship of Molon.
9. avveveiyKr]. This spelling was in fashion for about fifty years from
370 b.c. Cf. 412. Possibly it was due to confusion between Attic iveyK- and
Ionic iveiK-. Cf. Meisterhans Gr. p. 183, Meyer Gr.
603, Lautensach
p. 13 and
20.
'
If the resolutions passed concerning the alliance turn out favourably for
the Athenian people, the herald is to vow that he will cause to be made a
sacrifice and a procession, if the resolutions are carried out (re\ovp.iv wv toutuv)
in such way as may seem good to the people.'
12. tclvto. (xei> e^x^ctt kt\. This repetition (cf. 16 14 sq.) assumes the
adoption of the proposal expressed in ev^aadai fxh kt\. Periandros goes on to
propose that
'
whereas the allies brought their resolution
(567^0)
before the
92 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[34
Council, that they should accept the alliance offered by the Arcadians and the
rest, and whereas the Council framed a probouleuma accordingly, be it resolved
by the People that etc' By the expression ol o~vp.p.axoi is meant the synedrion
of the naval alliance (see 32 43) holding its sittings at Athens. The official
term for the decrees of this synedrion was bbyixara. In Xen. Hell, vi 5, 2 ret
\pr/(piafiaTa tQ>v 'Adrjvalwv /cat rdv avp-jxax^v denote the common decrees of the
Athenian People and this synedrion. (Busolt, Her zweite ath. Bund
p. 792 sq.)
The procedure appears to have been as follows: the proposals of the Pelopon-
nesians were made to the synedrion ; the synedrion was favourable to them and
communicated their 86y/j.a to the Council, which then framed a probouleuma
for the Ecclesia; the latter accepted the alliance in its own name and in the
name of the naval alliance. Possibly as a preliminary stage to all this the
Ecclesia had decreed that the matter should be referred to the Synedrion (cf.
E. Lenz, Das Synedrion der Bundesgenossen, p. 33).
20. Here begins fragment b : the restorations are due partly to Koe., partly
toD.
25. i7 Tvpavvov kt\. Cf. CIA iv 2, 59 b (a decree entitled 2f^uax'<x 'Adrj-
vaiojv Kai GerraXwi' els tov del
XP
0V0V (361/0
B.C.), 11. 1619: Borjdrjau} Tr[d]vTi
cdevet /card to dvvaTov, edv Tt[s] t'77 kt\ rj Tvpavvov Kad[l]o~Tr] ev GerraXta.
For irdvri adhei see 32 a 51.
29. Kai edv [tls kt\. Cf. Xen. Hell, vn 5, 3 : irapaKaKovvTes Aa/ceSat/xoftovs
el fiovXoivTO KOivrj dictKcoXveiv, dv Tives iwo~l KaradovXwaofxevoL ttjv UeXoirowTjaov.
30. tov 3?\eiao-iuv. So D
;
the drjpios in question can only be that of Phlius,
for at the time both Elis and Achaia had oligarchical governments (Xen. Hell.
vii 1, 43 ; 4, 15), and the same is probably true of Mantinea.
34. ijye/xovas 5e ktX. Cf. Xen. Hell, vii 5, 3: irepi \xevTOi rjye/uLovlas avrodev
bieirpaTTovTo ottojs ev tt\ eavruiv e/caaToi ijyrjcraivTO.
39. For this enumeration of the parties to the oath cf. CIA iv 2, 59 b, 14
:
dfjioaai 8e
'
'
A[drf\uaiu)v fiev tovs o~Tp\[a.Trf\yovs Kai T[rf\v (SovXtjv Kai tovs linrdpxovs /cat
tovs t7T7re'![a]s r6v8e tov opKov ; and for ^irib-qiiovvTas below ib. 30: o/xoaai 5e [/c]at
tovs irpea(3et.s tovs tQv QeTTaXwv ev
| rf^Jt ftovXrj tovs [eTri\dri/j.ov[v]Ta[s'] 'Adrjvrjo-iv
tov o.v[t]o[v] o^/clo^].
35. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA 11 62 ;
D 111.
ABrAE.HOIKAMN3EOPPTY4>xtn:
Ztolxv^ov, except in 1. 6 (see the note below).
E
= ei in -rrpvTavelas 1. 5 (and
2?)
; but perhaps the omission of
|
is accidental.
Q
= ov in 'AyadoK\eov[s] 1. 1, elsewhere
OY
= ov.
B.C.
357/6
'E7Tt
'
Aya6oK.\eov\i\ ap^ofvTos iirl Ttj-
9 AiyrjtSos ivdrr)^ 7rpvra[ydas,
fj
AiO&OTOS [A]lok\OVS A[-yy\f0-
ev eypa/jL/jLarevev oyhorj rrj[s irpv-
5
t[*\v6icl$' twv irpoiSpcov eVfeJ-v/r^f^t^
35]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 93
AioJTiffjiJo?
Olvcu:. eSofe
rfj
/3of[\fj]
Kal to>
S^fixw-
'H7Tj]cr[av]8p[o]? elirev 07r&>? [d]y "A^8[po-
s]
r) [i] cr[d] too
S[if]ftft)
tg3 'A^[va]tco^ [k<x-
l] too &r)fJL(p to) 'AvhpltoV fcal e[\ioo-
10 tz^ o[i] (ppovpol ol ev "A[v8p] Mtcr[06-
v] /C TWV awra^eoiV /efard roJ\ So["yp.a-
r\a t\u>\v avfxjjbd^wv kcu /jltj KaraX^vryr-
ai rj fyvXatcrj, ekeaOai crT^ajT^-yov k-
k rwy tceyeipoTovri^evwv' [t]o[v 8e a-
15 iJ/ofYj^e^TO, TTi[Jie\ela6ai [avroSv*
elcrirpa^ai he tcaX ra e<y v[r\<r(av
XPV
fxara
'Ap^eBrj/jLOv ra 0([i\op.va r-
Ot? GTpCLTLfjOTCLlS To[lS V "Av8pa>
Ka]i irapahovvat T<2\y dpxovn t<3
20 Iv]
'
Avopw, 07Tft)9 [civ 01 o-TpaTto)Tai
'^x]
(o~L /jllo[Q6v . . .
The decree provides for the maintenance of a garrison in the island of Andros,
towards the end of the Social War (358356 B.C.).
1 sqq. For the formula see Rem. iv, p. 85.
6. OiVcu : This abbreviation for Olvalos (Hartel, St. lib. att. Staatsr. p. 40, 93)
may be due to the fact that the engraver first intended to write to; S^y only
and then added in the limited space the words rrj
ftovXfj
/cat. Abbreviations are
rarely found in the text of Attic decrees till a comparatively late period. The
few exceptions possibly in each case admit of an explanation. See Larfeld
Epigr.
140 sqq. (Muller Hdb. 1 538 sqq.) and cf. 45 3.
7. "Hyrja-avdpos. So D, who identifies this person with Hegesander of
Sunium, a friend of the Leodamas of Acharna? (Aeschin. c. Tim. Ill) who was
a prominent person in the state at the date of this decree (Dem. Lept. 501).
Hegesander was brother of the Hegesippus to whom the speech Trepl
'
AXovvrja-ov
has been attributed. Cf. Schaefer, Dem. 11 330 note 1. In the following the
text is D's, who compares for the language Xen. Hell, vn
4, 4: rots fxevroi
<TTpaT7)yois irpoard^aL '4cpr] xpijvcu, owcos Kal 77 K6pivdos Cipa 17 r drjfup rwc 'Adrjvaiivv.
For aa cf. Aristoph. ap. Eustath. : i) fxa^a yap ad Kal ret Kpea
xw K&pafios
(Meineke,
F. C. 11 p. 1194; Kock, C. A. F. 1 p. 549). The word exactly corresponds as
regards space with the remains of the letters as given by Koe. The danger
which threatened Andros and the Athenian garrison was from the allies who
had revolted.
11. e'/c tu)v avvT&^euv . The name avvratjeis was invented by Callistratus to
take the place of the more invidious
(f>6pos
under the altered conditions of the
New Athenian League formed in 378/7 B.C. Cf. CIA iv 2, 54 b and Boeckh,
St.
z
1 494 sqq. On doy/xara and ol avp.fji.axot. see 34 12. For the duty of seeing
that the garrison is paid out of the avurd^eis of the islands Archedemus is
selected from the ten generals already elected (twc Kexa-poTowqixev wv)
.
94 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[35
19. np (LpxovTi kt\. See 118 note. In spite of the conditions of the New
League
(32 21 sqq.) the Athenian Timarchus, apparently through bribery, is in
office in Andros. Cf. Schaefer Bern, i 165, note
1, who quotes the severe
censure passed by Isocrates (Be pace 295. 165) upon Attic encroachments : r/^ets
yap (pbjxeda ixiv, 7]v rr)v ddXarrau irXioo/xev iroXkah Tpirjpea-t Kal ^La^ixeda ras vdXets
auvrd^eLS 5i86i>cu Kal avvedpovs evdade Trp.ireiv, 5ia7rpdacr#cu tl tQ>v bebvTWv.
36. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Eleusis in 1888. It is broken at
the top, and on the upper and lower part of the left side
;
also where the two
chief fragments join. Blank space below. CIA iv 2, 104a; Philios, 'E0.
apx>
1888 p. 25, 11. 1526, Isontas ibid. p. 113; Foucart, B. C. H. 1889, p. 433.
ABrAE(T)HOIKAMNZOnP^TY*xyA:
Cross bar of
A
and dot of
O
sometimes omitted ; omission of vertical stroke
of
3E
perhaps similarly accidental.
aroLxn^cv to 1. 53.
1. 1 ... e 1. 2 . . . i ew 1. 3 . . . ovres ir 1. 4 . . Xewv twv /ca
5
... eXe'o-Oat tov 8t)|x]oi> Se/ca dvhpa-
S {j
'A0T]vatfa)v dirdvTwv av-riKa pdXa, 7r'vT
8eJ
K Tr}<> j3ouXr}<i'
tovs 8e alp0vras 8iKaiv ev tw 'EXcvcriJi'tG) TW 6V ao~T-
6i ircpl twv opcov twv d[JL<j>io-pT]TOvp.6va)v] Tfjs lepas opyaoos 0-
(xoo-avTas tov vouiuov opKov
if
p^v] fJb7]T %apLTO<; eve/ca fir/r e-
io \8pas \|/i]<|>iio-9ai, dXXd ws SiKJaiorara icai v<re(3eo~TaTa' ra-
s
8*
<(8pas uowiv o-wexws d]7ro t^9 /CT7}<; eirl Bi/ca tov TlocriSew-
BC
vos 'dws dv 8ia8iKao-9^] iirl
'
ApiaTo8r)(J,ov dpyovTo^. Uapeiv-
at 8e Kal t6v pao-iXc'a] Kal tov iepocf)dvTr)V Kal tov SaSov^o-
v Kal KrjpvKas Kal] Euyu,oX7r/8a? Kal twv aXXwv Adrjvatwv tov /3-
15 ovX6uvov, oirws] dv [w]? evaeftkoTaTa Kal hiKaioraTa tov$ op-
ovs 0<So-tv. kt?C\iMe\elo-6ai [8]e 7-779 ipa<; opyaoos Kal tcov aWco-
v Upwv Tt\Ltv]a)V twv W.0rjvr)o~LV dirb TrjcrSe T179 r/fJiepas et9 tov
dd xpovov ov]9 T6 6 vo/JLO$ KeXevei irepl eKaaTov avTwv Kal t-
f|v povXi]v tx\v] e[]
'
' Apeiov irdyou Kal tov crTpaTrj'ybv rbv eiri rrj-
20 v <|>vX]<z/a}[v rr\s xjoupas Ke^eipoTOvrjfjievov Kal tovs irepnroXd-
pxJou9
Kal to[v]9 \-r\\fJbdp'%ov<; Kal tyjv (3ovXt)v ttjv ael f3ov\vov-
o-av] Kal twv [d]XX[(ov 'AQr\]vaiO)v to/jl fBovkofxevov Tpbrrw otw dv
eir]tcTT&)[v]Tat. 7p[di|/ai 8e t6v] ypa/JLfjuaTea Trjs ftovXrjs
6t9 $vo Ka-
TTJiTepco law Kal [opotw, is pev t\ov Tepov el Xwov Kai a/xe[i-
25 v6\v eo-Tt tw hr)p\(ji tu 'Ae-rjvaiwv pur^Oovv to/j, (SacnXea T[d] vv-
v
p](>?)
eipyacrp\k\va [ttjs Upas dp^dSos rd lv]ro9 twv bpwv 6t9
01-
KJoSofiiav to[v] 7rpo[o-Ttoov Kal lirio-Kvr|v tov ijepov tolv 6eo-
IV et9 [8]e TOV 6Tpov [Ka]TT/[Tepov* el Xwov Kal apeijvov eaTL
tw Btj/jLW tw AOrjvatwv Ta v\yv Ivtos tw]^ b[p<ov \ir\] elp[ya<r]/bLV-
36]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 95
30 a rf)<s iepds 6pydBo<; eav oVerfa toiv Q^eoiv eirecBdv Be ypa(/j,)-
/jLarevs ypdyjrr], \afiwv 6 e[ir]tcrTa[TTi]s 6 etc twv irpoeBpaiv crvveiX-
l[o.t](o [t]ov K[a]rTt[ri]pov e[Ka.r]epov Kal KareiXi^a^ epious el-
9 vBp[ia]v [eji.]/8[aX']T&)
[x^J^f^v]
evavriov rov Br}/j,ov irapa-
(TKevacr-
dvTGOv [8]e [ia]0[Ta] oi 7r[pv}rdvL<i, 01 Be ra/jblac T79 deov
/carevev-
35
k6v]to)v v[&]pla[s]
%[p]^[^?]^
zeal dpyvpdv avT[i]/ca fidX[a] eh
rov Orj/ji-
ov, 6
8'
7t[i]o'[t]<';[tii]9 [ava<r]etera9 t[i]]i/ vBpiav rrjv %a\tcr}v
eXKeray r-
ov KaTT\l\r\i\pov etcdrepov e/jb fiepeu Kal to/jl /jL/jl irporepov eh
rrjv {v8ptav ttjv] ypv<rfjv efx^aXera), ro{y Sk] varepov eh rr)v
dpy-
vpav Kal [Ka]Ta[8t]]cr[a]TW, he eTnardrr]^ [ratj/uu Trpvrdvecov
Karacrr)-
40 fxrj[y6^\a6o) [ttj 8r]po]o"/a a(f>paylBc, 7rapaa7]/jL7}vda0(o Be Kal rcov
a]XX[o>]v [' A]6[i\vai](o[v] 6 /3ov[\]6/jlvo<;' eVet[8dv] Be Karaar)-
fjbavdwaiv,
oWi>[v]/c[6vt]g)[v] oi \ro.\L\iai t9 u[8p]ta9 eh aKpoTroXiv eXeaOco
Be 6 B[r\[i]o(; [rp]eh [djvBpas, ev[a pf\v eV T179
ftovXijs, Bvo Be
e
'
AOrjv-
aico[y djiravTcov, oir[iv]e<; el[s A]eX(pov<; d^LKOfxevoi rov 6e6v
67T-
45
6p[rj(r]o[v]T[a]t, [ko]0' 6[Tc]6repa r[d] 7/)[dp.]^aTa 7roio\cr\iv
y
A07]valoi 7Tp-
l t[VJs l]^[d]9 6p\y<LS]os, [1:]t[c] r[a] K rrjs [xjpvafjs vBplas
6tT Ta K
rrj[s a.]p[y]vp[a.s' limSd]^ [8]e [iJKJ&Hrtz/ irapd rov Oeov Ka6e-
XovTwcra-
v rd[s] v[Spi]a[s K]a[l]
a[v]a[-yv]ft)cr0[iiT](y tw Bij/ulw r/ re
fxav-
Teia Kal rd
1]k tu>[v Ka]TT[\.]Tpco[v]
yp[d]/nfj,aTa' Kad" oirorepa B" dv rd
ypdfifiara 6
50 8]eo[s] rtfveXt]] Xgjov [Kal duiv]o[v] elvai rqj BtJ/jlo) toj
'
Adrjvai-
co[v, K]a[rd Tcun-a irjo^fciv, oir]a)[s] [v] C09
evaeffearara e^et
Ta 7T/0O9 T-
(o ueco [Kal |i.T]86iroT els tov Xonr]o[v] y^pdvov p\y$\ev Ve/3e9 yiyv-
7}T[ai irepl rr\s Upas] o[p"yd8os Kal] 7Tpl TWV aXXcov lepcov TWV 'A-
96 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[36
6\r\vyyr\.v. vvv 8*(?)
dv]a[-y]pa^a[i]
To8[J
to
tyr)(f)i(TfJLa
Kal to
TTpOTepOV TO
55
<J>t[X]o[K]/}aTo[vs to ircpl t<3v] /[cpwv] tov ypa/xfjiarea Trj<$
ftovXfjs e-
V 0"T[TJXaiv XiGivaiv Kal ctttjo-cu ri]v] \xev EtXevalvc 7rpo? tc5 7T-
po[7rv\a) tov Upov, tt)v 8c v T(i 'EXeJ^cTt^ft) tc3 eV (iaTer Ov-
<rai 8e Kal dpeo-njpiov] To[iv Geotv] Tew /[cJooc^oVt^z/ /cat Trjv l-
pciav ttjs Atjp.T]Tpos, Sovvcu
8'
avTots] toz^ Ta\xiav tov otj/jUOV to
6o dp-yvpiov , 8]oi)[v]at [s]e /cat et? t^v dvaypa-
(p[f\v raiv o-ttj'Xcuv ....
8paxp.ds els ]tf[a]T/9a^ K tcdv kclto. yjrr)-
^)[to-p.aTa dvaXio-Kop.vwv tw StjJ/xgl)* [s]oi)[v]at oe Kat t{^w)v aipeS-
e[vT&)v els AcXcpovs Kdo-TU) . .
.]
8o[a]^cta? et? ec^oSta' Sovvat Se
fea[l]
t]o[is aipeOeio-iv cirl ttiv Up]c/^ opydha : P : hpa^fjuci^ : e/caaT-
6$ to Ik twv els to, KaTa \j/t]<picrpaT]a avaXtakofievcov tc5 orjfjLO)' ir-
apaa-yilv 8e o-TT]Xas XiGivas], OTroaoov dv irpoaSerj, T0U9 7ro)\rj-
Tas iroiTJo-avTas p.rd ttjs] /3ov\rj[<$ \i]la0(i)/jLa, tovs re irpoeSpovs
ttjs povXrjs \i.t& twv TT&)XT]Tti>v a-v-yj'y/oa'v^at KdOoTL e^epyacrurjcr-
ovtcu, eirip.Xio-8ai
8*
o-n-ws cm] CTTaOr/aovrai, tt}<; lepas opy-
70 dSos oi opoi, KaGd hd^ovjaiv oi aipeOevTes' to Se apyvpcov
00 .. A,[t]#ot? tovs opovs hovvai to-
v Tap.iav tov 8-rjp.ov] etc twv KaTa [\|/]^(^)t[o-]/>taTa avaXicrKO/jLevcov [t-
<3
Sr'fjKoJ.
Ol'Se -gpe'Giia-av eirl ttjv Updv] 6pyd\s]a dvTL twv /C7r7rTG)fc6[r-
75
v veovs opovs Geivai* ck
ttJs
p]o[vXrj]? : ApK6(pa)v : Aafiir(rp)ev
?,
?
__^
?: %pidaios,
?
'
Ayvovcrio?'

l8ia>T(5v' - - - - -]to9,
r
\7T7roKpaTr)<; : etc Kep[a-
p.wv, ]o?, [Xaip]e[<p]a)[v] etc [KJrjSoov, : 'EyLt/xe^t'S?;?: c'[k .
80
- -, 2]ou^[ivs, 'A]otcTTet^9 OlrjOev, :
__
t0<?? : rXai;/<:ft)^ : Uepi0oi8r}<;, : <$>al8pos
- -
-'
4-jrl t6 jxavJTeto^ et'9 AeX^oi;?' : e' IhtwTwv -
-
-
eu?, : EuSt8a/cT0? : Aap,7TTpev^'
4k ti]s povX^s'
- -]o?: AafjLTTTpevs.: [T]a[8]e eVaz;[o]0#oOTar
85 idv tov irpoo-8T| roSJe to ylrr)(j)ia/jLa, tt\v $ov\r\v tcvpiav elva-
1 \|/T]4>to-9(u o ti dv avTfj 8]o:77 dpiGTOV elvai.
This is a decree of the year 352 b.c. (1. 12), concerning the land, sacred to
the Eleusinian goddesses, and known as the lepa opyds. It was on the borders
of Attica and Megara, and its desecration by the Megarians was one of the
pretexts for the famous Megarian decree that brought on the Peloponnesian
36]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 97
war (cf. Plut. Per. 30; Paus. in 4, 2. A Midprjs dpyds in Gallia Lugdunensis is
found CIG 6798). It was evidently violated again during the 4th century, and
this decree appoints a commission, with powers of summary jurisdiction, to
establish ita boundaries. The second part of the decree, from line
22, prescribes
with detail the manner of consulting the Delphic oracle as to whether the land
within the sacred area that has been cultivated shall pay rent, to be devoted to
buildings at Eleusis, or shall be kept free from cultivation in future. These
are probably the events referred to in the pseudo-Demosthenic irepl tjwrdtieus
175, and go to show that work to be a contemporary speech, not the work of a
late rhetorician. The text has been admirably reconstituted by Foucart, and
must be correct in the main, though many details are of course uncertain.
5. The total number of the commissioners cannot be determined; from the
list in 11. 7480 they would appear to be at least 20. But Foucart thinks that
list includes others mentioned in the earlier part of the stele; cf. note on 1. 74.
7. For the Eleusinion in Athens cf. 2 c 42.
9. The oath is restored from Dem. c. Eubul. 1318 : to \f/r]<pi.eta-dac yvibfxrj tt)
SiKaioTOLTr) Kai ovre
x&P
Lrs %ve.K oiir
^x^P
ay
1011. For the formula cf. crvvex&s 5e woecv t[<xs eKK,\r)(rla]s ecos dv 5t[ct-
Trp]ax6rj, 15 545.
12. The Archon Basileus represented the Athenian state in Eleusinian
rites; it was also his special function to fix the boundaries of sacred precincts,
cf. 9 54. The hierophant or president of the Mysteries belonged to the sacred
family of the Eumolpidae, the Daduchus to the KrjpvKes; cf. 2 c 27, where also
the KrjpvKes are placed first in order.
17. 'Adr]i>7]<7iv, probably in Attica, as opposed to abroad; not, as F, in
Athens.
19. o-TpaTTjybp kt\. This is the earliest example of a special assignment of
duties, at his election, to one of the Strategi : later this office is known as
GTpa.T7)ybs iirl tt\v
x^P
av
X
eL
P
OTOvr
l^
eL ^ ^5 24. Cf.
6 eiri rrjs
x^P
a^ (TTpaTwybs
Plut. Phoc. 32. In 325 B.C. we find mentioned the arpaTvybs iirl ras <rv/x/xopias
(CIA n 809 a 210) ;
circ. 270 B.C. the aTparrjybs 6 eiri rb vo.vtik.6v
(55 5), the
iTTpaTrjybs 6 eiri rd 6ir\a (ib. 31) and various others.

irepnroXapxoi were officers


of the police patrols of foreign mercenaries ; cf. BCH xm
p.
265.

d-q/xapxoi :
one of their functions was to protect sacred precincts, cf. CIA n 841, 15.
23. The second part of this inscription gives a most interesting
account of
the manner of consulting the oracle. Two questions are to be inscribed on tin
plates, which are rolled up and covered with wool so as to be indistinguishable.
The two are then to be put in a bronze urn, and afterwards transferred, with the
greatest precautions against foul play, to a gold and silver urn respectively.
Then commissioners are to be sent to Delphi to ask the god whether the one in
the gold urn or that in the silver urn is to be taken ; on receipt of his response,
the urns are to be publicly opened and both plates read, with the response.
ypa.fxfjLa.Tea tt/s [$ov\r)s. See Rem. v, p. 89.
KaTTiTtpu) : leaden plates were generally used for consulting
oracles, as
at Dodona; cf. JHS i 228. It was doubted how the answer was given; we
have here one method, but it is not universally applicable.
24. el \ov Kai dfieivov. This formula, usual in consulting oracles, shows a
pleonasm common in religious and legal documents. Cf. DI 1561 b, 1564, &c.
(Dodona) and 41, c 25.
R. II.
7
98 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[36
26. fJLT) eipyaap.e'va. F eveipyacr/neva.
27. tov irpo[<TT($ov : doubtless the great portico in front of the Hall of the
Mysteries, which was built by Philo under Demetrius Phalereus, 317307 b.c.
(Vitruv. vn, praef. 17). We see that its erection was contemplated some forty
years earlier; CIA n 834 c appears to be concerned with the actual building
operations.
31. 6 iTTKTT&Trjs 6 K tQv irpotdpwv, who presided at the ecclesia, so described
to distinguish him from the other eiriGT&Trjs tu>v ra/xtwj/ 1. 36, who kept the seal
of the city. It has been much disputed how long the two offices were kept
distinct; this inscription is an important piece of evidence.
33. The bronze urn would be among the apparatus at the disposal of the
prytanes ; the gold and silver urns were to be provided by the treasurers of
Athena, and to be kept in their charge on the Acropolis.
49. "And whichever decision be chosen by the god, that urn shall be
regarded as &c." ; but the construction and restoration of this fragmentary
portion is of course doubtful. 51.
%x
L - 313.
56
7. Trpo]jrv\ip. Both the extant Propylaea at Eleusis are much later
than this inscription ; but another inscription (CIA iv 2, 574 c), of the same
period as this, was to be set up near the Propylaea. This early portal seems to
have disappeared entirely. 63. els <po8ia. Cf. 45 44.
74. avrl rcav 4kttttu}k6tojv. F refers this to the Commissioners; more
probably, with K, it must be referred to the boundary-stones (opoi) that require
to be replaced. Perhaps this forms part of the formula of the lost earliest
section of the decree, and there may have been a separate set of commissioners
for this purpose ;
there may well be the names of two different sets, of ten each,
in 11. 7581. In 75 the stone has Aa/jarevs.
84. For the emendatory formula cf. CIA n 66 b, frg. c 10 sqq., 809, b 32 sqq.
Foucart infers that the response was in favour of leaving the iepa opyas
uncultivated, because
(1)
all ancient writers refer to it as remaining so;
(2)
the
irpbuTUiov was not built until the end of the fourth century
; (3)
the accounts of
Eleusis for 329/8 (CIA iv 2, 834 b) record the rents of the Eharian plain, but
not of the Orgas.
Compare also, for the details of procedure in consulting the oracle, an inscrip-
tion of Magnesia (Eur.) Mitth. vn (1882). The oracle is that of Apollo at
KopOTTT).
37. A stele of Pentelic marble with a relief, broken into two pieces, found
in the Piraeeus. Kumanudes 'A0. vi
(1877) p. 152 sqq.; A. Schaefer Rh. M.
xxxiii
p. 418 sqq. ; xxxviii p. 310 ; D 129 ; CIA iv 2, 109 b. Cf. A. Dittmar
L. S. xin 174 sq.; Hartel Alt. Staatsr. 96 sq. ; BCH v
(1881)
pi. 5 (cf.
p. 194).
Alphabet, type 1 ; a trace only of
X
occurs 1. 42. Utolxv^ov.
Lines 1, 2 are in larger characters, and are separated from what follows by
a space of eight lines. Lines
3
7 of the prescript are more widely spaced than
those containing the substance of the decree.
37]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 99
^irapTOKco, II a t
p
i (r a 8
||,
'A it o \\ w v i w, AevKOJvos it a i cr L
B.C
347/6
'E7rt S e /jl L<T t o tc\e o v s
dp[\]ovro[s
e ire r rj 9 A lyr) t8 o s 6
y
B o[t)]? 7r
p
u [t-
jajveta?,
$
Av a l pa
[\]
o? a> cr t S
?;
[p.-
o v 'A
x
a]
^
[v] e l> 9 eypa/x/judrevev, () e [6-
<p
i X O S
'AXi]yltOi;<Tfc09 7T <r t a T [f
1
AvBporlcov "AvBpcovos Tapyrjrr^io]? eiirev 7r\e-
pl wv eTrearetXe ^irdproKos k\oX\ T\aip\i<ra.h-v\-
io ? teal ol irpeafieLS ol tikovt\s\<s 7J"[a]/3 avrcov a7r[a-
yyeXXoucnp, diroKpi\y\aa6ai av\r\ol\s\ ore o [8f-
/X09 6 'AOtjvcllcov eiratvel %7rdpr[o]/cov Kal TLai-
piadBrjv on elalv dvhpes \&\ya\<f\ol Kal
eVfa-y-
yeXXovrai tc3 BrjjjLcp
[
T
]$
'A[8]i7i/[a]t-G>i/ eV^e[X-
15 rjcreaOoA rrjs K[ir]ofjL7rrj<; roO [o-jf/rfoju, Kaddirep 6
irarrjp avrcov e7refieXel[r]o Aral L^TrJ^peTr/o-ew 7r-
podvfMDS otov dv 6 8r)fji[os] B[ir\]ra[i], Kal dirayy[i-
XXecv avTo\i\s t[o]l>9 7r[po-p]e*,9, o[n] ravra iroi-
ovvres ovBevo[%\ drw)(r}o~\o\vo-iv rod Brjfiov ro-
20 v Wdyvatcov 67r]e[i8]?} Be [rd]9 Sa)[pidJ9 BiB6ao~i-
v ' AOrjvaloils o.<r\rrep 2[oit]ly?o9 Kal AevKcav eBo-
crav, elvai [2irapT]o[K]&) [k\oI YlaipiadBr} ra9 B-
<opeid<; 9 [6
8f|x]o9 eScofce ^arvpco Kal AevK(o-
vi Kal crT6(/)[avovv] ^pvacp aT(f)dvG) UavaOrj-
25 vacof; to[is p."ya]\ot9 <x7ro %lXlcov Bpa-^ficov
eKdrep[o]v [iroic ?]cr#at Be row erreepdvovs ro-
t>9 dO\o6e[Tas] rco TTporepa) erec HavaOrjva-
Icov toov p.ey\6\\cov Kara to yjrr}(f)Lcr/uLa rod Brjfiov
to irporepov i\lri](f)ta/jLvov AevKayvc Kal dva-
30 yopevecv, bri arecpavoc o Bfj/juos 6 'A6r]vai(ov
ZTrdproKov kol UaiptadSrjv rovs AevKOivos
iralBas dperrjs Kal evvolas eveKa T179 els T-
ov Brj/xov tov
'
AOrjvaLCOv eiretBr] Be rovs crrecf)-
dvovs dvarcOeaaL
rfj
'
AOrjvd
rfj
TLoXidBi,
35
tou9 dOXodeTas eU tov vea) dvaridevac ro-
f9 o~Te(f)dvov<;, eTriypdtyavras' ItirdproKos
Kal YlaipiadBris AevKcovos TraiBes dveOeaa-
100 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[37
v
rfj
'
'
AOrjvaia, aretyavwSevTes viro tov Srjfi-
ov tov ^A6r)va[c]a)v. to Se dpyvptov hihovau ro-
40 i? aOXoOerais et? tovs crTecfrdvovs
tov tov
hrjiJiov rafxiav e/c tcov t? ra Kara yjrTjcpicrfJLaTa
TO)
&7]/j,(p
/Jbepi^ofievcov to Se vv\y\ elvac irap-
ahovvai rot>9 airoheKTas to et? [t]ou9
o~Te<fi[a-
vovs itc twv aT[pa]TL(OTLfcoi)v
xp[i)]fAdTQ)v
dvay[p-
45 dtyai
Be to ^^lapua ToBe Toy ypafifxaTea tt}[s
/3ovXr}<; iv aTrfXy Xidtvei /cat aTrjaac 7rXr)[o-
Lov Trjs XaTvpov Kal Aev/coovos, e'9 Be ttjv dv[a-
ypacfrrjv
Bovvat rov Ta/jutav tov Btj/jlov Tpid^K-
ovtcl Spax/jids' eiraivecrat Be tol>9 7rpeo-/3ei[$
50 ^.wcriv real QeoBoacov, otl eirL/jLeXovvTai [-
v d(f>ifc[v]ovfjLeva)v
A0?]vr}0ev et9 J$oo~7ropov [k<x-
l KaXiaat clvtovs iirl %evua et9 to 7rpvTa[ve-
lov et'9 avpiov' irepl Be tcov ^pr}/jLaT(ov tcov [d<j>-
ei\\[o]/jL6v(ov T0Z9 iratal TOt9 Aev/ccovos 07r[s
55
a]z/ aTroXdfitoaiv, Xprj/uuaTLcrai rot>9 7rpoeB[povs
01 a]v Xdyodai, irpoeBpeveuv iv tco Br/p^co
[rfj
6y]S6rj iirl Be/c[a] irpcoTov fieTa Ta lepa, o[ira>s a-
v] a7ToX[ap]oz/T69 Ta ^p^/xaTa
fxrj
iyfcaXcoo~[i t<*>
SJtJ/jlco
tco 'Adrjvaicov Bovvai B\k to.]? vTrr)[pfo-la.-
60 9 9 airova1 ^irdpTOicos Kal TIaipio-[d7)s, t-
oti]9 Be 7r/D[e']a-/3et? diroypd-tyai Ta 6vo/xa[ra r<av
vTr]r}p[e<ri]cov cbv dv Xdftcocnv tco ypa[X[xa\rA ttj-
9
/3ouXt}?' ol>9
8'
az^ diroypd^cocnv, elva[\. kv tu
T[Ta]'y/ze^ft) iroiovvTas dyaOov otl [av 8vvw-
65 i>tcu tol9 TralBas rou9 AeuV&j^09. nfoXvnmT-
09 TifjboicpdTovs Kptcoevs eiire' Ta [p.ev aXXa k-
aO^direp 'AvBpoTicov, aTe<\>avcocra[y 8e Kal 'AiroX-
Xoovlov tov Aevfccovos vov e'/c to)[v
The decree is in honour of Spartocus and Paerisades, who were joint kings of
Bosporus 347342 b.c. (Paerisades being sole kiug 342309 b.c. after his
brother's death). The decree is followed by a supplement in honour of their
brother Apollonius, who is not elsewhere mentioned. They were sons of the
Leucon who figures prominently in Dem. Lept. 466 (Schaefer I.e.). The
document is one of those which illustrate the importance to the Greeks of the
corn-supplies from the Crimea (cf. Grote H. G. Pt 11, ch. 98; Boeckh CIG 11
p.
80sqq.).
37]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 101
The kingdom called by the Greeks Bosporus had its capital at Panticapaeum
(Kertch) and extended westward to Theodosia, which had been annexed by
Leucon I. (Dem. Lept. 467), his father Satyrus I. having died while besieging it.
(Harpocr. s. v. Qev8oaia). Eastward of the strait the Bosporus possessed towns
like Phanagoria and Hermanassa and held sway as far as the neighbourhood of
Caucasus. Schaefer, I.e., shows that Diodorus (xvi 31 and 52, xx 22) is five
years out in his calculations, as not having before him the information which
this inscription supplies, that Spartocus reigned not before but jointly with his
brother.
4. 675677s Trpuraveias. This brings the date to the early summer of
346 b.c.
6. 0e60iXos. The same epistates appears in CIA 11 109, whence Schaefer
inferred that both decrees were passed at the same meeting of the ecclesia. Cf.
Poll, viii 96, 5ts
5'
ovk ^ecrri yevecrdat tov clvtov eiriGTdTiqv , though Pollux is
speaking of the epistates of the prytanes, not of the proedri.
8. Androtion is the person against whom the well-known speech of
Demosthenes was delivered, 355 b.c. Probably he was the person who wrote
an
'
Atthis.' Cf. Schaefer Dem. i
2
351 note 1. His father was doubtless the
"
Avhpwv 6 'Avdporiuvos of Plat. Prot. 315 c, Gorg. 487 c.
15. Kadairep 6 irarrip kt\. By this is meant the Swpetat mentioned in 1. 20.
See Dem. Lept. 466. We learn further from Dem. c. Phorm. 917 that Paerisades
continued the immunity granted by Leucon.
20. dwpei&s. See Meisterhans Gr. 40 and cf. 26 33. The shorter form
Suped appears for the first time CIA n add. 1 b, 32 (403 b.c.)
;
after 268 b.c it is
the prevailing form. Hence Meisterhans infers that the form with ei is the
older and must not be classed with cases like that of <.i>a\v for idv
(39).
23. 2ari7/)oj /cat Ae^/cam. Of the grant made to Satyrus we know nothing,
but that irokiTeia and dreAeta were granted to Leucon and his son we learn from
Dem. Lept. 466.
24 sqq. The presents {<rre(f>avodv 24, voteTadaL 26, dvayopeveiv 29, didovac 39)
instead of the aorist infinitive indicate that the crown was conferred not on one
occasion only but in every fourth year at the Great Panathenaea (Dittmar I.e.,
who observes that avandtao-t 1. 34 = consecrare solent). In D 342 (coast of Euxine
Sea, not before 48 b.c), 46 sq. we have an instance of a decree by which crowns
were to be annually conferred on the benefactor. Cf. 18 8, note.
35. veu. Cf. 57 44. This form of the accusative is recognised by Herodian
Philet. p. 439 : tov ijpoj, tov Miva), t6v 'AttoWw, tov IlocretSuj dvev tov v ol 'AttikoL
t6v Xayiov /cat tov vewv, tov veto /cat tov \ayCo avev tov v rj avv raJ v. The statement
is borne out by inscriptions from 363 b.c In imperial times the old ending
re-appears. Meisterhans Gr. 128 sq.
38. 'Adrjvaiq.. The older form is probably due to its use in the dedicatory
formula. In the text of the decree 1. 34 we have 'Adrjvq.. According to
Meisterhans Gr. 31 the latest example of ' Adrjvala in decrees is 378 b.c, in
treasurers' accounts 367 b.c; 'Adrjvda appears less than ten times (6th to 4th
century b.c)
; 'Adrjvd, found only once in the 6th and 5th centuries, is the
prevailing form in decrees and treasurers' accounts from 362 b.c
40. Tbv tov drj/jLov Ta.fj.lav kt\. See 33 56. 42. pLtp^oixhuv 39 44.
43. toi>s dKodtnTas. See 21 16. The dirod^KTai here perform the functions
of the Tafias twv crrpartwrt/cuij', an office instituted later by Lycurgus. Kecourse
102 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[37
was had to the trrpartwri/cct apparently because the rafiias rod d-q/xov had not
funds enough in hand.
50. Qeodoaov. This envoy was possibly of the royal kin and may have
given his name to the town Theodosia, though the Schol. on Demosth.
(p. 477,
24 Dind.) notes that it was named from the sister or wife of Leucon.
53. tixiv 6<pi\ofxiuu}v : due probably for corn bought by the Athenians from
Leucon. Schaefer I.e.
56. rrj 6yd6r] iirl 56ca : the 18th of Elaphebolion. The ordinary formula
would be iv
rfj
trpwT-t) eKKKrjala, but here it would not suit. The decree had been
passed before the Dionysia (9th to 13th of Elaphebolion) ; for the first ordinary
assembly of the 8th prytany in this year (see Schmidt, Chron. p. 364, 785), an
intercalary year, was on the 11th of Elaphebolion, the second on the 20th. The
next assembly would therefore be 17 iv Aiovvaov eKKk-qaia, on the first day after
the festival, on which only business concerning the rites of the god could be
taken. (Cf. 38 22.) But in this very year, as we learn from Aeschin. F.L. 61,
c. Gtes. 68 there were, on the motion of Demosthenes, two extraordinary
assemblies, one on the 18th and the other on the 19th of Elaphebolion for
deliberating on the terms of peace with Philip ; and on the first of these days
was taken also, as it appears, the question of the debt due to Leucon's sons.
59. ras inrrjpeatas. The envoys had come to enlist sailors for the king's
ships.
63. elvai ev r< Teray/ieva). See 15 47.
66. ILo\6evKT]os. So K. Fuhr Rh. M. xxxm 607 from [Dem.] c. Phaen.
1042. The father Timocrates was an associate of the Androtion who was
prosecuted by Demosthenes. Schaefer.
68. vbv. On the various Attic forms and inflexions of vlds see Meisterhans
Gr. 59 sq. v and not vi in the first syllable is the prevalent spelling. The
inflexions as from vos are frequently met with from the 6th to the 2nd century.
38. A square base of Eleusinian marble, inscribed on three sides (a, b, c).
CIA ii 114; D 495. Cf. Riedenauer, Verh. d. phil. Ges. in Wilrzburg 1862
p. 77 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1
;
does not occur. Not croLxn^ov. Lines very long.
Marks of punctuation
(:)
on each side of numeral signs.
On the orthography ret, dond (subj.), avrei &c. see 313.
a.
*H
fiovXrj 7) 771 UvOoSoTOV
[ap\ovTOS avi6r\Ktv
c
H(f)ai(TTcp cr r e (\> avoj 6 elcr[p-
viro
t]ov t]{jlov
dperrj^ eVe/ca /cat SiKaLoavvrjs
Aetv6(TTparo<; AeivodSov ^AypvXrjdev elwev eTretBr) rj /3ov\rj
343/2
^
^tj-1 YLvOoSotov ap^ovros, ->Yi]^>i(ja\xkv7) /cpiatv Trotf}-
<rat twv Xeyovrcov iv rel jBovXel iirl T179 ivdrrj^ irpv[ra-
38]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 103
5
veias Kal rofjbf/aat, o? av BoKel avrel aptara Xeycov Kal irpdr-
tojv zeal dBcopoBoKyTco^ virep Trjs fiovXrjs
Kal tov Srjfiov
tov 'AOrjvalow BoaTeTeXeKevac tov eviavTov, eKpcvev Bia-
^6tporo[vtj-
o~ao~a irepl tovtcov rj ftovXr)
<$>av6Br)fjLov AlvXXov Svfiai-
TaBrjv, BeBo^Oai
rfj
{3ovXfj,
dyaOrj
TVXV
tv Br/puov
tov
y
A6r)vai<ov Kal T179 ftovXr)?
eiratveaai QavoBtipbov
AlvWov vpairo:\ht\v
d]peTr}<; evfca Kal BcKaioavvrj<; T779 eh tt)v fiovXrjv Kal tov
Brj/xov tov 'A6rjval(Dv, Kal o-Tefyavwaai avTov ^pvaa)
o~T(f)av(p dirb : F : Bpa^/jiojv, to Be dpyvpoov elvai to
6t9 TOV [vri-
cfaavov 6K Tu>v 6t<? to. kclto), yjrr](f)la
fiaTa avaXcaKOfjuevoyv Tel
ftovXel. dvay[p]dyfrac Be Kal eirl to dvaOrj/jua 7-179 ftovXfjs
ToBe to tyrjcjuo-fia T01/9 aipeOevTas irorjcraaOai, to avd-
ur)p,a. 07TO)? o av Kai
BfjfjLOS elBo)<; tcl eyjrr](f)Lafieva
tt}
fiovXr) irepl <t>avoBr)fxov
Tipjr\o~ei /cat avTos \k\cl\ aTe<pavd)o-et, eav Botcel toj
BrjiMp
Kaddirep Tjj
fiovXf),
tovs irpoeBpovs ot av
Xd^coaiv irpoeBpeveiv ev
10 toj Br]/Ji(p et? tt)V irpwTrjv ikkXtja[av xprj/jbaTiaai irepl
^avoBr)jjiov, Kal ava[yv(a]vac ToBe to
yjrrjifiicrfia Toy
ypafifiaTea toj Bt//jlg), yvco/uirjv Be ^vvfBdXXeaOai tt}<;
/3ovXf}<; 669 TOV B[r\-
fjuov, otl Bo/cec Trj
ftovXr), eireiBr) QavoBrj/xos AtvXXov
QvpLaiTaBri's fcaX[&s k]oI (/>[i]A,OTt/z&>9 nal dBcopoBofcr)T(os
fiefiovXevfcev, Xeycov Kal irpaTTcnv Ta dpiGTa virep T779
{3ovXf}s Kal
tov Btj/jLov tov Adrjvaicov Kal tcov avfifxa^cov, eizatveaai
avTov apeTTjs eveKa Kal BiKatocrvvrjs T179 et9 tt)v /3ovXrjv
Kal tov Brjfiov tov Adrjvaioov [Kal tovs <rvfiji]a^ou9, Kal
GTetf>av\<a-
o~ac xpvaa)
aTecjjdvco diro :
X
*
Bpa^/xSv eTreiBdv ra9 ev-
6vva<s Bu>' to Be dpyvpiov elvai to et'9 tov
o~T(f)avov
oirodev av tg3 Brjfia) BoK[ec. 07ra)9 dv ovv Kal ot aXXoi
aTrav]T69 eiBdoai o[ti
o Bfj/jLos Kal
7) fiovXr) eirlcrTaTai ydpiTas diroBiBovai TO69
del Xeyovacv Kal 7rpdTTov[<riv rd p^Xno-Tja virep TJ79
104 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[38
/3ouA,^9 KCLl TOV Sr'/fjLOV, [dvo/ypd\|/ai t68 to tyr\$io-]/jLa TOV
<ypafjL[/jLa-
15
Wa] rbv /cara irpviaveiav iv artjXrj Xl[QCvi]]l teal arrjaac iv
a/cpoTToXet, et9 Se rrjv dva[ypa$riv ri\s o-tJ^Xt;? Sovvai
tov rafiiav tov Srj/jbov A[- -
Spaxp-ds k t<3v icard \|/rj<j>t]cr-
[iara
dvaXicrKO\i\eV(i)V [tw 8^pu>.
b.
4>a]^o[8i](Aos AijvXXov %vjjuaLrdhri^ eiirev
. ava ov eXecrOai Tr\v /3ov\t}v avTLK,[o. p.dXa
] a(X
?)
a(\ ?)
. . . a(\
?)
. . .
T0V icaOoTL av avrols So/cf} dpLa[r ]
avaOeivcu to re dya-
20 Xpa t<3 T 'H<j>aio-TU) ti^v
poJfXf^v
k\oX ttj Adrjva
rfj
H<at-
o~Tia, iiriyp\_atyai 8 to ^{/T)<pia-p.a t68c ko.1 tovs povXjefTa?
irarpoOev teal rov Brj[fi-
ov ov 'cKao-Tos o-Tt to 6'vop.a, ot $Qv<rav]
(f>'
vyi[ei]a Kal acorrjpia
TJ79
flovXfjs Kal TOV hrjfXOV [tov 'AGTjvafov* iriYpdv|/cu 8* Kal
to \|/i]<J>io-]yu,a kclO eo~T(f)av(o6r}
7)
/3ovX[r)
viro tov Si^fxov 4v t]t? iv Aoovvaov iKKXrjata, $6ao~a KaX&s
e7rtyu.e[|XXTJcr0ai ti]s evKoo-pias ttjs irepl] tt)V eoprrjv rov Aio-
vvaov ro[y
Kt]4>i]<xo(/)ft)[v] K.aXXi/3iov YlaiavLevs eiirev iirecSr} r\ /3ov\r)
7] e[iri UvQoZ]6to[v dpxjo^ro? tca\a)<; Kal hacaiws iire-
\i.s\r\]0r} [ttj]? evtcoafiias rov Oedrpov, iiracveaat avrrjv Kal
aTe<f>a[y(a]o~ai, ^pvaco \a-Ttfy\dvw diro :
[H
: hpax/Jbwv
8ovvai &e avr[.
2
-
8]/Da^yu.a.9 rov? rafiLas ou? elprjrai K rov vo/nov
rot9 b\6^\ao-iv dpLcrra twv flovXevToov iiri/jLe/jLeXrjaOai
T779 evKOo-[pia$.
<o]v
y
AvriKpdrovs UafjLJ3(i)Td8r)s eiirev
ti>XV ^y
a
^V>
eTJrr)(f)Lo-0ai
ry
fiovXfj,
iireiSr} Ei/80^09 eay[yi\ov
EvTraX]^TTto9 KaX&s Kal hiKaiods eirefJieXrjOr] T579 SiocKycrecos
virb tt/s ftovXrjs
eft
r)v elpedr), Kal rfjq dXXr)[s cv-
Koo-p.]a9 T179 y3ofX,^9 fxerd twv irpvrdvewv rwv ael irpvravev-
6vt(dv, eiraivecrai avrbv Kal arecf)av(oaac
XP
V
~
38]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 105
<ru> o-Tt](f)dv(i)
diro :
[h
: Bpa^/jLtov, eireiBdv t9 evOvvas Bo*'
07r[ws] B av 7ro7]6fj
6 aretyavos teal r)
cfyavepd
r) Bcoped
rj 7ra[pd
30 ttjs PovXt}]?, eXeadai irevre dvBpas rrjv ftovXrjv avrtKa /nd\a,
o'lrives TTorjaovrcu rov ariipavov tovs Be rafjui-
as Sovvai r]6 dpyvpiov etc T<uv Kara ^rj^io-jJiaTa ava[\urKo]-
fxevwv
rfj /3ov\fj.
dvaypdtyat Be roBe to yjr7]^>ia/j,a
lirl to dv6i]0r]/Jia T779 /3ov\rj<; T//9 ttI Uv$oB6ro[v dp\]ovro^.
C.
ypa|AfjLaT]e[v]? /card 7r[pvTa] ve lav
KAeo<7TpaT09 TtfjuoaOevov; AlycXievs'
35
eirl rd '^rijcpto' fxara
Ar)/jb6(f)i\os Uavra\eovro<; ^AypvXrjOev
7rl to OewpiKov
Kr)<f)io-o(f)(t)i> Le(f)a\la)vos 'AcfriBvalos'
fiovXrjs rafiiat
4
o 'Avri/cXrjs 'ApLGTO/cpdrovs K.v8a07)vaiev<;
ApofiofcXeL&Tjs
%
pacrvfJLrjhovs Ayvova409*
Bpa^iAA,09 ^aOvWov 'Ep^teu? elirev e7reiBr/ E#So[]o?
/caXws teal Bc/caio)? eire
fjLe\r)6r) wv avrco r\ /3ov\r)
Trpo^ira^iv
rr}<; re Stot/c^crea)9 rrj
fiovXfj
Kal T/79 evKoa/juas fierd rcov
TTpvrdvecov raov del Trpvravevovrwv, Kal Bier\i\m-t to.
/3e\ricrTa avfjLJ3ov\ei>(ov, [S]eB6^6ai
rfj
/3ov\j}, eiraivecrai
EivSo^ov eayye\ov XvttciXtjttiov dperrjs e[vKa Kal
Sucai-
45
oo~vvr)^ T779 et9 TT\v fiovXrjv, /cat arecpavwcraL avrbv ^pverep
ore<$)dv<p airo :
p
1
: Bpa^/xcov, eiretBdv rd<; 6i)[6vvas 8a>*
to 8^ ap-
yvpiov elvai eh tov arefyavov 7r[a]p' [k]<2cttol' tcov /3ov-
Xevrojv elvai \h\\ avrw Kal irapd rod [ij|M>]is [cvpeo-Oai
ctyaGov oTi av
S\vv7]raL. dvaypdyjraL Be roBe to i^r/[<|>io-ua irl to] dvdOr\^ia
T779 j3ov\r}[s to lirl ILvQo$]6tov dp-^ovro^' [l]9
8 Tqv ava*ypa<|>^v Kal tv\v &va&i\o~LV T
-
-
The Council having earned distinction in connexion with the celebration of
the Great Dionysia in 343/2 b.c. (the archonship of Pythodotus), the People in
106 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[38
the assembly held according to custom after the festival in the theatre of
Dionysus (cf. 37 56) had decreed first, that the Council should be rewarded
with a golden crown, secondly that the councillors who had rendered greatest
service should receive donations. Then the Council itself decreed an offering
to Hephaestus and Athena Hephaestia, and upon this offering ordered to be
engraved the names of certain councillors and the decree of the People, as well
as the decree of the Council. Afterwards were ordered to be added decrees of
the Council passed in the latter part of the year in honour of some of their
number.
2. 'H<pai<TTu). The offering thus dedicated to Hephaestus is specified in
the decree engraved on side b, 1. 1722, where 'A^va "H<paicrTLa is joined with
Hephaestus. Perhaps, as Koe. conjectures, Athena's name was omitted here
because a statue of Hephaestus alone was set up on the base.
4. eTreidr) r/ j3ov\i] ktX. The verb is cxpivev 1. 5, and the words
77
(3ovXrj are
superfluously repeated 1. 6. The Kpiais described in 1. 4 appears to be unique, so
far as our records extend. Aeschines, c. Timarch. 109 sqq., cited by Riedenauer
I.e., is not a case in point (D).
6. dedox^at TTJ fiovXr}. This was not a probouleuma, but a resolution passed
by the Council for its own purposes; a right belonging to every civic corporation.
See Heydemann, Be Senatu &c. p.
11
(157).
Cf. 29 4. Phanodemus may be
the person who (like Androtion 37 8) was author of an
'
Atthis.' He is
mentioned in connexion with the worship of Amphiaraus I. G. Sept., 1 4252,
4253, 4254 (Koehler Herm. xxvi 45, v. Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. 1 280 sq.).
7. dirb :
f
: dpaxfi-uv. See 24 11.
8. -ipy}(f)l<jiJ.aTa: sc. ttjs povXijs. See 33 57. In the following the persons
denoted by rods alpedeuras were those whose election had been ordered in the
decree b 1722, which is certainly the oldest of those engraved on the same
stone.
oVcos
5'
av ktX. Here begins the probouleuma, the object of which is the
donation of a crown to Phanodemus by a decree of the People as well as by the
Council. But it is the probouleuma, and not the decree of the People, which is
inscribed on the stone, because the duddrj/xa itself is dedicated by the Council
and not by the People. But there is no reason to suppose (with Hartel, St. ub.
att. Staatsr. &c. p. 191 sq.) that the probouleuma was not formally adopted by
the People. D.
12. twc (xvfxfxdx^v. See 32 A 26 etc.
13. 6'7rws av kt\. : a very common formula in honorary decrees,
14. tov ypafx/jLCLTea tov Kara irpvTaveiav. See Rem. V, p. 89.
15. iv dxpoiroXei. A copy of the decree of the People was ordered to be
placed in the Acropolis, in addition to the original engraved on the dvad-qp-a
itself.
b.
20. 7-77 'Adrjvq, rrj "H.<parTLa. Cf. Hesych. 'H<pai<jTla' ' kd-qvd /cat 7r6Xis ttjs
Arj/jLvov. The next gloss, 'H0aKrrtd5af 'Adyvaioi, applies rather to the Attic deme
of that name.
tovs fiovXevrds: not the whole Council, but only those members (probably
those mentioned below c 33
41)
who had performed the sacrifices. Koe.
38]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 107
21. \pr)(pi(Tiia : i.e. that contained in 1. 23 sqq.
22. iv rrj iv Aiovuaov iKKXrjaia. In the fifth and fourth centuries the
Popular Assembly was ordinarily held in the Pnyx; but in the time of
Demosthenes the first assembly after the Dionysia took place in the Dionysiac
theatre, which at a later period was the usual place of assembly, the Pnyx being
used only for elections. Cf. the law inserted in Dem. c. Mid. 517 : tovs
wpvTaveis woietv iia<Xr)o~Lav iv Aiovvaov t~q varepaiq. tCov Uavdluv (the 17th of
Elaphebolion). h> 8i ravrri
xP
r
ll
Jt- aTl

eLV irp&Tov p.iv wept lepQv, 'iweiTa. t&s


wpoftoXds
wapahiSbTwcav t&s yeyevqfxivas evena tt)s wofiwrjs 77 tCov dywvwv twv iv
rots AiovvaLois, 6'crcu dv /ultj iKreTicixevai waiv, and Aeschin. F.L. 61: tovs wpvTaveLS
fiera to, Aiovvaia to, iv dcret /ecu ttjv ev Alovijgov eKKKricriav Trpoypa\{/ai dvo KK\rjaias,
ttjis fiev rrj dyddrj iirl 5e/ca, tt\v hk rrj hdrrj iwi 5ea. It is noteworthy, that even
at the later period, when all the meetings of the Assembly were in the Dionysiac
theatre, yet the place was mentioned in decrees, just as when the practice was
exceptional (CIA 11 307, 420 eKKX-qo-La ev Aiovvoov). D. Cf. 37 56.
23. KaXXijSiou: doubtless the KaXXt^tos of 32 2.
25. oOs is the subject to an unexpressed bovvou.
26. E#5oos. That he was a member of the j3ov\r) is clear (as D shows,
against Schaefer, De scribis &c. p. 30) from 1. 43, 44 below, where of him it is
said that he ditrtXeae av/jL^ovXevcov (sc.
rfj (3ov\fi).
Any citizen might av/n^ovXeijeLv
no drj/jop, only a ffovXevrris could avfifiovXeveu' rfj
j3ovXr/.
27. Note the careless inversion (probably due to the engraver), v-rrb rijs
(3ovXrjs
i(f>
rjv eipedt) for e^>' rjv elpedrj virb rrjs fiovXrjs. For other instances see
9 29.
29, 30. Trorjdrj, iro7)<rovTai. See 7 41. Tro-qaovrai is, of course,
'
shall cause to
be made.'
c.
33. See Rem. v, p.
89.
34. Ti/uLoadivovs : almost certainly Timosthenes of the Aegilian deme,
mentioned [Dem.] c. Timoth. 1193 (372/1 B.C.).
35. iiri ret xj/rjcpia-fxaTa. Schaefer, op. cit. p. 38, is inclined to identify this
officer with the ypafifiarevs rrjs [lovXfjs, who is otherwise not mentioned in the
decree, though he admits it to be strange that he should have this title here
only. In any case the ypafx/xarevi iwi rd \pr)(plap.aTa would seem to have been an
officer who preserved the copies of decrees in the state registry. But see v. Wila-
mowitz, Ar. u. Ath. 1 227 and note 84.
37. ewl to dewpiicdv. As from Arist. 'A0. ttoX. 43. 1, 47, 2 it is now clear that
there were more than one, perhaps 10, officers ewl to deupLKov, the official here
named can only have been a Council official with unknown functions. See D.A.
App. s.v. Theoricon, and Gilb. C. A. 246.
38. Krj(f)Lao(pQiu : probably the person who is cited as a witness Dem. adv.
Steph. 1 1107, where we may correct the ms reading Ke<pdXiovos to KecpaXLajvos.
He appears as a arpaT-qyos in CIA 11 804 a, 36 ; cf. iv 2, 1054/, 32.
39. (3ovXr)s rct/a'cu. A Treasurer of the Council is mentioned in an inscription
CIA iv 2, 11 b, frg b, c 9 (first half of the fourth century b.c), where he has to
pay for the engraving of a decree on stone. In CIA 11 61 (about the middle of
the fourth century) the stele containing the inventory of the Arsenal is
assigned (1. 20) to the Tafxiai (i.e. at least two) ttjs ^ovX-fjs: and again in the
108 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[38
present inscription two ra/xiai are enumerated. In CIA n 375, assigned by Koebler
to the end of the third century B.C., there appears again to have been only one
Treasurer of the Council. In the Eoraan period also mention is made of one
Treasurer only: see CIA m 646, 650, 1297. Cf. Boeckh, St.* n 46,* note 286.
42. iTreidrj E#5oos kt\. A difficulty is caused by the fact that we have
already (above b 26 sqq.) had a decree, substantially the same as this (42 sqq.) in
honour of Eudoxus, but in the first case proposed by (the son of) Anticrates.
Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. i
p.
214 (D agreeing) explains that the second decree is
supplementary ; the cost of the crown in 1. 31 is defrayed from public money
(the largest sum allowable), by 1. 46 is added the same amount from the pockets
of the (3ov\evrai.
39. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 115 b; D 137.
Alphabet, type 1. Twice tt = tt
2
.
AO
frequently appear as
AO.
^tolxv^ou.
. . . . l\
'AQl]VCL]l(OV KCL
. $<o]pl0i)V
. ro[v BrjfjLOV t[ov
5
Ka]l toi>? aw
a tJovtcov fxer
i] 7Tpo? TOP 8?}[|jlov rr\-
i av^TOV VVOl[a d-y-
a0]o? irepl 'A#?7[vaiovs k-
IO a]lpOV TTpCLTTeL
. n]eTa rod hrjfxov [tov 'A8T]v]a/[a>v, oirw-
S
a]z^ elhodCTLV aTTav[rt\; \or\l 6 SijfjLOS [o
'AQ^rjvaicov a7roBiScoo~tv yapiTas /x[e-
-y]aA.<x? Tot? evepyerovatv eiavro-
15 v Kal] Sia/ievovcriv iirl rrj<; evvol[a-
s
to]0 Srj/jiov, elvai YleuTiOeihriv T[\z-
\.a~\t6e\C\hov ArjXiov ' K6r\vaiov avr[6-
v] Kal i/cyovovs avrov ifKr/v rod 7r[-
ji<|>0e]^To? vtto ro)v eyjdpwv tcov tt)<; 7r[o-
20 Xcw]? Kal TieiaiOeihov dveXelv a[v-
t6]v ypdyjraadai Se avrov hrjpuov Ka\\
4>v]Ai}9 Kat
(frparplas ?/9 av l3ov\r)r[a-
1]
wv 01 vofioL Xeyovcnv, tovs Se irp[v-
T]aj/et[s] Sovvai irepl avrov rrjv [*|/tj<j>-
39]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 109
25 o]v ray [s]rj/jiq) eh tifV
irp(*>Trjv eKK\[y\-
<r]iav dvarypd-tyai Be ToBe to -^rrj(f)ia[iL-
a] eh o-Tr)\7]v \iQLvr\v rb(y) <ypafjLfjbar[{-
a r]bv Kara irpvTaveiav kcl\ arrjaa\i
v] afcpoTToXj], eh Be ttjv dvaypacf)[r\-
30 v TT]]? ctt[tj]X779 Botco 6 rafiias tov Br)[\i-
ou T]pta[Kovr]a Spaxfjids.
eldv Be ri[s
a.iro]fCT[e(]v[ei] YAeicriOe'ihr^v, 7roXe/x[i-
os &t]t&> to) BrjfJLW rco 'AOtjvcllcov tf[a-
\ -q iroXis] r) vTroSe^afievr) tov chtok\t-
35
cCvavra], 07rct>9 av he
fxrj
airoprjTcu r[p-
o<j>TJs
ILei](ri6eL8r)<;, ea>? dv Kare\6\r\-
1 is Ar\\]ov, tov Ta/jilav tov Btj/jLov [t-
6v cUl T\afjb[i\evovTa BtBovai ITeio-[i-
0C8ei] Bpa^firjv t^<? rj/xepas etc tw[v
40 KaTd y\rr\$C\o-/jLCLTa dvaXcaKo/xevcov [t-
tp 8-rjp.w]' eV 8e Tot9 vo{io0eTcu[s\ t[o-
$s
irpo'8p]oL9 ot ai> irpoeSpevcocrLV
Kal tov e] 7r[ 10-] TCLTrjv TrpocrvofioOeTrj-
o-ai t6 apYJfOiOi'
t[o]uto fiept^etv t-
45
ovs diro8]e/cTa? tco Tafxia tov Btj/jl-
ov Kara, to]^ eviavTov e/caaTov,
[0]
Se t-
ap.as dirJoSoTto IIe[o-i]#etSe tf<ZTa
tijv irpvT]a[v]taz/ i/cdo-Tr/v eldv Be {p.-
t] 6iri\J/T|<}>]i(Tft)crti/ 0/ [irpJoeSpot /cat [o
50
emo-TaT]?;? TCOZ^ VO/AO0eTWV, 6<j)tX[i-
tw ^Ka<rr]o9 avTGOV
X
Bpa^fid<; lepds
tt| *A0T]v]a.
f
O Btj/jLOS 'O BrjfjLOS.
Koe. infers that the inscription was engraved shortly after the middle of
the fourth century b.c.
;
note the second form of tt and the orthography
[5w]peiuv 1. 3, elavrbv 1. 14, eidj/ 1. 31, 48, which, according to Meisterhans Gr.
45, was especially common during the years 350300; eldv occurs as early
as 387 b.c. (CIA n add, nov. lib, 11). Cf. dei$ = dey CIG 2119 (N. coast
of
Euxine); the orthography ei for e with vowel following in the second half of the
fourth century b.c. was common in other places besides Attica. The inscription
may very well belong to the date 344 or 343 b.c, when the suit took place before
the Delphian Amphictyons between the Athenians and Delians for the manage-
ment of the temple in Delos (H. Sauppe, Or. Att. n p. 285 sqq.). Pisithides,
110 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[39
the person here honoured, appears to have belonged to the party which
favoured Athenian interests, like Pythodorus D 88 (Delos), and to have been
banished when the Delians attempted to deprive the Athenians of the manage-
ment of the temple; as they had done in 376 b.c.
;
cf. CIA u 814, a A 30, a B 31.
20. dveXetv. For the infinitive see 217.
21. ypd\paadai 5 kt\. Cf. 24 15. There are numerous local variations
of the formula, depending upon the divisions of the <pv\rj in the several Greek
states
;
e.g. Samos D 162, 31 : e-mKXripGocraL avrovs eiri (pvXrjv /cat
x
t ^LaaT^v Kai
eKaToaTvv Kai yevo?. See further Szanto Burgerr. 54 sqq.
27. On the ypap.p.arevs Kara -rrpvravdav see Rem. v, p. 89.
29. axpoTroXri. See 23 35. 30. rap-ias rod drj/xov. See 33 56.
35. diroprjTaL. There appears to be no example of the present middle in the
sense of the active diropio) in the classical authors, rpocpijs is D's restoration.
43. Trpoavo/uLoderijaaL. D explains as follows: the kind of expenditure which
might be made e'/c rue Kara to. <py)<pi<jp.aTa dvaXiaKOfxevuiu to; 5r)p.u) (33 57) was
strictly denned by law. As the maintenance decreed to Pisithides did not fall
under this head, a special law had to be passed, and this duty belonged to the
nomothetae (Hartel, St. p. 135 gives a different explanation). There is a
mention of irpoedpot. of nomothetae in a law inserted in Dem. c. Timocr. 710.
For the phrase iv rots vop-oderais 1. 41, cf. the same law: rdv hk vdfxwv tCiv
Keifxevwv p.7) t^etvai Xvcrai fArjdtva, eav pa\ kv vop-oderats. Cf. D.A. s.v. Nomothetae.
44. nepifaiv
(p.epL<rai) is used of payment made by one financial officer to
another, douvai (dirodovvai) is more general in sense. The formula which
appears in 1. 39 above is varied in 37 42 by the substitution of p-epifopLeviov for
dp ctAicr kopLevuv.
40. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 115
;
D 138. Cf. A. Schaefer Dem. u. seine Zeit n
2
424 sqq.; F. Keuss Rh. Mus.
xxxvi
p.
161 sqq.; Egger, Tr. publ. p. 90.
Alphabet, type 1. ZroixySbu.
.... [en'ei'ST] . . .
^
iroXtT-
eia 7] Bou[ti]o~a [tw irciTpl tca-
l too iraTTTray Kail at aXXai
8-
copetal V7rdp'x[o]vo-[i ko.1 a-
5
vTCti /cal Tot? 6K<yovo[i]<; [kci-
i elac Kv(p)iac e7ri/ie[x]e[i<r6ai
Be *Apvj3ftov oVa)? a/JL /jlt]B[Iv d-
StKrjrac rrjv /3ov\r)v rrjv de~
i fiovXevovaav teal rov? o~r-
io pa,T7)<yov$ tovs del arparr]-
yovvras /cal idv Tt? aXXo-
9 7T0V
'
A07jv
a
lcov irapaTwyd-
ver eivai Be avrco irpoaoBo-
v teal irpos ftovXrjv teal irpo<;
15 BrjfjLOv b'rav BerjTai, teal rov-
9 irpvTavei^ ol dv irpvrave-
VCOOriV 7TLfjLe\lG0at 07Tft)9
dv wpocroBov Tvyydvei' dva-
ypdyjraL Be roBe to ^njcpiafia
20 roy ypafjufxaTea T779 ^ovXtj-
9 ev aTrjXr} XtdLvr) ical Ka-
TaOelvai ev d/cpoiroXec, e/9
Be T7)v dvaypacf>rjv tt}<; o~ttjX-
779 Botq) 6 Ta/Aias tov Btjixov
2
5 AAA
Bpaxfjidse/c tcov fcaTa-tyr)-
<j)Lo-/jLaTa /juepc^o/jLevcov rc3
40]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE.
Ill
Sr/fMi)'
/caXeaai &e 'Apvfifiav
eirl helTTVOv et? to irpvrav-
elov e? avptov /caXeaai oe
30
fCCll TOVS /JL6T 'ApvftftoV
TjKOV-
to-9 eirl %evia eh to irpvTa-
velov e'9 avptov %prip>aTi-
crai 8e teal Trepl TOiv aXXcov [w-
v 'Apt'/3/3a9 Xeyet. tcl fiev
aAA-
35
a Kaddirep ttj {3ov\t}' e[dv 8]e
T]i9 *Apvft$a\y\
/3["u]ft> [#ava-
t]o) airofcrelvrj [r}~\ t&v 7r[cu8-
(ov Ttva Toov
'Apvfiftov,
eZ[vai
The following genealogical table will simplify the explanation of the
inscription, a decree according protection to Arybbas, king of the Molossi,
expelled by Philip of Macedon.
Tharypas
(irdTnros 1. 3; a boy [Qdpv\p] in 429/8 b.c, educated at Athens, Plut. Pyrrh. 1,
Justin xvii 3 ; cf. Reuss op. c. 161)
I
Alcetas
(cf. 32 B 13, 14)
t9 avTas tlfjLCo[p]ia<;
cu[irp
40 KJal
virep twv aWcov ela[\v
'
A6rjvai(t)V eVt/AeAeto-feai
8-
e teal tovs crTpaTT]<yovl<$ 6l a-
V CTTpaT7)*l\u>\o-l 0770)9 'Aflfvppa-
9 teal ol 7rat8e9 avTov [kojjlC-
45
awvTao tt\v
apXV
v Tr
)
v
[
iraT
P"
coav.
L
(in corona) (in corona)
'OXv/jLTTLa il[v0]ta -
-
Te\(p. T[e]\(p. -
-
Neoptolemus
(died before 357 b.c.)
Arybbas
(succeeded his brother)
Troas Olympias Alexander Alcetas Aeacidas
m. Arybbas ra. Philip (made puppet-king by Philip
on the expulsion of Arybbas. Pyrrhus
Justin viii 6, Dem. 01. 1, 13 and Schol.)
The expulsion of Arybbas took place in or about 342/1 b.c, when Diodorus
xvi 72, 1 says that he died (while Justin vn 6 more correctly says
'
in exilio
consenuit
').
Cf. Schaefer Dem. n
2
425, Reuss op. c. 166. It was on his expul-
sion that Arybbas and his two sons took refuge at Athens.
1
34. Part of a TrpofiovXev/xa of which the beginning is lost.
3. dupeial. See 37 20. 13. irpbaobov. See D.A. s.v.
fiovXr).
15. For this duty of the wpvrdveis see 7 12.
24. On the cost of engraving see 32 67. 26. fiepi^o^vcov. See 39 44.
34 sqq. Decree of the S^uos, with a supplement, approving the irpopovXevfxa.
35. Cf. the words of a similar decree in favour of Charidemus of Oreos,
Arg. to Dem. c. Aristocr. : iai> tls diroKTeiur] Xapi57]/j.ov, dywyifj-os tarco e aird<n]s
rrjs ' A6r)vaLu)u crvfi/xaxiSos' idi> 5e tis tov dydfieuov dcpeXrirai rj tt6\ls t) idiwTTjS,
^Kcrirovdos ^tw, and the comment of the orator, 650. Cf. also 11 13 sqq.
41. itnixeXe'tadai 8e ktX. That he was not restored immediately seems
clear. D thinks it most probable that he died in exile; or at any rate that (as
Reuss op. c. 172 conjectured, reading
'kptififiav
for
'
Apv-rrrcuQi' in Diod. xvm 11, 1)
his restoration did not take place till after the death of Alexander the Great.
112 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[40
47. The exiled king takes the opportunity of recording his victories in the
games. With reXicp supply d'p/xan, i.e. a chariot with t-rnrois reX^ois, not ttwXols.
The third crown may have celebrated a Nemean victory.
41. Five fragments of Hymettian marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n
162 and add. Cf. Burnouf, Rev. arch, xxvm
(1874) p. 316.
Alphabet, type 1. : : occurs once (c 15). 2t<hxt?56j>.
Frgm. a etb. i . . X.779, tov Be, 2 [irouirca
?]
/jbrj&e fcarevety .
.,
3
[to]0 Srjfioo-lov oVcd? dv
877^09 .
., 4
. . eveyKacrojv Kal Xafiov-
GO)V /JL7J .
., 5
[lav 8c . . . ira]pd TOvSe TOV VOflOV, 0(j)l\T(O
[.
. 8paxp.ds,
6 . .
7JV6L7J
01 Bij/jLoatoc ol iv
tjj d/cp[oir6\e]i S[ia . .,
7
[irapd] rovhe tov vo/jLOV, /jLaaTcyovada) /c<x[(tto]? avTo3v, 8 . . tov
dvcLTiOevai tcl dva6r)fjLaTa %/9f[o"d] rj dpy[y]pa iro .
.,
9
[tovs
8^uo]crtou9 \xlapu fiev
Scopedv cuv XafAJ3dv[r\(?) irajyoa tov Srj/jLov
dv . ., 10 [dva]TL0evciL ^pvcrd 77 dpyvpd, Kal idv [tivj]? dXXoi
Xdficocri [irapd tov Stjuov ? n seq. [dpyv\p0VV TOV & VOflOV TOV$
Kal t[6v ire]pl T179 e^eracrea)? t[<3v . . . dvaYpd\|/ai . . . 4v o-TijXci Xi0v]e
Kal aTTjaai iv aKpoiroXr], e[ls] Se ttjv dvaypacfirjv
yu-e^>t[o-at . .
.,
14 [.
. d]T?79* ^<Kipo(f)op[itiivos <-k]t*7 laTafievov vo/jlo . ., 15
[Av-
K0vp]'V09 AvXO(f)p[ovo5 Bov]t<xSt79 etTTefv]* 07TO)9 a . ., 16 [du]^>op^9
ol a[p7vpoi Ka]t Ta Ka\y\d Kal TX[\a], 17 elal 81a . . vel e/9 tSca,
mox
[.
. a]T09 fjL7)$e
kcl6 . ., 18 6e(opi[a. . . . K]e\ei)oucr[i].
Frgm. c et e.
5
iTreiSrj
'
k tov, 6 [rd ircpioJz^Ta. tovtcov tojv
^p7][y.6.T(av\
7
[irpJoSeSa^etcryLte^a e%a ... 8 IlavaO-qvajta Ta
/xeydXa yae^eo"#[ai],
9
. . Xclktikov et'9 Ta 7rpoSeS[avao-uva],
IO [koctuo]^ TOV KaV7](j)0pLK0V. 07TO)9 [v], II . . at TTeVTTjKOVTa
alyih . 9 tea . .,
12 [-rrjezrre tov ivcavTov eKdaTo\y\
13 [.
. <a]v
TOV Ai09 TOU ^MTTIpOS TTO . ., 14 . . <Zt T0U9 a\)TOV$ fjLTa TQOV
eVi[o-TaTc3v], 15 . . 1 tQ> Au to) OXv/ulttlu):: Ko<ryu, . ., 16 [irapja
tov Ta/jLiov tov Stj/ulov 6K twv l . ., if [.
. o]v ivcavTov iv TT)
TeTpaeTiq e/c . .,
i8 . . yu,ou9 k
t?J9
dirap^rj^ tyj<=; i/c twv t . .,
19
[irorijo-aadac Be Kal tj} ' Aya0r} Tv^y, 20 [p,Ta twv lin](7TaTft)z/
toO lepov T7y9 Ayadrjs Tu[xt]s], 21 ... ot9 /cal to5 AfKpcapaa)
Kal To>[i 'A]cr/cX?;7rt(Jt)[t K]e/c .... 22 [kJoct/ao^ exacrTOV otov av
f]
t . . .
23
[tovs rap-ias t]o[v]9 tcSz^ ^6&)^ to apyvpiov [t]o e/c toO
hepixariKov [ir] .... 24 tcoi^ [ijeyowz/ t^9 'A/0Te/^t8o[s t]^9 B/Qai;-
pwvla<z Kal Tco\y\ .... 25 [tov 8]eoV 6 Xwov Kal afieivov [t]o;
42]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 113
Stj/jlco tcov 'AOrjvcLLcov .... 26 ... ? teal koWlovs vewvrt wairep
vvv {e)yei
%
iTTepecrda\y\ .... 27 t[ci] puicpd [ijarafieva koX 6aa
fir)
iv
rfj
irapahoaei ear\\\ 28 . . . 9
[t]oi><? iepovs
rfj
AijfjLrjrpL zeal
rfj
Koprj fjuei^o 29 [ir]ept twv ev toi? aX\oo<;
iepofc rwv Kara //-[ucpov irapa8i8op.va>v ?]
. . . 30 o. roc . . . ov . . .
. . . [raj Kara ravra rbv .... 31 ... e tow? Kai k . . . 32 . . .
aioav . . .
Frgm. d.
3
. . %#et9 dnro,
5
. . ayec teal rr) . ., 6
[.
. o]i/
fcocr/iiov crre(f)a[v .
., 7
. . t virapyovToav r . ., 8 . . z/ e^hopbr)-
/coi^T[a],
9
ypdyjrai rov, ir . . a]t Se tw.
We have here fragments of a decree or decrees proposed hy the well-known
Athenian orator and legislator of the fourth century B.C., Lycurgus, as ra/uas
TTjs Kotvrjs -jrpoaodov, with a view to the collection, repair, or restoration to the
Acropolis, of vessels connected with the sacred ritual. Cf. the decree of
Stratocles Plut. X orr. p. 852, and the fragments of the speech of Lycurgus him-
self wept 5loik7i<tCi)s passim. Our inscription cannot be older than 338/7 B.C.,
when Lycurgus became Ta/mias rrjs kolvtjs trpoabbov. The most probable date is
the last month (Scirophorion ; cf. a, b 1. 14) in the last year of the pentaeteris
during which Lycurgus was in office, i. e. 335/4 ; for CIA 11 741 containing accounts
of the proceeds of the dep/xarLKdv and other sacred properties for the pentaeteris
334/3330/9 b.c. appears to be the immediate outcome of these decrees. And
the expression to dpyvptov [t]6 e/c rod bepfxariKov (frg. c, e 1. 23)
is perhaps part of
an injunction that the depfiariKdv, as accounted for in CIA 11 741, was to supply
the funds for carrying out the provisions of the decrees. The proceedings
here described probably took place before the voixodcTai, for whose functions
see D.A. s.v.
Frg. a and b. 2. Kareveiylic ?]. See 34 9.
6, 7. dr)/j.6(noi. Public slaves (on whose functions see Boeckh -St.
3
1 263) are
to be flogged if they break the law. Cf. 64 58.
13. &KpoTr6\r}. See 23 35
;
39 29 and for iipl[aai] 39 44.
Frg. c, e. 7. irpo$e8avei<xiJ,va. Lycurgus, as we learn from the decree of
Stratocles above quoted, on several occasions borrowed from private individuals
for state purposes, without security and probably without interest.
17. TeTpacTiq,: apparently the only inscriptional example of the word for
TrevT<xTr)pis.
24. -7-77S Bpavpwvias. On the treasures of the temple of Brauronian Artemis,
see Michaelis, Parth. 307 sqq. and CIA 11 754.
25. el \Qov /cat dfieivov. See 36 24. The reference is probably to some
consultation of the Delphic oracle concerning the matter.
42. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA 11 163;
D 634. Cf. Michaelis Parth. 332 ; L. Ziehen, Rh. M. li 211 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1; e=e
x
;
v = v
1 ,
v
2
,
j/
3
; o = o
1
, o
2
; i/ = u
2
. Numeral signs have
on each side the sign
(:). Xtolxv^ov.
R. II.
8
114 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[42
07TCDS CIV v]0"[p]ft)<? KCL-
l ]fcar evtavTov ze-
al tcXco-Gt) t iro|X7TT| ir\apeo-Ke[ya.o-y.i\vTj ojs aptara
rfj
A-
0t|vd kolQ' ^Kaa-To]^ tov evtavTov virep tov Brjpbov tov *A-
, 5
8T]vaiu)v Kal Td\]A,a baa Bel BtOLKTjTat irepl ttjv eopTrj-
v ttjv dyo\i.tvr\v r\rj Oe(p KaXcos viro t&v iepoiroiwv els
tov del
xp
vov
5 k\tyrj<f>icrdai tgj Brjpioj' rd puev dWa Kadd-
irep tt) povXfj, djvecv Be tovs lepoiroiovs rd<$ puev Bvo
0v<rias ttjv t tt)]
'
ABrjva
rfj
rr
Tyteia teal ttjv ev toj Ap-
io pcCu) Trd^w Qvo]/jLevr)v KaOdirep irpoTepov, Kal veipuavT-
as tois Trpvrdv]eaiv irevre pueptBas Kal tols evvea dp-
Xovo-tv irevTc] Kal Tapaaus ttjs Oeov plav Kal tois lep-
ottoiois uiav] Kal tols ar[par^Tjyo ? Kal tols ra^tdp^-
ois Kal Trd<riv t](H9 iropir[iva-i]v toIs ' AOrjvaiois Kal ra-
15 is KavT)<J>6p<n] 9 Ka(rd) rd elco[Q6ra\' rd Be aXXa Kpea AOrjvaio-
ts fip^tv'
'Ajiro Be T(jov re[rTap]aKOvra puvoov koI ttjs pu-
ds tv Ik ttjs \i\icr0ojaecos ttjs veas (BoajvijaavTes ol lep-
ottoioI p.Td t]gov ftocovajv irepLyjravTes t>)v iropLiTTjv
rfj
6e-
0v6vtwv ra]vras tus /3ovs dirdcras eirl toj
ftcopLw ttjs
20 *A0T|vds tu \ii]yd\(p, puiav Be eirl toj ttjs Nlktjs, irpoKpl-
vavres K twv] KaXXtaTevovaoov /3oqji>, Kal OvaavTes ttj-
1 *A0Tjvd ttj] UoXidBt Kai tt)
'
AOrjva ttj Nlktj diracroj-
v tc3v
Pov
t]z/ dirb twv TeTTapaKOVTa puvo3v Kal puds eco-
vT|p.V(ov vi\i]6vTcov Ta Kpea tgj Brjpioj too AOrjvaiwv ev
25 KepajieiKciJt KaOdirep ev toZs aWais Kpeavopulais. A[tt-
oSovvcu 8e] t9 puepiBas els tov Brjpov KaaTov KaTa [t-
ovs Trep.Trov]Ta9 oiroaovs av Tcapeyr} Br/puos eKaaTos. [E-
ls 8 Ta \ki\o~0ojpaTa Trjs iropurrjs Kal to pbayeipiKov Ka[\
k6(T|at|o-iv] tov ftojpov
tov pbeydXov Kal TaWa ocra iTpoa\r\-
30
Kt Trpovo]eicr6ai irepl ttjv eopTTjv Kal els iravvvyLBa
8i86vai] :
P
: Bpa^pbds. Tovs Be lepoiroiovs tovs Biol[k-
ovvTas r]d YiavaOrjvata Ta KaT evtavTov iroelv ttjv ira\y-
wxtSa] 009 KaWtaTTjv Trj Sew Kal ttjv iropmTjv 7repb7re[i-
v djxa t|]Xtft) dviovTC, ^TjpiovvTas tov purj irei6ap'%o\yvT-
35
a Tats Ik] twv vopicov %rjpLiai\s]. ^EtXeaOat Be tov BfjpL[ov . . .
d]^[8]pa?
ef
A0Tjvaicov a7r[dvTv
The decree ordains the annual celebration of the Lesser Panathenaea.
From the subject, the appearance of the letters on the: stone, and the general
43]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 115
style of the engraving, Koe. refers the inscription to the administration of
Lycurgus. Cf. 41.
2. nar' iviaurov. These words, as well as to. Wa.vaQ-qva.ia to, kcit' iviavrov
1. 32, make it clear (against Michaelis Parth. 332) that the fxiKpd are meant.
In Lysias 'AwoX. dupod. 2, 4 they are called Havad. ra fiiKpd, but oftener simply
TLavadrjvaia. Both the punpd and the jueydXa took place in Hecatombaeon.
6. ieporroiQv. The lepoTroioi iy ^ovXijs (9 9,
note) are meant, not the
iepoiroLol nar' iviavrov, ace. to Ziehen I.e., who infers from Arist. 'Ad. iroX. 54, 7
that the former had charge of the p.iKpd Ylavadqvaia as well as the fieydXa.
Similarly special iepcnroioL were appointed for the Mysteries CIA n 872, 39, and
for the Dionysia CIA iv 2, 184 b, 3.
9. 'Adrjvqi 'Tyida. See CIA i 335. The restoration in 1. 10 is doubtfully
adopted by D, partly from Kangabe (A. H. 814). Cf. Paus. i 28, 5 : ical
/3w/x6s e<TTLv (sc. iv
'
Ape'uo irayu>) ' Adrjv as 'Apetas, 6v dvidrjKev ('Opiarvs) aTcxpvywv
ttjv SIktjv.
11. vel/xavr[as : so D and others. Qu. veL/xdvTCjv? For the variation between
recta and obliqua cf. Meisterhans Gr. 248 and below 19 dvovruv, 24 vefMovruv.
16. airb 8i tG>v ktX. Cf. Isocr. vii 29 : iv 5e ro?s ayiur&Tots tQv iep&v airb
/juadu)/j.dTU}v edvov, i.e., ace. to Didymus ap. Harpocr. , dvrl rod i< twv Te/xeviKuv
irpoaodwv ; also 78 22 and D 615, 39 (Myconus) : 6 ipya6p.ev[os rb
x
w
p\<-
ov to
iv 2a ....
|
too
'
Ax^Xipov p-Ladco/Aa d7ro5i5[6]ra; [avrov rw] 'Ax[eXi^]w['
|
,
xai]
tovto Karadviado}. From the sum named, 41 minae, for the hecatomb and from
the form of expression (dirb tQv) we learn that the oxen (kine) cost somewhat
less than 41 drachmae per head (Boeckh St.'* n note 127). D however suggests
that possibly at this period in Athens a less number of victims than a hundred
was counted as a hecatomb.
26. tovs TrifxirovTas : restored by F. Blass.
28. els 8e rd piaddipara ktX. : i.e.
'
towards the contracts for the procession
and the cook's fee.'
30. [irpovo]e?adai. So D. All that the stone offers is -weiadat, but a verb
of the form -aelv (as in e.g. Delphian fafiiweiv) in Attic is impossible.
31. The form
P,
for the more common
P,
is the usual one in the
inscriptions connected with the administration of Lycurgus. Koe.
43. A slab of Pentelic marble, said to have been found in the Piraeus.
CIA ii 168; D 551. Cf. Koehler, Herm. v 351 sqq.; Foucart, Ass. rel. 187.
Alphabet, type 1. 1,Toixy<>bv.
O
= ou in AvKovpyos 1. 31, unless
Y
has
been accidentally omitted.
]
e o L
333/2
y
pj7rl NiKOfcpdrovs apypvr- 9 ^rjjovaio<;' eho^ev ry /3-
o? tVl 7-79 AlyeiSos irpcor- ovXer 'A^rt[8]oTo? AttoAAo-
779 irpvraveia's, rcou wpoeS- Scopov ^.VTrcukrjTTLOs et-Tre-
5
pcov 7r6-\jr7](j)i^v e6(j)i\o- v irepl wv Xeyovaiv ol K^t-
82
116 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[43
10 lets irepl tt)s ISpvcreccos
rfj
WcfypoSirrj tov lepov,
iyjrrjcpiaOat ret ftovXei, ro-
vs Trpoehpovs ol av Xa^w[<r-
i irpoeSpevecv els ttjv irp-
15 cottjv K/c\r)(Tiav Trpocraya-
yelv avrovs /cal ^prjfjbari-
crai, yvco/jbrjv Se %vv(3aK\ea-
Oai rrjs fiovXfjs eh tov Sr}-
/jlov, on Bo/cet
rfj
/3ov\ei
20 cLKOvcravra tov Stj/ulov twv
KtTieLcov irepl rrjs ISpva-
etcos tov Lepov ical aWov
"Adrjvalcov tov (BovKofxevo-
v /3ov\evcraa6at otl av av-
^5
T(2> Sotcel apiGTOV elvai.
'Kirl Nifco/cpaTovs ap^ovT-
O? 7rl TTjS UavStOViSoS 8-
K-
evTepas TrpvTaveias, twv
irpoeSpcov eireyjrTJc^L^ev <$>a-
30 voaTpaTos <>ikatBr)<;' eSo-
%ev tc5 hrj/jbw' Avxovpyos A
v/co(j)povo<; JSovTciSrjs eiir-
ev irepi wv ol eviropoL ol
iTLeis eSo^av evvo/xa Ik-
35
eTeveiv aWovvTes tov S-
TJ/jLOV %G)pLOV eVK,T7]GlV i[y
oj ISpvaovTac lepov
\\<f>p-
oSlttjs, SeSo^Oac tg3 hrjp,-
(p,
Sovvat tols efJLiropois
40 twv KiTtecov ev/cTrjcTLv %[w-
piov ev a) ISpvaovTaL to
lepbv rr)<? 'AcfipoSiTT]^, Ka6-
direp teal ol AlyvirTLOL to
ttjs lcr009 Lepov ibpvvT-
45
Tat.
Certain merchants of Citium in Cyprus ask leave to set up a temple to
Aphrodite at Athens and to acquire land for the purpose. The /3ov\ri merely
decreed to introduce the petitioners to the Assembly, that the latter might
decide as they thought best. Thus the decree of the
fiovXr),
1
25, is not a
probouleuma in the ordinary sense. It is followed, 26 sqq. , by an independent
decree of the People (1. 30 '^do^ev tu drj/uicp) granting the permission applied for.
But the decree of the povk-q, as well as that of the drj/nos, was engraved on the
marble, because it was of importance to the petitioners, that the grant made
to them should appear formal and should be shown to have been deliberated
upon previously by the (3ov\r). (D I.e. refers to E. Lenz Das Synedrion d.
Bundesgenossen im zweiten Ath. Bunde, Elbing, 1880, p. 46 sqq., who refutes
Hartel St. 277.)
The omission of the name of the ypafifxarevs both here and in the next
decree, 1. 26 sqq., as well as the absence of any directions for engraving the
document, may be accounted for by supposing that the Citieans themselves
caused the marble to be engraved.
9. ol Ktrtets. Cf. ol AlytiTrrioi below 43. Koe. Herm. I.e. thinks that by
these expressions may be meant close corporations to be compared with the
Italici or cives Romani qui Argeis qui Mitylenis negotiantur of late Latin
inscriptions. The formula irepl <Z>v kt\. is a very common one : see Index and
below 1. 33.
10. 22. idptiaeitas. Cf. below 21 Kineicov ; but 1. 40 KitUuv. See 39.
11. rrj 'Acppodlrr]. Cf. CIA II 1588 :
'
' ApiGTOKKe'a Kinds 'Acppodlrr} Ovpavia
ev^afiivn avedrjKev.
14 sqq. See note on 52 54.
44]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 117
31. AvKovpyos. Cf. 41. Koe. Herm. I.e. quotes in illustration of the
frequent appearance of Lycurgus as proposer of decrees relating to religious
matters Plut. X orr. 843 d : dire iced vepl iepGiv iroWaias.
33. irepl uv kt\. :
'
with regard to the request which the merchants of
Citium were held to have lawfully made, in begging of the People the right to
possess a plot of land etc' On the meaning of i>KT7)at.s (^y/cT^cris), with its
dialectic forms gyKTaais (Hyperdoric) , ^fiiraais (Doric), g-mraaLS, ^iraais (Boeotian),
see D. A. and cf. 32 25 sqq. The present case, in which land is granted to
foreigners for the erection of a sanctuary, is a special one.
44. ttjs "I<ri5os. Before the discovery of this inscription it was commonly
thought that the worship of Isis was not introduced into Greece till after the
foundation of Alexandria.
44. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. On a relief sur-
mounting the slab is written, probably by a later hand, the word
FYTA
~
' I
A
(Le Bas Mon.
Jig.
tab. xxxvu.
2
; Schoene Gr. Reliefs n. 63, cf. p. 34).
CIA ii 172.
Alphabet, type 1;
does not occur. : before or after numeral signs.
The first three lines aroixv^ov.
(tlv iijelvai ypdyjra .... o . e ... .
ov Kal
: |- : Kara rov avhpa et9 Se ....
tw Brj/ubo)
So/cfj.
Ql&e i\j]<p>rov[py]rj<Tav eVt [tou Scivos apxovros.
ISipe^rjtBo^'
Kr/(j6tcro8ft)^o9 MetStou \\[va]yvpdaios
(:
pi)
'Ap^e/3io? 'Apxe/StdSov [Aa]^7r[Y]p[i5]9
(: p
1
)
AlyrjtBos*
[O (H)e07TOyL67ro9 Yluppl^OV r[apyrj]TT0?
(: p)
Nwo/cX?)? Kf[8a]zrrl$r)<;
(:
pi)
TlavhtovlSos'
Al6(j)aVTOS AlO7TL0OV [Mvp]f)LVOV . . .
IldfjicfuXos [X]atp<f)L\ov n[aia]weiy? :
H
15 AeoouriSos'
Aevfctos eo/fXeof? [2,]ovviev<$
:
pi
Tli;^&)[v] Uv6o[K]\eov<; X[ov]vlvs :
P
AKafJiavrLhos'
A77[p]o/c\)?
HetVtSo? 2[<|>tjt]t0?
: j-|
118 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[44
20 X[iira)]^ [opi]/a09
:
H
- - -
0]lvr)t'So<;'
Xfilrcpos ['Axjap^eu?
(: P)
- - -
Me'[v]*/7r7ro? At]/xoKpdrov[<s ' Ax]apvev<;
(: P)
- - -
Ke*:p073-/809*
25 XapiBrj/jbos Ala-^vXov 'A[6fiov]ei;?
(: P)
- -
-
Xa[p>79 ['A ]ov Atfa>i/[>5s] :
AAAAPhhl-l
'17777000)im'So?*
Xatpe3[T]|jLo]? ['EX]6u[<rivi]o[s]
(: p)
- - -
A lavriSos
30 SOfjL[v7]]aro<; ['Pajxvjoucrto?
(: P)
- - -
. . /jLOcr6evr}<; ['Fa\LJvovaiO<; (:
P)
- - -
'AvTioJ^tSos*
The opening lines probably are the remains of a decree sanctioning the
erection and engraving of the marble containing the list or lists below of those
who have served the liturgy called evra^ia. The liturgy of the evavdpia, i.e. the
obligation to provide the expense of the contest for evavdpia in the Pana-
thenaea, is known from other sources
;
see CIA 11 965, 26.
The liturgy in the case of evra^ia was, at the date of the inscription,
apparently performed by a a-wreXeia, two men from each of the ten tribes,
contrary to the usage prevailing in ordinary liturgies (Dem. Lept. 462, 463),
though an exception was made by a decree of the People for a
xPVy^
in 412/1 b.c. after the exhaustion consequent upon the Sicilian Expedition.
(Boeckh, St.
s
1 538 and note c.)
As regards the date of the inscription, Koe. notes that several of the names,
e.g. 'Apxe'^tos 1. 8, Ai6<pavTos 1. 13, Tlvdw 1. 17, appear in the marine inscriptions
of the Demosthenic age as those of trierarchs ; and further that the style
of the letters points to 340 sqq. B.C.
A column of letters on the right appears to be what remains of a second
list of names.
2. The words seem to refer to some payment of a drachma per man.
At the end of 1. 2 we may supply eav or icad' on av.
4. e\rj<p>Tou[py]7)aai>. The spelling Xeir- for the older A777-- did not
begin on inscriptions till about 300 b.c Meisterhans, Gr. 37. Cf. 23 35.
On the superfluous
p
see Meisterhans, Gr. 81, who treats it as a case of
metathesis ; it is more probably a simple error of the engraver (Baunack,
St. 1 37).
6. 'Epe%0?7'i5os. Observe that the ten tribes appear here in their usual
official order of precedence. Cf. Rem. vi, p. 127. The order was of course
subject to alteration in the annual settlement by lot of the order of prytanies.
Thus when two new tribes were added (Rem. vi) the Demetrias, second in the
new order of precedence, appears as seventh in the order of prytanies in
306/5 B.c. (49 1 sq.).
45]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 119
7. In this and the following lines where
F
1
is enclosed in brackets the
stone has
P.
The symbols specify the number of drachmas furnished respec-
tively by the persons named.
45. A stele of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. Koehler Mitth. vm
(1883) 211 sqq. ; CIA iv 2 179 b
;
D 152. Cf. Wilamowitz Comment, gramm.
iv 24
;
Drerup Jahrb. 1896, 242 sq.
Alphabet, type 1. Itolx^ov, with some exceptions, to 1. 65. The mark I :\
generally before and after numeral symbols.
e o
[[].
325/4
'Ett-J, \\vTifc\(e)ov<> dp^ovros, iirl rfjs AlyelBos ireparr-
779 irpvraveias,
fj
Avncpwv Kopolftov KXevcri. iypa-
fx/jbdrevev' ivBe/cdrrj, rerdprrj Kal rpiaKoarfj -7-779 rrpvrav-
5 etas" rwv TrpoeSpcov i7refrr)<biv <>LXvXXo<; EXeuerjf.
Ar)p. oa6evr]<; Arfpofckeows Aaparrpevs eiirev iireih-
rj 'Hpa/cXclSr]? SaXa/xtVto? SmTeXet (piXoripbovpi-
evos 7rpo? to^ Brjfiov rov ' A0r)valcov Kal ttoloov 6 re o-
vvarai dyaOov, [/c]al rrpbrepbv re irrehooKev iv rrj or-
10 iravoairia :
XXX
: /leBifivovs rrvpwv :
P
: Bpd^fiov-
9 TrpooTos tcdv KarairXevaavrcov iviropcov, Kal irdXcv,
ore at iinSoaei^ r/aav, eTreSco/ce
: XXX
: opaj(jj,a$ el-
9 atrcovlav, /cal rd aXXa ScareXel evvovs gov kcli
(f>t-
\0TL/jLOV/jLVOS 7T/0O9 TOV hrj
fJLOV heho^Odi TOO StJ/jLO)-
15 1, erraiveoai 'HpaKXei&rjv HapiKXelBov XaXapLivi-
ov fcal are^avwaai ^pvcnp
arecfidvat evvocas eveK-
a teal (frtXoripLias t?)9 77-/009 rov hrjpbov rov 'AOrjvalcov
eivau S avrbv irpo^evov Kal evepyerrjv rov Stj/jlov
rov ' AOrjvaicov avrov Kal eyyovovs, elvai h avrols
20 Kai
7779
fcal ol/cias ey/crrjaiv Kara rov vopuov, Kal o-
rpareveadat avrovs rds arpareia^ Kal ela(f>epe-
iv Ta9 elacfoopds fierd AOrjvaLwv. dvaypdxjrat Be roB-
e ro yjr7](f)iapLa rov ypa/mpuarea rov Kara rrpvraveiav
Kai rou? aXXovs eiraivovs roi>9 yeyevijfiivovs av-
is, ro3 iv arrfKy XtOivei Kal arijaat iv aKpoiroXei, e-
i9 Be rrjv dvaypa<\>r\v T779 arrfXrjs Bovvai rov rapiia-
v : AAA : Bpa^puds iK rdov et9 rd Kara ^rj^iapuar dvaXia-
Kopuevcov r<Z Brjpiw.
120 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[45
T7]Xefia^o(; SeavyeXov
'
A^apvev<=; elirev e7retBr)
(
Hp-
30
a/cXeLSrjs ZaXa/JiivLos eirehw/cev tov ctltov toj
Stf-
/ji(p TrevreSpa^/jLov irpwros twv /caTairXevcrdvTGJv i-
fjbiropcov 7r AptarocfxtiVTos dpyovTos, e^TjcjjiaOac rc5-
l hr)fx(p iircuveaai Upa/cXecSyv HapacXeihov SaX-
afxivLov /cal arecfyavcocrac avrov ^pucrco aTecfjdva)
35
(fjcXoTt/juias eve/ca rrj<; et? tov Si]/jiov tov
'
'
Adrjvaioj-
v eTrecSr) 8e icaTayQels viro
(
Hpa/cXecDTa>v irXeajv
'
Kdrj-
va^e TrapetpeOr) tcl igticl vtt avTwv, eXecrOat
TTpecrfi-
evTTjv eva avSpa e 'AOrjvalcov airdvTcov, octtis dcfji/cofxevos e-
t9 Jipa/cXeiav 009 Aiovvcriov d^iojcrei diro^ovvau t-
40 a io~TLa Ta H-pcucXeloov /cal to Xotirbv
fxrihev dhace-
Iv t<mv AOrjva^e TrXeovTOJV /cal TavTa 7rocGov Ta tc 8l-
Kaia Troirjcrei /cal ov&evbs aTvyjqcrei tov Srjfiov [to]0 [A-
0Tjvaiwv] tojv hi/caiojv Sovvai Se toj alpeOevTt irpecrjBev-
Ti eZ? ecfjoSoa tov Ta/JLiav tov Stj/jlov
P
h
pampas eic tcw-
45
v KaTa ^7](picriJLaT dvaXiaKo/xevojv toj cjrjfiw. Rlped-
7] 7rpea/3evTj)<; %r)(3ayevr)s 'EXeucru/to?.
T^Xifia^o^ %eayyeXov 'A^ap. elirev eifrrjcfjicrOai, toj
r)fjb<p
ttjv j3ovX?)v irpo/3ovXevo-aaav etjevey/ceiv e-
l<; tt)v 7rpoJTT)v eK/cX^crlav irepl
(
Hpa/cXel$ov, icad 6 T-
50 1 evprjcreTai dv to SvvrjTai dyaObv irapd tov BtJ/jlov
tov ' AOrjvaiojv.
Kr/cfjicroSoTos JLvap^lSov A^apvevs elirev irepl ojv 6
Sfjfios irpoaeTa^ev tjj ftovXr} TrpofiovXevcrai nrep-
l 'Hpa/cXetSov tov ^aXafitvlov, heho^Oat Trj /3ovX-
55
fj>
iireiSr) 'Hpa/cXeiSr]? /caTairXevcras Adrjva^e ctlt-
ov aycov errehoj/cev toj ^/jlm Tpicr^cXtov^ fjuehtfjuv-
ovs irevTe hpa^fjbojv e/cacrTov, tovs irpoeSpovs o\ dv Xd^ojcri-
v TrpoeBpeveov et? tt)v irpcoTTjv eK(/c)Xr]aLav irpoaaya-
yelv
r
Jipa/cXel&7]v Trpbs tov hrjixov /cal xprj/jLaTicrai,,
60 yvoj/jLrjv Se ^vixf3dXXecr6ai tt)?
ftovXris eh tov Stj/xo-
v otl So/cei rrj
fiovXei, eiraiveaai 'Hpa/cXelSrjv Xa-
pucXelSou XaXa/jLLVtov ical aT(f)avo)aat
%p-
vaoo aTecf)dv(p dirb
p
1
Spa^/jLcov elvai h avTw ical ev-
pecrdat irapd tov Stj/iov o ti dv SvvrjTai dya66v, 07T&)? d-
65 v [/cal 01 aX^Xoc c^iXoTLfjLOJVTaL elSoTes, otl TL/j,a /cal o~Te-
cf)avo2
7)
fiovXrj TOf? <^>[t-
XOTtfAOV/JLeVOVS.
45]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 121
<>vXev<; Tiavcraviov Olvatos elirev iireiSr) 'HpafcXelSrjs
ZaXafiiinos KarairXev-
330/29
0.^
'
' KOrjva^e alrov aycov iir 'Aptcrrocfxtivros dpyovro^
iireSco/cev rco Sr/ficp : XXX :
/*-
&i/ulvov<z
P
Spdyfjiovs teal Sea ravra o SrjfjLOS eyjrrjcfrio-aro
avrco rr\v fiovXrjv 7rpo/3ov-
70 Xevcracrav e^evey/celv et? rbv Stj/llov tcaO' 6 ri evprjaerai av
ri Svvrjrao dyaObv irapa
328/7
T0{)
Srffjiov
rod
'
KOrjvaicov, /ecu irdXiv err EivOvtcplrov
apyovros eirehcotcev rco (SrjfjLco) et? aurcoviav :
XXX
: S-
payfjid^
y
SeSo^Oac
rfj ftovXf)
rovs irpoeSpovs ol av Xa^cocn
7TpO$pVlV et? T7)V KVpiCLV
e/c/cXrjaiav irpoaayayelv 'WpatcXeihrjv 7rpo<; rbv Srjfiov real
Xprj/bLaTLcrai, yvcofjur/v 8e %v-
fjb^dXXeaOai rrjs fiovXrjs et? rbv Bfjfiov ore So/cei
rfj fiovXf}
iiraiveaai
r
UpafcXelSrjv
75
XapifcXelSov %aXa/jblvtov zeal arefyavwcrai ypvacv erre^dveo
dirb :
f
71
: Spay/jbcov
eivau
8'
avrcp teal evpeaOav <x<y[a06v ira]pd rov hrjfxov brov
av Sorcel a^to? elvao, oVa)?
av real ol aXXoi eOeXcocrc
[.
. . . ]&)[
r-qv fiovjkrjv
Kal rbv
S??[h0
o
[
v
]
opoovres
rovs (f)iXorifxovfie[vovs
------------
T6v] hrjpuov
_____________________
7Trtcr[a]9
80 a
[-----------------].
corona corona corona corona
o 8f}/jLO<;
Sfffjbos rj /3ovXt]
y
j3ovX?].
The stone contains five decrees conferring honours upon the corn-factor
Heraclides of Salamis in Cyprus. The decrees are instructive in many respects
and illustrate the order of engraving upon the stone usual in such cases.
The latest of the decrees (1
28),
conferring the proxenia, is the first engraved,
as furnishing the occasion for the rest. The chronological order is the
following : (i) 4751, a decree of the ecclesia directing the boule to prepare
a probouleuma in honour of Heraclides
;
(ii) 52
66,
proposal of the boule to
confer a crown; (iii) 29

-46, decree in honour of Heraclides


(329/8 B.C., for
services rendered in 330/29 b.c.) and instructions to ambassadors to request
Dionysius of Heraclea (Pontus) to supply him with sails in place of some
stolen by the Heracleotae
;
(iv) 6780, fresh probouleuma in honour of
Heraclides for services rendered in 328
7 b.c
;
(v) 1 28, proxenia- and
122 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[45
euergesia-decree for the services rendered in both of the years mentioned,
together with a resolution that all the distinctions should be recorded on stone
(325/4 b.c).
3. 'EXeixn(pios). For the abbreviation see 35 6.
4. evdeK&Trj. Koe. thinks that the words Ilooeibewvos devrepov may have
fallen out. He shows that the equation, 11th of the month = 34th of the
5th prytany, could not occur in an ordinary year (cf. the tables, Schmidt,
Chr. 765 sqq.). The day in question will then be the 188th of the civil year,
if we assume that of the first four prytanies two were of 38, two of 39 days
each. This is a clear instance (to which may be added CIA n 121, iv 2, 231 b) in
which there is a violation of the rule laid down by Arist. 'A6. iro\. 43, 2 (for
410/9 b.c.) that the four surplus days w
T
ere assigned by lot to the first four
prytanies (making the ordinary year 4 x 36 + 6 x 35). Cf. Sandys ad loc.
10. o-rravoaiTia. This famine is mentioned Dem. c. Phorm. 918, c. Phaenipp.
1045, 1048 (Schaefer, Dem. in
2
29n sqq.). We learn from the inscription that
the scarcity did not begin till after 330 b.c, prevailed in 328 b.c, but was over
by the beginning of 324 b.c CIA n 808, a 40 sqq. , a marine document, shows
that in 326 b.c there was scarcit}' of corn at Athens : [Terprjpets r]do-5e eSop.ev
[Kara \p-q<pia~\ixa 8r]p,ov, 6 Uo[\vevKros K]v8avTlSris elire, eVt tt\v [Trapa.Trop.7rr)]v
t[oO] <tLtov. Koe.
10. :
P
: 8pdxp-ovs : i.e., irevrebpaxp-ovs. In 1. 31 the word is written in full
and in 1. 69 there is no
(:)
before and after the -w. For the amount cf. Dem.
c. Phorm. 918.
12. at eVtSocrets. Cf. 1. 71. D quotes also CIA n 808, c 1 sqq. ot[5e tQu
TpLrf\papxwv, lov 8[iir\coa(v
17]
j3ov\r) 7/ ewi Xpef/xTjros dpx\ovros (326/5
B.C.) ttjv
TpL7j[pr] 7}v eZJxev eKaaros avrQiv, [apyvpi]ov KareftaXov dir[o8eKTa]is ro?s eVt X/ae/xT^ros
ap]x
ouTs Kai t"reXo7[itrai']ro e <s>v eire 80a av els [to. ct]lti>jv lk&.
20. /cara tov v6p.ov. It appears that in the fourth century b.c and later
the value of the property held under this privilege of gyKTyais was limited by
law: cf. CIA 11 380, 27 sq. VTapxeiv
5'
aiVcp /cat ^yK[T7]<nv ot/aas pt.ev euros to\6.v]tov,
777s [8]e 8veiv Ta\dvT[oLu
;
iv 2, 407 e, 27 sq. eyKTT)[(riv ot/aas Tip.rjp:a]\Tos XXX,
777s
8e
TT,
and iv 2, 451 b, 3. For /cat o-TpaTetieadai kt\. cf. CIA 11 176, 29 ; 1 3.
24. iwalvovs: i.e. the decrees in 4751, 5266, 2946, 67end. The
word Ziraivoi is perhaps chosen to include xf/rjcpla/xaTa and irpo^ovKevixara. Koe.
29. TrjXepLaxos : ridiculed by the comic poet Timocles in the plays Lethe,
Dionysus, Icarii, ap. Athen. ix 407 d sqq.
37. Trapeipe'dr]. Cf. irapeiTr)<raTo 53 26. The et of the augment from a
present at- is frequently found after 378 b.c as a consequence of the transition
of 7) to et ; cf. 31 3. After 100 b.c this orthography ceases. Meisterhans, Gr.
171.
39. Alovvcrioi>. See Diet. Biogr. A coin of his is figured in Head, H. N.
442.
44. et's e065ta. Cf. 36 63.
67. $v\eus. He is the subject of an honorary decree in 336/5 b.c (CIA iv
2,
128 b).
72. Kvpiav. The usual expression is ets ttjv TrpwTrjv eKKkrjo-Lav. But we have
Aristotle's authority ('A0. iro\. 43, 4) for the statement that at the most
important {KvpLa) of the four assemblies of each prytany the question of corn-
supply was one of those especially discussed. D. Cf. Grilb. C. A. 285 sqq.
46]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 123
46. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 203.
Alphabet, type 1. Ztoix??56j>. There appear to have been 31 letters in each
line. There is no
\f/
in the fragment remaining.
icre . vye . . rat
elayyetrai cr
7r[o]t?7cre[o-9]a[i] r
Ka6[6\n dv.cr.8rj... Tvyrj
5
(ryct
] 6^17 [t] ? 8e8oy6ai
[.
to> 8-rjfJLa)
/nev Eco/cX^ija tu
v b6ev <f)7]crlv ttj/jl [it
.... StJ/jlo), iirei8dv 8e e[l]?
$a.v\epav Karaarrjar] rr)[v ctva-
10 t rrii]v KapiruxTiv ^w/cXel cr
ts irevrje KdL eiKOGl hrr), Kap7r[ov<rQai 8e to
piv 'tjrepov 6T09 ttj/jl 7roXi[i' to 8e rep-
ov] 2,(jL>K\ea vaXXd eco<; [d]y
. . c]t9 ra 7T6[vt]6 teal et/co[<ri 'iTt\
15 avT]c5 tj 7roX[i]9 KOfjbi^ea6a[i
.... Tot? avTMv TdXecn . e
.... tt\v auXXoyrjv S<w/c[\]ei
ira] VTayoQev oiroOev d[y
cl]vvt(i)
(?)
8e Xa)/cXr}<; rr)v avXX\oyr\v ttjs p7~
20 ao-J/a? iirl tov dpyovTO*; ro[y
6 av]ro? 8e Tpoiros earco t[t]]9 cr^Moyfjs Kal
t]^9 7rpd(T6CO<i Kal ttjs t[i]/x^[s Kal ttjs io
irp]afea)9 T&y ^pr)/jidT(i)[v iv aS dv r\ Kapira>o
is]
rfi
iroXeu yiyv[r\\Tai e[ru
25 . . X(*)/cXr)<; T7)v ipy[a]criav
. . . e^earco [/jL]r/8ev[\ pj^re e[iireCv ptjt 4m-
tyt\\tyicraL ft)9 8el
d(f>[e]\ea 6[ai SwKXe'a ttjv t-
pyjaaiav i] 8ta/c(oXvcrai ip[ydleo-Qai &os
dv] KapirwariTat rb[v \J/T)<pio-pvov
(?)
xpovo-
30 v 4a]^ 8e TIS elm)\l tj eiriy\ir)<\>i<rr\ <os Sti d-
$ik\6cr6aL,
6(f>
iX[tiv avTov
x^as
8p-X~
pds]
rfj
A6r)va' . a . . 8 [t-
tj iro]X6t TT)S /3Xd/37][s] T . . . (? V7r68ltCOV elvdl)
. > . . t ev rat? i/jLiro [piKais Sikcus
124 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[46
35
... . KkeiTTwv rj vtto
KaKoi-Je^ixw*/ a\tcr[K
. . . k]pyao/jLVO
. . . real 2ft>/cA.e
. . . [%]a)/c\L ira
40
iro\
Koehler affirms that the style of the letters, which are small and carefully
engraved, is similar to that of inscriptions belonging to the administration of
Lycurgus
; and he would assign the inscription to about 330 b.c. It contains a
decree settling the terms of a lease of some public land by the state to one
Socles. Koehler compares an Eretrian inscription (Eustratiades 'E0.
apx-
n> s.
1869 no. 404) on a similar subject.
8, 9. It is arranged that Socles, after having fulfilled certain conditions
(eTretS&j' kt\.), shall in alternate years have the usufruct of the land for 25 years,
the produce reverting to the state every other year during the same period.
1525. Stipulations are laid down as to the times and manner of gathering
in the produce (0-1AAO77? tt)s ipyaaias) and selling it.
2632. A fine is threatened against any one who proposes or puts to the
vote any motion for depriving Socles of his privileges. For the language cf.
8 20.
31. ocpeiXetv olvtov. This exactly fills the space. CIA has 60et\e'ra>.
34. Disputes arising from the lease were to be settled iv reus eixwopLKah
dixcus i.e. in suits between merchants, which had to be finished within a month.
Cf. Dem. Halonn, 79.
47. A slab of Hymettian marble found in the Piraeus. D 500; CIA iv 2,
192 c. Cf. Hartel, Att. Staatsr. 37 s ; A. Wilhelm GGA 1898, 221 sq.
Alphabet, type 1.
A O
frequently appears as
A O.
The text is a combi-
nation of the readings of Kumanudes and Koehler.
'AvaypcKpevs 'Ap%e[i]f<os Nav/cptrov Aa/jL7TT[pev]s.
320/19
'E7n ^eai^fJiov ap^ovros, eVt Tr)s Kpe^Or)-
i'8o$ Sefre[p]a? Trpvraveias, el 7]pa[\i\ev-
779
Kr)(j)i(Ttev<; iypa/jL/jbdreve' Bo^Spo/itw-
5
1/09 ivSe/cdrei, fiia ical rpia/cocrTec ttj-
9 TrpVTaveLas' t&v nrpoehpwv irre^rj^i^e
Ato8oT09 'Itcaptevs' eho^ev r<p SrjfMp'
A-
TjfjLaSrjs Arj^eov UaLavoevs eirrev 07T&)9 cl-
v rj dyopd rj
ifjb
Yleipael K^ajraiTKevaaOel k-
10 al 6fid\Lcr06L c9 KaXXiara /cai ra iv tg5
47]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 125
ayopavofiLG) emcricevaaQel ocrcov irpoa-
Becrai diravra, dyaOfj rv^rj, BeBo^Oat
to3 Br/fxcp, tov^ dyopavo/uLOVs tol>9 e/uu Yle-
ipael i7rc/jL\r]0f}vcu dirdvr(ov rovrcov, r-
15 o Be avd\(o/jLa elvai et? ravra etc rov dpy-
vpiov ov 01 dyopavofJboi Bia^eLpi^ovcr-
iv erreiBr) Be teal 7]
T&v darvvopifov eTTifxe-
\eia irpocrreraKTac rois dyopavopLois,
7rL/jLe\r)6r}vai rovs dyopavofiovs roov
0-
20 Bwv rcov irXareiwv,
fj
rj rroyurr) iropeverat
TO) Alt TCp %0)T7/pt fCCU TO) AiOVVaO), 017-
0)9 dv o/JLaX.tcr6(i)(TLP /cat fcaracr/cevaadwo'-
iv GJ9 j3e\ricrra, rd Be dvaXco/jiara elvai e-
9 ravra eic rod dpyvptov ov 01 dyopavo-
25
jjboo Bta^eup troverlv eiravay/ca^ovrcov
Be /cat tou9 rbv yovv fcaraftefiXrj/coras e-
h
Tas 0801*9 ravras dvau[p]eiv rpoircp o-
to) dv eiriarayvrai. eireiBdv Be erncnceva-
c
o~6el rod dyopavopnov d evBelrat teal r-
30 779 dyopds /cai rcov oBoov [s]c oj[v] r\ rrofxirr] rep
re At[t] to) Xcorrjpc /cat ra> A[\.o]vvo~(p irefji-
irerat, rd Xourd ^prjfjbara /cara[$d]Weiv a-
vrovs 77/009 T0U9 [a9]A,o#[Tas] /card rov vo-
/jlov. o7Tft)9 B" dv teal et9 rov Xolttov y^pbvov
35
0)9 (3e\rLa[T<i tj Ka]Te[o-Kvao-p.v]a rd r ev
rrj dyopa
rfj ifjb Heipael Kal rd ev ral-
9 oBols,
fj,rj
e^elvat
[prfievl [aiJtc] yovv /ca-
rapajAAe^ fir}re dX\[o \ii\S\v pjtc] Korrpco-
va
?x
tv i\ v T
V
ar
ypd ^[t] e[v] Ta.49 oBols
40 [ATiSaixov* edv 84 tis rojvrcov re iroel,
eafj,
pu-
ev S0OA09
y
\a/j,f3avera)
F
1
tt\-
Tj-yds
*
iv] B [eXcju 6ep-
os avrco e .
L
- - - - T69 av . . . ..
45
OV . . .
The decree contained in the text prescribes various duties to be carried'out
by the agoranomi of the Piraeus.
1. For the ai>aypa<pevs see Rem. v. p. 89.
126 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[47
4. Note that the secretary belongs to the Cephisian deme, i.e. to the
Erechtheid or presiding tribe : so in CIA n 191 the secretary belongs to the
Anaphlystian deme, i.e. to the Antiochid or presiding tribe, and this appears to
have been the rule during the short period for which the office of &vaypa<pevs
existed. Afterwards the rule which had been in force from 363/2 b.c. was
reverted to and the secretary whose name appears on decrees of the dij/xos was an
annual officer. Cf. 33 3.
7. Demades is the well-known orator of that name.
9. Ileipaet. This form first appears on inscriptions about 350 b.c. Meister-
hans, Gr. p. 32.
17. tQiv daTwSfxcov. There were ten astynomi, as there were ten agoranomi,
five in the city and five in the Piraeus, who among other duties had the care
of the public streets (Arist. 'Ad. iro\. 50, 2). We see that after the Lamian war,
perhaps in consequence of the paucity of qualified citizens, the office was dis-
continued and its duties handed on to the agoranomi. It seems however that
the office was soon revived (see CIA iv 2, 314 c). The office then continued,
perhaps with diminished numbers, to the second or third century a.d.
;
for in
the imperial period the ephebi, whose constitution was that of the Athenian
republic in miniature, had two annual astynomi (CIA in 1114, 1119, 1147,
1199). D.
21. ti2 Ad tc5 SwT?7pi. On to. AuaojTTjpta, which are mentioned in the ephebic
inscription CIA n 471, 30 and similar inscriptions, Dittenberger, De ephebis Att.
p. 70, remarks that we must understand it to be the sacrifice which was
performed at Athens in the month Scirophorion (cf. Mommsen Feste 528 sqq.).
But as in the ephebic inscriptions the Auawrripia are connected with naval
contests of the ephebi, Koehler thinks that some other festival must be meant
connected with the temple of Zeus Hoottjp in the Piraeus.
r Aiovfoy. Cf. 65 16 and CIA n 468, 11; 469, 13; 470, 12.
29. ivdeiTai : apparently = evdet Cf. CIA n 176, 14: i7rtd<l)ae[ip et]s [top
7r]6\e/xop ei tl 5e[ot]TO
[X X X X 8]paxfJ.ds (330/29 B.C.).
35 sqq. The restorations are mainly Dittenberger's ; cf. Wilhelm I.e.
48. A slab of Pentelic marble, found in the Acropolis. CIA n 235;
D 167. Cf. Th. Homolle Rev. Arch. Ser. 3 x (1887), 47 sqq.; J. Hoskyns-
Abrahall CI. Rev. v (1891), 242; C. T(orr) ibid. 278; Homolle, BCH xv
(1891),
136.
Alphabet, type 1.
f
does not occur, j once 1. 3. SToixySbv-
tv, fcaXecrat
Se Kcd tovs irp]ecr/3ei? ei? to 7rpvra[v-
eiov errl] %evia et? avpuov
\
%vv[a]\ov
Kal B]o8fii(X)/cav avaypd-tyai be roBe r-
5
o] ylr7]<j>icrfjLa top ypa/jLfjLarea rov Kara tt-
pvraveiav iv arijXrj XiOivrj Kal a-
48]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 127
rrjcrai iv atcpoiroXer et? 8e ttjv avcuy-
pa(pr]P t^? arrfkris
Sovvac rov ra/jLia-
v rov Stj/xov
pi
Spaxfias
/c rwv et? ra k-
10 ara ^rrjc^icrixaTa avaXucncofxevayv ru> Srjfjuw.
From the style of the letters Koe. assigns the decree to the period 330

300 B.C. Hicks (ed. 1, 142) attempts to fix the date more precisely. Honours are
granted to two persons who from their names must have been envoys of the
Carthaginians. One of them, Bomilcar (see note below), was executed in 308b.c.
for attempting to make himself king of Carthage (cf. Diod. xx 43 sqq.), and it is
possible that he and others may have been sent by the Carthaginians to Athens
to ask for help against Agathocles, whose expedition to Carthage lasted from
August 310 B.C. to the winter of 307 (see Grote, H. G. Pt. n, ch. 97).
3. Synalus was a Carthaginian commander in charge of Minoa in Sicily in
357 B.C. (Plut. Dion. 25 : ^ru^e 5e irapuv 6 Kapxydovios apx^v ~Oi>aXo$ iv t<
Xuplu), ^evos (x>v /cat <pLXos Alojvos).
4. B]o5fii{\)Kw. So D from the
OAMIAKAN
of Velsen
( DAM^A-
KAN
'Bodp.odKav, Koe.). The Phoenician form of the word is Bodmelkartli
(Noldeke ap. CIA) ; in Greek authors it takes the forms Bo/ai'Xkcis, Boa/x/X/cas,
Boi'/AiXccas. Homolle suggests 'lodfilXicav, referring to D 588, 10 (Delos) :
'Iw/jlLXkov avadep.a.
5 sqq. ypapLfiarevs Kara irpvraveiav : See Rem. V. p. 89. ra/xias tov drj/nov :
33 56; and for the concluding words 33 57. On the cost of engraving see
32 07.
Remark vi. Formula
of
decrees after 307/6 B.C. and re-arrange-
ment
of
the prytanies. A chronological re-arrangement was ne-
cessitated by the addition of two new tribes to the ten of Clisthenes,
which was followed by a redistribution of the denies. The two new
tribes, Antigonis and Denietrias, which in tribal precedence (cf. the
note on 44
6)
stood at the head of the twelve, were added in 307/6 B.C.,
and instead of ten Strategi there were thenceforward twelve : the
Council of 500 was raised to 600 and was divided no longer into ten
but into twelve prytanies, but the duodecimal arrangement does not
appear to have come into force till
306/5 B.C., because in CIA n 238
(307/6
B.C.) the first decade of Posideon is made to fall in the fifth
prytany: with twelve prytanies it would belong to the sixth prytany.
See the careful tables drawn up by M. Schmidt Chron. 771 sqq.
According to Schmidt, 582 sqq., the view that in the duodecimal
arrangement the length of the prytanies always in an ordinary year
exactly coincided with the length of the months, day for day,
is erroneous. Thus in the decree no. 50 the 29th day of the 10th
prytany coincides with the last day of Munychion, which happened
128 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I [R. vi
to be an intercalary day, i.e. the 30th, the natural end of the month
in the year 306/5 being the 29th; thus the
first
day of the 10th
prytany would be in that year the second day of Munychion, the first
day of Munychion being the last day of the preceding prytany. Yet
another useful chronological fact may be learnt by comparing no. 50
with no. 49 of the same year, in which the 27th day of the 7th
prytany falls on the last day of Gamelion. Now between the 30th
of Gamelion and the first of Munychion inclusive are 60 days, which
cover two days (the 28th and 29th of the 7th prytany) and two
prytauies of 29 days each. Therefore the year 306/5 is an ordinary
and not an intercalary year, which would have required, under the
duodecimal arrangement, prytanies of 32 days each. The prytanies
in 306/5 B.C. would be arranged as follows :
Gamelion 30 = 27th day of 7th Prytany
Anthesterion l = 28th
,, ,, ,,
,,
2 = 23th
,, ,, ,,
3= 1st

8th

,,
29 = 27tn
,, ,, ,,
Elaphebolion l = 28th
,, ,, ,,
2 = 29th

3= 1st

9th
30 = 28th
Munychion l = 29th
,, ,, ,,
2= 1st

10th

The Antigonis and Demetrias survived to nearly the end of the
third century B.C. and thus for a time with the Ptolemais, established
about 215 B.C. in honour of* Ptolemy Philopator (see Koehler CIA
iv 385 c and cf. Polyb. v 106,
6),
there were thirteen tribes. Cf. CIA
iv 2,
385 c?, 1,
2: 'E77-1 Aio/cAeous apxovros
(after 215 B.C.), ri rrjs
'l7T7ro^a>vTt|Sos Tptrrjs kolI SeKctT^s 7rpvTavLa<;. In 201 B.C. the
ArraAis was added in honour of Attalus I (cf. Polyb. xvi 25, 9;
Liv.
xxxi 15) and the Antigonis and Demetrias were probably then
abolished and the number twelve restored. In imperial times again
we find a tribe Hadrianis ; see Index s.v.
The following table of names, with alternatives, for each day of
the month, taken from G. F. Unger, Muller's Hdb. iv
1,
728
(Griechische Zeitrechnung), will be useful for purposes of reference.
1. vovix-quia.
2
10. devrepa larajxevov, rpirr), rerdprr) (Attic rerpas),

denary lara^ivov. 11. evdeKarr). 12. dcodeKarrj.


1319. rpirrj irrl deica

evdrr\ eirl dena. 20. eUds, Att. denary Trportpa. 21. denary (pdlvovros, Att.
Senary) varepa. 22. evdrr} (pdivovros, devrepa ^ter' ei'/cctSas. 23. 675677
(pdlvovros,
rplrt] fxer eUadas. 24. e^ddfirj pdlvovros, rerpds \xer eUadas. 25. eKTt)
50]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 129
(pdivovros, Tri/JLTTTT) fxer eUddas. 26. irefxirr-q (pdivovros, Zktt) fier eUddas.
27. rerdprt] (Att. rerpds) (pdivovros,
efiddnrj
/uer' eUddas. 28. rpirr) (pdivovros,
oyddrj per' eUddas. 29. in a "full" month, Sevrtpa (pdivovros, ivdr-q fier eUddas.
29. in a
"
hollow
"
and 30. in a "full " month, rpiaxas, Att. '4vtj /ecu vka.
49. A fragment of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 246.
Alphabet, type 1. Iiroixyb'ov.
306/5
'Ej77-i KoTpoiPov apxovTos eirl tts At]p.Tj-
b.c.
( f
TpJmOo[s ip86(XT]S Trpvravcfas, tj Ilap.-
cpjiA-O? [ccycCTovos 'Pap-vovcrios 4*yp-
aj{i/jLaTv[tv' rap.T]Xiwvos vtj Kal vea-
l], epOO/X[T] Kal IK0CTTTJ TT)S TTpVTClVC-
as*] Kfc\\r\<ria
See Rem. vi. p.
127.
50. A fragment of marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 247.
Alphabet, type 1. 'Lroixn^ov except in 1. 2.
e e o l
306/5
'EttI Kopoifiov apyovTos eirl r-
?7? Olvl8o<; Sefcdrrjs irpvrave-
Kz?, el IT cifupikos eo<yeLTOvo-
5
9 'Va/JLVovertop e^pa/juixarevev
M.ovvwxL(t)vo<z evei Kal vea i-
IA(3o\lfJL(p, 6VCLT6L Kal 6LK0CTT-
L rfjs TTpvTaveias' KK\r]o-i[a,
tcdv irpoehpcov
iTreyfrrjcfu^ev Hv-
io 6c7T7ro<; WvOicovos Mapa[d](ovio-
s] Kal crv/nTrpoeBpof eSo^ev rco-
i hrjfKp' ^TparoKXrjS ILvdv&rj-
fjiov Alo/j,v<; elirev eireiBr) [o-
l] OiKeloi 01 AVKICTKOV [SictTp-
15 IfiovTes rrapa to[i]? [pacriXcvo-
R. II.
130 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[51
iv 'AvTiyovay [ko,1 At]fAi]Tpa>
KCLl 0~VVCL[
r
yo)ViX
>
6\Levoi vir^p
TOV &tJ/jl[ov ktX.
VT
20 . c
See Rem. v. and vi. p. 89 and p. 127. The decree apparently confers honours
upon the family of one Lyciscus who in sojourning at the court of Antigonus and
his son Demetrius (Poliorcetes) had interested themselves on behalf of the
Athenians. For a summary of the history of this period see Holm H. G. iv
chaps 2, 3, where also an estimate is given of the characters of the two kings.
51. A slab of Pentelic marble, surmounted by a pediment, found near the
Ilissus. CIA 11 297 ;
D 188.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but in 1. 21 ir is tt
2
,
and throughout <p is
+
, a form which
appears occasionally in Attic inscriptions as early as 341 B.C. (CIA 11 703,
4)
and as late as 160 b.c. (CIA 11 447, 25). 'Ltolx^ov.
299/8 'Eir]t E[vktt]|jlov]o? dpyovros iirl
tt}]? 'AvTi<yo[vfoo<s Sjevrepas irp-
vr]av6ia<;,
fj
(*)eo$t\o? [Hv]o[<f>-
v]to<?(?) Ke[<|>]aA,?7#e^
iypafifidrelyt-
5
v, M.rayLTVi,oi)vos Be/caret va-
repa, fica ical eiKoarel rrjs ir-
pvraveias, eKKkrjGia' roov irpoe-
Spcov 7r6^7]<j)i^ Aval/jua^cx; Na-
vatarpaTov YlpovrrdXTios icai
10 (TwirpoeSpor eSo^ev tc3 Stj/jlcq-
r t&cXLTTTTL&rjs [<>]l\o/jL7]\ov Tiaia-
vievs elirev iirechr] ol Trpecrfte-
*9 ol diroaraXevre^ 7rpo? tov /3-
acrcXea KdaaavSpov dirotyaivo-
15 vai Tioael^iTTiTOv avvairoBrnjir)-
cravTa fied' eavroov ypijaijuov el-
vat, eavroLS diroSei/cvv/jLevov
TTjv evvoiav rjv eZ^e 7rpo? tov
8-
tj/jlov rov 'AOrjvalcov, SeSoy[6]ai r-
20 o3 Srj/jLG), eiratvecraL Ylocreihnr-
52]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 131
ttov [B]a/c[^]/of KoOgoklStjv fcal o~r-
<pava)crai avrov OaWov
o~T(f)d-
vw, 07r&)9 av &)? TrXelarot
(J)l\ot-
ifjLuwrai xpeiav irape^eaOai i-
25 ir]l ra avv<pepovra ra> Stj/jlo). av~
aypdijrcu Se roSe to yjr^ia/jia r
ov ypafjbfjbarea rbv /card irpyrave-
lav ev arrfkei Xiutvei kcli arr)-
aai ev d/cpoiroXer eh Se rrjv dv-
30 aypacf)7}v rrjs arrfXri^ Sovvac rb-
V <i;TCLGTr)V ICdl TOVS TpiTTvd-
pX<>vs AA
^pa^fid^.
Honours are conferred upon Posidippus, an ambassador sent to Cassander
from Athens. The embassy was despatched during the period following the
battle of Ipsus (303 B.C.), when Demetrius for a while lost his ascendency in
Greece and Cassander regained his influence.
1. For this archon see Dion. Hal. Dinarch. 9, Droysen Hell. 11 2
p. 247,
note 2.
2. 'AvTiyo[vLdos. See Rem. vi, p. 127 sq.
5. Se/cdrei varepa, i.e. Se/cdret (pdivovros, the 21st. See Rem. vi, p. 127 sq.,
where also it is noted that the coincidence of the day of the month with the day
of the prytany at this period, though frequent, is not necessary.
10. avvirpbebpoL, 25 crvvcpepovra. For non-assimilation of the v cf. the note
on 5 21 (where the reference in Meisterhans should be to ed. 3 p.
112 and for
ito\lv should be read 7rdXti').
11. $i\LTnrldr}s. Koehler Herm. v 347 sq. traces the genealogy of this
person.
26. tov ypa/m/JLarea top /card irpvTaveLav. Rem. V, p. 89.
30 sqq. The expense of engraving is to be defrayed from the funds of the
tribe by the i^eraar-qs or
'
accountant ' and the trittyarchs. For the t/httj/s see
Index, s.v. The ^era<rr^s appears to be mentioned only a few times in this
connexion, and at the beginning of the third century. In CIA n 298 he is
assigned with the trittyarchs the same duty as here, and in CIA n 300 and
iv 2, 300 b the same officers have to provide the cost of a statue.
52. A slab of Hymettian marble, the upper part found in the theatre of
Dionysus, the lower (11. 4874) at Eleusis. CIA n 314 and iv
2, p. 85 ; D 197.
See also Zink Eos i p.
24 sqq. ; Dittenberger Herm. n 286 sqq. ; Philios 'E0.
apx- 1890, p. 69 sq. ; Kirchner Herm. xxxi 260 ; Ferguson Corn. St. x 10 sqq.
;
Drerup Jahrb. 1896, 249 sq.
92
132 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[52
Alphabet, type 1; but

is
H,
once 1. 35 ir is tt
3
, d is only three times written
O,
in all other cases
O,
and </> with few exceptions appears as
^
(a variety
found in Attic inscriptions from about 318 b.c. to about 270 B.C.).
A
oc-
casionally and
A
once appear as
A-
284/3?
'E]7 Ev^[o]u apyovros iirl rrjs [' AKajuivTiSo]
9 (Vpn^s
B- c
-
Tr^pvravelas, el Navcrifievr)? NavcrcKvBov XoXap[yev-
s]
eypafjufidrevev' BoL7]8po/jLuoi>o<; oySoet iirl 8e[Ka, I-
v\aTi Kal be/carec rrjs irpvjaveias' eKKXrjala Kvp[i-
5
a* tgov 7rpo&[p]cov eire^-qcpt^ev 'lepo/jLvrj/xcov Tecai/jid'y-
ov K Ko/Xt;? Kal crv/jLTrpoeSpoc eho^ev
rfj ftovXei ze-
al raj Srj/jia)' Nt/crjparos <t>i\eov KecpaXrjOev elirev e-
ireihr) ^ikLirinhr]^ SiarereXeKev ev iravrl Kaipw\y
aTToSeircvv/jLevos rrjv irpbs rov hrjfjiov evvoiav Kal a-
io ttoBt)fir) eras rrpbs (r)bv fiaatXea Avo-'ipuayov irpbrepov
re hcaXey^dels too fiaaiXel eKOfiicrev t&> Stj/jlo) Sco-
peav irvpwv /neSi/juvovs
'
Attikovs p,vpiov<$ rovs Sca-
hoOevTas iracriv AOrjvalois eV ^vKTijfjbovos dpyovT-
09,
SieXe^drj he Kal virep Kepaias Kal larov oirws dv
15 SoOel
rfj
0ea) els ra YiavaOr^vata tc3 ireirX(p a ko-
fAicrOr] eV JLvKTr/fiovos dpyovros, Kal vLKr']cravTos Av-
diybayov rov [BacnXews \jf\\v \xdy7)v rr)v 'I
^6) yevofxev-
7)V Trpos Avrlyov[ov ko]1 Atjjxy) rptov rovs fiev
reXevr-
rjaavras ev tgo /c[iv8vvw] roov iroXiT\ja\v edatyev rols
20 eavrov avaXa)/jLa[<riv, oo-oi 8]e aly/jidXcoToi eyevovro
ifi(f)avL(Ta$ tco /3a[o-i\ei Kal] Xafiwv avrots a<pe[<r]tv r-
oi><; [lev 8ovXo/jbev[ovs a-Tpar^eveadai SLaiKrjcrev oit-
0)9 av Kara^copoaOcoacv [ev] rjyefxovLais, rovs Be irpoa-
tpov/jLevovs dirievac aficpieaas Kal icf)oBia Sovs ira-
25 p
eavrov aTreo-reiXev ov eKaaroi 7jj3[o]vXovro irXelo-
l9 ovraq rj rpiaKOcriovs, Trapetrijo-aro 8e Kal 07r&>9 a-
v acfzedwcTLv Kal ocroi roov iroXtrcov Kare\rj<^>Qr\aav ev
rfj
'
AaLq elpyfievoo virb Arj/jbTjrpiov Kal 'Avr[i]y6vo-
v, Kal to t9 ael jrepiTvvyavovaiv WOrjvaioov ypTjat/jL-
30 09 coz/ ScareXel Kadori av eKaaros avrov irapaKaXe-
(T) Kal KOfitcrafievov rov Stj/jlov rrjv eXevOeplav Scar-
ereXeKe Xeycov Kal Trparrwv ra o-v/xepepovra ret rrjs
TroXeoos acorrjpLa Kal irapaKaXoov rov (3acnXea /3o7]0-
elv Kal ypr/fiaaiv Kal crrreo ottcos av htafxevet Btj/ju-
35
09 eXevOepos oov Kal rov Uecpaca KOfjLLo-rjraL Kal ra
52]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 133
(f>povpta
ttjv Ta^iaT7]v, fcal virep tovtcov Tr\_6^\vT(ov ttoX-
XdicLS fjLe/jLapTvprjfcev avru> o (BaatXevs irpos toln tt-
p]eo-/3evovTa<? KOrjvaiwv irpos eavrov, kcli ^etpoTOV-
T]0l]? aycovodeTT)? eirl 'laatov dpyovTO^ inrrjKovae-
40 v to) ]r}/n(p 0eXovTr}s Ikk tojv thiwv Ta? T irarpio- .
vs Qva-Ca]^ eOvcrev Toh Oeoh virkp tov ZyjfAov Kal rrj-
v ]v eSco/cev iraatv
'
KOrjvatot^ iravras tovs
s, kcu iTrijOerov dywva KaTeaKevacrev rel Ar)/n-
iyrpi Kal ttj Koprj]*, [irp] WTO? viz
6
fxvr]jAd Tr}<; TOV Sr]/uiOV
45
I\v0ptas, Tr|xeXTj]^?; Be Kal tojv aXXojv dycovcov ica-
l Oiktiwv vir^p Tijs iroXew]?, KOt eh TCLVTCL TTaVTCL K TOJ-
v I8iwv dvaXwo-as ttoXXci \p]ijfiaTa ra? evOvvas oehoj-
K,ev Kara to\\j\s v6(xov^ kcl\\ ovti\ev vnrevavTtov Trpb\s
8-
rjfiofcpariav ovSeTrore [iiroC^o-w ovn \6yto ovr
50 6/370)* 07ra)? av ovv (fravepov el [irdcriv on 6 SrjfAos en-C-
ararai ydptTas dirohuhovat t[<hs cvep-ycrats di-
9 cwy dv evepyenjacocnv, dyaOel [nix" SeSoxOcu tc-
l f3ovXet, rovs irpoeSpovs, 01 av \a[xo-iv irpo8pV-
iv eh tov hrjjjbov, orav e^eXOojatv at [4k tov v6p.ov ^ji-
55
epai tt}? atrrjo-ecos, ^prjfxartaat irept [toutwv els r^-
v 7rpcoT7]v efc/cXrjcrLav Kara tov vojjlov, yvoj[^.r\v 8e v^p-
aXXeaOat T779 /3ovXrj<; 6*9 tov Sij/jtov on So/cel t[ci p-
ovXel, eiraivecrat ^tXtirirtBrjV t&tXotcXeovs Ke<aA,[Tj-
0ei> dpeTijs eve/ca Kal evvo'tas, 77? e^cov StareXet 7r[e-
60 pi tov Srj/jtov tov
'
AOrjvatcov, Kal o~Te(f)av6jo~at avT\_6~\v
[x,-
pvo~o3 aTecj)dv(p KaTa tov vojjlov, Kal dvetirelv tov a-
Te<fravov
Atovvatcov twv /JteydXcov Tpaya>8o3v tw dy-
ciovt' aTrjaat 8e avTov Kal etKova ycCXKr\v ev toj 6ed[r-
p<p
Kal elvat avTw aiTrjatv ev wpvTaveiw Kal eV-
65
yovcov del toj irpea^VTaTw Kal 7rpueSpta[v] ev iracrt
t]o6<> aywat, <T>oh r\ ttoXi^ Ttdrjatv' t?}? 8e 7ro[i]^cre&)9 T-
ov o~T(f)avov Kal T779 dvayopevcrecos eiri/jteXijOrjvat
tou? eirl Ttj SiotKijaer dvaypdyjrat Se ToSe to
yjnjcfit-
crfxa to;^
ypafifxaTea tov KaTa irpvTaveiav ev aTTjXrj
70
XtOtvet Kal cTTrjcrat irapd tov veco tov Atovi aov, eh
Se Tt]V
dvaypa<frr)V
tt}? o-TrjXrjq fiepiaat toxjs eirl Trj
8to[i\Kijaet
A A
^>P
a
XI
Ji
^ [*^ K
]
T(*> v t? T^
KaTct ^^](pto-/naT-
a dvaXtaKOfievoov tg3 Sijfjtw.
(in corona)
'O
7j[|AOs]
134 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[52
Honours are decreed to Philippides, a comic poet, for using his interest with
Lysimachus and for other services to Athens. Euthios (not Euthias, as
CIA ii 314 b shows) appears to have succeeded Isaeus as archon (cf. 1. 39), and
from CIA n 567 we learn that Isaeus (285/4 b.c.) succeeded Diotimus. Hence
if the archonship of Diotimus is rightly referred to 286/5 b.c, Euthios was
archon in 284/3 b.c. The actual occasion of the decree seems to have been the
aywvodeaia of Philippides (38 sqq.). His friendship with Lysimachus is
mentioned by Plutarch, Demetr. 12.
1. Evdl[o]v. The
O
is apparently written over
Y
previously engraved
by mistake.
3. Boirjdpofxiwvos. Cf., e.g., 6750177s CIA iv 2, 173, b 2 (322 b.c. ).
Meisterhans,
Gr. 58, observes that this peculiarity may be traced in inscriptions down to
30 b.c
10. irpbs (t)6u:
PPOZZOU-
13. Euctemon : see 511.
14. virkp xepaias kclI 'kxtov. For an account of the Panathenaic procession
see G. and J. 287 sq. On the last day of the festival, the 28th of Hecatombaeon,
the peplus was carried in a ship, stretched to the mast and yard-arm. CIA in
Add. 10a gives the dedication of an aKpoardXiov or aplastre for the Panathenaic
ffKd(pTj. It is possible that the Kepaia and lards here mentioned may have been
destined to replace those which, it would seem, were destroyed by the same
storm which rent the peplus on the occasion of the Magna Panathenaea
(302/1 b.c) described by Plutarch Demetr. 12. Cf. R. Schubert Herm. x 447.
15. t<x llavadrjucua : 298/7 b.c
17. 'I^ : 01. 119. 3 or
4, i.e. the summer of 301 b.c.
19. tG)v ttoXltwv. Droysen Hell, n 2, 209 thinks that these were mercenaries
rather than soldiers sent from Athens itself to aid Antigonus and Demetrius.
23. Ka.Taxupi-<rQ&vt-v
' '
that they may be posted to (in).' The word means
(1)
to be assigned to a certain station,
(2)
to be entered on a register. See
L. and S. and Index s.v. ^yefxouiai were parts of the army each of which had
its Tiytpubv. (Zink.
)
25. i)fi[o\v\ovTo. The augment rj in fiovXoixai, vvap.cu, p.eWio
>
is not found
in Attic inscriptions till after 300 b.c Meisterhans, Gr. 169. On TrapeiTrjaaro
see 45 37.
28. Demetrius, the reigning king, is mentioned first, and afterwards his
late father, Antigonus. The reference cannot be to Antigonus Gonatas, who
would not yet be twenty years old. D.
31. The first letter on the stone is |<.
36. tt]v TaxL<TTr)J>. As D remarks (against Zink), the use of the perfect
BiarereXeKe and the form of the final sentence, 6'ttws av dia/xevei (diajxhri)
Koixia-qrai, show that the garrison had not yet (September 284 b.c) been
expelled from the Peiraeus.
39. ayuitoderris. On the institution of an annual ayojvodtrrjs and the change
of practice by which the
89ip.os
itself became
xopvyos,
in the period shortly
preceding the date of this decree, see Index s. v.
xPVy
s - vTrrjKovaev : 'ministered
to the interests of
'
; cf. CIA n 317, 11.
40. kk. Other instances of this gemination are exx r[o~]v, CIA n 1060, 8
(4th or 3rd century), iKKireirT^KbTwv CIA n 224, 3 (before 300 b.c). See
Meisterhans Gr. 106 who makes the doubling depend
'
auf einem Schwanken in
53]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 135
der Silbentrennung.' D adds iKKreXiaaun (Boeotia) I. G. Sept. I 1794 = Ko. I
210 n, 'AkktIoccti Olympia v p. 343, no. 230, 3. Cf. the article by H. Stuart-
Jones C.R. xv 396 on
'
The division of syllables in Greek.'
41. Siw^eXiau. On this word, restored doubtfully by D, see 98 12.
42. iravras roi/s [ay&vas] : restored by Zink. The accusative perhaps
denotes duration of time
'
during all the contests.'
43. eirWerov ayQiva. We find no other inscriptional example of the word
iirtderos in this connexion. In Isocr. 145c eirlderoL eoprai are 'adventitious,
alien
'
festivals. The restorations in 44 sq. are by D.
54. tirav i^Xduo-iv kt\. This formula, with slight variations, gives way to
the formula els ttjv -rrpwrrju eKK\r}<Tiau found above in 43 14, 45 58. (By ttjv
irp&T-qv is probably meant the next eKKk-qala at which business of the kind
in question could be transacted. A common variant is tt)v eiriovaav.) In
37 56 the day for discussion was more precisely fixed.
66. roh for oh or ous can hardly be anything else than a slip of the engraver.
68. robs iTrl rrj dLOLKrjaei. On the office and duties of 6 eirl rrj 5ioiKr)<rei see
Gilbert C. A. 248 sqq., Busolt in Miiller's Hdb. iv 1, 160 sq. In inscriptions he
first appears in the person of Habron, son of Lycurgus, CIA n 167 (later than
307/6 b.c). This officer had the superintendence of the revenue and expenditure
of the state. With the Poletae he contracted for the public works (e.g. CIA
ii 167), directed the making of wreaths and statues (e.g. CIA n 251, 311), and
provided the money for publishing the decrees of the people (e.g. CIA n 300, 311).
From 286/5 several e7rt rrj bioLK-qaet are mentioned, as here. Before the Chre-
monidean War, however (267264 b.c), they were again replaced by one
(CIA ii 331). At the end of the third century we again meet with several iirl
rrj dtoiKrjcrei, who are once more reduced to one in the second century.
70. veib: see 37 36.
53. A slab of Pentelic marble in 14 fragments. CIA n 316; D 520. Cf.
W. S. Ferguson Corn. Stud, x 21. Cf. Girard UEduc. ath. p. 289.
Alphabet, type 1. The decree is aroixn^ov ; the list following not so.
There are alternative forms of
O
and
O,
angular, but not always exactly
square
;
in forming them the engraver appears to have made four or five blows
with the chisel, which generally resulted in straight lines. These forms there-
fore must not be confounded with later forms of
O
and
O
which were
designedly square.
*Eir]l Nlklov apyovios ['Orpwejo)? eVt tj}?
'
' AKafAavTihos rplr-
t]s] Trpvraveias,
779 Icto[kp(tt]s] 'lao/cpdrov K\coireKrj6ev iypa-
p\k]aTVV J$or)8po{jLLa)[vos '4k]ti p,T elfcciSas, eKreu real el/c-
oo-Jret tt}? 7rpvTavia[<$' IkkXtiJct (a* rwv irpoehpcov eVe^^t^e-
5
v AJeayKpdrr)^ Aea)(TTpd[rov .... t]o9 teal avfiirpoeSpor e8o-
cv] rel (BovXel teal ra> [8-q|xa> .... <r]Tparos Mvvvccrteov Hep-
yajafjOev elirev eireth\i\ ol ^poi ol k\^r)l3ev(TavT^ eirl M.ev-
tKJ/cXeovs apyovros 7ro[\i\iov Karfj^o^TO? [ttjv tto\l\v Bl6/jLl-
136 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[53
vav] irdvres evra/cr^ovvTts Kal
(?)
tre]c06fievoi rots re v6jJLo\y$
10 Ka]t T(p Koa/Jb7]Te\l Kal 8iTc'Xe<ra]^ tov eviavTOV Ta? re [<j>v\-
aK]ri?(?) \CTov[p]yovvT<; k[o\ airavrja rd irapavyeXXofxeva vtto
tov o-^rparrjiyov els ttjv r(o)v M[ovo-]etoL> (f)v\a/cr)V KaOdirep ird-
x8t]o-av v]7ro toO Sijfjuov 07ra)? [civ o]ui/ 7Ti,Br) Kal ol aXXoc ol B-
iafiiv]a[v]Te9 Te\_r\iixr]VTat /c[aTa r\rjv d^iav Ti/JL7]6ooaiv Kal ov-
15T01], dyaOy TV^rj SeBo^Oac [ttj] (3ovXr}, tovs irpoe&povs
oi av] 7rpoeb\pz\iKDGi els ttjv \kTrio\vaav iKKXrjaiav irpoaaya-
-yelv] tov Ko[cr]/jL7]T7}v fxerd rd /e[pd k]<zI ^prj/jLarto-aL irepl tovt-
wv, -yvwfjniv] Be ^v/jb^aXXeaOai [tt^s p]ouA,)79 et? toi^ Brj/xov, ore B-
oki ttj pJofX.?}, e7rat^ecra[i tov]?
e(f)7j/3ov<; tovs i(p7]{3evo-a-
10 vTas cirl Me]ve<o>K\eovs dp^ovr^os Kal] are^avcoaao avrovs
^p-
vo-ta] <tt[e<J>dva)] Kara tov v6p\ov tvr]a%ias eveKev Kal (>lXot-
4u]a? t;^
[^xovtc]? St<xT6Xo[vo-iv ir]/0O9 tw hrjjxov eivai S' ai}-
to]?9 /cat 7r[po8pia]^ eV tols [ay<acri]v ol?
?? 7ro?U9 nOrjcrov'
kti\aivecrai \h\ Kal t]w :ocr[|AT)TTJv av]r[ct)]z/ hp,eiviav
'AvTMfrdv-
25 ov] K^c^tcne'cr [iraiv]e era [8c Kal to]i/ TraiBoTpL(3riv 'YLppLoBoyp-
ov] 'Koprlov 'A[xapva Kal tov aKov]Tfc(JT77^ ^fcXo^eo^ Z^rpaT-
io\v Aapbirrpea [Kal t6v KaTairJaXfTaJc^eT?;^ MvrjcriOeov M.vr}ai-
Qi]ov KoTrpeiov [Kal tov *yp]a/<tyitaT[']a Ep[yit]o'yeV7;^ /cat tov to-
^o^ttjv ^%o3vBpov [KprJTa Kal] <TT6^)ci[v]c3crat avTovs daXXov are-
30 4>d]^ft) evTa^las e[vKa Kal] eTrifxeXelas r)v eyovres BiaTeX-
ov]criv irepl tovs e<f>r)\$ov$\. dvaypdyfrai Be ToBe t[o] ^lrrj(j)ia/iia t-
6v] ypafjbfxaTea tov Ka[ra irp]vTavLa[v k]v arrjXr) [\iQi]vr][i Kal
<n]r)aai ev dyopa, to Be [yev]6p.evov [dvaX]a)[p.a] e/9 t?)^ [o-Jt^A,?;*'
p.]/36crat tovs eVi T6t Sf.[oiKii]<jet.
35
'H fiovXrj toi>9 ['0 8tj]/xo9 tov 'O BrjfJLO? tovs
i(j)r}(3ov<; [Kotr^firjTrjv i(j)y/3ov<;
['Ap^euvLav
['Avr]i(f)dvov
[Kr\]<f)Lcnea
40
O / 6
^) 7) j3
[e] u cr [a] V T 9
KeKpoTriSos
niiihiiiiiii
n^v^
<j>x^9
AlOaXihat \M.vpp\ivovato 1 Nt/c/?paT09 NtKTjpaTOV
Xa[p]tz^o9 %paaaivihov
,
A/ot(j[TOKpd]Ti;9 'AvTL/md- 'l7r7ro#awrtS[o]s
45
EtVeatot n[aiaviis]
[x]
0l; AtyivieZs
Av[<r]cKpdTr)s <t>op{iL(ovo<; Teto-[au]e^o9 [Xd]/??;? UoXXlov
/ / / /
/
Kv$a07]vat,is ['Od]^e^ v/natTdBac
53]
DECREES
~
minimi!
50
MeXtret?
Alo-x\r/Ta&r)s Upo^evov
['E]/c K0/A.779
Tj]? jV0LOV
['EpxOtit]o5
55
~]
v
]x
ov
k]\l8ov
60 [AiyijtSos]
S]copou
l]?
K]a\XLKpd[rov]
65
-
tojfc
]tj(tlov
OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 137
'JepoficjX?}? 'Apt
'
AvyeXrjOe^v]
Xa[ip]e<TTparo9 Xai
AecovrLBo
1
;
Zovvtel?
Eevocfxtiv 6/u-tcrro/cfXeovs]
AvaavLas AvaavS[p
'
AfCa/jLCLVTL8o[s]
Ke(f)a\r]6[ev]
<Pi\ofcpdTr)<;
Eu;\e[t8i]s ]ov
[OtVTjt8osJ
o]f
['A]piaT68r)/jLO<; KXeoXeco
AlavriSo?
MapaOooviot,
[B]ovdr)po? ^ikcovihov
TLv6vvo/jLOS ' AvTijxdyov
Vapbvovatoi
K.\eofjLe8cov K^Xeapirov
TrjXea/coTOS Apiarorcpi-
(paXripels \tov
WfjLeLvlas /\r)\id$ov
'AvtioxlSos
ALO(f)dvrj<;
KXeacverov
Xapta? 'ApxeftidSov
UaX\,7)veL<; \ov
TlJjL0fCp(lT7]<Z Kr}(f)L(ToBrj/jL-
K?7</)tcri0? YLrj(piaohrjfJLOV
Tov iracBo- [To]^ KarairaX-
Tpi{3r)v [r\a(i>eT7)v
r
Rpfjb68(t)pov MvrjaiOeop
70
'JLoprlov ^AvrjGtOf.ov
'A^fapvca]
YLoirpelov
[Tov] ro^OTrfv
[Zv8p]oi> Kprjra.
This decree belongs to the category of
'
ephebic ' inscriptions
;
see Rem. vii,
p. 145. The ephebi commemorated were enrolled in the archonship of Menecles
and the decree itself passed in the archonship of his successor, Nicias. These
archonships probably belonged respectively to 282/1 and 281/0 b.c. They must
certainly have been later than 287/6 B.C., the year in which the Athenians under
Olympiodorus recovered possession of the Museion and expelled the Macedonian
garrison
;
for in 1. 12 it is stated that the ephebi garrisoned the Museion during
the year of Menecles. Further, Wilamowitz (Ant. v. Kar. 246) argues against
a later date than 282/1 and 281/0 b.c. from the fact that CIA 11 320 (containing
some peculiar signs
C, ^, P, 0,
which we find in CIA 11 317, belonging to
Nicias's year) must, as conferring citizenship on Bithys, a courtier of King
Lysimachus, be earlier than the death of the king (281/0 b.c).
138 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[54
1. 'Orpu^Jcos : restored from CIA n 317, where in turn we are enabled to
restore from our inscription the name of the archon and the deme of the
secretary. Cf. Rem. iv, p. 85.
2. 'laoKparov. For this late form of the genitive in proper names of the
s-stems see Meisterhans, Gr. 135, who notes that between 300 and 30 b.c. the
form in -ous is quite exceptional. The ending -ovs however came in again with
the general reaction in the imperial period.
10 sq. For the Koa/j.vrr)s or Director and other officers see Rem. vii, p. 146.
If the restoration rds [re 0iAa/c]as is correct, the expression probably describes
the general duties of the
tyrjfioi
as xepiiroXoL. In this capacity they must not be
confounded with the Trepi-rroKoL who in the fifth and fourth centuries were a
group of mercenaries commanded by peripolarchs (cf. Thuc.
8, 92, 6). We must
infer that the patrol duties of Trep'urohoi. were performed according to circum-
stances, sometimes by the cf)r)@oi, sometimes by the 7repi7roAot proper. (See
Girard, art. Ephebi in Dar. and Sayl. n 629.) Note further that the words rbv
iviavrbv imply that the original two years course of the ephebic training
(Arist. 'A0. 7roX. 42, 4) had been reduced to one ; Girard, UEduc. ath. 294 sq.
infers from CIAiv
2, 251 b that the change had taken place as early as 305/4 b.c.
12. See the remarks made above and for a description of the capture of the
Museum by Olympiodorus see Paus. i 25, 7 ; 26, 1
(6 5 <r<pas iwl rods Ma.Ke56vas
rjye /cat yepovras /cat juetpd/cta 6/j.oiu)s).
13. 07rws <iv ow eireidt] kt\. This parenthetical insertion of a causal
clause in a final clause is quite foreign to the simplicity of construction which
characterises inscriptions of an earlier period.
17. Mera ra lepd. The phrase has been explained in two ways, either
'
after the opening rites 'or 'at the assembly next after the one reserved for
business falling under the head of Upa /cat 6'cna,' i.e., next after the fourth
ordinary assembly in a prytany.
28. 'Epfioyturip. This is the prevailing inscriptional form of the accusative
of s-stems in proper names from very early times. A few instances in -77 are
quoted from the fifth and fourth century and a few from the imperial period.
Meisterhans Gr. 136.
29. 2,u>p8pov. i.e. *L<x>avopov. The same name occurs on an archaic inscrip-
tion of Amorgos, Ro. i 160 c.
34. tovs iiri reT dioiKTjcrei : 52 68.
35. After
77 fiovXr)
supply iwaiveZ or tljjR.
4166. Here are inscribed the names of the ephebi, ranged under their
several tribes, which follow the usual order of precedence (see Rem. vi, p. 127).
In 11. 41 and 48 the names of the
y
kvTLyovis and the AT/^rptds have been
purposely erased.
54. A slab of Hymettian marble, broken at the top, found southward of the
ffxrjwri of the Dionysiac theatre. CIA iv 2, 318 b
;
D 636. Cf. J. Martha
Sacerdoces Atheniens, 178.
Alphabet, type 1 ; 6 once and several times are square ; twice ir is ir
2
and
frequently w is 2rotx'756i', but with many deviations.
54]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 139
Ka- V
- -
-
[i
I <7L'/x7^y^6e[8pol 28ov t<*> Stjiko'
-
-J-
a? AiO"^vXov S[ direv' irpl wv aTra-y-
Ye[X.]X.6t o apyoav [ircpl tv Upwv <3v ZQve t<3-
5 i [A]covva(p, Tvyei a[-ya9t, ScSoxQat t<3 Srf-
fxw,
ra fxev dyaOd Se^ecr#[ai tov 8i]|xov, a diro-
yyeXXeL o ap^cov yeyovev[ai Iv tois Upot-
9,
ol? eOvev
i(f>
vyieia /cat <r<i)T7][p(a ttjs (Bo-
f\^9 Aral TOO 8t)fJbOV tov
'
AOrjvalcov kcl\\ tv k-
io apir&v tgov iv ret
X^PT
^
7rt
^V
^ ^/
?
X
ft)
[
v T(
*~
9 re aXXas Ovcrlas reOvtcev, ocras avTa> irpoa-
rjKev, virep 7-779
fiovXrjs Kai tov Stj/jlov kclXoos k-
al evaefiws, eTTL/jLepLeXr/TaL 8e /cat Try 9 iro/JLTrfj-
s]
tS A[i]ovva(p fxera tgov irapeBpoov kcli toov e-
15 7TLpLeX7]T(OV, 8iaT\ei 8e KOI TWV 7Tpl T7)V (ip-
yr\v TroLOV/mevos ttjv eTTL/uueXeLav Kara rovs
281/0
vopbovs, eiraivecrai tov apyovTa Nc/clav <>lX-
govos 'OTpvvea kcli tov<; irapeSpovs avTov
'AX/aV^X ^ K.Xeo/3ovXov M.vpptvovaiov, 'Av-
20 TL(f)dvr}v UoXvKpdrov ^Orpvvea evaefieias e-
V6KCL K(li (f)L\OTtfMLa<i, rjv
expvTes
&LaTe\ov-
glv irepl tov hrjfjLov tov 'AOrjvaicov inraLveo--
ai 8e KCLI TOl>9 T7;9 TTOfJLTTTj^ ilTLfieXyTCL^ "Icra-
vhpov
'
Ej^St]pLOv KvBadrjvaiea, y\.vr)o~L6eov
25 'E^eS^/xou K.v8a0rjvaLea, YLaXXiOeov BouXa-
PX
0V ^Xvea,
'
AvTL(f)(iTr}v YjvOvkpitov 'Atyyviea,
KdWaiaxpov Alotl^lov TlaXXrjvea, 'A/uetvoK-
Xtjv AvTi(j)dvov KiJttlov, lepcova (PclBvXXov
Al0aXl8rjv, KoXXlttttov
(
\iriro6epaov 'A^ap^e-
30
a, HoXv^rjXov RvrjvoplBov
'
AXaLea, %eoyevr)-
V HoO~l8ci)VLOV \\pL^>LTpOTrrj66V' eTTCLLVeO-CLL 8-
e Kai tov ircLTepa ttjs Kavrj<p6pov K.aXXL(f>d)vT-
a KaXXL<f)a)VTO<; A0/u,ovea. dvaypdtyaL Be To8e
to ylrrjcptcr/jLa tov ypafifiaTea tov kcltcl irpvTave-
35
tav iv crTrjXr) Xl6lvt) kclI aTrjaaL iv tw T/jl-
evL tov Aiovvcrov, t9 8i Trjv dvaypa(j>r}v Kai
TrjjuL TroirjaLv fxeplaaL tol>9 eVt Tel 8lolk7]ct-
t] to yevofxerov dvdXw/jia.
140 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[55
This is a decree in honour of the archon Nicias (see 53) and his assessors
for their services in performing a sacrifice to Dionysus.
6. rd ixev dyadd kt\. Readers of Theophrastus will remember that he
makes his /j.iKpo<pi\6Tifxos (Char, vii) obtain as a personal favour from the
irpvTavtLs the privilege of making the formal announcement to the assembly
"
w dvbpes ' Adrjvcuoi, edvofxev oi irpurdveis
rfj
pvqrpi tG)v deujv rd iepa d^ia Kai Ka\d'
Kai vfiels dexecde rd dyadd."
9. Kai tQu KapirQiv kt\. This addition is wanting in other decrees of the
kind
; cf. e.g. CIA n 307 where after
'
Kdrjvaioiv comes Kai walbwv kclI yvvouK&v.
14. vapedpoou kt\. Each of the first three archons was allowed to have two
assessors, chosen by himself; see D. A. Cf. 80 4 where also iirtixeK-qTai are
mentioned. Both the irdpebpoi and the e7rt/xe\?7rcu are noticed by Arist. 'Ad. tto\.
56, where it is stated that the archon has charge (tt}s Trofxirrjs) tt)s Aiovv<rlcoi/ tCov
[p.eya\Kwv [xera tCjv e7ri/j.e\r)TQii>, ous trpbrepov /j.ev 6 brjfji.os exeipororei deica
ovras, [/ecu rd] els tt)v tto/jltttju dvaAw/uLara trap avTwv dvr]\i[<T~\Kov, vvv
5'
eva ttjs
(pv\[7)S eKd~\dTf}s Kkiqpdi Kai biboxnv els tt)v KaraaKevTju eKarbv /nvds. Our inscription
shows that after Aristotle's time (cf. Dem. c. Mid. 519) they were again appointed
from the whole people, and not according to tribes (twelve at this date), for there
are several from one tribe and they are ten in number. In CIA n 420, 34
(probably early part of second century b.c.) we read oi xeiporoi^fleVres e7rt/xeX7?rat,
twenty-four in number. The function of the various sets of einp,e\T]Tal was to
assist in organising the festival for which they were appointed.
32. tov -rarepa ttjs Kavrj<p6pov. The same words occur CIA n 420, 14.
55. A stele of Hymettian marble found at S. Demetrius KaTrj<p6pr). CIA
ii 331 ; D 213. Cf. Klueber Verhandl. d. philol. Gesellsch. in Wurzburg, 1862,
97 sqq.; Wilamowitz Antigonos, 1831, p. 283; Koehler Mitth. ix
(1884), 52.
Alphabet, type 1; but

is
2E.-
The engraver has attempted a species of
punctuation from time to time by leaving blank spaces. These are indicated
in the text by an upper point.
.... eiav .... acre
. . k]7TO\l6pKr]<TV T?79 t[
. . v, baa r\v ev ret rcov evavTiwv avfjL{ia%La[i. vjxo-
xd]/3?;[s]
Be 6 vbs o tovtov, irarrjp Se QaiSpov, ^6t[poTovrj-
5 dels 0~tpaTrjybs virb tov S/jfiov eirl to vavTiK.\ov gn-Xe-
vcrev hr\ tguv vecov, a?
6
^V^
^
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1
avveirefxirev
}
els Trjv 'Aatav Kai auv8ie7roXe/jLrja[iv r-
bv TToXefjuov tov ev Kvirpa) Kai eXafiev' Ayvcova top l[r\'io-
v Kai t<2? vavs tcls p,eT avTov, Kai eirl Tlpa^L/3ovXov
CLpx
ov
\.
T
~
io o?, TXavKeTOV KaOecXrjcfioTOS }Lv6vov Kai KaTayaybvT-
09 evTevOev tcl irXola, ttjv Te itoXiv eXaftev Kai avTov
55]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 141
YXavKerrjv Kal ra irXola ra
fier
avTov, kcli irapeo~Kev-
aaev da<f)dXeiap tols rrXeoucrc rrjp daXarrav Kacr-
adphpov Se iroXtopKovpTos flpeop airocrTaXeis crr-
15
paTr/yos eirl roov vecov tgop tt)s iroXecos tovs rroXiTas
tovs irXeoPTas ev rals pavcrlp Trapetrrjcraro, cocrre r-
wv avpp>dywp pLovovs 'AOqpatovs dXeLTovpyrjTovs
eipai tojp epycop roov irpos rrjv iroXtopKtav icai av-
tos 8e <$>al8po<; ttjp avTT)P aTpeaiv eycop tols Trpoyo-
20 <yo>poLS &LaTTeXeK6v eavTop ol^lop irapaaKevd^co-
V T7)S TTpOS TOP 8?/pLOP VPOLaS' Kal Trl NlKLOV fJbkv Ctp-
Yoptos o~TpaT7]<ycs vttu tov BtjpLOv ^ecpoTOprjOels eirl
ttjp irapaaicevrjv Sis irdvrwv cupu rrpoo-fj/cev eirepLeXrjO-
rj KaXws teal (J>lXotlpcos' kcli eirl rrjv ycopap yeipoTOPt]-
25 6els irXeopd kos kcli eirl tovs ePovs yepopevos Tpls
rrjv irdaav eirorjcraTo crirovSrjp oirws dp 01 arpaTCwrac
C09 apicna KaT(t)o-KevaapuepoL irapeyajPTat Tas %pe-
Las rep BrpLLCty itpeer(3ev eras Se irpos top ftacriXea top
irpeo~/3vTepop Tf.ToXepalop eKopaaep tw Sr/pLW gItop
30
kcli ^prjiACLTCL' ^ecporopt/Oels Se vird tov Srjpov eirl tcl
oirXa o~TpaTi]<y6s top epiavrov top iirl Klpucopos apyppT-
os SieTeXecrep dycopi^opLepos virep Trjs kolptjs o~cdTr\pl-
as kcll TrepiGTaPToup Tel iroXeL Kcupcvp SvgkoXoop Siecfiv-
Xafjep Trjp elprjprjp
Tfj
yu>pcL dirotpaLPopepos del to, KpaT-
35
ICTTd, KCLI TOP gItOP K Trjs yj>pCLS KCLI TOVS dXXoVS KapiTOV?
aiTLos eyepeTo elo~KopLLo-6i)paL, avp,/3ovXevaas toj hrjpLW
TvvreX^aclJllllllllllllJlllllllllllllJlllllJllJll^
J I J J
kclI ttjp ttoXlp eXevOepap Kal SrjpLOKpaTovpLeprjp av-
Topop,op irapeScoKep Kal tovs PopLovs Kvpiovs toIs pLeO*
40
kavTovlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllJIH^
'
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1
1 ScereXeae Kal Xeycop Kal irpaTTCop dyad-
op otl rjhvpaTo virep tov $r}p,ov
////// ////////// /
IIIHIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIJIIIIIUIJimjIIH^
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 X
C
P
0T0V7
l@
i<i
'
7 T^ OlTXa TTpGOTOS vtto tov hljpLOV
45
crTpaTTjyos top epLavTOP top eirl ^epo^oopTos apyopTOS
SLeTeXeae irdpTa TrpaTTcop ukoXovOws toIs re popuots Ka-
l toIs ttjs
fiovXfjs Kal tov 8?jp,ov ^j]<pLapao~LP
/ 1 J J J J
I
llllllllllllllllllillllllllllilllllllllllllllllil
lllllllllllllllllllllllillllllllllllllllllilllllllll
viiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiii
142 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[55
////////////////////////////////////////////////
////////////////////////////////////////////////////
teal dycovo0(e)rr)s yeiporovri0el^ viro rov hrjpuov eirl Nt/ao-
v ap^ovTOS eirepeXr)0ri rcov re 0vcncov o*7r&)9 avvreXe[<r-
55
8<3o-]fc iracrai Kara ra rrdrpta teal oi dyouves ft)? tcaXXucrroL
ytv<o]vTciL teat a^iot rrjs rov hr/puov (fyiXort/xia^, teal vgt\i-
pov] rov vov v/uLO%apov dycovo0erov ye.Lporovr)0evro<$
es Th\v eviavrov rov etr l&vftovXov apyovros avveire^e-
Xr/07) teal tovtw irdvrwv, (pavepdv diroSecKvvpievo^
60 ijM iracrcv r\v
^X
6i
^P^
T v $*}v-ov
evvoiav teal rd<; aX-
\9 he rrdcras Xeirovpyla^ XeXecrovpyr\ tcev
(friXorip,-
&)9 teal baai eirihocrei^ yeyovacriv ev rw
Sr/fi(p
rra-
(twv /jlgt
ecr^V /cev teal eirl irdcrtv tovtois eo~re<^>d-
veorac viro re rrjs /3ovXt}$ teal rov hij/xov 07r&)? a-
65 v ovv (f)aivr)Tai teal o hfjpuos rificov rov? dyaOovs
avhpa<$ teal d^iovs /jlptJ/jltjs' dyaOel Tvyei heho-
X^
at Tei fiovXer roi>? wpoiSpovs oinves dv Xd-
Xayaiv rrpoehpeveiv ev ru> Sij/jlo), orav al rjfj,ipac
ai etc rov vo/xov e^ijtecoo-tv,
x,PV/
jLaTL0
"
ai/ tr^pl tov-
70
rcov, yvwfxr]v he vpif3aXXeo-0ac T17? /3ovXr}<; et? rov
hrjpuov on ho/eel rel fiovXet' eiraiveaai <>aihpo-
v %vpLoydpov ZtpijTTlov teal arefyavwaaL avrov
Xpvcrd) erreepdva) Kara rov vo/xov aperfjs eveK-
a] /cat evvoias i)v eyutv hiareXel irepl rov Stj/jlov r-
75
ov AOrjvaicov /cal avayopevcrat rov crrec^avov Ac-
ovvaioiv rwv pueyaXwv rpaywhoov tc5 dycovi ru>
/caivo)' tcai Hava07]vaicov rojv p,eydXcov ra> yv-
/jLVIko* dyo3vr t//? ^e Trorjaecos rov arefydvov
teal T?;? dvayopeucrecos iircfjL6X7]0fjvai rov eirl
80 rel Sioitcr/crer arrjerat 8e avrov rov Stj/jlov teal
eiteova xaXtcfjv ev dyopd teal elvai avra> o~ir-
rjcriv e/ui irpvraveiu) teal ifcyovcov ra> 7rpea/3vr-
dra> del kol irpoeBplav ep, rrdai, Tot? dywcnv
0I9 r) 7rdXt? ri07]o~Lv. xeiporovrjo-ai he rov Srj-
85
/jlov tjStj rpeis dv&pa<; i 'AOrjvauov o'lrtves
errifxeXriGovrai rr}<; re rrorfaea)^ rrjs elteovo<;
teal rr}<$ dva0eaeco^' dvaypdyjrai he ro
tyrjtyL-
a/xa rov ypapifiarea rov teard rrpvraveiav ev a-
t]t]Xi Xi0lvei teal arrjoai irapd rrjv eiteova'
55]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 143
90 eh Be rrjv dva<ypacf)r)u ttjs arrfKn^ fiepiaat r-
6v eirl ret Btocfcr/aei to yevofxevov avdXco/xa.
AvavBpos AvcnaBov
*
AvatyXvaTios elirev d<ya-
0]e rvyer SeSo^Oac rco Byjfjbcp' ra fxev aWa
irdjvra Trpdrretv wepi T175 Scoped? rj? elrrj/cev
95
<t>]cuS/oo? Kara to irporepov tyr/cfiicr/jLa b AvavBpo-
? elirev, tovs Be Oea/jLoOeras elaayayeiv avr-
co rr)v BoKifJuaaiav T179 Btoped<z eh to BiKaar-
r\piov Kara tov vojjlov EjTtI rr/v avaOeatv rrj-
<? elicovos oiBe KeyeipoTovr\VTai' ^Vfio^dp-
100 779
X^TTfco?' Mefw^
^
A^apvevs' ^rpdrtov
H(f)7]TTlO<;.
(in corona)
f
H fiovXrj.
f
O Brjfxos.
The person honoured in this decree is one Phaedrus. In the first and lost
portion of the stele were recounted the merits of his grandfather, who appears
also to have been named Phaedrus (cf. CIA 11 109 and Strabo x p. 446, where it
is stated that he acquitted himself well in Euboea in the Lamian War
;
indeed
the reference here may be to that circumstance), and in 1. 3 sqq. follow the
praises of his father Thymochares. For it was common at this period, in
which, as Koehler (CIA I.e.) somewhat severely remarks, Greece was more
prolific in words than in doughty deeds, to adorn the merits of ancestors with
honorary inscriptions. The verboseness of this inscription offers a good ex-
ample of the practice. By way of compensation the inscription is of more
historical value than is usual in documents of the kind.
The date probably falls between 273/2 and 266/5 b.c. ; after 273/2, if the
archonship of Eubulus (1. 51) is rightly referred to that year ; before 266/5, the
date of the Chremonidean War ; in fact before 267/6, because the words (since
erased) in which Antigonus Gonatas was spoken of must have been compli-
mentary and must have alluded to a state of things not later than 268/7 b.c.
For further arguments see D ad loc., Klueber I.e. and Ferguson Corn. Stud, x
p.
25 sq.
5. <rrparitybs... inl to uavriKdu. 36 19. Cf. below 22, 24, 30, etc.
6. About 20 letters have been designedly erased. D supplies ry tQv
Ma/<-e56i/a>j> aroXip and thinks (with Klueber) that the words have reference to the
struggles of 316/5 b.c.
, when we know that Seleucus and Ptolemy carried on a
naval warfare against Antigonus in the neighbourhood of Cyprus. For other
conjectures see D ad loc. Koehler (CIA) points out that the various erasures
must have been made in 200 b.c when, as we learn from Livy xxxi 44, 7,
the Athenians execrated
'
Macedonum genus omne nomenque.'
8. A7/wva. At this time, 316 b.c, he appears to have been one of
Antigonus's admirals. There is a coin (Mionnet vi 376) with the legend "Ayvw
144 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[55
Trftwv (Klueber). Plutarch Alex. 40 (cf. 22) alludes to him as a luxurious officer
of Alexander who wore silver nails in his boots.
9. Ilpa&jSoiJXou: 315/4 b.c.
10. VXavK^rov kt\. Diodorus xix 62, 5 makes mention of a fleet of 50 ships
sent by Antigonus against the coast of Peloponnesus and Klueber thinks that
Glaucetas ma3
r
have commanded part of this fleet. Cf. Droysen (Hell, n 2, 18).
D objects that Glaucetas must rather have been a pirate, else his ships would
have been described as jxaKpal vrjes, not TrXoia.

K<xdei\r)<f)6Tos. 23 20.
13. Kaaadvdpov 5e ttoXlopkovutos 'Clp6i> kt\. The siege of Oreos by Cassander,
its relief by the arrival of naval forces from Peloponnesus and Asia, and
Cassander's subsequent triumph by the help of reinforcements from Athens,
are described by Diodorus xix 75 (313/2 B.C.).
16. 7rapiTr]aaTo, 94 (tt]Kv : 45 37.
19. aipeaiv. This word in the sense of
'
propensus animus,'
'
kindly feeling
towards a person,' almost equivalent to etivoia, is very common in later inscrip-
tions. Cf. for later literary usage Polyb. v 56, 5 : t$ doiceiv ixt) 5<.\J/ev<r9ai rijs
aipeaews /cat StaA-^ews [r^s] rod /3acrtX^ws ; ib. II 61, 9 did ttjv irpbs tovs 'Axcuovs
aXpeaLv. A similar meaning has attached to irpoaipeacs ; cf. 57 17.
21. Nidou : 296/5 B.C.
23. ts. Wilamowitz Antig. p. 238, to account for the fact that Phaedrus
twice in one year held the office of aTparriyds, ingeniously suggests that there
were fresh elections for all the officers of that year. For from two inscriptions
(CIA ii 299 and iv 2, 299 c) we learn that Nicias was dpx^v varepos [apxovros
voTtpov), i.e. archori suff'ectus. And as according to the former inscription the
7th day of the fourth prytany fell upon the 16th of Munychion, it follows that
the order of the prytanies must have been rearranged and that Nicias entered
on office not at the beginning of the year in Hecatombaeon, but in Gamelion.
(Otherwise Unger Philol. suppl. v 686.) No certain explanation of the reason
for such a change has been offered. (See D ad loc.) Perhaps however 5is
applies not to
x
L
P
OTOt/
V^

^t
DUt. to iirefxeX-qd-n.
29. tov Trpeaj3vTepov : i.e. Ptolemaeus Lagi f., 306285 B.C. D would refer
the embassy to the period when Athens was besieged by Demetrius Poliorcetes,
2954 b.c.
31. KLiuuovos. 291/0 b.c See D and Ferguson Corn. St. x 6, and cf.
Koehler on CIA iv 2, 614 b.
33. 8vaKo\u)v. D. agrees with Niese Gesch. der griech. u. makedon. Staaten
i 372 in referring this to the war between Demetrius and the Aetolians.
43. -rrpooTos. The meaning of this word is not clear
;
possibly Phaedrus was
the first appointed after some political change. D.
45. "ZevocpQivTos : perhaps 286/5 b.c. (Ferguson Corn. St. x 17; but cf. D
ad loc. who argues for 290/89 or 289/8).
53. NlkLov : see 53 1. 57. vov : 37 68. Qvpcoxapov: 53 2.
58. EvfiovXov: see the introductory note above and cf. Ferguson Corn. St.
x 25. 68. otolv ktX. : 52 54.
76. t$ dyQvt. t kclivu : i.e., on the days on which new plays were performed
in the competition. Cf. CIA iv 2, 373 h 19 : /cat dvenreTv tou <rTi(pa]vov Aiow<rl\a)i>
[Tpayifidols /cati/ois].
97. tt)v 8oKi/j.a<riav t^s dcjpeds. On the examination of their titles to which
R.vii] DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 145
naturalised citizens were subjected before the deafioQhai, see Dar. and Sagl.
s. v. doKifxaaia and M. and S. Att. Pr. 256 sq. From the third century we hear
of the enquiry into the titles under which other honours, as here duped, were
held. In CIA iv 2, 451 b, 5 the words Kara tov vb^ov are replaced by : orav irpwrow
trXrjpQac diKaarrjpiov
;
in 513 I it is : ftrav TrXrjpuxri. 5iK~\a<TT7)piov els eva nal Tr[evTa-
Kocriovs dlKCMTTds.
Remark vii. The Ephebic Inscriptions. The institution called
'E^/Jia played an important part at Athens and, with modifications,
in several other states, in the military and intellectual training
of young men for the duties they had to perform as citizens. The
object of this note is merely to give a bare outline of the institution
sufficient to render intelligible the representative inscriptions. For
a fuller account the reader may be referred, e.g., to the article
Ephebi in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionary and the authorities
there quoted.
The Ephebi were youths between eighteen and twenty years of
age, who were entered on the Xrj^LapxLKov ypa/x/xarciov or register of
the deme and were undergoing military training. There is nothing
1
to show that the institution of the Ephebia may not have existed
as early as the fifth century B.C., though the earliest inscriptional
evidence we have is a decree of 334/3 B.C.
(75).
Originally the
Ephebia had, in principle, nothing to do with education as generally
understood. It was simply a military noviciate. The young man
at the age of eighteen became a soldier and the state undertook to
train him for war without imposing upon him the obligation of
cultivating his intelligence. Afterwards, as the inscriptions (CIA II
466, 467
(=65), 468, 482) show, intellectual exercises were combined
with military exercises, but the combination belonged to a compara-
tively late period, when the ephebia had become sensibly modified, and
the training developed in fact into a kind of University system. The
inscriptions, which form a distinct category, range over six centuries,
from the fourth century B.C. to the third century a.d. They
exhibit varying degrees of complexity in the different periods and
may be classified as follows : I. Documents consisting of two parts,
(1)
honours paid to ephebi and one or more of their officers,
1
Except perhaps the absence of any mention by Plato and Isocrates of
ephebic discipline. Wilamowitz indeed (Arist. u. Ath. i 193) seeks to prove that
the institution cannot have existed much earlier than 334/3 b.c.
, and that this
very year may have marked its inauguration.
R. II.
10
146 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I. [R. vii
(2)
a list of ephebi (cf. 53 and CIA n 324, 330, 338341).
II. Documents consisting of three parts,
(1)
honours paid to
ephebi and their officers,
(2)
honours paid to the Koo-fx-qTys,
(3)
a
list of ephebi (cf. CIA 465471; [467
=
65]).
III. Documents
consisting of four parts,
(1)
decree concerning sacrifices performed
by the Kooyx^T^'s and the ephebi,
(2)
decree concerning honours to
the Koa-fxr]Trj<; on the report of the ephebi,
(3)
decree concerning
honours to the ephebi,
(4)
a list of ephebi and officers (cf. CIA n
478, 479, 480). IV. Honorary decrees for the Koajx-qrai and the
ephebi promulgated by the
fiovXrj
alone, not by the /3ov\tj and
Srjfjios. (CIA ii 481, 482.) The documents of Class I belong to the
third century B.C., of II to the end of the second and first half of
the first century, of III to about the middle of the first century,
while those of IV are later than 48 B.C. The ephebic inscriptions of
the first three centuries of the Christian era exhibit a variety
of composition which cannot be reduced to a common formula.
The opening formula of the decrees naturally follows the rule of the
decrees representing the several periods. No. 65 well illustrates
the tedious prolixity which tended to characterise the later decrees.
The principal officers were the following : 1. The o-co^povtarat,
elected by the demos, one from each tribe out of three nominated
by the tribe (Arist. 'A#. -n-oX.
42). They appear in the earliest
inscriptions and are coupled with the koct/x^tt;? in CIA iv 2, 251 b, a
decree of 305/4 B.C., which apparently marks a transition stage
;
for we hear nothing more of the o-wcppovicrTaL till inscriptions of the
empire, when the office would seem to have been revived. Their
role was to supervise the financial relations of the ephebi and to act
as mentors to the young men, over whom they sometimes exercised a
severe discipline. 2. The Kocrp.r)T7]s who appears first inscriptionally
in 305/4 B.C. (CIA iv 2, 251 b) and is always henceforward first in
order of precedence. He was elected for a year and was the only
officer who held an
a-pxv-
His functions were to preserve the Ephebi
in good health, to maintain discipline and harmony among them, to
accompany them daily in the gymnasia, to take them to the lectures
of the philosophers, rhetoricians and grammarians and to conduct
them to the (ppovpca, where they were to learn their military duties,
to offer the ordinary sacrifices to the gods and to follow the
processions ordered by the laws. After him came : 3. The 7rcuSo-
Tpi/3r)<;, who was at first an annual officer and afterwards appointed
for life (Slo. (3lov CIA in 1105, 1112 etc.). He was a kind of Chief
Instructor in Gymnastics. 4. The 67rA.oju.aY09, 5. The aKovTiaTTJs,
56]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 147
6. The to^ottjs, 7. The KaTo.7ra\Ta<j>eTr)s or d^eV^s whose names do not
always appear in the same order of precedence. Their instructional
duties are sufficiently indicated by their respective titles. 8. The
ypa/jL/uuiTcvs. 9. One or more v7rr)pTcu. The duties of the last two
were not instructional. Under the empire various other officers
appear, drriKoo-fnyT^s, vttokoot/x^t^s, tjyep.wv (who marched at the head
of the ephebi in certain religious ceremonies), SiScto-KoAos (a teacher
of music), KaTpo<f>v\a (Ke'o-Tpos, a bolt discharged from an engine),
and others. Besides these there was 6 kiri Aioyevciou (see 65 24).
To be distinguished from all these are the officers chosen from the
ephebi themselves, who in later times formed a miniature 7ro/Us and
had functionaries bearing such titles as o-Tpa-njyo?, Krjpv, ayopai/o'/xos,
darvvofAos, eiaaycoyevs. The varied nature of the duties performed
by the ephebi in the course of their training may be gathered from
the inscriptions given below (see Index) and the subjoined com-
mentaries.
56.
"
Athenis. Edidit Pocockius Inscr. P. I. p. 56 n. 63, ad cuius exemplum
accurate expressa inscription Boeckh CIG 115. CIA n 329.
For the alphabet reliance must not be placed upon Pocock's copy. E.g. it is
certain that the form of 6 as
2
is wrong for this period
; 2E:
appears once for
f
and several times
E, zz.
for a
;
/x
2
for /jl, w
3
for ir and a
2
for <j are doubtful.
(Text on
pp.
148151)
In the lost part of the stone was a decree passed at the end of the prytany
of the Aegeid tribe in honour of the prytanes of that tribe. LI.
1
9 are part of
another decree passed at the same time on the report of the prytanes of the
Aegeid tribe in honour of the magistrates, the prytanes and the Council ; a
third decree (10
18)
was passed at the end of the 12th prytany in honour of
the ra/iias rrjs (3ovXt/s (see below 1. 12). In 1. 19 begins the list of the prytanes
(15 out of the normal 50 survive) arranged according to demes, which are those
of the Aegeid tribe (but cf. note on 1. 39). In 43 sqq., enclosed in crowns are
mentioned <pvXerai and dtViroi, perhaps as Boeckh thinks because the tribesmen
and the atoiroi crown those whom the fiovXr/ has commended.
7. For K tCov (pvXerQu Kirchhoff would write t&v irpvTaveuv
;
but there is no
reason to doubt that the former was on the stone.
8. tov K-qpvKa kt\. This official did not belong to the <f>v\r) irpvrave^ovaa.
In this case his deme, the Trinemean, belonged to the tribe Cecropis.
11. povXeueiv \axwv. Cf. Arist. 'A0. tto\. 43, 2: (3ov\r) 5e KXypovrai <p,
v
awb <tt}s> cpvXijs eKa<TT7)s, and see Headlam, On the Lot, 4156, 86. Cf. also
the clause on the Erythraean constitution modelled on that of Athens, 5 7.
12. rjdvvaro : 52 25. ra/xias aipedels vird r^s (3ovXi]s : Arist. 'A0. ttoX. 49, 4,
however, says: kcu ra/uas early avrocs KXypurds. See 38 39 and for one of the
functions of this ra/xias (or ra/xiai) cf. ib. 1. 30 sq.
102
148 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[56
Text
<T(f)
v airo(f>ai
v coaatKa . OacpLV ev
rfj(c)
. . vovBe T(ov tcai X .... r
(dy)adf) rvyei BeBo-
5 irja^efo-ai] top ra/ntav NiKOKpdrrjv Aloovos 'A[y]/cv\f}dev
Ti[<rQ]ev7)v Ovr][<r]c<j>oi}VTo<; TeiOpdo-cov eucre/^e/a? eve/ca
<f)i\oTi/jLLa<; tt)? et? tovs (frvXeras' eiraiveaat Be Kal etc
ttjv KfoXXJuTea* eiraiveaai Be Kal top /cypv/ca rrj<i /3ovXf}<;
<>i\o/c\eov<; Tpive/jueia.
io 'E7Tfc t?}? StofScicJaT?;? TrpvTavelas, [2t]yLto?
(?)
^irucpdrov
273/2 (?) T?
7
? fiovXe\y\eLV Xa^cbv t[o]v ev[i]avrbv to[v] e[ir' E]v-
Xeya&v Kal irpdrrcov dya\%b\v on r)Bv\y\aro i/[ir][p] re tt}?
//,/a? alpeOels viro t?}? (3ovXr)<s 6*5 Te ra[s] dvaia^ to?? . .
crf.z^ fxefxeptKev Tot? lepoiroiol^, Kal avrbs o-vve7rt/jLe[\ii]X[ri]-
TpiCDV
0VJ
15
o~<z9 Ta? dvcrias kOvcrev, a[vijXo>o- 8*] /cat e[<] t^ IB'uov,
Kal VTrep iravr(Dv
}
[wv to]t/c[o]^o//.?7/ce^, diroXeXoyta-TaL
rfj
dyady) Tvyei Behb-^Qai rrj fiovXel eiratvecrai ^iKOKpdrrjp
o~e/3eta? eveKa rf)<; irpo<; tov<$ deovs Kal <pcXori/jLia<; rf)<;
'AyKv[\]eis
f
A\cwe?
20 NiKOKpdrr)<; Alcdvos Eu#<e>u/Aa%09 JLv0v[K]pdrov
TeiOpdato^ M[v]?;o'tXo^o9 M^)<7lirirov
'AvTcaOevr)?
^Ovt]o-i$[<Z\vto<; YleBioKXrj? [2\ijllkv0ov
TLoX[-C]o-Tparos Aop;ea>9 Mi^o-ap^o? Mz^crao^tSov
eo7ro/x7T09 JLv6i>4>povo<s AOrjvnnros AOrjv'nnrov
25
'A[pio-T]oTe\?7?(?) 'A^TtSw/Joi/ ^^AiriyapiBt]^ Avo~
-
-
'Ep^et< Mi/'J/tra^opafs Mv]^[<ra>v]o?
K.aXXio~Tparo<; TeXealov HoXv[lr\]\o<i KA,6t[v]t7T7roi;
Eu^ei/o? Euf[i]0eou [KoWjirret?
'JLTrtyevrjs
,
E7ra/i[]n>o[vo]?
(?)
KaXXcKparr)^ [II] vOoBrjXov
30
ITa^atTto? QiXcDvos KXelrTj^ N<e>iKcovos
^ctiKXrjs
'
'A[p]lg-to(J)lXov Alcou Aicovos
E#/3to? Eu7roA.eyLtot> 'Apiarecov UoXvKpdrov
XoXcov * A6riv[o\Bd)pov <>[il"y]a[i]efc?
'
A/jL<f>iKXr}<; Uv6oBd)pov Xat[p]ecrr/)aT09 IIoA.L'e[v]tfTOi'
35
AvacKparrj
1
; RvcfrcXijTov ^Avrufytov UoXve[v]Krov
56]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 149
of
No. 56.
eicixras
vovacv els ttjv j3o[v\r\v
7rpVTavt,a(c)
'XQai rfj ftovXei e-
(5)
real rb\y\ ypafi/jbare[a] 'A[v-
rrj[s] 7r[po]9 [to] 1)9 0o[\>s teal
TOJV <f)v\T(t)V KaAA^Kpcr-
/cal tov Stj/jlov JLufc\fj[y
(10)
AWaXu&rjs elfircv' iir^ecBrj N[i]/co[K]pa-
fiovXov ap[x\ovTo<; BoerereXeKev
ftovXr/s /ecu tov StJ/jlov, Kal ra-
Ta[t], cos ra roiyv ira-
[ird-
(15)
Kal [Tr]e<f)iXoTL/jLr)[T]aL els rrjv /3ovXijv>
fiovXfj
6p6(Z<s Kal SiKaioos,
Aicovos
*
AyKvXrjOev ev-
6t9 rr)v (SovXrjV.
IcoVLOaL 13, 14. Qu. rots [idiots ava\wp.d]cnp ?
(20) AriuocrOivr)*; ^arvpov
Boeckh thinks that after 1. 14 a whole line
TT"\ /}
* 8 missi n
g-
The attempted restoration is
/ /
^is.
Nlkcdv o8copov
22. 'kvrureivw : marked as ypawarevs
IIep/[av]Sp09 Av<T<6>tOV (sc. Kara trpvTaveiav) 1. 48; he always be-
E/c KoXft)l/oi)
longed to the (pvXyj TrpvTavevovaa at this
/ \ period. See Rem. v, p. 89.
*^ 5 '
^ f
30. ArifjLOK\4ov: cf. 32, 40. See 65
Avac[K\]rj<; AvcriKXeovs
106 sqq.
(
JLo-TLai66ev
39. Here apparently the deme Myr-
'Apvta? KpLTeovo?
rhinus belongs to the tribe Aegeis
;
else-
r
-, ^ ,r
where it is assigned to the Pandionis.
Kv \bavTi 8cu ... ,.,.
a
_ ,
L J L
41. aiaiTOL. See 63 end.
(30)
ArjfiOKXris ArjfiOKXeov
48. Tbi> ypafxfiar^a tov St^ou : the official
EptA:t9 whose fuller designation was ypafx/xarevs
'AvTiScopos AlokXcov
t9
>
s
P
ovX
^
k<* rod Bvfxov, cf. Rem. v,
p.
89.
AyadoKXrjs
'
Apiarocf)dvov
Apa<f>7]pwc
(35)
KaX.Xt7T7ro9
'
Avrdvhpov
150 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[57
Text
JLv<f>L\r)To<; AvaiKparov
y
A[vr]cKpdrr)<;
'AfvrJt^Xeou?
(?)
'Orpvvels <&
cXa[t]&at,
<pL\t<TTL<a>$7}<;
(?)
AtoBoopov Me^at^/Lto? 'Apc<TT[i]ov
Alotl/jLos yieXavOiov
40 Eva1-17? A[n]vlov
45
50
Ol ^>[vX]erat
tov ra/jLiav
NucoKpaTrjv
Oc (bvXerai
rbv ypa/jLfjLaria
'Av[ti\o-66V7}V
(in coronis)
f
O hrjfjbo^
TOU9 TrpvTaveis
Ol (f>v\erai
HLaX\,LKpaT7}V
KoX[\]vria
Ol (j>v\erac
tov Krjpvfca
JLv/cXrjv
t[o]v viroypa/jL/jLaTea
- -
gikX9)v
57. A slab of Hymettian marble, in two fragments, found in the Acropolis.
CIA 11 332, 333; D 214. Cf. Koehler Sb. Ah. Berl. 1895, xl 975 sqq.;
Wilhelm, Mitth. xvn (1892) 193 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but frequently tt is w
2
,
w is w
2
. Spaces occasionally mark
a new paragraph. Utolxv^ov, with some deviations.
frg. a (S) O [<
B.C.
267/6?
'E7Tt UeiOiSrj/jLov apyovTos eirl tt}? 'E^e^etSo? Seirre'/oa? ir-
pjvTaveLas'
MeTayeiTvtoovos ivaTet laTapbevov, ivaTei T779 irpvTavei-
5
a?" eKKXrjGLa Kvpla' twv irpoeBpcov eire^rj^i^ev SwaTpaTos K-
aXXtaTpciTov 'EjO^teu? Kal crvfiTrpoeBpov e&o];v tco 8rj-
fi(i)'
Xp/jLcovi&7)<; 'FiTeo/cXeov? AWaXiSrjs elirev eTreihr)
TrpoTepofjL pLV AOrjvaloL Kal Aa/ceSac/jiovtot Kal ol avfifxay-
01 ol 6/caTepcDv
(fiiXtav
Kal avpLfxaylav KOLvrjv Trotrjcrafievo-
10 l irpos eavTovs 7roXXovs Kal kclXovs ay&vas rjycovLaavTo
fie-
t aXXrjXwv irpos tov<$ /caTaSovXovcrdai, tcls 7roXet? eTTLyeip-
ovvtcls, (ov eavTois T Sofjav i/CTrjaavTO Kal tols aX[Xo]is
57]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 151
of
No. 56.
K.aWt<r6ev7}s Qavoybdyov
'E<y M.vppivovT[Tr\]s
A/ca&rjfjLos NeofcXeov
Ol atatr[o]L
tov ra/Jbiav
NlKOKpaTTjV
Ol <pv\erai
tov <ypa/jb[\i\area
TOV hrjfJLOV
NeowToXe/jiov
"EXXtjctlv irapecncevaoav tt)v eXevOeptav teal vvv 8e /c[ai]pQ)v
KaOeiXr)<poT(ov ofjuoiwv ttjv RXXd&a irdaav Sea to[vs KJaTaXve-
15 iv eTTiyeipovvTas tovs t vo/jlovs Kal Ta<? iraTpiovs kicao-T-
o^9 iroXiTeias re {3acrLXev$ Y[ToXefialo<; afcoXovdcos Tel t-
cov Trpoyovcov zeal Tel tt}? dSeXcfyrjs 7rpo[a]ipecrc
<f)avepo<;
icrT-
iv cnrovSd^GOv virep rr}? kolvt)s t[<ov] 'J^XXrjvcov eXevOepias' [ic]al
Srj/nos 6 'AOrjvaioov avfifjua^iav iroirjadpbevo^ irpos avTov ical
20 tovs XoLTTOv^EiWrjva^ \lrtj(f)icrTai, irapaicaXelv eirl ttjv avTrj-
v irpoaipeo-tv waavToo^ Se Kal AaKehaifJuovLot tfilXoi, icaX avfi-
payoi tov /3ao-LXea)<s ovtes YlToXe/jualov Kal 7rpo? tov hrjfjLov t-
ov AOrjvaioiv elcrlv i^rj^Lafievoi avfipba-^iav /xeTci T 'HXelcov
/cal
'
A^aioov ical TeyeaTOJv Kal MavTcvecov /cat 'Op^ofxevlcov Ka-
25 l] <X>m[\W] /cal Ka<f)V(Dv Kal KprjTaeayv oaot elcrlv iv Tel ctv/jl/j,-
ax^a r]et AatceSai/jLovLoov ical 'A^eco? ical twv aXXoov o-v/jL/xd^co-
v Kal] 7rpicr/3ei<; d-no twv crvve&pcov direcrTaXicacnv irpos tov Brj-
|iov]* Kal ol iraparyeryovoTes Trap avTcov e/ncf)aviovcnv ttjv Te A-
a/ceSat/jLOVLCDV Kal \\pecos Kal tojv aXXoov crv[Xfia^ajv c^iXoTLfii-
30
av, rjv e^ovatv irpbs tov Srj/j,ov, Kal ttjv irepl tt}?
avfifxa^ia^ o/jLoX-
ojiav iJKOvat KO/xl^ovTe^' ottcos dv ovv koivtjs op,ovoias <yevo/JL-
152 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[57
evrjs Toi$
r
'lLWr}at, 777)09 re rovs vvv r/BiKTjKoras /cat irapearrov
BrjKoras ras TroXets irpoOv/JLOt puerd rov /3aat\eo)<; TlroXepbaiov
teal fjuer dWrjXcov birapywcriv dycovtcrral Kal rb Xolttov pueO' 6/jlov-
35
oia<$ ctoj^coctlv ras 7roXet9* dyadfj rvyei BeBo^Oac tw[i
8-
rjpia), rr)v
fAv (f>i\iav Kal rr\v o-v/jb/jba^tav elvai
'
'AOrjvaloes k\oX
Aa/ceSai/jLOVioLS Kal rots (BacriXevaiv rots AaKeBaifMov[l(av
Kal 'HXe/ot? Kal 'A^atot? Kal Teyedracs Kal M.avnveva[iv Ka-
l OpxpfxevioLS
Kal QiaXevacv Kal Kacfyvevcrtv Kal K.p7]r[atvfri-
40 v ogoi iv rel avfi/jLa^la eio~lv rel AaKeBatpLOvLwv Ka[\ 'Apneas
Kal rols aXXoo<; Gvybpudyois Kvpiav els tov diravra
[xpovov, rjv
r/KOvai KO/jLi^ovres ol TrpeafteLS' Kal dvaypdyjra[i av-njv tov -yp-
afJLfJLarea tov Kara irpvraveiav iv o~rr)Xrj ^oXk]^ Kal o-TTjcrai k-
v aKpoiroXet irapd tov veo) 7-7)9
'
AOrjvds rr)s Ilo[Xia8os. djioo-ai 8*
45
rel] dpyela rols rrpeofieaiv rols 7rapayeyo[v6<riv irap' avrwv
(?)
t6-
v opKov to]i> rrepl rrjs av/x/jLa^ias Kara rd [iron-pia
,
vtto tov hrjfiov 7rp[ia-$\e
-
-
TO , ,
frg. b <rv]/Lt/ia^0L9 'A6r)[vai
50
,
A8r]va]tOL'9 fJ<ev AaKeBat-
fxoviois 6|i6<rcu tov's t dpxovTas Kal tov]9 o~rparrjyovS Kal T-
i]V PovXi^v Kal iirirdpxovs Kal lirirlas Kajfc (pvXapyovs Kai ra^L-
dp\ovs vrj t6v Aa, 'AiroXXwva, "ApTjii]i>, ' YiXiov,
'
Apr), AOrjvdv
'
Ape-
lav, IIocri8o, Ai^p.T]Tpa, cjiacvovo-t \l\v t]v rel crufjUfia^La rel yey-
55
vt]p.VL dvai avrois iroXXd Kal 6l]ja0d, imopKovai Be rdva-
vria. AaK8ai(xoviwv 8 'A9t)vol]lol<; Oixoaai Kara ravra rov-
s pao-tXcis Kal tovs 6<j>6pot)s Kal] row; yepovras' Kara ravrd B-
k op-ocrai Kal Kara <ra> ras dXXas] TToXetS rovs dpyovra^. idv B-
l 8oKt AaKcSaijxoviois Kal r]ot9 o~vp,^xa.yoi<s Kal AOrjvaiois
60 dficivov tvat irpoa-06iva ti] Kai acfreXelv 7Tpi rrjs av/jb/jLa^t-
as o dv SoKct da<J>oTpois, 'ivo\pKOV elvat. diaypdyfrai 8e rr)v av-
vG^kiiv xds iroXcis v <rTi]Xai]9 Kal arijaat iv lepw brrov dv )3ov-
XtovTai.
For the
'
Chremonidean ' War, to the beginning of which this decree refers,
see Droysen Hell, in 1, 225 sqq., Holm H. G. iv 194
7. It was a final effort
for freedom on the part of Athens. Apart from a few inscriptions, our informa-
tion depends upon a brief account by Pausanias in 6, a few lines in Justinus
26, 2 and prol. 26, and a reference to the death of Philemon in Ael. fr. 11
(Miiller
4, 415). The only certain date is that of the death in battle of Areus,
the Lacedaemonian King, in the spring of 265 b.c. The capture of Athens by
58]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 153
Antigonus Gonatas is referred by De Sanctis (Studi di storia antica 11 55 sqq.)
to 260 b.c. For the year of Pithidemus, 1. 2, D now (ed. 2), after Koehler,
inclines to 268/7 or 267/6 b.c. on the ground that some time must have elapsed
between his archonship and the death of Areus. Ferguson Corn. St. x 28,
decides for 267/6.
7. Xp/j.o]vi8fjs. It was from this person that the name 6 Xpepaovideios
irdXefios (Hegesander ap. Athen. vi
p. 250) came. For his later history see D's
note. 14. KadeiXrjcpoTuv. 23 20.
16. UtoXc/jlcuos : sc. Philadelphus, who possibly was the chief instigator of
the war. Before the date of the decree he was in alliance with Athens (1. 19).
Holm I. c. gives to Athens the credit of having led, albeit without success, the
movement for freedom. By ddeXcp^s in 1. 17 is meant Arsinoe, sister and wife
of Philadelphus. 17. irpo\a}Lp{<xei : 55 19. In 1. 19 kclI =
(
also.'
25. Qiahtuv. The form without
y
occurs DI 4645 (Mtissenia). Cf. Hoffmann
Gr. Dial, i 221, where the doubt is raised as to whether <J>ia\eia or QiyaXeia was
the original name of the Arcadian town.
Kprjra^uju 8aoi kt\. : a necessary limitation
;
the Cretan towns were not
likely to act with unanimity. Cf. e.g. the inscription of Dreros (Ca. 121) in
which the dyeXaToc or
<t>7}fiot.
are made to swear eternal enmity against Lyttos.
26. 'A/o^ws. 'Apeijs, son of Acrotatus, succeeded his grandfather Cleomenes
in 309 b.c. and reigned 44 years (Diod. xx 29, 1). He was killed in battle near
Corinth in fighting against Antigonus, 265 b.c.
27. avi>i5pio. Cf. 32 43, 34 12.
32. irapeaTroudriKdTas. For the construction cf. Polyb. i 7, 8 : irapeairbvb-qaav
('broke faith with') tous "PyyIvovs and Plut. Sull. 3. Koe. points out that the
King of Macedon and the various despots governing Greek cities under his
protection are meant. 35. ayfacriv. Meisterhans Gr. 179.
43. ei> (TTrjXrj
x
a^K
[vl-
The stone then contains a copy of the original on
bronze. 44. ww. See 37 35.
45. r& apxeia. :
'
boards of magistrates.' This use of the word though
common elsewhere is not found in Old Attic.
b 49 sqq. This fragment was acutely seen by Wilhelm I. c. to belong to
frg. a.
54. ip.fieuovai p.kv ktX. For the formula see Index s.v. 6pKos.
58. After apxovras is left the space of two letters. Wilhelm thinks the
same was the case after Ta^idpxovs 1. 53 and after rdvavria 1. 56. The superfluous
to. after Kara, if it may be supplied, makes up the necessary 24 letters.
61. tvopKov. So D, for eijopKov (sc. doxe?) of Wilhelm, regarding the words
tvopxov dvai as the apodosis. Cf., for the phrase, elvai hairovbov CIA n 14 b
p. 423, and the Cretan formula Ca. 116, 10 : Sri 5e e(y)ypd\patfiev Zvopubv re
&ttw Kal tvQivov (='4vdeov, but for another meaning see D 326, 32, Chersonesiis).
58. A slab of Hymettian marble, found on the acropolis. CIA n 308;
D 227. Cf. Unger Philol. 38, 491 sqq.; Wilamowitz Ant. v. Caryst. 244;
W. S. Ferguson Com. Stud, x p. 31; Sonne De arbitris externis
p. 35 n. lv.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but

is
2
. Xtoixv^v-
154 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[58
'E7rfc
pGL\6'X0V
apyovTo^ e'[irl ttjs . . . ti-
8]o? 8VTpa(<;) TrpvTaveias,
77
[i Ai68otos A-
Loyvrfrov Qpedppios iypafjL/n[aTtvi' Mcto.-
yLTvi(*)vos Sco&efcdrr), $co8e[K&Tr\ t^s irp-
5
vraveia^' eKKXr^aia tcvpla' r<[v irpoc'Spwv
eVei/r^tfe^ Uv0oyi>r)<; rXai^icCirirov 'AX-
ireKTjOev Kal crv\y]7rp6eBpoL'
eSo^ev ttj
f3ov\fj
Kal tw[i Sijpup
KaXatSiys KaXatoov 'B^VTreratoDV \direv' ktn-
10 i&rj tov 8t]/jlov tov ' XOrjvaiayv real [tov koivo-
V TOV RoLCDTGOV CTVf/,/3o\ov 7TOL7}(TapJ[4v<aV irpo-
9 aWjjXovs Kal eXofjuevwv kkX7)t\ov ttjv Aa-
/jLLecov 7toXlv dveSe^aTo Ka6tel\y to 8iko.o
TTjptov, Kal vvv 01 diroara\6VTe\s vir6 tv A-
15 ajweW] iiri [rds 8f]/ca9 a[ir]o[<J>aCvov<riv kt\.
Athens and the Confederation of Boeotia had referred some subject of
dispute to the arbitration of Lamia and both this decree and CIA iv 2, 308 b
(proposed by the same KaXatdrjs) are concerned with the passing of a vote of
thanks to the Lamian arbitrators (oi airo<jTa\vTe[s virb rwc Aaputup], 14 sq.).
The archonship of Thersilochus is referred by D to the second half of the third
century b.c. The latter part of CIA 11 307 belongs to the same year as our
inscription and is preceded by a decree passed in the archonship of Callimedes.
That decree was previously held to be anterior to the Chremonidean War
(267263 b.c.) because in it the name of a tribe (Antigonis or Demetrias) is
erased; but it now appears (see Rem. vi, p. 128) that these tribes survived to
about 200 b.c
The written character of CIA 11 307 better suits a later than an earlier date
in the century : is once square, ir is 7r
2
, <p is frequently
3
or
<p
4
, w is through-
out w
2
.
3 sqq. On the coincidence of the day of the month with the day of the
prytany see Rem. vi, p. 127.
9. 'Evireranhv. Note that the genitive is EvweTaiovos (not -wvos). From the
middle of the second century we frequently find an e prefixed to the initial
;
e.g. 'Eu7reraict>;> CIA in 1119, 45 (circa 150 b.c) ;
'EijvTrereuv ib. 1892, 3 (where
the e = ai shows that it is not earlier than 100 a.
d.).
Meisterhans, Gr. 131
and 93.
12. ZkkXtitop
-
cf. the note on 26 1721 and for other examples of ZkkXtjtol
7r6Xets see no. 71 and Index.
The subject of dvede^aro is ij Aa/uueajv 7r6\is :
"
undertook to establish a court
of arbitration."
15. a-Ko<t>(x.ivov<jLv kt\. For the restoration cf. 51 14 sq.
59]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 155
59. A slab of Hymettian marble, in four fragments, found at Athens.
CIA ii 334; D 232. Cf. Beloch Jahrb. cxxix
(1884), 481 sqq. ; Lolling AeXr..
'Apx- 1892, p.
48.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but

is

2
and it frequently ir
3
. The dot of 6 is frequently
omitted.
Lines 1, 2 and 3032 are in larger characters
;
lines
3
29 are o-Toixydov
except that in 1. 19 an iota, probably at first omitted, has been inserted
[jx-qdevi).
T a
fJL
L a 9 CTT pOLTLCO
[tikwv
EupUK\et8)|9 M t K l ft) ^ O
S
[K T|
4
i <r b c v
s
230-228
'E]7Tt AiOfie&ovTos apy^ovTOS eVl rrj<;
[ 80s SfiKaTTjs irp-
vravetas,
fj
<>opvo~Ki87)s
'
Apccrrofjuevov (A)[vkovovs
Ypapp.d-
5
Te]vev 'l&\a<f)r)l3o\ta)vo<; hvet Kal vea eV[PoXipu> 8VTpa t-
tjs]
Trpvravelw eKKXrjaia' twv TrpoeSpcov 6'[irt|n]<^bgv KaXXtV-
Tp]aTO? TeXeaivov 'E^te[vs *al cr upirpofSpob*
eSo^ev tco SrjfKj)'
Be]6(f)7}fAOS
Ti/jlok\OVS MapaOcovLOS e277-e[v* oirws dv \pr\\i.arbiv
10 tr\opicr6ivTwv
^X
ei Ta
P<ia<;
pbepi^etv ra [Sfopcva, IVa Kara t6-
v
K\ara\oL7rov yj)ovov rod iviavTov cri^;[ofuo-8tt<riv ot Ik -yTjs ?
K\apirol fir
da^aXeua^' dyaOel rvyei Se[86x0ab ttj povXa
t\ov$ Xa^ovTas irpoeSpovs e/9 rrjv eVtoOfo-av iKKXtjo-^av
XP^K-
-
a\rlaai irepl tovtcov, yvcofirjv Be ijv/bLJ3dXX[o-Qai -rfjs PovXtjs, on
15 So/eel rjj fiovXel, tovs ftovXo/xevovs rw\y TroXbrwv Kal t<3v dX-
XcOV TCOV OLKOVVTCOV iv
Tfj
TToXei eViStSd [vcu ls TT\V O-WTTjpba-
v t^? iroXecos Kal tt\v (pvXafcrjv r?}? ^copas e[Tro/yY^o-"0ab Tt p-
ovXei rj 7rpo? tovs arpar^yov^ d7roypdyjra[o-Qai Ivtos prjvos Mo-
vvixiodvos' (Jltj i^earco Se /jL7j6evl 7rc8ovva[i vXiov H H Spaxpwv
20 /jlt)& eXdTTOv
n
*
eivat Se tois iirihovai [<rT<J>ava>9T|vaC t ko.-
l eiraiveOrjvaL Kal Ti/jLrjOfjvai viro rod Brj^ov KaGo-n, dv rj dfjb-
09 KacrTO<; avTcov. rov he ypapLfjuarea rod [8-rjp.ov dva"ypd\|>ab to-
8]e to ^7](f)t[(r\La] Kal ra [6vo/jLa]ra tcov 7rt86vT[<av iv o-Tr\\r\ Xl8v-
i k[o]1 o-\rrj\aai iv Ty dyopdi, [oVa)?] av <pavp[6\
f
d-irao-iv ij <pbXoT-
25
tyitta tcov fiovXofievcov evepyeTelv [rov S]rj[\iov' t6 8e dvdXp,a t-
o yevofxevov 66? Te t?;^ o-T^Xrjv Kal tt\v tt[va7pa<j>Tiv r<Sv ovopaT-
cov /JiepLcrai tov eirl Trj ZuoiKifjaet, to Be -^?y[<pi<rpa ToSe, ermSri
7Tpi Tropov Xpr)/jLaTco[y] ZcttIv CTTpaTCCOTLKCo[v, dvai dirav is <j>v-
XaKrjv t?}? ^copa?.
30 O 1 e i it 4o co k av ei? r J) v cr co
[t t|
p
U v t^s it
6-
156 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA
\ (o
s
k al r rj v
\jj 7]
(f)
L O" /a a t o v
AvTl(f)(i)V E/3%t
EvpvfcXeiSrj's K.7j<j)i(7 .
35
^Aiklwv K.7]<j)io~i .
Apjo/xea? 'Ep^ie .
4
o
SECT. I.
[X

p
a s
[59
(j) v X a k rj v t
77 5
8
7]
fJL O V'
HH Apa/covTi8r)<; 'Rp%i . HH
HH 'Kpiaro^v
'Epxi.
H[H]
HH 'lepo/cXrjs 'Eovvie . HH
HH Mt/aW (dpiao-L . HH
[HH] Sttoi/Smw Teidpd. HH
- -
o]po? 7]fia/c . H H
pa? 'A<^8 . H H
Elpea . H H
K Ko>\ . H[H]
k a t a to
v
45 ]
OXov
ado .
779 Mae .
wv *A<f)iBi>al .
- -
-y]^0)TO? 'A\(i)7T .
50 Eiz/xa^o? X(OKpdrov
l&V7rvpihr)<;
<>l\l<t/co<; Tla/JL{3(0 .
'ApiaroXas Ep^t .
ov/jt,6pcos Evcov .
55
Apiarayopas etc KoX.
S]^0X^9 ^(f)7]TT .
t
Bi]dv0i'TT'TTO^
'EpX
L '
Z]ft)7Tf/909 ^VpCLK .
. i/jUtiv 'OfjOev
60 A]rj/uLO(f)i\os i$j Ol .
'EpJtcDTo? MeXrr .
NiKO/c\r)<; Q>\v .
NuKoaOevr)*; <*>Xi> .
^[X]okXtj^ Koplv .
65 AiOTreiOrjs <Pv\d .
TifJLCOV *(f>lJTTl .
AiroXkoScop09 ^.wyev-
- -
(ovlSr)<; KoXa)i> .
virep avrov /cat rov vov H H
H H ScGo-o? 'AXaievs H H
HH Tjyjvcdv
'
AXaievs HH
HH Nttcayopas 'Ep^t . HH
H H Avaias K77 (juaie . H H
H ^rpdrio^ ^(J^tjtt . H H
H nau<rtVta^09 e*; KoX . H H
IlaiWa.9 Uaiavi . H H
H H %(oo-l{3i,o<; laore .
F
3
H H fcal virep rod vov
HH Aio[v]vo~iov
H
H H HeV[w]^
'
'Ao-fcXr)7rid8ov
HH OuXacnov [.]H
HH 'Ao-fcXriTTid 8r)[s 'B^epco-
HH 1^09 <>v\[<x]o-lo<; HH
HH Eua7ta[r,s
]
QiXat. HH
H H Ki;^<7^[w 'AOfxJo^ . H H
HH "Ap^avSpos 'EXevcriv . HH
H H y^aipe^wv Klreal . H
H H
'
Apiarwv Ylaiavi . H H
H H
*
AvtLitarpos Tlaiav . H H
H H . . vok[po.t]t)<; 'AXai . H H
H H <&vp6pi[ax]o<;
2re(i)pi . H H
H H Aicr^pcov Uaiavi . H H
7
ATTo\X(0(f)dvr]<; 'AXoott . H H
f
T
At;
8e
Ka
0>tX
Al
Kt[t|(t
- - -
A[.
f
Iep
Tip,
Tifr
At
- -
-
'AX
At;/x
4>uo-[t
Kr)(j)i[(r
<S>i8
Aioy
<>i\i
UvOo
- -
-
'A/xot
'AptCTT
'ETTfcf^JafvtJS
H T\pa%LT[i\r\S
HH Et/3ecr[8T]s
HH fi)ovKp[i
- -
HH A(OpL(0V -
-
HH Aaxap[r\s
HH HifALas A
-
HH [c]yu,[t]o-TO
HH N]t/coyLta[x
-
H (vacat)
H
HH
H
H
59]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 157
ov 'Orpvvevs H H ^cocriyivrj^ Tlaiav .
KaXXt/ia%09 H H u/xo^apr;? ^I^tjttl .
70
AijKCOV <f)l\6<TO . H H 607TO/A7TO? Ad/jL7TTp
v
A\e[|]i[s $]u\dai . HH Avrlas
^
Ay^apve .
f
E/caTato? MearjfjfipL
. H H (y)eo7ro/A7ro? AlyiX .
Ni/crjrrjs Uepyaai] . H AvcnOei&rjs 'Ep^t .
NiK]oKpd[rr]]^ MeX . H H <>t\6#eo9 Qpedppt .
75
Xcfyrfr
. H H Atj/jloc^lXo^ Qpedppo
779
^cfrtfr
. H H XaxptXos KoXXvt .
- - -
'ApiCTTLOW (drj/jLa/c .
09 QXvev .
Eljoecrz,' .
The decree invites patriotic citizens to make contributions eh (rurrjplav 7-77S
irdXews. The name of the prytanising tribe

Ar]/j.r)Tpia8os or ' Avriyovidosis


erased in 1. 3. These designations were not formally abolished till 200 B.C.
(Belouh I. c, Rem vi, p. 128). But a nearer indication of date is afforded by
the name of the rafxias, 1. 2, who is clearly alluded to (though his name is lost)
as the brother of Micion in CIA 11 379, a decree in which mention is made of
the Diogenes, upon whom extraordinary honours were conferred on his with-
drawal of the Macedonian garrisons in 229 b.c. (65 24). Our decree must be
slightly anterior to 229 b.c. But cf. the note on 1. 5 below.
1. The office of
'
Treasurer of the War-funds ' (cf. Fraenkel St.* 11
note 317) was established in 347 b.c after the fall of Olynthus. The earliest
inscriptional mention of the office appears to be in CIA 11 739, probably of
334/3 b.c. (administration of Lycurgus). In inscriptions down to the first
century b.c the cost of erecting inscribed stelae is very frequently assigned
to his office ; cf. for another duty 65 50.
5. The restoration devrepa, which exactly fills the space, is defended by
Unger I. c, who calculates that the first six prytanies of this (ordinary) year
were of 29 days each and the last six of 30 each, except the tenth prytany which
had an intercalary day, making 31. Thus
(6
x
29)
+
(3 x 30)
= 264, bringing us
down to the end of the 9th prytany, and the 2nd day of the 10th prytany was
the last day of Elaphebolion duplicated. So D, who rejects Lolling's conjecture
of elKocrT-fj and his attribution of the date to the period of the 13 tribes ; cf.
Ferguson Corn. St. x 44 who assigns Diomedon to 228/7 b.c
6. KaWiarparos : supplied by Koehler on a comparison of 56 27.
13. rovs \ax<Was irpoedpovs. See Rem. iv, p. 85. Koehler points out that
this is the earliest instance of the abbreviation of the longer formula toi>s
wpoedpovs ol B.v Xdxwct irpoedpeveiv. See 33 10.
16 7r(.8i56vai, 19 ewidovvai : the present tense denotes the general proce-
dure, the aorist the act of an individual subscriber. Cf. 37 24 sqq.
17. eh <f>v\aK7)v rijs x^/scis. Cf. CIA n 809 col. b 39. A special importance
seems to have attached to decrees ending with this formula. According to
Aristotle 'A0. ttoX. 43, 4 it was customary in the tojpicu iKKXrjalat to debate about
158 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[60
the (pvKaK-q T7js x^pas. The expression recurs in a marine inscription CIA n 811
col. c 155, where it is said of a decree relating to the cancelling of a debt : to de
\f/7]<pi<T[j.a rdde avav elvat els ttjv <pv\aK7]v ttjs xwyoas, eirei-dr) earifx irepl
xP
r
ll
x^T(jiV
elcnrpd^ews.
33 sqq.
'
kvTMp&v
'Epx<-
etc. On the subject of abbreviations generally see
Larfeld Epigr.

140 sqq. (Miiller Hdb. i 538 sqq.) and cf. 35 6.
61.
LOIiTTOZ
Koehler, who prefers 'Epiwros to Botwr6s on a comparison
of CIA ii 335, 20 : -puoros.
68. 2(a<Tiye't>T)s. As Wilamowitz, Antig.
p. 252, note
7,
shows, he was archon
in a year not long after this (CIA n 82, 1 : 'E7rt 'Luaiyivovs apxovros oUe rbv
injpyov ave'drjKav, where follows a list of subscribers many of whose names
appear here).
69. QvfMoxapvs : 55 3. Elpea[idT]s] is the demotic name. Hence D restores
in the preceding line U.pa^LT[e\r]s KrjcpiaoddTov?]; for if the father's name had
not been appended, the demotic would have been in the first line in an
abbreviated form.
70. A6ko)i> (frCkbao : i.e. <pi\6<ro(f)os, Lyco Troadensis, who presided over the
Peripatetic School at Athens from about 270 to 226 b.c. (cf. Diog. L. v
65;
Zeller Phil. d. Griechen n
2, p. 922 ; Wilamowitz Antig. p. 78 sqq.). D.
60. A base of Hymettian marble in three fragments, found at Athens.
Hirschfeld Herm. vin (187S) 350 sqq. ; Sybel ib. xx (1885)
41 sq.
;
Kumanudes
'Ad. in (1874)
262 sq.; CIA n 403. Cf. Newton Essays 139 sq. ; Hartel Att. St.
79 sq. ; Girard 1/ Asclepieion d'Athenes 59 sq. ; Miller De decretis atticis 85.
Alphabet, type 1; but

=
2
'
ti
p
O) L l a T
p
O)
Ev/CAt}? E V V 6
fJL
O V
Ke<f>a\rj0v
d v e 6
7)
k e v.
5
6 o [L
'E7rl pacrv(j)toi>TO<; apyovro^' [lirl ttjs IIav8t-
ovlSos e/cT7]<; irpvTavELas,
fj
rov Ylaiavievs i<ypa/jLfjuaT[vev' Stjjxov \|/tj-
(plcr/jLaTa' M.cufjLaKT7)piwvos ,
io 6KT6L fcai Be/caret tt}? irpvT^avdas' ckkXtj-
aia Kvpta iv tco ^ear[p]&)* t[<3v irpoe'Sptov
7T'^rr)(j)l^6V KXeopuiyos Aa
aios koX crv/jLTTpoehpor
eSo^ev ret /3ov\[eV
15
'
Ej/jLTreSicov JLv/Jirfkov ^v(>v\y\i.iv% ctirev'
60]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 159
virep cov tt)v irpocroBov 7re[iroiiTrcu 6 Upcvs
TOV TjpCOOS TOV LCLTpOV Oto[- - OITttS <XV C~
k tcov tvttcov tcov (ivaKei\y.iv<av kv T<3 Upw
zeal rod dpyvpiov tcaTacr[K.evao-Qr\ dvd-
20 ^[r)]yaa. TCp deep (o)lVOv6[r\
----,
a.ya\0L Tvyei BeB6\y$o.\. ti pouXci tovs
\a\jovTas 7rpoeo[povs els tt|v Imovo-av
CKKjA/^CTtaz; ^07]fia\rC(rai irepl tovtcov, -yvw-
p.T]v] Be f/x/3AAeo"[0ai ttjs (3ovXtjs ls tov
8-
25 TJp.ov], OTt oo[i<]e t[t| PovXtj, IXe'crGcu tov
8i]]/U-o^ [8v]o /Lte[v avSpas e 'ApcviraYiTwv,
repels Be 6% eaVTCo[y, drives p.Ta T tov
ije^eco? teal tov aTpaT7]y\ov tov lirl ttjv
irJa/oacr/ceL'?)^ /cat toO ttpvfcT#TOl/o[s] tov [4-ttI
30 t] tepa tcaOeXovTes tovs tvttovs koI el t[i
a]AAo o~tiv dpyvpovv rj yjivcrovv /cat to
a^pjvptov to dvaKelfievov cmqcravTes
KJaTacTKevdaovcn tco 6eco dvddrj/jLa cos
dv BvvcovTai koWlcttov Kal dvaOijcrov-
35
giv enriypd^avTes' r) /3ov\rj rj eirl %pacrv<$)Co\y-
t]o? dpyovTOS diro tcov avadrj/jbaTcov ?//Oft)['i
LdTpd)' dvaypayjraTcoaav Be 01 aipeOe[y-
Te? T ovofiaTa tcov dvaTeOrjKOTtov ev
tcZ tepco Kal aTaOfibv els cTTrjXrjv \16i-
40 vt)v teal aTTjaaTcoaav ev tco lepco' a Be civ
olfcovo/jLijo-cocriv, Xoyov KaTaj3a\ecr0ai av-
tovs' e\ecr#a[i] Be Kal Brj/jLocrtov tov dvTC-
ypayjro/jievov, bircos dv tovtcov yevop,evcov
e^ec KaXcos Kal evcre/3cos Tel /3ov\el teal tco\i
45
BrjfAcp Ta 7rpbs tovs Oeov^' Qvaai Be tco de-
ep apecTTiqpiov airo irevTe Kal BeKa Bpa-
Xficov. ewl tt]v KaTaaKevrjv ti)s olvo-
X
or
IS
Tc
p
rjpcoi tco laTpco e 'AOrjvaicov d-
ttcivtcov Ke^eipoTovrjVTai' TXavKeTTjs K?;-
50
cpicrcevs, JZcoyevrjs 'iKapievs, Kovcov 'AXca-
TreKrjOev
if;
'
ApeviraytTcov Seoyvcs Ku8a-
6]^[va]teu?, Xp?7? \\cj)tBvaios' Br)fi6aio[s
Ke[yju.po]TOvr)TaL Arj/jLtjTpios.
'E]v t[w] tov rjpeoos tov laTpov tcl KaOaupeOevTa
160 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[60
55
el]? to avadrjfxa' dpyvpd' rirpa^/iov o dve-
r\\tcev KaXXtcrTpaTO?* tvttov ov dvedrj/ce Aa-
fiihiov tvttov ov aveOr/Kev Zwt\o? virep tov
TTCLlhlOV' TVTTOV OV dv07)/CV Ka\\L0~Tl0V
tvttov ov dvedrjKev Aa/jLiBiov tvttov ov dveOr}-
6o Kv Aa(f>aXtcov tvttov ov dveOrj/cev NtKO/c\r)[s'
tvttov ov aveOrjKev Y^aWiaTiov tvttov ov dv\i-
Orjice <&lXlo-tl\s\' tvttov [k]gu daTTihto\y\ o dveOrj-
K6V EvOlOV' TVTTOV OV dve07]K6V Z&H'Xo?*
Al??[p]o[te
Svo ov? dveGrjicev He^o/eX?}?* tvttov ov dveOrj-
65 KV HLv/ckeiCl' TVTTOV OV dvi0r)KV 'OXv/JLTTlS'
tvttov bv dveOrjKe KaWiaTiov 6<p0a\fjLov^
OU? aV607]KV K.T7]0~(OV TVTTOV bv dv07JK6 KaXX/cr-
tiov hpa^jjual
ef
. . er . a . . . . dveTTLjpatyov
TVTTOV OV dv07]KV K[a\XlCTTlo]^* fjLTJpOVS OU? [d-
70
v]0r)KV ^TTlV07)p' TVTTOV OV dv07]K [ll]aTpOfc[\- .
.*
6<{>0]aXyu,oi>? o>? ave07)K Aa/xlStov
6(f)0a\fxov^
oOs] ave0TjKe QikoaTpaTrj* dfcpoaToXcov b d\yi-
6t|k]6 @6o'[8]oTO?* TVTTOV OV dv07]K
X6(f>ov
ctt[t]-
80s] b ave0T)fC TLvpcov tvttov bv dve0rjtc Mocr^
75
virjep KaWt,o~Tp(iT7)s teal KoWlttttov tvttov bv
aV0T]KV 'KaWtO'TLOV' TVTTOV bv aV0r)KV
KaWiaTLOv tvttov bv dv07)fC6V KaXXtcrrfiov*
TVTTOV OV dv07]K KaXXiaTlOV'
X
i
P
*1 V ai>0T)[Ke
Ni/coaTpaTr)' TVTTia Svo (d) dve0i)tcV EukXt/?.
80'Apyvplov
Spax/jbds
APhhh*
tvttcov oXtcrj
HAPh*
<f)(,d\r)
oXktj
H*
K<j)d\aiov
HHAAAhhhh*
dirb tov-
tov dp.o~T7]piov KdTa to ^rjcpia/jLa
A P
' feat o~v[y-
,
%rOVV0VTCDV TCOV TVTTLCOV fCCLL T?}? <j)t.dXr)<;
aTTOVGia
A h h
' ^a^ t? dvaypacf>7]v tt}? o~Tr}Xr)<s
85 f
-1
h h h II!
*
epyaoTpa
t/J?
olvoyor\^
Ahh'
V
oivoyo-
7]
ayei
HP A AAh hh III'
K(f)d\cuov
HHAAAhh*
^01-
ttov \-
\-
' tovto fcaTacr/cevaaa/jLevoo dvaOrjao-
fl6V
TVTTOV.
For the date see the note on 1. 9.
The inscribed stele served as the base of a votive offering made to the
'
Hero Physician,' as a certain physician who had received divine honours after
60]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 161
his death was designated. LI. 553 give the text of the decree for the melting
down of votive offerings dedicated in gratitude for cures effected in the temple,
11. 54
79 a list of offerings, with the names of the donors, 11. 8088 a
balance-sheet of accounts.
The "Hpws la.Tp6$ at Athens appears to be first mentioned in Dem. F. L. 419,
where Aeschines is said to have kept a school 7rp6s t<2 rod "Hpw tov larpov. All
other notices have reference to this passage ; e.g. the scholion ijpuos] ovtws
eKaXeiTO ijpcos iarpds ns irapa rots 'Adrjvaiois. 'E/CX77077 5 r/pus Sid to n^yedos
rod crwyttaros. to 5e xvpiov ovojxa clvtou
'
ApicTd/xaxos. Cf. Bekk. Anecd. p. 263,
Hesych. s. v.
8. The restoration in this line is based upon other examples, e.g. CIA n
407, 413, iv 2, 420 b. The plural
xfrqftfffMTa
seems to be due to carelessness, for
only one xf/rjfaa/uLa
follows.
9. MaifiaKTrjpiQvos. How comes it that the sixth prytany falls in the
fifth
month? Schmidt (Chron. p.
685 sqq.) solves the difficulty (cf. Koehler CIA)
by assuming that the inscription belongs to the period when there were two
concurrent calendars, the one kclto. debv, the other kclt apxovra. For an explana-
tion of these terms see no. 62. His calculations lead him to conclude that the
year in which Thrasyphon was archon was the 10th year of the 12th Metonic
cycle, or 214/3 B.C., and after Maip-aKT-qpiCovos he would supply evrj nal viq.. But
cf. the caution given 62.
18. The t6wol 'models,' enumerated 54
79, appear to include among other
objects the models in silver of different parts of the body in which cures had
been effected through the agency of the god. Many of these parts are specified
by name in an inventory belonging to the temple of Amphiaraus at Oropus,
IGSept. 303. Whether the representations of diseased parts were sufficiently
exact to serve for pathological study, we do not know ; but Hippocrates is said
to have derived part of his medical experience from the record of cases in the
celebrated temple of Aesculapius in the island of Kos. (Newton I. c.) See
further the notes on the inscriptions from the 'AaKXrj-me'tov at Epidaurus.
26.
'
Apevirayituv. Cf. 51: this spelling in Attic appears to be found only
in this inscription and CIA n 839, 7. Cf. Meisterhans Gr. 61. In CIA n 404,
dealing with a similar subject, a commission of three is appointed without the
Areopagites. The arpaT-qyos e-rri tt\v irapaaKevqv is mentioned 55 22 (see ib.
note 1.
5)
and in several other inscriptions. CIA n 839, where this office appears,
mentions in connexion with temple alterations the words KadaLpeais, eino-Kevri,
KaraaKevr]. The crTpaTrjybs iirl tt)i> Trapacncev-rju would seem to be concerned with
the superintendence of equipment, military or otherwise.
31.
xP
v<xvv - There is no other mention of gold in the inscription : the
formula is probably an ordinary one. The inscription of Oropus, IGSept. 303,
mentioned above, contains similar provisions ; cf. also Dem. c. Androt. 615.
32. o-T-fjo-avres :
'
after weighing them.' 35. 77 (3ov\rj : sc. dp^drjKe.
38. avaTedrjKdTcov : the usual spelling ; the form TidetKa of the grammars is
not found on inscriptions till the first century b.c Meisterhans Gr. 189.
41. KaTa.j3a\{<T0aL. Cf. for the use of the middle: Kara/3d\Aecr0cu...e(s ra
dr)fx6<na ypapLfxara, ap. Dem. Be Cor. 243,
'
to have an entry made on the public
records.' Cf. also 64 53.
42. Srj/xoaiov rbv dvTLypa\f/6p.evov : a public slave to act as controller,
8r}/x6aios avTiypaQevs ; cf. Dem. c. Androt. 615 and CIA 11 834 &, 12.
R. II. 11
162 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[60
46. apear-qpiov :
'
a propitiatory sacrifice. ' Cf. Dion. H. i 67 : dvalai
apearvpLai.
53. Arj/x^rpios : as a slave he has of course no demotic name.
55. Tirpaxp-op. The same abbreviation for rerpadpaxp-ov (cf. Ki6Kpavou =
KiovoKpavov CIA i 322 a, i 29, Meisterhans Gr. 118, where other instances are
quoted) occurs CIA n 835 c

I, 79 (320/317 B.C.). It was the large silver coin


of the period and may have been (Newton Essays
p. 140) the fee offered to the
god. Cf. Taprrj/JLopov 64 55.
56. Aapudiov, 58 KaWio-riov. These are of course female names.
72. aKpoGTokiov : a model of an aplustre; cf. 52 14.
79. Tvirla : apparently
'
small models.'
84. dirovaia : the
'
waste
'
is in melting the silver. In IGSept. 303, 15 it is
expressly directed that the tin should first be separated out : airoi;i/<yaj>Tes rbv
KaTTiTepov, perhaps the soldering is meant.
85. Zpyaorpa: the sums paid for making the oivoxbr). The following
'balance-sheet' is taken from Newton, Essays p.
141.
Membetr.
Drachmae
Silver drachmae 18
Weight of silver models 116
Weight of phiale 100
234
^HxprnUrtr.
Propitiatory sacrifice
Waste in melting silver
Engraving stele
Making oinochoe
Weight of oinochoe
Balance in hand
Drachmae.
15
12
8. 3 ob.
12
183. Sob.
232?
2
234
The balance is ordered to be made into a votive offering. The sum of the
expenditure actually amounts to only 231 drachmae : probably the mark of a
single drachma was omitted from the stone or has been effaced.
61. A slab of Hymettian marble in three fragments found at Athens.
CIA ii 444. Cf. A. Martin Rev. Phil, x (1886) 17 sqq. ; id. Cavaliers Atheniens
221 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1
; but

is
2
.
161/0
B.C.
'Avt] i &?;//, 09 KA,et7r[iri8ov clirev' limS^
NiKJoyevT]^ NIkg)vo[s ^iXdtSris
x
l
P
0T0VT
l^
6ls
viro tJov
Stj/jLOV ?7cre[ifa>v ci-ytovo0eTT]S is tov cviavr-
OV TOV eiTL
'
Kpiaro\d\ov d'pxovros *rrjv n irojiiniv
5
ir[i\|/V cvjcrfxj^/^ovja [ko.1 t]?^ 6va[iav <rvvcT\e<rev
tw 0T]<ri KJara [xd ir&JTpia kclI ttjs Xa/jLird[hos xa-
61]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 163
I tov yv\i]viKOv dyod[y]os eTroirjaaro rrjp 7r[ipAiav
irpo]f[o]77#et9 tov fXTjOeva tgov dyoovi^ofxevoov [<8ik-
1
lF
t
]
a
[
Tt
]
rrepiireo-elv eSrjKev Be Kal dOXa toIs aya>[vi-
10 o-ajj.v]ot9 awovBrj^ ovOev eXXeliTGOV Kara ra eyjr7](f>ca-
ptjva [tw] SrjfjLO)' irapeaKevacrev Be kcli tclls
(frvXais
r\al[s vi]Kw<rais dOXa T(Zv re lirirewv Kal tgov eTzCXe-
ktwv], o/jLolcds Be Kal tols Ik tgov eOvGov Tay/xaacv Kal
Ta]0[T]a dveOrjKev eBcoKev Be Kal rel ftovXec /ca6e<ri/jLov
15 8p]a^a9
XHH
/cat tois irpvrdveo-Lv els Overlay
H'
dve6r]Kv Be Kal ctttjXtjv ev tw tov 770-60)9 re/xe-
vei eus v)v dveypa^jre tovs vL/crjaavras, Kal els rav-
ra irdvra aTroXoyi^erai dvrjXGOKcbs etc tgov IBIgov
virep Tas Biay^iXlas e^aKocrias evevrjKovra
Bpay^fids'
io Kal irepl dirdvTGOv gov G0Kovo^r\Kev direvrjvoyev Xo-
yovs els to /jojrpopou Kal 77-009 toi>9 Xoyiards Kal Tas
evOvvas ehcoKev ottgos ovv Kal r\ $ovXr\ Kal 6 877/1,09
/jLvrj/xovevovTes (paivcovrat, tgov els eavTovs cf>cXoTt-
/ulov/jLV6l>v Kal eTol/iiGos BiBovtgov el<i>s t9 eTTtfjieXelas,
25 dyaOel Tvyei BeBoypai rel
ftovXel tovs Xayovras irpo-
']8oo?J9 els tt)v eirLovorav eKKXrjalav y^prnxarlaat
nr\epl tovtgov, yvGOfxrjv Be ^v/n/SaXXeadat tt?9 fiovXrjs
e]ls tov Brjixov on BoKei rel
fiovXe?,
eiraiveaat
NtK07]ez^77^ NIkgovos QtXatBrjv Kal crrecfravcocrai avrov
30 xpvo-<o]t o~T(f)av(t) Kara tov vo/ulov evvolas eve-
Ka Kal] (fiiXoTL/julas r\v eyjcov BiareXel irepi re rrjv
PovX]?7[v] Kal rov Brj/mov tov 'Adrjvaloov dvayopevcr[ai
8 t6v] aTe<pavov Alovvctlgov re tgov ev daret Kaivo\is
T
J/
>
[
tt
w8j W
?
KCLL ~H-ava6r)vaL(oif Kal 'RXevcnvlcov Kal UroXe-
35
aaC<ov To]t9 yvfiviKols aydoaiv. dvay[pdty]aL Be ToBe to yjrr]-
<|n<rua tov yjpafMfiaTea tov Kara irpvTaveiav els o-tiJXtjv
iv
$
Kal o]l veviKr\KQTes.
f
H /SovXi],
o Brjfjios,
40 NiKoyevTjv
Nikcovos
<
>iXatBr}v.
[Col. 1, see
p. 164 [Col, 11, see p. 165
EiTTi ApiaToXdov ktX.] eviKcov ktX.]
112
164 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[61
'Eirl 'Apio-roXaov
ap]vo^T09 O L O
tovs <r]aX7r[t]/CTav
45"Apio-Tos] 'ApMrrofcpdrou 'AOrjvalos.
rov[s KtjpVK]a9*
eoSeopfos n]ocrtSw[v]ou 'Adrjvaios.
rap e7r<[\K]rft)^ evavhpla,'
<J)v\r)
Vl[ko] At[t](l\1<; [to.] tap^o0i>TO?
50
Apyelov [tov] 'A<x/c\a[ir]&>j;o9 'Arrjvea)?.
ret [vo7rXCa* $v\r\ lv(]fca Ketf/0O7rt?
Ta^[tapxo]i/^T[o]? ^Av[riS](opov [t]o0
'
Apelov
co?. tco[v v] toi[s] eOvecnv
c]l)[av8pa' Ta-yJ/Lta ez^t/c[a] TO OfJLlkov.
55
T
]
6
[
J voirXa* T<ryp.a] eVttf[a] TO A.7)
flOV.
rtijv [lirireW cvavSpta'
<J>v]\?7
eV[iKa] Alye'fc
<j>vXap^ovvTos
'
AparCo)jvo<; tov 2<ifiov
s. rjel evoirXla.
$v\r\ ev^Ka Ajj/yepl's] <$>v\ap*fcOi)VTos
60 t]o0 Z . . ov ey yivppuvovTTrjs.
tt)[i Xa|Aird]St Tou? 7ratSa? e/c t?}?
Ti]yit[ov iraX]a/cr[Tpa]? iviica Xapurahap'^v
NiKo*yVT]s] NIk(ovos AlyelSos
<f>v\f}<;.
TT) Xap.ira]Sfc TOU9
ityrffioVS
Ot e
(f)7]/3ci}V
65
X]a/i7ra8ap^oi)i/T09
'AiroXX]ft)^[ov to]0 ^Lvktcliov
'
AKafJLdVTlhoS
4>vXtjs. twv vav]tcr:ci)^ ot e'7 Autfetoi;
Xap.ira8apxovvT]o? Kcupiov TOV
Te'Xwvos
- -
vt8]o? (>v\r)<;.
70
ir]a[l8as 86Xi\]o^ T179 TpiT7]<; r)\Ltcias'
- - - -
ob\<ap\ov ['AK]afiavTl8o<;
(fivXrjs.
iraiSas 4k] 7r[d]vT(OV hoXi^ov
Apo]/JbOV
'
Adrjvaios.
avSpas] S[opU^Oir
75
os 'A]p^aTpaTOV
'
Adrjvalos.
iraiSas] aTaScov TJ79 7rp(OT7]<; T]\t,/ela<;'
- -
A]r)/j,dpxov AlyelSos <f)v\r}<?.
iraiSas <rr]dSi0V Trjs hevTepa? y\iKia<;'
McX^tuv S]T[p]o[p.p]uXi63^09 AlyelSos (j>v\r)<;.
80 ir]at<t>Sa? [o-T]a8[iov ttj]9 TpLTrjs tjXiklck;'
'A]cr/c\7;[m]aS?;9 ['Apio-JTo/^ovXoi; AlclvtlSos
<f>v\r}<;.
61]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 165
e v C k o) v r 6 v a
y
co v a r co v % tj cr e i co v
iralBas BiavXov T179 Bevripas rjXucias'
(45)
MeXeTtoz> ^rpofx^vXtoovo^ AlyelBos (f>vXf}s.
iralBas BiavXov rrjs TpLTrjs r^Xi/cias'
y
AXei;(ov
'
A7roXXo(fxivov YlavBtoviBos <$>vX\r\s.
iralBas Ik 7rdv[r]a)v BiavXov Katpto?
TeXcovos *A6riva2os. avBpas BiavXov'
(50)
*AXej;av8po<; ^rjix\o]v 'AdrjvaLOS.
iralBas irdXrjv t?;[s ir^pcorr)^ r)Xitcia[s'
Nttccov Ntfcoyevov AlyelBos <uX?/9.
iralBas irdXrjv rfjs Bevrepas r)Xi/cia[s'
WleXerfov Xrpo/jbffvXc(t)vo<; AlyetBos <j)vX[r\<s.
(55)
iralhas TrdXrjv t^? rplrris r)XiKia<;'
'
A7ToX(X)covlo^
'
AttoXXcovcov AlyelBos <pvX[r\s.
iralBas i/c irdvTwv nrdXvv
'H-payopas AtovvaoBcopov A^t^cuos.
dvhpa<s TrdXrjv E#8?7/40? 2[a>]/c[paTovs *AQr\-
(60)
valos. iralBas Trvy/uLrjv ttjs TTpod\rT\s ^XiK^as"
Eu<^)/3ea? Qv<f)peov
5
A/ca/jLavTiBo[s <J>vXtjs.
iraZBas Trvyfirjv rfjs Bevrepas r)X[iKias'
Tlavcravlas Tlavaavlov OlvetSo? (l[Xtjs.
iraZBas irvyfxrw rrjs rpiT7]<; r)XoKt[as'
(65)
H/3d/C(DV Ylei0Q)VO<? \7nTod(OVTiho<s (l/[\T|$.
iraZBas itc iravrcov
irvyfitfv
Aa>po[8o$
XapfiiSov 'AdrjvaZos. avhpas 7TU7[|xrv*
ZiO)criKpdTrj<; Atj/ulovo/jlov
^
A6r)va\lo$.
TraZBas iraytcpdriov rrjs 7rpa)T7][s ijXiKias'
(70)
^tXea? <&iXeov 'A/ca//,aimSo? c^uX^s.
iraZBas Traytcpdriov
rrfi
Bevrepa[<s] ^X[iK(as*
'
Af3pa)v KaXXiov [0]tV[e]So? (fyvXfjs. TraZBas
Traytcpdriov T77? Tpirrjs rjXLicias'
'AttoXXgjvios Air<7r>oXXcovLOv ArraXiBos <f)vXf}[s.
(75)
TraZBas itc Trdvrcov Traytcpdriov Xd/xo's Xdfiov
1
Adr)valo<$. avBpas Traytcpdriov {eoB)wpiB\y\%
Tlavaaviov AdrjvaZos. ottXlttjv Nitc6Br)fjio[s
TIvOoBcopov 'AdrjvaZos. iv 07rXot? BiavXo\y
itc rcov (f>vXdp%(0v 'Aparlcov Xl/llov AlyeZ[hos
(80) (f>vXrjs. BiavXov i/c rwv (f)vXdp^cov' Aparioov ^[ip,ov
AlyelBos (f)vXf/<;. d/cdfiTTLOv i/c twv
^>uX[dpxv*
166 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[61
from
Traihas etc irdvratv (TTcihiov
K]atpio<i TeXcovos KOrjvalos. avhpas ardhiov
Aija^pucov ArjfxijrpLov 'AOrjvalos.
85
irjat&z? SlavXov rr}<; nrpwrr]^ rfkuclas'
'
AirjoWamo? j06\dvSpov QlveiSos <j)v\r}s.
This is one of the extant decrees which commemorate the services of the
ayuvodtrrjs of the Theseia and provide for the engraving of the victors' names,
as appended to the decree. For an account of the contests in the Theseia see
Martin Cav. Ath. 221 sqq.
The date of Aristolaus' archonship (1. 4) is assigned by Ferguson, Com. St.
x p. 64, to 161/0 B.C.: see his arguments ad loc.
3. Qr)<rdu)v. The Qqaeia took place on the 8th of Pyanopsion. After the
Persian Wars the oracle had enjoined that the bones of the hero should be
brought from Scyros and buried in Attica (Plut. Thes. 36). Cimon carried out
the injunction, and then the festival, although not formally established, was
raised to importance. It comprised gymnastic and naval contests and races, a
parade of Ephebi 65 20, and a great sacrifice provided at the public expense
IOO c 13, which was perhaps especially destined to benefit the poor and needy
(Arist. Plut. 628 and schol.).
6. tt)s Xafj.Tra.dos. This or 8p6(xos is the usual expression in inscriptions for
the \anira8T]<f>opla. See Grasberger Erziehung etc. in 199 sq. Cf. below 1. 64
and for the part taken by the Ephebi in this and other contests, cf. 65 5 sqq.
12. twv iiriXiKTOJu. 'E7ri\e/crot are mentioned in connexion with iiriroi in
CIA n 323, 12 ; i<f> ovs (sc. /3ap/3dpous, the Gauls who were defeated at Delphi
279/8 B.C.) Kai 6 6tji.los i^Tre/xirev rovs re tti\ktovs ko.1 toi)s lirweh avvayuvLovfiivovs
virep tt]S Koivrjs awnjpias.
13. rots K tCsv tdv&v Tdyp,aai.v. For an account of the classification of the
2<p7i(3oi see Dumont Ephebes p. 215 sqq. and Grasberger Erziehung in c. 1. In
the older period there was for gymnastic and agonistic purposes a two-fold
division into 7rcu5es and avbpes. Afterwards a triple division was adopted,
rcuSes (age 12
16),
dyeVeioi (age 16
20),
avdpes. For the purpose of contests
there was a further division into three classes according to age, r/Xt/cta veurtpa,
fj-ecrr), irpecfivrtpa, or Trpwrr), devr^pa, rpirr]. By 'tQvt) or edv&v rdyfiara are meant
companies composed of eW.
14. KadivifAof. ace. to Koehler merces senatoria
'
Sitzungsgelder,' though we
do not know why especially the aywvodeTrjs should have supplied the funds.
The sum 1200 drachmae (600 drachmae in CIA n 445, 10) appears to have
reference to the number of members of the (3ov\r), at this time 600.
19. virep rds StaxtXtas. The article is used with numerals which represent
a part of a whole: cf. CIA 11 add. 834 b, 11 47 (329 B.C.) : ir\lvdoi els rb
62]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 167
from
'Aparlcov 'El/jlov Alyel&os
(frvXrjs.
T7TG>[i iroX.-
P-
loo
' > r i
' *
r
'
.'a
fjLLGTr) ciavXo\y\ etc rcov iTnrecov Ap
rrjs
'
AvTipudyov OlvelSos
(fivXrjs.
$iavXo[y Ik tv
(85)
iTTirecov Nt:oSa)/oo? Nt/crjcrLov AecovTiS[os 4>vXtjs.
a/cd/JLTTLOV K TWV iTTTTeCOV' Nl/c68a)pO<; N[lKT]<rtov
AecovTiBos (f)v\rj<$.
lirirw Xapbirpw' Avavhp\o%
Nitcoyevov Alyei&os
(fivXrjs.
hiavXov etc itcivt^v
<>LXoKpdrr]<;
(
HSvXov OlvelSos <j)vXf}<;. aKafjariov '[k -rrdv-
(90)
twv' Ael;av8po<; QlXivov 'Avtlo^lSo<; (j)vXr}(;.
dcfi
[for-
ttov cik]o[vti<>v
-
] Ar)/jLT)Tp[(ov 'I-mro]Oo)[yrtBos <f>vXrjs.
'EXevaLviov rb iv aaret
XP^H,
(a)t eKarov=
'
100 bricks at
'
(Koe. reads
81 but cf. Col i 56 rds
X).
Meisterhans Gr. 231.
21. to fjir]Tpc3op. On this building as the depository of public documents
see H. and V. Athens 52. On the XoyLarat see lO 8.
33. Kaivo[ls r]p[aya}d]o[?]s :
'
at the exhibition of new tragedies '
'
when new
tragedians compete.' Cf. 65 48.
34. n-roXe/xcuW. The Ptolemaea, instituted in honour of Ptolemy Phila-
delphus, appear to be first mentioned in CIA n 341 (circ. 285 B.C.), one of the
earliest of the Ephebic decrees. He also founded the gymnasium, which bore
the name Ptolemaion (cf. 65 49, 100) and contained a library : cf. H. and
V. Athens 145. The Ephebi frequently presented books to this library.
64. ol e e0??/3wj' : also called %voi <prj(3oL
;
'anciens ephebes.'
72. Koehler notes it as strange that Habron is assigned to the tribe Oeneis,
for he belonged to the deme Bate, of the tribe Aegeis. Either we must assume
an error of the engraver, or Habron may have passed into the Oeneid tribe by
adoption.
81. aK&fjLinoi' : sc. 8p6/j.ov. Other forms are aKafXTrlas, a/ca/i7rros. Suidas
and Zonaras i 98 : 'A/cayujrias' 6 evdu5po/j.os. 'A/cd/i7rioj 8p6p.os, 6 /xaKpos /ecu di
evdeias irepliraTos. Grasberger Erziehung i 312.
87. limit) \aixirp$. Martin, op. cit. 207 sq., identifies this with the 'ittttos
Trop,TriK6s ; cf. Xen. De re equestri xi 1 : rjv 8i tls apa f3ov\7]9rj /ecu it o
fxir i
k
< /ecu
fieredopip Kal XapLirpu) 'iiTinp xpwcto'flcu. Note that the class of competitors
in the contest 'linrip Xa/nrpip and below 90 do/*' lttttov axovTifav is not specified.
Martin, p. 218, thinks that the contests were k irduTwv, i.e., in this case, open
to all Athenians whether i7r7reis or not. The expression e/c iravrwv would
seem also to mean elsewhere
'
from all classes of Athenians or strangers
'
or
'
from all ages ' (e.g. in 1. 48).
62. A slab of Pentelic marble broken below, with the surface in many
places rubbed or corroded, said to have been found near Cj'rrhestus. CIA n
408. Cf. Schmidt Chron. 643 sqq. ; Unger Herm. xiv 593 sq.
Alphabet, type 1 : but
+
= and w is frequently
f).
168 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[62
133/2?
'Eir]l M.r)Tpo(f)dvov apyovTos, eirl rrjs
*
AKapbavTi&os
0/caT7}<; irpura-
veias, 17 'EiTriyevrjs Mocr^teo^o? Aa/xTrrpev^ eypa/ju-
ixdrevev clvtl-
ypacfrevs
At;fioKpdrr)<; Arj/xoKparov KvSadrjvaievs' EXa-
(j)7](3o\L(t)Vo[s
ivdrei fxer ei/cdBas tear dpyovra, Kara 6eov [8]e
[M]ovviyi(a))vo<; S[(o8eKa-
5
ret, ScoSe/careo rr)<; irpvraveias' eKKXrjcrla KvpLa iv to3
Oedrpo)- roiv 7rp[o-
eSpcov erre^t^i^ev Tt[jivX\]o? Ttyu-i;[\]Xof 'EjO^tei)? fcal
avfjarpoehpoL.
Tifiapyos
['Etti...]o[v] %cf)7]TTio<; elirev virep (ov diray-
yeWovatv ol irpvra-
VC<Z TTjS 'E/o[x]^fc8o? [vir^p] TMV 6v<TlC0V (OV 60VOV t[cI]
rrpb ro)\y ckkXtj-
IO G10)V Tft)[l 'AttoXXwvi tu npo](7TaT?;|0t&) Kal ret 'AprefiiSc
ret [BovXaCa
Kal tols [aXXots 6ois] o[ls] 7rdrp[io]v rjv virep re T/79
/3ouXt}<? /cat rot) [8]t;[|x]o[v,
a/ya^ci tvxi SeSoxOai] tw S^/zeo, Ta yLte^ dyaOa Seyecrdai
ra y[y{\ovora
e[v] to?9 /e/OOt[s ots e]#foz; [l<j>'] vyuela Kal acorrjpla rrjs
re /3ov\r)s Kal rod [f>r\-
\l]ov Kai [irai8a>v Kal yvvaiKwv Kal twv <|hX<>v] Kai (TV/jL/JLayC0V
k]7r\^6iSr\ Zl 01
15 TrpvTavets 20v<rav Tas 0u<ras dird<ras Tas] /C<Z#[T]K]oi>[o-as kv
ttj Trpv-
Taveta. KaXus Kal <J>i.XoTip.9, TriuXTJ8Tj(rav 8 Kal tts (ruXXo"yTJs
tt)S PovXt]S Kal tov 8t]p.ov Kal t<3v dXXjft)^ lxeKT(x)V [<ov 7rpoo-eTaTTOV
avTois ol t vouoi Kal rd x|nj<|>(r(iaTaJ TOV orffxov, 67Taiv[io-a.\.
tovs
irpvTavis ttjs 'Epcx^iSos Kal <rT(|>ava)crai avjTOL'?
[xpj^[
<r<
?
0"T<}>dvto)
20 KaTd tov vdjjLov ti<rpias 2vKa ttjs els t]oi;[s
GeJoiyLs
Kt\.
This fragment of a decree in honour of the prytanes of the Erechtheid tribe
for the accurate performance of their duties offers in its prescript a good
example of the practice of reckoning by two concurrent calendars. Other
63]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 169
instances of this double dating will be found CIA n 433, 437, 471, and beyond
the limits of Attica we may compare, e.g., DI 951 (Tanagra) 1, 2 : /xeivbs Qovia)
vevfieiviTj,
|
Kara 5e dibv '0/j.oXojiov etr/catSe/cdr^. The peculiarity is first met with
soon after 171 (see however 60
9)
and ceases before 127 b.c. The date of the
archon in our decree was, according to Ferguson, Corn. St. x 74, 133/2 b.c.
The order of the prytany-day, it will be observed, coincides exactly with the
reckoning Kara debv, and this is implied also by the abbreviated formula in
CIA II 471, 1. 50, Uvav(oxf'LU)vos) evdeKarr] (i.e. kclt' apxovra), denary t?}s Trpvraveias
(Kara debv be denary being omitted before denary as superfluous). As the Sun-
god rules the year, while the Moon-goddess rules only the months, so in cases
where, as here, the divine or celestial year is contrasted with the Archon-
year, the former must mean the pure solar year, which at Athens began with
the summer solstice on the ideal 1st of Hecatombaeon, while the year which
was renewed by the Archon eponymus as a rule after the solstice on the ordinary
1st of Hecatombaeon corresponds to the old lunar year. The new calendar
Kara debv would seem to have been designed not merely to regulate the
frequently occurring inequality in the distribution of the prytany-periods, but
also and chiefly to pave the way for the abolition of the luni-solar year. (G. F.
Unger in I. Muller's Hdb. i
2
756 sq., where he holds that A. Schmidt's views
Chron. 643 sqq. are based on unsafe premisses.)
8 sqq. The restorations are Koehler's (except in 1. 17 /j.e\erQv, which is on
the stone, for airavriov) based mainly upon a comparison of contemporary
decrees.
12. ra fxev ayada kt\. Cf. 54 6.
63. " Olim Athenis Exstat in museo Naniano." Boeckh CIG 124.
CIA ii 475 ; iv
2, p.
122. Cf. Ferguson Corn. St. x 84.
Alphabet apparently varying between types 1 and 2
; f, fx, a- and generally tt
follow type 2. In the copy as given in CIA the iota adscriptum is occasionally
omitted.
B.C.
112/1
'E7rl ^lovvaiov ap^ovTos rod [xera
Uapd/jbovov iirl tt)? AlavriSos e-
f3S6fJL7]S
7rpVTCLVLa<s,
fj
KajJLLOS Tl/J,OV~
yov 'Va/jbvovcTLO^ iypafi/jLarevev Ya-
5
fjirfkiayvos 0780/7
lara/jLevov, oySo-
77 t/}<? irpyraveia^' j3ov\r) i/n {3ov\ev-
T7]pL(p' T(OV ITpoe^pWV
67T6yfr7](f)L(^)ev
%Tparo(f>(Jov HrparofcXeovs ^ouvt-
6U9 fcal avvTrpoehpor
10 eho^ev tl /3ov\ei'
f
Pi}o-09
'
AprefAcovos
'
AXatevs elirev
7TiBr) irpocrohov iroajad/jLevo^
777309
170 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[63
tyjv j3ov\r)v Atoyvrjrcx; i Oiov rafjti-
a? vav/cXrjpcov teal ifuropcov tcov <pe-
15
pOVTCOV TTjV CTVVoBoV TOV AiO? TOV
'Bivlov ifji(f)avl^i rel fiovXei /3ovXea-
6at tt]v crvvoBov avaOelvat eltcova ypa-
7TTT]V iv 01tX(jl) TOV CdVTCOV TTpO^i-
VOV, K6^6tpOTOV7]/jtVOV Be fCCLl 7TI/jL6-
20 \]t]tov iirl tov Xtfieva AtoBcopov rod
($eo(f)i\ov
f
AXatea>? iv rat apye'tw av-
rov, teal Buz ravra irapatcaXel ttjv (3ov-
Xrjv eiriKVpcoaat eavrcp
yjrrf(f)
tafia'
otyaOe[i] Tvyet BeBo^Oat ret fiovXet, eirt-
25
*e^ft>[p]r)<x#a[i] Atoyvijrcp tcai rrj crvv6B(o[i
Tr]o[i]7]cra[or0]a.t t[t|v] dvdOeatv rrj[s] ypa-
7TT7}? ettcovos iv 07rX(p AtoBoopov tov
eo(f)L\ov A\atQ)<; iv tqj dp%et(p av-
rov tcaOarrep irapatcaXet ttjv (BovXrjv.
This decree of the Senate sanctions the proposal of the Treasurer of the
Guild of Shipowners and Merchants, whose patron was Zeus Xenios, to erect
in the apx&ov of the Guild an dnlov "ypairry] ev oTrXcp of Diodorus, proxenos of the
Guild and eTri/j.eXT]T7)s iirl tov Ai/xez>a (Piraeus). From BCH xxi
(1897) p. 600 we
find that the archonship of Dionysius coincides with the consulship at Rome of
L. Calpurnius Piso and M. Livius Drusus and therefore belongs to 112/1 b.c.
4. Note that Rhamnus, the deme of the Secretary, does not belong to the
prytanising tribe, Aeantis. Cf. Bern, v
(1), p. 89.
7. T\pri<pi(f)i>: the text has 2, but the aorist would be very strange.
14 sq. tQi> (pepbvTwv rr\v avvodov :
'
who pay the guild-subscription of Zeus
Xenios
'
; cf. CIA iv 2, 623 e, 5 : roi>s ttjv avvodov cptpovTas ry de$. In 1. 17
atjvobos is used to denote the guild itself.
17. elicbva ypairrriu: 'a painted portrait.' Of such portraits there is frequent
mention in inscriptions ; e.g. D 681, 21 (Patmos).
20. iiri/j.e\r]Tov iirl tov Xtfxeva. This officer appears to be the same as the
officer elsewhere called eirifxeXrjTris tov iv lletpatet Xi/xevos or ITeipatews or errl tov
Ileipcuea. He is mentioned in inscriptions of the latter part of the second and
the first half of the first century b.c. Diodorus is probably the person who
appears in 64 39.
23. The use of iwiKvpovv or Kvpovv in the sense of
'
to decree ' is very
common in inscriptions. See Swoboda Volksb. 17 sqq.
64. Found at Athens. From the mss of Fourmont, CIG 123 ; CIA 11 476
;
Boeckh, Staatsh.
3
11 318 sqq. A considerable portion of the beginning is lost, a
few letters on the left, more on the right, but probably nothing at the end.
ABrAEZHOlKAMN3EZOnPTY4>X.fl
64]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 171
Fourmont, more suo, has played tricks with the original, e.g. in introducing
ligatured forms
^
1. 49, "FN
1. 61 ; and he uses the abbreviation
y
for on. The
length of his spaces or lacunas cannot be relied upon.
TO 6V TTJ
<TKlCt-
Bt 7) to i/uL [ll\etpat[i\t r) [t]o [ev 'EX]e[vo-ivt
a7r]a%#?7 6 [k]kt7)/jl6vo<; to fJterpov e
(d)fjL(j)Lcr/37]Trjo-avTo<; irepl tov fieTpov [ ol
dpyovTes eirl Trjv Brjfioatav Tpdire^av to ttjico
[
-
t6v t<5v
5
aTr]o/cr)pvi;L/jLcov Xoyov eav Be otKeTTjs, fxacrTtyovaOco 7re[vn]KovTa
irX-q-yds, to h\ [iCTpov
dcpavt^eTcoaav eav h\\\ ol dpi^ovTes
/-^(v)
crvveirtayycoat
Tol{s) IBtcoTats, [hravo/yKa^cTw
f)
fiovXr) ol e^CLKoaioi. al Be dpyat ats ol vofiot irpoaTCLT-
tovctiv irpos KaTea/ceva(cr)[[i(va
av/jt&oXa ar)KO)fjLaTa 7roi[r\]crd/jtevai irpos re Ta bypa teal tcl
i;r)pd real Ta aTad/xd [d]^[a"yK]aeT(w[o-av
tov](?) 7rcoXovv[r]ds t(c) ev tt} dyopa [rj] ev toIs epyacrTrjptots
rj Tots Ka{ir)r}Xeiots rj otvcocrtv i) eV o[lKi]|idT-
io wv \]prja0at toIs fjteTpots teal toIs cxTaOfjtols tovtols fxeTpovvTas
Tr(d)vTa \r\d L7[pd] r[]t avTco
\Urjpco, Kat fJi\r\K\eTi e^eaTO) (/jir))Be/jtia dpyrj ir{ot)^aao~6at
fir]Te fxeTpa ptrjTe crTaO/ita [|ie-
w
nJ^Se
(e)\aTTco tovtcov e(d)v Be Tt? irotrjarj tcov dpyov-
tcov r)
fjbr)
e7ravay/c[ai]^r) [tovs irtoXowTas
tov]toi? Tr\_o>]Xetv, 6[$]etXeTco lepd(s) ttj A'r)/j,r)Tp[i k]<zI tt}
Kop^ Bpayjids ytXtas Kat e()e[o-Ta>
av]ToO diroypacbr) tyjs ovatas irpos tovto to dpyvpiov
'A6r)vatcov to)
f3ov\ofjbev(p. 6[y.oL<a% \
15 civ]t[ovs k-K<x\vto~ovv [8]e[iv] Kal e^eTa^etv Ta fieTpa Kal Ta
crTaOfjia Kal els tov Xoittov
XP[
vov
>
KJat eirtfjLeXelcrOat tt)v
ftovXrjv tovs e^aKoaiovs ttjv del
ftovXevovcrav ev tco
'E/cafr-
o\i]/3atcovt /jlijvl, bircos fxrjOels tcov 7t(co)Xovvtcov Tt fj COVOV/JtevCOV
dcrv/jt/3\r)T(i) pteTpco
(it]8]e aTaOfAQ) yprjT{a)t, a\\[d 8i]/c[a]tot?. tovs Be TrcoXovvTas
HepatKas ^rjpas Kal d/jtv[y-
8]a\9 Kat HpaKXecoTtKa [Kdjpva Kal (k)ojvovs Kal KacrTavata
[*i]al Kvdfiovs AlyviTTov
20 KJat <f)otvtKo/3aXavovs Kal et Ttva ci\Xa Tpayi^fxaTa fieTa
tovtcov irtoXelTat, Kal Oep/xovs
172 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[64
Ka]l [eJXaa? Ka\ irvprjvas ircoXelv peTpw ^(opovvr[\. K]o[pv]ara
(TLTrjpa rj^^cx^ojcvifcia rpta, 7TcoXov[vt-
a<?
rfj
'yoiviKi ravrrj Kopvcrrfj e^ovarj to puev [pd]#o(?)
BaKTvXcov irevre, to Be ttXcltos ro[y\ %[eX-
0^(9)
BaKTvXov o/jlol(q))$ Be Kal tovs irwXovvTas rds re
a/jLvyBakas ras xXcopds [k]<z[i] ra? [cjXfdas
tcLs irpoo-J^aToi;? Kal ra<; (l)o"%aBas irwXelv yolvuci tc[op]vo-Tr}
B{t)7r\acriovL (t)?}? 7r(p)oyeyp[a\i\i.{vr\s
25 Ixovo-t) to] ^et\o9 \r\ptwv rj/JuBa/crvXlcov, teal ^prjaOac avrovs
ypivi^t ^vXivaw eav [8c tis
- -
iroi]Xf} [irjepqy ayyeiw dpuvyBdXas
,
%X(opa
i
s [tj] eX(d)a$
TrpoacfxiTOVS
f) lo"%d[Bas, jit) irw-
Xetv (L\cltt]ov rj p.eBip.vov aoTrjpov eav Be ev eXdrrovi 7t[<o\tj]
ayyeiw, r) dpyr\
v(f)
rjv av r

- - -
Td] re evovra irapa^prjpa [d]7roKr)pv[r]Tera) Kal ttjv
[ri\fjLr}i> elaayerco eirl ttjv [8ii|ao-
<riav Tpdire] %av teal to dyyelov /<ara/<07rTe[T](o. dyerco Be teat
r) pvd r) e{fi)iTop\_i]terj 5)Te[<|>avr)<{>-
30 6pov
SpaxJ^as"
eiearbv Tpidtcovra te[a\] oktco 7rpo(?) rd ardOp^ia
rd \k\v tu> dpyupo/eo7r[d<a tc]al
poiri]]^ [l,Ti](f)avrj(f)opov Bpa^p^d^ BeteaBvo, teal 7r<w\e[ it] cocrav
Trdvres raXXa {ir)dvra rav-
T
Tl]
T
V f
jLV
9
/
[
7r^1
l
v
]
do~a 7T/309 dpyvpiov BiapprjBrjv elpijrai
7r[<a]Xeiv, lardvre^ tov irriyyv tov i"y[oi5
ia-6p]po7rov dyovra Ta? e<L>tearbv irevrrjKovTa S[p]#^[|j.d]<? tov
S[T<j>avi]<J)]6pof to Be irevrdfjivovv [t6
iy.Tr]opLiebv e^er[ poir^rjv ep,7ropiK7]v pivd[y\ o[ir]a)9 laroppoirov
rov irrj^ew^ yevopuevov dyrj epirop[iK-
35
as a]m?
ef*
to Be TaXavTov rb e[\t]7ropitebv
[Xt]&>
poir[rv
u]^[ds] e/j.7r{o)pLfcds wevTe, oirw^ teal toO[to
i<r]oppo7rov tov irirj^eoi^ yivofjuevov dyr]
[1]
e(fi)7ro[piK]bv
ra[\avTov Kal \i\vds epLTropLKa<; irevTe
-
-
. . .
vcf)
. vairavTa toI<$ ev tco epiropltp

to ... . aw
p
. o . o
-
-
[oira>s] Be Biafievy et? To[v Xoittov
y^pbvov Ta Te fjueTpa [i<]ai Tfi aTaOpid, 7rapaBo[vvai avra r6v
K]a6eo-Tapuevov eirl \r-\v KaTao-Kc-
v\r)v to)v pueTpcov Kal twv crTaO/Acov &o68(opo[v] eo[$C\Xo[y
'A]X[ata t]o3 Te ev Trj o~tecdBi :a#[<rTau-
40 v(p BrjfjLocria) Kal to3 e/m Yleipaie[i] peTa tov [irip,\T]T]oi)(?)
[Kal tw v] EXeucrtzy[i]* ovtol Be [avTa
64]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 173
Gv\yr\r)peiTwaav ht,h6vTes arfKcofiaTa twv [n \t,ir\p(ov [ko,1 twv
o-Ta9p.]coz/ rals T dp^ac[<s Kal] to[is d'X-
\]ocs iraa\y r\ols ho\y.i\voi<; fir)
i^ovala(v) e^ovTes firjr
O l~l O E N
firjTe ef(a>)
i[K]<pep(ei)v [|nj8*v U r-
]*/ [Ka]T(TK6vacrfjLevcov olkcov 7rXr)v tgov fioXv/3[$iv Kal
x
a^K(2v
<ni];(y[|xa]Ta)^ ye{yov]oTcov
-
-
- -
idv he \y\t\y\U' dpyvpiov 7rpdTT(0VTa[i ^rjaa
. c . cooo) . . . (ov . . . o/jLclo)
777
45
. . iv ee . . . 01 tols y^peiav eyovaiv Xa[
.... r\ov
fiev
iv Te[i] cr[iaa8i Ka0crr]a[|i.vov
Ko\a]fo^TO)[v] o[l' t del] TTpVTaveiS Kal o GTpaT\T\y\o<$ 0? [dv
fl]
eVl orrXa fiaaTiyovvTes Kal KoX[aX,-
ovr]e9 [KJara
[""iv]
a^iav tov dhtKrj[\i.a\TOS, rov
[8] i(fi) Ilefipatct]
6 KaO[i]o-Tafievos 7rLfiX[r\ni\s tov
-
-
-
9,
tov he iv 'TLXevcrivL 6 r(e) lepo^>dv\rx\\s [koX ol Ka]^[<r]Ta-
/xeVo[t] a[v8p]e? KaO* eKacrrov [t6v Iviavro-
v] iirl rr)v Trav(r))yvpiv. /AeTa[TT]a/9[a8]tSoTO>[<rav hk\ o[l
8r]]/>tocr[to]t net Tots [uc]#' [i]a[v]Toi>[s] *;a[0o-Tau^-
50 vols: hrjfioaiois [a]eT' dvaypa(f>r)s {ir)dv\ra\ rd [uTpa Kal
o-Ta0ud]
#
iav he Ti fir) 7ra[pa8w<ri]^, e[irava"yKa-
<r]6coaav vtto twv TeTayfievwv iir avTovs Kara to "tyrffpLafia,
Kai [lav Tivd tis diroX&rT), dva-yKa^-
i<r\d<D avrl twv d7roXofievwv [^[cpa 8i86vai' KaTapa]AAecr
6
'&)
aav
he Kal %etp6ypa(f)o(v) [ct]? to [p-tyr-
p<o]co(v) (vv dv 7rapaXd/3(co)ai :[al] 7ra[p]a[8o-iv lav 8e tovto ut]
K]aTa(3d\wvTat,
fir)
e^e[a-r]co av[r]o[i<s
4-
r\epav XeuTovpyiav (Orj)Tcov[tlv. dvaTi0o-0w 8e els dKJpoiroXiv
arfKWfiaTa tov t[c] ifiTropi^KJov [raXdvTo-
55
v Kal heKafivov Kal SifuvJoL' [Kal ttjs pvds Kal tov] r)fiifivaiov
Kal Ta[p]Tr)(fj,)6pou Kal ^obs
k]dv he tis aXlaKrfTai KaKovpywv eirl -ra fieTpa Kal Ta aTaOfid
Ta Ke[t]fie[va %v re ttj o-Kt-
dS]t Kal iv 'ILXevo-ivt Kal i/x II[ipai]t Kal iv aKpoiroXet, idv Te
dpywv idv Te [18itt]s
4-
dv Te [Sy]\fi6acos,
[XW[x]? [flo"[
T
]
r<
p rffifiV
T(
P
*e[iu]eVft)
irepi Trjs t(Jo)v KaKovpycov [^fxias*
eTrifieXelaOay he Kal [i] p]of[Xii rj]
e'f
'Apeiov trdyov Kal tov
KaKovpyovvTa [ti] 7re[pl Tavra ko-
60 Xa^eTco KaTa tovs e[irl] tco[v] KaKovpycov Keifievovs vofiovs-
dvaypdyjrai he T[68e] to [\|n}-
174 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[64
<f>i<rn]a
[tl]? <TTi]\a<$ \i6\iv\a\s tov KoAi\arafxevov avBpa eirl rrjv
fcaracrfcevrjv tcov [jxtTpwv
Kal Tv <n\aQ\ioiv kcu arrjaat iv tols oikois iv ot? kcli tcl
fierpa Kal ra crraO/jia Kelrai.
K TOV tov tov-
9 Se ap^ovTas ^pr}a6\ai\ tg3 clvtw fxeTpw K6^[a]pa[y\i^V(p
T<p ^apaKTi)p\C\ /LtoXf[p8ivu) - -
-
65 (p
7rpbs tov iv tt) cr/a[8i, \i]rj 7r[\\elov TrpaTTOfxevovs
TpiG){36\ov ^pTjaOai he tcl [
a]?
aplx]?
tois 7rpoii]a(j)paryicr/jLevo[is] fjLTpo[i\s, idv jxtj
TLS TO)[v] 7ra)\ovvTO)[v
cnfipayLCTTa) fxeTpco "%prjTai.
This fragment is valuable as evidence of the attention which the Athenians
paid to the revision of their weights and measures.
If we may accept Boeckh's identification of the Diodorus of 1. 39 with the
Diodorus who is iiri/j.e\rjTi)s iiri top Xi/meva in 63 20 our decree should be of
about the same date as no. 63, i.e. about 112 b.c.
The decree may be analysed thus :
1
7 Proceedings to be taken on the
discovery of false measures
;
718 Provision for securing proper measures and
due inspection
;
1829 Measures relating to the finer kinds of fruit ; 2937 The
Commercial Standard; 3743 The safe preservation of the standard measure;
4448 Punishment of public slaves who fail in the last-named duty
;
48

54 Delivery (to successors in office) of the standard weights and measures


;
54, 55 Deposit of the standard measure in the Acropolis; 55 62 Punishment
of counterfeiters and engraving of the decree ; 63 sqq. see note below.
1. Eestored by Koehler
;
cf. 1. 39. For the o-Ktds = the Tholos see D.A.
2. aTr~]axdy. Users of false measures were Kanovpyoi and therefore liable to
airayuy-q, which might be followed by confiscation of property. K.
4. 4ttI tt)v br)ixo<xlav rparrefav. Cf. 1. 28. According to Frankel (Boeckh St.
3
ii 319 note) a private bank is meant which was monopolised for public
finances.
5. a7r]oK7)pvi/j.a}i> :
'
to be sold by auction.' The clause probably related
to the case of freemen ; then follow the directions for the punishment of
offending slaves. Fifty strokes were the regular punishment awarded to slaves
at Athens; cf. 47 41, CIA n 841, 10. In Syros (D 680, 4) a slave receives
100 strokes.
6. a<pai>iTU)<ra.v :
'
destroy.' The subject is oi apxovres by which probably
oi fj.eTpovbp.oi are meant.
ovve-Kio'xvwo'i.; 'join in supporting' (in order to bring offenders to justice).
The word is similarly used Polyb. vi 6, 10 etc.
7. oi e%cu<6o-ioi. See Rem. vi, p. 127.
8. o-v/xfioXa are
'
standard
'
or
'
pattern ' weights and measures according to
which the weights and measures approved for use (0-qKup.aTa here is apparently
a generic term including both weights and measures) are fixed by comparison
(5td tov o-vp.(3dX\e<Tdcu). An uncertified measure is called dcrv/ul[3\t]top p-irpov
(1. 17). From o-qKUfxa comes the Latin sacoma (Vitruvius) and at Borne there
64]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 175
was a special guild of sacomarii, makers of weights (CIL x 1930). An example
of an inscribed arjKu/xa has been found at Gythium in Laconia (Lebas n 241 b).
Trpos re ra kt\. :
'
with reference both to liquid and dry substances and to
substances estimated by weight.'
9. olvQaiu :
'
wine-cellars
'
; cf. Pollux ix 49, vi 15 (from Xen. Hell, vi 2,
6),
Hesych. olvuver at dirodiJKaL. Many words in -<hv denote
'
receptacle,'
'
collec-
tion
'
or
'
mass
'
; cf. yaiwv
'
heap of earth,' Tocpuhv
'
tufa-quarry,'
fiowv
'
ox-shed,'
Tabl. Heracl. i 136, 137, 139 (IGrSI 645). eir' o[Uij/idT<av doubtfully restored
by Boeckh may mean tabemae or cannabae
'
booths.'
11. 7r[oL]r)aa<rdat : restored by K. arddpua seems to be only a variant
of aradfid ;
cf. 1. 30.
13. Kol ei;i<TTw kt\. Any Athenian may make an inventory of the offender's
property to secure payment of the fine.
1829. For a full discussion of the fruits enumerated see Boeckh St.
3
n
322 sqq. HepaiKal are not peaches (malum Persicum) but Persian nuts, Kdpva
UepaiKd, fid\avoL
HepaiKai, our walnut. With d/JLvyb'dXas supply tjrjpds, to which
1. 26 are opposed xXwpaL 'HpaKXeuTiKov Kdpvov is the hazel-nut (mix Avellana).
kwvol and Trvprjves would seem to be the edible fruit of some kind of pine, the
former with, the latter without the external covering. On the Kvafxoi Alyvirrov
much is said in Athen. in 72
73. According to Theophrastus and Dioscorides
they are the hazel-nut-like fruits of the Nelumbium speciosum L. dep/xot. are the
fruits of the Lupinus albus L., still in use in Italy.
21. fi4rp({} ktX. : with a measure holding a corn-choenix and a half
brimming over, i.e. not \prjKTd, struck level. Cf. Hesych. Kopv(<x)r6v (so Is. Voss)-
t6 eirifxecrTov.
24. dcirXaaiovL. On durXaGiwv a later form of dnrXdaios (Arist. Probl. 19, 50,
Mund. 6, 18) see Lobeck Phryn, 411.
29. dy^TO) 5e kt\. This difficult passage establishes a relation between the
Commercial standard and the Attic or Solonic standard in use at Athens. See
Boeckh St.
3
n 320 sqq., Miiller Hdb. i
a
877 sqq., and D.A. s.v. Pondera.
'
The Commercial mina shall weigh 138 drachmae of the Stephanephoros,
according to the weights preserved at the mint, and there shall be added
(thrown in) twelve drachms of the Stephanephoros, and all bargains shall be
regulated by this mina, except in cases where silver-weight is specially
mentioned, the scales being balanced so that the rod is level, against a weight
of 150 drachms of the Stephanephoros.'
Below it is ordered that in every Commercial irevrdp.vovv
(5 minae) one
Commercial mina shall be thrown in (pom?)), and in every Commercial talent
five minae.
The passage shows
(1)
that the Solonic mina and drachma were called rod
1,T(pau7)(f)6pov. The Stephanephoros was an Attic hero or daemon in whose
temple the mint was in early times placed
;
thus the drachmae called after him
were drachmae of money
;
on the weights the Solonic mina is called [xvd d-^/xoaia:
(2)
that the proportion between the Aeginetan or Attic Commercial mina and
that of the mint remained at 138 : 100 (just as it had been fixed by Solon)
throughout Athenian history : but that
(3)
Greek weights were sometimes
arbitrarily raised by authority, at least in democracies (D.A.). Cf. CIA i 467
(65) 30; 468, 24.
36 sq. K suggests : [eii/cu be
\
a>j]v(p[u]va iravra tols kt\.
176 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[64
39. (TKiadi. See 1. 1.
40. If the reading is right the einp:eXriTf)s will probably be 6 eiri.p.eXr)Tr)s too
Tie/.pate" ws or 6 e-rrl tov Xip,e~va
;
cf. 63. In this case Diodorus at the time of this
inscription does not hold that office. There were it seems to be standard-
weights in the Piraeus and at Eleusis as well as in the Tholos.
42. Koehler doubtfully suggests p.r)T[e p.eTa]ir[oi]e[t]v.
g()
:
E50.
43. olkuv. Perhaps buildings erected for the purpose of preserving the
standard weights. p.oXv(35u>v : from p,oXv(38ovs.
46. (rrpcLTriybs 6 eirl oirXa. See 36 19.
48. oi KadecrTap.evoL...eirl tt)v iravr)yvptv. Probably the iirip.eXr}Tal tQv
fiverTrjpLwv are meant, iravr)yvpts is used of the Eleusinian festival CIA in 649.
49. peTairapadidovai occurs CIA n 628, 39 and IGSI 759, 22 {Neapolis).
54. XeiTovpylav drjruvc'iv :
'
to perform a public service for pay.' drjTwveiv is
due to Boeckh, based on the drjTibvLov
'
wages ' of Suidas
;
cf. TeXiove?v, TeXdovtov.
els axpoiroXiv. That certain weights were kept there we learn from CIA n
652, 46.
55. dexd/xvov, 8ip.vov. We should have expected also the irevTapvow
(1. 33)
to be enumerated here. For the form rapr-q/xopov see 60 55 ; TapTf)p.opov here
evidently means
'
a quarter of a mina
'
; elsewhere TapTrjpbpiov denotes
'
a
quarter of an obol.' Boeckh conjectures at the end [/cat
x
0LVLK0^\-
63 sqq. These lines are either an appendix to the decree which ends with
1. 62, or they belong, as Boeckh thinks, to the body of the decree and have been
accidentally omitted by the engraver
;
or the fault may be Fourmont's.
64 sq. K suggests p.oXv[(38Lvip, irvppe{$kiipi4v\(# irpbs t[6 4]v.
66. TroikovvTu{y ft 7j cbvovpLevuv]: Boeckh.
65. A slab of Pentelic marble in forty fragments. Grasberger Verh. d.
philcl. Ges. in Wiirzburg 54 sqq. ; CIA n 467
;
D 521.
Alphabet, in the main, type 1
;
but

is once
3
, ir varies between 7r
3
,
t
4
, t
5
.
101/0 'A7a#77
tvxv'
^7r ' Mrjdeiov apxovros eirl tt)s AeuvTlSos TpiTijs irpvTaveias, rj <i>iXt-
or
u)v QiX'uxivos 'EXeucriVtos eypap.p.aTevev' Hor)8pop.t.Qvos evc.Tr) iarapevov, evdry
100/99
B.C.
ttjs irpvTaveias' tKKXrjaia Kvpia ev Tip dearpu)' tQ>v irpoeSpiav eire\pr)(pi.ev '^iriTiXrjS
'Aperatou Haiavievs Kal o~vp.irpbe8poc fSo^ev Tip 8f)p<p' ^iKdarparos
5
Arjp.ape'Tov Aap.irTpevs elirev iireiSr) oi e'eprjfioi oi eirl
,
]$x
eK
P
(*T0V dpxovros ddaav'
res iv rats eyypa<pais ev Tip irpvTave'ap eirl tt)s kolvtjs earias tov 8r)pov
Kal KaXXieprjaavTes p,eTa tov koo~plt)tov Kal tov ieptias tov Sr)p,ov /cat tCov Xa-
plTwv Kal tCjv e^r)yi]Tu>v eirbp-irevadv re rrj 'Aprc'pLiSi Trj 'AypOTepa iv oirXots,
eiroL-qaavTO 8e Kal tt\v virairdvTi)cnv tois iepoTs ev birXois Kal irpoe'irep.ipav
io avrd, Kal rbv "laKxov wcraurws* ijpavro 8e Kal toIs p.vaTr)plois tovs /3ous
ev 'EXevffivi Trj dvcria Kal avTol ij3ov6vrrio
,
av ev Tip irepifibXip tov iepov'
avveTeXecrav 8i
Kal tovs 8pbp.ovs tovs ev toTs yvp.vao~iots Kal rots Xot-
7rets ayQeiv airavras Kal fjpavTO rat? dvcriais tovs (3ovs evo'xVf
xovo)S Kal ras
XajUTrdSas eSpapov dirdcras Kal ra? iropirds eirbp.irevo~av' dirrjVTrjaav de
15 /cat rots avp.p.dxoi.s /cat tois evepyirais too 8f)pLov 'Pco^tatois' irapr)yayov de
/cat rots 'EXcfcrt^tots )3ovs Tpocpias dvo Kal Zdvcrav, Kal rots Ilcipaiots Tip At-
65]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. Ill
opOitu) ravpov kclI idvcrav, rots re Aiovvaiois 'irepov ((3)ovv u>s on /cdXXto"-
tov irap-qyayov rrj Tropnrfj 8v Kal 'idvaav iv Tip leptp, Kal iirl tovtols diraaiv
iKaXXiipvo-av iroLvo'dpi.evoL de /cat pLeXiryv iv rots owXois diredei^avTO
rots re G^cret'ots Kal rots eVira</>tots' iiroLTjaavTo de /cat r# irofMirrj dp,tX-
Xav iv Tip Xt^teVt, wepu-TrXevaav de /cat et's Mowtxtaj> /cat 'idvaav rrj de[a>'
i^Xdov di ko1 iirl rd (ppovpia /cat rd 6'pta r^s 'Arrt/c-^s irXeovaKis iv ottXois
Kadios iiriraTTOv avrols rd \pr)<plo~piaTa r^s re (3ovX9}s Kal tov drjfxov' 'iQv-
aav de Kal rots Ato7ei/etots ravpovs dvo' 'iwXevaav di /cat eis 2a\aptVa rots [Al-
avret'ots /cat 'idvaav Tip AtWrt /cat raXXa KadrjKovra voLrjcravTes dveo~-
Tp&(pr)<rav eurd/crws, e'0' ofs /cat iTifxrjdrjaav virb tov drjpiov tov HaXap.iviojv
TrpoavatrXevaavTes de Kal eirl Tpbiracov dual ttXolols Zdvaav rip Act rep Tpo-
iraiip, rots re IIpo?7peo"tois ijpavTo tovs /3o0s iv 'EXevalvi Kal eXeiTotipyrjaav
ev T<p iepip euT&KTW dveBvKav di Kal rots piey&Xois pLvvrvpiois (ptdXrjv
rrj re ArjfiTjTpt. Kal rrj Kbprj yapi<TTr\piov airb dpaxp-^v ^Te<pavrf<pbpov eKarov, rds
re dXXas dvcrlas rds KadrjKovcras curdaas 'idvaav pierd re tov koo~plwtov Kal tCov 5t5acr-
KaXoov rots deots Kal rots evepyirais tov drj/xov Kal eKaXXieprjo-av ip. irdcraLS' yivop.e-
vol di Kal fyXcoral tCov KaXXiarcov e/c r?ys TrpdoTys r/Xt/ctas TpXelcpovTO re ej>5[\-
X&s
ev rots yvpLvaaiois dybp.evoi virb tov Koapaqrov Kal iaxbXaaav 6Y oXov tov eV[iavrov
rots <piXoo~b<pois yaerd Trdaws euraijias" Trap-qbpevaav de Kal rats e/c/cX77o~[icus dira-
crats ev ottXols rats re ev daret /cat ea Ileipaiet' irapeTvyxavov di /cat rats [dxpocurc-
O'ti' dirdaais evraKTus' iiroiriaavTO de Kal rds /ca#oX/cds /cat rds vewX/c[ias TTi0ap-
XoOfres rots U7ro rtuj' arpaT-qyQv irapayyeXXop.ivoLS Kal dLeTeXea[fx]v o^ovoovv-
res /cat ireidapxovvTes Ttp re Kotrp.r]Trj Kal rots 5t5acr/caXots 6V oXov tov e[viav-
tov' dvidrjKav de Kal (pidXyv rrj p.7]Tpl tCov deCov dirb dpaxp-uv 2re0af7?06poi e[|38o-
p.r]KOVTa /card to ipr\<piap.a 6 AioaKovpibr/s Atoo*/coi>pt5ou <i>r)yaLevs elirev' ^7ro[i-
rjaavTO de Kal eV' e6d<p ttjs i(pri(3elas tt\v a7r65et[^iv] rrj f3ovXrj' owcos ovv
%
T] [SovXi] Kal 6 drjp.os cpaivcovTai TtpiuvTes tovs 7r[ei8a]/3Xoi}j'ras rots re vop,ois /ca[l
\pri<piap.acnv e/c r-^s TrpwTTjs -^Xt/ctas, dyadrj
tvxV [8e8]6x^at ttj (3ovXrj, tovs Xa-*
XbvTas ewaiveaai ro[vs e^T^J/ifous /cat crre0ay[wo~at] ai)ro[v]s
XP
V(T
V
VTefidvu}
ei)ra[]tas eveKev r)s
^xC
VTS SteJreXecra^ /cat [ev<r]e/3etas r^s 7rpos [toi)s 0e]ous
/cat (pi.XoTip.ias rrjs els tt)[v |3ou\t]v] /cat tov 5?}u[ov K]at evvoias ttjs irpbs tov /cocryu[T]TT]V,
/cat d^et7rer[v t]6^ o~Te<pavov t[outov Aiovvcrtwv T] tCov iv ao~Tei Kaivois Tpaycpdots Kal
Havadr]vai[o)V~\ Kal "EXevcrivioov [Kal IlToXeuaCwv r]ots yvpiviKois dyuiatv' tt\s de dvayo-
petiaews [tov] OTecpdvov eirip.eX\x\r\va.\. tovs o~]rpar?770L'S /cat tov Tap.iav tQv GTpaTLW-
tikwv iwaivicrai de Kal tovs 5t5[ao~KaXovs, t]6v re wai.boTpifi7)v TipLOKpaTtjv 'AXip.ov-
o~iov Kal tov birXopidxov 'Hp65or[ov EiT]ea[o]^ /cat tov aKOVTiffT-qv Ay)p.bo~TpaTov
HvTraXrjTTiov Kal to[v] ro[|oTT]v Ztair^vpov Aii;(oj)via Kal tov d<peTT)v KaXXiav At'^tXfiea
/cat Tbv 7pa/x/xare[a 'EirCo-TpaT]oj> IIepi^ot5?7[v] Kal tov vinjpiTriv Aibbwpov 'Ai)v[li<k,
/([at] cTTecpavuiaat. ['^Kao"TOV o]vtu>v daXXov o~Tecpdvip. dvaypd\j/aL de ro[8e
to y\f]r/(pLcrp.a tov 7pa[p.p.aTa] roi^ /card TrpvTave[iav] et's ot1)Xt)v Xidivriv Kal ar^cr[ai kv
d"y]opo:" to 5e yevbp.e[vov el]s ai/TT]v dvdXojp.a yitep[o-a]t tov Tap.iav tQv crrpar[ito]rt/ctO[v.
'H /3oi/Xrj Kal 6 5?7pos 'H j3ovXi] Kal
'0
dijpios 01 fcprjpoi
(in corona
:)
6 drjpLos
[6]
^laXapiviojv (in corona
:)
tovs i- (in corona
:)
(in corona
:)
tov ko<x-
4>r](3ovs /cat (in corona
:)
tov kog- [tjous
i<f>y-
p.7)Tr\v
(3ovs Kal tov Tlpaova
Koap.VTT]v Bourd-
Hipioova dvv.
Bofrd-
dvv.
R. II. 12
TOV Koa- 'H $ovXr\ pLyTrjv
p.y\TT)V Kal 6 dr\p.os Tip.iova
Tt(UWf[a] tovs i(pr]- Boi;rd-
Bov[Td]- /3oi/s. drjv.
[SiH
178 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[65
AyCLvf]
TVXW
^wl M^Seiou apxovros eiri tt)s Aeojz>r[i8o]s rpirTys irpvTavelas,
fj
<f>t-
Xt'o;i> QlK'iuvos "EtXevaivios eypap.p.aTevev ~Bor)bpop.iu)vos eVr?7[i i<TT<x]/xevov, evdrr/ rrjs irpvTavei-
as' eKK\r)cria Kvpia ev rep fledrpcp" tCov irpoebpoov eire\J/r]<>t.[v 'E]7rtreX77S ' Aperaiov IlatavLevs
Kal avpLirpbebpor tbo^ev rw 5rj[AU>'
70
Nt/cocrrparos A77^cap^[T]ou Kapunpevs elirev eireibr] Tlp\u>]v Tip.apx'i-bov Bovrdbvs
x
L
p['
Tov-qdels KoapLVTrjs eiri tovs ecprj^ovs et's rbv [kvi\avTbv rbv Girl 'Exe/epdrou dpxov-
ros irapa\a{5Cov tt]v e["y]xetp'0"#eto"ai' eaur[<> irCjaTiv virb rod br]p,ov Kal dvaas gv r<[i
TrpvTaveLcp e/c tQv t5toj[v] p.erd tQsv i<prj(3u}v [eiri] rrjs kolvtjs etrrtas /card ra ei/o70ta[|i6-
va tw brjpap, dticras de /c[a]t rds dXXas 0i>[o~a]s rds ev rtp eviavTw irdaas /cat /caX-
75
\ieprjO~as rjpi-&>
ttjv
dpxw
Kara tovs p[op.o]i;s kolI to. \J/7}<f>lcrfia.Ta tov br)p.ov 5te-
rrjpTjaev 8e avrQu Kal ttjv irpbs dX\[r[k]ovs bpovoiav Kal (pCKiav oV o\ov rod eVta[v-
tou' irapearrjaaTO de /cat eis to e[vt)K.6]ovs avrovs etVat irpbs tcl irapayye\\[6-
p.eva virb re tQiv o~TpaT7)y[<a]u /ca[l 4av]rou /cat tCov bibaaKaXojv Trpoevor)[Qt]
be /cat rrjs tov eXat'ou deaecos [8i* 6K]ov tov eviavrov irpOTpe\pdp,evos tovs [Sv-
80 vap.evovs tG>v ecprjfiwv trwefiriSjofityai iavTotis' i<ppbvTt.o~ev be bpiolws Kal
virep rwv yivop.evojv cV b\ov rots [i]<prjl3ois dpyvpiKu>v fypuQv dpas auras [/cat o[v-
k edaas els to kolvov o~vvdye\_<rQ]cu btd<popov /car' ovdeva tlov Tpoiriov eiroirj-
eraro be Kal irpbvoiav Kal pdX[io~]ra e'airevaev Kal tov bLaTvprjBrjvaL ttjv eixfyrj-
piav avTols 7rpoo*/caprepu;[v lirjt/xeXws /cat wpocrebpevojv eh re ra yvp.vdai[a
85
ayiov auTovs Kad' e/cdcrr[Tjv r\\p.epav Kal rats crxoXats TrapaKadi^ducov jjya-
yev be avTovs eubirXovs [eiri T]d cppoupia Kal Ta 8pta tt)s 'Attlktjs irXeovaKis, Ka-
ddirep avTtp TrpocrerfaTTOv] dl re vbp.01 Kal Ta \py](piap.aTa tt)s re (3ov\r)s Kal
tov brjp.ov' ecppovTiaev be Kal ev dXXots TrXeioaiv /xerd Trdarjs baioTrjTOS
Kal bieTr)pr]o~ev irdvTas vyiaivovTas Kal aw^op^evovs' iroL7]o~aTO be
90
/cat tt)v dwobeL^LP avr&v Kal tov a7ro\oyiap.bv ev ttj (3ov\fj [virep rw]c /card
ttjv
dpxw
Ka' 7r
P
l T^l/ *v T
V
iviavTixi yeyovoTCov irdvTOJV rots i(p[r)fio\.S,
avd' u>v Kal oi ^0r//3ot ^ov\bp.evoi Tipt,av avTov dtws r^s 7670J>et'as et's eaurou[s
evepyeaias ecrTe[^>]dvojaav avTov ev ttj (3ov\rj' oircos d[v [rat <j>a-
odv i] [3ov\r] Kal b brjp.os (paivcovTai Tiputiv[r]e$ tovs d^iovs tQiv dpxbvTWV Kal 7[ivtj
95
vepbv 6'rt 7rdcrt ro?s /caXtos /cat eucre/3c5s dvao-Tpa<pelo~iv '4cttlv Tip,i]Qr\vai /ca[ra|t-
ws tCjv ireirpaypievwv' dyadrj
tvxv bebbxdo.L ttj (3ov\rj, tovs Xa%6vras [eirai-
vo~ai tov KOcrp.f]Trjv r[w]j/ e<prj(3oov Tip-wva Tt
/
u[ap]xt'5oL' BovTabrjv Kal aTe(pavu)a[a.i
Xpvcrw aTecpdvu) /car[d tov] vbpLov dpeTrjs eveKev Kal biKatoo~vvr]s i)s ^xw[v] 5tere[\e-
crej' et's re tov br)p.ov [Kal] rous <prj(3ovs, Kal dv[tnreiv] tov \jy\re(pavov tovt[o]v Aiovva[i-
100 ojv re twv ev do~Tei /c[ai]vots Tpaycpbols Kal TI[ava0T]vaia>v Kal 'EXevJcrtj'twi/ [Ka]t IlroXe-
uv rots yvp-VLKols d["y]a;crtJ'
-
ttjs be dv[a.yopV<rt<as t]ou crre0[avov eTrJt^teX^o
1
?;- [p,at-
vac tovs crrpar?;7oi/[s] ' elvai be avTtp [Kal a\\o d^aSov] evpecrdac 7r[apd t]ou br]p.ov otov
av boKrj d^tos elvat. dvaypd^ai be robe [to i(/T]<j>i.o"aa tov yp]ap,p.aTea tov [Ka]rd irpvTa-
av et'crr77[\T]v XtGjt^i' /cat crr^ijfai V d-yopa. \yel-
105 Ot e[(j>iiP]ucra^T[6s iirl '^\]fcpdrov clp%ov\t\o<;'
{Here follows a list
of
names in three long columns: see note beloio on I. 106.)
The date of these long Ephebic decrees passed in the archonship of Medeios
is determined as follows. CIA 11 985 gives a list of archons including, in
succession, Echecrates, Medeios, Theodosius, Procles, Argeios, and shows that
Medeios was epimeletes of Delos in the first archonship of Argeios. D 321
(Delos) makes Medeios epimeletes in the consulship of Cn. Cornelius Lentulus
and P. Licinius Crassus, i.e. 97 b.c. Thus Argeios and Medeios would be in
office at Athens and Delos respectively in
98/7 or 97/6 b.c, for offices at Athens
65]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 179
began in JuneJuly, at Kome in January. Medeios then would be archon in
101/100 or 100/99 and Echecrates (1. 5)
in 102/1 or 101/100 b.c. (Koehler CIA
;
Homolle BCH iv (1880) 189 ;
Ferguson Corn. St. x 86 sq.)
On ephebic inscriptions generally see Rem. vii, p. 145 sqq.
1. Philion was one of the thesmothetae three years afterwards in the
archonship of Argeios (CIA n 985, D 24).
3. iv tw dedrpu). See Rem. iv, p. 86 and 38 22.
5. diuaavres ktX. :
'
having performed the initiatory sacrifices at the enrol-
ment of names in the Xv^tapxtKov ypa,\xix<xTtiovS In CIA n 470, 5 we have the
fuller expression dtjcravres rats iyypa<pcus ra elcnrripia. The kolvt] iaria (cf. Gras-
berger Erziehung 120) continued to be the centre of official life for the
Athenians, though in later times this official life became more and more
insignificant and was concentrated mainly on the administration of the ephebic
institution and the celebration of the traditional festivals.
7. rod iepiws kt\. One of the marble seats found in the Dionysiac theatre
[Index s. v.) is inscribed leptm drj/nov /cat XapiTuv /cat "Pw/jlvs CIA in 265. From
the shorter title of our inscription we need not infer that the addition /cat'Pu^s
had not then been made, for we find lepevs 8rjp.ov /cat Xapiruv even in Trajan's or
Hadrian's time, CIA in 661, 2. D.
8. t&v e^yqrCov. On the various classes of these officers and their functions
see D. A. or Dar. and Sagl. s.v.
eiropLirevaav ktX. On the 6th of Boedromion, i.e. soon after the beginning of
the year's training, was the festival of Artemis Agrotera, when the grown-up
youths took part in the procession to
'
A.ypal (wo[xiry) irpbs 'Aypds).
10. (baavTW. sc. irpotirep:\pav. For this duty of acting as escort cf. the text
of 69.
ijpauTo. The larger victims were struck with the axe (Horn. Od. xiv 425,
Dion. Hal. Ant. vn 72, 15, Apoll. Bhod. i 425 sqq.) and then raised and held so
that the throat might be cut (Horn. Od. in 453 sq. oi p.kv hrevf dveXovres dxb
xQovbs evpvodeirjs
k<jx
v
'
drdp acpd^ev YleicriaTpaTos)
;
and this is what is meant by
the formula aipeadai rous /3o0s. D.
12. Xot7rets. See Meisterhans Gr. 147 who (after Solmsen Rh. M. liv 350,
note
2) treats the et as due to dissimilation, as in the late Attic oiKei for olkol.
17. (j3)ovu.
KOYN.
For the superfluous particle in d>s on cf. CIA n
482, 48 (4130 B.C.) : [irapao-Trjaapres w]s 6'rt KdWiara dv/nara.
20. On the connexion of the Epitaphia with the Theseia see H. Sauppe
G'ott. Nachr. 1864, 199 sqq., A. Marten Rev.phil. x
(1886), 17 sqq., A. Mommsen
Feste etc., 298 sqq., where divergent views are held. D argues that the connexion
depended upon similarity of ceremonies and games, not upon proximity of time.
With apiWav supply veQv. Probably the contest took place at the Munychia
;
see D. A. and cf. CIA m 1160, 51 (a.d. 192): vav[xax[r)<TavTe]s Mowt'xia
crvvaT(pauiJ}dr]aav.
21. Mowixiau. The spelling with t occurs as early as the fifth century b.c,
and in fact is more prevalent than that with v. Meisterhans Gr. 29.
22. irXeovdKLs (cf.
86). Previously for the whole year, or, if we may trust
Aeschin. F. L. 167 {wepiiroXo^ rijs
x^P
as Tavrrjs iyeudfnjv
56'
^rrj), for the two
years, of ephebic service they were on garrison duty in Attica. Later their
liabilities in this matter would seem to have been more restricted (wXeovdias).
24. rots Aioyevelois. On the Aioy^eia and Aioyeveiov see Dar. and Sagl.
122
180 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I
[65
In 229 b.c. on the death of Demetrius, King of Macedon, Aratus by a bribe of
150 talents induced Diogenes the (ppovpapxos, who was then in charge of the
Macedonian garrisons in the Piraeus, Munychia, Salamis and at Sunium,
to withdraw the garrisons (Paus. n 8, 6, Plut. Arat. 34). For this service the
Athenians accorded to Diogenes almost divine honours. There was a priest of
Diogenes (cf. the inscription on the seat in the Dionysiac theatre CIA in 299 :
Aioytvovs Evepyerov)
;
a festival, the Aioyeveia, was instituted and there was
a gymnasium for the ephebi, the Aioyeveiov. An officer, 6 eiri Aioyevelov, is
frequently mentioned in later inscriptions, e.g. CIG in 1093, 1121 etc.
The Aldvreia took place on the 16th of Munychion. See G. and J. 294.
27. Tpoiraiov : doubtless the trophy erected to commemorate the battle
of Salamis.
28. reus re lipo-qpeaiois. The UporjpeaLa, elsewhere called Ylporjpbcna, was a
Demeter-festival, said to have been instituted on the direction of the oracle, at
a time when all Greece was visited with a failure of crops (Schol. Ar. Eq. 729,
Suid. s.v. llporipbaia, Isocr. Paneg. 31). In later times as we see they were
celebrated at Eleusis with great sacrifices and attended by the ephebi.
29. dveS-rjKav. The sigmatic forms (dvedeaav etc.) prevail by 13 to 1
between 385 and 300 b.c.
;
from 330 to 30 b.c K-forms only appear; during the
empire both forms are found. Meisterhans Gr. 189. For 'LTe<t>avr]<p6pov
see 64 29.
34. iaxo\aaau. This use of o~xo\d'eiv common in these inscriptions appears
only sparingly in authors; cf. Xen. Symp. iv 44: 2w/cpdTet axoXd^wv avvdir)-
jxepeveiv.
35. irapy}5pev<xav. Alternative expressions are icprjdpevaav, irpoarjdpevaav.
Philostr. Vitt. Soph, n 1,
5, p. 236, quoted by D, uses the phrase rds iKuXriaias
wepieKddrjvTo. The duty does not imply the possession of a vote.
44 sq. Between \axbvras and eira.iveaa.1 the remainder of the well-known
formula has been designedly omitted in the text (cf. below 96) : -rrpoedpovs els
T7]v einodaav eKKXrjaiau
xPV/
jLaT'- a
'
cu irepi tovtcov, yv(hp,y]v 8e v[A{3dX\ecrdaL tt}s ftovXrjs
els rbv brjfxov on doicel rrj l3ov\y.
48. Kaivois rpaydidois. Cf. 61 33. The stone here and 1. 100 has
_Q
not
_Q|.
49. [/cat IlToXefiaiojv rjols : restored from 1. 100 below.
50. For the ra/u'as rCov GTpaTiojTLKivv see 59 1.
67. ktt] : obviously a mistake for eudry
;
cf. 1. 2 above.
77. TrapearrjaaTo : adegit. Cf. Plato Legg. iv 706 a: tovs olK.ovvTas...irape-
tjTT]craro els
x
a^e7r
W
two. <popdv 8aa/j.ov.
79. He took measures for the storage (decns) of an adequate supply of oil in
the tXaiodeaiov (cf. Vitruv. v 11, 2 : ad sinistram ephebei elaeothesium).
81. frj/ucDj>. In D 522 (Ceos) we find the gymnasiarch empowered to
impose a fine of a drachma. The KOfffxrjT-rjs is commended because he cancelled
the fines and did not allow them to find their way into the public treasury
(els to kolvov b~id(popov). This, Koehler remarks, is an indication of the prevalent
poverty of the period. On the use of didcpopov see the Lexx. After 5t' oXov in
1. 81 there is clearly an omission of the words rod iviavrov.
92. yeyovelas. This Doric form of the participle, due to the influence of
the Koiv-q, is the only one found in inscriptions of the third, second, and first
centuries b.c. Under the empire the ending -via appears again. Meisterhans
Or. 168.
66]
DEGREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 181
96. See note on 1. 44.
106 sqq. The names in the list, which is similar to that of no. 53, are
arranged under the head of the several tribes (including the later additions
UroXefiats, 'ArraXts, 'AvtioxLs
(?)),
and are followed in each case by the father's
name and the demotic name. The genitive of the third declension of proper
names in the list appears to end indifferently in -oi>s or -ov, except that -kA^s
always makes -nXeovs. In the sixth and fifth centuries the genitive is always
k\{o(v)s. From 350 b.c. -k\4ov appears sporadically; cf. 56 30. From the
Roman period we find -kX^cjs or -kXcos. Meisterhans Gr. 133.
66. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Athens between the theatre of
Dionysus and the Odeum of Herodes Atticus. CIA n 489 b Add. ; D 558.
Cf. Koehler Mitth. n (1887), 174 sqq., 253.
Alphabet, type 5
;
but /x is /M
lt

is
2
, ir is 7r
5
, <p is once
<f>7
and \p is once
\f/3
.
32/1
(?)
'
AyaOf)
rv^rj rrj^
fiovXfjs Kal rov Btj/jlov rov 'AOrjvaicov
BC*
'
v
A
67TL Av-
cdv&pov rov 'AiroXij^iSos ap^ovros, eVl rr}<; YlavScovl&os
8cD$fcarr)<; irpvraveLas,
y
Taios Tatov 'AXateu? eypa(/jL)/j,d-
revev Xfccpocf>opicbvo^ byBoy fxer l/cdSas, rpirrj Kal elKoarfj
5
tt)? irpvraveias' /3ovXrj ev /3ovXvrrjpio), rwv irpoeSpcov
eire^rj^i^ev %edvyeXo<$ eavyeXov A.lda\i8r]$ Kal avv-
TrpoeSpor eBotjev
rfj ftovXfj'
MemV/co? ^iXoKXeovs KoXcd<l>-
vrjOev elrrev iireuhr] irpoaooov Troirjcrd/jLevos 7T/30? rrjv
ftovXrjv b elXTj-^cos lepevs
'
Actk\t]it tov Kal 'TyteLas et? rov /xe-
io rd AvcravSpov apyovra iviavrbv AtoKXrj<; AioKXeovs
K.r}<fit-
crievs vecorepos evfyavL^et rd Ovpcb/jtara 8te(f)6dp0ai rfj<; irpo-
repov ovar}*; et? to lepbv elcrbSov, 6/jlolcos Se Kal r(rj)v OTruao)
rov irpoirvXov crreyrjv, en he Kal tov vabv rov dp%aiov<ov>
acj)i-
Spv/jLaros rov re ' AaKX^iriov Kal ri}? 'Tyielas Kal Std rovro
7rap[a-
15
KaXel rrjv l3ovXrjv ern^coprjo-at e<xrcS KaraaKevdaavn eK roov
tSlcov 6vpcoaat rd dpyaiov irpoirvXov, areydaat Be Kal rov
TrpoTTvXov ro ornate
fiepos Kal rov vabv rov airevavrt rr\\_%
elaoSov
%[p]t^ rov rrjv dpyalav diroBodrjvai rw tepoj rd^iv'
dyaOfj
TV
XV
oe8b^0ai
rfj /3ovXfj, eiriKeywpijo-Qat AtoKXfj Alok\ov<;
Krj(f)L-
20 Gtel vewrepw irot^aacrOai rrjv dvdOeaiv rcov 0vpo)fidrcov
182 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[66
/cal areydaat tov irpoTrvXov to o7rtcr&)<t>yu,epo?, /caTacncevdo~a[i
Be /cat tov dpyalov {vaov) /caOdirep irapa/caXel /cat iroirjaaaOai
ttjv eV[t-
<ypCL(f>7}V 67TL fJteV TGOV 6vpC0V /Cal TTjS CTTy7]^ TTfvhe' AlO/cXr}[$
Ato/cXeovs Kr/cfiLcrievs veojTepos tepevs yevo/xevos ev toj e-
25 irl AvaiaSov dpyovTos evtavTw rd Ovpojfxara real tt\v OTrtcrcoKO
tov irpoirvXov areyrjv 'Ag/cXtjttloj /cat Tyteta /cat ra> &r}[A(p
dvedrj/cev eirl he tov vaov ofJLoiws' Ato^X?}? Ato/cXeovs K77-
tyicnevs veaj<L>Tepos lepev<s yevo/xevos ev tco eirl Avatdhov
dpyjovTOs ivtavro) tov vaov /caTacr/cevdcras e/c tojv Iht-
30 cov Aa/cXrjTrcoj /cal 'Tyiela, /cal tw (hr)/xa>) dveOrj/cev Xva
TOVTCDV CTVV-
TeXovfxevcov eucre/9a5?
fx(ev
r)fj
(3ovXf) ra irpbs to Oetov ev^[t,
yivoovTai he /cal eTepot r]X(D<t>Tal t&v o/xoicov.
This decree of the Senate grants permission to Diocles, priest elect of
Asclepios and Hygieia, to make certain repairs at his own expense in the
sanctuary of Asclepios. On the details of the site see Koehler I. c. and Frazer
Paus. n p.
334 sqq. It was known as
'
the sanctuary of Asclepios in the
city
'
to distinguish it from the sanctuarj' in the Piraeus (Schol. Ar. Plut. 621
;
CIA 11 159 b, p. 424 ; 477 b, p. 427). From this inscription it has been inferred
that there were two temples, an old one and a new one, within the sanctuary,
and that there were two entrances, an old and a new one.
Lysander 1. 1 seems to have been succeeded in the archonship by Lysiades
1. 25 and 28. In the list of archons CIA in 1014 the names occur in the same
order. D remarks that V. von Schaeffer ap. Pauly-Wissowa Realencycl. 11
1,
p. 592 makes the dates respectively 32/1 and 31/30 b.c. A. Schmidt Ghron.
p. 545, 683 in endeavouring to reconcile the equation Scir. 28th =23rd of the
prytany as an example of the dating ko.t dpxovra arrives at the year 73/2 b.c.
for Lysander. But see the note on no. 62. On the reckoning /ler etiddas
/the stone has
| KAAA5T)
see Rem. vi table
p.
128 sq.
6. QedvyeXos. For the non-assimilation of the v, or the substitution of it
for any nasal, see Meisterhans (Gr. 113), who considers even iypav/uLdreve on the
stone 1. 3 to be deliberate and not an error of the engraver.
7. KoXw < 1 > vTjdev. The omission of the iota mutum, as well as the occasional
misplacement of it (five times in this inscription), is noticed as early as the first
half of the second century b.c Cf. ry dey (dual, CIA 11 605, 12, beginning of
2nd century). Meisterhans Gr. 67.
9. 6 ei\r)xus iepevs. For the various modes of appointment of priests in
ancient Greece see D.A. s.v. Sacerdos. The oldest method appears to have
depended upon hereditary descent, i.e., by devolution or selection out of a gens
or family ; the next was by public election either by open voting or by the lot
(the commonest method), and finally the appointment might be obtained by
purchase.
13. d(pL5pu/xa.Tos. So called because the ritual of Aesculapius had been
67]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 183
transferred from Epidaurus to Athens (D). For a<pi5pvw in this connexion cf.
the form afpedpiareuu) common in Boeotian inscriptions.
15. earcp: so earrjs etc. and arwv, dros. These forms are found from 74 B.C.
Meisterhans Gr. 61, 145.
31. ,xh rrj (3ov\y.
MNEHBOYAHL
Remark viii. The Decrees
of
the Imperial period which have
come down to us are few in number. The examples which follow
show that the introductory formula characteristic of the earlier
decrees (see Rem. iv.
p. 85)
is gradually losing its rigidity.
67. A base of white marble, on the Acropolis W. of the Parthenon. Boss,
A. Z. 1844, p. 247 [Be demis p.
vii)
;
CIA in 2.
Alphabet, type 2 mainly
;
6 is
4
, fi
is
/j^,
is
2
, ir is 7r
4
, <x is once <r
3
and
several times has the strange form
. The mark (') appears after elxev 1. 6
and after fMeTaarcbatv and 'HXecos 1. 8.
A.D.
119/20
(?) 'Ei7rt Tltov K-cottcovlov, lepoKrjpvKos vlov, Matji/jLOu
c
Ayvov-
(TLOV dpyovros, Bo?7S[pojj.u3vos
oyBorj fjier
elrcdda, eVt ttjs 'AvTioyiBos rplrr]^ irpvraveias,
irevreKaiheKarrj ttjs
TrpvraveLCLs, rj Net/aa9 Acoplcovos <>\vev<z iypapb/jbdrevev,
(Bovkr) lepd iv 'FiXeuaetvl^ia'
twv irpoeSpcov iire^rjc^i^ev
f
Hpa/cA-etT09 Tietpiev^ teal
avvirpoehpoi' 6 iirl rd ottXcl arpa-
5
rrjyos to hevrepov real yviivacriapyos; to Sevrepov fcal /eoeu?
"Aoeco? 'EiwaXiov koX Ez^foO?
Kal Ato? YeXeovros iepofcrjpv^ Tiros K-cottcovios Ma^o?
c
Ayvovaios elirev
^Etireihr) irdrpiov iartv
rfj /3ov\f
roi)<; drro tt}? 'EXAaSo?
dyaOovs dvSpas zeal ev yeyovoras rec-
[Jbdv KCU ^WVTCLS KCLV TOV (3iOV fJL6TaCTTo!>aLV,
'
AvTOJVlO? &6
O^vXos 'H\eto?, 'Avtcovlov
%ap,iirirov vlos, fcaXbs /cdyaObs veav'ias kcli i/c nrpoybvwv
avo)6ev viro tt)? 7roA,eo)? yfjuoov
IO TTt/JLr)/jLVOS, TTpOflOLpCDS Te6v7]K6V
TV^J) dyaOf), 8eS6)(daC
rfj ffovXf} tgov .^.
real rep Srj/jL(p
eiTLTpe-^rai dvBpidvra dvaara6i]vai iv d/cpoTroXei dperrjs
V6/ca
t
07r&>9 av tovtcov irparrofxevaiv
184 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[67
rj tt}? 7roXeft)? (pcXavOpcoTrta tols ko\ol<; KdyaOols toov
avop&v vTcapyovai
(fravepa iracri yetvrjrai.
This is a decree of the Senate of the 600 for the erection of a statue in
honour of 'Avtwvios '0i/Aos an Elean, who had died prematurely. The document
cannot be later than 12G a.d., when the Senate was reduced from 600 to 500,
after the formation of the new (13th) tribe Adrianis. The regular omission of
iota mutum, the use of ei for t, and the form
^
point to a date not earlier than
Hadrian's reign. Moreover the Coponii Maximi, as noble Athenian citizens, do
not appear except in inscriptions of the time of Hadrian and the Antonines.
Schmidt, Chron. 733 sqq., by elaborate calculations tries to show that the
only year in which the equation
'
Boedr. 28 = 15th day of the 3rd prytany ' holds
good, is a 19th year of the Metonic cycle, and the only such 19th year occurring
in Hadrian's reign is the 19th of the 29th cycle = 119/20 a.d. The decree in
this case was passed on October 9th, 119 a.d. (See however the caution given
no. 62.)
1. According to the punctuation given iepoKr/pvKos takes the place of a
proper name and the full title is Titus Coponius Maximus, son of the hierokeryx.
The name Titus Coponius Maximus, as that of father and son, occurs again
CIA in 661. The duties of the iepoKrjpv^ or Kr}pv were chiefly (Poll, iv 91) to
proclaim silence at the sacrifices.
3. (3ov\t) iepa iv 'EXevo-eiviip. This appears to be the only place in Attic
inscriptions in which the meeting of the fiov\-q is described as iepa.
4. Heipievs. This abbreviated form is not noticed by Meisterhans, but he
quotes Helpers from CIA in add. 1089a, 11 (before 126 a.d.), Gr. 35.
6 eirl ra oirXa (Trpar-qyos. See 36 19. Dittenberger Herm. xn 15 sqq. has
pointed out that, in the Attic decrees, not very numerous indeed, of the Imperial
period, this ar/jarriyos is the officer who proposes the decrees (CIA in 1 being a
possible exception). Cf. Swoboda Volksb. 190.
7. reifjiav, 12. yeiurjrat. Occasional instances of et for i (or i for et) are
found as early as the fourth century b.c. After 100 b.c. they become more
frequent. Meisterhans Gr. 48 sq.
68. A slab formerly inserted in the pavement of a church, now in the
Theseum, in several fragments. Pocock Inscr. ant. T. i c. 5 n. 68 p.
60
;
Chandler Syllab. Inscr. p.
xxx ; CIG 353 (from Fourmont's ms); 1.
1
12
Pittakis Uanc. Ath. p. 513
;
CIA in 10.
Alphabet, type
9;
is
1?
<p is
<p
7
.
209/10
(?)
'Eirl d'pxvTos] <X>A, Aioyevovs MapaOcovlov, eirl tt)? TlavhtovL-
8os irpvjraveLas, ?;?
iypa/jL/jLarevev 'PoBcov KoWlcttov
lAapa-
Gwvios] tepe[v]? SeotytXos iireaTarei, twv irpoehpwv eirey\rr)-
<J>i^v] ^lovXtavds Kaaiov Kai ol av/jUTrpoeSpot
Ky(J)
ttj^ irpvra-
5
veCas,] fX7]vb<=;
II ocretSea^o? rrj<; X(?)
3
/3ov\rj
crvvyx^V 7 TW
A.D.
68]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 185
vayy]eA,tot9, avaoei^uevTOS [AvTOKpdropos KaCo-apos noir\ov
2irTi|jLiov Tira Evo-Povs Scpao-Tov'] iv rj aveyvdoaOrj
yv(a\i\r] \r](t)v avveSpicov $ia rwv ap-^ovlj^cov, avayvov-
tos tov] arparrjyov
['
A\Xfca/jLevov<; Aa/jLTrTpeoos yvcofirjv ttjv
dvayypa/jL/jLV7)[y'
10 'H l 'Apeiov] irdyov (3ov\r) /ecu rj {3ov\r) twv
(f>
Kal 6 8?}/z,o? o
'AdrjvaL-
0V p.Ta] TCOV dp^OVTCOV, TOV T ilT(OVVfJLOV Ctp^OVTOS <>X.
Atoyevovs
MapaQiov^LOv /ca[\ r\ov iirl rd 6ir\a arparityov Kal 7rt/jLe\r)TOv
yv-
\Lvaa-Cov Kal crro]a9 #e[ov] AS[p]t[a]^Ol) Kal a^r^dp^OVTOS TOV
lepCDTCLTOV d[y~
wvos tov Ii\av\i\\Kriviov [Ma]p. Avp.
'
AXKa/xevov; AaparTped)^
Kal tov Ktjp-
15 vkos TTjs e|] 'Ap[e]iov 7r[dy]ov f3ov\[r\]s Kal dyo)vo06Tov tg>v
7-779
Xefia-
o-tt]s oiKias ? d.7](W^ft)[v Tpv]0&)^o? tov eo(f)L\ov TftaSov,
yv(o/xrji> <7[ir]o-
$a.ivov]criv KaTa Ta iraTpia' 'E7retS?7 rj lepcoTUTT] Kal te-
Xea)[s Qila. ? t\oc>v \r\\fiep(jC)V Kal viro irdvTwv i\Tria6eicra Bid
T7)v aOavaTov ofiovoi-
av twv ocriwv (3aai\e(ov, Aovklov XeTTTifjclov %Ovrjpov
Ei)cre/3oi)9 TlepTivaKos
20 %e/3aaTOv 'ApafttKov 'ASiafirjvifcov YiapOiKOv p,ylo~TOv, Kal
M.dpKOV
Avpr)\lov
'
AvTWveivov Ei)<xe/3o0? ^efiacrTOV, inrb tcov fxeyaXw-
v pao-iXcW Koivw KT]]p[v7p.]a.Tt iraatv ai>\j}]poi)7roLS SeSrjXcoTai,,
iv
[$
tov OetoTaTOV AvTOKpaTopa Kcucrapa IIoTrXiov 2irri|xiov T4tclv
Evo-eprf 2pao-Tov] Tj) ovpavia yjr7j(j)(p Kal Kpicrei irpoaei-
25 Xfr^ao-i irp]o9
[
Ti)v ttjs] avTOKpaTopos dp^s Icrrjyopiav,
ihpvaavTes
,
tov KocrfjLOv to (SacriXeiov iv o\oKXy~ipw T(p yever heho^Oat
tt|] e[] A[p(ov] irdyov
{3ov\fj
Kal tj}
fiovXf}
roov
<fi'
Kal tc5
^> /
O7]/Ub0) T(p
^A6r)vai(jdv \ti]v[ti\v 7ra[v]y6vel Kal eopTa^etv ev T6 koivw
Kal Ka-
r iStav iravTl t<3 pa]crt[\]etft) yeveu. ayeaOai Be Kal ttjv t^9 Kpa-
186 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[68
30
to-tt]$
apxT]s yiviQ\]tov rjfjLepav dKo\ov6<D<$ Tat? aXkais avrcov
fcpa-
tio-[tcus
?, KaGws 8id tt)]? ocrta? prjaecos avrcov /jL/jLa0rjfca/jLev, teal
SlSo-
o-0cu TravTl t<3 8ti]^[u>
8t]a^o/xr/i/, Kada Kal 6 Kpdriaro^ irpeafiev-
T^9
aVTWV Kal dvTlO-TpaTT]*yos] /Cat \oyt(TT7]^ TT)S ITCLTpLhoS Tj/JLCOV
Taio<; Ac-
SeSrjXcoKev iv rco 7rpo/c[^e]cjuiva) Siardy/Jbari
35
cr/crjcr/uL . 1 . . . evcre(3eLav, hi 7)9 Kal rrjv rrjs rroXecos evcfypocTV-
vrjv Kal lco[o]v[l\av els rov ^OXv/jlttcov avrcov oIkov evae/3ec-
a[v] ? hrfXcoaofJuev.
AX\^ri7T7ros? Ila! KaXXtas IIat atcreiToi
IIat TeXeo-<popos 2wT7;pt5a Ilat KX. 'Iepo<pauTr)$
~)
Mapa.
os Ilat 'Fovcpos
}
lieu $a(3. Aadovxos Mapad.
TLo
IlaZ MapetVos Ilat KX. 'E7rt /3a>w<p MeXt.
5
IIo tXos Ilat ^evocpCov Ilat 'Ep/. 'lepOKrjpv^ 'Epp..
Kdutos
Ilat Zwri/cos
^
Hat Aup. Uvp<popos Adfnrrp.
Mocrxuvios ? Ilat
'
OpTrjcnos Mrjvodtopos Ilat K7)pv ftovXrjs ical 5rj-
Bdo"o"os Ilat Tdios 6 /cat 'E7ra7a0os Ilat /*ou KX. 'Attlkos Mapa.
Te[ip,]6#eos Ilat <l>a[v]0-Tos 'E7ra0poetroii Ilat avriKripv^ 'A0po5et'<xtos 4>Xu.
IO . teiXutos Plat Aioyevrjs
~)
Ilat ypa/n/xarevs (3ov\rjs /cat
KX[d8]os? Ilat KvdadrjvaLoi drj/xov ' ApiaTo^ovXos
o Ilat
'
Attlkov 'Avayvpdaios
n6rap.os "Iir[Tr]ojvos Hal Arj/jLrjTpLos KeXddov K[v8a.] 7rept to
[P]^M
a 'P6[8]aw
[KaWlarov Mapad.
K6pp.o[8]os Ilat 'ApTe/bLOjv 'HXtoSwpou Ki>. dvTLypacpevs <X. Mapet^o[s] X
.
r5 Ho[Xi]/j.(x}v Tet'rou Ilat Aiovvcnos Tpv<fiwi>os Kv. iepavXrjs 'Adrjvaios 'A(ppo5eto~tou
Ilat IIed[vi]os ? TptHpuvos Ki7. iepeiis (pojtKpbpwu 'Apt-
Et-77/z^pJoi; [Srapjets -crre[t8T)]s
AtovucroScopos 'ATroXXctwtc^v y7T07pa
/
aaarei)s
'A7roXXu>ptos 'ApreptSwpou M^otptXos Ilapayuopou
20 KaXeree[i]s
'
' Airo\\o(pdv\y\\s Z[co]7r[vpov? Tu%t/c6s) K[a.]
'Owrja-ifxos Ilo\v8evKov MM
(?)
Y]pa[p.(xa]rei)s ....
This is a decree of the Seriate of the Areopagus, the Senate of the 500 and
the Demos, in honour of Geta on his association (209/10 a.d.) in the empire
with his father Septimius Severus and his brother Caracalla. Boeckh referred
the decree to the date of Caracalla's association in the empire with his father,
198 a.d., but
(1)
the name of the person associated is twice erased 11. 6, 7 and
23, 24, and
(2)
the name of Caracalla is not erased on inscriptions and in fact
appears on this one, 1. 21 (M. Aurelius Antoninus Pius Augustus). Schmidt
68]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 187
Chron. p. 741 sqq. accepts the date 209/10 a.d. and tries to reconcile the text
with the state of the Attic calendar at this period. But the calculation is not
rendered easier by the fact that the number of the prytany is lost in the text
and that we do not even know in what month the year began at this period.
CIA in 1023 shows that in 139/40 a.d. the beginning of the year had been
transferred from Hecatombaeon to Boedromion.
2. Note that the ypafx/xareiis Kara Tpvfaveiav, being of the deme Marathon,
did not belong to the Pandionis, the
'
prytanising ' tribe. See Rem. v, p. 89.
5. The (3ov\t) was assembled
'
on receipt of the good news.'
8. tGjv (Tvvedpiojv : apparently the combination of the three bodies is meant
the (3ov\r) of the Areopagus, the (3ov\rj of the 500 and the dij/nos. By dpxbvTwv
are meant magistrates generally, i.e. those enumerated ; cf. 1. 11.
12. rod iwl 8ir\a (TTpaTwyov. See 36 19.
13. On the present condition of the Portico of Hadrian see H. and V.
Athens 195 sqq.
avrdpxovTos kt\. For M. Aur. Alcamenes cf. CIA in 1165. He was vice-
president (cf. dvTLKoafxrjTrjs, avdtiiraTos, avTLaTpaTrjyos) of the Panhellenic contest.
Possibly the apxwv or president was the emperor himself, though in CIG 3832
(Aezanis in Phrygia) a private person appears as 6 (Lpx^v rCov ILapeWrjvcov Kal
lepevs deov 'A5ptacou Kal dyuvoderTjs t&v [jLeydXwv HaveW^viwv. The HaviXkrpres
(with the collective name HaveWrjviov) find frequent mention in inscriptions
after the attempt of Hadrian to revive a national spirit among the Greeks by
instituting the festival, or perhaps panegyris, of all the Greeks under the title
t<x HaveWrjvia. See D. A.
14. rod KrjpvKos ttjs e
'
Apeiov irdyov j3ov\t]s. This is D's restoration for the
rod K-fjpvKos KA. 'Attlkov Mapadwviov of Boeckh, in which the insertion of the
proper name in the official title is awkward. The words must refer to the
following name Trypho, who cannot be the k%)u (3ov\i}s Kal drjfiov because this
office in the list of names below is assigned to Claudius Atticus of Marathon.
15. tG)v rrjs 2e/3a|[(rT?}j cu'/a'as? dy~\ibvu[y. So D doubtfully restores,
apparently on account of the space to be filled up. In CIG 3831 {Aezanis
in Phrygia) we find mention of dywvoderris r&v ttjs Se/3a(rT^s dywpwv.
19. AovkIov "ZeiTTL/jiiov kt\. Severus was greeted with the title of his
murdered predecessor Pertinax by his troops on April 13th 193 a.d. The titles
Adiabenicus, Arabicus and Parthicus he won by his successes in the East,
195 a.d., after the capture in the preceding year of his rival Pescennius Niger.
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus Pius Augustus, whose name follows, was the son
of Severus by his second wife Julia Domna. His better known nickname
Caracalla or Caracallas, derived from the Gallic tunic which he wore and
introduced into the army, never appears on medals or inscriptions.
25. iarjyopiav. Here the word means little more than
'
equality
'
; it is
frequently coupled with iXevdepia and /nerovaia. See the Lexx.
idpvaaisTes kt\. Is the meaning
'
having made the whole family the seat of
royalty over the world
'
?
28. iravyevei. So D, for the iravdrifiel of Boeckh. Cf. CIA in 1423, 9
iKpLfadrjaerat. irayyevel. 32. 8iavo/j.rju. 69 35 sq.
32 sq. TrpeaftevTTis kt\. D shows (cf. his remarks Ephem. Epigr. i 247 sq.)
that the official meant is the legatus Augustorum pro praetore ad ordinandum
statum liberarum civitatum provinciae Achaiae. Cf. CIA in 631 'H 7r6Ats
|
Ti/3.
188 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. I.
[68
KX. KaXXt7T7rtai'6i' 'IraXiKdv, virarov
\
ir pea fievTTjv Kal clvtict pdrrjyov tCjv
\
2e|3ao'Twi', \oyi(rTT)v koX eiravopdooTrju
\
tQiv iXevde'pajv iroXewv, rbv evepy^Trju.
34. 5iaT&y/uaTi : i.e. some decree of the Legatus Caesaris sent to the Senate
of Athens.
36. By 'OXv^nnos oT/cos seems to be meant the imperial palace in the Attic
Olympieum. Boeckh.
At the foot of the decree is a list of prytanes, most of them belonging to the
Paeanian deme, followed in a third column by a list of dtaeiroL (deiVirot) ; cf. 56 41.
For these see D. A. s.v. Prytaneum, where it is pointed out that (i) del in the
compound means, not
'
for life,' but
'
during office,' (ii) that the deiVirot are not
found under that name before the second century a.d.
,
(iii) that in the numerous
Prytany lists dating from the middle and latter half of the second century a.d.
we find under the heading detVtrot, first the Eleusinian priests iepo^duT-rjs etc.,
then the lay officials connected with the Prytanes, (iv) that, whereas the same
priests appear in several inscriptions in different years, in the case of the lay
deia-LToi the same name never appears in two different years. Cf. CIA in
10291032 (1032 and 1034 are for the same year 168 a.d.).
In Col. in 13 is mentioned the ypafi/xarevs irepl to j3r}/na, a later title of
6 Kara irpuraveiav ypa/n/j-arevs tt)s (3ov\rjs.
In Col. i 15 note the form Telrov in spite of the short first syllable. In
nVct[Vt]os? ii 16 we see the change in the pronunciation of at, cf. 91 13. For
iepeds iirl r<2 /Sw/Ay in 4 see 2 c 43. In Col. in 19 the ov of Ilapa/x6uov is
expressed by
O
with
Y
inscribed.
The symbol
)
after several of the names denotes that the father's name
(in the genitive case) is the same as that of the son.
69. A slab of Pentelic marble in several fragments. One, belonging to the
Elgin collection, is in the British Museum. One or more of the fragments have
been edited by Boeckh CIG 118; Hicks BMI 19; Kumanudes QiXlaTup n
p.
238
;
Dittenberger Herm. i 405 ; CIA in 5 ; D
1
387. The discovery by Lolling
of another fragment of lines
111 has enabled Dittenberger (D
2
652) to
determine more accurately the date.
Alphabet, type 4.
Circa
"E8o|v t]c3 StJ/jLW'
'
Apa{3iav[6<s
tipx^v,
Iirpv-
210 a.d.
*

*
,
TavcveJ^, CjUTI^o? 6ypa/jLl\i.anviv ir-
o-Ta.Ti' Ajpvavrtavbs apyjDV [twv EvuoXiriSwv direv'
7ri]S?7 kcu hiaTe\ovfJLe\y vo-Povvts vvv ri] Kal
5
8i]a tgov irapw^r]fxevutv [xpovwv w<tt to. ko.t& t& \iv\arr)pi-
a Kal tcl irdrpia ir/o[o<t]t cltt\ovti$ del jxerd Eiip.o]A-7rtoft)^
7re<f)povTi,/cev[ai] oVa)? d[y kv k6<t[ko ayQ^eir) rd tepa
Sevpo t 6K tt}? 'EdXevcrelvo^s Kal irdX.iv
!]
acrrecos E-
\ev(TL[v]d&e' dyaOfj ti^[y| SeSox^cu] tc5 Brj/juo) irpos-
io Td|at t]g5 Kocr/jbrjrfj rwu [e^fpwv k]<zt<2 ra apyaia vo/jll-
fJLa [d](y)etz> 'JLXevcLvdSe rov[s Icjnjpjof? ry rplrrj iirl Be-
69]
DECREES OF THE SENATE AND PEOPLE. 189
Ka] rov Rorjhpo/jLiodvos /jbe[rd to]0 eldccrjjLevov o-yjqixa-
tos] tt}? afia lepols tto/jltt^s, t\va
rfj
rerpdhi iirl heKa rra-
p*Tr\e[jL"^ro}(JLV rd lepd
A^'xtp
1
]
T0V RXevcrecviov rov viro
15
tt) ir]6Xet, ft)? CLV tc6(TfM)[s] T irXeLOOV KCLl (j)pOVpd JULlcOV
irepl] rd lepa VTrdp%o[i,] ^irecBij Kal 6 <j>cu8vvT7)$ rolv 6e-
otv] dyyeXXec ^[aJTfl rd irdrpia
rfj
tepeia rrj<; Adrjvdfi ft)?
t]kcl t] lepd k\<x\\ t) irapaire\xnTovaa arparta' Kara
ra avra
8* Kal ttj] e[v]ar77 iirl heKa rov T$or)$po{iLQ)vo<; irpos-
20 Taai] roj Kocr/xrjrfj rcov i(p7]/3cov dyeiv rovs e<p7][$ovs
irdX.iv '~E}XevaeLvdhe fjuerd rov avrov ayjuxaro^ [impair-
n.iro]^Ta? rd lepd, fieXetv he rovrov rco Kar eV[iavTov
Koafir/rfj
07Tft>? /jaiheirore rovro eKXe\i^Qdt]
fiTj-
he oXcycoprjOeli] rrore rd t?)? evaefieias [t^s upos tw 0e-
25 co, irapaire/jbTTeiv he rovs e(f)7](3ou<; 7r[dvTas
^x
ovTa
s
(?)
rrjv iravoirXtav, eo~re(f)av(Ofjiev\_ovs \i.vpp(vi\s o-T<j>d-
vo), fiahel^ovras ev rd^er e7r[l] h[k tois I-
c/)^ot? rrjv roaavrrjv ohoiiroprjaai
Kal Ovauoov Kal cnrovhwv Kal iraidvwv rco[y Kara, ttv
30
6S6v fJLeOe^eiv, ft)? av rd re lepd fierd (fipovpd[s la-xvpo-
repa<; Kal rroixTrrjs /naKporepas dyotro, oi re
e<t>[r[fioi
rrapaKoXovOovvres
rf]
rrepl ro Oelov t?}? 7roXe[ws
Otpaireia Kal avhpes evae/3ecrrepoi yelvocvro' \xe6e-
%ovo~lv h\\\ Kal oi e(f)7]/3oi,
rrdvre? rcov re dXXcov cov av
35
irapey^ -rjot? RvfjioXmhai^ dp^cov rov yevovs Kal rrj[s
c^[av]o///)}?* yevecrOat he rrjv yvco/uuTjv ravriiv c/>a[vc-
p]dv Kal
rfj
i
'
Apeiov irdyov /3ovXfj Kal
rfj
/3ou[\tj] rcov
<fi
Kal rco lepocf)dvrri Kal rco yevei rcov Ev[p.o]X7rthcov
dvaypdyjrac he ro ijrr)(f)co-p,a rovro rov [ra]fJ,La[v r]ov <ye-
40 vovs roov Rv/jloXttcSojv ev rpialv [o-Ti]X]at? Kal arrjaaL
rrjv /uiev ev ^EiXevaetvLop roj vivo [t]j7 [ir]oXet, rrjv Se ev
tg5 Aioyevela), rrjv he ev 'EdXevcrelvL ev roj lepa> irpo
rov /3ov[\]evrr)pLOV.
The object of the decree is the restoration of the Eleusinian festival to its
original splendour. D identifies
'
'Apa(3iap[6$], 1. 1,
with 'Apa^cavbs ~Slapadui>ios
named as archon in two lists of prytanes, CIA in 1054, 3 and 1060, 2, which he
shows to be not far distant in date from 210 a.d. Further ApvavTiavos, 1. 3,
may be the same as the person mentioned in CIA 111 757, 3 : 6
tyrjfios
Apvawn-
avbs KaWaiaxpou Mapadiovios and 1177, 3 : tous i(pr)(3euaavTas avv r<p KpaTiaTcp
190 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. I.
[69
^>Xa(/3/y) ApvavTiavu) (a list of ephebi belonging to 212 a.d. or some year not far
off it). That an ephebus of high birth
(6 K-pdrtcrros) should afterwards (in our
decree) have become apx^v f the Eumolpidae would not be strange. The
restorations in 11.
1
9 are of course by no means certain. On the duties of the
ephebi specified in this decree see Rem. vii, p. 145 sqq. Note as indications of
late syntax the use of oirws with the optative after a present tense, 1. 24, the
use of 6'7rws av or ws &v with the optative, 1. 7, 15, 30.
8. 'EXevaeiuos, 11. 'EXevaiv&de. See 67 7. 11. [&]{y)eiv:
iTElN.
14. The site of the Eleusinium beneath the Acropolis (cf. 9 29) was
probably (H. and V. Athens
p. 94) somewhere beyond the Enneakrounos, near
the Pelasgikon, due south of the Acropolis. It is to be noted that in earlier
times the ephebi did not escort the procession all the way from Eleusis, but
met it at some point on the road (CIA n 470, 8 : /xexpt t?}s 'H^ous) (D).
16. (paibwr-qs. This and not <pai8pvi>T7]s is the normal form in Attic in-
scriptions, all of them however comparatively late (CIA in 283, 291, 928,
1058, 3859). For a similar loss of
p
cf. depixavTls 102 29. Hesychius
explains (paidpvvT-qs to be 6 to e8os rod deov depairttiwv. One of the seats
of the Dionysiac Theatre is inscribed: (paiSwrov Alos e/c Yleians, and another:
(pcudwTov Alos 'OXvfnriov iv acrrei ; see Index. Cf. Meisterhans Gr. 82.
18 sqq. Here mention is made of the grand procession from Athens to
Eleusis on the 19th of Boedromion, when the statue of Iacchos was brought
forth from his temple and conducted by the Iacchagogos amid a countless
throng of worshippers, along the sacred way, to be at length deposited in the
Eleusinian temple of Demeter and Kore.
19. evdry iirl 5e/ca. Greek authors name the 20th as the festival of Iacchos
(Eur. Ion 1076, Andoc. Be mySt. 121, Plut. Phoc. 28, Cam. 19). Probably the
period after sunset on the 19th, when the procession arrived at Eleusis by
torchlight, was counted as belonging to the 20th (D).
26. [fj.vppLvrjs are(f)d]vu). The myrtle crown played a conspicuous part at
the Eleusinia in various ways : cf. Aristoph. Ran. 330, Schol. Soph. O. G. 683,
Schol. Aristoph. Ran. 330 ; and also a fragment Rang. 803, whence we learn
that persons whose services had been of value in the mystery-celebration were
presented with an honorary myrtle-crown.
35. T7js dt[av]oiu.T)s. In later times it appears that distributions of money
(diavo/xai) at festivals were not uncommon as in Tenos (CIG 2336
;
cf. 68 32).
42. Aioyeveiu). 65 24. One of the copies ordered to be deposited at
Athens is the inscription before us ; a fragment of the other is found in
CIA in 6. ev t<$ iepy ktX. : 'in front of the council-hall, in the precinct.'
Section II. Decrees and letters of Foreign States
and of the Amphictyonic Council.
70. A marble stele sent by Fauvel to Choiseul from Aegina, but doubtless
originally set up at Athens (in the Metroon) ; now in the Louvre. CIG- 1688
;
CIA ii 545 ;
Ahrens Diall. n 484 sqq.; Froehner Inscr. 32
;
J. Baunack DI 2501.
H. 0.59 m. ; Br. 0.34 m. Another block must have joined this one on the right
and have contained the completion of the lines. The surface is badly corroded
and the reading is often doubtful. The text given is that of Baunack.
[The text
of
the inscription is given on
pp.
192
3,
194
5)
Alphabet.
0~-ou 1. 1 TLvdeov, 1. 8,
12 Aarovs, 1. 25 faixiovvTuv, 1. 41 clvtov. = w in
1. 1 (perhaps merely a slip) 'I-rnrod^vTidos.
E
=eil. 10 dTroypaxf/[e2]u, 1. 23 evoiKtiv.
E
=
?7 1- 4
ZyxVP
a-
This is a decree of the Delphic Amphictyony, probably ordered to be set up
in all the states of the confederation. It is composed in the Doric dialect of
Delphi, but doubtless was engraved at Athens ; hence the inconsistencies in
orthography and dialect.
The substance of the decree seems to be as follows, each section beginning
with a heading.
313 Oath prescribed for some official, perhaps (as Koehler
thinks) the Secretary of the Amphictyons or (as Boeckh thinks) the Pylagorae,
and also for the Hieromnemons and Heralds. 1315 Begulations for a
sacrifice. 1526 Regulations as to the sacred land and its inspection.
2632 Prescribed clothes and arms for a colossal image. 3234 Regulations
for sacrifice. 3443 Order for repairing sacred buildings and roads of
approach before the Pythia. 4349 Determination of time of two annual
assemblies, and injunction of the sacred truce.
1. The third prytany would fall in an ordinary year from the 12th Heca-
tombaeon to the 16th Pyanopsion
; the decree was therefore probably passed at
Delphi in the autumn, at the oirwpivri HvXaia. The Attic archon's name is added
for the convenience of Athenians, cf. Dem. de Cor. 279, where an Attic date is
quoted for an Amphictyonic decree ; from ibid. 278 we learn the formula
probably lost at the beginning of this decree : ewi ieptus rod deivos, oirupivris
HvXalas, 5oe roh TLvXaybpois nal rols cvvtdpois tu>u 'A/j.<Piktv6pu>v k<xl to; koiv<
TU>V 'A/Jl,<plKTv6l>l0V.
192 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. II.
[70
Text
38
'Eirl TL]v6eo(v) dpyovrov eirl t?}?
t
l7T7roO(a))vrtSo(; rpirr)<^
B.C. -. _
"OpJ/<:o[s
Ai/ca[e<o r]a<? 8t/ca<; oj? /ca B[iK]ato[r]dra[i y~\v(Ofia [to, \t.]ey
ye[yp]afifi-
7[p]a[irrai, KJard
yvcoptav rdv avr[ov], /cal ey[\]r)pa dvd rdv \Lk\(IV ov
5
iro/ca' [ko.]1 rd KaraBt/caa6evra e/crrpa^ecd ev b\v\vacrtv tf[a]t t EN
TAir|0NT. OYAE T<2v ypTj^drCOV TtoV ' Apt(f)tfCrtOVt/cd)V V7TO/3-
epttvya ov& aXXw Saxrjja] rcoy /cotvwv ypr/p^drcov v-
rov
'
Att6X\o)[v]o<; rov U[v]0tov koX t<z? Aarovs /cal ra<;
'
Aprdpt-
Xd fcal rdyaOd, ai
8'
i(f>top/ce(otp,t), rd /ca/ca dvrl rcov dyaOcov
io eypapptevwv prj d7roypayjr[et]v, aXK cov Kara rol iepopi'dpoves /ce-
/c[a]rav aiav ptrjSe Scopa he^elaOat p,r]Se7ro/c[a.]' o#t[o>]? u7r[i]o-^[o]^a-
roi)[(s)] /cal ra?
'
Aprdpuros, /cal vo[p]/ciovTi pep pt[o\t TroXXd /cat dyadd,
lepopvdpovas op/ct%eco /cal to? /cd[p]v/ca<$ rov avrov op/cov. II-
rbpt
(fropov
/cal rd leprjia dOpoa avvayovrcov to? govos rcov ho/ctpt-
15 arop,(3av, 6[p]?cov opoaas elirep rol tepopvapoves, So/ctpta^erco : II-
7^t]
tT
[]>
&V Apcfrt/crtoves IdpcoaaVf eirei /c[a] d irepoSos yivqrat, diror-
ararrjpa^ Aiytvatot /car t[o] ireXeOpov e/caarov, rol 8e iepopvdp-
fcal ir\jnx.<r\aovT(i)v tov errtepya^optevov. ai Se pur) ireptielev r) ptrj irp-
prjhe [(iir]paao'(o)v, rptd/covra ararr)pa<^. ai he /ca p,rj dirorivrj 6
20 eiXea[Q(a] rod iapov /cat arparevovrcov err avrbs Apcf)t/cr-
Xwvrt. [eirl] rd<$ iepcts 7a? KOirpov ptrj dyev prjheptiav. oi/crjertos errt-
e^etSta[.] eirl OaXdaaa, Ta? he iraaraha^ /cotvds elptev rrdvrecrcrt
crObv fju\r\h\eva cfxspev prjhevi, ptrjS evotKeiv tov avrbv ifkeov rptd/c-
evot/ce\iv \k\rjheptiav, ptrjSe pv\av ivelptev ptrjSe oK/jlov. ai Se rt<; r-
25 apoptv[6ni]ovS ^a/jitovvTcov ortvt /ca 8t/cai(p crty\i\v
80/cf}
el/xev iir-
/ca(T)ay[ye]WovTa)v irol to? iapoptvd/jtovas: AwTt?. a Xwn? rd?
^Afufi-
Aiytva[lo]t. to 8 dpirkyovov TrevTrjfcovra real e/carov aTarrj-
rcov e/carbv ararijpe^ Aiytvatot. ras arecfravas e/carbv arar-
Se/ca ararrjpe^ Aiytvatot. ras dairt&os hta/cdrtot o~Tarr)pe<; Aiyt-
30
Tr)pe<; Aiytvatot. Xo(f>ou 7TVT6/cat8e/ca crraTr/pes Aiytvatot. hopar-
? Aiytvatot. /cat rd irop{7r)dptara /cal d crrefyava ypvaea eovrwv. irt-
evecnG). [t]oO /3obs rtptd tov rjpeoos e/carbv ararfjpe^ Aiytvatot. rao~
bfyetXerw. ypr)o-TT)ptov at t/? /ca /z>) irapeyji, e/carbv crrarrjpas 6<pe-
? e<pohov Ovev ev ' Aveptaiats rpt/cre[v]av /crjiiav. rd) rpt/crevav /crjiiav
35
to?, rov vaov rov 'AttoXXcovos rod Tlv6iov /cat rav avXav /cal rov Ta? A-
Spopov /cal rdv Kpdvav rdv ep, 7re8t(p rol tapopvdjxove^ rol
'
Aptcftt-
crrav ecfra/cetaOcov irpb TivO\i\(jdv ortvos tea Secovrat. at /ca pr) rol iapop-
70]
DECREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 193
of
No. 70.
[irpvTavcfas, rj
(5)
(,o)
(.5)
<*)
(5)
(30)
(35)
eVa Kara tos vouos
8|0|iai
TTpl wv 8e: ui} ye-
aXeopcu aiTwi
iropdA\]e[<r8at opKos' virio-xouat ttoI
tTOS Kal V0pK0VTl |1U UOl TToX"
86fiev. opKos tov -ypaiiiiaTeos'
VTrio-)(op.ai Twy y-
XeV(T0VTt UT|8
1\
i irol tov 'AttoXXwvos tov IIvOiov Kal tos Aa-
al
8*
<j>iopKoip.i, tcI KaKoL dvrl twv ctyaGah' 86|Xv* tos 8e
V01OIS 8 0VT01 KirpaO-(TOVTWV
acrGe'vTwv diroSoVTes, Kal 6 to, lirl toLv ck-
e'poSos Tas lapds yds* aX ti$ Tdv "ydv eTricp-
eio-aTw
ovcs ircpuovTwv Tav Updv
"Y^
v
d<ro"oiv, diroTicrdvTWV ireXe'Opov Kao-TOv, ov p/rj irepiTio-av
tepojivdjicDv 6 oaSeCXwv, a iroXis, | as k' Ii 6 (.epop.vdfj.wv,
Covs, Kara Ka toI Upopvdpoves enuyy^X-
0VTa apepav
6s vouos t6s VTav0a "ye-ypauue'vos irapPaCvoi, toI
1-
iauw, to
8'
tJuio-o-ov tov iriauov c'o-tw twv
iktCovos cIko'vos o-TaT-^pes
pS Al-yivaioi. twv 8 irl to dp.ire'xovov . . . iropiraud-
tjpcs Al-yivaioi
vaioi o"Ta-
OS <TTCLTT\p-
o-TaTTjpas Alyivatos
.Xe'i
UT| OvVaVTl -
pTap.iTos vaov Kal tov
ktiovwv KaTa IIv0i,d8a Iko-
vduovcs
R. II.
13
194 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA; SECT. II.
[70
Text
ev ra<Tai> TlvdiaSc rat (t)apd eTTLKoafirjawvTi otlvos Ka Secovrcu, airo-
aTaTr}pa<; Avyivalos. at Ka
fir) airorivr) r[ot]9 lepofjuvafioveaai to-
40
apov a 7roXt?,
ef
a? k ei 6 lapofivdfMov, evre Ka airoreiarj : o&cov rd te-
as;
yecfcvpas efyaKelcrOai 'Afi<fii/cTiova<; kclt tclv avrov e/caarov. re-
fit)
aivrjTai. Kal tov Spofiov tovs lapofivd/juovas tovs 'Afxcf)iKTi-
erjraL, icai ^afiiovvTcov rol [apofivdfioves. k^tti toIs iroTafiols
a Tlv6id<; : eviauria d lepo\xr\vla a TivOids laa Trdvreacn i/c ras r)-
45
Uv8ta 8 d(y)~\6vTwv tov Bov^^ariov firjvos tov ev Ae\<poc<;, to? 8e 7r[-
e\<pOi rod Bvctlov /jltjvos, a[i] oe /ca
fir) 7re[\i.]7rcovTi, diroTLO~dvT(o-
7tot tov Oebv kut Ta 7rarp[i]<x SlSovtcov tols
Ae\(froi<;.
al Si Ka
ZiJKcovTac Tav eKeyrfpiav, elXeaOcov tov lapov
. . . Tav k\Ke-)(7]piav iepofirjvias . . . v la[p]6v
1. 'E7rt H]vdeov : so Baunack for the simple Hvdeov of other editors. He
notes that the IT itself projects beyond the vertical margin of lines
1
47.
3.*
AiKa^eu). On this and other Doric forms in the inscription (e.g. ovde-rroKa.
1. 4, Z/iivya 1. 7, Troi=Trp6s 1. 26, de^eicrdai 1. 11, 6pKieoj 1. 13, ros <2vos 1. 14, etc.,
iravTecrcn 1. 22, ivel/uLev = kveivai 1. 24, hia.Ka.Tiot. 1. 29, dvev, ayev etc.), see J. Valaori,
Der delphische Dialeht.
4. For erepa Baunack (after Blass) reads
ey[x\
e
P
a (ie- tyxvpa
'> cf. note on
1. 48)
= iirixei-po..
5. to. KCLTadLKao-deuTa iKirpa^ew. 'I will exact the fines imposed.' The
formula is a common one
;
cf. IGSept. i 4135 (Boeotia) 25 : rd 8e KaradiKaadevra
Xpr\p.a.To. iepa o~tu) tov 'AttoWojvos tov Htw'iov. For 8vvao~is = 8vvapus see the
Lexx. The use of eV with the accusative is a marked characteristic of the
Northern Doric, but is found also in Thessalian, Boeotian, Elean, Arcadian,
Cypriote.
6. 'AfMcpLKTLovLKuiv : so usually in this inscription.
'
Ap.<piKTvoves 1. 16 is
perhaps due to the Attic engraver and is in fact the regular form in Attic
inscriptions. vwo(3a\eo/uLai : 'will appropriate' ; so Strabo 790, Plut. Pomp. 31.
8. For the adjuration of three divinities cf. 5 15; 7 7
(
= CIA i 2) b 12 sqq.
9. i<piopKeoipLi. See Schweizer Gr. perg. Inschr. 118, where the suggestion
of Thumb (Spiritus asper 72) is approved, that in ((ptopKew we have a contamin-
ation from eiriopKeu} and e^op/ce'w ; cf. e<pi iepeus BCH vn 280, 1. 5 (Delos) from
i<p' iepews and eirl ieptws.
VTriaxofMaL kt\. :
'
I will make no entry in the registers, except as the
Hierornnemons shall order.' The word v-rriaxop-ac here and 1. 11 is supported by
the parallel formula in the Labyadae inscription DI 2561, A 12 : '6picos' 'vsrf-
CX0P-O.L
TTOL TOV AlOS TOV TTaTp&lOV \
Cf. 84 16.
10. d\\' dV On the relation (which is "noch nicht klar gestellt
")
between
Attic ovv and Ionic, Boeotian, Aeolic and Doric <Jov see J. Valaori op. cit. p.
25.
/card = /ca(r) t& (relative)
;
but cf. 1. 16 av, 1. 40 as. vySe] K[a]Tav d^iap :
"
[Geld-
forderungen an die Bundeskasse] nur nach Verdienst [zu stellen]." Baunack.
70]
DECREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 195
of
No. 70.
[TturaTb) 6 \i.r\ ciriKOO'(xi](ras
[is 'A|i<J>tKTto'va>v 6 Upofi.vdfj.cov o o<j>C\wv, clXc'crOto tov t-
(40)
[aKw(jiva Kal r-
[al
[ovwv irt[ieX6i(r8ai otivos Ka 8-
[
'lpop.T]Vt-
[
(45)
[
A-
[v . . . . orTaTTjpas Alyivcuos
[fJLI]
8l8ci>VTl tj p/rj
[
[
14. tos wvos :
'
paying the prices of those that have passed inspection.'
The subject to cwayovruv is perhaps Kapvues.
15. elTrep: cf. el, DI 1780, 8 (Delphi): olKeouaas el Ka deXuvri, and oiret
1728, 7 (Delphi) : oUelv oirei Ka 6^\t).
15 sqq. The sacred land is almost certainly that of Crissa, and it was
probably under this very decree that the action was taken which led to the
Sacred War. Aeschin. c. Gtes. 497 sqq. ; Dem. de Cor. 277. tTriepydfofxai and
iirepyaaia are the regular words denoting encroachment on sacred lands
;
cf. Thuc. i 139 etc.
17. For the Aeginetan standard of coinage see G. F. Hill Gr. and Rom.
Coins, 34 sqq. A stater is usually a didrachm.
18. irepueiev : cf. ieir] Hom. II. XIX 209.
20. elXe'adu. Cf. Ko. I 295, 7 (Elis) : airofrfkeoi k airb fxavreias, I 297, 4
(Elis) : airb rcD /Soj/xo; airofrfhtoiav Ka roi rrpb^evot Kal tol fiduTi.es. Thuc. iv 9 etc.
uses ei/rya> in the same sense.
21. Kbirpou fii] dyev. Prohibitions of this kind were not uncommon. Cf.
Ca. 527 (Thasos), CIPel 557 (Argos).
22. eveidia. The text is too uncertain for conjectures as to the meaning.
24. /xrjbe/uLlav : possibly yvpdiKa stood in 1. 23. 25. TjfMicraov: <T}[xiTpo-.
25. 6tlvl. This combination of an inflected with an uninflected pronominal
stem appears in the dialects of Crete (e.g. an, neuter plural, in the long inscrip-
tion of Gortyn Mich. 1333 n 47) and, according to the grammarians, in Aeolic
(e.g. oTTivas, Ahrens Diall. i p. G8).
26. AwTts. By this otherwise unknown word (possibly connected with
airo\auo), Xa'i's, Xtjls, lucrum etc.) seems to be meant a grant of money, perhaps for
the periodical decoration of a colossal image with clothing, arms and ornaments.
The large sums assigned imply that the image was colossal ; from the j3ods rod
ijpooos 1. 32 it may be inferred that the image represented a hero, perhaps
Amphictyon. For other explanations (which make /3ot)s rjpus appositional) see
A. Mommsen Delphika 226.
132
196 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA ; SECT. II.
[70
32. The price of 200 dr. for an ox (for sacrifice) is very high. Ziehen
(Rh. 31. li 216) reckons 100 dr. as the normal price, but in the Eleusinian
accounts of 329/8 B.C. we find rdv /3oQu eKaarov
HHHH,
rpi&v 8oQv
XHH.
Perhaps incidental expenses, such as those for gilding the horns, are included.
34. tyodov must refer to the approach to the temple
;
Anemaeae probably is
another name for Anemoria, which may be the modern Arachova, whence
Delphi was first visible.
rpiKreva according to Ahr. is the Doric equivalent of t/htti>s or rpiTrola
;
see
note on 3 5. It is prefixed adjectivally to K-rjva, a burnt-offering, connected with
the root which appears in %K7]Fa, Krjfibdrjs, ktj'Cov (Hesych. /ceta, Kadapfxara
;
KrjCa,
Kaddpfxara).
36. dpofxos : the Hippodrome in the Crissean plain
; Paus. x 37, 4.
37. etpandcrdw. the <p is remarkable. aKetadai. is used for 'to repair'
in Horn. Od. xiv 383 etc.
41. The roads and bridges are to be kept up not by the Hieromnemons, but
by the Amphictyons, i.e. by the respective states.
44. An annual celebration of the Pythia is mentioned here only
;
probably,
as in the Panathenaea, the annual custom preceded the quadriennial.
45 sq. Bovk&tios and Bvaios correspond respectively to the Attic Metageitnion
and Anthesterion. For the full list of Delphic months see D. A.
48.
Kexnp'
La- Cf. the note on 1. 4. Though the tendency of et in the most
diverse parts of Hellas was to become i, especially from the end of the 3rd
century, yet there are two exceptions
;
(1)
a following
p
has a protective power
in retaining the e-sound, thus o-wr^pa,
x^P
a
>
K
XVpi-
a
'i (2)
before vowels et
becomes r) or e; ttXtjcls, iraib-qa (Papyrus) and ir\-qovas, xp^as,
CIG 2060
[Byzantium, time of Tiberius).
71. Two fragments of bluish marble found on the Acropolis. Margin to
left and at bottom ;
broken at right and at top. CIA n 546
;
Boeckh Staatsh.
3
ii 312 sqq.; Koehler Mitth. n
(1877),
150 sq.
;
Pridik Be Cei ins. 107 sq.;
Ziebarth Herm. xxxn
(1897),
612 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1
; but
O
for ov in 'IovXitjtQv 1. 26, etc.
- -
We
- -
-
- -
e^ayovT
f^eprj 6 [<x7r] or [Xe]
vtl tcai ia[y
5
K.]ap6aiva[i e] y
l
r
M
(
f>
L
[
'] ~ ~ tcaXicrai 8e rov<; 'AOrjvaiovs
- -
eh to
7rpvravelov [o]7rw? S' a[v
y
eypairrai i[iri]/j,e'\,r)6f}v[ai on
av Svvwvrat ayadov
eo-yjei^? eiirev oeSo^Oac
\r\fi
/3o[v\fj ko,1 tu> r\\up tw Kop-qo-iwv' ircpl <5v
X.6"yov<ri ot Trap
1
'A.Qr\-
io vatcov, elvai *n}? jalXtov rrjv e[crya>yi]v 'AQr\vali k-
71]
DECREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 197
aOdirep irpoTepov yv ottcos o dv Kvpca ??[i r]a "^rrj<pLap,aTa
[-'---
- - - -
'A0T]vaifa)v te-
al Koprjaicov ra irepl tt)? (jllXtov, ijjdyecv
ifA
irXoiw cJ[t dv
- -
-
diro8i|ariv, iv dXXa>
he irXoto) LLTjhevi, vavXXov he TeXelv o(3oXov ro[v TaXdvrov Ikcio-tov
TOIS VdVKXljpOlS to-
v]? ipya^o/xevovs' iav he Tt? iv dXXw irXoiw e|*a'y[
,
n,
2voxov tvai t<3 vouctf*
15 a^vaypd'tyai he Tohe to ^rjcfua/jia e? aTTJXrj XiOivr) /c[al Kara0ivai Iv
T<S V(p T-
o]v
'
AiroXXwvos, Kal tov vofJLOV KaOdirep irporepov eZ^[c Kvpiov etvai'
T1]V 8 ^v8i|iv lv-
ai irpbs tovs darvvofiovs, tovs he do-TWOfxovs hovva[y rr\v \|/i]<J>ov -rapl
atiTT)s TptaKovra ij-
/jLepcjv eh to htKacrTijpcov' tw oe (f>rjvavTL rj ivhei%avT\i tcov ijui-
o"[']&)^
#
eaz^ Se hovXos
y
6 ivhei^as, e'a/x //,ei> tcov iayov[Tiav
$,
IXevGepos
^O-TO) KO.I T(X Tp-
20 (a] fieprj earco avra>' iav he aXXov two?
fj,
iXevOepos eo~T[o> Kal
-
-'
dv-
ai
\%\\
Kal e(f>eo~iv
^
AOrjva^e Ka\ tc5 r\vavTi Kal tg3 ivhel^avTi Lv 8e tl
aXXo \j/T]<}>i^a)VTa-
1 Kdr)valoi irepl <fiv\a/cr}<; t?)? /jllXtov, Kvpia eivai KaTaKo/jLi^o-Qevra to.
\}/1]<JHCrUVa' T"
X]eti^ he ttj/jl irevTTjKOcrTrjv tols irevTTj KOGToXoyois tovs e[rd-yovTas'
KaXcVat 8
KJal
iirl %evia eh to TrpvTavelov tol>?
'
*
KOyvaiovs eh avpiov.
25 "E8]oe^ Tjj fiovXr) Kal T(p hr)fx(p tco 'IovXct/toov, irepl [<5v ot 7rap' 'AG^vaW
Xeyovoa, 8e86-
xQa]i Tjj
fiovXfj
Kal t<w hrjixw tu> ^IovXltjtgov, elvat, tt)[v lla-ywyTjv t^s
uiXtov 'A8t]va^-
e], dXXoae Be /HTjSafirj diro T?)?Se ttjs rj/jLepa^' edv 8e tl[s dXXoo-*
e^aYT), 8r]p.6(ria clvai t-
irXolov Kai tcl ^prj/xaTa to, iv tg3 irXoiw' tw he (j>rjv\ja.vr\. tj evSe^avrt
etvat toL ij-
/juaea' iav Be BovXos
fj
6 fir) vvaas, iXevdepos ea\rv> Kal
- -
twv
xp^H-"
30
aT(ov fieTecrTa) avTcp' tov he i^dyovTa e/c Kea) /jliXtov i^[dynv u irXoiw
t5 dv - - -
diroS-
ei%o)o-iv' edv he Ti? iv aXXcp i^dyrj ttXolu), evoypv [!vai
-
lav 8c
ti dX-
Xo yfrrj^L^eovTaL 'A07]valoi irepl
(frvXaKrjs
t?}? fiL\[rov
Kvpia ct-
198 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. II.
[71
vac a av AOrjvaloi yjrTjcjyi^covTar dreXetav Be elvai
- - -
-
iov diro tov p,7)vb<z tov
(
Eipfj,aicbvo<;' KaXeaai Be toi>[s 'AO^vaiovs lirl |via
els to irpi>Tavi-
35
ov Ti)V Be evBetljiv elvai, 'AOijvycri, puev Trpos tov$ [sivScKa, iv 'Iov\8i
8^ draytoyia<$ ctv-
ai tovs Trpoo-rdra^' ottogoi B av Bo^cocrtv e^dyeiv [irapd t6v vojjlov,
TWV \pt]\l.dT(aV Tel |XV ]-
fiiaea elvat tov Brj/juov tov ^\ov\ir)TO)v, rd S' rjfjbiaea [tov ^vavTos'
dva-ypd\{/ai, 8e toSc to t(/-
r)(f>Lor/jLa T7)/jl /3ov\rjv teal KaTa0e2v[a]t iv tc3 Xt/x[e'vu
OiBe r/peOrjcrav "AvBpcov etc Kepa[fj,]ecov, Avcria[ ,
40 <f>\vev
?, E*v(f)pocrvvo<; TLatavcev^.
This inscription records decrees of three cities of the island of Ceos,
Carthaea (11.
1

8),
Coresos (9
24),
and Iulis (25 38),
enacting regulations to
enforce the already existing restriction of the exportation of /ulIXtos (red earth),
which might only be sent to Athens. An Athenian decree must have preceded
containing the appointment of the Athenian commissioners mentioned at the
end (11. 39, 40). The fourth city of Ceos, Poiessa, may have also passed a
decree, which in that case must have preceded those of the three others ; but
Poiessa is omitted in the treaty of alliance 32 B, 24 26. Miltos was much
used from the earliest times, both as a red pigment and as a drug ; and that of
Ceos was reputed to be the best (Theophr. de lap. 5153
;
but cf. Strab. 540,
Plin. N.H. xxxiii 36 sqq.). For the cost of /xLXtos see 124 12.
The Athenian commissioners must have communicated the decree of the
Athenians to the various Cean cities, which then passed decrees in accordance
with it, but not identical in wording
;
the provisions are to prohibit the export
of /hlXtos except to Athens
;
to inflict penalties, and to reward informers. A
complimentary banquet is also given to the commissioners in each city. CIA
iv 2, 54 b (circ. 363 b.c.) deals with pro- and anti-Athenian revolutions at Ceos.
Athens is there called an ZkkXtjtos woXis (cf. 58 12) for the trial of certain cases,
and dixcu ?kkXt)toi ib. 1. 73 sqq. may refer to appeal-cases
;
cf. 1. 21 below.
The alphabet and style of engraving suggest a time just before the middle
of the 4th century b.c.
;
this accords with Rangabe's assignment of the decrees
to the period 376358 b.c, during which Ceos was in alliance with Athens.
9. oi nap'Ad-qvaLuv, restored by the editors here and in 1. 25, is an unusual
formula, but seems to fit the available space.
12. Some Cean official must assign the ship ; Ulrichs (Reisen und Forsch-
ungen in Griechenland n p. 203) suggests oi darwdfioi.
18. (p-qvavTL rj evdei^avn. (paiveiv is the regular word for information against
contraband. On the local significance of these terms and on the meaning of
'4<peo-is 1. 21 see Pridik I.e., 109 sqq. and Ziebarth I.e. Note that ix-qvvais at Iulis
1. 29 appears to be identical with &/5eiis at Ceos 1. 19.
23. The irePTr]Koo-T7] must be either export duty at Ceos or import duty at
Peiraeus. If the former, Coresos does not grant the dreXeia given
#
at Iulis
;
if the latter, it is superfluous in the Coresian decree.
72]
DECREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 199
72. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken at the top ; Th. 0.09 m.
;
L. 0.32 m.
;
CIA ii 550.
Alphabet, type
5;
^varies between
fx
x
and /x
2
,
and -k has the forms Tj, 7r
4
,
7r
5
.
'A0Ti]^atft) Tw[i irpo]ei>&) T
- -
s] elSrjre' eppcoaOe. 'E^e^S?) rov S[|iov
t]ov '' AOrjvaiwv dyayovros rap TlvOatSa t[u>
'A\ir6W(jL>vi rep YlvOlw /jL<ya\o{ip(io<; teal a[-
5
Cods] tov re 6eov teal ras avroaavrov dp6rd[s
t:\apeyevr) Or) fxerd ras UvOatSos teal a t<x? 'A-
Odvas iepeua Xpvals ISIi/ctjtov Ovydrr/p teal rd\y
re eTTiSafitav teal avacrrpocjxiv irroirjaaro
tcaXdv teal V<T%r)fjLOva teal a^iav rov re 8a-
io fiov rov
'
AOrjvaicov teal ra$ d/xerepas ttoXlos'
dyaOd rvya SeSo^Oat, ra iroXei tcoi> AeA,-
(f)(Jov, liraivkaai UpvalSa Nttcrjrov WOrjvaiov
Ovyarkpa teal o-refyavwcraL avrciv rco rod
Oeov o~T(f)dv(i) a) irarpiov eariv AeX^ot?* [8c-
15
SoaOai 8e avra /ecu i/cyovots irapd rd$ 7r6\t[os
irpo^evtav rrpo\xavreiav irpoSctclav dcrvXiav
dreketav Trpoe8piav
ifju iracri rots dyoovoLs 0I9
d] 7ro\t9 rlOr/rc, teal 7a? teal ol/cla$ ey/crijaiv teal
rdXka rifjbia nrdvra oaa teal rots aX,X.ot? irpo^e-
20 vols teal evepyerais to,? ttoXlos virdpyzi' ap^o[v-
T09 ^evoKpdr(eo)^ tov *Ayr)o~iXdov, /3ov\ev6vrcov
rdv Sevrepav e^djjbrjvov ^i/JboXecovos rod 'E/x[|x-
vL8a Nctco$d/jLov tov Srpdrcovos, ypafi/jLare^-
ovro? 8e fiovXds
"
Ap%covo$ tov K.aWtfcpare-
25 09.
<A.\<fi>Ae\(f)oov d iroXts
Xpf-
alha
Nlktjtov
AQr\vai-
ov Ovya-
repa.
This is a decree of the city of Delphi in honour of an Athenian priestess,
who accompanied a Pythai'd, i.e. the sacrifice offered by the Pythai'sts, or priests
of the Pythian Apollo at Athens. For three days and three nights in each of
three successive months (AprilJune) they watched at the sacrificial hearths of
200 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. II.
[72
Zei)s 'AarpairaTos on the city wall between the Pythium and the Olympieum,
looking northwards to Harma, a district on Mount Parnes near Phyle. As soon
as they perceived the first flash of lightning, they started to carry their
sacrificial offering to Delphi. On the occasion commemorated by this decree
they were accompanied by the priestess Chrysis. A copy of the decree was sent
to the proxenos of the Athenians at Delphi with a letter prefixed, of which the
end only remains. The decree and the letter are in the Delphian dialect.
2. gppuade : more commonly at the end of letters as preserved in inscriptions.
5. avToaavTov. This compound form is not confined to the Delphian
dialect. Other forms in Delphian are avo-avrCbv, avcraurdu, avaavrais. Cf.
Valaori Der delphische Dialekt 56. For the union of inflected with uninflected
forms cf. 70 25.
6. rds 'Addvas : sc. rets IloXtddos.
16. irpo&viav, irpoixavTdav, kt\. See Rem. ii, p. 34 and Index.
17. ayibvots. This form of the dative plural of consonantal stems is very
common in the dialects of North-West Greece. It is found also in Elean,
Arcadian and Boeotian. In some districts, as in Messenia (see Index), its
usage may be an imitation of the official style current during the domination
of the Aetolian League in the latter part of the third century b.c.
20 sqq. In the Delphic decrees the date is frequently indicated by the
mention of officers in a postscript, and not at the beginning of the decree. So
in a Megarian decree DI 3005. Besides the archon frequently appear the
names of from two to five (3ov\vt<xL, probably the presiding magistrates of the
PovXrj. They change in each semester. Similarly at Orchomenus the chief
treasurer changes every quadrimester {rbv rap.iav rbv irpodpxovTa rdv rpirav
TTTpdp.Lvov, DI 488, 114). In an inscription of Paros, D 93, besides the
Delphian magistrates, povXetiovTes, are named also irpoaXtwrcu, perhaps presidents
of the a\La or popular assembly. See D ad loe. and cf. Swoboda Gr. Volksb. 88.
21. The stone has EevoKpdT-qs.
73. A stele of Pentelic marble in five fragments, found in the ruins of the
Dionysiac Theatre. CIA n 551. Cf. Egger Traites publics, 287 sq. (Fr. transl.);
Foucart De coll. seen. art. 37 sq. (Fr. transl.); Luders Dion. K'dnstl. 171 sq.;
Pomtow Jahrb. 1894, 500 sq. ; Poland De coll. art. Dion. Dresden, 1895, 3 sq.
;
Ziebarth Gr. Vereinswesen, 86.
Alphabet, type
5;
is
2
.

]
I.
'E/c rod fjL7]Tp(pov iirl
f
Ie[p]ft)^o? apyov-
to<$ iv Ae/V^>ot<?* TrvXaias i[a]pLva<$' lepo/xva-
fiovovvrcov (deaaakwv
f
I[Trir]oS<2[fji.a], Aovto<z' A[l-
5
rcoXwv Av/cea, ^odpLfMayov' [B](hcot[<5v 'A]cr(t)7rcovo[s,
AiovvcriSov [<i>a>/ce<wv Xaijpea, X[a
- -] eSo^[
TOt? 'AylK/u/CTf/oo-iv Kal toi]? [epo/JLv[dp.o(ri]v K.a\\
T06? ayopa[rpols ]? irav\y a<rv-
73]
DEGREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 201
Xia kcli are[\ia tois TexWTaJt? t[ois Iv 'AO-qvais
g
10 Kal /JL7] r) a\y\(DyL\y.o<s 6 tcxvitcis utjScvI
pJT
iroXt-
jJLOV /Jirjre elprjVTjS fJbr/Te [iv *yd a-ifr 4v GaXao-o-a
(?),
dXX* tj
clvtols aTeXeia /cat acr(a\e[ia i] Kal irpoTcpov o-uv-
K^(Op7)fJbP7J
V7TO TTCLVTODV TCOV E\X[i]V(*V Kvpia, l|lV
Se toi>9 Te^ylra^ dreXels <7T0<ZTe[ias Kal Trends
15
/cat vavTLKCLSy 07rft)? TOt9 6eol<z at T/x[al dirao-ai
-
<'
a? elcri Teray/jLevoi 01 Teyyurai avvr[<tk<avTa.\. 4v
TOt? K(l6r)K0VGLV %pOVOl<s OVTCOV aVTO)[v d7roXvirpa-
y]fjLovr)T(ov Kal lepwv nrpb<s rais twv Oecov [Xen-ovp-yC-
at?' fxrj
e^earco Be firjBevl ayeiv tov T^xviTav jj-t'tc
20 7ro\e/jLov firjTe elprfva? /ubrjBe crvXav [tt\t\v cdv
xpe-
09
X
WV ^oXec
fj
v7roxpea)$ Kal iav lB\i<x tj 18iwt-
OV VTTO'Xpeos 6 Te^yLTa^' iav Be Ti[s irapd TavTa d-y-
J),
VTToBiKOS 6CTTC0 iv
'
AfM(j)iKTL00~tv [Kal avros Kal a iro-
Xt9 iv a av to aBiK7}/ia Kara tov t[cxvitov crwTcXeor-
25
Or)' elfjuev Be rav dreXeiav Kal ra\y da-<f>dXiav Tav
BeBojxevav viro
^
A^iktiovwv t[ois v 'A0tjvais tc-
yy'iTai^ et'9 tov del ypovov ovcn\y aTroXvirpa7p.ovii-
Tot9* toi/9 Be ypa/bL/jLarels dva[ypd.tya.i to 86-yua
euGTrjXav XiQivav Kal arrfaai iv [t<5 Upa>
#
irp.\|/ai
30 8]e Kal ttotl
'
A.6rjvaiov<; tov B6y/jba[ros rov&e dvrtypa-
^>o^ icr(f)payio-/jLevov, cva elBwvTL o[i 'AQr\valoi on 01
'A/jL<pLKTLOve<$ TrXeicrrav eyovTi 7rp6v[oi<xv ttjs ai>T<3v
7T/309 tou9 6eov$ evo-e/3eLas Kal AjaT<z[KoXov0oi>o-iv
to?9 nrapaKaXovfjuevois viro rcov Teyv[ir<av
:
-n-poaipovv-
35
rat Be Kal et9 to Xolttov ravrd re (f)vXdo~[o-eiv els tov d-
iravra yjpbvov Kal aXXo o ti av eywvri [dyaGov Trpdo-
o~\eiv virep ro)v irepl tov Alovvctov t[x.vitwv. ILpio--
/3et9*
'
Ao-rvBdfias 7TOL7}Tr)<; Tpayo)[hCas,
/ao9 rpaywBos.
40
Kk tov ixrjrpwov iirl Arj/jLocrTpdrov [dpxovTos, utjvos Bot]-
BpOfJLHtiVOS' TO KOLVOV T(OV
'
AfjL(f)LKTl6[voiV 'AQr\vaC<av Ti
ftovXel Kal tq) Br)fi(p yaipeiv 7rpeo-/3ev[o-a.vT<av irpos t-
/xa9 irapa t&v TeyvtTcov twv yu-eT6^[6vTO)v r-qs imp' v-
/JLLV 0~V<0>v6BoV &.L0VVCT10V TOV Nu/A0([- - Tpa^lKOV V-
45
iroBiBaaKaXov, v/j,OTeXov tov <>tXo[K\eovs rpa-yiKov
TTOirjTOV, ^XlTLVLKOV TOV 'EtTTLKpaTOV Tpay[lKOV V7To8l8ao
KaXov, ^tXicovof; tov t&iXo/jiyjXov TpayiKov [viroSiSao-KaXou,
202 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. II.
[73
Api&TU>vo<$ rod Zijvayvos rpaytfcov U7ro8t[8ao-KdXov Kal
7]v hXa(3ov airotcpidiv irap rjpuwv olr]6evrco\y Seiv ire'ixireiv
50
Kal irpos v/ids, viroyeypa<papLev v/ullv tov 7[-yvr||xvov
uc/>' rj/jLGov Soyfiaros to avTiypa(f>ov.
"
Ap^ovTos ev AeX^>ot? 'AptcrTLcovos tov 'Aya.[av8p8a, ut|-
z/09 JSovKariov, Tivduoi^' e&oev rots
^
Ap,(f)ttcT[Lo<riv o-vveX-
dovcriv, lepo/jLVTi/jLovovvTcov irapd /iev eo-a[aXwv
- - -
tov
55
KXetirirov
'
Arpayiov, UoXXfyov tov <&pvvov T[-
-
-, irapd
8* 'A-
yauov QOlcotgov M.vao~dp^ov tov Aeovr^os A]a[- -,
fid^ov tov TIoXltov MeXtTate&)?, irap[a 8s MaXieW
tov ^evoXdov ^Ei^cvacov, irapd Se AoX,o[ira>v tov
KXew^u/AOL' 'Ayyeidrov, irapd 8e AeX(f>Go[y
- - -
tov
60 covos,
'
Afipopbd^ov tov yiavTiov, irapd Be ^[wKeW
Kal QavXXov twv Eittlvlkov AiXaiecov, 7ra[pd 8 Boiwtwv
viov tov Ocf)e\Tov ?7/Sa^[ov], ArjuofcptTov to[v ,
irapd Be MayvTJrcov eoSoTov tov &toyevo[ys Kal tov

alov Ar/jurjTpceoov, irapd S[\] Alvcdvcov Mocr[x
- -
tov
{lacuna quattuor vel quinque versuum)
irapd 8e Awpie-
65
cov twv ey y\.7)TpoiroXecos Teiaeov tov ' AXedv8po[v
- - ~,
irapd Be Ueppat^cov XaptSr}/j.ov tov QiXorcpaTov Tov[vCov, irapd
Be Acopiecov tcov etc HeXoirovvrjvov AtotVa tov Nt/co[-
-
Ei-
kvcovlov, [ir^apd Se JLvfioecov
'
Avt[i\]ovtos tov UoXca[-
-
XaXKi-
Bew eiretBr) ol irepl tov Aiovv[<r\ov TeyylTa.i ol ev ['A8TJvats \|/rj-
70 <ptapa zeal irpecr[3evTds diroo-[rd\]avT<; Aiovv<t[iov Nvu<j>i
-
-
Tpayifcov viroBcBdaKaXov, %v\y.oTi\kr)v QiXoKXeov[s Tpa-yiKov irot-
7]TTjv, 'RXirivifcov 'EiiritcpaTOu Tpa[yiK\ov viroBiBao~K[a.\ov, ^iXCwva
QiXo/jLt/Xov Tpayifcov viroBcBdaKa[\]ov, 'AplcrTcova Z^vwyos
Tpa^i-
kov viroBcBdcrKaXov dvavevecov\ra.i\ tyjv BeBopiev\r\v tois tx,v-
75
Tats too* ev Wdrjvats irpoTepov vito [tv 'A]p,(f)i/CTi6vQ)[v
dVvXtav Kal dV-
(fidXetav tcaTa to Boypua Kal irapaK\a\ov\o~iv toxjs A;iK[iKTCovas
aKoXov-
6a irpaTTovTaq Trj\y r\cov irpoyovcov alpeaei GVVT7)pr)cra\\. to
\J/Tj<|)lO-9V-
73]
DECREES: FOREIGN STATES ETC. 203
la iavTofc tyiXdvOpwira' ottcds ovv tcai ol Aia<$>i\k\tlov6<;
[<paCvwvTCU to,
irpoTepov Sehoyp,eva /3e/3aiovvT<$> SeSo^Oac tocs ['A(jl<j>iktio<tiv d-
80 vat tols ev
*
Adrjvais TeyyiTai^ rrjv re aavXiav [ko,]i tt]\v
do-<pd\iav els
tov del ypovov kclOci Kal e dpyrjs vTrrjpyev, Kal e[tva]t av^rovs
o-rparenas
djreXet? Kal /jltj e^elvai jurjOevl dyeiv tov Te)dyi]Tr)[v tov [ht{\ov-
ra rrjs ev ^AdrjvaCs avvoSov pur/Te TroXepiov fir}T[i] e[ipr\vr)s
(iT]8^ crv-
Xdv /jL7]8e pvcrtd^eLV, aXX elvai clvtovs lepovs kcli [dTro\virpaY|xo-
85 vrjrovs, edv pur) Tt? dyrj rivet tovtcov 7T>o[s] lBlov %/^e
/
[os edv
8^ Tts ira-
pd raura ttolt}, v7t68lko<; earco ev
'
'
Api(htfc\rC\oatv Kal [ain-os
Kal
y\
7ro-
Xi<$, ev
y
dv to dSbKTjpLa Kara tov reyvilrov] o~uvT[e]X
[o-0fj,
I'va TOV-
rcov yivo/juevcov virdpyrj r) re aavXia Kal r\ d[<r](f)dXLa t[ois
T6\vtTats
rocs ev A0r)vaLS Kal ol ApufyiKTioves (palvcovrac aKo\o[yQ<i]
7Tp[d,TTOV-
90 res T7) twv irpoyovcov aipeaei. avaypdtyai he to Soypua
i[v A]e/V(/>ot?,
6-
pjot'a)? Se Kal SLaTroareiXaaOao rov hoypuaros rouSe dvri[y]pa-
<f)OV
7TpO?
tov Sfjfjiov rov AOrjvalcov, ottcos irapaKoXovOf) ra hehoyp.e\y\a
(f)tXav-
dpcoira irapd rcov
'
Ajjl<$>iktlov(DV Tot? ev 'AOr/vats Te^VLTa[is'
i\lvac 8e
Tavra Tot? ev AOijvats TeyvLTais, edv pur/ tl
f
Pa)//,cuot?
V7r[tv]aVTL0V 7/[l.
In this inscription we have an example of the issue of one of the numerous
public documents deposited in the Metroon. Lines
1
39 contain, in the Delphian
dialect, the first and earlier of two Amphictyonic decrees securing certain
privileges to the members of the dramatic guild, or crvvodos, known as ol wept
rbv Ai6vvo~oi> Tex^rai. The guilds of this kind, best known from inscriptions,
are those of Athens, Argos, and Teos.
Lines 40
51 contain a letter of the Amphictyous stating that in answer to
an application made by the guild they have granted a decree re-affirming the
privileges previously accorded.
204 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. II.
[73
Lines 52
94 contain the copy of this decree in the kolvtj, which is of a
much later date than the first decree, 11.
1
40. The guild appears to have
taken the opportunity afforded by the second decree to republish the first.
The first decree belongs to the period immediately following the invasion of
Brennus, 278 b.c. (early summer), because the Phocians (cf. Paus. x 8, 2 and
Diod. xvi 60) again (see 1. 6) as before send two hieromnemons to the Amphicty-
onic Council, from which down to 278 they had been excluded. The earliest
probable date is the spring of 277, for the inscription belongs to a spring-
assembly (1. 3). Further the number of the hieromnemons2 Thessalians,
2 Aetolians, 2 Boeotians, 2 Phociansdoes not occur in a similar combination
again. The date of the second decree with the republication of the first may
be about 125 b.c.
;
the last line eav jul-q ti 'Pwyucuois vir[v~\avTiov rj[i is significant.
3. wvXata, originally denoting only the meeting at Pylae (or rather
Anthela), was afterwards used indifferently of the meeting at Pylae or Delphi.
For the genitive cf. 40 ix-qvbs BorjdpofXLwvos.
iepoixvaixovovvTuv . On the constitution of the Amphictyonic Council at
various periods see D. A.
8. ayopa\rpoh. These officers, who as contrasted with the hieromnemons
may have represented the political interests of their several states, appear after
the end of the fourth century to have replaced the -wvXaybpai (or irvXaybpoi), an
office of which there is no inscriptional mention. The restoration in the text is
due to Pomtow I. c.\ if right, the imperatival use of the subjunctive
$
is
unusual. On the extraordinary immunities conceded to the rexylrai see Foucart
op. cit. 37 sqq. and cf. Diod. iv 5, 4. For striking instances of the aacp&Xeia
enjoyed see Dem. De pace 58, F. L. 401, Plut. Cleom. 12. Livy vn 2 shows that
with the Romans histriones were allowed exemption from military service. On
dcrvXia, the right to immunity from atXy, see Ro. i p. 355 sq. (Ozolian Locris),
and cf. below 19 sq.
21 sq. U7r6xpews, virbxpeos. The same fluctuation occurs in mss. One of
the forms here may be an error of the engraver.
24. awreXec^d-Q : cf. 87 below. There appear to be no certain parallels for
the phrase adiKrjfxa crvvreXeiv or avvreXela6ai.
28. dby/xa : so in 1. 51. Dem. De pace 62 speaks of tcl t&v 'A/jLcpiKrvovuv
8by/nara. But in the later decree, 1. 69, tyr\(p'i<jp.a. is used.
31. IW: lOB 2, 17 30.
33. KaraKoXovOoucnv. Cf. Plut. Lys. 25 : avdpbs IcTopLKOv koX <piXoab(pov
Xbyo) KaraKoXovdrjaavTes.
44 sqq. vTrobidaaKaXov. This officer apparently did not exist in the earlier
period of the drama, but was at a later time supplied by the Choregus to assist
the iroirjTris in his task. Miiller Hdb. v 3, 199.
53. ~Bouk&tios corresponds nearly to July. Ilvdio is : at the Pythian festival,
i.e. in the third year of an Olympiad.
64. Here comes a lacuna of four or five lines, which should have contained
the names of a second hieromnemon for the Aenianes, two for the Locrians, and
those of the Athenians and Oeteans.
77. aiptaei. See 55 19.
84. pvaid'^eiv :
'
seize his property as security.' Cf. the notes on Ro. i 232
A 1 {Ozolian Locris).
Section III. Decrees of Tribes, Demes, Clemens, Clans,
Phratriae, Guilds and other Associations.
Remark ix. Formulae
of
decrees
of
Tribes, Demes, etc. The
formulae observed in the decrees of Attic Tribes, Demes, Cleruchs,
Clans (yevr)), Phratriae, Guilds and various Associations, follow very
closely those of the state decrees. The date is sometimes indicated
by the archonship (e7rl Mvo-tlx&ov dpxovTos CIA n 554
6);
then
follows the decretory clause, though (cf. 75, 82) it is frequently
absent (e8oev
rfj
. . . . cpvkfj 74
;
e$oe UXoiOeavo-t 78).
The place or
character of the assembly is often specified (ev
rfj
dyopa CIA n 554 b
;
rrj Kvpta dyopa Kpv/3$rjv \f/r)(f>icrap,eva)v to>[v <f>v\T(2vj iv aKooTroAei,
CIA II
555)
; there is a general statement of date, the name of the
month only being in the genitive (CIA II 614, 618),
and the name of
the proposer is given
(6
Seim elirev 74, 75, etc.). Then comes the
transitional formula dyadrj
rvxy
SeSay^ai (rarely Ixp-q^icrBat) toIs
<iAtcu9 (CIA ii
557), Tots 8>7/AOTais
(75 45, 52). And in the
directions for engraving, setting up and furnishing the coat, the
model of the state decrees is followed (CIA n 575 : dvaypdif/ac Se
ToSe to if/r}<f>Lo-pLa tov &rj[p.a]pxov kv crrrfXr] XtOivrj [xa]t crTrjcrat ay] rw
tepw t[t7?] 'ApTe/xtSo? Trjs KoAatvtSos
4
cts 8e t[t;]j/ dvaypacprjv rfjs or^'A.^s
/xpt'o-[at] to a[i/]a[Xa)ju.a] Qt&LTnrov Ka[t] tov dvTiy[pa]cfiea Mi[i]av
AAA
$pax[jw,]ds
aVo tt}<; 7rpo[o-]o8ov ; cf. 32 A 63 sqq., 38 a 15 sq.).
74. "Athenis, olim ad murum arcis orientalem." Edidit Chandlerus Inscr.
ii
6, p. 48. CIG 213
;
CIA n 553 ; D 712.
A.rAE(=e,
ei)
XHOIKAM N0(=
o, ov)
PPCTY^xyA.
The copy in the CIG, doubtless wrongly, has ^\Y,
0]
e o
[.
"'ESJo^ev
rfj
Ylavhioviht
<fiv\fj'
KaWiKparrjs et7re[v*
hc\aLve(jat, Nlklclv 'Qirvyevovs K.vSa0r}vaia dvhp-
ayadias eveica, rf}<; et? ty]v ^>v\rjv, on ev /cat irp-
5 oOvficos i^opijy^aev TOt9 iraial teal ivl/ca At-
206 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. Ill
[74
ovv<Jia teal SapyrjXia dvhpdaiv, ical ar<pav-
coaac avrov avaypd-^rat Se roSe to
"tyrjtyicr
fia
L(TTt]\r} \l6Lvr) ifJb II[av] o7o/;09 TOL'9 7n/jL\r)-
rds. dvaypd^/at Be teal el Tt? aAA.09 vevlfcrj/cev
10 dir Eu/cXetSou ap^ovros iraialv rj dvhpdaiv
Acovvcria rj %apyr)\ta fj Tlpo/bL7]6ia r]
f
H<paLarta,
dvaypdcfreiv Se teal to \oiirbv edv ri? tovtcov
tl vitcrjcrr) T01/9 7rifAeXr)Tas e<' gov dv vtfcrjar]
iv
rfj avrfj
o~rr}\rj.
15
Aiovvcna
avhpdat iraLcrl
apyr)\ia
20
25
'EiTTi/yevovs
JLvSaOrjva-
ievs
'Av&otciSrjs
Aecooyopou
KvSaOrjva-
tevs
FjVpL7T7riBr)(;
'ASeifidvrov
M.vppcvovaco<;
30
dvBpdai
Nt/aa<?
^YLTnyevovs
K.v8a0r)v-
cuevs
Arjpbwv
Arj/jLoreX-
ou9 Tlaiaviev?
XappavTL-
Srjs Xat/O-
ecrrpdrov
Uacavievs
0? <>l\C7T-
Trihov TLaca-
vievs
iraicri
'Airr/ficw
^6LSi7T7rOV
M.VppLVOV<Tlo[s
aV07ri6r)[s
NavoL/Lid'xov
TIaiaviv[s
KXeco/jLeScov
KXecovos
K.vSa6i)va-
L6V5
3
AvTLa6ev\y\$
y
AvTi<j)drov
Kv07]ppLo[s.
This is a decree of the tribe Pandionis in honour of a successful choregus.
It was passed after the archonship of Euclides, 403/2 B.C. (cf. 1. 10), but not
many years after, as the written character shows. Moreover as yet the
Pandionis had won no victory in the men's contest at the Dionysia and none at
all in the Promethia or Hephaestia (1. 11) ; cf. the lists below. The decree was
placed in the shrine of Pandion in the Acropolis. CIA 11 556, 9 ; 559, 13, 567 b,
22 sqq. (Add.
p. 429); iv 2, 563 6 35 =D 519 (where see the note) show that
it was a common custom to place the decrees of the tribe in the shrine
of the tribal hero.
5. Aiovvcria : sc. ra /meydXa. On the interchange of aorist and imperfect
(exoprjyrjae, eVi/ca) cf. Meisterhans Gr. 240, where however he does not quote
this example. Cf. also 18 8.
8. The Trifji.eXT]Tai were annual officers. They administrated the affairs of
the tribe, supervised its landed property, and along with a rafiias controlled its
treasury, for which they collected rents and on occasion arranged mortgages.
Further they held assemblies of the tribesmen, which were called dyopat and
75]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 207
took place in the city, and in the case of some tribes on the Acropolis. Cf.
CIA ii 554, 554 b, 555, 557
9,
564 (
=
76), 565. No. 555 mentions an dyopd of
the tribe Cecropis held on the Acropolis; cf. Rem. ix and Aesch. c. Ctes. 27
(dyopdv Troiijaai t&v <pv\<2v). Miiller Hdb. iv 1, 150.
11. For the proceedings at the Promethia and Hephaestia see D. A. s.v.
Lampadedromia. The officers to be recorded in these games were not the
choregi, but the gymnasiarchs, Boeckh.
12 sq. dvaypdtyeiv 5 kt\. This order, as the list below shows, was not
carried out.
16. On the division for agonistic purposes into dubpes and 7rcu5es see 61 IS
Col. 2. 'AvdoKldrjs : the well-known orator. Cf. Plut. X orr. 835 b.
Aeiwybpov. See note on 39 init.
Evpnnridrjs: ex evpeiv et lttttos ut QaivnTiridys, QeidnnrL8r)s. D.
Demon, son of Demoteles, belongs to the family of the orator
28. Col. 3. $i\6fjLr)\os. Cf. CIA n 1251 and 51 11.
Xenopithes may be the person mentioned Dem. c. Nausim. et
21.
22. Col. 2
25. Col. 2.
21. Col. 3
Demosthenes.
20. Col. 4,
Xenopith. 986, 991.
23. Col. 4. KXeojfxedcjv : son of Cleon the Demagogue.
ii 1009 (where edd. read KXeo/aedojp).
27. Col. 4. 'AvTurdfrlv*- Cf. CIA n 804, 234.
Cf. Dem. c. Boeot.
75. A base of Pentelic marble, broken in the upper portion
;
found on the
Acropolis. Foucart B. C. H. xin
(1889), 253 sqq.; CIA iv 2, 563 b
;
D 519. Cf.
Wilamowitz Arist. u. Ath. i 193.
Alphabet, type 1. Stoi^c^.
io
!5
fjLOKpiTOV
-
KJpCLTOVS
- - - - -
ou
- - - -
Of?
- - - - -
viirirov
- - -
- -
dS[o]f
- - - M.V7](TL0eOV
- - -
'li]yr)aLcf)avov<;
....
n^Jx
? TXavtcerov
. . . . avoScopos Avacarpdrov
KajAAta? KaWcdSovs
AvTL<fi(bv
^EiTTLTpoiTOV
X/^e/x^? 2,/jLifcv6ov
Aigavr}?
~Eiv/c\y)$ EjvtcA-eiSou
M.\dv0w<; ^A]pia-r(e)iSov
6otl/jlo<; SeoTTOfurov
W{i(f)i,(TTpaTO<$ tPikrj/jLOviBov
Arj/jLOfcXeiSr]*; Aijfieov
208 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[75
o8otos Atcrypcovo^
vo<; ^vpofiayov *HLiriKpdTr)s Evfcpdrovs
20 Xaip&rrJ/oaTO? Xatpicovos 'EivTreTacoves
.... OT09 Al]/jL7}TpLOV Nt/aa9 EiVKTClLOV
. . . yevrjs 'Zdficovos Hevo(f>a)v M.pt](tlciSou
'A]vricrdevr}<; Avrt(f)dTOV<; Hodr}?
AacSaXiSac Teiaafjievos Klpov
25 <>iXoj;evo<; QiXovofAOV Avro/cXrjs ILapiirirov
334/3
YLaWacpdrr]<; Al^wvevs eiirev eiretSr) ol
(J)7)(3ol
ol tt)s Ke/cp[oiK-
S09 ol eir\\ K.ti]\(t[i]k\6ous apyovTos evTaKTovacv Kal
[iroiJoOafiv
irdvTa, 6[o-a avrjot? ot vofiot, irpoaTaTTOVcrtv, Kal [tu> <r<|>p]oz^[(rT-
ei 7ret[Qapxo]vcnv rc5 yeipoTOvrjOevTL virb rod 8[^[lov, br]aiv[4a-
30
at atT[ovs k<x]1 crr6(pavci)(TaL ypvacp are^dvco dir\o p* Bpa\]/jLcov
/co(T{ii[6Tr)T]os eve/cci Kal evTa^ias' iiracveaai he Kal rov crct>[<{>po-
vi<jt7)v \^K%\ei(iTov ^AvTi/xdyov 'A6/j,ovea Kal crrefyavoocrai %/0f[o-a>
<7T6(j)dv(p diro p* hpayficuv, ore KaXws Kal <f)iXoTL/u,(os eVe^eX^^
toov icf)r}(3(ov ttjs K.eKpoiriho<;
(frvXrjv
dvaypdyjrai he roSe to
^v[<J>i-
35
afxa iv o-rrjXr) XtOivrj Kal crrfjo-ai iv rw rov KeKpoiros lep\&.
^ye/nayo^ XaLprj/jLovos Uepcdoihr]<; eiirev iirethr) ol e<f>7j/3o[i 01
T77? KeKpoirihos TayOevTes KXevcrlvi KaXaJs Kal (f>iXorljjLco[s eir-
ifieXovvrai (Lv avTols r) /3ovXrj Kal o S7/Z09 irpoardrTei Ka[\ tvr-
aKTov? avrov? irapeyovacv, iiraiveaai avrovs koo-/uu6tt][to<$
40
eveKa Kal evra^ias Kal arecf^avoocrat 0aXXov areepdvo) e[Kao-rov
avT&v iiraivecrai he Kal rov acofypoviGTrjv avTcov "ASetcn-fov 'Avti-
fidyov 'AOfjuovea Kal o~Te<pava)crac daXXov errecfrdvep iire[i%dv tcI-
9 evOvvas Sar iirtypd-^rai he Tohe to ^rf^nafxa iirl to a[vd0t]p.a,
b dvaTtOeaaiv ol e<$>rj(3oi ol Trjs Ketfpo7rtSo9.
45
Y[po)TLas eiirev i^lrr)(f)to-dai, tol<; hrjfioTais, iirethrj KaX[<Ss Kal <|>i-
\]otl/jLO)'s iircfxeXovvTat tP/s tyvXaKrjs
RXevcrlvos o[l] t^[s KeKpoirC-
8]o[s &j>T)p]ot Kal 6 (7Q)<f)povL(TTrj<; avTWV "ASe0"T09 ['Av]Tt[p.][xov 'A0ao-
vevs, eirai]^ecra[i] avTOV<s Kal aTe^avoHaaL GKaaTov avTOo[y GaXXov
<^T<j>dvw] dva<y[p]dtyai Be ToSe to ^rj^yiafxa et9 to avdOrj/jua, [o dva-
50
Tt]^ea[o"t]^ ol e(f)7]{3oi ol t^9 Ke/cpo7rtSo9 ol eirl Kr^crt/cXefovs
&]pxVTo<;.
Yiixj)p6vLOS eiirev
etyrjfyio-QaL
TOt9 hrjfjbOTaLS, eireihrj ol e[<}>T]pot
ol eirl Ktt](t iKXeo(v)^ apyov^ ^ evypa<f>evTe<; evTaKTOvcriv [Kal
iroLOvatv irdvTa oaa ol vojulol avTols irpocrTaTTOvaiv, Kal [<rw-
55
(ppovio-jrjs 6 virb tov hrjjJLOV yip0T0V7jul$ diro^alvei avTo[i>s
ireL6a(p)yo(v)vTa^ Kal TciXXa irdvTa iroiovvTas
(fiiXoTifjLCDS,
eV[ai-
76]
DEGREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 209
veaat avrovs Kal arec^avcbcrat ^pvcra> are<pdva> arro
p
8pa[\\i.-
gov Kocr/ALOTTjTO's eiveKa Kal evra^ias' eiraiveaai Se Kal rb\y
(70L>(j>poviaTr]V avrwv "ASetarov
'
Avrtp^d^ov ^AO/xovea Kal crrecf)-
60 avcoa[ai
xp
v<rt
?
"T<|>dvto> airo]
P
Spa^fidov, ore KaXcos Kal (J)iXotI/jl(o<; eVe-
fjbtXrjOr) T(hv re 8t)/jlotg)i> aXXcov dirdvrcov t&v rrjs KeKpoiriSos
<f>vXr}<;' eTTiypcftyai he rohe to yjrrj^Lo-fjLa eirl to avdOrjfia, avari-
Oeacriv 01 e(f)7]/3oi rrjs KeKponihos /cat aw^ypovLarrj^.
*H
(frvXij.
*H
f3ov\y].
'EXevctivlol. 'A^/xo^tJ?.
The inscription was engraved, as 11. 43, 50, 62 show, on an offering dedicated
by the ephebi of the tribe Cecropis, together with their ciocppoviarrjs, in 334/3 b.c.
It contains four decrees, (i) of the tribe Cecropis, (ii) of the
fiovk-q,
(iii) of the
Eleusinian deme, and (iv) of the Athmonean deme, the whole preceded by the
remains of a list of the ephebi (with their ffwcfrpoviaT-qs).
20. AVTreTaidves : cf. 58 9.
27. On this date cf. Rem. vii, p.
145 and note. 35. See 74 init.
60. Here is an erasure with space only for 11 letters. The engraver
apparently neglected afterwards to fill in the gap.
61. Clearly the words Kal tQi> have been omitted inadvertently after
drj/JLoru)!'.
76. A slab of Hymettian marble found in the Acropolis. CIA n 564
;
D 429. Cf. Wilamowitz Lectt. Epigr. 1885, p.
10.
Alphabet, type
1 ; o> is occasionally incomplete as in no. 62.
W
-
- -
-
- - -
va opo
--------
-
arj/xa tea
---------
-----
tov diravra
-------
5
- - - - -
i]<? acp^wvrat
[--_-_._
o-^-
(/>e[povT - tt|]
(f)v\y
eypayjre he /cal yjr7]<pccr/jLa ottock; dv
Bat eihw[<riv air]airre? rd eavrcov /cTrj/uLara Kal ol e7rc/JieXr]ral
oi aiei KaOioTafxevoL Kar evtavrov fiahi^ovTes 7rl rd ktij/jl-
ara Sis tov evtavrov eTTiaKOiroivrai rd re ^copla el <yeG)p<yei[r-
io at Kara ra<; crvvdrjKas, Kal rovs opovs el e<pear7]Kaair Kara
x-
a avra, Kal ravra rrerroiriKev ovre \dpiv ovhe rrpos eva irepl rr-
Xeiovos TTOLov/jLevos rwv avfufiepovrcov
rfj (f>vXfj
ovre hco-
pohoKovfxevos ovK
v<f>
evo<s, dXXa Xe<y<ov alel Kal rrpdrrcov hua-
rereXeKev ra /3eXrLO~ra
rfj cf)vXfj
dvevKXrjrov eavrbv rrapea-
R. II.
14
210 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[76
15
^fcctx; 7rpo9 Travra? rovs fyvkeras' dyaOel Tv^ei heho^Oau rrj
^Fjpe^OrjtSc
<pv\fj,
eiratveaai 'AvricrOevTjv Ni/cavSpov Aafi7TTp-
ea /cat GTe^>avwcrai clvtov %pvo~(p o~Te<&avw Kara tov vo/jlov d-
pTTj<; eveica Kal Sifcaioavvr)?
779
%cov SiareXec irepl rrjv 'Ep-
e^Orftha t^vKrjv eireiSr) Be crvfiftaivei
'
AvTLcrOevec Ovyaripa e-
20 Ivai 67riic\r)pov etc twv vofiwv yeyevrnievrfv, tovs eTrifieXrjTa-
9 tow (d)el KaOicrTa/JLevovs tear iviavrbv eiripueXelaOai
'ApLCTTOfjL-
ayr\<$ T/79
'
AvTiaOevov Ovyarpos, edv tivos SerjTCU [efi\(pavl^ovT-
a<s Tel
(fivXei
otclv ayopav ttoi<ao~iv, ottcos dv fi[r)S' v<J>'
l]^[os
d8tKTJT-
CLi' T7)v S' evvoiav ttjv Trap 6ACc/[o-]t[ov tv <j>v\tv Kal I8ia ko.1 k-
25 Oivfj
biTapyeiv Tjj OvyaT^pl rv 'Avrio-Bevov 'Apio-Top-dxt)
8-
la Tr/v TOV irciTpos [dv8pa-ya.0iav Kal cpiXonuiav rjv '4\n irepl t-
7]V 'Epe^lJrjtSa <{>v\i}v
-----
6ov
-
- -
The fragment contains an honorary decree of the Erechtheid tribe. It
is interesting mainly from the preamble, in which are detailed some of the
duties of the iiri/xeXrjTrjs of the tribe : see 74 8. The number of errcfMeX^rai
belonging to each tribe is not known, but from CIA 11 558, referred by Kohler
-with probability to the Pandionid tribe, we may conjecture that there were
three to each tribe.
5. aa>fai>Tai : 57 35. 11. ovde irpbs eva: 5 24.
16.
'
' kvTLadevrjv, 22.
'
' kifrurdevov : see 53 2, 28.
23. ayopav ttolCjcflv: 74 8.
77. A block of white marble found near the Theseum ; H. 1 ft 4 in.;
Br. 5 in. ; Th. 8 in. CIG 70 ;
CIA i 2 ; BMI i.
AABAAE
(=e, u, rj)
TH (= h)
OIKUM/^ [+*
=
]
O (= o,
OV, co)
P
|^
5 TV. +. : :
There is possibly a trace of cb in c 23.
C
b a
vtjfietv
. .
K7]pi>x[Q (?)
. . rajflia \
L . . . .
r]e\o9
rj - e7r<x
77"
ov
'-
T0V
(
or 'W tcov) 8
v : vefxeiv & e\6r) : tea- at tog
\
i ...
fie%pi
rj\- l rd kolv- a
\
to . Aew . . .
5
lov 8vo-p.]a)[v] : [lav] Se fir)
d] Ta *lfcafi- Aecov
\
\e% . . .
o .... Ov- /3(ovcSaJv 6]{3o\ov :'e ....
77]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 211
....:.. o .... fia
. . : at
...:... o[Y]at : a
10 . . cr#[cu : . . o . . . io~6
ai] .
[.
. . ko,]t : [r]a8e
. . . . : [tt]A.^ tov fccQ/jLa-
(?)
. . . . ol rohe tov hrjfjid-
p\ov Iva]t to heppa o-
15
i86vt]o? oiroiav $
av dp|x]oTTecr^<x6 :
8-
T] Qv<r]uiv ScSova-
1 'HpaK\]e(Ot?
(?)
: teal
TLavaQyUvaLOLS : Z^e/i-
20 tv Iv d]70pa t?7 S*-
<j?;9 : [t]]au ...
o . . . .
<r<wct) : tfat a-
7roS<wcrG> : ir-
apd tov e-
vOvvov : t-
o KaOrjKO-
v : TavTa e-
7T0/jLVVv[a-
l] : TOU? T^fei
s] Oeovs :
c
o
t]<. ai> tco[v
KOLVOiV
'.
yLt-
77 diroSiS-
(jdonv irap-
a tov evu-
v\vo[y tr]po
'Z]fca/jb^covt[B<av Kal
t]ou9 /6TO(,[kovs ve'fJL-
t]^ : eV [a]yopa[i ttj S-
K]a/x/3&)z/t8c3[v
. 019 : Spav ....
: ve/jieLv 8e : e
a t<x too : <t
[0ri]creto^ ? : /e[al -rd tt-
pi]oz^Ta : eiri
. . . ev i;vva ....
e[p-] TToXei : refXaov
r]a
[&]
/cpea : a7ro[8o<r-
#at Wfjud : iiTL^e-
tai :
if!
Uv6l[coi Kp-
i]oi^ : to, Be Kpe[a diro-
8]o<x#at : co/jid : *,
. . . Ol . . <ZT[a]T . . .
For the date so far as it is indicated by the alphabetic characters cf. what is
said on no.
2, p.
4 and see the table Ko. 1
pp. 106, 107.
The inscription, engraved on three sides of the stone, is a decree of the
Scambonidae, a deme of the tribe Leontis. The arrangement of the columns
c, b, a is tbat of Mr Hicks, BMI ; the CIG has the order a, 6, c. The connexion
in sense between the columns it is impossible to determine.
Column c appears to contain regulations for the sacrifices of the deme, the
victims to be offered, the perquisites to be divided etc. c 12. kw/ulo.- : perhaps
KWfxapxov ; Attica was divided into Kufiai as well as demes. 13 sqq. The
hide of the victim is to go to the demarch who provides the victim. 19 sqq. A
distribution is to be made in the dyopd of the deme. Here dyopd denotes a
definite locality; cf. 79 10 : kv 7-77 dyopa t<2v drj/moTuiv ;
so in col. a 9. For a
different use see 74 8 and Rem. ix, p. 205.
Column b. 2. eirayytWew denotes
'
to proclaim officially.' 2
12. This
is the concluding portion of the oath to be taken by the officers (the demarch
and the two treasurers
(?)
Col. a 1). 7. irww. For conjectures on the origin
of the form see W. Schulze Quaestiones epicae, 397 ; Meisterhans Gr. 66.
For (rwcD : o-yfw cf. \jov (41 c, 25) : \ui[ov~\ CIA iv 1, 373
1
,
p. 79 (vi cent. B.C.).
9, 19: for the construction cf. to, 7]fxia-^a...8ia6aL irapd <re, Hdt. vi 86. A
single etidwos is mentioned also in CIA n 571 and 578. In the latter, a decree
of the deme Myrrhinus, a \oyi<xT-qs examined the accounts, and on the ground
of this examination an etidvvos considered whether an accusation would lie, and
in that case assessed the penalty (Muller Hdb iv
2
1, 215). On the functions of
Xoyiaral and etidwoi in general see Boeckh St.
z
1 239 sqq., 247, 250, 395, 454 c,
523. 12 sqq. Cf. 5 15, 70 8 and Pollux viii 142: rpels deovs 6fxvvi>ai
KeXeuei 'L6\u)v,
,
lKt<nov, Kaddpaiov, 'E^aKearrjpLov
; Hesych. s.v. rpeis deoi.
142
212 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[77
Col. a. 1. Ta]fxia: perhaps dual; cf. 78 3. 4, 5. Aeon/: the
eponymous hero of the tribe. 14. \Qrf\aeiov : see note on 124 10.
16. w4>: an Ionism; cf. Smyth Ion. Dial.

380. 20. The Pythion was
probably on the right bank of the Ilissus, below the spring Callirrhoe, S.W. of
the Olympieum, where in fact the inscription Eo. i 56 was found : Mv^/ao,
rode tjs apxys HeiaiarlpaTOS 'l7r7riou] vibs
\
drJKev 'AiroWwvos Hv[diov] ev Te/xivei.
Cf. Frazer Paus. n 189.
78. One of the Choiseul marbles, now in the Louvre. H. 0.58 m.
;
L. 0.26 m. CIG 82 and
pp. 176, 897; CIA n 570 ; Froehner Inscr. 36 ; Sauppe
Eh. M. iv (1849) 289 sq. Cf. Szanto Unters. ilber d. att. Bilrgerrecht, 38 sq.
;
Haussoullier La vie municipale en Attique 63 and 75.
A.TAE
(=e, ei)
IHOIKAMN^O
(=o, ov)
PPTY4>Xtfl.
Ta]fjilacv e? ra oY erov<; iepd
p
4]?
to 'Hpa/cXelov
p X X
5
l]? \\.$poUaia
XHH
4]
5 Wvd/cia
XHH
l]? rrjv dreXecav
pa
l]? ^KiroWwvia
XH
g]<?
Hdvhia
[p]H
io |i]4(r^o5o-0)i;
HAAAhhhHIC
"E8]ofez; II \&)#etei)crr 'Aoterrori/jlos [e-
tir]e' tou? /L6ez^ dpypvra% rov dpyvpiov d[|-
io]^peo)9 KvapLevetv baov efcaarr) rj
a[px~
t| ajp^et, TouTOf? Se to apyvpiov ao)v [-Tr-
ig apje^et^ nx&^euo-t, 7re/9l /Ltez/ otoi eVr[l
^>)(f>LapLa Saveio-fjLov rj roicos rera<y\y.i-
v]o9 Kara rb yjr^(f)La/jLa oavel^ovr^as k-
a]l iarrpdrrovra^, 6cro\y\ &e Kar eV[iav-
r\bv Savel^erat havei^\ov\ra<; o[o-ti-
20 s]
az' rrXelcrrov roKOv hihcp 09 a[v ircf-
G]?7 tou9 Bavei^ovras ap^ovra\s rip-
ij]/*aT 77
eyyvr/rr). drrb Be rod rotcov [t k-
ai rcop* piLcrdcoaecov dvrl orov av t[wv k-
<p]aXat&>^ wvrjpbara
f)
/j,i[<r]6coo-iv
<f)[ipo-
25
v]ra Qveiv ra lepa rd re 69 n.\co0ei[as k-
oi^a /cat t is
'
' Kdnqvaiovs vrrep IlX[a)0^-
78]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 213
<a\v TOV KOiVOV tcai TCL 69 TCL? 7TVTT[l]pt-
8]<x?' real e? rdWa lepd, oitoi av oe[r\ II-
\]codea<; diravra^ rekelv dpyvpio\y h
30
(\epd, rj 65 TLXcoOeas t) i$ *Fi7rarcpea[s r\ es
'A]0r)vaiov<;
y
ire rod kolvov tovs dpyov[ra<s
o]t av dpyuscri rod dpyvplov rov e? t^v <xt-
i^Ketav reKelv vrrep rcov Stj/jlotwv' [ko.1
e]? rd lepd rd KOivd iv ogoigiv e[<rn-
35
(av\rai TiXcoOrjs olvov irapkye.iv rj8v[y e-
k tov] koivov 5 fjL6v
rdWa iepa
l^eyp\_\.
r\-
jjli^ov k\redar(p Tot? irapovcn H\o)6\i(a-
v, 4s
Aiow'o-ia 8]
BcSacrredXw rea[Sov . .
TTO/CaLOVTi re
40 8]rjfjLLovpy
This is a decree of the deme Plotheia, belonging to the tribe Aegeis,
preceded apparently by a statement of the resources available for defraying
certain expenditure on ritual and festivals as well as upon the repair of the
Heracleum. The sums themselves are too large to be considered as the
expenditure of a single small deme
;
probably the interest only on these sums
furnished the actual expenditure. In 1. 10 is subjoined a statement of rents,
doubtless of lands belonging to the deme. From the alphabetic characters the
inscription should be dated at about 400 b.c.
3. Ta.ixxa.LV : for the dual cf. 77 a 1.
4. 7000 drachmae. Boeckh notes that the more usual symbol is
T X
.
The sum was probably for repairs of the temple. 5.
'
A<ppo5l(ria : see D.A. s.v.
6. The 'Av&klol or 'Av&Keia were the festival of the "Avaices {"AvaKres) or
Dioscuri, as their temple was called to 'Av&iceiov. Cf. the inscription on the
base of an altar (now in the Louvre) : 'Ayadrj
tvxV
I
^uT-qpotv olvolkolv re
Aio<xKoijpoii> ode (3oj[j.6s (CIA in 195). The 'Av&Keiov was probably on the N.W.
slope of the Acropolis. Frazer Paus. 11 165. 7. dreXeicu/ : below, 32 sq.
9. UavSui : celebrated at Athens after the Dionysia in the middle of
Elaphebolion. See D.A.
11. n\codeiev<ri. The orthography varies strangely in the inscription
; cf.
15, 25, 26, 28, 30, 35.
12. The archons shall elect fit and proper men to deal with the funds
administered by the several magistracies.
15. 7rep fih kt\. :
'
with regard to any loan about which a decree has been
passed, or the interest on which has been fixed, they shall make loans or collect
the interest.'
18. 6<xov 8e kt\. The amount annually available is to be lent to the
persons who offer the highest rate of interest and gain the confidence (ireidr)) of
the officers making the loan by mortgage or security. For the use of Tip.r\p.a. in
the sense of drroTiyUTjyiia. see Index s.v. diroTifj.r]fxa.
22 sqq. They are to perform certain sacrifices airb tov t6kov kt\. :
'
from the
interest and from the rents produced by whatever capital sums have been
214 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[78
placed in investments bringing in rent.' For the form of words a-rrb 5e rod kt\.
cf. 42 16.
27. 7TVT[TT]pl8]as : i.e. the Panathenaic festival.
28. /ecu is raWa kt\. : 'and for the other sacrifices, in whatsoever direction
it may be necessary for the Plotheans as a whole to contribute to the expense
of the sacrifices, whether those relating to the Plotheans or to the Epacreans or
to the Athenians, the officers administrating the funds destined for the
exemption (from the expense of sacrifices) shall make the necessary payments
on behalf of the demesmen from the common chest of the deme.'
36 sqq. So Wilhelm GGA., 1898, p. 222; cf. Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. n
p. 154, where it is noted that by 'E7ra/cp^s, 1. 30, is meant, not the trittys of that
name, but the tripolis, because they have iepd. The tripolis was composed of
the demes Plotheia, Semachidae and (ace. to W.'s conjecture) Icaria.
79. A slab of white marble now in the British Museum : H. 9 in.
;
Br. 9 in. CIG 102 ; CIA n 573
;
BMI 12 ; D 433. Cf. Haussoullier La vie
municipale, 74.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but d, o, w are smaller than the other letters, and 6 is
frequently written without the dot.
O
three times stands for ov.
a[v Kaj6 7r[ap-
c'xav ? a]t9 r}S[(a]\ia<7fjL6V7]P Tr)v 6eav [k
aTa r]a irdrpia' iav he fxrj
itor} awalv Kara rds avv6\r\-
Ka$ rd<; irepl to Oearpov, otKoSofirjaac fiev Tletpa-
5
ea? rd Seo/jLeva, rd o dvaXciifxara rots irpiafievois
elvcLL' 7rLTC/jLr)Td<; 8e alpelcrOat Tleipaeas orav ira-
paSiBcocrL to Oearpov rpels dv$pa<$ i/c Yletpaewv.
dvaypd-^rau Se rov Srj/jLap^ov teal tovs ra/Jblas clvtl-
<ypa<pa tqjv (tvvOtjkcov et? aTrfKrjv \lQivt)v koX arr)aa-
io i iv
rfj
dyopa rcov Stj/jlotcov' irapaypdyjrai 8e koX to
ovofia, Trap' w dv Kelcovrai at crvidrj/ccu. covrjral 'Apt-
aro(f>dv7]<; Ifii/cvOov :
P H
: MeA^crta? 'AptaroKparov:
XH
'
ApeOovatos 'ApcaroXeco YLrfkrj^:
p
1
: Olvo^)(jdV Kucf>i-
\r)rov Yleipacevs :
X
H
15
KaXAtaS??? elirev eyjrycpLadai Tlecpaevcrr eVetS?) Sealos
(j)t\oTt/JL6Lrat 7TOO? tovs Srjfioras KaX vvv KaX iv TOJ
epurpoaOe ^pova) koX ireiror\Kev rpiaKoalais Spa-
YfJLals
ir\eov evpelv to 6earpov, are^>avoio~at avr-
bv OaWov o-T(f)dv(p dperr)s k'veKa koX SiKato-
20 avvrjs rr)s els tovs Srjp^oras' arecfyavcoaai Be
KaX tovs irpiaixkvovs rb Oiarpov, 'ApcaTocfrdvrjv
Tlecpaea, ^AeXr/aiav Aa/jL7rrpea, Olvocpayvra
Heipaiea,
'
Apedovcriov UrjXrjKa.
80]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 215
Lines
1
14 give what remains of an agreement between the Piraeean deme
and certain lessees for the letting of a theatre, perhaps r6 Heipouoi dtarpov
mentioned by Xen. Hell, n 4, 32, of which the remains are still extant.
(Leake Top. i 387 sq.) For the procedure see Boeckh St.* i 276 sqq., 377.
Lines 1523 contain a decree of the deme conferring a vote of thanks upon
Theaeus for his public services (perhaps facilitating the agreement) and upon
the lessees.
The survival of
O
= ou should indicate a date not much later than the
middle of the fourth century B.C., though the practice of writing 6, o, w smaller
than the other letters is not common till a later period.
I. i]d[u]\ia<Tfxvr)v. So Hicks in BMI : "furnished with tiers of seats"
(of wood and raised upon scaffolding). Suidas joins edioXidaai with iKpiQacu
'to furnish with benches'; cf. Dio Cass, xliii 22, Harpocr. s.v. edwXidaou,
Pollux iv 121. dia is here 'the auditorium'; it also means 'a seat' and
'the right to a seat.' Perhaps in 1. 2 we might supply ird<Ji rocs 0ear]cus.
4. Ileipaeas, 15. Ueipcuevai : cf. 11. 21, 22 and 26 33, 37 20, 38, 39 init.
5. toIs irpiap.voLS : i.e. the lessees
;
cf. 1. 21.
6. 7n.TifX7]Tds : surveyors or valuers.
10. dyopq.: 11 c, 19 sqq. For the functions of the demarch and other
officers of the deme, see D.A. wapaypdxj/ai. : 'to subjoin.' L. and S. quote
Arist. Lys. 513 : ri ($e(3oijXVTai. wepi tlov airovduju ev rrj crTrjXr] irapaypdxpai ; This
precaution was apparently forgotten. For the observance of it cf. DI 488
(Orchomenus) 44 sq. : a aovyypa<pos trap Fuptddav TiplokXcIos, and again 91 sq. : to
6/j.[6Xoyo~]v irdp Qi6<peTToi> Qto5dopu) Qei<nrt.eia. For the ellipse of the antecedent
in to 6vop.a trap' o5 see Meisterhans Gr. 240, who notes that it is most common
in prepositional expressions.
II. KtluvTai : see Meisterhans Gr. 47, who doubts whether the t of ct, as in
e.g. Setwprcu CIA ii 119, 14 (c. 340 b.c), Idpvaetus (43 10) is simply euphonic, or
a remnant of an older formation, at awdrJKai are contrasted with the stone
(TTijXai. They denote the original copy of the agreement written on wax tablets
or parchment and deposited with the demarch or other officer. By <Jbvr)Tal are
meant oi irpi.dp.evoL.
13. n^X^^ {al. HrjXrjKes). This deme along with Kvirvpidai and KpuirLdai
formed the rpkw/iat (Ross Demes 91).
15. Geatos: of the Piraeean deme
;
else we should have had Heipaitas or
tov drjpLov instead of toi)s Stj/aotcis in 11. 16, 20.
18. irXtov evpuv :
'
to bring in more ' (by way of earnings) ; 8paxfJ-ais is
dative of measure after irXtov.
80. A marble slab found S. of the temple at Sunium. Kordellas Mitth.
xix
(1894), 238 sqq. ; CIA iv 2, 572 e
; D 431.
Alphabet, type 1; but
O
= ov (genitive),
E
= et (infinitive).
Ol.

, ,.
,
This decree of the deme Sunium
Weob
V
\os earev e^i-
provides for the establishment of a
a6ai %ovviei)cnv' Tvyr]-
new market-place acquired by the
216 GREEK EPIGRAPHY.
ATTICA : SECT. III.
[80
i ayaOf}' eVetSr/ Aev/cto-
5
? 8l8(oo~iv dyopdv rots 8-
rjuorats irocrjaaaOai, eX-
g6cll avrl/ca pudXa rpe-
t? dv8pas, aircves opco-
vatv Tr/v ayopav puerd
io AevKiov
fjur]
eXdrrco rj rrj-
l pev 8volv irXeOpoiv,
rfj
8e irXeOpov, oVo)? d-
v
y
evpv^copla %ovvi-
evaiv dyopd^eiv teal dX-
15 Xu> toG {3ovXop,ev(p,
7r6i8rj r\ vvv ovaa avv-
(p/coSo/jL7]rai' ivoctco8-
opueiv 8e /lit) e^etvac purj-
T 8r)/ndp-)(p fJLYjTe dX-
20 X(t) p,7}8evl VTOS rC0V
bpcov. Avaypdyjrai 8e rb-
8e to \jnj(f)icr/jLa ev arrjX-
ei XtOlvei rbv SrjfjLap^-
ov fxerd Aev/clov kcli arrj-
25 aac ev
rfj
dyopd.
bounty of AevKtos, more fully given
44 16 as Aeviaos QeoKXtovs [Soi/ji'ietfs.
Several names in that inscription,
which occur in the naval documents,
show it to be of the age of Demosthenes
(see note
p. 118). Our decree is
probably older. As D points out, the
age is clearly too early for a Latin
name. AcOkios therefore must have
been a genuine Greek name, which
perhaps afterwards gave rise to the
spelling of Lucius in Greek with ev.
81. A slab of white marble, broken below; found at Kuluri in Salamis.
Monceaux BCH 1882, 525 sqq. ; CIA iv 2, 591 b.
Alphabet, type 1
;
is
2
.
Xaipe8r)/jL0<; ^irt^apivov KoXcovrjOev elirev eirecSr)
?
Hpa-
fcXetros Ao~KXr]7ridSov
'
AOfjuovevs irpbrepov re irapd t&) /3a-
cnXel
y
AvTiy(o)va> reraypcevos 8cereXec Xeycov fcal rrpdrr-
cov virep rov 8rjpiov rov ^aXapivlcov baa vrreXdp,{3avev crvfi-
5 (f>epecv Kai [t]o? 18la ^aXapaviwv d^ifcvovfievot
1
^ irpbs rbv
(3aaiXea avpbtyiXoripLovp,evo<L>s et? rb purjOevos rcov 8vvara>-
v] drrpaicrovs yevo/xevovs dirievat, fcal vvv /caOearrjfccos vivo r-
o]v ftaaiXecos arparrjybs eirl rov Ile(t)paieco<; tcai roov aXXcov
rSv
r^arrofievcov puerd rov Tlecpateux; 8careXel woXXrjv rrpbvoiav
10 TTOiovpLevos 07TO)? dv purjOev d8l/C7}pia ylvr)rai Kara rrjv %<w/0-
82]
DEGREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 217
a]v, fCdi TGOV TL%(t)V T&V V TTJ V7J(T(p
TTeTTTCOKOTCOV <JVV7T/X-
\]ijOr) 07T0)? avoiKoSofjLr]Oel, /cal iroXefiov yevo/juevov rov irepl A-
Xe^avBpov Kcu ireiparaccZv etcirXeovrwv etc rov JLttlXl/jlvlov
rrjv iraaav rrpovoiav eiroelro rov fjarjdev (3Xa(3epov ytveaOai tt-
15 e[p]l rrjv ywpav, aKoXovOws rrjv rovrcov eTTLfxeXeiav Troiov/juev-
0?
rfj
rod fiacnAecos irpbs rov hrjfiov alpecrei, en Be teal ctgo/jlclt-
09 ap7r[a<r]0evTo<; eV rrj<i vrjaov fcai e^ayOevro^ et? tol>?
inrevavr-
Cov]? a[ir'8(0K]6^ /cat tov<z dBucr}<Tav[r]ci<; eicoXaaev $>avep\b\v
7TOLC0V
on ov]/c eTTLTpey\rei to?? dBiKOvaiv rd iv
rfj
iroXei icai ra
ev
rfj
yw-
20 pa T^apeyerai Be teal /cow?} /cat IBlq ypeiav tg3 (BovXofjLevay ^aX-
ap.i]z/[twv Ka]/ rdXXa irpdrrcov BcareXel ra crvfAcfrepovTa
ZaXafUvi-
01s
Kal I8a]t kcl\\\ Koivel' dyaOel Tvyei BeBoyQai too Brjfjbw
ra>
X\a\-
apaveW eircuveVai] H/3[k\i]to^ Ao"/c[\T]]7r[id8oD KOfJLOvea KtX.
The fragment contains the preamble of a decree of the cleruchs in Salamis
in honour of one Heraclitus, who had furthered the interests of the cleruchs at
the court of Antigonus Gonatas and had performed various services as com-
mander of his garrison in the Piraeus and Attica, had protected Salamis
in the contest with Alexander (son of Craterus, and half-brother of Antigonus)
and the pirates, and had effected the release of a captured Salaminian and
punished his captors. CIA iv 2, 371 b is also a fragment of a decree in honour
of Heraclitus. The date may be about 254 b.c.
;
cf. CIA iv 2, 371 c, a decree
also having reference to the war with Antigonus, which took place probably
in 255 b.c.
8. tCov dWiav kt\. : perhaps
'
the other districts associated with the
Piraeus.'
13. 'E7ri\t
/
iu>ioi> does not appear to be elsewhere mentioned.
82. A slab of Pentelic marble. Found at Kuluri in Salamis, now in the
'Theseum' at Athens. CIG 108 (cf. Vol. 1
p. 900) ; CIA 11 594.
Alphabet, type
6 ; except that a,
/3, 5, fi, , \p conform to type 1 ; tt is ttj
or 7r
3
. Lines 40 to end are plain and in thicker character (<r = <r
2
).
f
does not
occur. A space of one or two letters is left at the end of each paragraph.
B.C.
131/0
'E^J
'QTri/cXeovs dpyovro^ ev dcrrec, ev ^aXafilvi Be
'AvBpovifc[ov
MerayeiTvicovos rerpdBi fier
el/cdBa?' Seoyevrjs K[a]\Xi-
218 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[82
yidyov AeuKovoevs eiirev eireiBrj %ebBoro<s Evcrrp6(j)ov
Yleipaievs yecporovrjOels yv\xvacriapyos els rbv evtavrbv
5
rbv irrl ^pyo/cXeovs dpyovros rds re Ovaias e/3ov-
6\y\rr)ae\y
dirdcras rds Ka6r)KOvcras Kal vireBe^aro robs dXei(f)0-
fxevovs irdvras' crvvereXeaev Be teal Ta''Ep/j,aia fc[a\] v[ire-
Be^aro irdvras dvaXcbcras els ravra ovk 6Xt(y)ov 7T/do[o--
Barrdvr\Ge Be Kal irpbs to fjueptcrOev avrcZ els to eXatov i/c
10 T(hv voicov aveQr\K,ev Be Kal birXa oktco Kal dveypa^jrev
rov[s
vevtKrjKoras rovs Bpo/juovs, ofioicos Be Kal rovs t[cL K]ava [d-
Xrjcporas' eiravqyayev Be Kal ras eiravaycoyds kclO' eKa[a-
tov fjurjva iroiovyevos ev rals Ka0r/Kovaacs rj/jiepats'
qp^ev Be Kal rr)V dpyr)v Kal ev rots XolttoIs BiKalcos fca[\
15 Karovs vofiovs (pLXorifiLas teal arrovBrjs ovOev eXXe\i
7T(ov, ets ravra arravra dvrfXoocras irXelov dpyvpcov
Q)KoBo/jL7]crev Be kcli tov rolyov etc rebv IBLwv rrjs crro[as
rov j3XeTrovra irpbs vbrov, Kal irepl tovtcov 7rdvra>[y
aTToXeXoyLarac rel (3ovXel /cat toj Brjfiw, BeBootce B[k ko.1
20 ras evOvvas' oirws e<pd/jbiXXov
f)
irdcri rols (SovXo(ie\yo\.%
(piXoBo^etv elBoacv bri Kara^tcos Tifxr]6r)aovraL t[v
evepyeaicbv, dyaOel rvyei BeBbydai rel /3ov\el,
rovs Xaypvias irpoeBpovs els rrjv emovcrav e/c-
KXr)crLav ^prj/jbartaat irepl rovrcov, yvco/jLrjv Be ^v/x-
25
/3dXXea6aL rfjs fiovXrjs els rbv Brj/xov ore Bo/cel rel /3of-
Xel eiraiveaat rbv yvpbvaaiapyj]aavra tov eviav-
rbv rbv eirl 'KpyoKXeovs apyovros eoBorov Kvarpo-
(f>ou Weipaiea, Kal arefyavaycrai avrbv ypvera} crrecj>d-
vw Kara rbv vbfjuov (fiiXorifjuias
eve/cev rrjs els rbv Brj-
30 fiov tov 'EaXa/jLLvtcov Kal dveirrelv rov o~recf)avoi>
rovrov Atovvatcov tcov ev ^aXafilvi rpaycpBois, orav
irpwrov yivj]Tai, Kal Alavreiots tw yv/JLvcKQ) dycovc.
dvaypdyjrai roBe to yjnjcfyiayxa rbv ypafi/juarea rov Brj-
/jiov elcrrrjXas XiOlvas [8]uo Kal arrjaac fiiav fxev ev tw
35
yv/jLvacrL(p, fJLiav Be ev rS em^aveGrdrcd rf}$ dyo-
pa<; tottw' rrjs Be dvayopevaecos rov crrecfiavov
Kal rfjs dvaOecrecos rebv crryXoov emfxeX7]6r]vai rows
e7ri/ieXrjrd<;, fjuepiaai Be rbv rafitav QiXoKXrjV Tleipai-
i]a eK rwv els rd Kara ^r\^)io-p.ara dvaXiaKOfxevwv
82]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 219
40
T<a]l
8r)fjL(p
(in corona
:)
(deoSorov
TLvCTTp6(f)0V
Yletpatia yvfivaac-
45
apxrfaavra
eVl 'E[p-
yoKkeov? ap-
%OVTOS.
This is a decree of the Salaminian cleruchs, in honour of a gymnasiarch.
For the date of the Attic archon, Epicles (whose name occurs in a decree,
CIA 11
459), see Ferguson Com. St. x 74 sqq.
On Attic cleruchies generally see D.A. s.v. Colonia. It must he noted that
Salamis itself never ranked as an Attic deme ; the island therefore immediately
on its subjugation in the time of Solon, and long before the similar occupation
of Chalcis, must have been colonised by cleruchs (Wilamowitz Hermes xn 342,
Kohler Mitth. iv 253 sqq. ; cf. Boeckh St.*, note 686). That the cleruchs them-
selves belonged to Attic demes appears both from this inscription and from
several others (e.g. CIA 11 592, 593, 595; CIG 2270, Delos) in which the
demotic name is added.
Note that, as regards internal government, those cleruchies which occupied
continuous territories, from which the former inhabitants were entirely re-
moved, formed miniature copies of Athens, with but trifling variations. Gilbert
C.A. 450.
2. TerpaSt juer' eiK&das : Rem. vi, p.
128.
6. tovs aXeMpofitvovs : 'the youths in training.' The same appellation is
found frequently, e.g. CIA in 739 Oi] aXei(p6fj.evoi . . . .
|
v
J
ApxiXao[v
|
M]apadu:vio[u
\
yvix\vaolapxo\v. Cf. the expression aXel<f>e<rdai wapa tivi Arr.
Epict. 1 2, 26.
7. On the "Epp-aia, a festival celebrated by boys, formerly in the gymnasia
and later in a palaestra (cf. Plat. Lysis,
p. 206 d), see D.A.
8. avaXuxras, 16. avrjXuxras. According to Meisterhans Gr. 173 the aug-
ment of the pluperfect has occasionally forced its way into the perfect and
from the indicative into participles {<rvvrip[ri]pix4voi CIA n 813, b
7,
probably before
400 b.c, ei<TT7)K6Ta 118 c Col. i, 19, 408 B.C., avrjXwaas, as here, elad/xevos
BCH v 262, 1st century), into the subjunctive (avnXw<rw<Tii> CIA n 595, 4,
2nd century) and even into the noun (avrjXcop.a n 595, 12, 624, 5, 2nd century).
10. ottXcl: 'shields.'
11. tcl Kava. Rangabe suggests that these were prizes, possibly second
prizes. A kolvovv appears in the inventory of votive offerings at Oropus,
IG Sept. 303, 55.
12. iiravriyayev 8e ktX. : probably referring to naval exercises such as those
described 65 20 sq., 24 sqq.
15. Karoos. This combination is not found in Attic inscriptions till after
363 B.C.; cf. Kardde ifilcrdujcrav CIA n 1055, 1 (345 B.C.), Kara elwddra 42 15
(unless it is a slip of the engraver for Kara to). Meisterhans Gr. 218.
220 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[82
31. rpaycpdoh, orav irpCorov yLi>7)Tcu. : i.e.
'
at the exhibition of tragedies, so
soon as there shall be an exhibition ' ;
for that in some years no exhibition took
place seems to follow from the formula ovk iytuero found in several 5i5aaKa\lai.
For dida<TK<x\Lai see Index s.v. and cf. Koehler Mitth. in 104 sqq. For the
Aldvreia see 65 24.
37. rovs eirLfieXrjTas. An iiri./xe\T]T^s or
'
overseer
'
was sent out to cleruchies
as well as to colonies. See Boeckh St.
s
i 508.
38. $L\oK\rjv. Up to 300 b.c. we find the ending -K\ea in these forms, after
that date it is -kXtjv : in the imperial time both -/cXea and -kXtjv. Accusatives in
-kXtj are not found in Attic inscriptions. Meisterhans Gr. 133.
39. e/c tQv els kt\. : 33 57, 38 8.
83. A slab of Hymettian marble found at Eleusis. D. Philios 'E0.
dpx.
1883, p. 81
;
CIA iv 2, 597 c ;
D 605. Cf. Haussoullier Rev. Cr. 1900, p. 25.
Alphabet, type 1
;
=
2
.
(&pao-v<ficov 'Jepo/cXeiBov avirercucbv elirev
eTreihr) 6 iepo(f)dvT7]s XatprJTios ebvovs d>v Bt-
areXel ra> yevec to3 re Krjpv/ccov icai JLv/uloX-
7TL&WV feat Xeyei xal irpdrTec on av ovvrjrac
5
dyaOov virep avTwv icai tol$ dirohrjixovaiv e-
ir\ ra<; airovScxfiopLas StaTeXel fjuer
evvoias
diroypdcfxov rffv
eirayyeXiav, dvacrr
pecker
ai
Be teal ev rel dpyel ttjs lepecocrvvr)
1
; evayrnxo-
voas, dveyfcXrjTOv eavTov TrapacrKevd^wv oir(o\%
io av ovv teal rd yevrj alvr\Tai Ti/JL&vTes tovs
ovtcis evvovs re teal d%Lov<; iavrcov, dyaOel
Tvyei, BeBoyQai K^puft
/cal Fiv/jloXttlScils eiratve-
aai tov lepo(f)dvT7]v ILaiprjTuov Upo<f)r)Tov RXev-
crivLOv icai arec^avwaaL /JLvppivrjs erre^dveo a>
15 irdrpcov eariv avrw evvoias eveicev rjv eycov
SiareXel eh rd yevr]' icai dvayopeveiv tovtov
tov are<pavov Atovvcricov tS irarpLcp ayoovt
'RXevcrlvi iv rat 0edrpo)' rrj<; Be dvayopevcre(o<z
tov areepdvou eTn/jLeXetcrOac tovs apyovras
20 tovs del kclOterrafievovs if;
efcarepov tov yevovs*
dvaypdyfrat Be ToBe to yjnjcfria/jLa iv crTrjXet XiOlvei
teal o-Trjaai 'QXevcrivo iv Tec avXel tov tepov, TJ79
Be 7ror)o~eci)$ tt/9 crTrjXrjf; icai Tr}<; avaOeaecos eiri-
fMeXrjOrjvat tovs dpyovras tojv yevojv.
84]
DECREES: TRIBES, EEMES, ETC. 221
(in corona
:)
25
Krjpv/ces
KCLl JLv/ULO\7rL8ai
top iepo<J)dvT7)v Xaipr/rtov
K\6V(TLV10V.
The inscription is a decree of the two clans, the Eumolpidae and the
Heralds, in honour of a hierophant. Thrasyphon, the proposer, appears also
as proposer of a decree CIA iv 2, 323 b, in the archonship of Polyeuctus,
275/4 b.c. (cf. CIA 11 323), and our decree is probably of about the same time.
2. From the fact that here and 1. 13 the name of the hierophant is added
during his lifetime Dittenberger Herm. xx 13, note, infers that these officers
were not yet, as they were in Roman times, iepdbwfioi, quoted as sacred
functionaries without name.
5 sqq. D thinks that what is meant is that Chairetios commended by letter
those who were proclaiming the mystery-truce to the good will of the magistrates
and councils of the places which they visited. (Otherwise A. Mommsen Feste
etc. 208, note 5.) On the cirovbotybpoi see no. 124 4 and note.
12. Kr/pv^i Kal Ei'/zo\7ri5ais. Similarly these two yeurj act together in
CIA 11 605, 11.
13. "Ei\evaiviov : the record here given of the hierophant's deme shows that
the Eumolpid family must have been resident at Eleusis from the primitive age
when Eleusis and Athens were separate, at least until the time of Clisthenes.
This was not the case with the family of the Ceryces {Herm. xx
p. 9),
nor, in
Roman times, with the hierophants either ; cf. CIA in 1282, lepocpavTrjs
TapyrjTTios 6 irore <J>tp/x.os.
17. dyQvi. : the rural Dionysia of the Eleusinian deme (cf. CIA iv 2, 574 c,
10, 574 b, 6, 20, 32). Proclamations of honours were made there as well as at
the Greater Dionysia at Athens. Cf. Dem. De Cor. 267, Aeschin. c. Ctes. 41. D.
84. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken below, engraved on both sides,
found on the site of Decelea. CIA n 8416 and iv
2, p. 205; D 439. Cf.
J. L. Ussing Vidensk. Selsk. Skrifter, &
te
Raekke, hist, og philos.
Afd. 2, iv
Hauniss 1889, p. 307 sqq. : J. Pantazidis 'E<.
dpx-
18S8,
p.
1 sqq. ; J. B. Tarbell
Pap. Am. sch. Ath. 1892, 170 sqq.; H. Sauppe De phratr. Att. Gottingen,
1890;
E. Szanto Rh. M. xl 510 sq.; G. Gilbert Jahrb. cxxxv
(1887), 23 sqq.;
R. Schoell Sb. baij. Ak. 1889, n 1
p.
1 sqq. ; J. B. Tarbell AJA v (1889) 135 sqq.,
318 ; W. R. Paton ib. vi
(1890) 314 ; Busolt Miiller Hdb. iv l
2
, 207 sqq.
;
W. R. Paton G. R. v (1891) 221 ; Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. n 259 sqq. ; Haussoullier
Rev. Cr. 1900, p. 24.
Alphabet, type
1
; but, except in 11. 114126, which are probably not earlier
than 360 b.c,

= e, et, O=o, ov (once even in the diphthongal ov of
Ok 1. 36,
OAENAl. 37; also in
TOTAI, TOCOTOI 1. 77; cf. Meisterhans
Gr. 63). Srotx^56j/.
B.C.
222 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. Ill
[84
Aio?
<>
p
ar
p
iov
lepevs QeoBcopos JLvcJxlvtlBov dv-
eypaijre zeal earijae tt\v cttiJXtjv.
Lepecocrvva tcd lepel BlBovcll r-
5
dBe' airo tov pueiov kcoXtjv, irXevpov, ov-
?,
apyvptov
III'
airo rov Kovpeiov K(oXrj-
v, irXevpov, ovs, ekarrjpa yoiviKia-
lov, olvov rj/jbi^ovv, apyvptov [-.
TaBe eBo^ev rots (pparepo-c iirl
396/5
IO <t>op/jLLQ)vo<; ap^ovros
'
AOr/valoL-
9,
fypaTpiapyovvTos Be Uavra/cXe-
ou? ii; Otov
'lepofcXr/s elire' oiroaot ptrjirw BteBttcda-
6r)aav Kara tov vo/jtov tov Atj/jlotloovlS-
15 (bv, BtaBttcdcrat irepl avrwv tovs
(frpdrep-
a<; avTLKa ptaXa viroo-^optevovs irphs rov A-
to? rov (Pparpiov,
(fcepovTas tt)v "^rf}<f)ov dir-
rov {3(Ofiov' 09 B dv Bo^r) /jltj wv
(fypdrrjp elcra-
yQr\vat, i^aXetyfraTco to ovofia avrov 6 tep-
10 eu? /cal 6 <\>pcLTpiapyo<; etc tov ypaptjxaTet-
ov tov ev ArjpiOTLoovi&Gov /cat tov dvTtypdcf)-
ov, 6 Be elaayayebv tov airoBt/caaOevTa o<pe-
i\eTo) etcaTov Bpa^fid's tepds tg3 Ait t-
o3 QparpLcp, elairpaTTetv Be to dpyvpto-
25 v tovto tov tepea /cat tov (ppaTptap^o-
v rj clvtovs 6<petXeiv. tt)v Be BtaBt/cacrtav
to Xonrov eivcu tu> vaTepqy erei rj oj d-
v to Kovpeiov Ovcrrj, ttj /covpeooTtBt
'
Attclt-
ovp[a)v, <f)ipetv
Be ttjv -yjrrjcpov airo tov /3copiov.
30 edv Be tis /3ovXr)TCLL
ecfretvat et9 ArjfjtoTtcov-
tBa<$, (hv dv airo-^rri<j)Lcr(jdVTai, e^etvat av-
Tcp, eXeaOat Be eir avTots avvyyopovs T-
6v AetceXeioov ol/cov irevre dvBpas vire-
p
Tpid/covTa eTTj yeyovoTas, tovtovs Be
35
e^opKcoaaTco fypaTp'tapyos /cai 6 lepe-
U9 crvvyyoprjcreiv Ta Bt/catOTaTa /cal ov/c
eacretv ovBeva ptrj ovra
cfipdrepa <f>paTpt-
eiv otov B
,
dv tcov i(f>evTcov d7royjr7](f>icrcovTa-
1 ArjfjLOTicoviBac, 6(j)cXeTO) xiXlas
Bpa-
84]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 223
40 %At?
lepd<; to3 Aa toj (pparplq), elairp-
arrerco he to dpyvptov tovto 6 lepeijs
tov AeKeXeLcov olkov tj avrd<; 6cf>c\6Tco' i-
%elvai he Kal aXX(p toj fiovXofJieva) tw-
v (fyparepoov elcrirparTeiv tc3 kolvoj. rav-
45
to,]
>'
eivat drrro Qop/uLLcovo^ dp^ovTos* eiTL-
ty]r)(f)L%iv
he tov <fiparpiap)(OV
irepi obv d-
v SiaSt/ca^LV her) Kara tov iviavrov
etcaoTOV eav he fir)
eirL^rrjtyicrr), ocpetXer-
(o TTevTCLKoo-Las hpa^fid^ iepds t(Z All
50 t]g5 <>paTpL(x)\y, d]cr7rpdTTLv he tov Lepea
k\ol dXXo[y tov $ov\koiJievov to apyvpLOv
tov]t[o tw koivw]. to he Xolttov dyeLv tcl
H.ia
Kal tx Kovpi]a e? AeKeXeLav eiri r-
6v p<o|idv, edv 8e |xt| Q]varj eirl tov /3co/j,ov,
6(f)-
55
tXTW 7TVTTJKOVT]a Spa^fjLU^ </)? TOJ-
1 Ait tw <i>paTp{a), d<r]irpaTTeTco he lep-
vs to ap*yvpiov tovto tj] CLVTOS 0<p6l\X&-
tw, el pr\ Xoijxos tis eVTai rj TroXejxos'
eav he tl tovtcov hLaKcoXvy, ottol dv 1-
60 epevs 7rpoypa(f)r), evOavOa dyeLv tcl /j,el-
a kcll tcl KovpeLCL' irpoypafyeLv he Trpoirefxir-
tcl tt}? Aopirias ev ttivclklu) XeXevKcop,-
eV0)
/JL7J 'XcLTTOV i) GTTl6CLfJLLaiti) 07T0V UV A-
etceXeLr/s irpoacfjoLTcoaLv ev daTeL. to h-
65 e
^fTf^Lo
/ulcl Tohe Kal tcl Lepeooavva dvay-
paijraL tov Lepea ev aTi]Xrj XlOlvtj irp-
ocrOev tov /3co/jLov AeKeXeLaaLv TeXeaL to-
t? eavTov. NL/cohrjfjLos elire' tcl
f/,ev
aXXa /caT-
a Ta irpoTepa
-^rr](f)La
fxai a a KLTaL irepl t-
70 (77)9
elaaycoyr)^ tojv iraihtDV kol t?}? hiah-
LKaaLas, tovs he fxdp-xvpa^ Tpet? ovs elpr)-
Tai, eirl tt} dva/cplcreL irapeyeaQaL etc T-
gov eavTov 0Laao)Tcov napTvpovvTas Ta v7repcoTcop,e(va)
KaL 7ro/jLvvvTa<; tov Ala tov <PpdTpLOv
75
/jLapTvpelv he tou? fxdpTvpas Kal eirofjivv-
vaL e^o/xevov; tov /3co/jLOV' eav he
fj,r)
wctl ev r-
G0(l) 0Laa(p TOVTQ) TOOOVTOL TOV dpLOfJLOV,
6-
k tco^ dXXcov (ppaTepcov irapeykoOw bWav
224 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[84
Be
fj
r] BiaBi/cacria, o (f>paTpiap^os fjbrj it-
8o porepov BlBoto) t^[v] -^rrjcfrov irepl tgov irai-
Bcov tois airacri (ppdrepat, irplv dv ol av-
rov tov elaayopuevov Otacrwrai /cpvftBrjv d-
7ro tov fico/nov (fiepovTes tt)v
tyrjtyov
Btayjrrjcj)-
IcrcovTar ical ra? yjrrjcfaovs Tas tovtcov evav-
85
riov T(tw airavTwv (pparepcov twv irapov-
ro)v iv
rfj
dyopa o (^parplap^os Biap-
cOfirjcrdTco KaX dvayop everon oiroTep
1
dv
tyrj^LcrcoPTai' idv Be "^rr)(^>taapLevoiv rwv 6-
lacrcorcov elvai avTols cfrpdrepa ol aWo-
90
1 (f>paTepes d7royjrr](f)Lcra)VTai, o<pei\ovT-
cov e/carov Bpa^pias Upas too Ait tw <t>-
parpio) 01 diacrwrai, ttXtjv oaoi dv tgUv
OiacrcoToov Karrjyopoi 7) ivavTiovfievot
4>atvcovrat ev
rf/
BiaBifcacria. idv Be
95
d
r
iro"ty'Y)$io~<>vTai ol duaawrau, Be elad-
ycov
i(f)f)
et? tovs dwavTas, rocs Be (iiraa-
1 Bo^et elvau (ppnrijp, ivypa<f)ecr6co els t-
d KOivd ypa/jb/jLarela' idv Be d7royj/7)(j)la(o-
vrai 01 diravTes, 6(f)ecXerco etcarov Bpa-
100
X/Lt?
lepds tw Ait Tft> <paTpl(p' edv Be
a7royjrr)(f)LcrapLvcov rwv OtacrcoToov pbrj
icfrrj-
i els tovs airavras, /cvpia earco rj
a7royjnj<f)-
tais r\ rwv QiacrwT&v ol Be OtacrooTaL p,e-
rd tgov aWcov typarepwv ptrj (f>ep6vrcov rrjv
105 yjrr)(j)ov irepl tgov iralBcov tgov ifc tov Otdcrov
tov eavTwv. to Be yjrrjiptcrpta roBe irpoaavay-
payjrdTco o lepevs els tt)v cn7]\r)v ttjv \t-
Olvrjv.
r/
Op/cos /xapTvpcov eiri Trj elcrayco-
yel tgov iraiBayv ptapTvpco ov elcrdyet ea-
110 vtq) vov elvai tovtov yvrjcriov iy yapteT-
rjs' d\rj0rj TavTa vrj tov Ala tov <>pdrpio-
v evop/cov(v)TL ptev ptot iroWa fcal ayadd eiv-
at, el B' i7riopfcoir)v TavavTia.
Mjeve^evos elTrev BeBoydai, tols (frpaTepai irepl
115 ttjs elaayaiyrjs Tap, walBcov Ta puev a\Xa rca-
Ta Ta irpoTepov yjrr)<f)L<TpLaTa, oircos o dv elBcocrt ol
(ppaTepes tovs pueWovras elaayeaOai, diro-
84]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 225
ypd<f)(T0ai
tco Trpcoro) erec ry
q>
av to /covpeto-
v ayet to ovo/jlcl waTpoOey teal tov Stj/jlov real tt)-
120
? fJbrjTpos iraTpoOev /cat to[v 8ij]//,ou 77/509 tov
<\>paTpiapyov, tov &e ^>paTpia\jt\ov d-Tro"ypa\|/-
afjuevayv avaypayjravTa e'/cfnGe'vcu oirov av Ack-
e\er)<; 7rpoo-(f)ot,To3o~c
y
e/CTl6[ivai 8 Kal tov Upe'a
avaypdyjravTa iv o~avi8[Cip XcvkiS ev tw Up-
125 a; ttj<5 A.r)T0VS. TO oe i|r[tj{j>io-p.a toSc dvavpd\|/ai
els tt]v] o~T7][\r\v - -
[See the Note below,
p. 227.]
So far as concerns the opening lines the inscription might be classed under
Section vi (Edicts
of
Priests etc.), but the decrees of the phratria of the Demo-
tionidae clearly formed the most important part of the document, to which was
prefixed an edict of their priest, claiming certain contributions, iepeuavva (cf.
87
6),
to be made to him for the purpose of sacrifices. Then follows, 11. 9

113, a decree of the (pparepes prescribing rules (926 retrospective, 2668, with
a supplement 68
113,
prospective ; cf. to \oltt6v 1. 27) of procedure in the case
of illegal enrolment of members. LI. 114126 form part of a decree, passed
some decades later, containing further provisions.
1. Aios fyparpLov. This possessive genitive denoting consecration to a deity
is common. For a fuller form cf. lepa Aiovtiaov (sc. (XT-qkri), CIA iv 2, 623 d.
That by tepees in 1. 2 is meant the priest of Zei)s ^pdrptos appears from 1. 25. He
must be also identical with 6 iepeus tov AeKeXecQv olkov
;
see 1. 41 below.
4. T&de refers to what follows, as in 1. 44 below TavTa refers to what
precedes.
5 sqq. On the third day of the Apaturia (see D.A.), called Koupeurm (1. 28),
the <pp&Tepes on behalf of their sons performed a double sacrifice, the fxeiov and
the Kovpeiov (wrongly said to be names for one and the same sacrifice, Schol. Ar.
Ran. 797). The Koupeiov, as Pollux viii 107 shows, was the victim offered by
the fathers on the occasion of the first hair-cutting (Kovpd) of their sons, when
their names were enrolled in the register of the <ppa.Tpia (117 sqq.). The /zeloj',
though inflexionally not identical with the neuter of fxeiuv, probably denotes the
lesser sacrifice offered when the children born in the preceding year were
presented to the <pp&Tepes. On the orthography of Kovpetov see below, 1. 118.
For iXaTrjp see the lexx.
9. (pp&Tepo-i: clearly the same as the Arj/xoTiuvLdai, 1. 14 etc. D compares
the promiscuous use of 6 drj/Aos and'Afl^i/cuoi in decrees.
12. Otov: sc. AeKeXeiKov, of the tribe Hippothontis, not Olov Kepa/xetKov,
which belonged to the Leontis.
13 sqq. The process of 5ia5i/ca<n'a indicated here was clearly not the
species of private suit known under that name ;
see D.A. s.v. 8t.a5t.K&eiv in the
phratria corresponds to 5ia\p7]<pieo-dai (which itself is used below, 1. 83) in the
deme; it is the examination and voting upon the title of persons claiming to be
0pdrepes. Correlatives of these terms are (once 1. 22) &irodi,Kdeiv and (1. 31 etc.)
aTroxJ/Tifafco-dai,
'
to decide against the claim.'
R. II. 15
226 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. III.
[84
14. rbv vo/xov. Clans, phratries and other corporations might make laws,
provided that they did not violate the laws of the state. Cf. Andoc. Be myst. 127,
Isaeus 7rept rod 'A-n-oWob. k\. 15, 16, Just. Big. xlvii 22, 4 (Schoell I.e.).
16. vwocrxop-evovs kt\. Cf. 70 9.
17. (pepovras kt\. For this custom cf. Hdt. viii 123, Plat. Legg. vi 753 c,
Dem. Be Cor. 271, Plut. Them. 17, Per. 32, quoted in P.-W. Real-enc. i 2 p. 1690.
21. ev ArifioricovidQiv : sc. iep or some such word. The ellipse (with the
exception noted in 11 14) appears to be confined to petrified expressions
connected with sanctuaries, demes and the like ; see Meisterhans Gr. 214.
29. (pipeiv. The subject is the AexeXeiuv oIkos; see 1. 33.
30. e(pehai. For the meaning of ejects cf. 7 74. From the AeKeXeiwv oTkos,
as part of the (pparpia, appeal might lie to the whole (pparpia just as in 1. 96
below the diaaurai as part of the (pparpia might appeal to the whole (pparpia.
Cf. D I. c. who criticises other explanations offered. Schoell I. c. explains 6
AeKeXeiwv olkos to have meant first the building in which meetings were held
(6
Kr)pvKcoi> olkos at Eleusis 124 24, 6 iepds oXkos 6 KXvribwv D 571, 24, Chios)
and then the corporation which met there ; D adds rb Baxxetov (cf. 92
8),
and
the use of dearpov to denote the spectators. The AeKeXei&v oTkos was apparently
an influential section of the Demotionidae, whose verdict in ordinary cases
would be accepted when they ait-e-^rj(picravro a candidate for admission to the
(pparpia.
53. es AeKeXeiav enl rbv (3u)/j.6v. This provision may have been due to a
desire to bring back to Decelea as a centre rites which may have fallen into
desuetude during the many years through which Decelea had been in the
hands of the Lacedaemonians.
60. evBavda: cf. 9 13.
62. rrjs Aopirias. As a reckoning would be certainly made to the first and
not the middle day of a festival (here the Apaturia; cf. 1.
5),
the evidence of
this inscription is conclusive, D thinks, in favour of those authors who make
the Aopiria the first, and the 'Avdppvais the second, day of the festival. The
trivaiaov XeXevKUjxevov , on which the notice was published for temporary purposes,
was probably of wood. Sometimes in the case of records intended to be
permanent it was explicitly directed that the first draft should be temporary,
and if approved should be transferred to stone ; cf. CIG 2360 (Ceos) 40 sqq.
:
dvaypd(pLV be els XevKW/xa e^ijs rotis del vLxQvras rby ypap.p.area' [a]v be bo^y
6 vdfxos, dvaypdipai els arrjXrjv.
63. ottov dv kt\.: cf. Lysias Kara UayK\. 3: eXduv eirl rb Kovpelov (note the
accent) to irapa robs 'Epyuas, tva ol AeKe\eis irpoo~(poiTu)<nv, rjptorcov kt\.
68. The formula for an amendment or supplement passed at the same
meeting would have been: rd fiev d\\a Kaddirep 'lepoK\rjs (cf. 7 70). It is
probable therefore that, though these lines are written by the same hand as the
preceding, the resolution, which in effect annuls some of the foregoing pro-
visions, was carried at a later meeting (cf. 115 sq.). The words oOs etprjrai 1. 71
show that there were more \pr)(pio-/xara than that of Hierocles.
70. By iraibuv is meant the youths after the offering of the Kovpetov, not the
children born in the preceding year ; cf. 1. 26 sqq.
72. irapex^a-dai. The subject seems to be the claimant or litigant.
73. diaaoi would seem to have existed previously in the (pparpia, but not to
have taken part in the examination of claimants for membership of the (pparpia.
85]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 227
Members of an individual dlacros are here opposed to the whole (pparpia in
the same way as at Delphi in the (pparpia of the Labyadae individual clans
(frarpiai) are opposed to the whole (pparpia (DI 2561 b 5, si lectio certa). Cf.
D 438, note 31.
118. ruj TrpwTcp '4tl -f)
y
av. 'in the first year after that in which.' novpeov
should probably be ranked with cases like Upea for ttpaa ;
cf. 26 33. Above
1. 6 the stone has |<
O P E I O,
and 1. 28 |<
O P E O N ;
the fluctuation makes it
doubtful whether even at the time of the later decree, 114 sqq., we should
transliterate by Koupeiov.
122 (cf. 64). AeKeXerjs: see Meisterhans Gr. 141.
Note. The following remarks will further the explanation of the foregoing
inscription and nos. 8588. After the reforms of Clisthenes the (pparpiac,
though they were named after ytvr) or clans, e.g. ArjpLOTLwvldai, as above,
6eppiKid8ai CIA n 1652, 'Axvid8ai ib. 1653, no longer consisted only of these
but also of the diaaot or the sacrificial guilds composed of ordinary citizen
families not belonging to the yevrj. The members of the yivrj were called
yevvrjrai, in reference to an original relationship, afterwards looser and not
necessarily one of blood. The bond of union was the common ancestor and
common cultus, especially that of Zeus 'EpKeios and 'AttoWuv Uarpuios. From
the worship of the latter as a common tribal ancestor came the names bp-oirdrepes.
(ppdrepes, 6/xoyd\aKres, beside the name yevvrjrai. At the head of the yevos stood
an annually changing dpx^v. The diaaoi themselves, the members of which
were called dtaacorai and formerly opyewves (no. 87),
in general depended upon
blood relationship. They existed before Clisthenes, but it was he who first
incorporated them in his phratries along with yivrj, so that there ceased to be
any political distinction between yevvrjrai, as such, and cult-members, as such.
The opyeQves as (ppdrepes consequently took part in the cult of Zei)s 'EpKeios and
'AiroWav Uarpwos peculiar to the yevvrJTai, and this cult became in the case of
each citizen the test of his genuine burgher origin, though the word yevvrJTat in
the strict sense implies a closer and more legitimate relation to these deities.
Cf. Miiller Hdb. iv
2
1, 2
p. 205 sqq. and the authorities quoted.
85. A stele of Hymettian marble, found at Merenda, now in the museum
at Athens. CIA 11 600. Cf. Buermann Drei Studien auf d. Geb. d. att.
Bechts, 645
;
Dareste etc. Inscr.jur. 1
p. 264; Billeter Gesch. d. Zinsfusses, 1898,
17 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1; but
<f>
is
+
(cf.
51)
and in 1. 1 ir appears to be 7r
v
Koehler notes that the
A
and the
_Q
in the inscription are hardly distinguish-
able from each other. Stoix^j'.
.... ap^os elirev heho^Oat Afa[\vcrtv*
fjbtadoixjat to yoapiov to Mvpptvo[vvTi to
k\olvov AvaXicov AtoSaypw Kara <rvv[Qr\K-
152
228 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[85
a]? TaaBe' Jxara TaBe ifjbiaOwaav to %(opi\o-
5
v rh MvppivovvTi o[t] fypaTpiapyoi Ka[X\-
</cX.[t)]<? 'Apio-reiSov M.vppivov<rio<; /ca[\ A-
iJoTret^ii]? Acocf)dvTov TS/Lvpptvovaios [k<x-
l to kolvov AvaXewv r[r\]v Xa/cfcvrjv
(?)
fea\[ov-
fjLevrjv Tr] Sefca, a> yetTcov fioppaOev .
io .
709,
voTodev Be 'OXv/jLircoBcopov yoyplov, r)X-
lov dviovTos 0S09, Bvofievov 'OXv/jLttloB-
copov xcopiov, AioBwptp K.[a]v6dpov yivppi-
vovcri(p
PH)
tov ivcavTov eicdcrTov aT-
cJXe?
kclI dveirit l/jltjt op [twv] tc e[yBt] o[. .
15
6\vt(dv teal 7ro\fjLLcov e["ypoXTj]9 teal
(frtXio-
v <TTpaT07re8ov teal TeXco[v K.]al [tjiacfyopas
teal tojv aXXcov diravToyv 7r[i\crfc[e]vd%eiv B-
e tt)v olfclav AtoBcopov [yX . ]o~fjLev . . e . e
. .
7]]
ra9 d/jLirekovs . . v . . . ve\ir] . . K\Xa\ai[a]v
20 . eivai rot? (f)paTpLap[xois], Ka\\ o-]/c[a]"v^et
t]<Z9 dfJLireXow; St9 Ka\ra. -ird]cr[av] t[t]]^ ft)[pa]zr G-
tr\epei Be Tr)$
7^9
ctltg) t[t\]i> rjfxicrecav, ttj-
9 Be dpyov 6o~7rpevaec 07ro[o-r]\v av /3ovXr)T~
ar epydaeTai Be ical TaX[\a 8]a>[8p]a Ta rj/jL-
25 p]a* diroBiBbvai Be tt)[s] /^[ijaOcoaeax; tt)v /jl-
\\v rjfiLcreLav firjvbs BorjBpo/jLLGOVOS evrj,
T7]V
8'
rjfiiaeiav /jltjvos ILXa(f)r)/3oXL6i)vos [e-
vt|] to?9 (^paTptdp^otls] AvaXewv tols [a-
i]l fypaTpLapyovcnv [p]%ei ir]<=; /McrOaxTe-
300/299
30 w? ifrl
'
Wyefxayov M.ovvl)Loov'
fir) e^elva-
1 Be AioBoopw Ko^jrai tcov BevBpcov toov c[k
tov ywpiov /j,7]0ev fArjBe ttjp ol/ei'av /ca6[t-
Xeiv eav Be /jlt) aTroBtBa) tt\v pbiaOoyaiv e-
v] rot9 %/90^ot9 to?9 yeypafxpuevois rj /jurj
35
i]pyctr}Tai to ycoplov KaTa Ta yeypa/ifxe-
v]a, e^elvai to?9 $paTpidpyoi<$ ical Ava-
\ev]o-Lv eveyypd^eiv irpb Blkt)<; ko\ [mlo--
Odocrac eTepw to ywpiov (o dv /3ovX[<a]vTa-
1, K~]al vttoBikos ecTTQ) AwBoopos eav tl 7r[p-
40 oo-]o0etXet T779 /juo-Qcoo-eoJS rj KadeXe\i\ t[i
TJr/9 ot/cia-9 ^7 KO"^rei tl twv k tov ycoptov
ia]v Be /3ovXr]TaL ev Tot9 Beica eTeaiv AioBco-
B.C.
85]
DEGREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 229
p]o? >7 ol Kk/qpovofJiOL avrov, Kara/3a\ovT-
uv] AvaXevcriv
P
Spa^fid
1
;,
/cal lav [nva]
fjuu-
45
aOoxriv 7rpoao(f)iX(ocnv, a7roS[o]cr#[(o](7[a]z; a-
v]to?9 ol fypaTp'iapyoi fcal AvaXels to %-
otpijov KOfitad/jLevoL to dpyvpiov lav o[l
|it]] fcaTa{3a\(o<jLv ra9
F
1
/cat eai> Tt 7rpoa[o-
\ikto<jiv Trjs /jLLa0ooo-ea)<s ev T0t9 &erca e-
50 To~iv, fir) eivau AioScopw /jLrjSe twv AcoB-
copov /jurjOevi avvftoXaiov 777209 to %wp[]o-
v tovto jjL7]6ev teal fjLia6coad<v>To)aav AvaX-
et?
<p
av fiovXcovTat tov irXeio-Tov. 'Avay-
pdtyac
be tyjv pbiaQwotv TavTrjv ev GTrfXe-
55
1 XiOlvei Tou? <ppaTpidp^ov<; /cal ctt^o--
]/////////////////////////////////////
/////////////////
Art TO
J^W
The decree defines the terms on which an estate is let by the (pparpla of the
AvaAets to a certain Diodorus. On the constitution of the (pparpiat see Miiller
Hdb. iv
2
1, 208 sqq., and the Note on
p.
227 above. As the lessee may at any
time within the ten years over which the lease extends buy the estate for
5000 drachmae
(1. 42), we see that the rent, 600 drachmae (1. 13),
comes to
12 per cent, of the purchase-price. For other percentages cf. ISO 27.
5. From the fact that more than one phratriarch is assigned to the kolvov
AvaAeW (?two phratriarchs), it may perhaps be inferred that the kolvov here is
a union of two (pparpLai (Miiller Hdb. I. c. 145, note
5).
9. irt] dixa. In 21 13 and 37 the language in a similar connexion varies
between et'/cocrt Irt] and /card et/cocri ir&v. cp yelrcov kt\. : a common formula
in definitions of boundaries
; cf. Ill 3 etc., 112 1.
13 sqq. It would seem that Diodorus is to have the property free of taxes
and not subject to assessment for state purposes, such as the ejection of
enemies
(?),
the maintenance of a friendly force or taxes generally or war-tax or
anything of the kind. Cf. 131 6 sqq. : iav 8e rts elacpopa
y\
[ijyvrjTcu d-rrb tQv
Xupitov rod Ti/jLTj/xaros, tous drj/xdras e|[t](T0epetz/.
20. /cat <TKa\j/u kt\. Cf. the conditions imposed in the lease Tabl. Heracl.
IGSI 645 I 172 sq.: devdpea . . . irepL<jKOL\pei /cat iroTiGKatyei /cat irepLKOxpei.
23. oo-rrpevaei :
'
shall sow with beans.' The verb does not appear to be
found: &<nrpia according to Galen, Be alim. facult. i
(p.
314, 14 ed. Bas.), are
eKelva tlov Ar)p.7)Tpliov (nrepjudTcov, e uv apros ov yiverac and among these he puts
Kvafxot in the first place.
29. cipxeL kt\. For the formula cf. Ho. i 291 3 (Elis) ctpx01 ^ /ca rot
(sc. Zeros) and below 129 18. 32 etc. firjdtv : 130 19.
42 sqq. The construction is somewhat involved though the sense is clear,
even if the restoration at the end of 1. 44 is not absolutely correct.
'
If within
the ten years over which the lease extends Diodorus or his heirs wish to do so,
they may buy the estate on payment of 5000 drachmae to the Dyaleis, and the
230 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[85
phratriarchs and Dyaleis may sell the estate to them ; only if there be arrears
of rent, they must first have recovered the sum due ; but if within the ten years
they do not pay the 5000 drachmae, or if there be arrears of rent, then no
contract with regard to the estate shall subsist (between the Dyaleis) and
Diodorus or any of his kin.'
86. A slab of marble said to have been found in the village of Marcopoulo
in the Mesogaea of Attica. CIA n 609. Cf. Koss Denies p.
iv (with Meier's
notes) ; Ziebarth Griech. Vereinswesen, 141 sq., 182.
Alphabet, type 1.
''EJTra/jLeivcov 'AfieivLOV elirev iireiBrj n-
v]e9 evavriov rw 6p/c<p ov d)/j,oo~av /cal re[l
dpa r]v Rl/caBevs 7T7)pdcraro BiareX-
ovcri irpdrrovTes kcli Xiyovres Kara E-
5
l/caBecov eiri (3\d{3ei rwv koivwv tgov
TLl/caBecov,
d<f>
cLv rd lepd rols Oeois
6-
vovcrcv EZ/ca8ee?, Kal rots BiKa^ofiev-
ols Qlfca&evcriv o~vvBlkovo~lv vire-
vavria tck9 ILlfcaSevcriv Kal fie/jbap-
io TVprjtcacnv eiri rov SiKacrrrjpLOV i-
irl /3\d/3eL rov kocvov rov JLtKaBicov
TJrevBels fiaprvpias, eXicrOai rpeU
avbpa<z rjoj] e hjcfcabeayv oirives
(TVVayCDVLOVVTCU Tft) 7T60-K7)fjL/jL6V-
15 a) tclZs fjLaprvpiais HoXvtjevqy, 07rco-
9 dv Blktjv BiBgoctlv oi rd tyevBr} fxapr-
vpovvres' eiraivkaai Be YloXv^evov
AtoBcopov Kal are^avoocrai ^pvatp crr-
(f)dv(ti ore BtKaios iartv irepl rd kol-
20 vd rd RlfcaSecov Kal iTreo-fCTJyjraro rots
jjudpTvcTLv, dvaypdyjrac Be roBe rb
tyrjcfrLo--
324/3
^
roi>9 dpyovTds tovs i(j> Hyrjcnov ap-
'XOVTOS 19 0~T7]K.7)V Xl6lV7)V tCdl <JTr)<J-
ai iv too lepa rov
'
AttoWcovos rov Ha-
25
pv7jo-alov.
B.C
The Et/ca<5e?s were (Meier I. c. thinks) a religious club or dlacros, which held
meetings on the 20th of each month for the purpose of a common sacrifice or
banquet. The Parnessian Apollo (1. 24) would seem to have been the chief
object of their cult. ElKadevs (1. 3)
was the mythical Eponymus of the club.
87]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 231
2. t 6pK(i}...Ti apq.. For the combination of the oath and the imprecation
cf. what Aeschines c. Ctes. 109 sq. says of the Amphictyons : opKou u/io<rau
io~xvpbv...apa.v lo~xvpa.v...iroi.Ti<javTo; and for the construction cf. Soph. El. 388 :
tLv, (3 TaXcuva, t6i>8' eir-qpaau \6you ; and Dem. De Cor. 275 : ri ovv ravra
eir-qpafxai
;
7. Kal rots 8LKa{o/j.evois kt\. In a law-suit in which the Ei'/cadets were engaged
certain members of the club appear to have taken sides against the club
((TvudiKovatv vTrevavria) and in the opinion of the club to have given false witness.
By the decree a crown is voted to Polyxenus as iirecrKrjiufxevos rats fj.aprvpiais.
For the procedure see D.A. s.v. Martyria.
22. dpxovTes : cf. the &pxoi>Tes rod yfrovs. (As the (ppa.TpLa.pxos stood at the
head of the (pparpia, so at the head of the yevos stood the apx^v too yevovs who
was at the same time high-priest of the ytvos, D.A. s.v. genos.) See the Note p. 227.
24. n.api>r)<T<rios : only here with acr. The ordinary form is Ilapvrjdtos
(restored by Bentley in Arist. Ach. 348).
87. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken at the top and bottom, found in the
Piraeus. Foucart Assoc, rel. p. 189 ; CIA n 610.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but ir is 7r
4
, \p is
xf/
s
,
w is w
3
; once a is a
2
,
and //. is /j..
2
.
The mark
(:)
appears before and after numerical signs.
vaiKe ...e... a? oiroaoL iv tt)[l a-rr\\-
V
eyiyeypa^fA/Jsivoi elaiv rj ro[vs rjovrcov i/cyovovs. edv Be
TtS
0VJ)
rfj
Beep to)v opyecovcov ot? fierecrTiv rod lepov areXels avTovs
Ovecv'
i\av Be IBccott]^ tis 0vy
rfj
Sew BiBovat
rfj
lepea yaXadrjvov
fiev : |C
5
k\<zI to Bep/ma kcl\ kcoXtjv Btave[K]rj Be%idv, rod Be reXeou :
| I |
:
Kal Bep/na Kal
K\co\r)v Kara ravra, /3oo<; Be : [|C] : Kal to Beppua' BiBovac Be
ra, lepra crvva tw-
v \i.e]v 6rfk[i\iwv
rfj
lepea, twv Be dppevcov rw lepel. TrapaftcopLta
Be
fir)
9v]eiv [\^]r)Be[va] iv rcZ iepdo[\. rj] 6<pei\e[\.]v :
p
:
Bpax^d?.
07r<i>? o av r) oiKia Kai
t]o lepov eiTLaKe[v]d^r}TaL, to eV[oiKiov ttj]? 06[k<xs] Kal to vBcop
oaov dp, irpaOy e-
io Is ti]v k]7ricrKevr)v tov lepov [koA ttjs] otVta?, e/? aWo Be firjBev
ava\io~KLv, e-
ws] av [to Lepo]^
e7riaKev[a(r]0f} k[oX ij olKia], edv fiij tl aWo
yjrrjcfiio-oovTai ol 6pyecove[s
232 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. III.
[87
. . acre . . . .]v eis to Iepov. v7ro\i[\nra.]vei,v Be vBcop to3
ivoLKovvTt oocrre ^prja6[ai.
k&]v B[i n]9 []tw[u] rj i7rLyjf7](f>Lar} irapd rovBe rov vo/xov,
d(f)L\eTG) :
[p]
: hpa^fxas
rfj
06w] 6 t[c clirwv Kal] o iTri'tyrjtyicras teal pur) pberearco avra) tcov
kolvgov, ava<ypd(f)Lv B-
15 \ avrov 6<j>iXov]ra
\j\fl
6eop rovro to dpyvpcov els rrjv o~rij\rjv
tovs i7rifL\r}Td\s.
dyo[pa,v 8e k]clI [%]v[\\]oyov iroelv tovs eirifxeXn^Tas Kal tovs
iepoiroiovs ev too lep-
<3] 7re[pl twv Koiv]o)z/ rrj Bevrepa, larafxevov rod /jltjvos eKaarov.
BuBovai Be
tois (\epoiroiol<$ et? ttjv Ovaiav \ \- \- : Bpa^puds e/caarov rwv
opyecovwv 0I9 /nereart
to]i) [le]poi) rov apyrfkia>vo<i irpb rrjs %KT7]$ iirl Biica, o?
8'
dv
eTTiBrj/jLCov AOr/vr/-
20 o-i] Kal vyiaivtov (xr) avv/3d\\rjrat, 6(jyei\erco : (- []: Upas
T17 t/ew. 07TCO? o af <w-
s irXJelcrTOL obaiv opyeooves rov lepo[y\, e^elvat [t] /3ov\o/jiev<p
io~ev\i\yKavTi
. . . 8p]a^/xa9 /jierelvat avrw rov iepov Kal els rrjv arrjXrjv
iyypd<f)6O-0ai, t[ovs
hi yeypa\i.\i]ivov<; els tj}z/ arrjX^v SofKip-ajJeij; tow? opyeoovas
Kal 7rap[a . . .
to]0 Sap-
25
yqXiwvos.]
The inscription of which this is a fragment was doubtless originally of
considerable length. It contains part of a law, not a decree in the strict sense,
of the orgeones, in fact the regulations by which the society was bound.
Foucart 1. c. thinks that it is the oldest document of the kind, because it makes
mention of a temple not yet completed. He assigns it to the latter half of the
fourth century B.C. On the opyeuves see the Note p. 227 above.
3. rrj dey : Bendis? Cf. 1. 19, note. 4. iepea : 26 33, 37 20, 38, 39 init.
4. yaXadrjvov kt\. :
'
an obol and a half in respect of an unweaned animal
etc' Cf. CIG 2656 (Halicamassiis) 9 sqq., where the priestess Xf)\f/Tai t&v
dvojxivwv drj/jLoala
&[<pj
k&<ttov lepeiov KoiKrjv Kal r& iirl kojXtj ve/nofieva Kal
TTaprr]fJLo[p]ida o~ir\ayxvuv Kal r<x d^pfxara, t&v
5'
1[8]oi)tl[k]u}p \r)i}/Tai kw\t)u kt\.
;
and 1. 30 sqq. KaTaoKevaaaTu de (sc. r\ ttpaa) Kal dr)<ravpbv rrj [d]e<, ej>[/3]a\[\]^-
Tiocav 5t o[i] 6vovT[e]s eirl puev ra; reXet[w] 6(3o\ovs duo, iirl de yaXadewq) 6^o\6v.
6. Upuavva : contributions to priests or priestesses for the purpose of
sacrifices. See 84 4, where the form is lepeibo~vva.
88]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 233
7. irapafiwiiia : sacrifices made without presenting the victim at the altar.
9. ivolKLov : house-rent. The oi/ct'a may be a house connected with the
temple and rented to a private individual. Foucart would explain it as a
diaaibv (Hesych. diaaQves' oIkol ev oh avviovres heLirvovcnv oi dlao~oi).
16. ayopav kcli v\\oyov. Perhaps this is a technical expression
'
meeting
and assembly.' In CIA iv 2, 624 b 8 (cf. 623 d 30) we have also r/ a-vuodos tQu
opyewvuiv.
19. The contribution had to be paid before the 16th of Thargelion ; on the
19th were celebrated the Bendidia. Hence Koehler infers that the place of
meeting was the chapel of Bendis. Cf. CIA n 620, 11 (decree of thiasotae)
:
[/cat cr7~>7<xcu iv tuj]i tepw[t t]t)s [Be]v5l5o[s
;
and CIA iv 2, 573 b, an inscription
surmounted by a relief, in which a female figure in Thracian dress, according
to Trendelenburg that of Bendis, is placed side by side with iEsculapius.
20. /cat vyialvwv. Cf. CIA n 630 ('Hpot'orat), 14 : iav yd) tlvl avfx^y dia
Tri[vdos rj 6l a^adiveiav airoXeicpdrjV at.
88. A slab of Hymettian marble built into a wall south Of the Dipylon.
D
1
426 ; CIA iv 2, 618 b. The stone is cut across the upper margin, not
fractured, but it is clear that the beginning of the inscription has been cut
away.
Alphabet, type 1
;
=
2
, 7r is once ir.
2
. Xtolxv^ov.
. . eve ... ....
A](opL(Ov Ka\X[to-Tio]^
N]0V/J,7]V10S Aop/CLOV
4>]e^8ta9 Ko/zi|r?7
5
K\\eLyV7)$ ^Lfxakr}
. . . . ??? M77X/9
230 228
*A.ya}0rj tv^tj, iirl Alo/jl8ovto<; dpyovros,
2-
Cf. 59. Kipo]<fiopL(vvos, dyopa Kvpia' Aiovvatos T-
. . . to? elrrev SeSo^Oai rS Kotvd) twv 6l-
10 ao-oiT^cov eirei rd re dWa izparrovaiv /caXoos
k]cli evaeftoos rd Kara rovs Oeovs, dvaOelvai
<x\vrov<; Kai arrfKrjv ev rco lepa> rf}$ 'Apre/xL-
8o]9 /cat rd bvoyuara dvaypdtyai rwv Ocacrcoroo-
v Tr]avra)v,
avaypd<fieiv Se teal rwv lepec(cb)v rw-
15 v d]et yevo/juevcov Kar \k\viavrbv drrb AtofieSo-
vJto? dpyovros, idv 86i;i ru> kolvco opOws e-
irji/jLe/jLeXrjcrdai rwv Kara rrjv Oeov dvaypdcf)-
ew Be Kal rcov irreccuovrcov avv6taacord)v
ra ovofxara errdv KaraftdXcoaiv ro e7ri/3d\\o-
234 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[88
20 v] avroLS rod VTrap^ovros dpyvpiov Kara to-
v v]6[\l]ov ev t&) epdvw, evypa(f>erco Be etcacrT-
o? avrov tq) avrov avaXco/juart /xerd rov ra/ju-
(\ov Kal rov ypa/jL/jLarecos.
lov rafjiL- lov ypa/x-
25
av /iarea
Alovvo~iov. QeoirpoTTov.
For the guild of the thiasotae see Note p. 227 above. The decree enjoins the
inscription of the names of the guild-priestesses and of present and future
members. The assembly at which the decree was passed was called dyopa, KvpLa
1. 8, and this was the usual formula in such decrees of guilds : cf. CIA 11 619,
621 etc. In 611 we have more precision: p.r)vbs Hvavo^piQvo'i Tre/uL-rrTei. iara/Jiivov'
dyopa Kvpia tCov dLao-urGiv. Cf. Rem. ix, p.
205 and for the epithet Kvpia
'
ordinary ' see Rem. iv, p. 86.
5. The stone has . .
511 TENH2I-
For the form KXeiyevrjs cf. 99 a 1 and
KXtLdrjfios (KXE) CIA 1 437, 8, CIA 11 1249, 2 (400350 b.c.) beside KXeodrj/ios
]
so also KXeifiovXos, KXeofiovXos.
Meisterhans Gr. 21 and 117.
10. TrpaTTovcL : probably the subject is the diaawrat themselves.
14. Upei{Q))v : for w the stone has
A.
16. 56|e: : the singular is perhaps sufficiently justified by the expression
tQv del ytvopAvwv
'
the priestess for the time being.'
19. iirdv ktX.
'
when they have paid their due share of the standing
fund(?).'
21. epypa<pTb) ktX. Each is to have his name inserted at his own expense
with the consent of etc.
24
6. Possibly the lost upper portion contained a decree in honour of
these officers.
89. A slab of white marble found at Athens, now at Paris in the Louvre.
CIG 2910
;
Froehner Inscr. 66
;
CIA in 16.
Alphabet, type 2 ; rr is 7r
4
.
NE
and
HN
are once ligatured.
T
= TItov.
AyaOfj Tv^y . KevKLTnros .
*|ni<j>icr]/u,a to yevo/xevov virb r(ov HaveWrjvcov
TTi8tJ Ma"yVT]TS Ol] 7T/90? TOO M.aidv8p(p 7T0Ta/JbU>, airoucoi
ovts M<ryv]Ttov] rwv ev eaaa\ia, irpwroi 'EjWtjvcdv
5
8tapdvTs el]? rr\v 'Aatav, Kal KaroiKiqaavre^ aijv d-
XXois "EXXt]<rt] 7ro\\d/ci<;, "Icocri Kal Acoptevcri Kal rots e-
k tou avTov y^evovs AloXevac, rifxrjOevre^ Kal vrrb
tov 8ij|xov tov 'Ptofijattoz; Bo a? eTTOirjcravTo avfifxa-
x/as
irpos avrov Kal h\wpewv e^atpercav rv^ovre^ v-
90]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 235
10 iro Qiov 'A$]piavov, iraTpbs T. AlXiov K-accrapos
AvTOKpdrojpo? 'ABpcavov
'
Avroyveivov tcl$ ?
The inscription contains the preamble of a decree of the Panhellenes and
concerns the inhabitants of Magnesia irpbs Mai&vdpcp, whose inclusion in the
bond was probably ordered in the lost portion of the decree. The name
A;/ct7r7ros in 1. 1 has nothing to do with the decree. He was the mythical
founder of Magnesia, beneath whose statue possibly the decree was placed. The
council of the Panhellenes was established by Hadrian at Athens. It is clear
from 1. 11 that the decree belongs to the reign of Antoninus Pius a.d. 138161.
4. GecrcraAict. The form with <r<x (for Gerr.) is found once in an Attic
inscription, in a list of allies, CIA n 184, 2, 323/2 B.C., and on an Attic tomb-
stone (perhaps of a Thessalian) of the viv century : 9e<r(cr)a\6s CIA iv
1,
491
14
p. 115. Here the acr is doubtless due to the noiv-q.
7. Alokevai. Though situated in Caria, Magnesia was regarded by the
ancient geographers as an Aeolian town (Strabo xiv 647 : rroXis AtoXt's).
90. On a stele of white marble, surmounted by a pediment ; the lower
part of the stele is broken away. H. 1 ft. 6 in. ; B. 1 ft. 11^ in. ; Th. 6
in.
From the Elgin Collection (hence, though doubtfully, assigned to Athens).
CIG 349 ;
Luders Dion. Kiinstl,
pp. 74, 177 ;
BMI 49 ;
CIA m 22.
The alphabet does not conform to a single type. The letters in 1. 1 belong
to type 7, those of the other lines partly to type 5; but

and

are absent, t is
7r
4
,
0-
is once a
li
the \p
of 1. 2 has the peculiar form i//
4
.
ME, PE, HNE
(of
Etfo-ejSH NEov, 1. 6)
are ligatured.
'AyadfjTvxy
yjrrj^ia/jLa tt}? Upas
'
ASpoavrjs
'
Avt(DVl[v]7]s
6vfjLe\i/cf}<; TrepiiroXicrT acrjs /jueyaXijs avvoBov
tcjp airo rrjs ol/cov/jLevr)<; irepl rov b^iovvaov ical
5
AvTO/cpdropa YLaiaapa Tlrov AlXiov A&pcavbv
A^[twvivov ^e^aarbv Ei)cre/3i} vkov Acovvcrov
T\VlT<3v.
- - - - -
The decree itself is lost : the heading only remains. It is a
"
Decree of the
sacred dramatic (dv/meXiKrjs) itinerant great guild, named the Hadriana Antonina,
of the artists from the whole world concerned with the worship of Dionysus and
of the Emperor Caesar Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Augustus Pius, the
new Dionysus." It was not uncommon for Corporations of this kind to name
themselves after some monarch to whom they paid divine honours as their
patron
; e.g. the Attalistae, Eupatoristae, Basilistae (CIG in
p. 419). On the
AiovvaiaKol rex^rai see Luders op. c. and Foucart De Collegiis &c. See also
Mr Hicks's fuller commentary BMI 49.
236 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[90
If the inscription is Attic the otivohos may have received its title 'Adpt.avri on
the occasion of Hadrian's visit to Athens, 135 a.d., when he celebrated the
Dionysia with great pomp as Athenian archon.
91. On the drum of a column belonging to the Hall of the Iobacchi, S. of
the Areopagus. The inscription is divided into two columns, surmounted by a
pediment in low relief, with a crater, a bull's head, and two panthers and vine
branches. S. Wide Mitth. xix
(1894) p. 248 sqq., E. Maass Orpheus p.
18 sqq.;
D 737. Cf. Ziebarth Das gr. Vereinswesen p.
141.
Alphabet, type 9. Frequently
|, once (1. 79) Y>
is surmounted by two dots.
Iota mutum is omitted throughout. For the numeral signs see Index and for
the confusion between ei = i and t = et (e.g. 11. 2, 19, 54 etc.) cf. 93 58.
Column I.
AyaOrj tv^tj.
'E7rl apyovTos 'A/o. ^KiTa(f)poSeLTov, fX7]vo^
'
E\a<f)r)f3o\i(t)vo<; rj' earafievov, dyopdv
crvvrjyayev irpcoray^ o diroheiySel^
5
lepevs vtto Avp. NeiKopLayov rov clvOl-
epacra/jbevov err] i% zea\ lepaaafievov
err) zey zeal 7rapa%(opi](javTos ^wvtos
eh koct/jLov zeal ho^av rov Ba^etou
to) fcpartcTTO) KXa. 'HpooSr), v(j) ov dvOiepevs
io diroheiydeh [&v\eyv(a Soy/juara tgov
lepao-apbevcdv X.pvai7T7rov teal Aiovvctlov
iea\ eiraiveaavTO^ rod iepecos zeal rov ap-
^t/3a(/c)^of zeal rov irpoardrov e. tovtoos
del ypoo/uueda

zeaXws 6 iepevs

dya/err/aac
i$ r~\a hoy/xara crol irpeirei

evcrrdOeuav ra>
Ba/c^etft) zeal evKoafxlav

ev <rrrj\r) ra Bo-
y/jLara

eirepwra' 6 lepev<z eiirev eirei zeal


i/jiol zeal roh Gvviepevai fio[v]
zeai v-
fxelv
iracriv dpecr/cei, eo$ a%iov ye, eire-
io paynjao/Jbev zeai eirrjpooTWo-ev o irpo-
eSpos
f
PoO^)09 'A<f)poBeicriov orw Sozcel
zevpia elvac rd dveyvcoafjueva Soy/JLa-
ra zeal ev crTrjXr) dvaypacfrfjvai,
aparco
rrjv yelpa. iravre^ eirrjpav.
ef.
iroWoh
91]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 237
25 ereat tov tcparicrTov lepea HpcoSrjv

vvv eifTV^el^, vvv irdvTcov Trpcoroi


tgqv BaK^elcov

koXoos o avOiepevs

r) arrj-
Xrj yevea(6)co. 6 dvOuepevs elire' ecrrac r)
crryXr} 67rl tov Kelovos, Kal dvaypacpr)-
30
(tovtcu, evTOvrjaovcn yap 01 7rpoeo~Tco-
T6S rod fjbrjhev avroov XvOrjvat.
M.7]8evl i^earco loftaicyov eivat, idv /irj
irpwrov diroypcv>^r\Tai irapd tw tepee
ttjv vevo/jLHTfjLeP7)i> diToypa^rjv Kal
35
BoKC/jLaadfj vtto tcov lo$atcyu>v yjrrj-
(fxp,
el ai;io<; tyaivoiTO Kal iirtrriheto^
tg3 ^aK^ela). <TTa) 8e to larjXvo-iov
to)
fir)
diro Trarpbs
-% v' Kal airovhr)
6/jlolcos, Kal 01 diro TraTpos diroypaipe-
40 crdwaav iirl
-)f
K6
,
hihovTes rj/iKpopiov
fieyjpis otov 7T/30? yvvaiKas (haiv.
^iWLTCocrav Se oi l6/3aK%0L Ta? re ivd-
t<z? Kal ra? dfityieTripihas Kal Ba/c^et-
a Kal el Tt? TrpocrKatpos eopTr) tov 6eov
}
45
etfacrTO? rj Xeycov r\ ttolcov rj cf)iXoTei-
fiovfievos KaraftdWcov firjviaiav
ttjv opicrOetaav et9 tov olvov
(fropdv.
'Ea^ Se fir) TrXrjpol, elpyeaOco rr}<;
oTiftd-
So?, Kal VTOVLTcoaav 01 tw
ylrr}<f)Lcrp,a-
50 tl ivyeypafifievoi %&)pt? r) dirohrifiias
rj irevOovs rj vocrov rj cr(j)6Spa dvavKalos
Tt? r)v 6 TrpocrSe^Orjcrofievo^ Is Tr)v o~Tt/3d-
&a KpetvdvTcov tgov lepecov. 'Eaz; Be lofiaK-
yov
d8e\(f)6s
lo~epyr)Tai yjrrjcficp hoKifiaaOeis,
55
BlSotco
^ v' ' edv Se [epos irals i^coTtKos Kadecr-
ZOels
avaXwar] tu 7rpbs tovs Oeovs Kal to J$aK%lov,
eaT(o fieTa tov iraTpos lofta/c^os eirl
fita
airovhfj tov iraTpos- Tc5 he diroypa-^rafievw
Kal TJrr}(f)o(f)opr}0evTi ScBotco 6 lepevs eVtcr-
60 To\r)v otl 0~tIv l6f3aK"%os, idv irpwTov
Sol tg3 lepel to lar/Xvcrcov, ivypa^o/xevov
Trj iincrTo\fi tu ywp^cravTa et'9 Tohe tl.
238 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[91
OvBevl Be i^earac ev
rf,
crTi/3d8i ovre aaai
ovre 6opv/3f)aaL ovre Kporrjaai, fxera Be
65 Trdcrrjs evKoafilas Kal rjav)(ia^ tovs fiepicr-
fiovs Xeyecv Kal iroceiv irpoGTacroovTO^
tov tepett)9 r) tov apyjiftdityov. M.rjBevl
i^earco tow ioftdicywv tmv fir)
avvTeXe-
advTcov et? re rds evaTas Kal dfi<j>ieTr)pL-
70 8a? elaep^eaOat Is rr)v aTifSdBa, fii^pis dv
7nKpi0fj
avTo3 vtto twv lepewv rj aiTO-
Bovvai avrov rj laep^eadai. Ma^? Be
edv Tts dp^rjrai rj
evpedfj tls aKoaficov
i)
eV aWorpiav KXialav epyofievos r)
vfipi-
75
^(ov rj XotBopatv Tiva, o fiev XoiBoprf-
#et? r) v^ptaOels 7rapaaravrco Bvo K
tojv ioftdKytav evopKovs, otl r/KOv-
aav vfipt^ofievov
rj XoiBopovfievov,
Kal 6 vfipiaas
rj XoiBopijaas airortv\yv-
80 TO) TOJ KOLVto XeTTTOV hp. K T) 6 aLTlOS
yevofievos rrjs fia^rfs diroTLvvvTW
rds avrds Bp. Ke rj
fir) avviTcoaav 1$ rovs
loffaK^ovs, fie^pts dv diroBwaiv.
Column II.
'Eai> Be tls d%pi 7r\r)ycJov eX6r), diroypa<j)ea{6)co
85 6 7rXr)yel<; irpbs tov lepea rj tov dvOiepea'
6 Be enrdvavKes dyopdv dyeTco Kal ^jrrj-
(j)(p
ol loftaKyoi KpeiveTcocrav Trporjyov-
fievov tov lepeoos, Kal irpoaTeifidcrOo}
irpos yjpovov fir)
elaeXOelv, oarov dv Bo-
go %r), Kal dpyvplov fiey^pt -)f Ke' . "Ecttco Be
Ta avTa eircTelfiLa Kal t<w BapevTL Kal
fir)
7re^eX66vT0 irapd toj lepel rj toj
dp-^i^aKyw, dXXd
Brffioaiq evKaXecrav-
Tf iiriTelfAia he eo-Tco Ta avTa tw vkoo~-
95
fjL(p
fir)
eK/3aX6vTi tovs fiayofievovs.
Et Be tis twv lo/3dK%c0v el8o)<; eirl tov-
to dyopdv 6<f>eiXovaav dyQrjvat
fir) a-
91]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 239
ZTravTTjcry,
dTroreiadrco ray kolvw Xe-
7TT0V 8p. v\ edv 8e direiQfi
TrpacrcropLe-
ioo vo<>, e^icrrco rS ra/nia KcoXvaac avrov
t?7? eio~68ov rfj<; et? to ^aic^elov pe-
XPW
av tnroool. 'Eay 8e rt? twv
elcrep^o/ubevcov to larjXvatov pur)
81801 toj lepel rj to) dvOtepet, elpyecr-
105 dco t>;? ecrrtacrect)?, fJLe^pL^ dv diro-
80I, koX irpaaaea6(D, ot(d dv Tpoirw
6 iepevs KeXevarj. M^Set? 8e 7r(p)ocr-
(jxovLT(0 firj iTTCTpiyjravTos tov le-
pea)<; rj tov dv0iepea)s, r) virevdwos
I IO eCFTW TO) KOLVCp Xeittov
8p.
A/.
(
Upevs 8e iirtTeXeiTco Ta? eOLpLOvs
XiTOvpyias o-Tt/3d8o<$ fcal dp,(f)LTr)-
pl8os V7rp7ra)<; teal tl0tco ty)v
tgov KdTaycoyicDV cnrov8r)v cttc-
115
/3d8i filav tcai deoXoytav, rjv r)p-
%CLTO ifC (f)lX0TLp,LCL$ 7TOL6LV 6 L-
paadpuevos Net/coyLta^o?.
f
O 8e dpyi-
$aicyp<s OveTCO ttjv Ovcriav tgo
0(p KOL TTJV 0~7TOv8r}v T106T(O
120 kcltci 8e/cdT7)v tov '^Xa<f)r)/3oXL-
Govos /jltjvos. Mepdov 8e yeivopii-
vcov aipeTco iepevs, dvdtepevs,
dpxif3aK%os, Tapuias, ftovKoXucos,
Aiovvcros, Koprj, YlaXaificov, 'A^>po-
ii$8eiTr), Hpo)Tvpv0p,o<;

to, 8e ovo-
pLdTa clvtgjv avvfcXrjpovcrOci)
ttclgi.
*09
8'
dv twv lo^d/c^cov Xd^rj tcXr}-
pov rj TLpur)v r) Ta^iv, ti0TO) to9 lo-
/Sa/c^ot9 GTrov8r)v diav Trjs Tafea)?,
1 307
dpL(ov, yevvrjaea)^, %owz>, i(j>r)/3eta9,
7roXetTe/a9,
pa(38o(fioplas,
/3ovXeta<;, d-
OXoOealas, iraveXXrjvos, yepovalas,
0o-/jLO0cria<;, ap%^9 ?y9 BrjwoTe ovv,
crvv0vaia<;, elprjvap^ia^, Upovei/cov,
135
/cat el Tt9 tI iirl to Kpelacrov lofiafcxos wv
TvyoiTO. JLv/coa/JLos 8e /cXr)pova0a) rj Ka0ia-
240 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. III.
[91
racrOco viro tov lepi(o<; eTrufrepcov rS okog-
/jlovvtc rj OopvfSovvTi TOV QvpGOV tov de-
ov' o5 Se dv TrapareOfj 6 Ovpcros im/cpel-
140 vavTos tov lepicos rj tov apy^ifiaicyov,
i^ep^eaOco tov eariaropelov. 'Eai/ Se d-
7Tl6{}, alperaxrap avrov e%co tov irvXod-
vo<$ ol KaTaaraOrjaofievoL virb twv
Upicov Xititoi, teal earco V7rv0vvo<;
145
rot? irepl twv fia^o/mevcov 7rpoarei-
lioi<$. Tafiiav Be alpetaOwaav ol loflaK-
yoi
tyijcfxp
et? hueriav, Kal 7rapaKafjb(3a-
virco 777509 dva>ypa<f)r)v rd rod Ba/c^et-
ou Travra Kal irapaBwaet ofiolcos to3
150 fier avrbv ivo/ieva) ra/jbia' irapeyeTto
Be oiKoOev to Oep/xoXv^vov rd$ re e-
vdras teal d/xcf)t,eTr]plBa Kal crTiftdBa
Kal oaat eOc/juoc tov Oeov r)fMepac Kal
r9 airo Kkrjpcov r)
Tetfioiv rj rd%e-
155
cov r)fjLepas.
AlpeiaOco Be ypafji/jLa-
rea, idv ftovXriTai, tw IBiq) klvBvvw'
avvKe^coprjaOco Be avroj r) ra/jitev-
tlktj o~7rovSrj, Kal aT(D dveicr$>opo<;
Tr)v BueTiav. 'Eai/ Be rt? reXevrrj-
160 or) I6(3afc)0<;, yeiveorOco are^avo^ av-
T60 ^e^(p)t -X-
e' , Kal Tot9 eir 11 a^rjaaat rc-
0eo~0co olvov Kepdfjuov ev, 6 Be
fir)
eiriTafyrjcras elpyeaOco tov olvov.
The Hall of the Iobacchi in which this inscription was found is doubtless
the icrTiardpeLou mentioned in 1. 141, called also Batcxelov 1. 101. This partly
occupied the site of an early shrine of Dionysus, identified by Professor
Dorpfeld with the Dionysion ev Ai/mvaLs (Mitth. xix,
1894, p. 147).
The inscription consists of two parts
;
a resolution of the Iobacchi to record
the old regulations of their society upon a stele, 11.
1
31
;
and the text of these
regulations, 11. 32end. The Iobacchi are an example of the private clubs for
religious purposes common in Greece. The date is probably in the later days
of Herodes Atticus (d. 177 a.d.). Cf. 1. 9.
2. 'Ap. can hardly be an abbreviation for anything but a Roman gentile
name, Arrius is the most probable. The archon Epaphroditus is mentioned
CIA in 1070, 4, but his exact date is not known.
3. earafxevovprobably only an illiterate mistake ; both accidence and
syntax are erratic in this inscription.
91]
DECREES: TRIBES, DEMES, ETC. 241
4. 6 a-rrodeLxdeis iepevs : the priest has the right of nominating his successor.
Aurelius Nicomachus, having been vicar 17 years and priest 23, resigned in the
interests of the society, so as to make way for Herodes, who then nominated
him as vicar.
8. BaKxeiov is used either for the society or its club-house (1. 101) ;
cf. 84
30 sqq. ; Ba/cxa is the name of the festival, 1. 43 ;
cf. 'Io/3<xKxeia, Dem. in Neaer.
1371.
9. KXa.
'HpwSfl.
This is probably the well-known Herodes Atticus; the
title KpaTKTTos is given officially to Roman senators and magistrates ; and the
circumstances suggest that the iepei/s was a man of great eminence, whose
appointment was purely honorary.
10. doy/mara. These decrees, referred to again in 11. 15, 16, etc., were
apparently preserved in ms, but not inscribed. They cannot be earlier, in their
present form, than the time of Hadrian, since the Panhellenic Council instituted
by him is referred to in 1. 132 ; but this may be an interpolation.
13. The TrpoaTdTrjs probably was the
"
patronus
"
or legal representative of
the society.
i^{ej367]<rav). This formula, with the exclamations following it, which looks
more like a journalistic report than an official document, is not uncommon in
late inscriptions; cf. D 607, 16 (Chalets in Euboea), and see Wilhelm Arch. Ep.
Mitth. aus Oesterr. xx p. 62, note 18. Cf. also the reports of proceedings in the
Roman senate, Scriptt. Hist. Aug., e.g., Vit. Alex. Sev. 6, 7
; Vit. Taciti, 5.
14. dvaKTTJaai (edd. av&KTrjaat., and a break after 56yp.a.Ta)
;
cf. CIA u 628, 13
aveKT\rf\<ja\TO rds] irarplovs reus deais dvcrlas.
20. The formulae here used recur to a great extent in the late decree of
Chalcis quoted above.
28. &rrcu ktX. This phrase fits the facts as already stated
;
the inscription
with its frame and pediment resembles a stele carved on the column.
35. doKi/xacrdri : cf. CIA in 23, 30 vbixos ipav[La]T<x>v ' [p.r]]8evl e[^]c<rro
(e)tcri[ei']ai [et's] tt]v aep.voT6\j\t]v avvodov rCou ipaviarCov ir[pV\v dv doKipiaadrj.
37. to (e)l(n)\ij(nov : cf. Hesych. elarjXotiaiow ti/xtj/xcl elaodov rj reXos, and
CIG 3173, 14 (Smyrna) : oi TreirX-qpuiKOTes ra {e)l<rrfX&<rta.
38. t /jlt) airb Trarpos. It was customary to reduce the entrance fee for
sons of members ; cf. IGSept. i 2808, 40 (Hyettus), with the note of D 740 ad
loc., where the son or representative of a member is elected free of charge
;
cf. 1. 55 below.
41. ^xpts ktX. This can only mean, as D says,
"
until they are of mar-
riageable age
"
;
cf. tempestiva viro of a girl. Boys are admitted at half fees.
42. tols t ivdras ktX. :
"
on the ninth of every month, and the anniversary
of the foundation, and the Baccheia, and on any special occasion for a festival,"
the last as opposed to annual or recurring festivals.
46. p-nvt-aiav : an Zpavos or club subscription was usually paid monthly;
cf. Harpocr. s.v. epaviarris.
48. TTJs art^ddos: cf. 11. 52, 112, 114, 152. From these passages it appears
that the oTt/3ds was the name of a definite festival, which is apparently identical
with Bc.KxeTa 1. 43. Srt/3ds properly means a bed of rushes or leaves (see L. and
S.), such as was used on a campaign, or by those "camping out" in the
Asclepieum (Ar. Plut.
663) ; such were used as couches at the Lacedaemonian
feast called Koms (Ath. iv 138 f., 140 f.), and Herodes entertained citizens and
R. II.
16
242 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. III.
[91
strangers at the Dionysia in the ceramicus iirl <rri/3ct5wj> klttov Philostr.
Vitt. Soph, ii
3, p. 549. Probably the name here belongs properly to the
'
pulvinar ' provided for the gods, cf. 1. 124 ; and hence is transferred to the
festival.
49. oi to; \pr)(f)L<TiJ.aTL euyeypapL/xevoi are interpreted by D as the officials
mentioned : Maass understands the whole body of Iobacchi, of whom a list was
to have been appended. The vagueness of the word evrovelrwaav leaves it
ambiguous whether the official act of excluding others or the general duty
of attending is here prescribed.
50 sqq. On the constructions of
x
w
P^> x^P^ V> X
W
P^
rj 6tl, to none of which
the present usage exactly corresponds, see L. and S. D supplies el before
ccpbbpa.
51. Presumably, if a near relation was a candidate for admission, a member
might absent himself to allow free discussion.
55. 'upbs waTs evidently means the son of a member
;
such are admitted on
special conditions, if domiciled apart from their fathers. It follows that
ol airb Trarpos, 1. 39, means those succeeding to membership on their father's
death. i^wriKos nadeadeis : domiciled away from his father's house.
61. 8ol: this and the similar forms below, 1. 102 sqq., are clearly sub-
junctives formed on the analogy of contracted verbs in -ow.
evypoLcpofxivov is probably middle ; it is in any case bad grammar, being a
loose genitive absolute, and must apply to the priest, the drafter of the decree
having become confused by the preceding alternation of nominative and
dative.
62. ra
x
co
PV
ffavTa t
'*
T0^ Tt is an awkward expression
;
it can hardly mean
anything but
"
the contributions in each respective case."
65. tovs [iepi(T/jLovs : the parts assigned for impersonation ;
cf. 1. 121 sqq.
72. rj (e)i<repx<rdai : "or to enter (without paying a fine)
"
;
(/X77), suggested
by Maass and D, is not required for the sense.
74. K\iaiav: this implies a "feast of tabernacles" such as was not un-
common. Cf. Kaibel Ep. Gr. 810, 7 : Bolkxov /cAiert'cus aweariov.
76. irapavTaveTw. The nearest parallel to this strange dialectical form is
(TTaweadcju (Crete) CIG 2556, 66.
80. Xeirrov. Mommsen (Herm. v 136) shows that when the denarius
superseded the old Attic drachma, its approximate equivalent, the name
drachma was retained to signify the old obol = l/6 drachma (cf. 96 note, p. 254).
This is here called the Xeirrov (vo/ahx/acl).
94. t$ evKoafMip : cf. 1. 136
;
this official was evidently charged with the
preservation of order in the assemblies.
102. airoSol : see 1. 61.
107. irpoa<puveLT(i) : "address the assembly," cf. wpoacpwqfAaTiKbs \6yos =a,
public oration, Dion. H. 5.
112. rrt/3d5os /cat &/ji(pi.eT7)pi8os : genitive of time.
114. rw*' Karaycoyiu)v :
"
the festival of the Keturn
"
of Bacchus to Athens.
Such celebrations of absence and return of a deity are common among all
peoples, especially with divinities, like Bacchus, associated with vegetation. At
the Great Dionysia, the statue of Dionysus Eleutherios was escorted to the
Academy and back.
115. deo\oyiav. a sacred discourse or sermon.
91]
DEGREES: TRIBES, BEMES, ETC. 243
121. fiepQu 8e yeivo/j.epwi'. At first sight this suggests /j.epi<rfjLoi, 1. 65. But
the context hardly admits such an interpretation. Meprj must therefore mean
the distribution of portions of the victim, which are to be taken, not by all the
Iobacchi, but by the priests and by certain members chosen by lot (1. 126) to
impersonate certain gods for the occasion.
123. The (3ovko\ik6s is evidently one of the officials. Cf. fiovKoKot as a name
of a Bacchic thiasus at Pergamon (D 743) and elsewhere in Asia Minor.
124. Persephone is often associated with Bacchic rites
;
Palaemon's mother,
Leucothea, is mentioned in Orph. Hymn lxxiv 1, 2 as dpiirretpa Aiovvaov.
Aphrodite, as goddess of fruitfulness of vegetation (see Boscher, p. 398), comes
appropriately into the same cycle. We have no means of identifying the
divinity here called npwTe6pvdp.os.
127. Kkripov : an
'
inheritance
'
; there is of course no reference to <twk\t)-
povcrdw in the line before. On all occasions of honour, advancement, etc., an
Iobacchus is to treat his fellows.
130.
x&
v >
intermediate between birth and coming of age, evidently refers
to the ceremony of acknowledging a boy at the Feast of the Choes ; cf. CIA
in 1342.
131. pa/35o0o/sias : being an officer to keep order in the theatre, Schol. Ar.
Pac. 733.
132. wav^Wrjvos: member of the Panhellenic council instituted by Hadrian,
cf. IGSept. i 106, 12 (Megara), CIA in 534, 7 ; 68 13.
yepovaias : the sacred yepovala of Eleusis is the only one with this title which
an Athenian was likely to belong to. Cf. CIA in 702.
133. deafxodeaias : the name thesmothetae is applied to all nine archons in
later times
;
cf, CIA in 716, 3 : ap^avra rr\v rod BacrtXews ev deafioderais
apxhv.
134. avvdvTcu, D thinks, are officers of some sacrificial guild. The dp-qvapxns
is a municipal
'
peace officer ' of the imperial period. He appears in the Oxy-
rhynchus Papyri, e.g., G and H. Pt. I lxxx
7,
and in cxli 5 mention is made of
an dp-qvapx^ov.
136. For the middle tvxolto Maass compares Hymn. Orph. xliv 6 : rifxas
rev^afxiv-q Trap' 6.yavrjs llepaecpoi'eirjs. On evKocr/xos see 1. 94.
144. Linroi : these subordinate attendants suggest the Sileni who are
mentioned in the Pergamene inscription, D 743, 29. Sileni and Satyrs often
appear in half equine shape on early Ionic and Attic vases ; e.g. the Francois
vase (Baumeister Denkm., fig. 1883).
151. depfi6\vxvov : the word is otherwise unknown, but must mean oil for
the lamps, cf. D 633, 9 irapex^v 8k rep de...\cuov iirl /3u/xdu /cat (rx^aj /cat
(nrovdrjv .
160. aTe<pai>os, cf. Kaibel, Epigr. Gr. 153, 11 are/xfia 5e [/xol irX^avro]
Aiwvticrov diaawrai.
162
Section IV. Imperial Ordinances, Laws, Edicts and
other documents.
92. A slab of white marble, from the Elgin Collection. CIG 354 ; CIA in
39; BMI 50 (a small fragment only is in the British Museum).
Alphabet, type 2
; but X is X
2
,
is

2
, ir is 7r
4
,
<f>
is
<p
6
.
he^ovrat to apyvpcov, eiriTipbiov opi^ercocrav
avrols Kara ttjv rrjs a7re\i\6Las a^iav. e[dv] h\\\ ol ira-
pa8o[Q4\vTes Lcr(f>epeiv fir) ftovXayvrca, [el]ra
v7Tv6vvol earcoaav irp&Tov fjuev
e/carocrTLaifov toko)[v
5
dcjy ov heov TTOurjaacrOai rr)v tao(S)ov ovk eTTOirjaav-
to, fie^pi pir]vwv aWcov Svo rrjs reXevraias airo-
Socreax;, fjLerd Be tovs firjva? tovs (Bvo) tovtovs, el fievoiev
fir) ireiQofxevoi, airo^oaOcoaav ol dpyvporafiLao fiera
rod KtjpvKO
1
; Tfl9 V7ro0r}fca<;, e{^6v)r(ov avrds e^ovaiav
io \)vo~aa6ai e^rj/covra r)/jLepo3v 7rpo3rov fxev rwv BeBco/cor-
a)v, elra /cai tojv eyyvrjrcov oiTives V7rev0(v)vo<e>[i tQ>v
<,TWV~> 6VOTjO~av{T(D)V ocpeXov virevdavou tuiv evderjaarwv
. . itjrjfcovra rjfiacpcov a [o^lXovcn KTLO-i[y.
This document appears to be a fragment of an imperial ordinance or rescript.
The form r\^a.ipdv 1. 13 for i)p:epu)v seems to show that the inscription belongs to
the time of Hadrian or even a later period. The only example of cu for e which
Meisterhans Gr. p. 34 can quote before Hadrian's time is 'EpiKcuevs CIA in 1100,
13 (about 110 a.d.). Then come 'EpiKaieus, ib. 1023 m 11 (138/140 a.d.),
'Aioficuevs ib. 1023 v, 5 (138/140 a.d.) etc., e\aLov = \tov ib. 170, 3 (2nd cen-
tury a.d.), Kcu/cAuTi = /ce/cAi;0i ib. 171, a 7 (2nd or 3rd century a.d.) and later
examples. Cf. 68 Col. n 16
;
93 9, 94 29, 95 4.
The inscription deals with certain persons who have to pay (elacptpeiv)
revenues to the public exchequer. These appear to be the farmers of the taxes,
who had of course, in all cases, to find security up to the amount of their
contract, together with sufficient sureties. When these farmers are called upon
by the magistrates who receive the revenue
{$ex
ovTaL T apyvpiov 1.
1)
to pay in
the moneys {woi-qaaadaL ttjv e'iaodov) for which they are liable, should they
93]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LA WS, EDICTS, ETC. 245
neglect the summons (aTreidla), they are to be proportionally fined (1. 2). If ol
irapadodivres, i.e. reported delinquents, still refuse to meet their liabilities;
three months grace will be given, interest being paid upon the debt at 12 per
cent. (e/caToo-ricuoi tokol, 1. 4,
=centesimae usurae, a Latinism which in Attic
would be represented by tokos iirl dpax/u-v)-
After three months the apyvpoTafiicu
are to sell by auction (11.
7
9)
the securities of the defaulter, right being
reserved both to defaulter and surety to redeem their property within 60 days.
8. dpyvporafjiiai. Cf. 93 66. Perhaps the title was invented to prevent the
office from being confused with that of the Koman Quaestors, for which the
word tcl/xIcli was appropriated.
11. rQuiudeTjadvir^v:' the defaulters.' Thecopy has
ENAEHZANAON,
where the v5 = vt is possibly another anticipation of modern pronunciation.
The words that follow in 1. 12 in the faulty copy are possibly a careless repetition
by the copyist of parts of 11. 1113. For [6]<pi\ovo-i cf. 93 57.
93. On an anta behind the portico of 'Adrfvd apxnytTis. Spon Itin. T. in
P. ii,
p.
24 sqq.
; Wheler Journey into Greece p. 389 (cf. Chandler Inscr.
Syllab.
p.
xxx)
;
CIG 355
;
Dittenberger, CIA in 38. Cyriac and Muratori have
the first three lines as copied
'
ad Hadriani arcum ' and
'
in palatio Hadriani '
;
whence Boeckh infers that there may have been duplicates at Athens, one in
Olympieum, the other in the agora.
Alphabet, type 2 ;
tt is ?r
4
, <p is
7
, xp is
\p
2
. Iota mutum omitted.
H7-138
KN0 '\hpiavov
A.D.
ol to e\aiov yewpyovvT<; to TpiTov
KaTa(f)peT(i)crav, rj to oyhoov ol to,
lirirdp-^ov ywpia tcl virb tov (piatcov
5
irpadevTa kkt7}/jL6i>ol' jxova yap e-
Kelva to h'uccuov tovto eyei. /caTacfye-
peTcocrav $e dfjua too ap^aaOai gvvkq-
jxiStjs
KJaTa fiepos, 7rpo<; \6yov tov
<rvyKop.ii]o/j,evov, tols i\eojvcu[s
io oh-ivcs del] irpovoovatv tt}[s
8T]fioa-ias
xp^a-]?. a7roypa<pia0co[a-av Se
.... ttjs] avvKOfjahr)^ irpb-
S tovs Tap.as Ka]t tov tcrjpvica Svo
i8ovT<$ VTroypa-
15
<pev. [r\] 8e d[-Koypaj>]r) eaTO) /jueTa opKOv
/cat irocrov
avveicoixLcrev to irdv,
tcai otl hta hovXov TovBe
17 d7re\6v-
Oepov Tovhe- iav 8e TrcoXrjar) tov
246 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IV.
[93
Kapirov o SecnroTrjs tov ^copiov, rj 6
20 yecopyos rj o Kapiroovr)^. diroypa^e-
aU(o be 7rpo? clvtovs /cat o eir ea-
j(oyfj
7rL7rpda/ccov, iroaov iriirpaaicei
/cat tlvl kclI ttov
6pfi[i]l to \tt\XoIov. B\\
diroypa<$)r)<; %o)/n? 7r[nrpa<rKwv] eV
e'fa-
25 ycoyfj, kclv S(f>eiXev r)
/ca[Tvi]voxws
TT) 7T0Xei, <TTpeCT0(D TOV 7Tpa6[ivTO$'
Be yjrevBels diroypacfids 7roor)cra[s
rj ra<; irepl tt}? o-WKopuBrjs [rj -r]a[s irepl
tt}? i^aycoyrjf;, rj virep ywpiov [o urj ira_
30 pa (j)L<T/cov eirpcaro
fxrj
'lTrirdp^tio-
v [o]i> oyBoov /caTveytc(t)v, a[repi-
<rQ(o, to 8 T]fjLio-v 6 irryi'fO'a? \a/i-[p]a[vT.
8s
8'
av 7r' ^a-ytoj'y^^ a/;a7T07[pairra ? irpit]Tai ....
eipeeip,
35
Tcov a7r[o]crre[p ....
o? afTo? ?) oz>
av ^XrjTai, Tmrpao-KjeTft) puev eg a7T-
o7pa<}>T|s, t]^9 Be TL/jir)(; [t]o [fiiv rj-
fAicrv Kare-^erco, ei /jbrjiro) BeB(o/cev, r) Xa/m-
40 fiaverG), to Se rj/jucrv ecrrco Brj/jLoaiov.
ypa(pe<T0a) Be koi o e/jiiropos, ri e^dyei
tcai iroaov irap eicdaTov iav Be fir) diro-
ypayjrdfjLvo<; cfxopadf}
ifcirXecov, arepe-
aOw iav Be eiarXevaas (f)0darj teal /nrjvv-
45
@V->
ypa<f>0'@
( kcm T
fl
iraTplBi avrov virb tov
Srj/jiov tcd/JLoi. Ta? Be irepl tovtcov Bltcas
fAXP
L
A
1 ^ TrzvTrjKOVTa d/n(f)opecov r) /3ov-
Xr)
fiovrj tcpeiveTco, rd Be virep tovto fxerd
rov BrjfMov. edv Be tcov e/c tov irXoiov tis
50 fJLr)Vvar), errdvayices 6 GTpaTrjyos Tjj itjrjs
r)p,epa /3ovXr)v ddpoiaaTco, el
6
inrep tovs
irevTrjKovTa dp,(f>opei<; eir) to /JLe/jirjvv-
jxevov, ifCfcXrjcrLav teal BiB6a6(o T<p eXey-
%avTi to rj/jbtcrv. edv Be eKKaXear)Tai tls r)
55
ep,e rj tov dvdviraTov, yeipoToveiTto crvv-
Bikovs 6 S77/ZO?. iva Be dirapaiTr]Ta r) Ta
KaTa toov KaKOvpyovvTwv e7T[T]etyiu[a], ret-
93]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LAWS, EDICTS, ETC. 247
/<t?7? t? to hr^fjLocnov Kara(f>po-0o) ro kXai-
ov, r)Tis dv ev
rfj
yoopa
y.
el Si irore ev(popt-
6o a? eXaiov yevofikvris irXeov etr) to i/c rwv
rplrwv rj oy&ocov fcaracf)pofievov r[r\]<; et?
b\ov t[6]v eviavrov hrifjuoaia's ^pe/a?, ee-
ara) toi^ fi[kv
ye<tipy]ovo~Lv to eXcuov r) irav
rj /juepos Sevrepap diro'ypatyrjv iroir\craybk-
65 voi^ koX hrjfjboaiov ro re ofyeiXopevov
iroaov icrrlv . . . . o ot eXatwvac r) o[l] dpyv-
pora/jLua[i] ov (BovXovtcu Trap avrwv \aj3elv,
<pv\d[^rTiiv
^era
70 cfk
This is a law prescribing that oil-cultivators shall sell to the state for its
uses $rd of the produce, or in the case of some estates, --th of the produce ; if
the proportions of ^rd and |-th more than sufficed for the state's needs (e.g. for
the gymnasia), the proportions might be reduced. Eegulations are also laid
down concerning the sale for export (to TrcrrpdaKeLv tir' e^ayoyrj) and the export
itself. Cf. Boeckh St.
3
1 54 sq. It is to be noted that the proportion of oil
claimed by the state was in no sense a vectigal or tax ; the state merely retained
the right of buying it.
I. Boeckh conj. Ke(\ei>i) i>6(/li.os) de(afiQv)
'
XbpLavov; D, KeKevei vofios deov
' Adpiauov and thinks that the words may have been inscribed after the death of
Hadrian.
3. KCLTcupepeTwo-av : they are to deposit it for the use of the state, to be paid
for as arranged.
4. ra virb rod (pio-Kov irpadevTa. Philostratus, Vitt. Soph. 11 1, 2, alludes to
the confiscation by the Imperial treasury of the property of Hipparchus,
grandfather of Herodes Atticus.
7. cip.a rep ap^ao-dai kt\. They are to deliver their quota as soon as they
begin the harvest, field by field (/caret p.epos) in proportion to the amount
harvested, to the public buyers of oil, whose business it is to provide for the
state needs (cf. 1. 63), for gymnasia, games, baths, sacrificial rites, the prytaneum.
9. For \u>vr)s = e\aidovT]s cf. 92.
II. The cultivators are required to declare the amount (Boeckh doubtfully
supplies tov Kapirbv before rrjs o-vuKopudris) of the produce harvested to the
Tap.iai. After 5vo perhaps &Troypa<pds might be restored. Cf. 15 39.
14. idovres viroypcMpev : 'after they have seen it entered
'(?).
16. kcu woaou kt\. :
'
and shall state how much in all deponent has
harvested.
'
18. eav 8e kt\. :
'
and shall declare whether it is the landlord of the estate
or the cultivator or the oil-merchant who is selling the produce.'
21. eV e^ayuyfj. On the supposed prohibitions of Solon against exports,
see Boeckh St.* i 54.
248 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IV.
[93
30. rj vrrtp xwptou kt\. :
'
or if he has delivered an eighth part only (instead
of a third) on account of any estate, other than that which belonged to
Hipparchus, which he did not purchase from the Imperial treasury.'
39 sq. These lines seem to deal with the case of a man who has sold oil
without having declared and, having subsequently confessed, is entitled to keep
as a reward for his confession half the value, if he has not yet surrendered it,
or to receive such half, the remainder going to the state.
50. 6 <TTpaT7)y6s : sc. iwi rd ovXa. See 36 19.
54. eKKaXeiadai here = 'provocate ad.''
55. avvbiKOL was the name of extraordinary functionaries at Athens,
appointed soon after the overthrow of the Thirty Tyrants to exercise jurisdiction
in disputes concerning confiscated property. Possibly the vvvbiKoi of our
inscription were officers of this kind.
56. airapairr)T a:
'
inexorably enforced.
'
57. Tei/xTjs kt\. : the quota of oil which is to be delivered over to the state
is to be sold at the price current in Atticanot at an insignificant price as
might happen in a forced sale. For the orthography of Tei/*rjs cf. 67 7. For
is = is see 91 and Meisterhans Gr. 48. The prevalence of the change dates from
Tiberius ; but much earlier examples, perhaps in some cases errors, are found.
66. dpyvporapiat : 92 8.
94. A slab of Pentelic marble; H. 6 ft.
;
Br. 2 ft.; Th. 7 in. Pittakis
thinks that about 120 lines have been lost from the beginning. Formerly in
the pavement of the church called MeydXo Mouaarripi, afterwards transferred to
the Portico of Hadrian. CIG 356 ;
Pittakis 'E<p. 520
;
CIA in 48.
Alphabet, type 8. Iota mutum omitted throughout.
1.
5
fin. . . . [t]&> ch/#[/3]a>[7rft>] or av6[p\<i)\irlv(p
6 atT(t)[v] //,....
7
n-JpofTepJoi;
8 r\]/jiipa fca\i[v ....
9
w]a[p]a8vcTec"[8]a[i]
(?)
*
el
[v][p]-
IO 6VTTOL6LCLS 1 I V(f)pOCr[y]vT) .... 6lVafJLVCll CLVCLp
12 [fxera ?]
(j)povTiSo[<; /c]a0[i]i^ovr6<;, firjro Kara r[v]^r]v ....
13
^ev/xevov
vcfS
rj/xoiv \adoi, hi ov 7r[p]o(f)[ave2(ra
r)
7r[p]07TTLa t[o>V
p]o[v]X-[o|i.6v]w[v cUl] i[tri^]ou\veLV rots virapyovatv twv
avaiTiwv tivcls [civ d7r]o[\]e[o-iv ?
15 rots [eTri$]aWovcriv [pr\]fu,aa iv (prjOrjixev hel\y S]iop6a)-
Or/vat, .... apeaK\ei ?
et? t[i]v] irpb cy kclX. 'OfCTCofipitov rfjs rJyu-eTe/oa?
S^A-aS^] v7raTLa$
94]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LAWS, EDICTS, ETC. 249
A.D
305
Ktto-Tavriov teal ra\p]tOL> Maf[t]/^[i]a^oi) tgov ^eftao-TGov to
irefJLTTTOv, dirb irapaar)pi[i]ojaeG)[v . .
tivo]? [t]^a^T[c]a? t[v]^/t;9, Kpiaeaiv vTroj3Xr)6(e)vTe<; tottov
[t]oj rafjLteia) i[ir]o[Cr)]aa[v
o[i>]t<h t?)? [ij]/xerepa? ei)cre/3eta? Tat? evepyeatats eXev6[t-
20 pev6ooa]t, teal tov Xol7t[o]v
[8*]
pLr)$epLi[a]v tcaOoXov tolovto-
rpoirov TafJbiaKrjV Bio[y)^t\a-iv
r]a/Ltta>[v, tv\]a/3(io[v]Ta[i \]t[a]z/ ? [irjaoa oYtf[ij]i> t[tj] Biavola
t/)? rjfierepas (piXav9pG07ria<z
K]aTa[v]r[TJcrat ? wo-tc] dirb tovtgov tgov [y]p[a]p,pLdTOJV Sto^X?;-
Orjvai Tivas, direp rj e/c
-----
fiera tt)v TeXevTrjv ifcSt/cr/aec iairovhaKoos, aire-
X6]^?
GOV
[
ft]4vr]
[a>]cr7T6/9 et? enropdv /cepBovs rj fcal
Biapjrayojv r)
dfJLTp[r\-
-25 to<; tgov K[ai]<x[ap]taz/&)i/ K\jx.K\or)6eia r) iirdpaTos eirXdcraTO.
tva Be tgov tolov-
TOTpOTTGOV B I0y^\\r)CT eGOV 01 t\(\t\01 6/C pi^GOV ifCfC07r6VT?
[ajet dv fcaT[a]/co/jLi[cr6]Gdcriv,
ycyvGt)<TtcT tov rjpueTepov Oecrpiov 7rpo[K]e^copr)Kvai, T<2?
eVro[\ds], go(tt6 airdaas fiev
ir]avT\(c<? tus irapaa[ri\pitoo[fr\eis Ta? et? ttjv TTpoeiprj/jLevrjv
rjpLepav ev Tat? tov Ta-
puteLov Ta^eatv a7ropLpievr)KVta<; ev /3t/3\.[i]ot? errfc] Bi(f)0epe<;
rj Kal ^apTat? 17 e-
30 v oh StJttot ovv ypap,p,aTeiot<;, ev6eoo<; et? to aTpaToiratBov
diroaTa\r)vai hrjXa-
Brj, Kal pueTa TavTas t? tt}? [r]/z.eTeoa? et)cre/3eta?
(f>tXav-
dpGOirias, ft)[s] dv pur), diro-
pi\evovTGOV tgov TOLOVTOTpoTTGOv ypapbpi\a^T\i\ia)v irapd Tats
TTpoeiprjpLevaLS Ta^eatv,
too avvrjOet Tpoirw [t]o0 del a . . . . ecv tov[s r\\i\eTepovs
eirap^iKOv? Tot? Kaicrapia-
vols iTpo(f>daet<;
y
p,[e]TaB6[l-]r)
(?).
MeTa TavTa Be ov/c aXXcos,
et pr\ Ik [fyjavepoov
35
a7ro[8]et[fe]a)i> /cat [y]pa^/xa[Tet]a)^ oo#c3[s] eTriyeypapL-
p,ev[<]v, et? to TapuiaKov
tf[a]A.e[i]cr#at 8t/ca[cr]T^ptoz/, [|i]6Va>i> ? Be tgov r)pbeTepwv
8t)\goo-gov ttj BiBaaKaXei[a xp^^ai ? twv
e[ir<r]TaXyLtei/a)^, tV et [|iv tis] tou Xoittov opboico Tporra) tov
r)p,erepov Tapaei\ov
250 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IV.
[94
tois \o<yi<r\r]aiOL<; ? 7rapaar)fjLt[(acris] 7rpocnropl<cra>o-eLV,
/jLrjSevbs
ef
6v6fiaro[s] a[v^ra>v Bio-
'yXr)0evTO(; airaarcu ets* to tj
fx\iri\pov crTparoiraiBov evdecos
a
r
Troara\waiv oOev a/co-
40 Xovdcos tc5 6eo-/jL(p rr}<; [ij]/u,6Tepa9 (f>o\av6p(07rla<; /carao-KO-
7retT[cu]. JLav Tivi airo rov-
tov rod tltXov twv 7rapa[crr)\fj,[i<a(re]a)v Bio^\r)o~L<; avvKet-
vrjdfj, Belv avrov evTvyelv
tw tov rjye/uiovos r) koX twv 7rdp^cov BtKaarrjpi(p' wv rrjs
a.7ro(f)dcrco<; ee-
ve^deicr?]*;, /cat rod dhu6>iav dcfriara/jLevov irpovoia yl-
yvoiTo, /cat /card tovtco[v,
ova\y\p dv iv
rf)
irporepa avOahta Stafiivecv avvarer),
ev[r\ovLa
rfj
7rpoo-r]fc[ov-
45
~V V
[^jfcBtKia yiyvoiTo.
This is an edict of Constantius Chlorus and Galerius Maximianus, belonging
to 305 a.d.
,
their fifth consulship (11. 16, 17). The subject is the annoyances
caused by the Caesariani in the matter of confiscations. The Caesariani,
sometimes called Caesarienses and Catholiciani, were attendants or assistants of
the imperial procurator. See Facciolati Lex. s.v. The decree orders that
certain
'
irapaarfixeabaeLs^ which up to a. d. xin cal. Oct. of the year 305 a.d. had
remained in the quaestorium, should be sent to the camp (i.e., ace. to Boeckh,
the camp of Galerius Maximianus Caesar, whom Maximianus Augustus had
put in command of the East). When Constantius and Galerius entered upon
their fifth consulship they were still Caesars, while Diocletian and Maximianus
the elder were Augusti. But in 11. 16, 17 the two former are called Se^ao-ro^
whence it is clear that this inscription was engraved after the abdication,
in 305 a.d., of Diocletian and Maximianus the elder. See Gibbon Rom. Emp.
ch. xiii, and for the distinction between the titles Augustus and Caesar, ibid.
ch. iii.
The word Trapao-rHueiuais, as Boeckh shows from Dig. xlviii 17 and the
Graeco-Latin Glosses (Ducange s.v.), means 'note' or 'annotation.' These
'
notes ' were made in the search for accused persons, whose property, unless
they surrendered themselves, had to be confiscated ; and it was in the use
of these notes that the officials had acted vexatiously.
1215. In these lines complaint is made that the rashness of those who
are constantly desirous of plotting against property might ruin some innocent
people : we thought it right, say the emperors, that reform should be effected
by fitting words.
16. The Boman notation of date is found in a Greek inscription as early as
170 B.C., IGSept 1, 2225 A 2 (Thisbe).
1620. The general purport seems to be as follows : provision is to be
made that those who as the notes show, in consequence of some untoward
chance, having been unfairly defeated in trials (? Kpicecnv vTro^XyjOeures) have
95]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LAWS, EDICTS, ETC. 251
'
afforded opportunity for the treasury,' may,
'
by the benefit of our righteousness,'
be set free, and for the future may be altogether exempt from such vexatious
treatment at the hands of the fiscal officers. The expression tottov ry rapne'np
eiroi-qaau seems to be a rendering of a Latin formula, Cod. Justinian x 1 (de iure
fisci) 5 : Prohibitum est, cuiuscunque bona, qui
fisco
locum fecisse existimabitur,
capi priusquam a nobis forma fuerit data. Et ut omni provisionis genere
occursum sit Caesarianis. &c. The words are those of Diocletian and Maximianus
at about the same date as that of our inscription.
21. Between lines 20 and 21 a whole line appears to have been omitted.
2125. Fiscal officers are hereby cautioned against opposition to the
intention of 'our imperial benevolence.' By tovtojv tCov ypa/x/j.a.TU)i> may be meant
the TrapaavfieLLoaeLS.
24. dia-irep kt\. :
'
as in order to sow the seed for lucre or even plunder the
immeasurable accursed malignity of the Caesariani fabricated.'
26. tItXoi: perhaps
'
subjects
'
or
'
causes.' KaT[a.]KOfii[<T9]uHTii> : perhaps
4
may be removed.
'
29. Ta^eatu: perhaps
'
records.
'
29. ev /3t/3\t'ois kt\. :
'
in books, parchments, or papers, or in any document
whatever.' Probably dupdepes corrected by edd. to dufrdepais, and ovvvrkn corrected
to (rvuffTairj, and conversely arpaToiraLdou 11. 30, 39, corrected to CTpaToirebov,
and possibly also a8t.KeLai> 1. 43, are not due to the engraver's error ; cf. 91.
33. a .... etc: qu. a[fl]eiv or, if there is room, a[v^dp]eiv?
38. e ovd/iaros avrCbv. Probably a translation of earum nomine,
'
on their
account.' 40. airb toijtov tov tLtXov :
'
under this head.'
42. tov ijye/xouos. The word denotes
'
the governor or procurator of a
province.' Cf. Matth. 27, 2, Acts 23, 24.
u>v tt)s airofidaeus kt\. :
'
whose verdict having been published, both let
thought be taken for the person who refrains from injustice, and against
those persons, whosoever may be known to persist in their former stubbornness,
let vengeance be exacted with befitting vigour.' Can cvvar^v be a Latinism for
'
constet ' ? Latinisms quite as odd occur in the Herculaneum Kolls.
95. A fragment now in the Museum of the Archaeological Society at
Athens. CIA in 57.
Alphabet, type 5 : -k is 7r
4
, a in lines 8 sqq. is (T
3 ; f
and
<f>
are missing. The
numeral sign
s~', 1. 12, appears on the stone as
f^
;
>|< denotes denarii. Iota
mutum is sometimes omitted.
O Krjpvg t["1S
'ApeCov ira-yov
Pov-
XrjS /CCU a,)[x
i
P
^s SUpao-rwv Kal
2e/3acrTTrJs
[oUfas
OT^S AtOiLta[lVS K TWV ISlWV 8&>K
5 TO) G"ULVOTa\j^
o-uvcSpCu) tuv 'Ap-
O7TCtytT0j[v
ird<ra$(?) -ras v*iro"ypa<|>-
cras Sajpedi?
. . p/rj]i/09 [l]:[ciorTov ? . . . .
252 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IV.
[95
nIONKA
firjvo[9
]
e^o[s?
io \ri\fX^rovTa[\. airavTes] oi Apeoiray^lrai
6T0U? ^efaTJof fJLTjva iv 7TpVTav[eC(o (rdrr\<riv ?
^kcutto]?
-)f
S"'.
rfj
Be [](i)8e/caTr] [t]g5V %/cipcov e[Ka<rros ttj
yev]ed\i(p /Jiov rffjuepa
6/jLo[l]o><; e/ca<TTo[<s ....
'i\ica(TTO<s
-fcyB'.
/3ov\o/jlcic \Z\ihoa6cu,
15 k\7rl to r/pa>6v
fjiov
K*\tyd\ai\o\v
The inscription consists of a fragment of a testamentary disposition made by
the Herald of the Council of the Areopagus and High-priest of the Emperor and
the Imperial House in favour of the a-e/xvoTaTov awidpiov of the Areopagites.
One of the provisions appears to be (1. 11) that at the end of the year, trovs
vearov, entertainment shall be provided in the Prytaneum from the legacy for a
month long. There is nothing to indicate the date
; another example of a Will,
CIA in 59, is as late as the time of M. Aurelius.
1. Krjpvi;. The importance of this officer may be judged from the fact that
his name immediately follows those of the Thesmothetae ; cf. CIA 111 1005, 15.
4. Aio/ua[ietfs : see 92.
5. The appellation awedpiov applied to the Areopagites appears to have
been convertible with that of
fiovXr)
or 8iKa<TT7)pioi>.
10. \\rf\ix\l/ovTai. On this form, which may be due to a confusion between
Ionic Xd/x^-o/xat and \-qtpofiai, see H. W. Smyth Ionic Dialect, p. 136. It occurs
in the New Testament and in Lycian inscriptions CIG 4244, 6, 4247, 20,
4253, 15, and in the Papyr. du Louvre, xiv 47.
12. By Xidpuv (2/cipa) seems to be meant the Skirophoria celebrated on the
12th of Skirophorion (cf. Schol. Ar. Eccl. 18) and not, as A. Mommsen {Feste,
p. 313) thinks, a part of the Thesmophoria which were celebrated in Pyanepsion.
14. Before the
5'
on the stone stands
|~~.
So in CIG 1992 (Thessalonica),
3265 (Smyrna) we find -)f
~2_ 4> = dyudpia <p' , where similarly the
Z.
is used
merely as a mark of separation. Cf. for another use of the symbol 91 1 57, n 99.
96. Built into the church of Havayia Ilvpynbrt<T(ra are six slabs of white
marble, on four of which all trace of letters has disappeared, while the other
two are inscribed each in three columns. On these latter however the lacunae
are so numerous that we have thought it better to give a specimen only of
the more intact portion of the first stone. Eustratiades Eph. nov. 415
;
Th. Mommsen Herm. v, p. 129 sqq. ; CIA in 61.
(.For the forms of
letters see the facsimile tables at the end.)
Slab A, Column 11,
1438.
(Note. The sums given at the end of the long lines, without any break, are
totals of the sums in the several paragraphs.)
K\. ITa^^[vx]o?
X
W
P'
j
Ig>vi>&m(v) 7rpo9 too
-)f' 6^7rf
. .
15 dv8po(f)6v(p K(>vw -)f[a]</3 . .
96]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LAWS, EDICTS, ETC. 253
eaycuria^ 'OpeaSft)(j')
-)fX*|V]
0"%aoTr)-
ptwv Barr/cri,
-)f
' acrv 'AeToO
7rpo9 tg3 K.op(v)co$dX(p -)(- apvf
AP^S
'
AfxireXovpyoov /cat Xv/ca-
20 fjueivov
'
AP[}l]ovol
-)f
' 0.^7
AP&S
ofi(ov)
KX. Aa/AO) r) teal ^vva/ndrr}
x^P-
Az/- -X-Toe
/cvXrjac /ecu 'AypvXrjcri, irpd<; tw
<t>X. <I>iXa
X
W
P-
^VTTpiwv Aa/jLTTTpaat %' ap/ee
25
-)f
cr7ra
AP ^S
(^/3[d]tr&)i/09 Aafxirrpaau
-X- Tt/3 < (dpLCOCTLO) 7T/90? Tc5 Mvp/JiTJ-
kl zeal aXXou %&>/). fxepovs rpirov
-X-
<Xa
AP S
[ojiov-
KX. ^HLXevOepiov
x
w
P'
Hv/ayou /cat Kco-
-)f^>
30 fjLooSoov UaXXrjvrjcn iv fjuecro-
yL(p [ojjlou
YjVKapiria 'Hpa/cXelSov
X
(
P-
'AO/jlovol
-)f
^X
<>X. AwpoOeos, <X. <5>lXotl/jlo<;, <X. AoX-
-X-%7rf<
Xta, ^X. Me7to-T?7 ktjttov 7rpo? t?7
35
'Axctpvifcfj
ttvXt) TTpoaayopevofxe-
VOV K.6L0V10V
Ni;/lko'Soto?
3
X^/
- HoXi/or/jaTOti St?7-
-X-
Toe
X77? /cat 'EX[7r]tomato[v.
The introduction to this remarkable document, if there was one, is lost ; but
Mommsen, I.e., has argued with great probability that the inscription contains
the details of a deed of endowment or obligatio praediorum such as the private
endowment-scheme described by Pliny (Ep. vn 18) or the alimentation scheme
of Trajan, the details of which we have in the famous Tablet of Veleia,
CIL Vol. xi, Pt 1, no. 1147 (cf. Merivale Rom. Emp. ch. 63). The sums of
money are made over to the owners under the obligation for themselves and
their successors to pay the interest on these sums for all time for a specified
purpose. Dittenberger (CIA) inferring from the coincidence of several names
with those found in other inscriptions, known to be of Hadrian's time, ascribes
this document also to that period. In the enumeration of estates and amounts
the following order is observed :
1. the name in the nominative of a free-man or free-woman, the owner
of the estate
;
2. the name of the estate in the genitive
;
3. a definition of the locality
;
4. a sum of money.
If several estates are assigned to one person the separate sums are added
254 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. IV.
[96
together at the end and the total given with the sign
/M
= o/xov prefixed.
Mommsen (I. e.
)
points to the nearly identical language of the Ligurian Alimen-
tation-deed (CIL ix 1455) : P. Camurio Fortunato fund(i) Lusiani et casae Popil-
lianicae, pago Mefano, adf(ine) Valerio Valeriano, aest(imatorum) ttS lxxx in
OS vii and then -US clxxv. In the Latin document the name of owner is in
the ablative case
;
perhaps it implies dabuntur ab Mo, while in the Greek the
formula will be dabit Me.
For the
>|<
of the text above, which is the more usual form of the symbol,
the stone itself has
-X,
here denoting a denarius;
AP
denotes a drachma,
which is not the ancient Attic drachma, but a sixth part of the denarius (see 91
80 note)
; <
denotes half a denarius,
S
half a drachma or
T
Vth of a denarius,

an obol or ^th of a denarius,


3 a half-obol or
7
Vnd of a denarius. An
almost identical explanation found in a notice which frequently occurs in
the tables of Galen, as quoted by Hultsch Metrol. scr. i 226 : irXdyiov
A
's
ixev ra 5eia rats Kepaicus vevov 5paxfJ-7)v 5r)\oi<:, eh 5e tcl evdovvfia rjfiiaeiav > . T6
de 'Pw/wai/coj' aiyfia Trap* eviocs /mev rpubfidKov, 7rap' ijfuv 5e iravrbs araOfiou to ij/uucrv
S
TrXayiov 8e V fxev 6fto\6v oo >
8ijo 8 5iu>(3o\ou
^
. &rw 8 itXTpafM/niuov to
'^Wtjvlkov aiyfjux
f/y
att6/3o\oi' J.
Further, the alphabetic, not the ancient
'
Herodianic,' numerals are used.
See Index s.v. Numerals.
Mommsen, I.e., points out that the capital sums enumerated after the
owner's name agree best, and in fact only, with the assumption of an 8 per cent,
rent. Thus, to take the example of Claudius Pannychus (A Col. n, 14 sqq. ), we
have the following calculation :
Capital received. Annual rent
15621 Denarii 125
625
?>
50
1250
>
100
11561
>5
92i
1093|
1>
m
5687J
M
465
and this percentage suits very well what we know of such financial arrangements
in the provinces in the imperial period (Mommsen I.e. p. 132 and note). In
Italy itself, in the case of alimentation endowments at least, not more than
5 to 6 per cent, was given.
Slab A. Col. ii, 1438.
(The iota mutum is throughout omitted.)
1420. Claudius Pannychuson account of the estate belonging to the
deme Ionidae near the murder pine 1562| denarii ; on account of the border estate
belonging to the deme Oreadae 625
;
on account of the rope-walks
(?)
at Bate
1250 ; on account of the estate (formerly belonging to) Aetos near Coryodalus
11561 (i- e- H56 + 1|
drachm.); on account of the vineyards
(?)
and mulberry
plantation in the Athmonean deme
1093|
(i.e. 1093 + 4^ drachm.). Total 5687^
denarii.
96]
IMPERIAL ORDINANCES, LAWS, EDICTS, ETC. 255
14. Note the absence of praenomen in the name CI. Pannychus and in
other names. The praenomen in fact appears only four times in these tables
(A 2, 6
; 3, 7
; B 2, 49, 50). According to Mommsen, I.e., in the period after
Diocletian, even in Italian documents, the use of the praenomen is very rare.
21, 29. K\. i.e. Claudia.
2428. Flavia Phila : on account of the
'
Cyprian ' lands at Lamptrae
.... the lands of Thraso at Lamptrae .... the land at Thriosion
(?)
adjoin-
ing (that of) Myrmex, and a third part of other land Total ....
29. For the form of 'EXevdepiov see Index s.v. Personal names, neuter.
37. 'Sv/Mpodoros 3. For the symbol 3
see 68 p.
188.
Section V. Finance.
Remark X. i. Treasure Lists. On the completion of the Parthenon
in 438 B.C. the treasures which had been hitherto kept elsewhere on
the Acropolis (cf. 2 c 30)
were, with one or two exceptions (cf. 102,
103, 104),
transferred to the newly dedicated building. The treasure
was placed under the charge of a board of ten tcl/xlou, appointed by
lot yearly, one from each tribe, from among the Trei/raKocrio^eSt/xvoi.
Their office extended from one annual Panathenaic festival to
another, and each recurrence of the Great Panathenaea marked
the beginning of a new financial period (ttcvt^t^pUat rtTTapes ap^at).
The expression Upa
xPll
xaT(X T
l^
'A^vcuas was of wide import : it
comprised
(
1
) avaBrjixara, various precious objects dedicated by
States (apicTTcta ttjs 7ro'Aews) or individuals,
(2)
the tenth of the
spoils in war,
(3)
the money accruing from sacred lands,
(4)
the
balance of the national income which was not required for current
expenses and which was kept as a reserve fund only, to be drawn
upon for some special necessity.
The series of marble stelae containing the inventories of the
treasure, drawn up every four years, is nearly complete from 434 to
404 B.C. The separate treasure-houses mentioned in these inventories
are the Pronaos (7rpdi/eo>s) the Hecatompedos (or Cello), the Parthenon
and the Opisthodomus. On the relation of these buildings or
compartments to each other see the note on 10 b 22 sqq.
Examples of Treasure Lists and Inventories are nos. 97, 101,
102, 103, 104. Many of these inscriptions fall under the category of
7rapa8do-i9. The articles enumerated are handed over (cf. -n-apeSoaav
97
2)
by one set of officers to their successors. In IGSept. 303, 8
(Oropus) the articles so passed on are called 7rapaS6acfxa.
ii. Public Accounts. To those accounts which consist mainly of
mere inventories may be added the following, all testifying to the
care and vigilance which was bestowed upon the preservation of the
treasure :
97]
FINANCE. 257
(a) Accounts of disbursements for state purposes, as to military
officers on foreign service (nos. 98, 99).
It seems certain (Newton
Essays
p. 109) that bills were drawn on the Athenian treasury by
generals on foreign service, though we have only the barest hint of
such a practice on existing marbles (cf. 99
17)
;
(b) Accounts of the Logistae
;
monies due, with interest, to the
Treasurers of the Gods
(109);
for nos. 106108 see Rem. xi,
p. 288;
(c) Accounts of the Poletae, e.g. of monies realised by the sale
of confiscated properties
(110, 111),
proceeds of mines
(112)
;
(d) Accounts of the kKarocrrai
(113)
;
(e) Accounts of the Curators of Public Works, including those
concerning the building of the Erechtheum (114

118)
;
(f)
Accounts of the Curators of Dockyards
(119, 120)
;
(</)
Accounts of the Delian Amphictyony (121, 122)
;
(h) Accounts of other public officers (123

125)
;
(i) Accounts of the Sep/xanKa, or proceeds from the sale of hides
at sacrifices. See no. 100, one of the series of documents belonging
to the financial administration of the orator Lycurgus.
97. Four fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA i
170173. For previous authorities, including CIG 139, see CIA. Fragments
a and b only
(
= CIA i 170, 171) are given here; the rest is almost an exact
repetition. Cf. Boeckh St.
3
n 142 sqq.
ABAAE
(=,t,
v)
iH
(=h)
OlkUMN [X
=
f|
O(=o,
ov,
)
PP^TY4>X (<P=ir). |:
(The text of
the inscription is given on
pp.
258
9.)
This inscription, containing inventories of treasure, relates to two of the
four years, 01. 89. 390. 2 (422/1419/8 b.c), as is seen from the names
of the First (or 'Senior') Treasurers and the Secretaries, a chronological list
of whom is given on p. 48 of the BMI, Part i (cf. CIA i, p. 225). Each year of
the quadriennium is introduced by a general heading, that of the first differing
slightly from those of the remaining three; cf. a 2 sqq., b 1 sqq. After the
heading comes the inventory ;
in some inscriptions (not in this one) is appended
a list of objects added during the term of office of the outgoing board : eir^Teia
eireyeveTO or eirireia' iireyivero cttI tCov ra/jaQiv oh 6 8e?va iypa/JL/xdreve (CIA I 117,
118 etc.). Such additions are inventoried in their proper place in the next
year. The inventories preserved refer to the Pronaos, the Hecatompedos and
the Parthenon proper
;
see Rem. x, p. 256. The annual inventories for each
separate division were kept on separate slabs. Here we have those of the
R. II.
17
258 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[97
Text
&
% O I 'E
[
w
TViSe rrapehocrav
(
at rerrape^ dpyaX
'
al ihihocrav r[ov Xo-yov k Ilav-
/jblaai,
r
ot9 TLpeafiias %r]/jbl[ov $r\]yaiev<; iypafi/uudreve, ['01 8 rap-icu,
iypa/JL/mareve, irapeSocrav rot's rafiiaai,

ot? Ntea9 Ei)[0vkXovs 'AXi-
5
KoXXvrel koX fyjvdpyovcn
\
iv rw Hapdevcovr crrecpavo^ ^[pvo-ovs*
aO/xov tovtcov
iPHHFAAAhh:
XP
V(Ti0V darjfjbov araO/xov tov-
yv\pov
:
(
e^ov, lepbv rod 'YipcucXeovs rod iv
'EXatfeJr araO/jibv tov-
vcrco' <TTad/jLov tovtocv
j H
*
hThh :
TTpbtrcoTrov
'
virdpyvpov
vpal
iHAAAPMl:
xepas dpyvpovv araB/ibv tovtcov
.] JT XXX
io Xtjio/jl Trept^pvarov aTa^ves
:AI*
[ic]ai/G>
e
vtto^vXco KciTay^pv-
I

fcoprj eirl crTrjXrjs Kard^pvao^


|
*
kolttj vtt6^vX[o<s] KdTciy^pv-
09,
ypv^r
\
ypvvros TrpoTOfiij, ypvyjr

Xovtos
/cecfraXr}
'
o[pp.]o9 av-
pvcros. aairihe^ eV/^0i;cro[i]
'
vtto^vXol
; A P :
/c[Xivai Xtovp-ye]^
i>
: P 1 1 1 1 : 1<I>V
: P :
Ocopcuces
A[ P l~|.
dcririhe^ enriar^fjioi
TP] I
:
aairi-
15 /at
; P
I I I I

Xvpa KaTa^pvao\%
\ \ \
Xvpai iXecjxivTtvai

| [ 1
1

Xv-
Xivcov 7ro8e9 iTr]dpyvpo[i
IAIN:
irJeXfr]^. cjadXat dpyvpat
I 1 1
1

kvX-
v tovtcov
: PHHHH :
dairi^e eiri^pvaco
'
viro^vXco
||.
dfcivd/crjs
ad/jbov tovtcov
iPHHHPhh:
7roT[ij]/oia XaA,/a6\kcl dpyvpd P |~|
1 1 1
1
fjLvaicov iXe^avTLvr] KaTa^pvcros. dcr7rl<; iy Aecrfiov

eTTiarnio^ \pv-
20a] dpyvpd
HI:
/cap^rjo-ico dpyvpdo
.Till:
CTTadfxov tovtcov
:PP
H F
1
A A
:
o~Te<j)avo$ ^pvcrovs' aTaOfiov tovtov
: A P h h h 1 1 1
. o~Tecj>a-
//C979 CTTecJHlVOS ^pVCTOVS' GTClOpbOV TOVTOV '
A A
P f~ h h H ;
(TT&lJMlVOS
lkt)<; crT<fiavo<; xpvcrovs. aTadfiov tovtov
iAAAhhh:
TeTpdBpa^-
v SuktvXoov xpvcrovv

[^[wv cL]crTa6{io[s.
7
qj^
TaSe
(
o[i] TafJLicu [tv
'
wpwv
xP
T
l]/
Lfc ^T<wz/ T27*>' A6r)vaLa<;,
^vcJ)7]/jl[os
171, 1.
K']a9 ['AXip.ovon.os 6Ypa(xpdT]i^6, 7r[ap]e8ocra7y r[ois] Ta/jLiacri, ['
01s 'Eiri-y^v-
ap.J/xaTe[ve, Ev<ptXi]TO) Ki](}>io-ii Kal ^vvjapYOu[o-i, Trapa8edp.voi 7rapd rtov
pecr^3//<X9 [2rjp,Cov ^Tj-you-cvs *ypap.p.a,T6V. v t<3 IlapGcvwvt. fC.T.X.
Parthenon, which contained at this time a large number of silver bowls (0td\ai
dpyvpai, over 150) and articles of furniture, such as chairs (5l<ppoi) etc., all of
which were employed at festival time, besides a quantity of weapons and musical
instruments which we may suppose to have been used in the various contests
at the Panathenaea.
a (CIA 1 170. First year of the pentaeteris, 01. 89. 3 =422/1 b.c.)
1. deoi eirLKoijpLoi. For the restored formula cf. Pausanias viii 41, 7, where
he speaks of 6 pais rod 'AttoAAwj'os tou 'JZiriKovpiov at Bassae.
2. aX r^rrapes
dpx
a' : the four successive annual boards. For the form
ra/xtaai see 5 14, IO intr. Euphemus was the Senior Treasurer for 01. 89.
4 =
421/0 b.c; he and his colleagues passed on the account, 1. 25 sqq., to
Euphiletus and his colleagues, treasurers for 01. 90. 1 = 420/19 b.c
97]
FINANCE. 259
of
no. 97.
K OV p
I O I
a0r|vaLa)v
j9 nLavaOTJvaia' tois Ta-
'ois Ilpeo-J^ta? 2??[p.iov ^"yaievs
jiovo-tos fjy
pa
fifjba\^Ttv, Ev<f>T]p.a)
(5)
o-to.0jj.6v TovJTOf
PA.
<m/Va[i
xp^
"
"
P
'
"T
"
TOf
H['
' KapxTJo"iov] %[pvo-]oi)/v TO/Lt 7rua[|Xva V7rdp-
t[ov
HA A A P hh]h
'
rf^Gi &vo vTrapjvpo) Kara^p-
Kard\\pv<rov o-raGj/zo/v tovtov
jHAPh:
</>[idXai dp-y-
HHHPh[h
'Api0p.6v Ta]Se* aKivciKat 7rep[Lxpv<roi
p |

(10)
ca)
I I .
[0vpiaTT]'pi]o/v
r
vtto^vXov /<:a[Tdxpwov
G"[os |* Topy]ovlOV
y
/cd/ATrr) 7TL^pvcra' 'nrir-
[0p.a)v, 8paK]ft)/v 6TTi)(pvGa ravra. [kvvt] ctt^x
-
PIN.
[kXivcu] MiXTjcrtovpyeis
\ A :
|"'(/)[o(xdxaipa-
8e[s eirtxaXKOi
A A] A I !
0\_p]6voi

P | |
S*0/Oo[i
MM.
6kXo,8-
(15)
pat
[P]| I I.
[Tpdire^a r\\](j)aVT(0/J,V7]. Kpavr) [xoXko
| | |
. k-
[1K6S
A I I I
a.py]vpOL

/7T7TO? a/O^vpovs* o-Ta0p.6-
e7r/^/3[vo-os* do-]ra[0]yLto?. </>ta/Va[i dp*yvpai |
'
III"
or-
crraOfibv [tovtwz/]
jHAAhhhh:
H^
7
?^
c
*|
irapd MtjOv-
[<"i I.
7
A]ea/3ov lWvpitc[ov
x
a^K^v- 4>-a-X-
(20) AAA.
[A']cr[p]i(H [kotuXoi] a [p*y]fpot
j 1 1
1
' 0"Ta#[p.6v tovtwv
H H
vo<$ ^pvaov\s' o-to.Q]/ul6v tovtov
lAAPhhhh.
[*A6ijvoos N-
^/Quo-fovs' o-ra0]/U,Oiv tovtov
:AAAhh[h.
'AOrjvaCas N-
fjuov [xpvo-oiJv (r^Tad/jLov tovtov
:P[hhllC.
vv

T<>"
(25)
KoXX-uTcJf[s real 1-uz^dpxovTcs
'
01s
Ni-
J779
AfO"[dv8pov Al"ytXvs *yp-
irpoTcpov Tap.io>v
'
ois II-
5. eV tw HapdevQvt. Similarly the inventories relating to the other divisions
of the Parthenon are headed h ry Upovrjiip (or Ilpdvecp), and ev r ve<$ rip
'EKdTofxTredit). The weight of the objects is given in talents, drachmas, and
obols ;
where the weight was not ascertained, the object is described as Aarad/xos
(cf. 1. 17).
6.
XP
V<T
'
L0V o-arffjiov : Thucydides 11 13, 4 mentions this as one of the available
sources of revenue.
7. 'EXcuetfs, 'EXcuoOs or 'EXaiovs ace. to Steph. Byz. was a deme of the tribe
Hippcthontis. For 77X0; cf. Hesych. : rjXor irepovai. The lexx. (cf. Boeckh St.
3
11 148) distinguish between virdpyvpos, of silver, or with silver substratum,
/cardxpucros, overlaid with gold-leaf, iTrlxpvaos, overlaid with gold, irepixpveos, set
in gold.
172
260 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[97
9. Kipas: i.e. a drinking-horn; cf. Ath. xi 476 A

e. 'Apid/mov rdde : a
fresh paragraph
;
'
reckoned by number (i.e. with no weight specified) are the
following.' The aiav&Kcu and the other arms specified may be Persian spoils
;
cf. Thuc. ii 13, 4, and Schol. Diod. xn 40, 2, Paus. i 27, 1.
10. Xrjio/j. TrepLxpwov :
'
a small sheaf with gold setting.' viro&Xw : 'of
wood, with gold overlaid.' Cf. Xen. Oec. x 3.
11. Topyoveiov :
'
Gorgon's head
'
; Kafxir-q (not Kaixir-q, turn) : 'caterpillar.'
13. Xiovpyels

Mi\ri<T(.ovpyeis : cf. HO 6, and Critias ap. Athen. xi 486 e.


14. eTrlarjixoL: 'bearing devices.' In the following, dpbvoL were seats of a
more stately kind than blcppoL. 6/c\a5icu : 'folding-chairs' or camp-stools.
Pausanias, r 27, 1, speaks of a 5L(j>pos 0K\a8ias . . .Aaid&Xov iroi-rj/xa in the temple of
Athena Polias.
16. iwdpyvpoi. See the note on eirixpvcros, 1. 7.
18. XaXKidtKa : from the Euboean Chalcis ; they were the produce of the
mines on the hill of Chalcis, which also gave the name to a make of swords.
Cf. Boeckh CIG i,
p. 191, and Steph. Byz. s.v. XaMls. The (tv^vtj
'
flute-
case
'
was perhaps an honorary present.
19. 'IKkvpiKov : perhaps l(pos or irorripiov. These entries may describe spoil
taken from Lesbos, which was conquered 428 b.c.
21. 'Adrjv. Nt/c?7s <ne(pavos : probably identified by an inscription on the
crown.
23. rerpadpax/J-ov : a gold cast of a (silver) tetradrachm ; the weight given,
7 dr. 2^ ob., is too high in proportion, but the cast might be a thick one.
ow kt\. : is an onyx set in a golden ring.
24. The letters
TO: TOY?
following d]aTadfxo\s\ (which should be read
aaradfjios), found in Stuart's copy (Antiqq. Ath. n
15), do not appear to have
been on the stone.
b (CIA i 171, second year of the pentaeteris, 421/0 b.c.)
25 sqq. On the formula see the introductory note.
98. A fragment of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. CIA i 179
(iv p. 30) ;
D 26 ; H 53. Cf. Boeckh Kl. Schr. vi 72 sqq.
;
H. Miiller-Striibing
Aristoph. etc. 597 sqq.
;
P. Foucart Rev. Arch, xxxin
(1877) 388 sqq.
;
Stahl
Rh. M. xl 439 ; Nissen in v. Sybel's Hist. Ztschr. N. F. xxvii
(1889) 398, 402
;
Droysen Herm. 9 (1875) 1 sq. ;
M. Niedermann, Rev. Phil. 1897, 167 sq.
; Kolbe
Herm. 34 (1899),
388.
ABAAE
(=e,
04 V)

H (=K
once omitted)
OIKUMN
[X
=
f
] O
(= o, ov, to)
P
P
Z T Y
4> X. ^TOLx-ntev.
B.C.
433/2
'AOtjvcuoi a.vr(k\(oaav ? Ko[p][vpav TaSc. 'Eirl 'A-
\|/ev8ous apxo]yro? zeal eVl tt)? /3ov\r}(;,
r
fj
K[pi-
TidSTjs ^aivov] Tet0pd(Tios Trpooros eypafjifid-
Tve, Tapxai '^tepcov ^prjp.drcov tt}? 'Adrfvala-
98]
FINANCE. 261
5 s .... K K6p]a/jL6(i)v tcai ^wdp^ovres, 'ot<?
KpdTT^s Navr]a)^09 AafiTrrpevs iypa/x/jbdreve,
7rap'8oorav] arparrjyol^ e'9 Kopfcvpav rols
irpwTois cK]7r\eovcri, Aafcehaifjboviw Aaiad-
8t), IIpcoTa A]l(DVL, AtOTL/jLO) l&V(OVV/JLei,
io lirl ttjs Aiav]Tt8o9 TTpvraveia^ 7rpa)T7]$ irpv-
Tavvovo-rjs r]p6i^ zeal Se/ca rj/jiepac eaeXrjXv-
QvCas r\<rav . .
.J
fr*
T.
'Eirl 'Axj/cw'Sovs] dpyovTO^ ical eirl ttjs (3ov\r]s,
'tj KpiTidSrjs] Qaelvov TecOpdcnos 7rpwT0<s e-
15
Ypap.p.aTV, Tap.]tat Lepcov ^prj/Jbdraiv rrjs A-
0T]vaas,
]^9
'Ep^ei>9 *:at ^vvdpyov-
Ts, 'ois EvGias Ai]cr^pft>^09 AvcufiXvcrTios
lypappareve, irapijSocraP (TTpciTTjyois 69 Kop-
Kvpav tois 8VTp]cH9 etcTrXeovat, TXawccovc
20 Ik KepafwW, MeTa'yJei'et KotXet, ApdKOVTl-
8t) BaTt]0v, eirl ttjs] At'a^TtSo9 TrpvTavelas
irptoTTjs irpvTavvov<rT]j9 T17 TeXei^TcUa
iip.-
pa ttjs irpvTaveias
(?)
The inscription contains a statement of the sums disbursed on two separate
occasions, probably within three weeks of each other, for the purposes of the
expedition to Corcyra in 433 b.c (Thuc. 1 45, 51). A more complete type of
this class of documents is furnished by no. 99.
1. K6[p]Kupau. The spelling KtpKvpa does not appear in inscriptions before
the fourth century b.c. Meisterhans Gr. 22. For 'Axpetidovs Kangabe proposed
KpdTrjTos because in CIA 1 117 sqq. (Treasurers' Accounts beginning with
434/3 b.c.) the Secretary of the Ta.fji.lai was Kparris Nat/To^os Aap-Trrpevs (cf. 1. 6
below) and during their period of office a Kpdrrjs was also Archon. But this
would make an interval of more than a year between the first and second
payments (cf. 1. 7 sq., 1. 18 sq.), an interval inconsistent with the state-
ment of Thucydides. Moreover the Secretary of the j3ov\rj in the archonship
of Kp&TTjs is shown by 115 4 to have been Meta^enes, not KlpiTiddrjs] as
here (restored from 13 9).
The explanation of the fact that the rafxiai whose
Secretary was Crates son of Nauton for the year 434/3 b.c are coupled with
Apseudes, who was Archon for 433/2 b.c, is, according to Boeckh, very simple.
The new Archon came into office in Hecatombaeon : the Treasurers continued
in office k navadrjuaiwu es llavad-qvata, i.e. till the day of the Greater Panathenaic
festival, the rp'nr\ (pdivovTos 'E/caro/x/Jcuwi'os.
8. AaKedaifxovLy kt\. Thucydides 1 45, 1, 2 mentions these persons as
taking part in the first expedition to Corcyra ; he omits the demotic and
supplies the fathers' names : AaKedai/.iSvids re 6 KLfiuvos kt\. For the connexion
of the family of Miltiades and Cimon with the deme Aataadai see the reff. in
P. and B. s.v.
262 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[98
10. Alavrldos, or Aewvridos and 1. 22 irpwrris or rplrns. Boeckh and Foucart
incline to the former because it is unlikely that the two squadrons described
Thuc. i 45 and 50 were separated by an interval of three months.
11. 7)fxpa.L. For other instances of somewhat loose syntax see Meisterhans
Gr. 203 and cf. 109 4. 17. EMias. Supplied from CIA i 117 sqq.
20. eK Kepafxicou. Supplied by Muller-Strubing,
p.
600**, from Schol. on
Aristid.
p.
485 Dind. He also restored Mertry&'ei from 122 8 : 'ETriyfrrjs
Merayevovs e/c KoiXws, and saw that ApaKovrtdrjs was the person whose son
Av<tlk\t)S ApaKovrldov Bari^dev appears as ypa/x/xarevs to the ra/miai in CIA i 126,
128, 158, 159, 182.
The names Glaucon, Metagenes, and Dracontides do not, however, correspond
with the enumeration of Thucyd. i 51, 3 who gives two only, TXcujkuv re 6
Aedypov kolI 'AvdoKidws 6 Aeuydpov. Probably the mistake is not the historian's,
but due to a confusion common in mss. of Thucydides in the case of proper
names (cf. Niese Herm. 14, p.
423 sqq., cited by Dittenberger).
99. A marble slab (the
"
Choiseul Marble") engraved on both sides,
H.
3' 8"
M" (or
3' 6" 9'"), L.
2' 4" 6"',
Th.
6" 6'",
brought from Athens to Paris
by Choiseul-Gouffier. Now in the Louvre. Barthelemy Mem. de VAc. des
Inscr. xlviii p. 337 sqq.; CIG 147; Boeckh St.
3
n 2 sqq.; CIA i 188, 189a;
Froehner Inscr. p. 80, no. 46; D 51. Cf. A. Schmidt Ghron. 228 sq.
; G. F.
Unger Sb. Bayer. Ak. Wiss. 1875 n 53 sq. ; B. Keil Herm. xxix 39 sq. ; L.
Ziehen Eh. M. li 213 sq.
A B A A E
(= e, ei,
??)
.
H
(=
K
frequently omitted)
O 1
1<
U M N
[X
=
f]0(=o,
oi/, co)
rPTYct>X[4>
=
^].
The symbol (
)
occurs between many words and especially before and after
proper names and the numeral signs. Side b is written aroixn^bv.
(The text
of
the inscription is given on
pp.
264
7.)
The inscription is engraved on Side a of the stone and continued on the
lower half of Side 6, as indicated in the diagrams below
;
for an explanation
of
its positiou, see the introductory note below.
a Tab. I. Obv. Tab. II. Obv. Tab. II. Rev. b Tab. I. Rev.
Accounts of
01. 92. 3
CIA i 188
lines
140
Accounts of
01. 92. 4
(This stone was
joined to the
right of Tab. I;
Accounts of
01. 93. 1 and
beginning of
Accounts of
01. 93. 2
Conclusion of
Accounts of
01. 93. 2
CIA i 1896
lines 127
(lines 1227
crowded)
vacant space
Continuation
of Accounts of
01. 93. 2
CIA i 189a
lines 1 sqq
{Lost) (Lost)
99]
FINANCE. 263
The inscription
pp.
2645,
266
7 contains (a 1
40)
the accounts of disburse-
ments made by the Treasurers of the Sacred Funds deposited in the temples of
Athena (Polias and Nike, lines 4, 5 etc.) for the ten prytanies of 01. 92. 3
=
410/09 b.c. ; and (b
1

25)
the disbursements made on various days, from the
13th to the 36th day, of the second prytany of 01. 93. 2 =
407/6 b.c. (For the
designation of the days of the month see Rem. vi, p.
128 sq.) The text of the
upper part of Side b, not given here, is very defective. Its position is possibly
due to a miscalculation of the space available.
a.
1. ttI ttjs j3ov\r)s ktX. For the office of ypap-fxare^s at this period see Rem.
v
(1),
p. 89. For KXeiyivris see 88 5.
3. 4k tQv iirereicov : from the additions made to the funds during the year.
Cf. 97 introd. and CIA I 121, 7 : e7r^r]eia iireytvero eirl rQ>v Ta/j.iQv, 'o?s OeoXXos
Xpojuddov 4>Xueu[s iypap.(j.aTv. For xp-qcpiaafi^vov rod Stj/jlov we have in CIA 1 180
c 14 a fuller formula xf/rjcpLo-a/m^vov rod Stj/ulov
rV]
&Seiav (' passed an Indemnity
Bill
')
;
see Boeckh St* n 33 sq.
4 sqq. iwirois ktX.
'
as maintenance for the cavalry, from the funds of
Athena Polias 3 Talents, 3237 Drachmae and half an Obol, from those of Athena
Nike 85 Drachmae, 3^ Obols. For the temple of Athena Nike see no. 4. Keil
has shown, I.e., that the year of office of the fiovKr} for 410/9 b.c. began on the
14th of Scirophorion of the year preceding, and that the first prytany lasted till
the 20th of Hecatombaeon. The remaining prytanies will end as follows; the
second on the 25th of Metageitnion, the third on the 1st of Pyanepsion, the
fourth on the 7th of Maemacterion, the fifth on the 12th of Posideon, the sixth
on the 18th of Gamelion, the seventh on the 23rd of Anthesterion, the eighth
on the 30th of Elaphebolion, the ninth on the 7th of Thargelion, the tenth on
the 13th of Scirophorion. Keil's calculation removes the difficulty attaching
to the mention of the Panathenaea, 11. 6, 7 ; we see that the second prytany
began eight days before the festival. The adXoderai (1. 5) held office for four
years, the interval between the celebrations of the Greater Panathenaea.
6. On the various kinds of iepoiroioi see 9 9.
8. For Pericles, son of Pericles and Aspasia, see Xen. Mem. in 5, Plut.
Per. 37. He was granted citizenship by the Athenians and was one of the
generals who were put to death after the battle of Arginusae.
9. erepov :
'
a further payment.' Cf. CIA i 273 b, 20 : h[4]pa ddaLS.
10. "Ep/jLuis is possibly the person of that name who was concerned in the
overthrow of the Four Hundred (Thuc. viii 92, 6). Pylos fell into the hands
of the Lacedaemonians in 409 b.c (Diod. xiii 64, 7). The meaning of 5tw/3eXa
or 5iw/3o\ia, the most frequently recurring item in the document, is uncertain.
Cf. Arist. 'A0. ?roX. 28, 3 : KXeocpQv 6 Xvpowoios (one of the successors of Pericles
as party-leaders), 6s kcu -7-771/ 8ioj(3oXlav eirdpHre Trpuros. Former commentators
have referred the word to the dewpiicdv, the fund for paying the price of admis-
sion to the theatre at the rate of 2 obols for each of the ordinary seats (cf.
Sandys ad loc.). But v. Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. n p. 212 sqq. thinks that
it denotes a payment, distinct from the deojpu<6i>, of 2 obols a day each to
individual citizens.
12. The amount for the 5iw/3eXt'a in this fourth prytany is exceptionally
large. On the other hand in the sixth prytany (1. 14 sqq.) there is no mention
5iu>/3eXi'a.
264 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[99
Text
a
Adrjvaloi avrjXwaav eirl YXavKHTirov ap^ovros ical eirl 7-779 (3ovXr)<$
iypa/jbfidreve' rapblat
f
lepcov ^prjpdrcov 7-779
'
AOrjvaias J^aXXicrrparo^
re? nrapeZoaav i/c rcuv eirereioyv yjrrjifricrapivov rov hrjpuov eVl 7-779 Alav-
r\\voTa[Xiat^ irapehoOr]
\
KaWi/jud^co
'
Ayvov<rl(p, ^paatrrfXihr) 'I/capiel

5&]? : TTTXXXHHAAAPhhC
N^?
| PAAA
n
IM3C \
hrl
rfc
Qr\ 69 YlavaOrjvaiCL ra fieydXa QiXcovi VLvSadrjvaiet /cat crvvdpyovari,
viavrov
\
AlvXXg)
f
Ep^tet ical avvdp^ovatv, e? rrjv eKar6pf3rjv
FHAh
vovarjs : YjXXrjvora/jLiais irapehoOr]
\
TLepi/cXel XoXapyel /cal avvap-
erepov rots avrols
f
JLXXrjvorafjLLcas,
f
iiriroi^ ctltos iSodrj
\ TTFHHHH :
io
f
KpficovL i$66r] apyovri e'9 UvXov
p?T
:
Grepov tol<; avrols
'
YiXXrjvo-
afjLavriSos rerdprr)^ irpvTavevovar)*;
\
^XXrivoTapbiais irapehoOrj
\
7-09
'
innrois i&66r)

TTT
:
erepov to9 avrols JLXXrjvoTa/jLiai*; 9
9 Ke/cpo7TL&o<; 7T6/X7TT779 irpvravevovar]^
\
*JLXXr)voTap,lai<$ irapehoOrj
\
T7]v hiwfieXiav \
TTTTXXHH:
^1Tl T7
7
<
>
AecourlEo^
'
itcrr]? irpvravev-
15
'
YiXXrji'OTa/jLLacs irapehoOr)
\
Aiovvcricp KvSaOrjvcuel /cal avvapyovGiv
<Z9
'
YiXXrjvoTafAiais %pdawvi HovrdBy /cal (jvvdpyovaiv
TTTXF
1
XXrjvora/jLLais irapehoOrj, Upo^ivq) ^A^tSvatw /cal avvap-yovaiv, crrpa-
rj/uua
:
'
XXXPHHAAAAID
:
rpirrj /cal Be/cdrrj ttJc -TTpvraveias
'
E\-
XXXXPHHHHPI- :
oyhorj /cal el/coarrfj 7-779 irpvraveias \
'
EXXrjvora-
20
H :
TpiT]/coaTy T779 irpvraveia^ rd
6^
^dpuov dvoopLoXoyrjOri
\
*
EjXXtjvo
oXvapdrq) XoXapyel
j pppyyx : iirl T779 'Avtlox,18os e/386pL7]s Trpvra-
07) Aiovvo~i(p YLvhaOrjvaiel /cal awdpyovcriv 69 tt\v Bico/3eXiav
'
T \
(Tcovt TSovrdhrj /cal avvdp'yovaiv e\ rr)v SicofteXLav

TXHHAAAhh!
XanreKTjOev ical avvdp^ovaiv, alrov
'
ittttols
\ TTTT :
e/crrj /cat
2^v(p 'AfybhvaLw /cal avvdpyovaiv
\ XFAAAhhhhMI
:
TerdpTr) teal
(f)i8vai<p /cal crwdpyovcriv
\ FHHHH:
/386fj,y
/cal el/cocrrfj
rr}<; irpvra-
al o-vvdpyovcriv
\ TXXPPAPMMC :
7rl t^9
'
liriroOayvriho^ 07^0779
ra/JLLacs irape66r
h
Upo^evw
'
Afyuhvaia) /cal
avvdpyovaiv
\ TTTPH
veias }^X\r]voTa/jLLaL$ iS60r), Auovvaiw KvBaOrjvaLel
/cal avvdpxovcriv
30 t?)9 irpvraveias
(
JLXXrjvorapiais iSoOrj, ^)pdacovc BovrdSr/ ical crvvap-
evdrr]^ 7rpvravvovar)^, SoiSe/cdrij ttjs irpvravelas \
R\\r)V0Tafj,iai<;
XXHPAAAPhhH:
rplrrj ical el/coarfj
7-779 Trpvraveias \
'EXXrjvora-
. TTTPHHFAAAAhhhlll :
'
6*777
/cal rpiaKoarfj T779
irpuravelas
\
a]pxovcnv
':
TTXXXPHHHPIIC \
e/crrj ical TptaKoarfj
T779 irpvraveias
35
. . 09 o-Tparriyols e'9 ^dpucp Aegacparel AlyiXcel
\
^^TX :
Uacrt(f)a)VTL
. . . Evayvvpuet
\ f^XXXPHHHPAAAAPh
:
Nt/cripd
KvSavriSr)
<a . .
.]
e[irl tt[]9 TIavBioinSos Bexarr)? irpyravevovo-r)^ \
evheicarr) T779
c'vo) 'A<t>i8vaia) koI] avvdpxovo-Lv
\
PHHHHAAAAhhlllll
:
rpLTy ical
Kai o-wdpxovjo-^
:
TTFPAAAAIII :
^KT
V
KaL T
P
ia
~
40 ... Kal <rwdpx]ofo-iv
pPXXXXPHPPhllll :
/cecf)dXaiov
99]
FINANCE. 265
of
no. 99.
fj
KXeiyevrjs 'AXacevs 7rpa)r[os
M.apa0(t)VLOS teal %vvdpyo\y-
tiSos TrpooTrjs 7rpvTavvov(T7)$ E[\\-
iTrirois alros i&odr) :
'
Adrjvalas IIo[\id-
(5)
Alyei&os Seurepas itpvravevovcrrjs
\
ddXoOeracs irape\Z6-
A6r)vaia<; UoXtdSos
j
pPX :
tepoiroiols tear \k-
\-\-\-
:
eVt T?}? Olvei&os Tpirrjs TTpVTav\i\-
yOVGLV \
'
ITTTTOLS (TITOS ihoOt]
\ TTPHHHHAA.
erepov rots avrocs EiXXr)voTa{j,ia[is
(10) racial*; e'9 rrjv hieofieXiav

TT :
7ri. T
*?
<
>
^K
~
TIepi/eXel XoXapyel teal o-vvdpyovcriv
cr[i-
tt)v
hwfieXlav
iB60r)
\
pPTTT> HHHPP :
eVl t[i|-
TLepLteXel XoXapyel teal owdp^ovatv e[s
ovarii \
rpirr) rj/uiipa tP/s Trpvraveias
(15) :XHHFAAAhhhh :
ivory 7%
7rpvrave[i-
AA Ah h hi I :
'
ei'SetcaTrj ttjs irpyraveias
(
E-
TTjyS e 'Eperpias

Ev/eXeiSr] dvo/juoXoy-
Xr)voTafAiai<i Tlepi/eXei XoXapyei teal crvvapyovaiv
[ ...
fjuiais :
^7rov8i,(a)o QXvel teal Gvvdpyovaiv
\ TTXX
(20) raffia \
'Avatriq) %qbrjTrico teal irapeBpw [II-
vevovo~r)s
\ 7re/n7rrrf rr/s irpvraveias 7rapeb\6-
/38o/jL7) t?)? trpyraveias
'
EXX^ora/iicu? p[d-
113 : rfj avrfj rjfiepa
'
TLXXijvorafjLLaLS QaXuvOa) ['A-
hetedrr) rrjs irpvraveias
'
EXXrjvoTa/jLLais Ylpo[i--
(25)
el/eocTTfj rrjs irpvTavela^
f
EXX^vora/^lai
1
; Eu7roX/[8i 'A-
veias
(
RXXrjvora/jLiaLS KaXXia Ei)ww/i[{i k-
TTpvTavevovarjS, Soobetedrr} rfjs Trpvraveias
\
f
EX[\t]vo-
AAAhhhhllll :
rerdprr} teal elteocrrf) T779 7rp[vTa-
':
TTTXXXXHHHAPhhhlC : \
6kt
V
teal Tpiateoa^
(30)
xovo-iv
':
TXXXHHHAAPhhhhlll : eVt tt}
? 'E^e^e^cs
ehoOr), Tlpo^evqy
'
AcfriBvalcp teal awdp^ovaiv, . .
fMiais ehoOr), dnovva[(p \Lvha6rjvaiel teal <jvvdpyovo\yv,
EiXXrjvoraniais iSodrj, ^pdawvt BovrdSr) teal a[w-
rd
%
^d/jiov dvco/jboXoytjaalro . . . -]/^a% . .
(35)
^peappiw -
fj\~Y
'
ApL(TTo/epd[Tii ]t
ppi
\
'E . .
Tptrjpdpxq)
:
X X X :
'ApL(TTO(f)dvL ' Ava[ <rr]pdr7]y-
rrpVTaveia? ' EXXr)vo[Ta\i.Cai$ ISoGt],] ri/o[o|-
eiKoarrj ttjs TrpvraveLa?
\
e
E\X^[voTap.iais 4860T) . . .
Koarfj tt)? irpvTaveias
\
f
EXfX^voTapiiats &6Qt\ ....
(40)
dpyvptov crvfjLirav o te . . .
266 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[99
Text
of
b
FjTtI t?}? 'Epe;#etSo9 Sevrepas 7rp[vTaveias 'EMtivoTauiais Kal irapc'Spois
Sr) Kal (rvvdpyovai, rpLr[r}] Kal $eKarr)[i ttjs irp] tTa[v(as, SeKarrj <|>0(-
e? tt)v 8cco0eXiav
'
Adrjvaia]?
r
E\\?7[v]o[Ta|uais Kal irape-
iw Kal avvdp^ovai, e^Sofir) Kal SeKarr) [ttjs TrpJuTfavcias
'
ckttj <j>8ivovtos]
5 6? tt)v SuafBeXiav
HAhhh
['EJXXrjvoTafjiiaLS [Kal irape'Spois, Avo-Ute'a)
e{3&6/jL7) Kal BeKOLTj} rrj[s] Trpvravelas, 6[ktt) 4>0(vovtos McTa-yeiTviaivos, Is]
Orjvata Nlk
V
TTP HHHH[F]A[A A]Ph[h}
(
EXX
V
vorafMiai[s Kal
Wapyovai, o\^%\orj Kal SeKcirr) [ttjs -irpuTaveias, ttcutttt) <j>0ivovtos McTa-yJetT-
v hiwfSe\ia\y\'
Ahh.
f
FjXX7}vorap,iaL<; Kal TrapeSpocs, [npwTdpx<*> npo-
io rrf Kal 8e/c[aT]?7 t?}<? irpvraveia^, Te\r\pdhL
(f)6i[y]ovro<; M.ra[yi]irvi(b-
^YLWrjioTapbiaLS Kal TrapeSpots, AvaiOecp v/uaLTaBr) Kal avvd[pyov
]
(TI
'>
n)? TrpvTaveias evrj Kal [v]ea M.erayeirvtwvo^, e? ttjv Bico^eXiav
irapehpois, Spaavlxjo^cp [o]pt/a&> Kal crwdpyovcri, TpLrrj Kal ei-
vla l^orjhpofXLO)vo<;, e? ttjv hiwfieXLav
HPAhhll.
EAA-^orayu-iat?
15
rdSrj Kal crvvdpyovai, Tra[p]r7j Kal elKoarrj t?)9 irpyraveLa^, Bevrepa
Scco^eXlav
P
\-
\ \ | C . 'EiXXrjvorafiiaLS Kal irapeSpocs, [A]vcnde(p
Kal eiKoarrj rr}<; Trpvraveias, rerpdSi laraixevov BotjS/oo/ugG^os, e?
XrjvoTafAiats Kal TrapeSpois, AvaiOecp [v\i\airdSr) Kal crwdpyovcri,
a<?, oySoy icrra/ubevov Bo7]8po/uncovo<;, e? ttjv hiwfieXLav
'
A9r)vaLq,'
20 I irapiSpoLs, Avcndew ^Vfiavrdhr) Kal crwdp^ovat, TpiaKocnf} T779 irpv-
vov T$or)SpofjLLa>vos, e? rrjv BwtyfieXiav
PA A Ahh.
'
QXXrjvoTa/jLLacs
yw > ITpo/3aXiaia) Kal avvdpyovcri, eKry Kal TpLaKoarfj rr}? irpvra-
Z^pofjLiGovos, [es tt]v h\io}j3eXiav'
AAPhhhIT.
' EXXrjvoTa/Jiiatf; Kal
ko]1 avvdp\yjov<r\.
y
^kttj Kal TpiaKJocrT^ rrjs 7rpvTavia[s, TcjrpaSt eiTL
25 SitoPeXtav]
a.
14 sqq. From the sixth prytany onwards the style of the document changes.
Henceforward the days of the prytany are specified on which payments are
made, but only in exceptional cases the objects for which they were destined.
17. <rTpa.T7iy$ e 'Eperpias :
'
admiral at or near Eretria' (Barthelemy). For
the defection of Euboea in 411 b.c. see Diod. xni 47. By dvo/j.o\6yr)fia is meant
'
payment made to Eucleides by drawing a bill upon the treasury.' Cf. BMI
23, 5 (CIA 1 183d), where Mr Hicks restores 5i' av[o/xo\oyr)[j.aTos]. So below,
1. 20, avu/AoXoyrjdr) must mean
'
were paid by means of a bill-transaction.' An
Eucleides and (1. 20) an Anaetius appear among the Thirty Tyrants, Xen. Hell.
11 3, 2, but the identity is not certain.
19. Zirovdla :
P O Y A I A I .
20. to.
ex
2d/iou :

income from Samos.' After the defection of 440 b.c the
lands at Samos were confiscated and dedicated to Attic deities and heroes,
among whom it is not likely that Athena Polias was forgotten. Cf. the
99]
FINANCE.
267
no. 99 continued.
Av<ri8u> Qv\i]aLTa-
vovtos MtTayeiTJviCOVOS,
Spots], (y)[p]a[o-v\]o%ft) Sopifc-
M.TayLTVlWV0[<5
(5)
0vp.aiT]aS?7 Kai <jvvapyovo\y,
tt]v hi(t)j3e\iav 'A-
irapeSpois, IIpo>Tdpx<i>]
TIpo/3(l\l<TL(p KCLi G-
VlOdVOS, 6? TTj-
PaXwrCo)] kcll crvvdpyovcri, iva-
(10) 1/09, 69 rrjv StdyffeXiav
HP A
Bevrepa rcaX 61kogt[v^
HPhhhK
'EWtyi/ora/uaifs Kal
Kocrrfj rrjs TrpVTaveLas, [v]o[vjjlt]-
Kai irapeSpois, XvaiOew f[uai-
(15)
BorjSpo/jLicovos, [es rr\v
vpbaiT(ihr) Kal (jvvapyovcri, eicrr)
T7)v hcofteXlav
PAAAP[MT].
'E\-
rptaKoarfj T779 TrpvTav\d-
[N]lkt}
HP Phi.
f
E\\i7i/0Ta//-ta[is Ka-
(20)
Taveuas, oySorj iar[a^A-
koI TrapeSpois, Ylpcordp^a) <[Tl]pco[r(xp-
veias, rerpdhi iirl hetca [Botj-
irapehpois, Avcndea) i>//.atr[d8T)
Se/ca T$07)8po/jLicovo<i, [is ttjv
inscription on a boundary stone from Samos (BCH viii 160) : 8pos refxevovs
'Ewupt/jiwu 'Kd-qv-qdev; Kirchhoff Abh. Ah. Berl. 1876, p. 67; Boeckh St.
3
11 14
note. For the combination
ex
2. cf. Meisterhans Gr. 106 and 28 24. It is a
strange expansion of the Old Attic usage by which

is written
X ^1.
Polyaratus is mentioned in complimentary terms by Demosthenes c. Boeot.
irepl irpoiKds 1009, 1015.
35. . . os. Probably this is part of the name of one of the Treasurers who
acting for the board caused a bill to be drawn in favour of the naval commanders
at Samos. For es 2d/*(y = eV 2d/>u
f
> cf. 28 26. 'ApicrTOKparns may be the son of
2/ceMas ; see Ro i 71.
36. NiKvp&Tip : son of the general Nicias
;
put to death by the Thirty,
404 B.C. (Lys. irepl drj/jieiKreus kt\. 6, virep r&v
'
kpiar.
xp-
47, Xen. Hell. II
3, 39.
b.
1 sqq. Kirchhoff, I. c, agreeing herein with Boeckh, has shown by elaborate
calculations that these accounts belong to 01. 93, 2 =
407/6 b.c. and that the
268 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[99
year is an intercalary year; otherwise Unger and Schmidt (Chron. 228 sqq.).
But a reference to the table on p. 88 will show that in an ordinary year, with
prytanies of 35 or 36 days, the equation 13th day of second prytany = 21st of
Metageitnion is impossible. It is to be noted that, as Keil, p. 68,
points out,
the arrangement instituted by Clisthenes, by which the order of prytanies
began sometimes before, sometimes after the first day of the civil year (see
note on a 4 sqq.), did not subsist after 410 b.c.
3. 'AdrjpaLas. Waddington read on the stone 'Ad-qvalq Ni/07. Froehner
gives the genitive and says that the following words have disappeared. Probably
we should supply Ni/c?js as in a 5.
6 sq. Froehner reads k ttjs Alyivrjs
;
but here again and in 1. 19 Wadding-
ton reads 'Adrjvaiq, Ni/07. The conflict of testimony is hard to explain. It is
not clear what meaning we should attach to the phrase diwfteXia 'Adrjuaig.
;
for e/c ttjs AiyLv-qs we may compare
^x
2ap.ov, a 20, 34.
17, 23. The
T
when it follows the symbols denoting obols is of course
rerapTrifjiopLov : see Rem. iii p.
44.
lOO. Eight fragments of a stele,
0-13 m. in thickness, of Hymettian
marble. CIA n 741 (after CIG 157 ;
Pittakis, Rangabe) and Add.
p.
510
;
D 620
(the part concerning BepfiariKd). Cf. Koehler Herm. i 318, v 223.
Alphabet, type 1
;
does not occur. Numeral signs are preceded by the
mark
(:). 'Ztoixv&-
Side A.
This document is concerned
with the financial administration
Fragm. a. ofLycurgus. See the introductory
..
r
-,
note to no. 41. Side A of the
ira
JPL
a jov
stone contains the accounts of
HHH[Hr
3
AA]AA[n]|-. the pentaeteris 334/3331/0 b.c.
relating to the receipts from the
K<KXaio>
444ATTXXFHHHHA
<^ad or ' hide-money,' the
proceeds from the sale of hides
(and probably other portions) of
334/3
*"
TC U
^
aT
f
iK0V
\i
the victims slain at the great
B c
5
irl Kn]cr]t/c:XeoL'9 ap[)(ov]T09* public sacrifices at the eirlderoL
ky Aio]vvo-LO)v tgov [ip. TLei]pa[*l irapd
toprai
(52 43).
The total given
_ -i -
i II II i a i
below A frg. a 28 for seven months,
pouvj^
: HHH A h .
^ ^
5099 dr 4 ob>> shows that these
Kcd t[o 7TpcyevOfi[vov a]7TO [t]^[s
receipts were an appreciable
Po]o>z//a9 :
H H r
3
AAA*
source of the state revenue. See
ro
7
]
biowaiav T&v [>l A]
V
valco[i
Dar
-
and Sa
9
L s - v
-
Dermatikon.
-.
v ,
Side B contains accounts of gold
nr]apa fiva-rvpttov [kr^Xrjrtov
---
expended in repairing ornaments
ifc rrjs dvaias rrj[i
'Ayad]fj Ti;[xt|
wapd
and other appointments for the
Upoiroiwv :
H PA
-
'
canephoroe.
e ' AatcXrjTT telcov 7m[pd
side A.
15
kpoiTOiWV
H H r> AA AA h
'
Frg. a. i_3 . Conclusion of
iy ALOVvaicav twv iv a<rTe[i] 7r[apd
the accounts of a pentaeteris.
100] FINANCE. 269
20
25
powrov
:FHHHP|-h|---

y
O\v/jb7rtLcov irapd
[tv tov
hrjfjuov <Tv\[\o]yea)v
:PH[P~|AAr-*
i/c T/79 #ucr[as] T(p
^pfifj
too
H<yefJLOVLCo[i irjapa [o-TJpaTrjyodv
- -
iy T$v[]t8icov irapd ipoiroi[&v
HHHHPPhr-"
etc Trjs Overlap tc5 Aa rco
Xcorfjpt, irapd fiowvciov
iXTPl.
Kcf)d\aLov SepfiariKOV
FPAAAAPhhhHIII.
7Tfc NlKOKpciTOVS ctp^OVTOS'
30
eV T//9 Ovaias
rfj
Eilprjvrj
irapa o-rparrjywv
iPHHHPAAhhhh"
e T179 Ovaias ro3 "A/jl/icovl irapd
arpaTrjy^v
:
A A A A h hh h I I I I C
"
Ik IIava]#??z/euGr)z/ irapd
35
UpoiroiwJ^ :
FA Mil"
k IIava8i]vat]&)y e/c[ar6\i^r\s
i~pd
]AAAhhHII.
Fragm. b.
K TTJS
6v(Tjta? ~ - -
]
T?; Aae/p[a -irapd.
ImpeX^*]*
:HHAAPhhhh[llll]-
7
Aiovvo-io)]^ T(tfV eVt ArjvaMp [irapd
5 -
-
-v -]
HPI-
ck ttjs 8vo-]ta.? t^
'
KyaOfj Ti;^?;[i irapd
Upoiroiwv]
; H h
I
III"
4
'Aa-KXrywijeiwu 7ra[pd
UpoiroieSv]
:HH. AA[P-]"
ro -y AiovvcrCJoov T&v iv [curm irapd
a-rparr\y<av]
:
H H H P h
-
"
c '0\v\Liri\La)v 7ra[pd tv tov
8ijp.ov <rv\]\oyea)v
:
P
-*
CK TTjS Ovorjta? TOO
f
Ep/Lt[T) TW
15 'H-ytjjtovCu)] irapa arpa^rryy/wv -
-'
With 1. 4 begins the new pentae-
teris.
4. eK roC Sepfi. : SC. iXdfiofxep
;
of. fr.
#
Co. 3, 12.
6. The Dionysia of the Pi-
raeus appear to have been identi-
cal with the Rural Dionysia
(celebrated in the several demes
in Posideon), but from the greater
importance of the deme to have
become to some extent a state
solemnity (Dar. and Sagl. s.v.
Dionysia). On (3oQvai see D.A.
and Boeckh St.
3
1 274. The
pouvLa, 1. 9, was the sum assigned
to these officers for the purchase
of victims ; any surplus came
under the head of receipts.
10. The Lenaea took place
in Gramelion. The fxvarripLuv
iwLiueXvTai were four in number,
including one of the EvfioXiridai
and one of the Krjpvxes, and with
the (3a<TL\evs presided over the
Eleusinian mysteries
;
cf. Pollux
viii 90. The fact that, as 1. 10
shows, they also assisted the
fiaaiXev's at the Lenaea is now
confirmed by Arist. 'Ad. iroX.
57, 1.
12. Cf. 41 c, e 19 sq.
14. 'AcrKXwTrieiwv. Cf. Aesch.
c. Gtes. 67 : rrj 6y86v i<rTap.vov
tov 'EXa.(pr)l3oXiu)j>os /xvuds (before
the Great Dionysia), 6t r\v t
'Acr/cX7/7ria> rj dvaia kcli 6 irpoaydov.
16. tCjv ev dcrret : in the
middle of Elaphebolion.
18. 'OXvp.Tnei.wi' : between the
middle of Elaphebolion and the
19th of Thargelion (cf. the note
on 1.
22)
;
perhaps on the 19th
of Munychion (Plut. Phoc. 37)
in fact the avdnnraaLa at the
'OXv/xirieia, CIA 11 1291, may
have been on the same day.
(Mommsen Feste 466.) On the
avXXoyeh rod 5r)/j.ov see D.A., s.v.,
and cf. 149 35.
270 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [100
ky Bv8i8]e&)z/ Trap a /e[poiroiwv
-
Ik -rrjs Qv<r]ia<; ra> At[l t]co[i ScoT-rfpt
irapd Poa>v]&W
:XXHHAIII'
K <a]v irapd
ftowvov
:H-
K <a]v 7r[apa l]6|007ro[iwv
Fragm. c.
.... 8 ..
Kifyakaijov oep[p.aTiKov
eirl ~NiK]o/cpaTo[v<s d'pxovTos*
--
H]HHHPhhhh.
332/1
5 irl NikijJtol' ap^ovTO^'
Ik ttjs] Ovalas
rfj
JLlpyjvr) [irapd
a-Tpar}
V
ya)v
:
nHHA[l]ll*
4k ILa]va6r)vaia)V irapa ipo[iroiwv
-'

''E\e]vcrivicDV irapa lepoirotw\y


-
-
K ttjs 8]ucri[a]9 Tjj Ar]/jiOKpaTta[i irapd
<rrpaTT,]y<Sl/
:
[H] H HH A h h h h III
*
4
'AcrK\]7]7rieiO)v irapa fiowvwv : X
'
l\ 0t|<r]ea>i/ irapa
Upoirou]i/
:XHPAAAhhh-'
*y Atovvo-iwv twvj e//, llet[paii
B.C.
15
IO
Fragm. d.
!
'EX.v<rivia>v irapd
t>07r[oia>v -
-
'
6fC rfjs #[vcrias ttj ArjuoKpai-ia irapd
CTTpaT7)y\jov
-
-'
e' Acr/cX^7r[iia)v irapd
-
*
e^ i)0~6(QV [irapd
-*
iy AlovvcrL(o[y t<3v eu rieipaiei irapd
arpaTTjyoov
- -

iy AlOW(TL6o[y t<3v 6irl Aiivaiu) irapd
arparrjywv :

e]tf [t])7? #u<7*,a[s


rfj 'A-yaBfj Tiixti
-
]
o~TpaT\r\ya>v

*
l| 'Ao-K\]?;7rtea)[v irapd
-'
e"y Aiovv]<JiO)[v tc3v v olo-tci irapd
15
a 20 sq. For 'E/tyif/s 'Hyefidpios
cf. Ar. PL 1159.
22. Bej/5t5ewv: on the 19th
and 20th of Thargelion. See
Mommsen Feste 526 and cf. Plato
Rep. i 354 a.
24. Mommsen I. c. refers this
sacrifice to the Buphonia on the
14th of Scirophorion.
30. Mommsen Feste 39, com-
paring Schol. Ar. Pac. 1019 with
Plut. Thes. 24, assigns this sacri-
fice to the 16th of Hecatombaeon.
32. r< "AfjLfjiaivi. : apparently
between the 16th (see above) and
the 28th of Hecatombaeon, the
date of the Panathenaic festival
(below 1. 34). See K. F. Hermann
Gottesd. Alterth.
54, 14. On
the early recognition in Greece
of the Libyan deity Ammon see
Dar. and Sagl. s.v.
35.
F
1
(for Boeckh's
P,
after
Fourmont), is due to Koehler.
The sum is too ridiculously small
for the whole proceeds of the
dep/jLariKov from the Panathenaea.
Hence Koehler's restoration in
1.
36,
giving a separate entry for
the hecatomb. The Upoiroioi of
1. 35 were annual, as appears
from 99 a 6. Cf. the note on 9 9.
Frg. b. Between frg. a and
frg. b a few lines are lost, probably
containing the dermatica of the
Eleusinia, the Asclepiea, the
Thesea and the Piraea.
2. rrj Aaelp[q.~]. Boeckh St.
3
ii 124 sq. collects evidence (Etym.
M. p. 244, 34 and Schol. Apoll.
Eh. in 847) to show that Daeira
was identical with Persephone,
and he refers the sacrifices con-
nected with the three deities
named in the text to the 'AXya,
which took place in Posideon
(Harpocr. s.v. 'A\<a).
3. 4iri/j.\yTu)]v : sc. of the
mysteries
;
cf. a 1. 11 above.
100]
FINANCE. 271
Fragm. e.
r, 2 dv0T)];e[v .... t\ov, 46
77
/3ov\r}
7) e7r[l . . . apxovJTO?
ai/e^[K .... Kara
tov] vofjiov, 7
/cat dpyvp -,
8
11 ave'J^/cez;
2oj(/h[\os .... <rT<f>av]a)#eU U7TO
[
eirl Njt/co/cp[dTovs dpxovros, o-Ta0ji6v]
:
f^.
Fragms.f,
g,
h,
{containing parts
of
three columns).
Col. 1.
<TT<|>avos, ov ]o9 av607]fCV
}
<TT<j)avw8els vir6 tov S^JyLtOf TOV
- - -, o-r^ov
-]
n-hhiii.
crT<j>avos, ov 6 8tJ(jlos 6
'
AQjwvalcov
5
dve0T]Kv, o-T<pav0els v]irb tov &r'j/jLo(v)
tov , o-xaOjjiov] :
HAAAAhb'
o-T<j>avos, ov pjou?
ClV0T]KV, <TT<}>]ai/ft)^ei?
v-n-6
i}v(t)V
10 - -, o-Ta0ji.6v

J |C*
o-Te<J>avos, ov 6 8-rjp.os 6 'AO^vJatw^v
dve'0T]K6v, o-T<|>ava)0ls v-irjo TOV $r]fjLo(v)
tov , <TTa0,ji6v
-]AAAAMi!l-
o-Tpavos, ov 6 8-rjfxos 6 'A0T]vJ<xta)^
15
OlV^0T]KV, O-T<j>aVW0ls Virjo TOU
8t]|iov tov
- - -, o~Ta0(x6v
o"T<}>avos, ov r[ PovXi] ij irl XjGWpGOi'OOl'
dp\ovTos dv^0T]Kv, o-T<|)av]&)C/etO"a
20 vir6 tov Si]p.ov Kara t6v vop.oj*v,
O-TO.0fJ.OV - -
-J*
o-T<|)avos, 8v
\uOVs
dve0T]KV, o-T64>avfa)0Jet9
viro tov 8rjp.ov tov 'AOrjvaiwv,
25 o-Ta0p6v - -
-J*
Frg. c. 5 sqq. The third
year of the pentaeteris.
9. "EXevo-ivLcov : in Boedro-
mion.
10. rrj A^fioKpariq.. Ditten-
berger compares CIA 111 165
:
'Adrjvas At]/jlokparias. There was
a painted representation of this
deity along with Theseus and the
Athenian Demos in the porch of
Zei>s 'EXeudtptos (Paus. 1 3, 3).
13. Qr)<jeo}v : in Pyanepsion
;
of. 61 3. For the form cf. 124
a 10.
Frg. d. 1 sqq. The fourth
year of the pentaeteris
;
the be-
ginning is lost, as well as the
latter part of the accounts of the
preceding year.
Frg. e. Eemains of a catalogue
of golden crowns dedicated in the
acropolis. Probably the words in
the left-hand portion (not given
in the text) of frg. a 1. 16 [ere-
<pav<jode]is, 1. 24 . . . dpxov, 1. 25
[crT(pava}d]ds refer to the same
subject.
Frgs.
/, g,
h. Fragments of
three columns, the first two con-
taining a list similar to the pre-
ceding, the third containing the
accounts of crowns wrought of
gold. For the crowns granted in
Col. 2 to Charidemus, Nausicles
and Neoptolemus, see Dem. de
Cor. 264.
272 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [10D
Col 2 (J. 1 is level with 1. 4 of Col.
1).
T-
------
e[irt - - - apxovTos*
0~[T<j>avos, ov XapiSr][xos <l>i\oVOV
A^[apvi>s av0T]KV, o-T<j>ava)8is
5
f7r[o tov 8i]|jlov tov 'A8T|vaa)v,
crr[a6(xov
- -
-
crT[<j>avos, 8v Xap8T]p.os $i]\oevov
A^<ZfO[vVS aV0T]KV, CTTtfyCLV^G) 6 LS
VTTO TO\y 8t]|xou tov *A0T]vata)V,
io crraO/jLo[y - -
-'
arecfxivos, [ov Xapi8r]p.os 4?t\o] evov
' A.'yapvei)^ a'[v0T)Kv, o-T<pavw]#et<?
viro tov Brj/jLo[v tov 'AOtjvafov,
arad/jibv
AAA
-
'
15 o-T6<fiavo<;, bv N<z[vo-ikXtjs . ^\o~apyov
'Of}0ev dveOrj/cev, cr[T<{>av&>0]t? vtto to(v)
Stj/jlov tov 'A0r]vai[<av, o-Ta0p.o]^
H"
crT6(f)avo<;, o^Neo[irTo\(ios 'A]i>Titc\eo(v<;)
MeA,iTL>? dvi0r}[Kiv ttj 'AQt]]va,
20 aTecfravcodels vtt[o tov 8-rjp.ov] tov Col. 3. 1 sqq. In
1
3 the
y
A6rjvalo)V, <JTa6p\ov
.
Ta
f
xiai and ^fieXriral received
(from the melting down of accu-
Col. 3 (1. 1 is level with 1. 2 of Col. 2).
mulated offerings) 48 staters =96
r
drachmae of gold = 960 drachmae
ctt6(PI<Lvov
4
6 8f>os 6 'AO^va^v
of gilverj for one crown For
iaTcefxivGOcrev tov[s , the two crowns presented to
o-TCtTrjpas
AAAAP^lS'
e[ripoiv
Alexander (doubtless of Macedon)
1
/ o. r '
$
* r they received 97 staters. For
aT(pavo)v ovolv, 01$ o orjao\s
;
e , , , , ,
each crown was allowed only
5
Adrjvauov eo-Te(pav(0O- A\e^a[vSpov
}
1000 drachmas of Attic silver
;
aTCLTrjpas
:PAAAAP$$
hence perhaps in evasion of the
Kal
Bpa-XM XP^tov
law the

rant of tw0 crowns to


., r
f ~ f
r
*
-m
/
Alexander. The date was prob-
aretavov, w 8^09
[A]e
V
vamv
aWy 331
^
after Alexander
,
g
eo-T(f)dva)aV Teiaa[i[e]vbv Uaiavi[4a
} return from Egypt ; cf. Arr. An.
10 o~TCLTrjpa<;
AAAAPW[5
i]we 6/3o\o[t. m 6, 2,
Diod. xvn 48.
>
a
v 1 / / r* n r,
7. dpaxny,
10. 6j3o\o|T]. For
aptuuos aT<bavcoVy avv v to Ypvcrl tov . , , .
r
r~
? *r l j A.r l
the loose syntax common in
eXapofiev : p 1
1
'
inventories and accounts see 98
aTaOfibv tovtcdv
:
P H AA--.
11 and Meisterhans Gr. 203.
100]
FINANCE.
Side B.
Fragm. a. Col. 1. Col. 2.
(all traces 8Jt([pos
-
-
lost). <TTa6\y.6v
oY^>o[os
<TTa9|AOV
5
8icj>pos
(TTaGjiov
o[t<|>pos
O"T[a0jx6v
ot[<f>pos
io CTT[a]u[p.6v
8i(f)po[s
<JTau\y.6v

S]i(f)p[os
a[Ta]u[[ibv
[5
Ot([pOS
273
Side B.
Fragm. b.
irpcoTos pvp.6s 8eKa, ots P^Ta
Kal I caret
irapa<ro-i]p.avTai], cr[Ta0p.6v
:HHHH'
Scurcpos pvp.6]? Se/ca, [ots prjTa Kal
8vo IcoTa irapa\(T(: (T
rj
/jia\yTai,
araOpdv
:HH](H)H'
5
Tptros pv(i]o? Se/ca, ot9 [p-fJTct Kal
rpi'a Icot]cx irapaaearj^[avTat,
c]Ta0fibv
:[H]HHH'
ri]rapro(; pv/mbs Se/ca, [ots Piyra
Kal rerrapa loota 7ra[pao-o-T]fjiavTat,
aradfiov
:HHHH*
erepoi ol rb 'ydjjbfxa e^[ovTs
AAA-
(TTaOfxbv Kaar[ov
AAA>
Kal ovtol Kara Seta [pepx-r^'voi ?
irpcoro^ pvfios Se:a, 0I9 [-yap-fia
15
Kal twra irapaaearj^[avrat
crraO/jibv
:HHH*
hjevrepos pvfJLO's Se/c[a, ots -yaixixa
Kat OV\_o Icarja 7TO.[pacro-qp.avTat,
o-raO^ov
:HH]H*
(10
Frg. a. A list, with their
weights, of the chairs which were
carried behind the Kav-qtpbpoi. Cf.
Arist. Av. 1550 sqq., and Schol.
ad loc. Other notices are col-
lected by Michaelis Parth.
p. 330.
185 sq.
Frg. b. A list probably of
crowns (cf. the masculine erepoi
1. 11) belonging to the outfit of
the Kav7)<pbpoi. They were ar-
ranged in rows, pv/xoi, and had
each a letter stamped on them,
followed by the numerals
l
5
I I,
{ICora, duo ICora, rpia iCora
etc.). The weights are expressed
in drachmas.
R. II. 18
274 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. V.
[100
Fragm. c.
K(j>dX.cuov <rTa.QjfjL0V a"T[<j>dvwv
o-vp/irav Kj(^)[dX]<XfcO^ GTau/JL^ov twv
viroScpCj^co^ Kal tgov d/ji(f)cSeoov
5
Kal] tvv
(TTefavwv
:TTTXXXHHAA-*
Xpvjcrou e% aKpo7ro\CO<; eXdftofiev
d.$e~\ipr)iJL,vr]<; ttj<; a^>'v|r^crea)9
TTX^FAAAIIIIICT-
Xpvo-ov] b irpocreirpidixeOa
io
TXPHAA]APhhhhT'
ovtoi o-TaTTjj^e? yiyvovTai
XXXFHHHAP]>*S*
8paxp.ii
tc(?)
xp]^<^
#*- TapT?;yL6o[ptov'
cjiVocrt Kal Tpt(t)[v
15 4TTTTXXXPAAP-.
Frg. c. Totals of gold and
other articles received. 4. vtto-
depides and dficpideai are necklaces
and bracelets doubtless belonging
to the costume of the na.vq<pbpoi.
5. The total in this line is the
sum of the amounts in 1. 8 and
1. 10. The officials received the
old damaged ornaments, bought
more gold and produced the new
total weight as stated. The
value of the extra gold is re-
peated in staters, i.e. didrachms.
7. a(pipr)p:ei>r)s (for the ei = rj see
313, 45 37) T7)s a<p\pr}(reu)s : 'de-
ducting the cost of melting down.'
13. TapTr]p.6[pLov. 60 55, 64 55.
On the symbol for this coin (11. 8,
10) see 99 b, 17, 23.
Fragm. h.
? TTpO
-----------
SpaxJ/LKxr K(fc[d\aiov
--------
|iio-]#09 TH9 ep["yaa-ap.Vois
-----
5
Kt<\>]d\aiov fjiicr[9ov
-------
ot] eiror/aav t9
-------
Ni]fcoKpaTr)<; Nttf[-
-
4k KoXwvov
|]^)'
f)
TO a\cf>a K.a\\ to p-rjTa irapao-to-TJ-
[uavrai
- -
-
Ml)? 'EjpflLOV ta[oT\-qs - - - <j>'
TJ
TO
[dX<pa Kal to "yda-
io /ma irapaaear//ji^avrai
--------
K.paTi7T7rov OX[vv0ios ? - - - <j>' T) TO
[aX<f>a
Kal to 8'X-
Ta Trapaaeo"rjfx\a.vTa.\.
pbdyov iv KfOa[0TjvaCa> o'ikcov <}>
'
r\
[to aXcfja Kal to
el : 7rapacr6cr^[p.avTai
--------
15
TTLva/ca apyvpo[yv
-------
'E<|>i-
a\Toi; 'AytcvXfj
----------
Frg. /t was apparently added
later and by a different engraver.
Nicocrates, 1. 7, is probably the
metal-worker of that name men-
tioned in CIA 11 720 a Col. 1, 16,
724 b, 10, 737 a, Col. 1 11. Mys,
1. 9, can hardly be other than the
celebrated metal-worker of the age
of Parrhasius, the sculptor.
101]
FINANCE. 275
avev rrjs oXX,[t]s
---------
t[ov]t<w /co\\r)[s
--------
hpa^fxal' /jLLa0[d<s
-------
20 tcecfxiXaiov
--------
v[8]/04e3[v] /c[a\
---_---.
IOI. A slab of Hymettian marble broken on all sides, 0.11 m. in thickness,
inscribed on both sides. CIA 11 742. Cf. Boeckh St* 11 278 sq.
Alphabet, type 1
; |
is
.
2
; there is no
f
or
\J/.
Side A.
dv\d0rjfjba
. . . dvSpids 7]ez^e[i]ft)^ o~<f)v[py\ka.To% ?
dvd0T]|xa] a . yLto^[o]? vyi7][s
x]a\fcov<> 6v/JL6ye67][s ....
5
dvd8T]p.a MXi]Te&)9* iraWahiov e . . . .
.... airoararel o ri eZ^[ev
.... d]vd6r}/jba Kap/civov [opucfov . . .
airoaTarel ort 6Z^[cv
. . vjY^eV dvSpids dyeve[ios
10 . . . X.]aLplov MeX,tT6 : a7ro[o-TaTt
on d\]ev 7rat? yvpivos \a\yoiv '<i\<av
..... dva0r)/bLa
'
Av0fjLLO)v[os
.... Kvvrjv e%et real \o[<|>ov or
X6[yxr\v
.... x\eipolv zeal r\ Wep[a
15 ... 9 fii/cpov dvd6r}/Li[a
. . 6i]\KTpvova e%e[t
. . dirocr]TaTet OTfc 62^[ev
9 (HpOaXfjbbs [t
/3aCTfjL
Side B.
V T?79
/Jbijpbs oa-
fj,
. KdTWv dvdOrj^ia
airOGTCLTOVCTLV 01 6<f>[Qa\\Loi
. 09 teal to 6ppo7Tvyio[v . . .
182
276 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [101
t]o[s] lALKpOV KCU 7TOO? . . . .
ol] Sd[K]rv\oi' irals yv/ji[v6s ....
.... tca[\] rrjs 8e^ta9 Kvi]\y.r\% . . .
io . i/c .
fiaXris
yetp&v r
. . . ^J^/So?'
ivSel
x
L
[p
.... pov
eVefpJo? yv/jLv[6s ....
9 apL(TTpa\<5
o<?
#
ivhel
X
ei
\-P
15
... . 'i\repo^ \^]vfxvo[^
779
TUV 7To8[(Ss
^Tp]09 yV/JLVOS
6[<j>Tlp0S
?
rrjs
8ef
t[as ....
Sh-Je/309
20 c<i
The stone contains fragments of inventories of bronze statues. The in-
ventories were probably deposited in the Acropolis and published by the
Treasurers of Athena. This and the similar documents hitherto found may be
assigned to the second half of the fourth century b.c.
The recurring phrase airoaTaTel 8ri d\e means
'
the object carried by the
statue (e.g., in the case of the Palladion, a spear) is missing.' A statue from
which nothing is missing is vyirjs,
'
entire.'
102. A slab of grey marble : H. 1 ft. 10^ in.
;
Br. 1 ft. 1 in. From the
Elgin Collection. CIG 155; Hicks BMI 1 34; CIA 11 754. Cf. Michaelis
Parthenon,
p. 310; H and V, Athens, 395 sqq.
[Compare throughout the Commentary in BMI from which the following is in the
main abbreviated.]
Alphabet, type
1;
is
2
. Inscribed aToixydov "in those small clear
characters which mark all the documents of Lycurgus' administration." Hicks.
349/8
B.C.
mtC
. . . .]V0V 7To[lKl\oV
. . apjopf/yijz^ov
. . . v ... i koKv[pp.a
Tapav^TLVOV 7T/0O9 (T . . (J . .
o-Ta0p.]o^ e[iT]7e7pa[Tr]T0
:hhhC:
lc/> . . . . vrj a* . . ,
77 Ap[x]i7r7T7] Kard(TTLKTOV x6ipiS[<a]rb[v ep. irXa-
(1)'
iirt [K]aWifid'%ov apyovros' \iOwvi(jko\% ktcv-
09 irepiTroucLXos, K_aWi7nr7}' ovtos e%et ypd/jL[\iar-
]vv(f)acr/jLeva' XaipiTTTrr), ILvkoXlvt} KardanKrov e[p
102]
FINANCE. 'Ill
B.C.
B.C.
348/7
10 ir\]atat(i)' <>l[\]ov/jlvt) yjLT&va [d]/jb6pyivov eirl fyeo(f)[C-
Xov a/o^o[vT]o?* YlvOids KardcrriKrov ^vcttlBootov e[ir-
347/6
I (tbe/jLMTTOKXeovs ap^ovros' xltcovlgkos dXovpyo-
9 ttoiklXos
fi
irXaiaiop, vaiv\;rf\ teal MaXOd/cr) dve6[t]-
KV yiTddvlaico^ ttouciXos
ifi
TrXaiaiop dXovpyos .
150. racrco . a, \LvkoXlvj) dveOrjKev QuXr) ^od/jua' <>6L$vX\[a.
Ifidriov XevKov yvvaiKelov ifx
TrXacaU)' yivrjaco /3[a-
rpa^lSa' Nafcrl? IfidrLoi' yvvaiKelov irXarvaXovp-
76?
Trepi^Kvj/jidTioir KXeoo dynreyovov <>iXr) TreptrjyrjT-
ov T[t]icn/cpdTia Kavhvv ttolklXov MeXtTTa l/jbdrt-
20 0V XeVKOV KCLL %LTa)Vl(TKOV, pdfCOS' YXvKepa ZKlvS\tT1T-
ov yvvrj ^itcdvlctkov TrepujyrjTOV eKirXvTop dXovp[y-
ei Kal \r]oL(3o>VLa ovo' NucoXea ^crcova dfiopyivov, 7r[-
pl too k'Ber [Ko^rpoirrov eXe<j>avTtvrjv Xa\$]rjv h\ov, irp-
346/5
09 Tq) r[oi]^ft),
^
ApiCfToBa/Juea dvedrjKev errl
'
Ap-^lov' A-
25
pX
<7T
P
(^T
{.'
r
\\
MvijcnaTpdrov Ilaiavioos OvyaTrjp
X
LTC0
~
vL nrvpyoorov ifju
7rXat(Ti(p' WLvrjcrtcrrpdrrj Eevoc/uXfov
i/jbdriov XevKov irapaXovpyes, rovro to XiOlvov e[8-
09 a/xTre^erar ^itcoplo-klov Kaprov iraiBelov av\ert-
iypacfrov,
7rapv<f>r}v %ei 6epfi[ti\arLV' aevocpdvrrj %[itw-
30 v'ujkov e^i(TT(o\y\ Krevoorov, ovtos eirl too /cava)' [Nuc-
o/3ovXrj 67r//3X,^[p.a] ttocklXov Kaivov, arj/necov
e[x]ec i-
fx
/juecra), Aiovvo-os airevBoov Kal yvvrj olvoyoovaa' *Ap-
icrreia 67ri/3Xr)/u,a [f\fjb 7rXataia), ep, fieaoo e%et t,ooa o-
345/4
e^co[y]/jLva' eirl Ejv/3ovXov ap^ovros' dpurkyovov, Apr-
35
e/xiBos lepov 7riyeypa7rr[a]c, irepl too eBei too
p[x~
atop, %eavoo' dpureyovov irepi too eBec rco dpxaico[i, II-
evreTrjp\C\$' rapavrlvov irepl too eBec too dp%a[(<a,
%eavoo' fcardaTLKTov Btirrepvyov irepl too eSei [t<3
dpyaioo' yXavls KapTr/
dypacfros irapdfioXov e^o[vo-a'
40 iraihiov yXavLcnciov Xev/cbv Kaprov, lepov e7ri[yty-
paiTTai 'A/DTeyLttSo?, irapdfBoXov zyei cfrocvLKiov
X
l
\-
r
~
oovio~ko<; KTeva)To<; TrepLTroiKiXos, irepl too a<ya\/z[a-
tl tw opOcp' ^tTO)^/cr/co9 KTevooTos TrepLijyrjTos' [Xr\-
Slov aveTriypafyov "B,evaplo-T7) 'Avtl^oovtos yvvrj n[-
45
piOoiBov
yj
,Twvl<J,COv ktvoot6v, Xrj[8i\ov'
x
LT(]dv
'
icr
\
K
~
09 XevKov irvpyooros 7rapaKV/j,uTtos irXarvaXovpy[r\-
9 dveTTLypafyos' ifiaT[i]ov dvBpelov, 'Apyovids dve6[rj-
Kev /3aT/oa^i9, eyicvKXov ttocklXov, ^A6t]va'i<; dvedrj^K-
B.C.
278 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[102
ev dXovpyls ^evacr), [pja/co?, dv7rlypa<f>o<;' M.P7]ai[<r]Tp
50
drrj ayjirkyovov e/x irXaiai^'
'
Avtl/3iov yuvrj <t>ei8vX-
Xa xltoovlov ap>opyivov dirXovv' Y^aXXiTnrr) yjLTwvlcr-
KOV /CTV(OT0V Nitfft)
^
[
it] &>[v]tCT/CO Z/ 7T6pi7]y7]T0V
'
ApT/jL-
iSr 'iTnrohafjLT) %eoreX[ov^\ AX[a]ta>? yjLT(javio~Kov rjfxi\y-
$\r)
ifju
7rXaia[C<a]i kcli Kp\oK
]
*
irapaXovpyih\y-
55
o\v %lt(dvi(t/cov airXo[yv, . . .]t7T7rrj dveOrj/cev <&avo<TT[p-
arr{\ fc[ar]a(TTLtcTov
[
a]Xovpyi8o<s . . .
-
. . tjv 'ApicrTQ) Kardcr[Ti]fc[r^o[v ]v ev oOovicp p[i-
a \i]aXa/cd, HBvXrj' kpok[<otov x""covio-k]o[v] iraihiov [a*yp-
344/3
o](f)ov'
Xaipearpdr^ ijp.i]
1^779,
pd/cos' eirl [Av-
B,c
"
^ / 1
"
a
' v
r
60 tcCo-KJof ap^ovTos' tlevo/cparous yvvi] [icp-
o]/ccl>to^ harXovv z/[.] dv7TLypa[$o-
v* 3>]tA,7/ Kpo/ccorbv 8cir[\ovv 4p. ir\ai<r]a>[i 4>]tX[ov]^e[vT] M-
VTlo-i]8?7^0U AayLt7TT^[a)S "yWT|
X
IT
]&>^[
1
]
^ ayLtOp["y]i[vov l-
o-oTTTvxje?* KaXXtcrTa) [xnwiov] dfiopytvov $itt[\ovv'
65
x^twviov l<r]o7TTir^e9 [dpop-yivjoi; ai/7rt7/oa^)o[v'
x
iT
~
wviov lo-o-n-TvxJe? ScttXovu [dv][irC\ypacf)ov' %[i]t&)[v . . .
SijirXovv Ka[rd<r]riKTOv . . .
r\apavrlvov Ta[p]a^T[tvov
ira]paXovpye[s i]e[p]ov [iir]i[y]eyp[atzTa-
70 1
.]
rapavrlvov KaKXrjir1080^0. . .
Kara]crTt;[T]o[y]. v(f>7]/jbay
. . .
e? /cai tcpoK7]v /jl
o
X
^LTCOV
-
Since the time when Boeckh described this monument as
'
marmor in re
vestiaria classieum,' a whole series has been discovered in the Acropolis of
closely similar inscriptions, represented by CIA 11 751 sqq. in the section
1
Tabulae Curatorum Brauronii.
'
Our inscription contains an inventory of articles of dress dedicated to
Artemis Brauronia in the Brauronium, the site of which is close to the
Propylaea on the south. The remarkable collection of cast-off raiment seems to
comprise
(1)
the garments worn by children at their presentation to Artemis
;
(2)
the girdles dedicated by brides before marriage
; (3)
garments dedicated after
childbirth. (For further explanations and illustrations see Mr Hicks ad loc.)
The Brauronian treasure came under the head of twv dWiou dtuv and we
might have expected to find it deposited in the Opisthodomus of the Parthenon :
cf. IO 15 sq. Some exception however is evidently contemplated in the words
(ib. 16) oaa duvarov ical o<xtov, and the arguments summed up by Hicks (I. c.)
102]
FINANCE. 279.
tend to the conclusion that the regular store-house of the Brauronian treasures
was the Brauronium itself.
The dedications enumerated in the inscription belong to the period 349

344 b.c, as we learn from the names of the archons.


The following list of articles of clothing may be useful : 1. 2 etc. 'Ap.6pycvos
sc.
x
LT&v : i.e. made of dp.opyis, Amorgian flax (cf. dp.6pyiva x^uvia Ar. Lys. 150,
described as dia<pai>rj ib. 48). 1. 4 Tapavrwov : a fine Tarentine woman's garment
reaching to the ankles. Ath. xiv 622 b, Schol. Ar. Lys. 45. 1. 6 /cardo-n/cros
XetptSwros (sc.
x<-
T&v) : embroidered sleeved tunic. Pollux vn 55 explains Kard-
(ttiktos
x
LT&v to be 6
^x
3V
V
a
V
b\vQn vv<paap.eva. 1. 7
x
LTU}VL<TK0^ ktvojtos : a
woven shift. Of. Hesych. ktvo)tt)' ixpavrrj, and Pollux vn 52, <sti 5 rd p.ev
TTPTdKTva
x
lt0}vL<xkol trapd ttju tpav irop<pvpol Trtvre Krevas vv<pacrp.i>oi (Bekk.).
1. 11 v<ttl5u)t6s = v<ttis. 1. 15 ^ua :
(1)
a girded frock, Ar. Fragm. 309, 7,
cf. Aesch. Fragm.
240, (2)
later =
favrj. 1. 16 ip-driov. See Diet. Ant. s.v.
Pallium. (Sarpaxis : a frog-green coat. Schol. Ar. Eq. 1406 eldos itxdijTos
dvdivris, op.oi.op rep 6v6p.a.Ti exoticrys to xptD^ua. 1. 18 dp.irexovov = dp.irexbvT) : shawl.
TrepLrjyrjTov : apparently a
'
plain-bordered ' garment. 1. 19 ndvdvs : a Medo-
Persic robe with wide sleeves. Our authority for the form of it is the
Persepolitan sculptures. Diet. Ant. 1. 22 Tpift&viov,
dim. of rplpuv : not
necessarily a 'threadbare' cloak, but a coarser variety of the ip.driov. See Diet.
Ant. s.v.
rplfiuv. 1. 31 e7ri/3A?7/xa : ace. to L. and S., a piece of embroidery, but
it more probably denotes an outer garment of some kind. See Diet. Ant. s.v.
Amictus. Cf. for another use of the word as a covering for a bier, D 877, 4 (Ceos).
1. 38 diwripvyov, apparently used as a noun : a mantle with two irrepd. 1. 39
xXavis {x^o-vLgkiov) : a much finer garment (than the x\atj/<x) and of Milesian
wool, Diet. Ant. s.v. Pallium. 1. 43 Xrjdiov (also \rj5os, Xydiov, Xyddpiov) : a light
summer dress, Diet. Ant. I.e. 1. 48 ZyuvuXov : a woman's upper garment, Ar.
Thesm. 261, Lys. 113. 1. 49 dXovpyis : a purple robe, Ar. Eq. 967.
6. 'Ap[x]iTnrw : sc. dvednicev ; but frequently as in 11. 7, 8 both the thing
dedicated and the name of the dedicator are given in the nominative. The
expression ip. irXaioiip, which recurs frequently, denotes that the figures
'
were
enclosed in a kind of chequered pattern, which divided the garment into
lozenges or oblong compartments : such patterns are often to be seen in vase-
pictures and ancient mosaics (see Wieseler, Theater-Gebaude, pll. vii, viii
;
Wiener Vorlege-blatter 1888 vi; cf. Lat. scutulatus).'' Hicks.
7.
x<-6
<j0V
'
L<TKs i s obviously an engraver's mistake. The word ktvu)t6s is
restored from CIA n 755, 2, where the same collocation occurs,
x<-
tuv'i.<tkos ktcviotos
jrepiwoLKiXos. The last epithet 'variegated all round' is used of the tails of dogs,
Xen. Cyn. v 23 rr\v ovpdv oi p.h KvuXip TrepLiroiKiKov, oi 8t irapdcreipov (i.e. only
on one side).
9. EvKoXivv. The BMI has {X)evKoXivTJ, on which Koehler (CIA) remarks
'
Dubito num vox \ei>/co\u>7?s unquam usurpata sit.' Cf. 1. 15.
13. ttoikLXos ip. irXaiaiy. The colour was arranged in a chequered pattern.
15. o[5] rd <rcD[a] XevKoXwi) : Michaelis, Parth. p. 310 and Hicks.
dvdr)Kev <i>LXy. Mr Hicks reads dvidnntv $LXy; joining Qp.a with $el8vXXa,
and so frequently he makes the person dedicating follow in the enumeration,
where CIA assigns the dedicated article to the name preceding.
17. irXarvaXovpyes vepiKvp-dTiou : 'with a broad purple border of wave-pattern
all round
'
; a pattern often seen on robes represented in vase-paintings.
280 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[102
19. Teurt/cpdreict. For the diphthong cf. Tei<rap.ep6s, Teiaavdpos etc. enume-
rated by Meisterhans Gr. 53.
20. paKos. The expression often occurs in the Brauronian lists, in apposi-
tion to a substantive. Perhaps it should be literally translated 'in rags.'
21. 7repir)yr\Tov eKirXvrip dXovpyec : 'with a plain border of purple that has
been washed out.'
22. irepl tu) edet. Cf. 1. 27 touto (sc. 1/jloltiov) to \16lvov edos d/U7rexercu ; 11. 35,
36, 37, 38 7rept t<2 edet rip apxaiQ ', 1. 42 7rept rep dydXptart Tip 6p9<2. Here a
marble seated statue is contrasted with a standing statue, by implication not of
marble. The edos was then the old cultus image, the dyctX/uta a new votive
image. That the eSos was not a copy of the older xoanon at Brauron, said
to have been brought by Orestes from Tauris (Eur. I. T. 1359, 1448 sqq. and
passim), is clear, according to H. and V., because the xoanon is represented by
all tradition as a standing statue.
22 etc. For Nt/coAea, 'Apiarooapea see 26 33, 84 118.
23. KCLTpOTTTOU \ cf. KCLTClPTpOKV, O.TTaVTpOKV. The form KCLTpOTTTOV OCCUrS 18
times, the normal Karoirrpov only once in Attic inscriptions. Meisterhans Gr.
80. Cf. Mod. Gr. KadpecpTTj. 25. yiTwvl. :
x
lt(j}Vl0
~
K0V -
26. -rrvpywTov eix irXato-'ttp :
'
a tunic of chequered pattern and with an
embattled border,' such as occurs in vase-pictures. Cf. Ath. v 196 c : /meaoXei/Kots
ifiver&a-ftatri irvpywroh, i.e. hangings white in the middle, with a battlement-
shaped border. Hicks. 1. 26 begins with the letters
N I
oni
y>
followed by
TTVpyWTOV.
27. 29. wapaXovpyes

irapv<pr)v. Cf. Pollux vn 53 : rrapveph de K<xl irapa-


Xovpyes to eKartpwdev
'4x
ov Trapvcpaofxevriv iropepvpav. In 1. 29 irapvcpT] denotes a
border not all round; but on either side. deppLaaTis, for Oepfxaarpis which occurs
CIA n 675, 42, is a smith's pair of fire-tongs, and was also applied (Ath. xiv
629 e) to a certain kind of dance, fxautdodrjs opxy&ts,
in which perhaps the dancing
figure was likened to a dep/naarpis. The wapvepr) depixao-Tts then might have been
a border with dancing figures. The loss of the
p
in deppta-arls may be ranked
with such displacements as those noticed on 1. 23.
28. KapTov :
'
shorn of its nap or pile,' perhaps from wear.
30. e^i(TTU}[u] probably, says Mr Hicks, the substance of whose note is given,
represents e^[e]aTw[v]. Perhaps connected with e^earts or e'taarts, the rough
edge left by tearing linen or cloth, Hippocr. Ojfic. Med. 744. Galen, Expl.
vocum Hippocr. s.v., gives a similar explanation. So Erotian s.v. Possibly
there was an adjective e^ecrrcos meaning either 'having a pile,' 'with a woolly
surface,' or rather 'reeved out,' 'with the threads beginning to fringe at the
edges.'
32. Ai6vv(to<; ktX. For the nominatives cf. Paus. i 2, 4 otK-qpta dydXptaTa
x
ov ^K iryXov, /3a<TiXei)s
'
Adrjpaioov ' AixcptKTvwv aXXovs re deovs eartCov kclI Atovvaov.
33. 5eiov/uLva :
'
figures joining their right hands ' as often, e.g., on
sepulchral reliefs. H.
36. IleuTeTrjpis : restored from CIA n 758 a Col. n 18. Harpocration s.v.
Nepicts Xapddpa quotes from Polemon a xpr/faaiiia forbidding the name to be
given to a dovXr) or direXevdepa or irdpvr) or avXrjTpLs (cf. Ath. xn 587 c ; Preller
Polemonis Fragm. in). Other names derived from festivals are Havadrjva'ts,
'ArraToijpios, 'AvdeaTrjpios, QapyyXia, Arjuatos, 1$ov/JLr)vtos, 'Icd/uuds, Nepeds. (Keil
Spec. Onomatolog. Gr.
pp. 16, 99.)
103]
FINANCE. 281
39. irapafioXov : ace. to Boeckh, a border not woven on, but sewn on.
53. r)fuv<pTj : Kangabe on CIA n 758 b Col. in 12, 15 translates
'
demi-tisse,'
i.e. very finely woven.
103. A slab of Pentelic marble, originally containing 119 lines, of which
however only the first 37 given below are legible. 'Found on the Acropolis.
CIA n 766. Cf. Grirard L'Asclepieion (VAthenes, p. 116 sqq.
(The text
of
the inscription in given on
pp.
282-3.)
Alphabet, type 1
;
numerals are preceded and followed by the sign
(:),
which
also marks abbreviations.
Probably the first part of the inscription was engraved on a stone now lost.
We have here an inventory of the dedicatory gifts in the Asclepieum, the site of
which was on the south slope of the Acropolis. The inventory is arranged
according to priests and archons. The articles enumerated are various
;
with
the exception perhaps of <tk\os (1. 8),
napblav (1. 16) and dcpdaX/mol xpucroi (1. 22)
they do not appear to include models of parts of the body, dedicated for cures
effected, such as are noticed in 60 18 and form the staple of the objects
catalogued in some other inventories, belonging to the Asclepieum, e.g. CIA n
835, 836 (cw/xa yvvo.ixos, cr/cAoy, irpoacoTrov, aibolov, tltOos, ods, Kapdia, [xei]pi5ioi>
iraihiKOv).
Abbreviations are frequent, as t\vTp: = 4\i>Tpu), toLx'-=toIx^>, ^\i: = ^v\lvov.
For the abbreviations of the demotic names see 35 6, 59 33 sqq.
1. ev iX6r[p{cp) :
'
in a case.' One of the equivalents given by Hesychius s.v.
is driK-q. ov]k <ttii> : 'missing.
1
2. irpos irivaiiLu) : the coins were affixed to a tablet or other object.
3. erepas kt\. : 'another drachma is wanting, which is in the hands of
Telesias.'
5. kclXicls is perhaps
'
a wooden niche.' Cf. the Lexx.
6. tovto kt\. Perhaps IIo\i/ei>os is the same as in 1. 19: 'this missing
amount which P. repaid on his own account (he dedicated as) a gilded censer of
wood a cubit long.' On the difference between iirixpvaos, Kardxpvaos, Trepixpvcros
see 97 7.
9. avpLfxeiKTov. The diphthong is legitimate in all forms of this verb which
have not the short vowel, and in derived proper names
;
thus we have fj-ei^o),
Merits, Mei^tS^os ; cf. tlvu, Tei<ru), Teiaa/jieuds. Meisterhans Gr. 180 sq. For
IWiXea see 102 22.
11. 'AvTiy6vas. The Doric form is strange.
12 sq. <jTo.Qix.bv. Meisterhans Gr. Ill quotes from other inscriptions
instances of the neuter form.
15. Nt/dSia : small statues of Ni/07.
17. 8iKaSiav : qu.
'
an urn (uddos) with two compartments
'?
18. For lepei(w) see 39 introd.
19. xepxviov : perhaps diminutive of
k^px^V,
a kind of hawk.
26. VTrr)pyvp(i)/j.e(vos), 28 viroxa^KOL. See 97 7.
27. sXetdiou irevTefia\avov : a key with five prongs; see Baumeister Denkm.
p. 1808.
B.C.
282 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. V. [103
Text
of
h\aKTvXio<; ^pvaovs acrT[a]ro?, Sevofc[pdrr]s dv]e[0T]][v, 4v] iXvr-
k eartv AioireiOys irpbs irivaKiw :
P
: KaW/yLta^o? e[|x] iriva/ciw
Xe'nrei : | | |
:
, ravras Set[v] ecj)rj dirohovvai AioxXea Mvppi :
7T/D0? too vireprovaiw
'.\-\-'.
AtV^uX/S?;? irpb<s raiviSio) :(-|||*
5
eV /caXidSi 7rpo? tc5 to/^ : A^fjiOGrpdrrj oivoyor\v ^aXfc :
(
HBvXr]
IdoV 'JLv7T0plQ)V 7TpO<; TTIVCLKI
'.
A H H
: "OvCLGO? 6/JL TTlvaKlBll
rod <ro> aTreBcoKe TloXv^evos Ov/jliclttjplov %vXi : ir^yyalov eiri-
vi/ci&rjs 'AXai: iraXaids elvai' AioSorrj
:A-
k&l GtceXos iiri^pv:
340/39
Aio/cXeovs lepe : , apypvros oe SeocfypaGruv dpyvpiov GVfifiei/crov
io too tol%g) :
AA
: Ai<j)iXo<; iv irivaKiw irpos rS
rofy:
irpoGUnrov
VCLKIW 7T/909 Tft>
'
AvTlyOVa? TTIVCUCIU)
lAAAA^
'
Hj?]
/jLOOV ^
A.6
fJLO
'.
:
hhhhlll
: NiKo/ia^os 6/jL 7rivarci(p
:A-
KaWt'a? K.aXXi7T7rov
0/jlov iiriyeypairr :
HHF
<j)idXr)v
'
ApiGTotycov 'Afyvi: dveOrj/ce
pyvpa, rjv <$>iX(ov dveOr) : aGrarov iv iXvrp : TeXeGap^o^ XoXap :
i^eypa:
PAhHII
: ^ T<^ Nucihia'
KVfjifiiov dpyv: iv iXvrp : b
dvkQr\ : GTaOp, : iiriyeypaiTTai :
p
: OlvdQr\ iv raiviSiw \\-\-\
7T/30? TTivaKi : ^ok/cd' QiXcov QaXrjpe : Si/caoiav TlafufiiXr)
:
p
: Ba/crvXios vdXi : G<f>payi$e<> vdXi :
P
: %XafAv<z (fzaid'
339/8
g HoXv^evov %pvGLov, GraQp, : | : apyvpiov
GVfifjieiKT :
p
| :
20 w dXvGLcp BeSefie : GraOp, : iiriyeypaTrrai :\-Q\ (friaXr) dpyvpd
riyi tc5 vXiv(p rep Karaice'XpvGWfjLi : %pvGai Bpa^/^al :
h h
*

AAAA^
'ApiGTo&oopos iv i\vrp: \-\- : 6(f>daX/jioi %pvGo2
Xovvi : Suo rpiGofioXa irpos rw toi^ : Me^i7T7r?; Kep^viov iv
pyvpiw SeSe/Lte :
A
: GrXeyyiSes :
||
: -^aX/cel aXvGei hehe^ie:
2-
s
eiyahtciVT)' haKrvXios GiBrjp : dXvGei ^aX/cei Beoe/Jii : ^Afieivo)
oeSefAe:' Sa/crvXios Gi&rjpovs vTrrjpyupcofie: G(f>payi8ia
:||||:
x
VT(
^y
dveOrjfce' Ba/crvXioi Gibrjpoi :
A P
I : Kai /cXeiSlov TrevrcftdXavov
rov UoXv/cpiTOV GT6(fiavoi
vTro^aXKoi :
||
:

G<fipayl<s GVvOeros,
gttis, GapSiov gvv/coXXt]t :
Gifipayls ow\j\' eVl TeiGiov lepe:,
338/7
20 rerpaBpa^fMov ev' tvttos apyvpovs 7rp6s irivaKiw' 6(f>0aX/jiol iiri-
III
:
*
OoXia' irivat; Tlapiov Xidov' KvXi^yl^ Yiapiov Xidov xa\
erepas 'Rpjjuov dveOrj :
p
: aGrpaydXiov iirvy^pv : oXvgiw ^aX[Kt5
(r^iSrjpai :
HI
: XtjkvOos gkvt[Cvt]\
'
XyjkvOos dXvGei SeBe/jie :
<r]iKva ^aXKYj fxiKpd' GrXeyyis
X
a
\S\
K
*l
ai
^VP-
'
X[a](3r)v eyov :
35&)
GiSrjpd' GrXeyyls GiSrjpd' /cvfJ,/3iov v[aki
:]
7rpoG[K]e(f)dXaiov
fA,^*>t? ITa/5[]ou [Xi]^[ov, .... dvi]Or] : [d]</)[8a\|i]oi ..'...
01 ..., ol
eOrj : KaXXia
B.C.
B.C.
103]
FINANCE. 283
no. 103.
[p
: <ni$\avo<; dp[yv]povs, bv Aia)v aveO^KJev, [oi-
7r/9o? to5 roiy.
AAAA
M.vr}aaper7] :
A
: e\-
erepas ivSel : \- : rrapd TeXeaia' KaXXtarcb :
erepa c/jl irivaKiw : (- : irpoaunrov puiKpov
(5)
oivoyoriv yaXic : N*/aa? Koyyov II apiov X-
:
A h h
eVSet :
h h h h :
tovto to iXXec7rov b virep ea-
ypvaov ' M.WVLOV :
p
: ravras
ecfrr)
6 Upe : Eu-
XXcl/jlix;' 6povo<s %vXi : rdSe dvereOrj iiri
araO :
f- h h h
IlacrtXea eV eXvrp : 7r^o9
(10)
dpyvpovv teal dpyvpiov :
A
: TlvOcov ip, m-
ev racviStw :
P A
: KXu/i^ e/A ttivclkL'.
P AA
:
Pa/xiW :
<fii,d\r)v
dpyvp : [ajcrTaToi/ eV eXvrp : , o-Ta-
dararov, araOpu : iircyiypairrau :
H
: cfyidXr) a-
irorrjpLov dpyvpovv dararov, arad : e[ir]t<y-
(15)
ea^co aveOrj : dara : Kvpuftiov dpyvpovv darar : b QiXr)
MeX^TO? /capSiav dpyvpdv /cal ofyihtov :
TpnroZicncov Tt/xoe^o9 Kapyrjaiov Zacr7r[i]Se[s
TaSe dvereOrj eirl Avaipayl^ov dpyovr : /epet[a>s
XprfaLfios :
A A
: ^tXtwy icepyyiov darar : %[pv]o"-
(20)
darar : rjv eoS&)/oo? dvedrj : 7T/90? tg5 T6T-
KXeaperT) ip, irivaicLtp :
AA
^lXtj iv iXvr :
dararoi irpbs Trivatcicp, ou? AOcrt? dviOrj : Hiy^crta?
mvaiciw dararov darpdyaXoc Sop/cdSeoc a-
<&vo>,
7}
puev yaXKYj, rj Si aiSrjpa, rovrcov rj puia 6p-
(25)
laarriv eiriKeypvacopLe : dXvaet yaXicy
XlOlvov ev fcapyrjatov, b KXeivco ^clXk :
oivoyor) i/c t/}? ^etpo? rod dv&pidvr :
yjivaiov 81a pueaov,
'
Apiarayopa dpedrj : ia-
dpyovros Se XaipcovSov' 6<j)0aXpLol iiriypv : : ||
:
(30)
xpvaoi :
||
:
" VTrohrjpidrcDV yvvaace : ^evyrj
avXos, 'la? dve6r] : Bpa-%pLa<; iv dvOepuiw :
A P

8]eSe[p/]e : arXeyyis' Xrj/cvdos' arXeyyt&es
arXeyyis aiorjpd' Xr)Kv0o[\.] :
||
: arXeyyls ai8r)
:
arXeyytSes athrjpal :
|| : arXeyyU Trpbs Xrj/cvd-
(35)
ipeovv' KvXiyyls \k\v iXvrp : [%]vX[v(p' Xvpa' k-
[p.]ei^ [8]uo [a]p[-yv]pot, ol 8e 8vo ypvaoi <l>a[v]l<; av-
B.C.
284 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[103
28. (njvderos kt\. : of cast
(?)
metal, with a small gold centre-piece. In DI
2502, 30 (Delphi) a payment is made for j3o\ifxov
(
=/jlo\v(38ov) <svvBe<n%.
29. adpdia, Sardian stones, and laairides are mentioned together by Plfcto
Phaedo 110 d. <rvyK6\\r)T(a) : 'cemented.' For the distinction between ovvi;
and (rap56w see L. and S.
30. nJiros. See 60 18.
31. do\ia : probably a chest or casket with a conical lid, Poll. 10, 138. By
avdeixiov is meant a band with floral ornament, used as the -mvaiuov 1. 2 or the
raivibiov 1. 11.
104. A slab of Pentelic marble, in two fragments, found at Eleusis.
CIA iv 2, 767 b.
Alphabet, type 1 ; the sign
(
:
) before and after numerals,
^tolxv^ov.
rdSe 7rap[&]oaav emcrrdrai *EXevcriv60ev
'
Avria0evrj<;
'
Avri/cpdro-
f? *\Kapi\i\v<;, AficfiteriSrjs Qeorroinrov TlaiovLSrjq, Av/JLo/cXeiSi]*; <t>iX-
o/cXeov[s EjtVeaio?, ^eo(f)cXo<; KaXXt\xdyov
^
Ayapvevs, Aa/jL7rpta<; Acl/jl-
rrplov ^v[Tr\aXrjTTio<;, 'AXe^lfiayo^ Tetcra/jLevov e/c KolXtjs, Ato^evo^
5
TlX[dT<o]vos Tpifcopvcrtos, ol? iypa/jb/jidrevev
'
Ayv60eo<; (vacant space)
332/1
'A[\]co7refcrj0ev, emcrrdrai^ rois iirl Nl/ctjtov ap)(ovros KaXA,ea KaX-
\l7T7t[o](v) : Aapurrpel Xaiptyevei Xcupe<ficovTO<; M.vppivovcri(p, TloXve-
V
XV
Avrayopov Ylepi0oiSr), HoXv/jltJStj Aieirpetyov? QXvei, Tetcr-
ia Aei;i0eov <PXveL, Yleicrla
'
Apicrro/cpdrovs M.apa0covtcp, Fsvatvi-
iotw 1Lv0vSlkov \\va<f)Xvaricp, ot? eypafjbjjbdrevev (douKpirlSrj^ KaX-
Xio(v): %opiKLO$' xpvcrd' 7rXao-[rp]a ^pvcrd, opfiov firjXa :
APII
'-, a/cv-
Xol :
A P I
:

<TTa0/jLov rovrcov drravrcov :


["plA
AA hhllll
: dpyvplov vofxiaixaro^ d-
pyaiov :
AAAhhllllC
: arXeyytSiov tcareayos eirirrjKrov, erepov
iTTLTTjKTov tcareayos, ara0fibv rovrcov :
Phil III
vrroSepls -)(pV(T7J
15
teal Ba/crvXios, 'Hzevo/cXea dve0rjfcev, ara0fibv rovrcov :
Phil IK
: &a
~
ktvXoos drrelpcov ^pvcrovs. o-ra0pibv :
||||
: dairiStaKi^ ^pvarj Kal S-
a/crvXeos xpvaovs, dirvpov yjyvalov apyvpico SeSe/xevov, Sa/crvXi-
oi Svo Kareayore^, \xt)victkoi Tpet? -ypvcrol, SafcrvXioi rpeU direi-
poves, SafcrvXioi y^pvaoi ypvalov Xev/cov drreLpoves Svo, erepov
20 tcaTe[ay]b<; xpvo-iov Xev/cov, erepa drrvpa ypvala Svo, evcoSia Svo
yjp-
vcrd avvre0Xao~fxeva, y^pvala Xeirrd' ara0^bv rovrcov dirdvrcov
:AII|C:
o.py]vpd' criyXot Kal dcrKol i^dytcrroi, ara0p,bv rovrcov :
hhhhl C
:
~
l
~
7X01 Kal 8a]/cT[v]Xto? dpyvpovs, ara0/ibv :
hlllC
Sa/crvXios clpyv-
povs, o-Ta0u6v :
1
1~
1 1 CZ
: dvepfxa rod . . . ov dpyvpov, ara0fxbv :
H h I Tl
~]
:
25 ,
o-Ta0u6]^ :
APhhhirilll]
: crcf)pa,yLhia Svo [la0-J7rf.Se? %-
pvo-
,
crra0|Aov .
.'
akv^CTLOV
XP
v
\-
<r ^<0
]
i SeSefiivov IT-
104]
FINANCE.
285
Xpvo-Cu]
SeSepbeva, to erepo-
v
cr$p]ayi8e<; eirra \lOivai bv
v-^is
<TTa0p.ov
-
-] :| : (piaXr) dpyvpd ^pvcr6fx(j>a-
30 Xos
Ka]ra to 'JLfi/jLeviSou ^rjtyiapLa irp-
o<rirapa8o0e-
<rT*Q]p,bv
'.
AIIIC-
apyvpiov darjpu-
ov ivTOS Tt\s\ TCL(f>pOV U7T0 TO)V ipyCLTOOV
XP
V
~
a-- : dpyvpiov darjpiov crraOpbov
Kcn-d t6 \|/ti<}>i]
cr/xa. irpocnrapahoOevTa ra
d<fiaip-
35
iQivra BiJottou iepo(f)avTOv yevopevov k-
d'Ka]f#09 xclXkovs, at'Xo? etc rod arv-
paKos,
-? r] irepl rov oktJtttpov ^pvai) dirv-
pwros -ov b dcfreipeOr) diro tt}? kcoSvcls kcl-
o-Ta9|x]oz/ dirvpojTov :
P hh hill II
:
4
o -l Kopai eirrjaav, djrvpcoTOv, araOpL-
6v a]fcdv0(p dpyvpovv dirvpcorov, crra-
0(jtov dTTvpcoTos, araOpubv :
P A AA P 1 1 1 1
1
'
air]vpov(?) dirvpcora, <rra6/j,bv :
hHIIIICT:
-v rov o~K7]7rrpov, kpL{3o\os rpiTJpo-
45
vs -i\]dl3o(p,)ev' xpvcra' irpoi^ol^a^
QiXiir^Treiovs Svo crraTrjpas.
336/5
<j)idXai dp-yvpat' 4>uxXt]v rjv tj PovXrj i^] 7rl TlvOohrjXov dpyovTO^ dve6r}-
334/3
k, o-Ta0|x6v
'
cre'pav i\d\r)v dpyvpdv rjv rj {3ov\r) r) errl Kt?/-
o-iKXt'ovs dpxovTos av0T]K6, a-TojOpbv :
HAPhlll
:
'
erepav (j)id\r]v dp-
333
/
2
50 7vpdv tjv
1}
povXrj t] eirl NiKOKparoju? apyovros dveOyKe, araOpu :
HA A
:
B.C.
- Tirr\apa^, araO/jiov Terrdpcov ovaojv
, o-Ta6p,bv : \-\-\\ :
twv
x
a^K"v
~
ov
^X
vy^'
f*i<f>ioi,ov' KQdOcoves
-vos /ecu et? dvev goto? /cal Kvp,(3ia)v
55
p]et* tcdSoi rpeis Kareaybre^' yjrv/c-
Ti]p-
H^lx^Dn]/
3
^
T0 ^ ^v W7^e9* Kap^rjaiov v-
yUs -Tt]pa 0aWov crretyavov eyovaa dpy-
vp- -p,kvov KarpoTrra 8vo' (piakrj yak/cr)
Tirpv\7rr}pL6vrj' vSpta Aafccovitcr] . . 7roSe?
60 KJaTeaybres erepot :
AA I
icaX Aa/c-
a>viK-
^],
tovtcov Kareayores rerrape^
-9
e[x]o^Te? direppvr]kotcl<;' /ca[y]ov[y
r\pia' irorripiov \e[3r)Te<; yap,ttcol
8-
vo -Kpov \eovTo/3ao-is e^wv icepvi-
65
'[]'
^-(k)^V
T<
^ &v p^kv erepo^ Aafcco-
286 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [104:
vikos -<tlv viroararov airo Trepipavrrjpi-
ov {\%ovaa aireppvrjKo^' TroSavtTTTrjpof;
-o<? ev oi>9
e[x]&>^
a7Tpf)VT)?C0S' {le&L/JL-
vo- . = o [ih-cpos ri\rpvirr]ixevo^' fcrels ap-
70
KaTa-y]o?" Secr[|x]a Xidcov v-
KaTcry]ceK' /jLO^Xol Svo
-
jiox]A-ol rerrape^
o] erepos o7)-
v-
-tcr/co?.
The inscription contains the inventory of the properties handed over by the
TTL<TTdTai "EXevcrwodev for 336/5333/2 B.C. to their successors in 332/1 B.C.
From 1. 25 to the end the left-hand portion of the lines is lost. The objects in
the inventory are divided into
XP
V(T^ H21, dpyvpd 22

52,
x
aX/ca 53end.
The eiriGTaTai are seen by this inscription to be seven in number. For another
inscription dealing with the accounts of these officials, see no. 124. On the
meaning of
'
EXevcrivodev in this connexion see 9 9.
6,7.
KaXAhnro(i/):
KAAAIPPIIIO.
10,11. KaXXfo(u):
KAAAIOO.
13. iiriTrjKTov : gilded. 15. Se^o/cXea. See 102 22.
16. airelpuv : circular.
17. dirvpov : new. Cf. Horn. II. ix 122 : %itt dirvpovs Tplirodas.
22. 0-17X01 /cat dcTKoi e^dyaxToi : the aiyXoi (shekels) denote coinage of Persia
and Asia Minor ; da/col is probably here a name of some coin; e^dycaroL, devoted.
For this devotion of coins, especially bad coins, see P. Gardner JHS iv 243.
24. dvepixa : necklaces? Cf. epptara, 6pp,os, dvelpi*).
36. avXbs 4k rod crrvpaKos : flute of storax wood.
38. dcpapidri : see 31 3. By nubta is probably meant some kind of
ornament resembling the head of the Egyptian bean ; cf. CIA 11 708, 13 sq. : ol
rjXoi oi iv rots ....].. vyol[s t]Qu dvpQv btovTcu. ko}8vu>v
||||.
45. irpoLxoidas : probably an error for irpoxoidas.
58. KdrpoTrra: 102 23.
64. XeovTofidaeis : cf. <TKd<pTj XeovToftdjAova (resting on lion's feet). Aesch.
Fr. 210 and CIA 11 678 b, 14 : <TKd<pr) X[e]oi>To- .
105. A slab of Hymettian marble broken on all sides. Found on the
Acropolis. CIA 11 768. Cf. Kohler Mitth. in 172 sqq. ; v. Wilamowitz Herm.
xxii 107 sqq., 211 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1
;

and \}/ are absent.
Column I.
-
- - - - - - OV
y
<j>Lo\\r\
(TTaGfiov H ' - - - k\v KoXXf[Tw
oIk - , - - , diro<J>vy
-J
Er60/cXe[a
105]
FINANCE. 287
-, <Jud\r], O-Ta0|xo]^ H" 2ft)0"a9
5
- - -, 'AXttireK^o-Jt oucwv, (i7ro<f>(vy)-
a>v EoSo-Tpa-rov "Epp.e]to^, Ttfiap^lSrjV E-
vcovvpia, <f>ia\T]], araO/nov H* Ilepcr-
ls(?) Iv
- -
8(5]^ olfcovaa, diro(f)vyov-
o-a ]<z YdjXVOVCTLOV KOI tcoivb-
io v 4pavi<rTv, <|>]tA.?7, arced/jlov H' t; 0\e
(?)
-,
, Ip.] Ile^at. oiicaiv, drrotyvycov M-
[i] rie^at. ol/co(v)v(r)a, <pcdXr), arad-
|iov H] ' ^corqpls 'AXa)(7r)e/
l
C77crf, oltcovaa,
ko/tttiXi]?
(?),
drrocj^vyovaa Z[<a]arparov
r/
Ep-
15
p.i]o^, TifjLap^LSrjv Eivoyvvfiea, <j)tdXr}, a-
ra]0/xbv H ' EuTU^t9 /caTTrjXls, dirotywy-
ovaa Swarparov, M.vrjalarpaTOV 'AXco-
ireKrjOev, (fcidXr), araOfibv [H]* IlAtWa
e'/A Ilei/mt. olfcovaa, dirotyvyovaa 'Actt-
20 vvo/jlov
%
O'lov, fyidXr), araOfiov H' X-
vve.Tr) iv Keipta&[u>]v olfcovaa, a(7r)o<f)(v)-
y\ovaa Ntfco[o]rj/jLOv Aevfcovoia teal kol-
v\ov ipavtaroyv, (f)id\r), araO/xov H'
M]rfi/?;9 QaXr/pe. ol/ccov, yecopyos, [dir-
25 ocf)vycbv Nadav 'OXvvOlov, <f)idXr/, [o-to.0-
\l]ov H' Tlvppia? e'yLt MeXtVef. o[Ik<3v,
KairrfXo^, a7ro(f)vya)v ' K.ya6\-
-
Ip.
MXtT]et(?) oltcovvra, (fiidXrj,
a[raQ\t.6v H*
09 eV [EKap.]/3&mS[wv oIkwv,
GOV
2t
- - -
-
KO
Column II.
5 [8]
.... 6 a) [<j>id\- 7 77 <7T[a8p.ov H . . . . 8 TaXa-
o-iovpYos .... airo<j>vyov(ra ... 8- 8 (Opov
[<f>ia- 10 Xr),
ara[d\i.6v H . . . . dp-raX- 11 ovpyos, .... [d-iro- 12
cf)v-
yoov
13 v, (j)tdXr), o-Ta.0p.dv H . . . . ircuS- 14 iov iv
K . . . . [oikcSv d-rro^v-yu- 15 V paav [<j)idX- 16
7),
aTa6[p.6v H . . . . 17 iv Ko[. . . oIk . . . 18 6.
This is a fragment of one of the lists, apparently all of the last half of the
fourth century B.C., of silver bowls dedicated in the Acropolis by persons who
288 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[105
were not citizens. That such bowls were dedicated by freedmen we learn from
CIA ii 720 a Col. i 15 and 729 a 811, where it is said that of certain silver urns
that they were made k t&v (pLa\u>v t&v e%eXevdepiKuii>. Kohler (MittJi. I.e.) thinks
that the bowls were dedicated by manumitted slaves to Athena Poliuchos and
that lists of them were published by the Treasurers of Athena. In our inscrip-
tion the dedicators were men and women who had won a law-suit directed
against their freedom ; the bowls dedicated, each weighing 100 drachmae, would
seem to be in the nature of a tax. The persons dedicating are or become
metoecs ; in some cases the master who lost the suit was a metoec (cf. 11. 27, 28)
or even a foreigner (cf. 1.
25) ; it may also be a proxenos, CIA n 772 b 16 or a
guild {kolvov pauL<TTwv, here I 22 sq.). Where, as in CIA. n 772 b Col. i sqq.
(HoXvarpcLTos UoXvaTpdr(ov)
,
~Eiir\iK7)<plcnos "Zwcriav yewpybv ev
|
'H0cua"ria(5iDj')
oIko[v]vto., (pia\(r}) H), the claimant and dedicator is a citizen, perhaps the words
e^eXofxepos els eXevdepiav should be supplied. Compare the formula for a metoec
:
livppias i/j. MeXtret o[Ikujv] (i 1. 26), with the ordinary formula MvrjaiaTparov
'AXuTreKrjdev (i 1. 17). Further, the person manumitted is designated by his or
her trade, yewpyds, K&irrjXos, Kair-qXis, raXaotovpyos etc. Sometimes the dedica-
tions appear to follow upon an airoaraalov Sikt] (see D. A. s.v.) ; cf. CIA n 776
(as restored by v. Wilamowitz I.e.) : YloXe/j.apxovv]ros At^otAous tou ' AvrifA&xov
'AX[a|tews* 51kcu d.7r]ocrracrtoi' 'E/caro
/
a/3ata)t'os Tre'fiirTei. eiri bena (apparently the
airoaTaaiov 81ktj was the only private suit which came under the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Polemarch).
Abbreviations in these inscriptions are not uncommon
;
thus Ileipcu. Col. i 11
above, IlepidoL. (YlepidoiS-qv), olkou. {oikovoo.) etc. in CIA n 772.
Remark xi. The Tribute Lists. Under the head of Decrees of
the Senate and People was given (no.
17)
a unique example of a
new assessment of tribute with a list of the states assessed and the
amounts to be paid annually. Below
(106, 107, 108)
will be found
examples of another kind, the accounts of the quota of tribute
annually dedicated to Athena as a7rapxai or first-fruits, her share
being g^th or fiva
airo raXdvTov (106 a
3,
108 7).
To ascertain the actual
amount payable it is of course only necessary to multiply the quota
by 60 (cf.
p.
49 note). In the introductions to CIA I 226272 is
given an exhaustive enumeration of fragments found in the
Acropolis, which have been pieced together by various scholars.
The accounts of the years 454421 B.C. are contained in six of the
marbles so restored. The first inscription on the first of these
contains the first list drawn up by the Hellenotamiae after the
transfer of the treasury from Delos to Athens. This list (no. 106)
has the fullest heading. For variations in the headings see the note
106 b 1. In every year except the first the numerical signs are placed
before, and not after, the names to which they refer. In the lists
of the first eleven years little attention is paid to geographical order.
Rem. xi] FINANCE. 289
From the twelfth year (443 B.C.
;
CIA I 237) onwards the states
are distributed under five regions

'Ia>w<os
<f>6po<;,
'EAA^ctttoi/tios
<f>6po<;,
'E7r(. (or 'A77-0 : 107 44)
pa.Krj^ cf>6pos, KaptKO? cfiopos, N^o-iarriKOS
4>6po<;. After 439 B.C., in which year there was a new assessment,
the Ionian and Carian regions were combined in one group under
the title 'IoovtKos
<f>6po<;
(cf. CIA 1 244). It remains to notice the
following formulae which occur in some of the later lists as heading
subsections.
(a) CIA 1 240 = 107 (440 B.C.), 18 sqq.
- - -
[MuJ/oivouoi 7rap[d K.
.]
- - -
[Mi/Jpivouoi liri^opas.
- - -
Ki)/xatot
- - -
Ku/xat06 7ri<opas
kt\.
Koehler (Urkimden und Untersuchunyen zur Gesch. d. Delisch-
Attisch. Bundes
p. 131) infers that the occasion of the cVt^opa, of
which this is the earliest mention, was the defection of the Samians,
which compelled the Athenians to exact from their allies greater
sums than before.
(b) CIA 1 243 (437 B.C.), 5 sq.
IldAeis avral
<popov Ta^a/xei/at,
i.e. states which, for some unexplained reason, were allowed the
privilege of making their own assessment (see Busolt Gr. Gesch. in
2
207, note
4).
(c) CIA 1 243
(437 B.C.), 18 sqq. Cf. CIA 1 257, 42 sq.
(427/6 or 426/5 B.C.).
IIoA.ei5,
'
a? '[oi] II6]A.i[s,
'
as ']ot [ISuotcu
tSicoTai i/'[\]pa- c|>dp]o[v ^]r[a]^[(rav <|>piv.
i//av <p6pov (So Koehler : Kirchhoff
4>peiv. omits
<f>6por
and <epeu/.)
Perhaps the meaning is that this assessment was fixed at the sugges-
tion, not of the t<xktcu (see below) nor of members of the
ftovkrj, but
of private Athenian citizens who volunteered advice to the
fiovXrj
(cf. Andoc. de Myst. 84).
(d) CIA 1 243, 36 sq.
ATaKTO? 7To'A.l9
I Kvcrrtpioi
R. 11.
19
290 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [Rem. xi
Cf. CIA I. 242 (436 B.C.), 23;
APHIl[l] 3>ap/fy'W
axa/c^oi], 31
A h h h I I . . . . ot aroLKToL and A P h I I II Mi\tg>/oioi aT<xKTo[i]. The
<f?apf3y]\Loi
and MiA.Tu>pioi appear subsequently among the aurcu
Ta$dfxevat.
Busolt (Philol.
1882, p. 665)
treats the category axa/oro?
7roA.is as forming a transition stage to the aired Ta^a/ze^at ; an axa/cros
7roXts, he thinks, had been granted but had not yet exercised the
privilege of self-assessment.
(e) CIA i 257
(427/6
or
426/5 B.C.), 45 sqq.
'
Ai8c irolAet? 7Tpucr[ivov
<|>6pou r]a 6[<j>i\o|j.6va a7re-
8oo-av]
i.e. states which paid the arrears of last year's tribute.
(/)
ibid. 50 sq.
'JAiSe To)v 7roAe(Di/ aurr)[v
tyjv <iTTa[p])(r)v airrjyayov
H H H M[t]0u>valoL
ktX.
See the notes on 15 7, 30.
(g)
CIA i 258 (between 409 and 405 B.C.), 11 sq.
II]oAcis at[8]c ap^ais
&>]oo~aj/ tojx cpopov.
f. CIA i 260 =
108 (421/0
B.C.), B 1 sq.
IIoXjci? cu^e o-Tpar[ia]t
(amtOov ireXecrav.
This may mean that the states paid their quota to Athenian military
officers or magistrates quartered at the time in their districts. Thus,
though the amounts were not actually passed through the Athenian
treasury, the quota due to the goddess was religiously exacted. D
1
19,
note 3.
(h) CIA i 258, 15 sq.
['JcuSe 7r[o]A.6is Kara-
rjeXovarL to/a
<f>6pov,
i.e. pay their tribute in the form of re\r) (yectigalia)*.
*
We learn from Thuc. vn 28, 4 that in 413/2 b.c. the dKoarr) was substituted
for the tribute ; that it was shortly afterwards abolished appears from this
inscription and Xen. Hell, i 3, 9. From Ar. Ran. 363 it may be inferred that
there were still eiKoaroXdyoi in 406/5 B.C. Possibly the elKoarrj was continued,
but not in all states
; and the tribute, as Kirchhoff suggests, may have been
reimposed on the states which were reduced to subjection after their defection.
It is of course open to question whether KarareXeZV will bear the meaning given.
106]
FINANCE. 291
(i) CIA I 266, 4 IloXcts
'
ds r]aav
'
oi to.kto.1.
9, 10 IloXcts,
'
ds
'
t]\
fiovXrj
KGU
'
OL 7rVTaKocrio[i]
?T]a^av (Koehler supplies ol rjXiao-Tat or Sixa-
crrcu).
The last quotations may be explained by a brief summary (borrowed
from Messrs Hicks and Hill Gr. Inscr.
p.
121 sq.) of the procedure
adopted in making new assessments of tribute. The process closely
resembled the method adopted by the Athenians in the revision of
their laws, whether at the annual revision described by Demosthenes
{adv. Timocr. 706 sq.), or at the extraordinary revision B.C. 403
(see Andoc. de Myst. 83). In other words, the assessment of tribute
was not managed by a if/t]cf>to-p.a of the people, nor by a committee
appointed by it, but was effected with the same solemnity as an
alteration of the laws. First, the iKKk-qcria voted that a re-assessment
should be made. Next, the prytanes were bound, under penalties of
fines
(17
f

m, o,
p,
17 sqq. 25 sqq.*), to prepare a 7roo/?ovAev/Aa and
bring the matter before the iKKXrjo-ta by a certain time. Thirdly, the
iKKXrja-ia had to appoint two commissioners (tci/ctcu, c) for each
tribute-district. The tributaries having prepared statements of their
liability to tribute, the duty of the raKrai was probably to examine
into and if necessary revise these statements. On the basis of the
schedules thus prepared the Council imposed the tribute. During
the deliberations of the Council on this matter the several tribu-
taries were entitled to represent their own interests (cf. 7 26 sq.).
Possibly the rubric iroXtis as ot ISllotoll iviypaipav cfaopov
cptpeiv (c) refers
to something of this kind

but it is by no means certain (see Busolt,
Gr. Gesch.
p. 210, note 1).
From the decision of the Council there
was an appeal to the people ; such cases of appeal were brought
before the StKaaTtjptov by the cicraywycts
(17
f

in, o,
p,
40 sqq.
47 sqq.
;
cf. Ar. 'A0. 7roX. 52, 2 : KXrjpovai SI koll eio-aywyea? irevre
avSpas, ol tol<; i/jL/Aijvovs elcrdyovcn Slkcls, Svow (pvXacv CKao"TOs). The
decision of the people was final. Many points in the procedure just
described are very uncertain
;
the subject is discussed by Bannier
Rh. M. 54 (1899)
544 sqq.
These Tribute Lists, like no. 109 (cf. Rem. x
p. 257),
belong to
the accounts of the Logistae.
106. See p. 294.
{The text is given on
pp.
292294)
*
For a further restoration of the text of no. 17 see Addenda.
192
292 GREEK EPIGRAPHY.
ATTICA:
SECT. V.
[106
Text
of
a.
'Ai8 t<3v <}>opwv twv 7rap]a twv
'[EjAAf-qvo-
7pafX(jLaTV, tois] TpL(lfCo\yr<x
ctir]-
454/3
^j
(j i^ 'Apfo-Tcovos 6l]p%ovtos 'A-
VTOV.
5 [Map](L>VLTcu :
HP
[At'J^oi
:
PHHHAAAA[hllll]
[OlJ^atot iv I-
icapm
:
HAAAhhh[ll]
'Hcraioc : |-j
IO
Nedp&peia :
A A A h h h [ll]
AafJLTTwveLCL :
APHIini
-
UK
'AXtfcap-
PHH vaararis :
HPAPHIII
HHHH
ZTpefaloi :
H
15
H
TaXtjyfnoi :
HP
PHHHH
Kvp/3i*<r6s :
AAAhhhll
A I
AiSv/JLOTC-
H[HP]AAh
xitcli :
APHIII
- -
[AiK]at07ro-
*o - -
[xtrat :
H]HHH
HHH
A*---
25 KoXo<f>a'v]iO :
HHH
K\aopev[ioi
Not[i]^9
:AAAhhhll
'ApyiXtoL :
XP
AtocrepLTat :
A P hill I
~Kap/3a<rvavhr}$ -
-
^iraprwXioi :
HH
^aarfXlrau :
PH
-4]? Ai>atot:HHH Teppepfc : HHP
30
AlAAhhhll
AlvBlcov Olfirai :
PP
Kefiprjviot, :
HHH
? :
HP Hill
'Ao-rafcrjvoL :
HP
Kacro\[a(3Tis
-
-
106]
FINANCE. 293
no. 106.
T^a/juooVy o?9 .
6(pdv6r}
!
[fra]i' [d-rrapxal t-
[0T]v]atot9, fivd a[ir6 tov ra\d-
(
5)
f
A/3[8t,
P
t]Ta*
:XHHFAAAP
/3A.ato[i 'A(r]cr77-
plrat :
H K
Se/o/AiA^s]
:XHHPAAhh
(10)
M?;;^7r6p[va]toi
ZrcoXioc :
P ... I
XatrraL:
HHA[AA]AHI
St^oi
:HH[HHPh]hHI
e<ot :
HHH
(i
5
)M^o/:
AAAh[hhll]
UtKprjs
*Evay[ye\tvs
-
-]
KeBpti]Ta[i ]
Kepa/xtot
JSovOeirjs
(20)
~Kv\XavBi\oi
-
-
Na[pi]<r[(Bapiis
-
-]
Mv$[6]v? -
-
Kia[v]ot:
A[PHW]
A[p]rafcr}vo[C
-
-]
[NjeafirJoXt?
[*>
[Qp]a*
v
:
AP[HIII]
Dep[y\<rioi virb
vy [l]$y
:
A P Hill
AvXidrai Kap<; :
PhhThlll
larat :
H
Uapiavol :
H
[A]aafcv\eLov
[lv] Ylpoirovrihi :
Pj-hHI
[A]lyiv7]Tat :
XXX
yiiXrjcrioL
[l]([ Aepov :
HHH
[Mi]Xr/cri06
294 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [106
CUCL
Text
of
no. 106 continued.
Xtppovr\a-]lraL :
XPHHH
NeoTroXirai :
p
AtV[<
HHHHAAA
MaidvSpioi
:
PAPHIII
7[p' "ApS^pa
LP
hum
'Eirl
ttJs a.pxT)S ttj]? devrepas,
'
fj
A[. . . . typa\i\ia.rVi.
(Here follow five columns
of
names as above. Then comes the third year with
its heading and five columns, and so on to the sixth year. The seventh year begins
on the narrower right-side
face of
the stone. The ninth year begins on the bach
of
the stone. The fourteenth year and the fifteenth year
(107),
given beloiv, are
on the left-side face.)
106. See p. 291. a CIA i 226 ; b ibid. 227 ; H 33. The inscription
occupies the upper portion of the front face of the stele, which contains the
Tribute-lists of the fifteen years, 454449 b.c.
(The text is given on
pp.
292
294)
A&AAE (=,
[e*], rj)
iH
(= h)
OIKUM/VN [X*
=
| O
(= o,
ov,co)
pp STY0X [<X>*
=
^].
In & 1. 1 and CIA i 228 1. 1 (452 b.c.) a is once
and in i 231 (449 b.c.) there
are several instances of
iSC.
(See the table Ko. i p. 102.) Ztolxv^ov, except as
regards the numeral signs which are preceded by
(:).
The general explanations given in Rem. xi p. 288 sqq. on The Tribute Lists
render unnecessary any detailed notes on this inscription and nos. 107, 108.
2. tois TpioLKovTa kt\. : 'were declared by the thirty logistae (Rem. x, xi) as
first-fruits for the goddess.' The name of the archon Ariston is restored by a
comparison of no. 108, which contains the Tribute-list for 421/420 b.c, with
the statement that the accounts are those of the 34th year. The first year
therefore will be 454/3 b.c, in which Ariston is known to have been archon.
b.
1. The heading is slightly changed in some of the subsequent lists on the
stele. CIA I 228 has : ^7r]t tt)s TpiTrj[s
apxv* ]v
At6[r]i
/
uos eypafxlfxareve] tois
107]
FINANCE. 295
TpLOLKovra. The
dpxv
is the collective name for the 30 logistae. From CIA i 229
onwards the demotic of the secretary is added. In CIA i 237, the 12th year, the
names of an assistant-secretary and the Hellenotamias are added at the end
(in CIA i 238 these functionaries are named in the heading) : Sdrupos AevKovoeus
vveypa/ui.[fxaTve. 2]o[0]ok\[?7]s Ko\oo[u7]dv (i.e. the poet) 'EWrjuoTafiiajs t}i>.
30. Oi'arat
:'
O I I A T A I
.
107. CIA i 240
ABAAE
(=e, i,
v) . H
(=h)
OIKUMN [X
=
f]
O
(=o, ov, a>)
PPTY4>X [4>?
= ^r].
*E] IT I T?;? 7T 6 /X 7T T ?| ?
(C CL I 8
-
K a r
7f
<; d
p
%
fj
s ,
e
rj Z co <r l
-
a T
p
[a t] o ? ' T j3
a $ 7] ?
i
y
p
a
fj,
-
jU, a [t v . Alo-x]^^ ?
K \ e v
-
o-] I [v i o s]
f
[E X] X 77 y o r a p, i a
-
s]
rj [v. 'I] w h [o s] (j) 6
p
o <;
H
Alpaioc
PhhHI
AioaLplraL
H
AefteStoi
Hill
Aiocriplrai eirt^o.
H
Ncavptoi
PH-[HI]
^AaTvprjvol Muo"o[i]
ioFH
TrjioL
inn
Aarvprjvol
7TL(f)0.
HH
^>(OKair}[s]
p
MtXr/aLOL
APt-llll
EXatea
H
yivrjGGiOL
AjPhllll
Tpvv[ei]r}<;
H
IIi;<yeXr/9
- -
KoX[o]<<wj^O
PH
'E[<J>']crtO
15 - - [Olvaijoi

I/cdpov
APhllll
['I<riv8]iOt
- -
[K\aX,o]p,VlOL
PHH
['EpvOpcuoiJ
- -
[epjiatoi c] '^KJapof
APhHlll
BouGei-qs]
296 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA
20
SECT. V.
[107
2i8ov<rioiJ
IIoA,[i]^[atoi]
Ylre\6ov[a-ioi]
E\a.fcOk[<rioi]
APh]
A]AAhhh
^5 nine
p
Phhhii
p
3AAAhhhll
HHHH
APHIII
APhllll
Phhhll
35 APhllll
PHHHH
AjPHIII
APhllll
APhllll
40 H
hhhhll
APhllll
Hill
45 APh[llll]
H[H]
ovT]<riTai
50
[Mvpiv]aloi irap[6L K.]
|

r~|
| |_
1
1
[Mv]pLvaloL
67ri<f>opa<i
PAfPhlllll
}LvfJLaLOt 7Tt(f)0pd<>
Hill
Ucravatoi
YltravaloL eTrityopas vacat
NoTt?79
N0T6179
irrtifiopas
JLW7]<t7tovtlo<;
<
[6 p
o s]
'
Apirayiavol
HHPAAAhhhllll
[TcveW]
II aXalit pre to ato 1
AAAhhhll
II[apiavoi]
Nea7roA69a7r"A#??z/&)i>
H
X[epp
NedvSpeLd
APhllll
'Af3v8
V
vol
p|_[> h ||]
Ylaiarjvoi
P
-
Ilep/CGoertot
- -
YIpianos
- -
^cyeifjs
- -
XaA/^?/[8dvioi]
- -
K.iavoL
-
-
AayL6[vi]0T6^tTa[l]
-
-
AiSv/jLoreL^lrac
- -
Aa[p]8avfj<;
- -
AapSavrjs
7TL<f)0pas
- -
Aafji7rci)Virj<;
- -
Aafjiircoveotj^ eTricfropas
- -
A IT o
p
a [t] K
7} 9 <j)
[o
p
o s]
^KuiOiot
PAT Hill
'OXvvOlol
P
'
Acfyvracot
p
%pafj,fiaioi
Phhhll
'
AiouvLOL
APhllll
^ApytXiot
p
1
H
['A]y3Ta;[T]voi]
[Kjf^^ftivoi]
Me[v8atoi]
Ne07ro[\lTCu]
^epfxaloL
UorecSecdraL
107]
55
6o
65-
70
75"
[To]pcovatoi
FINANCE.
AAP
- -
- -
HHHH
- -
- -
HH
- -
- - 1
X
- - - rat
[K a
p]
i k o ? < [p
o s]
1
KaTViraXaLrjs \
H
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H
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- -
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AP Hill
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297
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^rpeijraloi
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[A]6i7? dirb rov "AOa>
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l2]afjio6pa/c[es]
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AT]\|/ip.]a^8[i]s]
[Zva\yye\r}<;
[Kd]/oe? wv Ti/[p,vT)s
Ka[\]v8vioi
Lapx
61
B
<x[p]t
vXcfjrat
TlapTTapicoTai
'
A]\Lfcapva<r[crioi]
[Tejpfieprjs
[ll\]et[dTai]
298 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[107
N^[(TlWTlKOS <j>6pOSj
H -
- - - -
- - - - -
85 [*H
["Av8pioi]
-
- - - - -
AAAhhhl[l
- - - -
-
- - - - -
HHH
- - - - - -
.--
-
a r hiii
- - - - - -
-
- -
-
pi
['Idrai]
- - - - - -
9A]nHii[i -
- - - - -
-
- -
-
H]HH
... - - - - - - -
P
['Pijvaifjs] -
- - - - -
A]A[Ahhhll
-
- - -
See Rem. xi p. 288 sqq. and the notes on 106 a, b.
1. The 15th year is 440/439 b.c.
29. Nect7roXts : see 32 b 34
;
23 49.
56. At?7s : see 32 b 32.
108. A fragment of Pentelic marble iuscribed on both sides ; Koehler,
Monatsb. Ak. Berl. 1865, p. 209
;
id., Urk. u. Untersuch. n. 107 a, b
;
CIA 1 260;
D
1
19.
AB A AE (= e, 6t, rj)
. H
(= h, frequently omitted),
Ol (<UM N
[X
=
fl
O (=0,
ov
y
<o)
PPTY4>X.
2toix'>756j'.
Side A.
e] Ol
421/0
'Eirl ttjs povXrjs, rj irpwros kyp]a/ji/jidr6V'
VPX
^ 'AOtjvclloi*; ^Aptarlayv
'EX\TivoTa|iCai ^<rav
r^Je^,
"HSuXo? <pL\at$r}<;, YIpa!;L/3ov[\]o<; Ylatav-
uvs, ,
--
a]/)%tS?79 K.(f>a\r}6ev, 'Rpya/jLevrjs ^A^apveix;,
g
f
]
?>
'AptcrTO/cpaTris QaXrjpevs,
'
ApMTTOTeXrjs
, ots cju? iypafjufidreve' eirl tt;? reraprr)^ teal rp-
B.C.
109]
FINANCE. 299
laKoo-Ttjs
apx-qs
ol TpiaKovra air<j>Tiva]^ rrjv dirap^rjv
rfj 0q),
jxvav airo
tov. [rod TcCkav-
10
15
'EXatea irapd
Ahhhll
TpLTTOai
[Mjvpivav
Ahhhll
XtVo?
[Kv]/xatot
AP
TlpdcriXos
[Ka\vVLOL
. A
Ka/jLa/cai
[TIa]<Tav8rj$
hlll[l]
Z*ap\Taioi\
[Kajp/Saavavbrjs
X
- - - -
[irajpa Ka>[vov]
Side B.
IloXJet? alhe arpar[iai]c
/jlictOov ireXeaav
HH
'H(at<TTt>79
H
"\pbj3ptoi
j
J
I

||
yivpivatot
- - - - - -
Lav
For general explanations see Rem. xi p. 288 sqq. The heading is interesting as
showing that the Hellenotamiae were here ten in number. Further, that in the
appointment of these officers regard was had to the claims of tribes, appears
from the fact that the ten names, as the five surviving demotic names prove,
follow the official precedence-order of their tribes : Rem. vi p. 127. The rule
which, according to J. G. Droysen (Herm. ix p. 1 sqq.), was observed in the
appointment of the arpaT-qyoi would seem to hold good for the Hellenotamiae
;
viz., that the latter, ten in number, were not necessarily chosen one for each
tribe, but that in practice the rule was carried out as far as possible. Frankel
in Boeckh, St.
3
11 note 307.
B 1 sq. See Rem. xi p. 290
(</).
109. Eight fragments of Pentelic marble found on the Acropolis. For the
detailed account of previous editions see CIA 1 273. Cf. also Rang. 116, 117,
373 ; Boeckh Kl. Schr. vi 72, 89, 211 ; D
1
29
;
H 62
;
Billeter Gesch. d.
Zinsfusses 42.
A B A A E
(= e, [etj
17) IH (= h, sometimes omitted)
O I K U M N
[X
= ?]0(=o,ov,)
rPTY<t>X.
Xtoixv^ou, with slight deviations
;
\ before or after numeral signs. The
average length of the lines seems to be 75 letters.
300 GREEK EPIGRAPHY.
ATTICA: SECT. V.
[109
TdSc tov tokov ikoytaravrjo 01 \oyiara[\ kv tois r(r]rapcnv
ia o<f>iXoueva(?) Ta'Se
'
ol ra/juiao 7rapeSoa[av
'AvSpoJ^A???
ais ]el Kal ^vvap^ovai\y
a-rpa.T\riyols 'XiriroKpaTei
eirl ttjs KcKpoiriSo]? irpvTaveias
efre[pas Trpv]Tavvovar]s,
4
^c
5 ***
T
^
S
P
ovXlf
5
s
' ^]
MeYa/cXet^? 7T/oajro[s eypauj/iia reue, eVt
7
'vTo-
PPHAAJAPH
Sevrepa Boat? eV[l ttjs KJck/ootti-
ikoo-i i]p.pc3v]
rfj irpyraveia-
|?i
toko? t[ovtv]
TTXP
s irpvTavcias] TerdpTrjs
irpvTavevovo-rjs, [e<re\r)\]v6vias irevre
hhh*
kos
TjoJTtt^ijTXP^HHAPhhhHI. TcrdpT^So-
10 iTpvTavevovo-]?;?, irevTe
rjfiepai ea\?)\v6[vas ttj]? irpVTaveias'
PHAhH.
np/ir]T?7 Soa-t? eVt T/y?
'A/cayLta^friSos irp]u-
\%
rjpt'pai t]^? irpvTaveias'
[j\

tokos t[ovtv
:] TTTPP
TrpvTavias] Be/carT]?
7rpvTavevovo-r)[s,
lo-e\r]\]v6vias
'
eirra
A h h :
tovtois] eyevero'
[X X X X]H P A A h h[l
C. K<t>-]
15 PX^s
Kal <cy]vapxovTWV'
hri[H P]T F P H[A A A A*
t]6kov
'
AvSpoKXt'ovs]
"/>%>? 9
Kai %vvap%6vT(o\y'
4^
T] P A A A A P
425/4
Ktd8r]s e| Oi]of /cat ^wdpyovres eirl SfTpajTo/cXeou? ap-
TrpwTos lYpap-JyaaTeue' crTpaTr)yoZs irep\\ Iit\Koir6vvrjaov
ttjs .... t)X'8os] irpvTaveias Teraprrjs [TrpvTojvevovorjs, rplrrj
20 as, 4k tov oirio-BjoSoyCtOf"
4^4^ tokos tovto[is kyijveTO
P
fR
iKT]pa.Tov K\)8a]^Tt8>7 ^a^ vi>dp%ov[a-iv eirl] T779 IIa^Sto^t6o?
s, Trcp/TTTT] Kal] Be/cary r/fiepa tt?9 7r[pvTav]e/a? iaeXijXv-
PHHHH-
K<f>d\]ato^ rod dp%alov aVaAo)[paTos] eVt t?;?
K<j>d\au>v tw oi]p>yvpL(p toj dva\cod[(vri] eirl tt}$ QcoKi^aS^ov
424/3
25 HA-
TdSc -n-ape'S] o era zv
f
ot racial (*)[ovkv]o\S?79 'A%ep-
vtos Kal eirl tt)s PovXtjs
'
fj
'A]/[o]^09
(?)
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ILapoirihr) ^K^ap-^lcopiSy Kal ^vvdpyov(JL
\y
tori
- - -
ioos TrpvTavcias
------
s irpvTaveJ l)OVO~rjS, ex.Tr) KCLI
tokos TovjTot? eyevero
XXXXPHPAPIIIII.
kevrepa
30 s
------
180s 7rpvTavias S
irpvTav\VOvo~7]S, OCO-
-----
TOKOS TOUTOIS tytViTO'
-------
TpiTT] SjOCTt? 7Tt
vovo-t]S
- - - -
TT
^
S 7rpvTavias - - - -
-J.
TOKOS TOVTOLS
eirl ttjs 180s
7rpajTaveias ] irpVTavevovcrrjs,
tokos tovtols "yvTo
------
KccpaXaiovJ TOf apya^OV
35
vapxovTcov
--------
tokov KecpaAaiov
to>J
apyvpLO) TO)
ijvvapxovTwv
--------
Td8 irap] eooaav
'
ol tapnea
423/2
TS 1^1 'Apvviov dpxovTos Kal eirl ttjs PovX]^9,
fj
A7]pr']Tpios
Mvpp]ovovaUp Kal ^wdpyovGi
ias S
7rpvTavvovo-T|s, tj] Trjs TTpvTaveias'
109]
FINANCE. 301
T(Tiv 6K WavaQr]vaiwv is [iLxvaG-qva-
t&Xvevs fcah ^vvdpyovTes
'
EW^vorauC-
XoXapyel Kal [|]f[vdpxov(riv
rerrapes rj/xepac r/o~a[y eo-]e[X.T]\v0mas,
(5)
KvOvvov dp^ovros' QQ' tokos t[ovtois I-
80? hevrepas Trpvravevovarjs [\]ot[ir<3v '4ti e-
HHHHPAA-
TpLTT) 860-1$ eirl rrjs IIa^[8i.ovi8o-
?7/U.ep<x[t] rrjs irpyravetas'
^[^FTTTFPAA
crt?* eVt t>]S
'
AKafiavrlSos 7rpvTavLa[s
678011s
(
to
) <^<^[T]TTTXXX-
tokos rovrco[v'
TXXXXF
raveias 0780779 irpvTavevovaris, ecreXr/\[v8vias
'
HHHHAAAA-
"^/crr) Socr^ eVt 7-/79 'E^e^T^os
rj/xepas rf)s irpyraveias'
^PTfTTXXXP^P
dXaiov rod dpyalov dva\oo/jLaros eirl rrjs ' Av8p[oK.\iovs d-
(15)
K(f)a\aiov too dpyvpiw to) dvaKw6evr\y lirl ttjs
h h h h I
Ta8e irapehocrav ol ra[|iicu
<!>-
y^OVTOS tf[al] eVl T//9 fiovXrjs
'
fj
II\[io-Tias
Ari/ubocrOevei,
'
AXKtaOevovs 'A(^nci)[vaLa> ttI
^[e'J/^a.
tt}? irpvTaveias e[a-\T)\\>0ii-
(2o)HHHHA-
e
r[i\pa Socrcs arparrjyois [NiKia N-
irpvraveias ivdrrjs 7rpvr[avivov(rr]-
Ovlas'
H
'
tokos tovtols eyeve[ro
T T X X X
QcoKidSov
dpxfis
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dpx^
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(25)
Sovaios Kal ^vpdp^ovres eirl laa[pyov
apx~
/jbdreve, '^jWrjvoTafJbiais
'
evots 8
ttjs
-

- --
---
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o[6<ris irl tt)S
^30)
hKar
r\
rrjs Trpyraveias'
4^TTT
[
rrjs 'Epe-^drjcSos irpvraveias e[ t^s irpvTav-
eyevero'
PHAAAhhK-
TefrdpTtj 860-is
TptaKoarfj rr/s 7rpvTai'[da<$
dvaXw/xaros eVt 7-779
(
h
)ovkuSlSou [dpxtjs
Kal v-
(35)
avaXooOevrt eirl rPjs ovku8\_Lov dpxrjs Kal
Tl^iokXPjS EtTtat09 /<:[al |wdpxov-
KoXXvTVS TTpoOTOS iy[pa.\i\ia.reve, . . .
eirl rrjs A/ca/^a[vTi8os irpuTav-
PPTTTTXXXXPHHAA-
t[6kos tovtois iy-
302 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[109
4O VTO' "-
AVTp]a &6(TLS 7Ti
irpvTavvovo-T]S, i tt]s -rrpvTaveias'
] TTFF
1
.
.irl ttjs
- - - -
{80s 7rpvravias
------
-1
7-779 TrpVTCLVGV-
tokos tovtois 4-yeWro
-
-]
PPAAAhH-
TerdpTr} Boat?
as o-ySoTjs TrpvTavvovo-iis, Sevrepa Kal] eiKOOTj]
T7/9 TTOVTavela^,
45 HA A A A-
nejiiTTT) 860-is 7rl ttjs AewvT.So]? irpvTaveias
VTav.ias, .... tokos tovtois yVTo"]
HA A Ah MIC
Ke</>a-
uokXc'ovs
dpx^is
Kal vvap
X
6vTa>v'
HH.]^^TTXPHAAAA
TJuao-iv Itti ttjs TijaokXcovs
apx^s
Kal i,v\vap^ovT(ov'
TPHH
p.7ravTos
'
o l"yVTo cv tois TeTTapo-iv <f]T0~iv fc Tiavaurjvaicov
50
- - - - -
K<f>dXaiov tokov |vp.iravTos
'
AQt]\vata^ iv toI<$ T6T-
va0Tjvaia
]
A07]vaLas Nt/a??
-----
S 7rpvTavvovo-T]S, - - - -
tj ttjs TrpvTaJ^eia? \lfXOK-
peSoorav
--------
tokos tovtois e-yevcTo
-----
Ta8 tov tokov tois dXXois 0ois d<J>i.X6p,va IXo^yio-avTo
'
01 Xo"yio-Tal
55
Ik IIava0T]vaiwv s IIava0T]vaia. TdSe irapeSoo-av
'
01 Taaiai twv
ov 'iKapttvs Kal fjvvdpxovTCS
--------------------
_____________ _____________
T<j K
Jo9
tov-
__ _ _ _ _ _
aai
-
HHA
6o
Ahhh
____________________
roKOS TOVTOV
J
|-
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1
1
'ASpao-Jre/a? F
1
A
_______________________
TOKOS TOVTOV
J - -
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___________________
tokos tovtov
- - -
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Hpa/c-
65
"-
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'A]7T0A--
AtjJ/U-O-
_ _ -_
toko]? tovtov
70 9 xHHHP
'AGj^mta? eVl
]
|_j [t6]/co? tovtov'
____ __
K<j>dXaiov r]ov a[pxaiov dvaXw]/xaTO? twv
ivov dpxovTos" 4-4-
] HP [
Kc|>dX]afO^ TOKOV
75
- -
Td8c irapc'Soo-av]
f
oi Tafuiai twv d\]\cov Oeoov T6p<yoivo<i
XOVT6S Ka0'
'
Kao-TOV t6v 0ov] CLTTO Tft)[v ' Kdo-TOv] 7TL T7/9
OVO-T)S ]CT0L O0[
*l]/-OCTT^ T^9
--tokos tovtov ']
A h h h h 1
1 ['A+po8Gr]i?9 eV KrjTTOLs'
TT
XXPHjHHAAAA [
tovtov] toko?
109] FINANCE. 303
(40)
ttjs TlavStoviSos 7rpvrapel[as
s
TOKOS TOVTOLS 6J6V6TO'
HF
1
AhhHIl
" " [TpCx-q 86<Tl]?
ovcrrjs reraprrj ttjs 7rpvra[ydas ]<r<z/z
7rl ttjs Alavr[tSo<s irpvr]aVl-
\j\
'
TOKOS T0VT0[lS *yv]eTO
X P H
(45)
SeKaTijs TrpvTavevovarjs
, T[TdpTJ?7 t^9 7T/9-
\aiov rod apyaiov ava\(>\y.ixTo<i\ iirl Trjs T7-
hhllC
K(f)a\aiov tokov r[ois d]va\w6elai
%p-
H A h h h
I
C. K.e(f)dXat[ov dv]a\oo/jbaTos
f[
v
-
(50)
rapcTLv ereauv i[< Hav\a6rjval(i)v is Yla-
e'firl ttjs 'AKafiavT^So]? nrpvTavelas
[\-fjs Elreatas Kal i,v\vdpj^ovTes ira-
kv tois TiTr\apatv eT[<ri
(55)
aXXwv 0c5v, rop-yoj^o? 0[lvei8-
_ __
o-TpaTj?77OtS
- -
-
[tov
T X X X X . H
'
[tokos tovtov]
A P H
*
TOKo[<$ TOVTOV
(60) IHI*
TO/c[o$ TOVTOV
|| C. M0L'Cr[cl)V - - - TOKOS TOVTOV
A A P h
'
To[kos tovtov
AtT0W(i)v[0S
TOKOS TOVTOV
A<Of
? e[v Kvvoo-dp'yct - - - -
TOKOS TOVTOV
-
-
(65)
TOirr[ov
Xa)^[os
-
o
<P<jL)Z/[t]o[s
------
TOKOS TOVTOV - - -
HAAPhhhHIlO
(70) AAAAPhllll'
tokos tovtov
[A
HaWaSiO) At]piov[ei(o
tokos tovtov
A AC TloaecScovos
KaXaupefarov tokos tovtov
aXkcov 0cov Tys irpcoTTjs
B6a0)[s 4irl rop-yo-
TOVTO) Tip
dva\(>fJL(lTl'
XXHAA
(75)
Olveihov 'Ifcapievs [Kal wdp-
AeeozmSo? irpvTaveias &KaTT][s irpvTavev-
irpvTavetas' ApTe/jibSos
'A7p[oTe'pas . . .
FHPAAPL tokos TOVTOV
P h [ h h Mil II C.
HIIIO. Alopvo-ov
HHHPPhl-
tokos to[vtov-
|C . . .
304 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[109
80 t]o/CO? TOv\tov . . ILocrejlSoJVOS ilTL
AhhhHIO XX]XXPHHAA[AA' tJoko? tovtov
TOKOS TOVTOV
]||.
S7}aio[<s
F HHH P h h h I] III
C
. TOKO?
tJoko?
TO?j[tov
'
Btyafo-jTOf
TX P
(
I
1
1
*
TO/Co[s tovtov
]
MoVCTGOV
85
toko]? tovtov [
'
HpaKXe'Jof? iv
'A^fvaias kv ITaXXj^foY
X X
t]o/co[s tovtov*
'ApT.J/uSo?
___-______-_---_
xoKOS TOVTOV* - - - -
"J
3. A^Otj-
_________ _____
xoKOS TOVTOV - - - - -
-J
AH H l~ H I I .
90 KOS TOVTOV
-_-
J
|_|* TOVTOV
KOS TOVTOV
] AAPhK
TOKOS TOVTOV'
Xw|_a.Tos twv dXXcov 0o3v ttjs 8v]re[pas Soo-cjeo? eirl Yopyoivov
- - - - K<j>d\aiov tokov tovJtco [tw dpy^vpla) '
P A A A H K
v|XTravTOs twv dXXcov 0v*
P
|

TTF P A A A h h
.
95
dp-ywpia)
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]
Td8e eXcyio-avTO
'
01 XcyicrT\at i> t[ois Ti\TTapo~iv T0~ns
yia-Tal XeXo-yio-fxe'va irape\boo~av \kv tois
'
ejTTTO, T0~LV, TOKOV
-
i]? vrevTa^Koo-iais t'iJKoai h)volv Spayfiatv. tov-
]
IOO TOIS dXj\ot9 U0{Zs kv TOIS riJTTapCTCV T0~CV
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Sj
TaXdvToi]?, e TaX[dvTois, \i\i]ais vev?]fcovTa
os tovtols -ye'vTo kv Toij? TTTapo~\iv <=Tcri.v']
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9 \\.0r}vaia[s Niktjs k\v tois TeTTapcnv
105 o-Tcu XeXo-yio-fjieva -Kjap 00era v e[v tois
'
crrrd] TecrL, eiKoeri
kov]t<x S/oa^[p.ais], oktw
[SpaxJ/U-at?, Svolv
ofio-
Trepfjio eV[Toi]? TeT[ra.p<Ti]v eTeenv,
(
a
'
ol
e'va Trape'Soo-av kv tols je[TrTd] e^o-i]^ Ta\av\rui\ TeTpaKOcrl-
]
[ kv] ev8e/ca eT<er>eriv
\ -> 4_
p J~f
~[~
IIO t6kos ] AAAPIIC.
to apyalov \b$\ei\overiv
:'P
|
v
]
evheica eVeo-fiv
]M H^^^^TT
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[4-4]PMMP^PT
IToXidJSo? Kal N,/c[t)s tok]oV
H M4-4-
115
_-_
tov dpx\aiov v evheKa [^reo-iv
]
_____..
4] j, evheKa eVea[iv
J
_'
dirlaac Toes #e[ots
J
^
V
J
evSeKa erecr[iv
]
109]
FINANCE. 305
(80)
2ovviq> TTTTXPAAPhHIIlO
to[kos tovtov
hhllllC.
\\prefit,8o$
Mowi%/a9
tovtov
||C 3.
'
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HHHHhhl'
to[kos tovtov' |C
HHAAAAPhhK
to/cos TOVTOV'
n-[>]f-||C.
'A^vatas .
.
PHAAK
tokos tovtov' | C D. eoO %eVLKOV
(85)
KwoadpyeL'
PAAA'
tokos tovtov'
C*
A?7/xo(i>[wvTos'
XHHHHAPhhhl.
t6o? tovtoi/-
hlllllC.
'A[
Bpavpcovlas
HHHFhhHIC'
tokos tovtov
| [~C
vaias ttl YlaXXaBiq)' |-
h I C
*
tokos tovt[ov
TOKOS TOVTOV C y\riTpOS iv "AjpCLS'
HH
[
TO-
(90)
tokos' C.
^XOrjvaias ZcoaTrjpias'
H[ to-
| C . K.ecf)dXaiov tov dp^aCov dva-
dpxovTos'
^^TTTPPHHH[
YLetydXaiov avaXco/aaTOs tov a[px,aov g-
KecfrdXaiov tokov ^v/jlttcivtos to[vtu> t<3
TOKOV Tols TTJS 060V d
'
Oi 7Tp6[rpoi Xo-
TTpaKiCT)(i\LOLS Ta\[vTOlS . .
rot? tokos eye[vTo . . .
(ioo)
f
a
f
ol irpoTepou Xoy^o-ral XcX-
\dvTOis, SiaKoaloLS r[aXdvToi-
Spa^/JLals, nrevTe 8pa^([\i.al<5' tok-
HHHAAAPhhhllC.
6Teo~LV
'
d
*
ol 7rpoT[epoi Xo-yi-
(105)
TaXdvTOts, hvolv Ta[XdvT<nv,
Xolv
TPPAAAAhhll
- -
-
irpoTepoi Xo<yio-Ta,L A^eXo-yto-fi.-
ais eveviqKOVTa 8pa%/jLais
[
XXXPAAAAPhhHI.
M4444FTTT[
TXXXPHH
TXXXHH
44PTTT
r. 11.
20
306 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [109
The inscription contains the accounts of the interest payable on sums
borrowed from the temple-treasuries at various times to meet the strain of the
Pelopounesian war. The transactions extend over the eleven years 483/
2

422/1 b.c. The sums entered are those paid on requisition to the Hellenotamiae
by the treasurers of the different deities ; in each entry the auditors (Xoyio-Tcu)
add the interest on the loan. The consistency in the use of the later forms of
the dative plural in -cus shows that the document cannot be earlier than 420 b.c
(cf. lO introd.). The inscription may be analysed as follows :
1
51. Sums borrowed from Athena Polias during the quadriennium, 4k
navadrjvaiiou is Hauadr]vaia, 426/5422/1 B.C.
5153. Sums borrowed from Athena Nike during the same period.
54
95. Sums borrowed during the same period from
'
the other deities,'
the Muses, Adrasteia, Apollo, Heracles, Poseidon etc.
96108. Interest accruing during the same period on sums borrowed
during the seven years (433/2127/6 b.c) preceding the quadriennium and not
yet repaid at the end of it.
109118. Summary of the amounts drawn and the interest for the whole
eleven years.
The calculations of Eangabe, Boeckh, Billeter (cf. the table Schmidt Chron.
784) result in the following conclusions : (1)
the interest is reckoned at y^th of
a drachma for every mina, per day, i.e.
T
Vth of the normal Attic interest, tokos
i-rrl dpaxp-rj, i.e., a drachma per mina per month. Thus the sums, instead of
being formally appropriated, which would have required an abeta (cf. lO B 15
sqq.), were borrowed at a nominal interest
; (2)
the interest is calculated from
the day on which the money was drawn to the end of the quadriennium (see
(note on 1. 5 below)
; (3)
the years were respectively426/5 ordinary, of 355
days, 425/4 ordinary, of 354 days, 424/3 intercalary, of 384 days, 423/2 ordinary,
of 354 days. The symbol D 1. 63 etc.
~Y

TerapT-qixopLov.
2 sq. The money was paid 'to the Hellenotamiae
for the generals.' Hippo-
crates is called by Thuc. iv 66 6 'Apicppovos ; the father's name and the demotic
show that Ariphron was the brother of Pericles.
4. rjfxepai r)<Ta[y. Elsewhere rjaav is omitted, e.g. 11. 8, 10 ; for the loose
syntax see 98 11. eo-]e[\7]dvdvias is due to D.
5. The sum borrowed on the 4th day of the 2nd prytany (i.e. after 35 + 3
days of the year had elapsed) is 20 talents = 1200 minae = 120,000 drachmae.
The interest for this sum is 5636 drachmae for 1409 days (317 + 354 + 384 + 354),
which works out to
u^h
of a drachma per mina per da}-.
6. \olitCjv 'in kt\. So D, comparing CIA iv 1, 179 b, 12
(p. 31) : [i]/x]ipai.
XolttoI rjaav 6k[t<Jj. Boeckh, though adopting another reading, had by calculating
the interest arrived at the 16th day of the prytany, with which D's restoration
agrees.
10. <re\rj\vd[vas : a common variant of -was, but here and below perhaps
only a slip of the engraver. Cf. Meisterhans Gr. 59.
14. The word t6kos before tovtols appears to have been inadvertently omitted
by the engraver. Ke(p]a\at.oi> k.t.X. :
*
total of the expenditure of principal.'
18. (TTpaT-qyots : a generic term : one only is mentioned. As this payment
was made in October 425/4 and Sphacteria was captured in July (Droysen Herm.
ix 18)
Demosthenes would appear to have remained on the spot after the return
home of the Athenian troops (Thuc. iv 39, 2 ; 41, 2). D.
110]
FINANCE. 307
20. For the Opistbodomus see 2 C 30, lO 22 sqq.
21. Ni/a'a : a certain restoration. The operation is that recorded Thuc. iv
53 against Cythera. Boeckh {Seeivesen p. 246) shows that the family of Nicias
belonged to the deme Cydantidae.
26. '(-vols :
'
to the Hellenotamiae of the preceding year
'
;
cf. evai dpx.cu
Dem. c. Aristog. 775.
44. 075677s. The restoration of this word and of the numerals may be
taken as an example of the acuteness of calculation brought to bear upon this
inscription by scholars. Kirchhoff shows that we must assume the interest to
cover 87 days. For 100 talents require 20 drachmae of interest per day. The
stone shows 1600 drachmae only, and the five following spaces may be restored
so that the whole represents 1740, 1780, 1920, 1960, which correspond respec-
tively to 87, 89, 96, 98 days. The payment must have been made in the eighth
prytany (none of the totals of days suit any other, whether the year be ordinary
or intercalary) ;
hence the restoration 675677s. Now 1. 78 shows (by the amount
of interest stated) that the tenth prytany contained 37 days. If the eighth and
ninth contained each 36 days, and if we suppose the payment to have been made
on the 22nd day of the eighth prytany (supplying Sevrepa /ecu before eiKoarrj), we
have the sum (36
-
22) + 36 + 37 = 87, add 87 x 20 dr. = 1740 dr.
64. On the shrine of Heracles in the Cynosarges see H. and V. Athens
216 sqq.
68. Demophon is the Attic hero, son of Theseus. For the legends con-
cerning him and for 'Ad-rjvaia iirl HaXhaSLtp see Frazer Paus. 11 369 sq., where in
quoting this inscription he speaks of an image of Athena at the law court called
Palladium. There would appear also to have been a treasury connected with
her name. The epithet ArjpLoveiip is unexplained.
78. The Gardens of Aphrodite were probably in the low-lying district on the
right bank of the Ilissus, between the stream and the city wall. H. and V.
Athens 209.
86. Pallenis was a deme of the Antiochid tribe.
90. 7ao<jT7]p was one of the drjpLoc ixiKpoL of Attica and had a /3w/xos 'Ad-qvas /ecu
'AttoXAuwos /ecu 'Apre/xtSos ical Atjtovs (Paus. 1 31, 1).
92. inl Yopyoivov apxovros : this is not the common formula
'
in the archon-
ship of Gorgoenus,' but it merely denotes 'in his term of office as ra/ucts. ' There
is no room for a Fdpyoivos in the list of archons.
102. These amounts of interest are clearly higher than those which
obtained for the quadriennium 426/5422/1. Kirchhoff thinks that the rate
was diminished in 426/5, but that the people considered themselves liable for
the higher rate for the sums belonging to the preceding seven years.
106. Kirchhoff notes, against Boeckh, that the interest here indicated must
be at the higher rate, not at that of the quadriennium.
Probably the last two lines contained the grand totals of all the sums
borrowed, with their interest.
HO. A fragment of Pentelic marble, found near the Church rrjs
'
Tit airavTrjs.
CIA 1 274
;
more accurately iv 1
p. 35 ; D 41 ; H 72 (where other fragments are
given, relating to the same subject, but not all from one stone. Cf. Kirchhoff
20-2
308 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [110
Jahrb. 1860, 238 sqq.; id. Monatsb. Berl. Ak. 1865, 545; Gotz, Jahrb. Suppl.
vni
(1876) 538 sqq.; Kohier Herm. xxm 396; B. Keil Herm. xxix 45 sqq.,
xxxi 472 sqq.
ABAAE
(e, [et],v). . OIKU
(once, 1. 20,
A) M N [X
=
f]
O
(=o,ov, o>)
PPTY4>X.
AP]hhh XPHHH
Spvtvcov /c[a\ Trp]tvoov .... e ... .
teal itIOol
PHI
eV t>} [o]t/cta
h] 1 1
1
H AA A P h
KuSt>axo(?), AoXoi^
'
Kheifxavrov
K(f)a\aiov [<r]v/jL7rav
(PP)Ahhh
5
T]dSe iirpdOr) iirl rrjs E^e^^?/t'So? /386/bL7]s irpvravevovar]^'
T]afjL7]\i(i)vo<; i/386/jir) larafievov 'Afto^ou rod 'AXfCL&idSov *Ek-
[a|ipvi8ov
hh HFAAAAP
'0^
9
dvrjp
ivdrrj tyOivovTos Yap,r)\iwvo<;' W^to^ov rod AA,-
K.Lpi(io\_ov 2Ka|xP<ovL8ov
hill HA A A
Meaarjvios dvrjp
io ktt] (f)0ivoi>TO<; Ta/jLT)\i(t)vo<;'['A]8ei/jLdpTovTovAevtco\o(f)-
[iSou 2Kap.{3a>viSov
h P
7riKap7rla rr/q yf)<; t^? eV
'Ocfrpweca)
rj kko-
[(XKTTai
K(f)d\acov avfjiirav
HHHP A A P hhhhlll
tco/jL irepl dfi^orepa Ta/jLrjXicovos e/crp (J)61vovto[s
Kv(j)L\7]TOV (tov) TifioOeov K[v]SaOr)[valos
15 hill HP
OLKia e? Sr;/xa^t[8wv
hill HP
yo&piov ey Ta[pyi]TTia
hhlll HHP
x
w
?
iov
*\y-
ill a
x^P^ly
fCt(f)d\atOV 0"u[fiirav
20 K(f)d\atOP d/X(f)OT6pOV PHHHAIII
This fragment, one of several, gives part of a list of d-rj/jaoTrpara (Ar. Vesp.
659),
or confiscated properties
;
a very common source of revenue of which an account
was required to be presented to the people in the first assembly of every prytany.
See Boeckh St.
s
Bk in ch. xiv. The accounts were probably drawn up and
published by the TruXrjTai. Our fragment deals with the properties confiscated
from the Hermocopidae (Thuc. vi 27 sqq.) and contains (among others mentioned
Andoc. e.g. de myst. 35) the name of Alcibiades. By an elaborate calculation
Keil I.e. shows that the 7th of Gamelion (1. 6)
must belong to the year 414/3 b.c.
Ill] FINANCE. 309
To the 7th prytany of that year (which was an intercalary year) belonged the
7th and following days of Gamelion, because the order of the prytanies in that
year began from the first half of Scirophorion
;
cf. Arist. 'A0. tto\. 32, 1 : 5e: be
T7)u ei\r)xv?ai> t< Kva/xcp (3ov\i)v eicnevai 5 iirl beKa Hiapocpopiiijvos (of 412/1 B.C.).
The difficulty is noticed, but not solved, by Schmidt Chron. 193 sq.; it consists
in the fact that neither in an ordinary nor in an intercalary year, in which the
first day of the first prytany coincides with the first of Heeatombaeon, can the
7th of Gamelion fall within the seventh prytany. Compare the equations :
Ordinary year 1 Heeatombaeon = 1st day of 1st prytany
6 Metageitnion =lst ,,
2nd ,,
1 Gamelion = 3rd
,, ,,
6th ,,
Intercalary year 1 Heeatombaeon = 1st
,, ,,
1st
,,
9 Metageitnion =lst
,, ,,
2nd
,,
1 Gamelion =18th
,, ,,
6th ,,
In the text the second column of numerals denotes the price, the first
column the percentage (about one per cent.) payable to the state as iirupiov
(cf. CIA i 277, 5: Ke<pd\aiov avv eiruvl[ois). Boeckh St? n, note 536, remarks
that eirwviov appears to have differed from iKarocrT-r], in that the latter was a
regular one per cent, duty payable to the treasury of a temple and not to the
state. Cf. Ill introd. note.
3. Kvdifxaxos (so D for Kvbi/j.axov) and Dolon were probably slaves of
Adimantus.
4. For
P
the stone has
P
, which clearly could not come before p* .
7. "OXas : perhaps the name of some Thracian clan or tribe. In D 545, 13 sq.,
an inscription found in the Dobrudja of Koumania, there is mention of a
TroXe/xos 'OXart/cos. Both the "OXas awqp and the 'Mecrarjvios (1. 9)
were probably
slaves. Another fragment, CIA iv 1, 277c/ p. 178, clearly deals with the property
of Alcibiades himself. In it is noted as sold (1. 5) a x'wOi'a 7rapd/coXXos (a low
couch with only one end) and (1. 7) a k\u>[t) Mi\7}]<novpyi)s [d]p,0[t/c]e0a[Xos
(cf. 97 a 13). We know from Pollux Onom. x 36 that these were part of the
bedroom furniture of Alcibiades and that they were among the brj/xioTrpara.
11. iwiKapiria: perhaps here merely 'crops,' not, as usually, 'usufruct.'
Ophryneum was in the Troad (Strabo xiii 595). 77 KeK6[/ju<TTcu] 'which has
been already reaped' is Wilhelm's restoration (H).
13. tw/x wepl a;jL<poTpa. The words may mean
'
those who were convicted
on both counts, the mutilation of the Hermae and the profanation of the
mysteries. The formula recurs CIA iv 1, 277 a p. 73.
20. aiuportpov : i.e. of the last two totals.
111. A slab of Pentelic marble, 0.09 m. in thickness. Koehler, Monatsb.
Berl. Ak. 1865
p. 546 sqq.; CIA 11 777.
ABTAE
(probably =e,
eO. HOI KAMN3EO (= 0,
ov)
PPCTY^X.A
Stoix^Soj'.
(:)
before the numeral signs in 1.
7, and after the abbreviation
airey. in 1. 9.
310 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [Ill
to
T]i]riO [o
5[HHAP]
eirci.J
[n]
]fCLOV Wyp[v\r\(riv, u> 7-
ltw[i poj^pa^ez/
7) oSo[s, votoGcv 8-
e 'EvQv]/ia^o<i' e7rpiar[o
. O? RvOufjid^OV
,
Aypv[\r\Qev
t
eyyv
KarafioXr) :
A A A A h h h
*
10
[H]HHHA
Phhhh
'5
[H]AAAAP
kjlTCO.
>o[hhh]
(A)evfc6\o(jx)<;
if* 2a\a[}iivos Ta8
airey:
Qeofxevovs H^7r[eTaiwvos ol-
Kiav ev -.aXajALVL e[v
-
l,
fj
yeiTCOfA /3oppa6[w
, v-
oroQev Be !Sifc68lK[os' lirpiaTO
2-
(OCTLVOIAOS ApCCTTOVolpov -
? iyyv .
KaTci{3o\(ij)
PAAAhh"
Seo/xevovs irepa olicia [kv
-
TLtp,
f]
yeLTCOfi j3oppd6[ev rj
6&6s,
voroOev 8e 'Ef^^eo-To?" [lirptaTo
MeA/^ro? Meya/cXeovs 'A\[amKrj0-
vj
*
771;.
[KaraPoX^
HAAPhhhh']
This is another account of drj/xLoirpaTa. To judge from the alphabet it should
belong to the beginning of the -ith century b.c. The ktr&viov, for which see
HO introd. note, is here 2 per cent., not as in that inscription 1 per cent. The
inscription records
(1)
the amounts paid by purchasers of confiscated property,
together with the eirwvca,
(2)
the amount of deposits
(77^775 /cara/3oXcu) made
and forfeited by persons who, probably as creditors of the last possessor, had
gone to law with the treasury (the term is aTroypacpecrdou) and had lost their case.
The proceeding was of the kind termed vtiri<TKr)p.ixa. From our inscription it
is clear that the term eyyvrjs xaTa(3o\r) was used in the sense of the more
common TrapanaTafioXr). Cf. D.A. s.v. Paracatabole ; Suid. s.v. iveirL<TK7]\}/aadaL
/ecu eyyv-qv Ka.Tafia\eiv
=Etym. 31. p. 340, 38 etc.; Boeckh. St.
:i
11 note 569.
3. ix> yeirufjL kt\. : a common formula in the description of boundaries
;
cf. 112 2.
8. A]evKo\o<pos e ZaXa/uuvos. On the form of the preposition see Meister-
hans Gr. 105, where instances are given of

before <r,
%, {, p,
X. Koehler
(Mitth. iv 255)
argues that Aeu/c6Xo0os was not a citizen, because there is no
demotic ; not a metoec, because he held landed property ; not an laoTeXrjs,
because the iVoreXeis are always described as such in sepulchral and other
private inscriptions, e.g. CIA 11 616, 12, and also in public documents, e.g. 59 51
;
not a cleruch, because cleruchs in public inscriptions are designated by the
demotic name, not by their place of residence. It remains that Leucolophus
112]
FINANCE. 311
must have belonged to the ancient population of Salamis, which was composed
of non-burgesses subject to the Athenians.
9. arrey: = &Treypa<peTO. Similarly yyv(r)), i-rrw(i>La) are abbreviated on the
stone.
11. The percentage as given is only approximately two per cent.; of. the
proportions in HO.
15.
KATABOAN.
16. oLKla : supply iirpad-q, if necessary.
112. A slab of white marble, H. 11 in., Br. 11 in., entire on the left only,
in the Elgin Collection. CIG 102; CIA n 780; BM 36. Cf. Arch. Anz. 1854
p. 464 ; Philol. xn
p.
568.
Alphabet, type 1.
. . . (a) or (X)
. . . lklcdv : 0I9 yi[T(av
ir]apa to Ar)/jL7)TpcaK6[v
6
ywv fca\ov/jLvo<$ : govt) :
'
AyvoOeos
- _____
5 Acfrpo&LCTLatcbv : iirl %paav{XK)w : Ajo[ kchvo-
TOfJLiav A(f)po(8l)cn,aKbl> iv TOfc9 ehd<f>e\a-\.V tois
- - -
-qX.ov dviovros 6 - -
KaXov-
ixevos, Svo/juevov to ipyao-T7)ptov to A[i<j>i\iov Ka\ov'|_vov (?)
,
o] )}pjd^eTO TeXecri/cXtjs KaWtov \\pacf)[7]vios
SoptKol :
ArjfjL7)Tpt[a]/c6v : rj ^apdSpa Ka\ovfxe\yr\
io iirl tt}s Epe^^t'So? SevTepas 7rpvTave[ias
-
to AityiXeiov fcaXov/jievov, o aireypd^aTO ,
gov : KaWi/jbeScov KaWifcpaTov KoX\ : iyiro

avaad^ifxa'
' A]fi(f>LTpo7rT]o-Lv 'AOrjvau/cov Kovoov Ko^a>[vos
- -
aTT7pd\|/aTo(?)
-
-
15 'A]6i7vau/c6v /cal avvTOfJids \A/uicf)LTpo
f
7Tr][a-i.
0J009
: y]\lov Suofievov 686$, <ivl6vt[o$
'ApTt]/juo-La/cbv : %optKol' Evc^r)/ullBtj 9 K77
Iv tois
e8a](f)o~L Tot9 Qirafieivovos
.
K]r)(j)i(To8(opov W0/iio :
HP
- -
-
20
------v iraQC)aiov
avaadfopov
- -
-
09 [t| . . .
.] Aavpe[i
KVVT
This fragment together with CIA 11 781783 belongs to the class of
documents called diaypcupal /xeraWwu or leases of the silver mines at Laurium.
See D.A. s.v. Metallum. Portions of them were sold or demised by the state
to individuals, with the reservation of a perpetual rent, and these leases were
312 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[112
transferred from one person to another by inheritance, sale and every kind of
legal conveyance. The sale of the mines, or rather of the right of working
them, was managed by the Poletae. A twenty-fourth part of the produce was
paid as a perpetual tax.
The date of our inscription seems to be somewhat later than the administra-
tion of Lycurgus ; the mine formerly belonging to Diphilus, 1. 11, we know to
have been confiscated under that administration. Further Callimedon, 1. 12,
may well be the father of the 'Ayvppios KaWi/j.eb'ovTos KoXXu-rews, the proposer in
a decree of 280/5 b.c. (CIA n 311).
2. oh yelT[uv. See 111 3.
3. At;fxrjTpLaKov. This and three other epyaaT-qpta (' workings'),
'
A<ppo8i<nan6i>,
' Ap[Te/ju<nai<6v], 'AdyvauKov are perhaps named from goddesses : add from CIA n
781 "Epfxauicdv, HoaeLduviaKov, and iiri 2ouz>i'a> Uocrei8ojviaK6i> named from gods.
The names may have commemorated a vow or denoted neighbouring shrines.
4. uv7): i.e. tov-qr-qs. So below 12 ibv., and KoXX. for KoWvrevs. Cf. 35 6,
59 33. The word originally used for the purchase of mines was uveiadat or
irpLaadai', later /xtcrdovcrdai.
5. iirl Qpacru[W]ip : i.e. at the tomb of Thrasyllus, a place in the district of
Maroneia ; cf. Aeschin. c. Tim. 121 and Schol. Dem. 973 (v.l. QpaavWov).
6. [Kaivo]TOfj.Lai> is a certain restoration : it means
'
a newly opened mine or
vein. ' Perhaps some word like irapa preceded. It is said to be p tols edacpeai
'
in the foundations ' of some other mine, i.e. it is a gallery driven under the
floor of another.
8. Tjpydfrro. Meisterhans Gr. 171 collects eight examples of -qpy. and one
of dpy. in the Imperfect and Aorist before 300 b.c. The Perfect has always
eipy. (six examples). Afterwards the proportion is reversed.
9. QopiKol. A stele found near the modern Thoriko (CIA n 1122) is
inscribed : Qeoi' dpos epyaaTrjpiov /cat dv
8
pair6 8oov ireTrpafxevuv eirl \vo~ei (see Index)
$ei8oji/L Al^wvei
T>
and the place where it was found is still called
'
' Apyaar-qpaKLa.
10. TrpvTave[la.s] or 7rpvTai>e[vovcnis]'? Both are equally common. The lists
of sales were drawn up by the Poletae and arranged according to prytanies.
11. aireypa\{;a.To:
'
made a return of the property to the state.' Those who
omitted air
oypafaa
6cu to fxiraWov were liable to an dypdcpov /xtrdWov SLktj
;
cf. Suid. s.v. and, for the use of the word, DI 489 (Orchomenus) : diroypdcpeadrj
5e E#/SwXoj' /car' eviavrov eKacrrov Trap tqv rafxiav /ct) top vo/xibvav Td re /cauywara
(branded marks) tQ>v irpo^dTiov kt\.
13. dva<rdi/j.a : perhaps (B) mines for a time unworked and left to be
filled (adTTeiv) with slag and rubbish and then again worked, (cf. Strabo ix
399)
;
hence 7ra\aibv dvaad^ifxov 1. 20.
15. avvToiids : nominative according to B ; cf. 77 diroTo/j.ds. But even so
the meaning is uncertain.
113. A slab of Pentelic marble, entire only on the left margin, inscribed
on both sides
;
found in the Acropolis. Th. 0.075 m. CIA 11 784.
Alphabet, type 1 ; ir once (1. 13) is apparently tt
3 ; (:)
before numeral signs.
113]
FINANCE. 313
A
e
_--_-
yiiknewv 'AXctJ7r[KT](rt -
(DVrjTal ^TpaTLTTlTOS 1rp[ar -
AvcrLOeos AvaiOeov T[ei0pd<rtos-
5
. '~K\paic\eovs ipofJLvr)fAo\yi<i
Xaplaav&pos Ar)/jLOKpLTo[v
-
-,
At]/jLOfcXfjs
[. v . . .]ou 'A\&)7t[ktj0v
airehovro ywpiov AA,co7re[KTJo-i"
(DV7) . AvCTLKpCLTrj^ AvGLfJbCl^OV At[t]VVS'
lo Ke^akcuov : 4TTTXXXHHH
:
tovtov eKaroaTT) :
PHHHAhhh'
i/c ^aka/jLivos Fil/caSeayv /3ov\[apx.os
(?)
'OXvfiTTLoScopo^ KvfirjXov [II
-
-
(iTreSoro ywpiov iv S<z\a[fAivi
15
iv XirrpeaW
(hvt) . Acop66eos^(&copov [ef]
Or.
XX[P-
B
V

k?)]77Jo<?
TlaWijvrjcri
wvt]] [-
- ur]7T09 MdA,7TtS/>9 HaXX .
[H]HP*
[k]fcarjoarv
hhlll'
5
-
l]7rl [Avp]lov iirifJLeXr)Tri$
-. - - 9 %eoir6[Jbirov UaWrj .
direborjo ywtpiov TlaXkr\vr)0
C
wvt]]
- -
ei/779 Xaplov Ua\ .
F
1
'
e/caroa . \\\'
- - <a\v e7nfJLe\7]Trj<s
10
- -
w]i^ eo<f)i\ov
'
Avacf>Xva .
d-n-eSoTJo ytoptov Ava(f)\vcrTo2'
<avr{]
- -
tS?79 AiofcXeovs ^Zovvi .
PHHH*
KaT00-TJ?7
P h h h
"
K<},ctXatov]
^^XXX^HAAAAhl-hhlllll'
15
iKaroo-Tr,]
XHHAAAPhlll.
This inscription and CIA 11 785788 contain accounts of the eKarocrrrj or
one per cent, duty levied on the sale of lands. The vendors appear to have
been guilds (A
5),
perhaps represented by their fiovXapxos
(A
12),
or families
represented by their e-m/j.e\r)Tr)s (B
9)
or even demes, if KXwiridai CIA 11 788 is
the deme afterwards belonging to the Ptolema'id tribe CIA 111 ind. vi 5 s.v. K\w...
The dues may have been paid not to the state treasury, but to some temple or
314 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [113
deity
;
cf. HO introd. note. This and the kindred inscriptions belong probably
to the second half of the fourth century (K).
A 2. We may perhaps supply
x^P^ov ;
but the precise meaning of the word
~Sli\Tieojv is uncertain.
9. wv7), i.e. uvr)T7]s: so 16, B 3, 8, 12. See 112 4 etc.
10, 11. The percentage is exact; so in B 12, 13; but in B 14, 15 it does
not work out exactly to one per cent.
12. WiKadeojv: see 86.
B 5. Avpiov or Avpiov : perhaps the name of a place.
114. (a) A fragment of marble found in the Acropolis. Michaelis Be
Parth.
p. 288; CIA i 298 ; cf. iv p. 37; H. 47. {b) A slab of Pentelic marble,
H. m. 44, L. m. 29, Th. m. 105, fractured below, containing obviously a more
complete edition of the inscription than the foregoing, which seems to have been
abandoned unfinished. Lolling, AeXr. 1889 p. 6, 7 n. 1 (minusc); Foucart,
BCH xm
(1889) p. 171, 172 n. 7; CIA iv p.
146. Cf. E. A. Gardner, JHS x
269 sq.
A.AAE
(=e,
[eel 77) . H (= h)
OIKUMN [X
=
f
] O
(= 0,
ov, co)
PP^ITY'i'X. (:)
in (a),
(:)
and
(.),
perhaps only by error, in b. 2toixv<>&-
a
(")eot
*A6r]va

Tv^rj.
Kt^crt7T7ro? iypa/jL/jud-
reve

aydX/juaros

iirt-
ardrrjcrL

^vppivovauo^.
5
\f//jL/jLa irapd
Kt^r/crt7r7ro?
7[p~
a/jL/judreve : d<ya\[p-
/jLclto? : eirLardTrj\<T-
t : lAvppivovdios. [A
5 rjfifjLa
: irapa r<z/iu[a>-
H
v : ot? : A7]fio[a-]rp[a-
TO? : iypafJL,jJidTe[y-
e : "BiVireraoov' rac-
ial : K.t7]<jio)v : Sr[p-
IO (DGLCLS
'. ^ A.VTL<^dr\y\-
? : MevavSpos. (*)[u|a-
o^dprjs. X/ji6fcop[Z-
0? : ^etSeXet'Sftis.
15FTTX
XXXF
HPhh
y^pveriov : icovr)6-
7] . araO/jibv :
PTXP
1
Tl/JLr] tovtov
Phhl

TTHH
HAAA
^oAhhh
i\i<f)a<;
iwvrjOr)
115]
FINANCE. 315
There is little doubt that this is an account of monies received by the
maT&Tat. or commissioners for the erection of the chryselephantine statue of
Athena, sculptured by Pheidias 438 B.C., and to this year or a date very little
earlier the inscription must be assigned. CIA i 299 appears to deal with the
same subject.
The first numeral in the margin of
(2)
indicates that the e7rtcrrarat received
100 talents from the ra/xicu. Why in 1. 8 sqq. only seven rafxiat are enumerated,
instead of the full ten as in CIA i 299, we cannot say. The next set of
numerals represents 87 talents 4652 drachmae for which gold was bought
weighing (according to the numerals on the right of 1. 15
17)
6 talents 1508 (or
perhaps 1509) drachmae 5 obols; whence it appears, as Kirchhoff conjectured on
no. 115, that at that time a drachma weight of gold did not cost less but rather
more than 14 silver drachmae (actually the figures are 1 : 14-037).
a 1. On the form 'Adrjva see 37 38.
a 3 b 3. iiri<7T&T7i<ri. On this form see no. 9.
16. TL/nri. The price is given by the numerals on the left of 1. 1417.
115. Inscribed on one of the narrower faces of a quadrilateral stele
containing on each of four or at least three sides statements of public accounts.
To this stele belong the seven fragments given under CIA i 300311, one under
iv 311 a and two under iv 297 a, 297 b. The width of the narrower faces is
0.19 m. or 0.20 m. See Kirchhoff, Monatsb. Ah. Berl. 1861
p.
860 sqq.; Koehler,
Mitth. iv
(1879) p. 33 sqq. The text below corresponds to CIA i 301.
ABAAE
(=e,
04 v) IH
(=h)
OIKUMN/V (311) [x
=
f]
O (= o, ou, co)
PPCTY^X
: and : after some of the numerals.
Paragraphs are marked by a short line as indicated in the transcript below,
cf. no. 116 and DI 1222 (Tegea).
TOL$ i7TL<TTdTr)(Tl ot?
'AvTL/cXrjs i<ypafAfjLciTv[e
7rl T?;? TTapT7)<$ KCLl d>~
KaT7]<i (3ov\r}s,
(
fj
MeTa-
5
yevr)<; irpwros iypa/Ji/jL-
4^4/3
dreve, iirl KpciTTjros
apx~
ovtos KOrfvaionTtv,
\r)fJLfJLCL TOV iviCLVTOV
rovrov rdSe.
i o X H H H TrepLyevofjuevofi
H P A A
pev iic tov irporepov
iviavrov
PAA xpvaov o-Tarfjpes
Aa\iy\f]aK7]VOL
316 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[115
ij
AAF^^
XP
V0
"
^]
crraTr}p[s
e
KT7]

K[vjriKT]v]o/
7ra[pd Tafitjft)^,
[
01 to,
MMF
rrj? Oeov [T]a/ueL{ov,
f
o<? Kpdrr)*; 7p[o-
20
fxixdreve Aa[/j,7rTpevs
XHHH
XP
V<7L0V 7rpa[0ivTos
FAAhh
aradfwv
(HAAA)?
Tifirj. tovt[ov
XHHH i\e(j)avTo[s -n-pa&V-
25 ...llll
TO? CTTa^yLto[v]
TT
- -
p
1
A
Tzyu./; t[ovtov
a^aXojju<a[r]a
HH:
a)V7]/LLaTco[v
hhl:
30
yU.tcr^ft)[yLtaTtov
'juTrouof-yois] Tfl
-'
77 ... .
This fragment with the others on the same stele contains accounts which
are undoubtedly those concerned with the building of the Parthenon rendered
by the commissioners called emo-raTai. 1. 4 shows that the accounts on our
fragment belong to the 14th year of the financial series, thus making the
beginning of the work date from 447/6 b.c For accounts concerning the
chryselephantine statue in 438/7 b.c. see no. 114.
1. e-mcrTaTrjai. For the form see no. 9. The dative depends loosely in
syntax upon Xyj/xfia 1. 8.
6. Clearly not the same Crates as the one named in 1. 19. Cf. no. 98.
10, 11. The numerals in these lines form one sum.
13. The compendia denoting multiples of staters may be added to those
described in Rem. iii. p. 44. The sums given also form part of the balance
(Trepiyevofxevov 1. 10) from the preceding year70 gold staters of the coinage of
Lampsacus, 27^ of the coinage of Cyzicus. On the value of these and the eKrrj
see D.A.
21 sq. The weight of the gold is uncertain. The value (tl/ult] totutov) is
given on the left as 1372 drachmae (of Attic silver). On the relation of silver
to gold at this period see no. 114.
116. A fragment of Pentelic marble; H. 0.510.44 m., Br. 0.390.31 m.,
Th. 0.15 m. Broken at the top and on the left, damaged in the upper portion
of the right side. CIA i 319.
116]
FINANCE. 317
ABAAE
(e,
|>], y)
iH(=/i) OIKUMN [X
fl
0(=o, ov,
g>)
P P ^ T Y ^ X . 2Totx7?56f for the most part.
^aX/CO? ew^^ft)
. TaXai/Ta
Kaiheica Kal /juval 6e[/ca . T^[jiti] tov raXdvTov Tpi-
ciKOvra 7T6vre hpa^pbai.
5
K]aTTt[Y]epo9 e(jdvr]6r) e? to a^#e/-io[v, rdXavrov
/cat rj/jbirdXavTOv teal /uuval 6Ckoctl [^rptis Kal
fifjLLfjLvaiov, to rdXavrov huaKocrioov to[kk-
oz^Ta Bpa^fModv. tc/jL7],
fjLiaObs Tot9 epyacra/jLevoLS to av[Q]e/jLov vtt[6
io tyjv denriha Kal toov ireTaXoov toov v[a-Ttp]ov
irpoafJbt o-0(i> 0evtoov.
fxoXv/38o<; Ta> dv0e/jL(p Kal toI<$ Seay-tot? tcov
Xl0cov tov /3d0pov, KpaTSVTal SooSeKa. tl/jLT)'
vXa Kal av0paK.\e<; t]g3 /uloX[v]/38oo\i
15 Tpdire^av iroirjaavTi
fjLiar06<; iaayayovT[i too d-yJaX/xare Kai
o-TrjaavTi ev to) veoo.
!;vXa io)V7]0r] to) KXlfiaKe iroLrjaat, ev
'
olv t(go)
aydX/iaT6 ear}ye[aQ]r]v (K)al
ecf)
gov
(
oc Xt0oi ia-
70
I
eKOfJbi^ovTo
e
ol e? to /3d0pov, Kal
(f)dpac
to (3d0pov tolv dyaXfiaTOLv Kal Ta? [0]u/oct9
Kal iKpiooaai irepl too dydXfiaTe Kal KXlfiaKe
7T0O9 TCL IKpia.
vp/rravTOS dvaXwjJtaTjo?
K(j)d\aLOV PXXXHHA.
The inscription forms the concluding portion of accounts in connexion with
some public building operations. If, as Kirchhoff conjectures, they form the
completion of CIA 1 318, which contains accounts of the erection of two statues
of deities whose names are not given, the date may be about 421 b.c. Reisch,
Jahreshefte 1 p. 55, identifies the deities as the Athena and Hephaestus mentioned
Paus. 1 14, 16, and assigns them to 417/6 b.c He also tries to identify the
types by the dvde/xov, 1. 5.
2. %a\/c6s. By this may be meant either copper or an alloy of copper, and
the same remark applies to Karrtrepos 1. 5, the high price of which compared
with that of x<*Xk6s is proof of its rarity, imported as it probably was from
Britain by way of Massilia.
5. dvde/aov: a less common form of dvdifxiov; see 117 47.
10. Kal tQ)v TreTdXwv kt\.; "and pay for the gold-leaf prepared by the men
subsequently hired in addition
"
(?)
318 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[116
13. Kparevrai. The word (Lat. craticulum) properly means andirons or
"
dogs," rests on each side of a fire upon which a spit turns. Cf. Homer II. ix
214: KparevTauv eiraeipas and Pollux x 96. Hence Kirchhoff conjectures that
ingots of lead are meant, cast in the form of Kparevrai, and of a regular and
known weight. The price was probably given on the left of the inscriptions
:
cf. 114. Possibly the I to the left of 1. 20 is a remnant of a column of
numerals.
18. tw K\L/j.aK : apparently a kind of inclined plane. For the infinitive
irocrjaai see 21 7, 39 20.
21. [6]vpas:
OYPA2I.
22. iKpiQaai : "for setting up scaffolding round the two statues and inclined
planes up to the scaffolding."
117. On a slab of white marble from the Acropolis at Athens, H.
3' 6";
Br.
1'
8"; broken only at bottom; now in the British Museum. CIG 160;
CIA i 322; BM 85. Cf. Choisy, Etudes epigr. sur V'architecture grecque, 85166.
ABAAE(=e, a,v)XH(=h) OIKUMH [X
=
f]
O (= o, oV)
)
PP^TY^X [^C
=
^]
Initial letters of lines sometimes thus:
A, A, T.
'F^mo-rdrat rod veoo rod
efi
iroXeu, ev g5 rb apyalov ayaXfia, TSpocrvv-
. 7)s Kr)(f)io-Levs, XapmS^s 'AypvXfjOev, AtwS?;? K.r)(f>co-ievs, dp^ireKrco[v
<i]A.o/c\>7? W^apvev^, ypa/jL/jtarevs Kreap^o^ KvSaOrjvatevs,
Td]8e dveypaijrav epya rod veoo,
(
ax; KareXaffov e^ovra, rb yjrr)-
5
<$>io-]{Aa rod 8r}/jLov, 'b 'R7riyevr)<; elirev, i^etpyaafieva tcai
'
rj/xcepya, errl Aio
409/8
K]\eof? dp'xovTos, YLeKpoiruhos irpvravevovarj^ rrpcorT]^, errl rrj<;
fiovXrjs
']?7 Ntfcocf)dvr]<; MapaOcovtos wpcoTo^ iypapLfjidrevaev.
Tod vea> rdSe KareXdf^ofiev ruiiepya' rovrcov e/cdarov ovk e^elpya-
errl
rfj
ycovuq
rfj
7rpo? rod Y^eKporriov
10 rrXivOovs dderovs fjurj/cos rerpd-
B, C.
Illl
7roSa9, TrXdros Si7roSa^, ird^oq
rpir)ixt7roScov<i
[xacr^aXtaiav /Jtrj/cos rerpdrroha
I
rrXdros rptiroSa, rrd^os rptwv
15
'
T)flt7TO$L(OV
eirucpavLTLhas fJbrjicos rerpdiro-
p
Bas, rrXdros rpiiroha^, irdyo^
rptwv
r
r}/jLL7To8tO)V
ywvtaiav fifjrcos
f
eirrdiroha
|~| 20 rrXdros rerpdiroha, 7ra^o?
TpLCOV
'
TJ/JLLTToBiCOP.
yoyyvXos XiOos aderos avrtpbo-
arai
' '
apfib<; o
*
erepos ovSe
(
oi oirtaOev
f
apfioi
/jltjkos
f
eKiroSes, rrXdros hirro-
All
Be<;, 7ra^o? rrootalof
rovrcov e/cdarov ovk i^elpya-
arai
(
o
'
appbos o erepos ovBe
c
01 oirtaOev
e
apfioi.
rerpdrrohe^
fxiJKOS, rrXaros hirro-
p
hes 7ra^09 irohLaloi
rovrcov
'
efcdarov ovk e^elpya-
crraL
'
o
(
apfjibs
f
o
f
erepos ovSe
01 omaOev appioi
rrevreirov^ fxrjKos, irXaros BLrrovs,
I
7rayo? irooialos.
117]
FINANCE.
319
po? Tat? 7rcKpaviTiacv, /ultjkos
Be/cairous,
'
v-^ros Tptcov
25
'
7]
fJb LIT oh MDV
dvTLfJLOpGO TOt? ilTiO-TvXtOi^
/jlt/kos rerpdiroSe, 7r\[aTos irejv-
TeiraXdarco
KLOKpavov dOerov
-
-
30
/xircoTTOv to ecro) /x7/[kos Sforow,
7r\aTO? rpioov
'
77/u7ro[8u>v, irdx]o9
TplCOV
r
7]
fJLLTToZ LCOV
iTTt<jTv\ia dOera //.[tjkos okt]o)-
1
iroha, ttXutos Svolv [iroSoiv
35
zeal 7ra\a<TTrjs, 7ra^o? [SforoSa
eTTLcrrvXta dvco ovra [&>i
eirepydaaaOai [xrjKOS oktcotto-
8a, irXdros hvolv iroholv Kai ira-
\ao-T?is, Trdyo<$ StnroBa
40 tov Se Xoittov epyov
f
diravros
ey kvkXm dp^ei o KXevcrtvtaKo^
I
XlOos, 7T/909
f
ft) t c3a
#
Kai ireOr)
eirl toov eincrTaTcov tovtcov.
TOOV KLOVCOV TOOV eVl TOV TOiyOV
4: TOV 7T/30? TOV UavSpOaeLOV
||
Keifxevoov Kiovoo\y
aTjxrjTa i/c tov ivTos dv6e-
[xiov etcdcTTOv tov kiovos Tpla
f
rjixiirohta
50 iiriaTvXLov oktootto&os
7rl TOV TOiyOV TOV 7T0O9 VOTOV
KVfJbdTlOV 9 TO 6<7ft) $l
iirtOelvat
Ta8e aKaTa^eaTa Kai
^
apdj3So)Ta'
TOV TolyOV TOV 7Tp09 VOTOV
ave/jbov aKaTa^eaTov
ttXtjv tov v Trj irpoaTaaet
Tjj 7T/0O9 TOO KcKpOTTlOp
60 tou9 6p0ocTTdTa$ aKaTa-
eo-Tov<; etc tov e^ooOev iy kvkXoj
PI
n
tovtov apyos o apfjbos o Te-
po9 Kai
e
oi oiriadev ap/jboL
yelcra /jirJKOs
TCTpdiroSa, 7tA,to9
TplwoSa, 7r^09 irevTeiraXaaTa,
Xeia K7r7roc7}fAeva dvev Kara-
TOfjirjs.
f
eTepwv /jL6ye6o<; to avTOv
KVfiaTLOv Kai daTpaydXov eKarepov
dT/jL7]T0(l) TjCraV TTTa/369 TroSes
k.KaOTOV
6Tepotv
dT\xr\TOi rjaav tov KVfiaTuov TeTTapes
7roSe9 tov Be dcTTpaydXov oktco Trohes
I
6TpOV
tov KV/naTiov Tpla
(
7]/jLL7r68La dr/ji7]Ta,
dcTTpaydXov TeTTapes iroSes
I
'
TpOV
ttjv /jlv Xetav epyaaiav elpyaaTO,
tov Se KVfxaTiov dpyot TroSes yaav
'ef
Kai 'vifiiTToSiov, dcTTpaydXov dpyot
770^69 OKTCO
I
f
erepov
KV/juaTiov
r
e Tro&es dpyoi
do~Tpayd\ov oktco 7roSe9
I
'
TpOV
rj/jLiepyov t?/9 Xeia9 epyaalas
tcov diro T/79 CTTOa9 firJKOS TtTpdlTO-
1 1 1
1 8a, 7rXaT09 Tpiiroha, 7ra^09 ireine-
TraXacTTa, Xela eKireiTOLrjfjieva
dvev KaTaTOfir/s
yoovtala eirl tt)v irpoaTaatv ttjv
7rpc9 e&) {if)KO$
'
exTToSe, 7rXaT09
||
T6TapTOV
(
T)/jLL7ro8lOV, 7T^09
7re^Te7raXa<TTa
tovtwv tov
'
6Tepov
*
7]
Xeia
fiev ipya-
aia (e^)ipyaaTO, to Se KV/xaTiov
apyov oXov Kai o daTpdyaXos,
tov Se eTepov dpyo(l) Kv/xaTiov -pels
770^69 Kai
'
7J/JLl7r6SlOV TOV & d&Tpa-
320 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[117
irXr/v rov ev
rfj
rrpoara-
CT6L TTj 7T/30? TCO K.6fCpOTTL(p
t? (Tireipas dirdaas
\
65
appa(3ScoTOV$ rd dvcoOev
row tciovas dpa{38coTOV$ drravras
ttXtjv rd)v eirl rov rolyov rrjv tcprjirlha
[ey
tcv/cXw
f
dnracrav dtcard^earov
rov roiyov rov e(v)ro<; d/card^eara \
70
(y)oyyvXov XiOov rerpairohias
P|||
rov ev raj 7rpoaTOfjbiai[(o
rerparrohia^
All.
rrjs
rrapaardhos [ttjs
-
-
rerpairohlas I... .
P
75
rov irpos TOu<ya\/jLaTOS
TTpair08las. I
ev
rfj
irpocrrdaei
rfj
rrpos
rov OvpM/jLaros
\\
TOfJb
/3(O/JL0V rov [Q]vtj^ov
80 dOerov
rrjs errwpotylas cr(f)r)/c[i<r]fcov<;
teal l/xavras aderovs
-
-
irrl
rfj
irpoardaet
rfj
rrpos rdo[i
Ke/cpo7rl(p e8et
\
85 rovs XlOovs tou? opocfrialovs tovs
67rl tcov tcopcov eirepydcra-
\
III
aOat dvcodev, fiij/cos rpicov
teal Betca irohwv, rrXdros irevre
IToScOV
llll
90 rds tcdXyas rds iirl rots eiri-
arvXlots etjepydaao-Oac
kSei
XlOtva iravreXws i^etpyaa/xeva
a yap,ai'
\
95
irXwQoi rerpdirohes /jurjtcos,
irXdros Slirohes, irdyos
/\\\
rpcwv r)fjLiirohiwv, dpt6fji6[v III
ydXov apyol irohes irevre
eirt rov roiyov rov irpos rov Tiav-
opoae\lo\i
fjbrjtcos eirrd iroScov teal 'rjfjLnroSlov,
irXdros rpcdov irohoov teal
c
tj/jlotoBIov
r
r//xlepyov Tr;? Xelas epyaala?
purjKos 'etc iroScov, irXaros rptwv
iroScov teal iraXaarrjs irdyos irevre-
irdXacrrov, (eir)l rov rolyov rov irpos
rov HavSpoaelov
rovrov darpaydXov dr/jur/roc irohes
irevre
alenaloi rwv diro rrjs crroas [Arjtco[s
(
eirrdiroSes, irXaros rptayv iroSoo[v
teal
f
tj/jUttoBlov, irdyos iroSiacoc
ovrot Tj/jLiepyoi
e
erepco /irj/cos irevreiroSe, 7r[Xa.Tos
rpiwv ttoSgov teal * rjfjLLTTohi\ov, -n-axos
7roSialot,
'
rffilepyoi
yelaa iirl rovs alerovs 7r[\aTos
irevre
'
r)/Ai7ro$Lcov, //.^[kos tctto.-
pa>v ttoScov tcai
f
7j/jll7to[SCov, irdxos
TToStaia rrjv Xeiav ep[ya<rCav
efC7re7TOL7j/ievov
erepov r\pnepyov rr\s
Xelas epyacrlas
Ovpau XiOtvai fjbrjtcos otcroo rrohwv
teal 7raXaarrj<;, rrXdros irevre
7)/jLt7ToSiO)V
rovrcov rd fiev aXXa e^erreTroi-
rjro,
65
rd vya Se eSei tou? Xidovs
rovs fxeXavas evdelvai
ovs too
'
vrrepQvpw ra> irpos eco,
rjfjiiepyov
tc5
ftoofjLG) [tco] rov Ovrjyov XiOoi Tiev
reXec/co[l fijry/co? rerpdwoSes
f
vyjros [8]volv iroholv teat 7raXaarrj[s,
117]
ILacryciXiaLa p,fjfco<; rerpa-
| 7rou?, irXdros rpiirov^, 7ra%o?
100 rpicov
'
7]fjLi7ro8io)V
b
an dpi6p\ov
-
-
'
tipUpya,
'] a yap,ai'
tt\L]v6ol 7rL/cpavLT[ifcs
5
jj.tj]/co? TTpa7roSe[s, ttXcltos
Tp]t7roSe9, mayos r[pi<5v
f
?;yLtt7roSiw[v]
p,
. . . .
7ro8e9
III
acr
6Tpa<; acr^rpayaXov rir-
10 rape<s 7roSe[$ Kal
?7/xi7ro[8iov
67rt/3[avCTi8s
Sa . . . .
J4
FINANCE:
ERECHTHEUM.
321
7ra^o? iro^ialoi
r
erepos Tpi7r[ovs [itjkos
-

1. 100 was possibly followed by the appended
fragment, b
114, because it mentions iiri-
KpaviTLbes (see note on col. i 16 below). The
words rj/jLlepya a x^ai
may be the title of the
third part of the survey which is evidently
contained in col. ii.
Note. The left-hand column 11. 8100 must
be read continuously, then the right-hand
column 11.
8100. Similarly in no. 118.
l\avS()0(Tfi
ywvia r; TTpos
tov Kacpoiriov
R. II.
21
322 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[117
The building to which this inscription refers is described in the preamble
as
"
the temple containing the ancient statue." There is no doubt, from the
description of the various parts of the structure, that this is the building still
extant on the Acropolis and now known as the Erechtheum. The title here
given does not recur, but "the ancient temple," 6 dpxcuos vabs or veus, is
mentioned in various inscriptions (IGr* n 1, 74, 5, 672 c 6, both restored), and
Xenophon Hell, i
6, 1 speaks of a fire in "the old temple of Athena," 7ra\cu6?
T-fjs 'Adyvas veu/s ev 'Adrjuais. Cf. 2 C 30 : [rbv] vabv rbv dpxcuov rrjs 'Adrjvas r\j)s
Uo\l6.8os and Strabo ix
p. 396. It is generally held that all these titles refer
to the same building; Dr Dorpfeld disputed this view (Mitth. xii 64, 194)
; but it
is confirmed by Frazer (JHS xiii 167). Pausanias (i 26, 5)
mentions the
building in the Erechtheum, and appears to describe the temple of Athena
Polias as part of it, while he says the temple of Pandrosos is adjoining
(vvvex'Q'5 ib. i 27, 2).
The main body of the building, which is of an unusual nature (see the
plan, p. 321), consists of a rectangular chamber, divided transversely by walls
and facing east and west. At the east end it had a door and a hexastyle portico
in front described as 17 irpbaTaais
77 irpbs ew ; it can hardly be doubted that the
chamber entered through this eastern portico was the cella of the temple of
Athena Polias. At the west end the building ends in a wall surmounted by
engaged columns, Kioves iirl rod rolxov rod irpbs rod Uaubpoaeiov ;
whence it appears
that it is here that the Pandroseum adjoins. To the N. and S. of the west end
are porticoes, that on the N. called 77 -rrpoaTacns 77 irpbs rod dvpLo/u-aros, because it
contains the great door which is the richest in decoration and also was, probably,
the chief entrance to the building, and that on the S. borne by Caryatids (called
tcbpai), and described as 77 Trpbarao-is 77 rpbs ry KeKpo-rriy. This appears to imply
that the Cecropium (see below 1.
9)
was within this S.W. corner of the building,
(77
yuuia 77 irpbs tou KeKpoiriov), from which the enumeration given in the
inscription takes its start. It is among the most noteworthy peculiarities of
the building that the N. portico, the door in it, and, presumably, the chamber
entered through the door, are at a lower level, by about 10 feet, than the
eastern and southern porticoes. The difference of level necessitated a staircase
within the southern portico ; but there is no certain indication as to steps or
other means of communication between the eastern and western cellae. There
has been much discussion as to the internal arrangement of the building and
the exact use of its various parts ; but what has been already said suffices to
enable us to follow the description.
The measurements given in the inscription are evidently not intended to be
very exact, but only to serve for identification of the various stones, since they
are given only in feet and palms (iraXaa-rai) : but if we omit a few short
measurements, the majority point, on comparison with the extant stones in the
building, to a foot of between .32 and .34 m.
;
and Dorpfeld (Mitth. xv, 1890,
167) infers that the Attic foot in use at the time was one of .327 m., not the
shorter foot of .296 (Mitth. vii, 1882, 277; Michaelis JHS iv, 1883, 335).
We do not know when the temple was begun
;
all that can be inferred from
the inscription is that it had been left in an unfinished state, and that work
was resumed upon it in 408 B.C., when this elaborate report on its condition was
drawn up. The fire in 406 b.c must have occurred immediately after its
*
For this revised mode of reference, adopted henceforward, see Index s.v. Corpus.
117]
FINANCE:
ERECHTHEUM. 323
completion (if the fire did occur in this building
;
see above) ; but the structure
must either have been but slightly damaged or else have been restored in the
same form again ; for the description of the various parts fits the extant building,
though some allowance must be made for restoration. Thus the engaged
columns on the west front appear to date in their present state from a restoration
in late Eoman times, though they correspond to those mentioned in the
inscription. One of the Caryatids of the N. portico and one of the columns of
the E. portico were carried off by Lord Elgin, and are now in the British Museum.
The building subsequently suffered severely during the siege of the Acropolis
in 1827 ;
but was partially rebuilt out of the ancient materials in 1838 and 1845.
The W. wall was blown down in 1852 by a storm. Its appearance before these
last vicissitudes may be seen in Stuart's picture {Antiquities
of
Athens, II
cap. ii PL ii) which shows in situ many stones now thrown down or lost,
especially at the W. end.
The survey of the works was made, as we learn from 1. 1 sq. , by commissioners
called e7rt<rT<xTcu tov peu). On the various kinds of ^Tviararai toop 5r}/j.o<Tiojv gpyuv
see D.A. and cf. lO 18. The survey, 5oKi/nacria, usually took place when a
building was finished ;
here it seems to have been ordered previously on account
of undue delay in the completion of the work.
7. The use of the aorist eypa/m/j-aTevcreu appears to be unique ; unless it falls
under the head of the instances quoted by Meisterhans Gr. 240, e.g. IG n 2,
814, a, A, 5 (377 b.c) :
XP^
V0V aov eKaaros avr<2v rip&v. For the formula irpcoros
iypa/jL/jLaTevev cf. 99 a 1, Rem. V
(1)
p. 89.
Col. i.
8. The enumeration begins with
"
unfinished work on the temple." With
1. 93 begins the second division: \L6iva iravrekus i^eipyaafx&a a
x
a
M
a<> "stones
entirely finished but not yet in position."
9. iiri rrj yaviq. kt\. See introduction and plan.
On the KeKpo-mov (shrine or tomb of Cecrops) see H and V Athens
p. 489,
509. We may infer from 1. 59 below, where the Caryatid portico (7rp6crra<ris) is
spoken of as being 71-pds rc KeKpoirLtp
'
added to or built out from the Cecropium,'
that this building adjoined the portico. The huge stone carrying the south-
west corner of the main rectangle was probably intended to bridge over a space
on which the tomb of Cecrops was preserved.
10.
Illl
trXbdovs dO^Tovs,
'
four blocks not fixed,' i.e. in position, but not yet
clamped. Of the three dimensions named -rraxos denotes the vertical measure-
ment.
13. ixaaxo-Xialav \ sc- nXlvdov (to be supplied also below with e-rriKpaviTis and
ywviaia). The exact meaning of the word can only be conjectured by analogy
;
cf humeri Vitruv. iv 7 ;
oj/wa LXX Kings iii 6, 13.
16. iiriKpavlTidas: the course of projecting blocks immediately below the
architrave and above the irXivdoi.
19. ywviaiav : the eiriKpavlTis at the angle.
22.
|
yoyyvXos Xidos ktX. :
'
one curved stone not fixed, corresponding with
the i^^LKpauLTL8s
,
, i.e. forming the other part of the same course. By 7077^X05
is expressed the ogee curve formed by the profile of the cymatium. For the
variation between accusatives and nominatives in these entries, cf. 97 5, IOO A
Col.
3, 7.
212
324 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. V. [117
26. Boeckh thinks that the e-mo'TvXia are the architrave stones of the
western wall, with which the ornamental facing-stones {avrid-qixaTa ?)
are said to
be corresponding, avTi/j-opic. If the facing-stones tallied with these in height,
the fact may explain the omission of this dimension here.
29.
|
KLOKpavov aderov [/cat] pt-eTunrov to ecrco :
'
one capital of a column not
fixed and the inner metopon.' Boeckh explains as follows: on the inner side
of the western wall were pilasters corresponding with the external engaged
columns ; the capitals of these pilasters were called ixerwira. For the form
KLOKpavov cf. 60 55.
36 sqq. e w
e
pydaaa8 at. : three epistylia in position had to be tooled. Cf.
126 63 and Schoene Herm. iv 3843.
40 sqq. rod 5e Xonrov kt\. :
'
And the whole of the rest of the work all round
starts from the Eleusinian stone, attached to w
7
hich are the figures in relief, and
three of these blocks were fixed in the term of office of the present epistatae.'
The frieze, focpopos,
consisted of these slabs of a dark grey, almost black, lime-
stone serving as a background to which marble figures,
faa,
were affixed.
Several fragments of these sculptures have been found, as well as remains of
clamps by which they were attached. Cf. 118 c ii 39 for an entry of the
purchase of lead els trpbadeaiv tlov
fodiwv.
44 sqq.: a fresh heading; the word Tj/miepya must be supplied. The Kioves are
four of the six engaged columns on the western wall. Above them was after-
wards placed the aero? 6 irpbs tov llavdpoaelov
;
cf IG i Suppl.
p. 151.
46. By Kei/xeviov is meant
'
columns in position,' the opposite of ddercov.
For avdepuov, the floral decoration round the top of the shaft immediately below
the echinus, see DA. For the meaning of a77*77x0, kt\. we may choose between
Boeckh's
'
the part still uncut was l^ft of the anthemion measured from the
inner side ' and Hicks's
'
\\
ft measured from the inner anthemion ' i.e. the
anthemion nearest the wall.
50 sqq.
'
The cymatium of the 8 ft long architrave on the inside of the wall
had to be added.'
54
76. The entries in these lines belong to various parts of the temple.
For apafiduTos
sometimes in error dppdj3diOTos is written.
56.
'
The wall facing the south ' is the wall attached to the portico of the
Caryatids, of which the architrave stones have been mentioned. It is
'
un-
polished, except the part within the portico adjacent to the Cecropium'; irpbs
rep K., not Trpos tov K., as was said of the angle in 1. 9.
60. By opdoo-Tdrai is meant the bottom course of the walls, consisting of
blocks of double height (" dado "). Cf. 126 19.
64. o-irelpa, Lat. torus, is the rounded base-moulding of an Ionic or
Corinthian column, and here also of the entire external wall. t<x avudev relates
to the upper torus.
67. T7]v Kpr)irWa: the base, i.e. the three steps on which the whole edifice
rested.
69. tov rolxov rod evrbs kt\.:
'
of the internal wall (we noted) as unpolished
portions 32 feet (TtTpairodias
|
'
111)
of moulding.'
70. TOAAYUO
is clearly a mistake for
TOAOAAYUO.
71. tov iv t<2 TrpoaTopuaitp TeTpairodias
All-
With the old and incorrect
reading dvo for
All
various conjectures as to the meaning of irpoaToixiaiov were
117]
FINANCE; ERECHTHEUM. 325
made which are not now admissible, as it must have had room for 48 feet of
moulding. No satisfactory conjecture has been made as to the meaning of the
word
;
perhaps it was the corridor between the two western porticoes.
73. ttjs irapaardbos. Supply again yoyyvXov \idov. This irapaards is
probably, as Boeckh suggests, the pillar at the northwest corner of the
Erechtheum, which ranges with the north wall and the two western columns of
the north porch. Uapaards, like the Latin anta, is used to denote a rectangular
pillar to support a roof-beam, often corresponding to a column that bears the
other end of the beam ; it may be either at the end of a wall or set against the
side of it or stand free.
75. tov irpbs T(Jjya\p.aTos :
'
of the (wall) near the statue, 4-foot lengths (of
moulding, 70771^X01; Xidov). This must be the statue of Athena Polias, to dpxouov
ayaXpLa (1. 1). The passage seems fatal to Dorpfeld's theory that the old statue
was never moved from the early temple of Athena (Mitth. xxii, 1897, 159 sqq.).
77. ev ry irpoaracFei ktX. The northern portico is meant. For the dvpupia
see the introduction above. dvrjKoos, here spelt Ovrjxbos (dvr)xov<;), is a variant of
dvoaKoos. For the aspirate cf. QepuadoKXijs on an ostrakon D6; below 148,
ii 18 and Meisterhans Gr. 103. In a Greek roof there were
(1)
5okoL, main beams
resting on the architrave,
(2) o-firjKlo-Koi, beams laid on these, the ends of which
are conventionally represented in the Ionic order by the dentils,
(3)
ipLdvres
(cf. our
'
tie-beams ') shorter cross-beams.
85. tovs Xldovs ktX.: 'the three roof stones above the Kopcu had to be
worked on their upper surface, to a length of 13 feet by 5 feet in width.' The
dimensions given are probably meant for each of the three stones, though they
do not correspond exactly with the extant remains. Here we have the official
name of the Kopcu or
'
maidens ' which supported the south portico ; the usual
modern name, Caryatids, cannot be traced beyond Vitruvius. Kopeu was also
the name given to the early female statues found on the Acropolis and elsewhere;
cf JHS xii p. 386.
90. ras /cdX%as ktX. Whether
KdXxv
or
x^
K
V
or
X^XV
is tne original form
it is difficult to say
;
the third form is more probably due to confusion between
the other two; cf. Meisterhans Gr. 103; xdX/07 occurs 118 c 69, 75, xdX/07 ib. a
50. Dioscorides iv 58 describes a flower called
KaXxv,
which botanists have
identified as the Chrysanthemum coronarium. Wilkins Prolusiones
p.
68 thinks
that the unfinished disks seen at this day on the architrave of the Caryatid
portico are the incomplete KaXxai of the inscription.
93 sq.: a fresh heading. On p:a<rxaXiaia 1. 98 see above 1. 13.
Col. ii.
8 sqq. ToxjTwv endo-rov ktX.: 'Of each of these the joint at one end is not
finished, nor the back joints.' By dpp.6s is meant the careful finish of surface
round the edges of the joint, against which the next stone is set close, the space
within being slightly sunk. All joints in the best Greek masonry are thus
made to fit close only for two or three inches round the edge. The gender of
Trodtcuoi 1. 12, referring to toOtwv Kd<rrov shows that not irXlvdoi are meant, but
perhaps XLdoi.
25. 7ei(ra : the stones of the cornice. The yci&ov here has an upper and a
lower cymatium (see the figure in BM pi. in
fig.
8),
one decorated with egg and
dart, the other with tongue and dart, both with an astragalus or bead moulding.
326 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [117
Hence the words enarepov kv/jloltiov and eK&repos darpayaXos
;
for in a stone four
feet long there would be double that length of cymatium and astragalus.
27.
Pll
Xeia kt\.: 'seven blocked out smooth, but not carved.' ko.to.top.-t]
refers to the carving of the detailed ornamentation, egg, tongue, bead etc.
29 sqq.
P
trepuv kt\.: 'of five others (sc. \ldoi) of the same size there
were of either cymatium and astragalus four feet (i.e. one half: see above) not
carved.'
47 sq.
| cTepov kt\.: 'another had the smooth blocking half-worked.' Cf.
39 sq.
49 sqq. In this and the next entry the word yeiaa must be supplied. The
oTod or portico here mentioned can hardly be part of the Erechtheum ; the use
of dirb (Leake Top. i, 583) suggests the probability that these stones were taken
from some other stoa which had fallen into ruin. Cf. Dorpfeld Mitth. xxii,
1897, 159 sqq.
53 sqq.
1 1
yuviata kt\. :
'
two corner cornice-stones (supply yeiaa) intended
for the portico on the east.'
63. ewl tov toixov kt\. :
'
for (i.e. intended for) the wall towards the
Pandroseion,' i.e. the western wall.
67. The stone has
HE K
as in the adjectival form iKirodojv.
73.
PI
cu'ertcuot kt\.: 'six pediment stones from the stoa'; see above 1. 49.
80. yeiaa eirl kt\. :
'
the stones of the cornice for the pediments.'
87.
Illl
dvpaL Xidivai.
'
Four stones of the doorway... of these all was finished
except the
fyya,
into which the black stones had to be inserted.' The meaning
of 66pai here has been much disputed
;
it has been suggested that they mean
jambs, or jambs and lintel. But in the inscription Michaelis, Partk. 317 dvpai
and firya are used of the leaves and the rails of the great gold and ivory door
of the Parthenon, and it is probable that the terms are used in the same
sense here. Marble doors have been thought unlikely; but they are by no
means impossible, and such actually exist in Syria, and also in St Sophia and
the M.0P7} ttjs %wpas at Constantinople. See JHS xii 1896, 383. That the
rails of such doors should be inlaid with black marble is extremely appropriate.
The doors here mentioned were probably some of the smaller doors of com-
munication between the different chambers of the building.
93. oSs is the console at the side of the doorway in the Ionic order called by
Vitruvius (iv 6, 4) ancon or parotis. One such console still exists at the north
door.
118. Six blocks (a

/)
of Pentelic marble, more or less fragmentary,
forming together the right-hand portion of the same monument; IG i 321,
i Suppl. 321, 1
(p. 148), 321, 2, 3
(p.
150), 321
(p. 75),
331 c
(p. 39), i 323,
324; i Suppl. 321, 4, p. 151. Each of the blocks a
/,
except e, contains
portions of two columns. Cf. Michaelis Arx Athenarum,
pp.
102109; Eobert
Herm. xxv 439 sqq. The subject-matter enables us to arrange the blocks (a, b,
c, e) as under. The position of d and
/
is less certain, but they probably
belong to the last column's. In the text below the contents
of
blocks a and c
only are given.
b Col. 1 b Col. 2
(5th pryt- a Col. 1 a Col. 2 c Col. 1 c Col. 2
/
Col. 1
/
Col. 2
any) (6th and (7th (7th and (8th and d Col. 1 d Col. 2
7th pryt.) pryt.) 8th pryt.) 9th pryt.)
(10tl
e
pryt.)
118] FINANCE: ERECHTHEUM. 327
ABAAE
(=e,ei,
v
)j:H(=h) OlkU(and
A) MN [X
=
f]
O (
=
o, OV, co),
PP^ITY^X.
The sign for spiritus asper is very often
wrongly added or wrongly omitted
;
see Ko. i p. 104 sq.
H
once, c Col. i 75,
= t? (AtVxtfHs). Cf. the Note, p.
321.
a.
..... oi 09 \cl/36vtol-
v] Bvolv avhpolv XcoGia ^AXcott-
eKTjcri oIkcov : \- : ^IvSpcovL : \- : ttjv
opocf)r)v kcltlgtclglv. ttjv KapaT-
5
v\r)v : creXiSa eh eSpav tcai ra-
9 aA,\a9 7ra<yayovcrtv eh eSpa-
v eKacTTTjif' McivlSl ev KoWirr-
co olkovvtl : |- : KpoLGcp : eV ^kcl/j,-
/3cOVLOCOV
(
OIKOVVTL \ \~
'. \AvBpeCL
io
efi MeXtT?7 olkovvtl : (- : IIpe7ro-
vtl A>ypvXr)GL oIkovvtl :
(- : M.7]C)co-
l ifju yieXiTr)
(
olkovvtl : \- : 'AttoA,-
\00C0pCp /UL MeXtT?7
'
OLKOVVT-
L
; h
: LKpLCO/jLCLTCL KddeXoVCTLV TCL
15 a7ro Tft>z^ klovcov tcov
(
ev tjj irp-
OGTacreL e avopacrLV YevK-
po<$ eV K.v8a0r)vaicp
'
olkcov : \-
KejoSo)^ ^K^LoireLOovs (- : ,
Kpoto
-
-
09 eV %Kap,{3covLc)cov :
'
olkcov : \- : II-
20 peircov AypvXrjcTL
f
olkcov :
f- ;
, Krjcf)-
Lo~ohcopo$
:
h
: ,
^irovhla^ : |- : .
c
LKpLco-
GCLGL TOi9 eVKCLVTCLLS
'
e/c toO
'
Z/to?]
'
f7ro tt)^
f
opocprjv Mdi/(-
8t cv K]oWvtg> :
c
olkovvtl :
HI I
:
^
_
25 ... . civacpoprjaacrLv : II/?e7ro-
vti 'AjypiA^crt
f
olkovvtl :
f-
: ,
M^S-
<o]t e/i, MeA,tT^ :
f
olkovvtl :
\- : . Ke^>-
a]\ato^
f
VTTovpyols :
FAAAhhhh
IlllllC : IIj0to-Tat9 tfa#' rjfjuepav ep-
30 <ya%o/jievoL<;, hvolv avhpolv
f
P
: Tk:t[ovi Ka6'
'
Tjfxc'pav ep-ya-
^ofievcp /x[ t-
ptT7^[s] owdeLK^ixepov ....
<>Po-
A,09 T"[ii}s] T/yU^epas
'
eKao-T^s
' -
7TTa
'
7
?[h-]
6
/
c> ^>
[
v 'AXanr-
eKTjCTL OLK\OVVT\. . . . TOtS Ka\-
v/jl/jlclctl : 7re[ dir-
poo"e/xtcr^[c6o-a|Xv, 8uoiv 8pa^-
"
f
' r \ *
[JLCLLV eKaycTTov TO OiraiOV, T-
TTtipcov o[ira{to)v* MdvtSt
'
v K-
oXXutw [oikovvti :
Phhh
T KV_
fJLCLTLOV 7Tep[iKo\\r\o-a.VTi
'
a tt-
pocre/>6tcr^aJO"[a(jLv, 8volv 8pa^-
fJLCLLV eKCLO~T\ov TO oiraiov, 0-
irala e' Ma^[i8t ev KoXXutw
'
OLKOVVTL :
A
hf
h
T0 KV|ldTlOV ? TT-
p(,/CoXX^cra^[TL
'
a Trpoo-|iiar0-
cocra/jLev, ovol[v 8paxp.aiv
e
Ka-
gtov to 07ra[iov, 'oirata ^* K-
poLGco :
A I h I h
: K[<}>dXatov tckto-
vlkov :
Phhllll
: ['Yirovpyots Ka0'
e
tj-
fiepav e/O'yfa^ofjLe'vots tt\v t-
po^LKeiav
[
K-
eKpOTTLOV
f
[
K-
eKpOTTLKCL
lvcls crvvOe
gclctlv ev tt} [o-to^ ?
'
e-n-Ta dv8-
pctGLv
Spaxf^i-fy
T1
1
s '
1H^P8'
K6-
i/(w^t
|-
; 'A7roA,X.[o8pa) : |- : nptirov-
tl :\-: M?]Scp :
h
:
[ :
h
:
328 GREEK EPIGRAPHY.
7T-
e/ctccdSefca
'
rjfjLepwv, 8pa^firj<;
rrjs rjfjbepas e/cdcrrrj^
r
e/car-
\pa}'
(
Pathlo) ev KoXXvtoo
e
o-
ijfcovvri real avvepya)
AAAhh
:
35/)i
/
c7Tat9 fca0
y
rj/jiipav
f
epya^o-
/jL6voi<;, Tpirr)? ScoSe/crjjjiepov, k-
akv/jLfxara eh ttjv opotfirjv, e-
TTTCL
'
7)/jLpO)V hpa\p,r]V T?)?
'
Tj
fJL~
epas
*
e/cd(TTr}<; Suolv dvSpol-
\ov Vaihivs ev KoXXvto) olkov-
vti /cai avvepyw :
Ahhhh
: K<j>d-
Xcuov TTpLaTais
AAAAPh

'
Qvk-
avrah. to KVfidrtov
(
evKea\y-
Tl TO
'
67H Tft)
*
e7rLCTTV\LCo[l t-
45
co 61/to?, irevTwfioXov to\v tto-
Sa
f
e/cao-Tov /jlio-Ocottjs Ai[ow-
aoBcopos
ifi
^JleXiTT)
(
OLfc[<av,
'
eyyvrjTrjs
'
HpafcXel&rjs ['.Ofjfe-
v
'
AAA
: ~K.e(f)d\aiov ev/cavr^ais
50
AAA
: Xpv<ro%6oa?. XaA/^a? %[pv<r
cocravTL irpoaairehofiev to
[
c
o<}>-
eiXofjuevov tt}? TrpoTepas [irpv-
Taveia^ 7-7)9
f
Oivei&os' [urv-
c/)&) e'/u- MeX^TT; ok:ou^t[i . . .
55
Ke(f>d\aiov ^pvao^ooc^ :[....: M-
iaOoL dp%LTeKTovi Ap^[i\6\-
w
*
A.ypvXrjdev :
AAAPhh
:
'
f[wyp-
afjLfiaTel Uvpytcovi :
AAAIIlfll
: Kc<J>-
dXaiov hlo-Oov
PAPI-hill II
: 2v[|Mra-
60 vtos dvaXcofjLaTos /ce(f)dXa[iov
XPHHPAAAIIIO
EjTtI TTjq AeCOVTlSoS
'
6/3[8op.T]S
TrpvTavevovGT)^ :
:
Ar)p,p,a [irapd t-
a/jbiwv 7-779 0eov, 7r[a]pd
'Apfccrai'xp.-
65
ov] KypvXrjOev [teal o-vvapxovru-
^ XXXXHHH[hhl* 'Av(Xu)p.a/12vTip.-
a]Ta /ce
----------
ATTICA: SECT. V. [118
Ma/ifiai/ffl : |- :[....
j- :
'
ik-
pia KadeXov\a-\. Kal dTroKOfifo-a-
0~i airo TOV To\l\ov rov irpos |3op-
ou,
f
acf>
oov tcl [<*>a Yop.<j>w0T],
gg
dvBpdo-L' IlfpeVovTi :|||:
Mij8
:l||:
'A-
7roX\oSft)[pfa) :
III
:
HI,
. . .
ai(p :
lll[:
f
OTe
fJLO
v
118]
FINANCE: ERECHTHEUM. 329
6v to h\6pv
'
kyovTa
(P)A'
Qvpofia-
^o? Kr)(f)t,(Tiv<; tov veavicr/co-
v t6]z> irapa tov Ocopatca
PA'
n/oap-
<rias] e'/>6 MeXtT?? olkcov tov
5
Cinro]i> /ecu TO*/ oiTLcrOocpavr} T-
ov irajpatfpo vovra
HA A'
'AvTL(f>dv-
779 e/c Kepa/juecov to dppa teal t-
ov vcjcwtcrtfoz; /cat to)
f
lirirco tco
gcvy]z'i;/z'a>
HHAAAA* <Pvp6ftax-
10 os Kr]]c/)tcrtei>9 tw
f
dyovTa to-
v ijirirov
P A
: Mvvvlav
'
AypvXrj-
o-t] olkcov tov
(
iirirov Kal tov
a]v8pa tov
'
eirLtcpovovTci' teal
rr\]v gt7]Kt)v
(
vo-Tepov irpoaeO-
T
5
"*]**] '
H AA P h h
'
ScOAcA-O?
'
A\(07Tfcfj-
CT-l] OLfCCOV TOV tov ^aXivov
(
e-
\o]vTa
PA
: ^vpopLa^o^ Krjcfucne-
vs] tov
'
dvSpa tov
'
enl ttjs (3a-
Kr\ripia^ eicrTrjtcoTa, tov irapa
2oto]^ /3o)/jl6v
PA
: "Iacro? KoXXure-
vs]* t^^ yvvai/ca rj r) irals irpocr-
i?i\iTTC0K
P A A A
*
K.<j)d\aiov
e
a-
Ya]\^aT07roA:oO
XXXHHHAP*
A77-
HF->
XXX(X)HHHhhl :
'
Ai/aXyLta to a-
2
5
vt]o^.
I
f
E7rt
7779 na^St-
ov]So?
0780779 irpvTavevova-
t]s.] Arj/jL/juaTa irapa TapLLCOV
77)9
8e]oi),
'Apecraix/jLov
'
AypvXrjOev te-
al]
avvapxovTcov
XHHAAAPhhh
30
(-
I

'
AJvaXco/jbaTa'
'
Vtvr\\xaTa
%
aa-
v]8e? Svo,
(
e? a? toz^ Xoyov
'
a-
v\aypdcf>o[p]ev, Spaxfifj?
c
etcaTe-
pa]v
h h
'
Ke<f)d\aiov
'
covrjp,aTcov
[KTjpoir\do-Tais to. irapa-
SelyfiaTa irXaTTovaL tcov j(aXtc-
cov tcov '[e]t9 Ta KaXvpLpLaTa' N770--
1
*fJL
WLeXiTr)
(
olkovvtl :
P h h h
'
f
eTepov irapaSeiypLa irXdaav-
tc, T7)v dtcavQav
t
et? t tcaXv/jb-
fiaTa'
'
AyaOdvcop AXcoireKrjcrL 0-
lkcov
P h h h
' tcecf)dXacov tcrjpoTrX-
acrrat? :
A P h
*
Mtcr^ot
#
dpyjbTetCT-
ovi
'
Apxi\6x<p
'
AypvXrjOev
A A
A P r
>
C
v7roypafjL/AaTi TLvpycwv-
l
'
Ot[p]vvl :
AAA
'
KecpdXacov pucr-
6co
P A P h
'
'FivtcavTrj to tcvpuaTL-
ov ev/ceavTL to eirl tco ewe-
CTTVXlCp TCO
*
6VTOS, 7T6VTCo/3o-
Xov tov iroSa
(
etcacTTOv, 7ro8a?
etcaTov heicaTpels' pLtcrOcoTr}
irpotr aireSopuev 7T/oo9 co irpo-
Tepov eZ^e, AcovvaoScopep e/uu
MeXiTj)
e
olkovvtl,
c
eyyvrjTr)-
9
f
HpaKXeiBrj^s 'OrjOev,
AAAAhh
(- (-
I
: Kecf)dXaLOv
'
evtcavTrj :
A A
AAhhhhl:
A^yaa
:XHHAAAPhhhh
|*
'
AvdXtopa to
r
avTo : : 'E7rl t?}-
9 AlyqtSqs' At]pb^aTa Trapa Ta-
/jlccov tt;9 0eoO, irapa 'Apeo-al^ov
'
AypvXrjOev teal avvapyovTcov
X . HHH
'
e9 /eoa ^e-
t]A TWf S?;^^[ovp]7a)^
f
evrj teal v-
i\a
'
et9 Ovalav Trj
'
'AOrjvaLa-
1] hhhHIII'
*AvaXtop,aTa
c
Hj/^yu-afT-
a* yapTai
e
ecovrjOrjcrav Svo, 9
a(9) tA dvTLypacpa
'
eveypd^api-
ev
I

1 1 1
1

cra,i/iSe9 T6TTap<s
hh
330 GREEK EPIGRAPHY.
hh]'
AtOovpyiKov' pa/SBoxreco^ rayv
35
ki\ovcov to)v rrpos ew, twv Kara r-
6]v
ftoOfJLOV TOV Tp'lTOV
'
aiTO TOV /?-
top/joO ttjs Accovr)<s
m
e
A/jLivcd8r}<;
v K]ot\i;(t)
(
olkwv
APhhh,
'
A[t]<r^-
<vt]>:
APhhh,
AvaavLas
APhhh
tr
pu|U]^;
r
A/jbLvid8ov
: APhhh
: T*-
p.0K]par?79
:
APhhh
: toz/
c
e-^ofxev-
ov
'
eg]^9'
Xifiias 'AXcoTre/crjcn
(
oikcSv
A]hhh,
KipSav
:
Ahhlllll
: 2tV
8
P
v Sip.]tow
:
Ahhlllll',
2o)/cX^9
r
A^-
^5
o-ioirt0]oL'9
Ahhlllll,
Xavvlcov St-
fV Ah[hll]lll,
'
Eiriefei|9 [2>/u'oi;
: A
hhl]llll,
Sft)o-ai/S/309 2*/K&W
Ahhlllll'
to]^ e^ofievov e^9*
| ]
Oz^crt-
|xos] NtArocrT^djTOL' i
API-pill I,
'
EuSo-
5oo]9 WXwTTK:r}aL
e
o[ikco]^
APhi I
II,
K\]ei/ :
A Phi 1 1 1,
2^[a>v 'A^iA?}-
<ri
f
]
OL/cwp :
APhil IK
T
Av]t8oto9
TXav]/coi; : Arhllll,
'
E[8i]'*09 :
APhll
1
1 t6v]
'
eyop^evov
[
f
x]o"^9
: 6L"y-
55VT]s] Tf.Lpa,Lv[s
AP],
K.[r\](j)C(TOy-
vi^s ~n.]eipcuevs
[AP,
T]eu/c^09 6
K\)8a]#?7zWo)
[
f
oij/ccoz; :
AP
: Krjcfri-
<r6oi]po<; e'[v 2Kap.p]o)^So)z;
'
ot-
k<5v:~|AP : N^/c6[o-Tpa]T09 :
AP,
ei^e-
60 (tcov] Ueipai[ev]<; :
AP'
TOU9 6p6oa-
TaT]a9 Kara^jrox^vTL to) irapa ro-
v Bjvrj^ov
/3cofi6\y
m
~\
TTo\u/cX^9 Aa/ci-
a8r]]9 :
AAAP'
pa[p]So)creo)9 rSv klo-
vwv t]o3z; 777309 ea), to3z^ /cara tov /3-
65 cojxov]' TOP 7Tp09 TO*)
ficDflOV
TTj^i AtO)-
vt]s A]aoo"cro9 AXwrreKrjOev
AA,
<

>_
tXw]^
'
E/o^[Y]u9
A A
Tlapfievcov A-
a6o-]crou
A A,
Kaplcov Aaocraov :
A A
: I"
Kapos
A] A'
toz^
f
eyoLievov
[]f^-
ATTICA: SECT. V.
[118
hh'
yj>vcriov
'
eayvr/Or]
c
et9 t&9
^aX/ca9, ireraka
HPAPI , Bpa^LLrj-
9
f
e/ccuTTov to ireraXov, Trap* 'AS-
covlBos e/bu MeXtr?/
f
olkovvto-
9 :
HPAPh*
AtoXu/3So9
'
ecovTjdri, [8v-
TaXdvTQ),
(
6t9 7rpocr^6crf,[v tco-
z^ ^wBicov, Trapa ^(oarpdr[ov Ip. M-
eAz/777
f
olkovvtos :
A
: ^/ouo-fos, ir-
6TaXo) Si;o,
'
(DV7]6rj %pvcr(x)[<ra.i
to) 6(f>0a\Lico rod tciovos, Trap ['A8-
0WS09 e'/x MeXtTT; ot/co)[vT]o-
9
hh'
KecfydXatov
(
oovrj/jidrcov
HP
AAAPhhhhl
: AtOovpyi/cov- pa/3Boo-
<T60)9 TftJI^ KtOVCOV TtoV TTpb[s] 60), T-
wi^ Trapa tov {3(i)p,6v top [wpo]9 tot)
/3g)/jlov tt}9 Ato)^^79 Aao[<ro-os] 'AX[w-
7re : <1>L\(dv
c
Ep^iei;9, n[app,]e^[wv
AaocrcrOL', YLapioov Aao[<r<rov, "iKapi-
9
HA'
TO^
'
6^;o/xe^o[v
'
e^s r-
o^ BevTepov QdXa^Kpos Ilaiav-
i6U9, ^iXQO"T/)[aTQS Ilaiaviev-
9,
ap(y)7]Xto<; [<J>a\aKpou, rrjpos
*-
aXdtcpov
: H[A'
tov
'
xl
AVOV
6
_
7)9*
,
A/xety[i]aS[T]s v KoiXt](i) oik<5-
v, Avaa\y(\as, ^wLiev[y\s 'Ap.ivid-
Bov, AtV^[iv]^9, Tt/xo[KpdTT]s
HA'
t-
6v
e
e[xop.]ez^o^ effrjs*
2ip.ias 'A-
Xo)7r[.
J
OLKGOV, Ke/9[8v, 2iv8pa)V,
So)[kXt]9, ^awL(o[v, 'EirwiKTjs,
2-
O)[ora]y8p09
PA'
t[ov
'
KTOV kiov-
a [dirjo TOV /9o)/xo0 t[t|s Aiwvt]S. evy-
e[v]r;9 Tlecpac : K[t]<j>io-o7VT]s Uc-
t[pa]t I TeVKpOS [lv Kv8a0T].
'
oik.,
K?7^)tcroSo)p09, [NiKoo-Tparos,
0-
evyLTQ)v Ueip.
[MA'
K<|)dXaiov
X]t^Of/C>7t/coi)
P
. ^aX/ca[s Ip7a<rap.-
118]
FINANCE: ERECHTHEUM. 331
Is
1
$a.\]a,Kpo<; Tlaiavievs :
A A
: *&CK- evois' N?/cr[Y]fc
ifi
MeXt : '[oikwv. u-
6<TTp]aro9 Tlaiave .
A A, [aJpy^X-
Lav :
A h h h h,
Sco-reX?/? 'A
ios ^aXa/c^ou
["ATA,
^XoO^f-yo]? <J>aX- yu-ta^
Ahhhh
*
'
Qvfjvq\\pr\s\
iv XfC-
dKp]ov :
AA>
r^pv[s] <aXa/cp[ov
:] AA
: tov cl/ul.
r
oik :
Ahhhh,
3>tXfc[os] iv Zfcafi-
'
ix]6{jL6vov [e]^?* 'A/jL[n]pid8r]- /3&) :
c
oik.
Ahhhh,
'AyopavSpos ev
75
s e]^ Ko/[X]?7[i o(]kwv :
A A[:
A]la^lvr)- KoWv :
(
oik : fiiav :
A h h h'
%aX*:a-
s
A]A, A.V(ra[vlas
A] A,
^ayfiivrj^
(
Afi- ? ipyaaafxevcp
ef*
Maz'tSt eV
]i/mS[ov
A A,
T]tyLto/c[p]aT?;? :
A A
: to- KoXXvtw]
f
<h.
PA A Ahhhh'
%aX-A;-
v
] e^ojj^vjoi; e^?}?'
XlfJLiaS
'AX,- as Ip-yao-anJeVft)
c
evSeKd' %r-
*iTr]Krjo-i
e
oikcov
A h h h h II,
KepS- Iv KoX]Xu :
f
oikovvt-
8o<ov]
Ahhhhl I, 2m>8/og>[v] 2l/jllov :
Ah[h
<<
HPhhhh'
x<^
KT
l
v *]pya<rafiiv-
hh]l,
2ft)A:X779
f
Af[ioir]e^ou?
[Ah* <P P
av T
V
:
Ahhh
h h h] 1 1,
XavvLcop Xi[\iCov]
A h h h[h
1 1,
'
h'
X
'^
Kas
'
ep^ao-afiJeVft) r/?et-
M^?
Styttoy
[Ahh]hh[ll,
2<ra- s*
AA]AAhh*
to
v8po]? :
Ahhhhl : t[6v
'
J^o[p,vov
evw. .
85 |T|S'] '
O^O^JoS NlKOO-TpCtT-
ov
Ahhh]hlllC/[E]v[8^os*AXirK-
....
r\<ri
'
oik](OV
A
...
The inscription records item by item the expenses of building the Erechtheum
and must be taken in close connexion with the survey of the uncompleted
works (117). The document is of peculiar interest to the student of ancient
art, because it contains, among other curious entries, a statement of the sums
actually paid for the sculptural decorations of the Erechtheum, with the names
of the artists by whom they were executed ; it is also of interest as giving the
rate of wages in Athens at the end of the fifth century.
That the fragments are to be referred to one and the same year is plain
from the following considerations ; they are evidently inscribed by one and the
same hand, with letters elegantly engraved and accurately arranged
;
they are
marked by the same exceptional degree of error in the omission or wrong
insertion of the sign for spiritus asper
;
and the same treasurer, Aresaechmus of
Agryle, is mentioned in fragments a and c. Since the whole inscription
evidently contained the accounts for a whole year, it is easy to estimate how
much is preserved. Of the ten prytanies, the accounts of the first five are
altogether lost
;
portions of fragm. b and of a Col. i contain the latter part of
the sixth
;
the seventh begins with a Col. i, 62
;
the eighth with c Col. i, 25
;
the ninth with c Col. ii, 23
;
and fragm.
/
Col. i (see heading above) begins with
the tenth:
'
Ewl tt)s 'E/)ex#??i]<5os: 5e/cdr?7
|
[j
TrpvTavevovar]]* :
The date of the inscription can be fixed by a process of exclusion. It is
obviously later than 409 B.C., when no. 117 records the unfinished state of the
building, and a different architect is mentioned ; and it must clearly be earlier
332 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [118
than the disastrous year, 404 b.c. Again in 406 and 405, the years of Arginusae,
and Aegospotami, no systematic work on a public building can have been
possible
;
408 and 407 alone remain. But in 407 the President of the Treasurers
was one KaXX... of Agryle (see Table IG- i
p. 226); therefore there cannot
have been another member of the Board of treasurers from the same tribe,
Aresaechmus of Agryle (a Col. i, 63 sqq., c Col. i, 27 sqq.). The year must
therefore be 408; in this year 3>i... of Marathon, of the Aeantid tribe, was
President of the Board ; but Aresaechmus was the member to whom certain
duties were delegated for the year by his colleagues.
Fragm. b (see above) begins in larger characters with the letters
T O X!
,
which if the inscription belongs to 408 b.c. may be the remains of ['E7rt
'EvKTTjfxoi'os dpxov]ros.
a Col. i.
2. For information concerning Alopeke and other demes see the references
given in Frazer Pans, n p.
398. For 'AXuTreKijai oikwv etc. see 124 25.
In 1. 3 the stone has O I K O N,
probably a mistake for
O I KO N T I
,
unless it is an example of loose syntax ;
cf. 1. 17 TeO/cpos.
3 sq. tt)v dpo(prjv Ka.TL<TTa<TLv : the heading of a new paragraph 'to the
workmen who fixed the roof
'
; then follow the details. In 1. 4 /carto-Tao-tv for
KadiGTacriv is perhaps only another example of the general laxness in the use of
aspirate sounds which characterises this inscription.
4 sqq. T7)i> Ka/jLTrvXrju aeXlba ktX. By creXLs is evidently meant some part of
the roof construction, probably a panel of some sort. <xeXls dedrpov doubtless
means a panel of the scena (Bekker Anecd.
p. 62), not a bench, as L. and S. The
better known use is for a leaf of papyrus, and hence the column or page of a
book. For the phrase et's ebpav iirdyeiv cf. Hippocr. r. p. 863 g : KaravayKaaat
t<x virepexovra els edprjp,
'
to force the floating matter to precipitate
'
; ib. 899 h :
/ecu edprjs yevo/xev-qs iv t< oa-Tecp /3Aeos,
'
the arrow having fixed itself in the
bone.'
8. Kpolaos seems to be a foreign name and may be that of a slave ; such
slaves, living and working independently, had to pay their master a percentage
of their earnings (Blumner in Hermann's Lehrb. d. gr. Antiquitaten iv 91
;
Becker's Charicles, ed. Groell in 20).
14. The removal of the \Kpnbixara (Up.) or scaffolding, seems to indicate
the completion of the building. The Trpbaraais here mentioned is i] wpos rod
dvpwfjuiTos 117 i 77.
21 sqq.
'
LKpiuxraai kt\.
'
To those who erected the scaffolding for the
encaustic-painters in the interior (of the portico) under the roof.' On 'iynavais
see D.A. s.v. Pictura; Donner Enkaustische Malerei; Cros et Henry Uencaus-
tique
; Baumeister Denkm. s.v. Enkaustik. The encaustic method was that
commonly used for painting architectural mouldings. The paint was laid on
with wax and the heat was applied to make the surface even. Several fragments
of the ornamental parts of the Parthenon, the Propylaea, and the Erechtheum
itself still retain traces of these encaustic colours.
24 sq. Bangabe supplies \[K&vas], which just fills up the lacuna. XeKdvr)
is a general word for 'pot,' 'pan,' 'bucket,' perhaps containing materials for
the painters. Cf. Ar. Av. 1142 II. cirrfkocpbpovv
5'
avroiai Tives ; A. epwdioi
\
XeK&vaLcri,
118]
FINANCE: ERECHTHEUM. 333
28.
'
virovpyoLs : perhaps a comprehensive term for subordinate workmen.
29 sq. Upiarais kt\. :
'
to sawyers working by the day.' We have definitely
stated in this entry the daily wages of an artisan, a drachma per day. See
Jevons JHS. xv 239 who quotes and discusses other views. Below 1. 36 rpir^s
dwdeKri/jLepou means 'for the third twelve-day period of the prytany.' The
KaXvfx/xaTa on which the sawyers were engaged were the wooden laths to carry
the tile or marble roof ; they rested on the o-TpuTrjpes
;
cf. Ar. Fr. 54 ;
Pollux xi
173 : T(jJ (TTeyaaTrjpi dpocpu -rrpocrrjKoiev hv nai oi (TrpioTTjpes /cat t<x KaXv/mfxaTLa.
46 sqq. The contractor, /ucrflomjs, had, as usual, to rind a surety, eyyvrjTrjs.
50.
x^X
as ' see 117 i 90.
56 sqq. The vwoypa/j./uiaTe6s is that of the iiriaTaTai. The pay of the
architect is obviously too low (37
drachmas for the whole prytany) in proportion
to that of the artisans. At Eleusis (124 11 sq.) and at Delos (BCH vi 1882,
p. 83) the architect receives two drachmas a day. Here he doubtless was only
retained, but could undertake other work as well.
63. \r)/j.fia kt\. The treasurers of Athena, Aresaechmus and his colleagues,
had doubtless advanced to the iTri<TT&Tcu for expenses to be incurred during the
prytany the sum of 4302 dr. 1 ob. (for the restoration cf. c Col. i 24).
66. dvaXojfia. uvrj/iara. Cf. c Col. i 30. The first is a general heading
;
the second the particular heading of the entry.
a Col. ii.
140. These lines are very incomplete, 10 letters at most in a line out
of the 23 being preserved, and often less. The text given is consequently
much restored, and in many cases is merely conjectural.
7, 12, 17. Trpoae/jucrdujvafxfi' means
'
we gave the contract ' for certain
pieces of work undertaken, as in a Col. i 46 etc., by a /uadwrris.
9, 14, 19. biraiov (oircuov) : this should mean a hole or window of some
sort; it was evidently a square aperture surrounded by a moulding (icvfx&Tiov),
which was cemented or glued on and was probably of wood (irepLKoW-qaavTi
1. 12, 16). These may have been the windows in the partition separating the
westernmost compartment from the middle chamber. The above, it will be
noted, is all carpenters' work, if the restoration tcktovikov, 1. 20, be right.
23. TpoxiXeLav (Lat. trochlea)
'
the roller of a windlass or sheaf of a
pulley,' the Lexx. give the forms rpoxiAia, rpoxiXea, rpoxaXia and (the corrupt)
rpoxyXia. Here it is mentioned with the scaffoldings, etc., and is doubtless
part of the apparatus for raising the stones into position.
24. KeKpoiriov : see 117 i 9 ; KeKpowiKa 1. 25, may be walls or other things
belonging to the Cecropium
;
but the expression seems improbable and perhaps
we should divide KeKpoin kcl[1 . .
34. ct0' wi> to.
faa
:
'
from which the figures were affixed or finished.'
c Col. i.
1. Here we have the record of payments to the sculptors who carved the
figures for the frieze. The accusatives rbv . . .^xovra, tov veavivKov etc., depend
upon rdv ypd<pouTa, iypaxj/e in the lost portion
;
cf. frgm. b Col. i (see heading
above) : tov yp]d(povTa veavi<xKov ktX. These figures were carved in high relief,
and affixed by clamps to a background of black Eleusinian stone (117 i 40). The
sums paid amount to 60 drachmas for a single figure, a chariot group counting as
334 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA; SECT. V. [118
four figuresvery fair pay considering that the rate for ordinary skilled labour
was a drachma a day. It is of course only the execution in marble that is meant
here, the whole design and composition being supplied by a master sculptor,
who also furnished models [rt/irovs) ;
cf. Kavvadias, Fouilles d'Epidaure 241, 36,
where the sculptor Timotheus undertakes to supply models for the pedimental
sculpture for 900 drachmas, and to supply acroteria for one pediment, doubtless
including the execution in marble, for 2240 drachmas. It is evident from these
sums that the models were not full-sized models for purely mechanical repro-
duction by subordinate workmen, but mere sketch designs, probably on a small
scale. In that case a great deal of the modelling in detail was probably left to
the individual workmen, who were themselves artists of no mean skill ; that
this was the case is clearly shown by the unevenness of work in a great
composition like the Parthenon frieze. Several of the figures are preserved
(some are figured in Baumeister Denkm. p. 489), and one at least, the woman
with the child of 1. 21, can probably be identified.
5. top oiTLcdocpavrj tov irapanpovovTa : the man seen from behind, turning the
horse round ; for Trapanpoveiv cf. Xen. Eq. xi 33, avaKpotieiv, to pull up a horse
with the bridle (quoted by Stuart Jones Anc. writers on Gk. Sc. p. 124). So
i w
i
kpote (.v (1. 13 below) should mean 'to turn the horse forward.'
30. Cf. a Col. i, 66. By <ravL8es are meant tablets, whitened with gypsum,
of the same kind as those used for public notices
;
they would also serve as
MS. copy for the engraver.
34. The cases here are rather confused. We may supply puadbs pa/35u>o-ews
tQv Kibvwv kt\. Then the individual columns follow in the accusative, the
workmen in the nominative ; we may supply eppafidioaeit. At the time of the
Survey (117)
all the columns, except the four engaged columns on the western
wall, were unfluted.
34 sqq. pafiduxreus kt\. is the general heading

' for fluting the eastern


columns, those opposite the altar.' This altar is probably the altar of Dione,
which was opposite the end column of the six. Or it may possibly be the
great altar of Zeus Hypatos, which we know from Pausanias (i 26, 5)
was
'
in
front of the entrance of the Erechtheum.' If so, the altar of his original
consort Dione is appropriately placed near to his own.
38. Kot\?7 : the hollow ground on the sea side of the Pnyx hill.
60 sq. opdoardras : see 117 i 60. Karax[cov]vTL (
K ATA X %i O N T I
),
i.e. Kara-^ovvri, is Kirchhoff's restoration. Note the dual rw in apposition with
a plural accusative :
'
the two beyond
(?)
the altar of the sacrificial priest
'
;
this altar as we learn from 117 i 79 stood in the north portico.
c Col. ii.
1. Kt]poTr\d<xTaLs kt\.:
'
To the wax-modellers who make the patterns of the
rosettes for the roofing. ' Hence we learn that special designers were employed
for the finer details of the architecture ; but the payment seems to imply that
they were not artists of the first rank.
5. tt]v anavdav. The acanthus-pattern constantly recurs in the decoration
of different parts of the Erechtheum.
27. Ets lepd kt\. We learn from Demosthenes (c. Aristog. i 799) that on the
vov/LiTjvia or evrj /ecu via sacrifices were offered on the Acropolis. The smallness
of the item for sacrifices shows that the sacrifice to Athena must have been a
119]
FINANCE; NAVAL. 335
bloodless one, like those offered at the altar of Zeus "Twaros in front of the
temple (Paus. i 26, 5).
The bruxLovpyoi were probably all the workmen engaged
on the building
;
the use of the word in the sense of
'
magistrate ' is peculiar to
Doric states.
30. avakdoixara. uvrjfxaTa. Cf. c Col. i 30. These headings should have
come before the expenses of the sacrifice which are included in the total given,
1. 45.
31.
x&P
TaL- Apparently the original accounts were written on wooden
tablets (aavides), the copies on sheets of papyrus.
34 sqq. We have here a fresh proof that the ancients beat gold into leaves
and attached them to objects by means of some glutinous substance. See
Blumner Technologie und Terminologie der Geiverbe und Kilnste, iv 315.
39. as Trp6ade<TLv tQv
fobiwv. Cf. 117 i 40 sqq.
42. xpuowcu. For the final use of the infinitive cf. 217, 39 20.
43. rib 6<f>6a\/ji,d) are the central bosses of the Ionic volutes. The dual is
hard to explain
;
perhaps though each column had four such bosses, only the
exterior pair were gilded.
119. A slab of Hymettian marble found in the Piraeus, 0.1125 in thickness,
inscribed on both sides and broken below. On the left margin it appears to
have been joined to another stone. Koehler Mitth. iv
(1879), 79 sqq. ; IG-
ii 2, 804
;
D 530. Cf. F. Diirrbach UOrateur Lycurgue 47 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1; O
occasionally = ov, once, unless it is a mere mistake,
1. 13, E
= ei.
(:)
follows abbreviations and sometimes numerical signs, occasion-
ally preceding them.
004/3 (.)
Ta8e irap'8o(rav em^eX-qTal twv vewpCtov ol lirl Kt^o-ikXcovs ap\0VT0S
B.C.
.]
<
t>t,\o/CT7]ijLovo<; 'AO/jiovevs,
B.C.
]fl(OV XlfjLtoVlSoV
y
A\0)7T6K
'.
VG)[pC<av
333/2 (.)
4iri|i\.T]T(H$ T<us erri NiKOKpdrovs apxovTOS
^rjfJLOV YlaiaVL : Wp^LVO) *Ap%LVOV AfapaSiurr]
5
. . . .]/L6&) ApicrTo/eXecovs Qlvcu : ArjfioK
a b
tclvttjv w/uLoXoyrjo-ev ovroc laa^06VT[es
iwl rod SiKaorrrjptov et? to 8t,Kao~T7]pio[v
Kaivr\v a7roB<oo~ecv
rfj
cocfrXov rr)v Bi7r\aa[iav
336 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[119
ro
iroXei Etfei/t7T7ro9
P'FIIC
y
Q6e\oKpciTov<; Aa/jbirrp. Capias NeoTrToXefxov
rr/v Be iraXaidv BtaXv- AvpiBrjs b (txfceiXov to
20
aeiv Kal tov ejJbfioXov
diroBojaetv els ra vecopca,
'IirTraywyos,
15
AvaLarpdrov<<;> epyov,
Tpitfpap
: Avcn/c\r)<;
AvcriTTTrov AOfiovevs,
'ApxtrcXrjs Ap-^earparov
Tapyr) : tjv irapeXafBov
nap
'
Apiarrjihov rod
JLvcfiiXrjTOV Kr)(f)L(TLa)s
Kal irapa KXeo/jieBovTos
tov Atoyei,Tovo<; Aafxir.
Kal irapa yivrjacOeov
tov Ta^v^ovXov M.vppt.
Tavrrjv tt)V vavv od/jloXo-
yrjaev TrapeiXrjcpevai
eirl tov BcKaaTrjpiov
<l>aiai; AecoBd/jLavro<;
*
Ayapv : /cat diroBoocreLV
/caivrjv, T7)v Be iraXaiav
BiaXvaeiv Kal tov 6/jl-
/3oXov dTToh(joae{i)v eh
rd vecopia.
35
EZ9 ^KiaOov fxera
Kr)(f)LO-CKba)VTo<;
'
AfyiBvai.
arparTjyov rpirjpap.
ArjfjLcdveTos Tijjlcktl-
deov ifc K.epa/ji6.
UoXvcfriXos ^iri^apiBov
X/cayx/3<y : o~/cV7j eyovcri
a eXapov eiri rrjv
30
40
kcl& avrov :
HHFAAKT
elcrayOeis eh to BiKa-
CTTrjOlOV
d)(f)\V
TT)V
BiirXaaiav :
HAAAAhh[hC
YjvKapiria 'Eiiriyevovs
epyov, Tpirjpap'xos
AioBoto? <&tXivov
Afjua^avT : KrjcfiicroBo-
tos Tlpa^iTeXovs *Ev{3.
AyvoSrj/jios
r
Ayvcovos
'A^a/9. "
ApXlTTTTOS <>op-
fxi<ovo<s Ueipatevs,
Xaptas Neo7TToXeyLt[ov
AvptB : 0UT09 irpoa-
0(f)L\L
T(a)V O~KV0)[y
rov biaypdfjLfiaTos
HHPhhhC:
teal el<ra
X
-
6els eh to hiicao~Tr)pL-
ov co<j)Xev virep tovtcov
rrjv BnrXacriav :
PPM,
T7)V Be Tpir]pr\v TaVTTJV
elaa^Oeh eh to 6V
KaaTrjpcov AioB6to[v
tov QcXlvov ' Afia^av.
KkrjpovofjLOS Ato/xe-
vrjs
f
AfjtafjavT : oo/jloXo-
yrjaev Kaivr)v puav
d7roBooo~eiv Trj ir6Xe[i
tt)V Be iraXaiav BtaX[v-
aecv Kal tov
efxftoXov
diroBdyaetv et? Ta vecop.
45
*A/j,(f)iTpLT7)v Avo~LK\ei- A^X-ta? Tc/jLOK\eov<; epy.,
Bov epyov %v\iva Tpir)pap : LpaTlvo<s
evTeXrj, Kpefiao~Ta evTeXrj, ^/ullkvOov Aovcrievs,
icTTiov tgov XeTTTtoV Mevio<$ Ai<piXov Tlpocnrd.,
119]
FINANCE: NAVAL. 337
ravra MeveaOevs
](f)CK
parous
(
Pafji(p)ovcn.

X
6L
50
rpirjpa. eod>pov tov
KvSrj/xtSov MeXtTect)?
/ckripovofjios (P)e68a)po<;
eo$copov MeXiTeix;
atcevcov b 7rpoaoj(f)ecXev
55
to /caO clvtov eirl rrjv
KpvOetav AvcrtfcXei&ov
epyov :
H A h h
: tovtov
cocf)Xev Tt]v BiTrXaalav
HHAAhhhh
60 Eu7roXt? Tlpovdwov
9
Al^co : tq)v (Tfceucov
7rpoo-co(pL\6i> (ov eXafie
7rl tt)v ZidXirtyya, 'Apt-
aTO\xdyov epyov
^sPAPh-hhl-:
tovto dva-
Se^d/xevos <PiX6/jL7]Xo<;
Meve/cXeovs XoXapy.
aTToScocreiv fcai elcr-
a^Oeis eh to So/caar^-
70 ptov o)<$>Xev SlttXovv
HAAAPhhK
r]pLijpap : Y^Trja-iiriros
X]a/3pLou Aitjcovevs
a-KJeui] eyei fCpp>CLo-Ta
75
IvjTeA,?}, %vXiva ivTeXrj
dJTrb rrjs 'Op[#]eta9
''E^Trcyevovs epyov,
a] TrapeXaftev irapa
^lXlttttov tov UoXvev-
80 fcrov Aa/xTTTpe : zeal orvv-
Tpiripapywv.
*Z]v/jLp,axia ' Ayvo[r\pov
epyov T
p
Lr)[pap\o<$
Ai(t)V ALCLLTo[v
4>pappiOS
85 a/cevrj %et, [gvXiva
evr[t\]rj ....
R. II.
Xapias NeoTTToXe/jiov
AvpuB : ravTTjv a)[p,o\6y-
r\]aav eirl rod [StKcur-
TTjpiOV KCLLv\i\V dlTO-
Bcocreiv
rfj
7roX[*\.
KoV&w Ava<fiXvo~TLO<$,
'OvrjTGdp yieXtrev's,
Eu/3oto? KparccTToXea)
1
Avayvpd : tgov Be cr/cev-
ciiv 6(f>eiXec rod 8t,a-
ypd/jL/jLCLTos Kparivos
HfjLL/cvdov Aovacevs
FAAhhMH
:
t[ovt]ov
elaa^Oeh [els r6
81]
ica-
GTTJpLOV GL>(f)[\e
ttjv] oV
irXao-iav:
XAA[AAPhh
'E7Tt8et^? [A]ucr[i(rT]paTOL'
epyov,
T/^h'MapxJo?
Tlavaavia? O[i\]?;yu.o-
vo<; 'AypvXrjO : ovros
elaa'xOels eh to oV
KacrTr)piov oo(f>Xev
Bvo Tpirjpets KaLvd\s'
dirohovvat Trj(c) iroXei
Kara :
P
: tov Siaypd/j,-
fJUCLTOS' TOVTO) CTVV-
Tpiripapyov : ol aTpa-
Trjyol teal ol el/COCTLV
Karearrjaav kcltcc
fMvav tov Siaypd/bL/jL[a-
tos ^OvrjTopa
0^[i]Topos MeXixe.
o
22
338 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [119
B
a
Oeoi ....
Qyyvrjral t[ovt<o]^
K.Xeoyap7]<; YXavKerov
K.7)(j)L(Tiev<;, TLp6!;vos
5
f
Appuohiov 'A(f)i(8)vaio<;,
KXttlvt)^ ^YmiviKov
A]\ate : Arijioo-Qevv)*;
Arj/jioadevovs TLcllclvl.
Atj/jLO^aprjf; YlvOeov
io Jr)(f)L(n., ILvcfrpdvcop
Qoo/cov 'Orjdev,
Ap/cecrlXas eoevov
}Lv(ovv/jLe :
,
TLpo/cXr}*;
Tlpcoro/cXeovs IlXco[0]e.,
15 tyalSpo*; KaXXlov
Ii^iJttl :
,
K6v(ov
TijjboOeov
'
Ava(f)XvorT.,
^Appevrjihr)? [X]a/ot-
/cXeovs Ylaiavievs,
20 Aep/cvXo<z AvrofcXeovs
Ayvovac : ,
KaXXta?
AvrofcXeovs
'
Ayvovcr.,
<&iXcqvl&7]<; 'Ovrjropos
MeXcre :
,
<>cX68r)/jLO<;
25 AvTOfcXeovs 'FjpoidS.,
r
Hy7][a^L7T7ro<; 'Hyrjcrlov
XovvLe :
, X(*)(f)LXo<>
%r)pLicXeov<$ QXvevs,
Arjjnd8r]<i Arjfjbeov
30
JJaiavc : Aiofyavros
3?]pacn/cXei8ov Muppi.,
Kjpurcov Aaruo^ov
K.]v$a0r) :
,
y
Avdor^ero<;
Arj/jLoreXovs
(
AXaie.,
35
AtOT4yL60? AtoireiOovs
TLv(ovvfjLe : KaXXtKpdrTjs
Neyitea? AvaL/cXeiSov
epyov, Tpafjpap : Oop-
yLttO)^ KT7)<TL(f)cbvT0<;
Hetpace : /cal avvrpir)-
5
papyoi ^ AvTipiayos
Avtivov ^A^apveix;,
ZiTr)
o~
iXl8j]s KaXXat-
crypov 'Elcjivc : <>el$i7r-
7T0? ^au'Wou ITi^eu9,
10
^
eiyev rcov eh ttXov[v
Xaj3ov : RvOv/cpdrrjs
JLvdv/CpdrOVS 'A/JL(f)LTpO.,
AtOTLfJLO^ JLv(t)VV
'.
TCLV-
T7)v d)/jLoXoyr) : 7rapeiX7](f).
15 Aiohwpos ^ifiov Yiaua.
AvvapLis XaLpearpdrov
epyov, Tptripapyos
QiXopLTlXo*; <>l\C7nri-
Sov Tlaiave : rjv elye
20 to)v eh ttXovv Xa(3ov-
rcov ' Appearparos
JLvOv/cpdrovs
'
A/jb(j)CTp.'
ravTTjv eyei da/cevov
Tpir)papyo<; XrrjcnXeL-
25 779 Y^aXXaiaypov
^L(f)vc
: (TKevr) eyei
tjvXtva evreXrj, icpe-
pbaard ivreXrj, iari-
ov rcov Xeirrayv, a el%e
30 eirl rrjv 'lacrco Avaucp-
drovs epyov.
IpirjpeLS aide e^eirK-
evaav /xerd arparrjyov
AlOTL/JLOV ilTL TY)V
35
(frvXcLKrjv
rcov Xeccr-
119]
FINANCE: NAVAL.
339
Xarvpov AatSaXiSrjf;.
ovtoi 7rpocro(f)6i\ovaL
T(OV CTK6VG0V TTjS
4
oTifiri<i- PHHHAAAAP.
MeT<x arparTjyov
AtOTL/XOV
l&iKJypaLvovcra ^Apyeveco
epyov, Tpirjpapyos
KaWaio-'Xpov Zi<f)VL.,
Y)v direhooKev eVt-
crfcevdaas KXeofie-
Scov Aioyelrovos
50
Aapanpe : ravrrjv
eXafie
Kara yfrrj<j}iafia
ffovXrjs, o AtocfravTos
elirev M.vppwouo-L.,
Tpir\papy^ : 'lepcovv-
55
/xo? 'lipcovos ^Ayapv.
rcov a/cevcov ocfyeuXei
rod &Laypd/jL/jLaTO<;
PHhH-HIII.
A^puoviKo^ he 'Ayjrev-
60 Sou? ^Ivppivovcrc.
elcrayOeXs et? to
Sifcao-rijpiov ccxpXe
rrjv oiifXaaiav
XXAAPhhHI :
eirl rqv
65
Tyleiav
'
Apyevt/cov epy.
roov Kara '\lrr}(f)to-/jba
8r)fiov
}
elirev Av/c-
ovpyos Boirra : ical A-
picrToviKOS 7S/[apad(o.
40
TayyvavTovcrai ein
l&vatverov apyovros
y
\ovcra
'
Apyeveco epyov,
roov eVt TLvdohrjXov
vavirrjyr]6eLo~oov,
45
KaiVYj, hoKifios,
Tpuqpapyos Alayjpalos
Avayvpd : teal avvrptr).
'
AiroXXohwpos TapyrjT.'
ravrijv eXafiov (d)cr/cevov.
50 AeX<fils ^Tuyevows epy.,
roov IttI ^pvvlyov
vavTnjyrjOeccrcov,
Katvrj, SoKi/uLOS,
TpLTjpap'% : aevo/cX-
55 ?}? X</)iJtt : zeal crvv-
Tptrjpapx : ''ApXlTTTTOS
TLeipai : ravTijv eXa-
j3ov aencevov ravrrjv
copuoXoyrjcrav irpos
60 rr)v dpyrjv irapetXri-
(f)evai AvaiTTirthr]^
TlaaL/cXeovs Tapyrjr.,
TldvOtip ArjfjLovi/cov
(Aa)/aaS?79.
335/4
B.C.
336/5
B.C.
337/6
B.C.
rafjuias irapdXov
f/
T\^yu,o? 65 O'tSe rcov rpcrjpdpycov
Aioyvijrov T/Sao^?*
rpoijprj :
e
\irirohpopbia
Xaipearpdrov epy.
70 hotcipLOS, r/v [a7reT]etcre
AicfrcXos ^[ejiSiirirou
Hide :
[r/v
&x]
ev tu>v
et? 7rX[oi)]z/ Xa/36vrcov
'
AvTia6evr)<;
'Avrufid-
75
tovs KvOrjpp : ravrrjv
rcov eirtSovrcov ra<;
rpujpei
1
; encevr) ey^o-
va(t)v /card yjrrj(f)Lo-/iia
Stj/jlov N(a)vcrLfcXri<; ei[irc'
70 t&iXofJLTjXos XoXapy.
aicevr]
X
6i ^vXtva
evreXr), Kpepbacrrd
evreXi], lariov rcov
XeTTTciov, d eXa/3ev eirl
22
2
340 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[119
<b/J,o\o<yr)crev irapeu-
75
r
V
v napaXiav
'
Ayvo-
\7)(f>6
: YiriroXo^ihrj'; hrjfjLOV epyov.
liriroXo^ihov Aovat. Tpir)papyo<; XaplSr)-
Tpir)p[i\i,s aiBe ee- fios
^
A^apve : atcevcov
SoTrXevaav pera crrpa- Xolttov ofyeiXei :
f^AAAA
rrf\yov QalSpov Kara 80 <ov eXa(ft)ev iirl tt)v
^r^jtcr/ma hrjfjbov, Avpav Avat/cXeiSov epy.
6 T\tt6V Tpir)pr\. Arj/jLO/cparia
Iirl cL]p)0VT. XaipecrTpdrov epy.
85
7T7TO? . . . KCLlvr)
'.
, hoKifXO^'
..... 85 (TTpaTrjybs Navon-
tcXrjf; Olrjdev Tav[Tt\$ '4\n
afcevT] (%)vXiva e\yrekr\
Kp^e/jbacrra ivr[e\f\,
\.<t]t'iov twv Xe[TTTwv.
90 ^iXo] 8rj/ulo 9 Ep[oia8r]s - -
The inscription as a whole is one of those which were published by the
annually changing board of the iwifjLeXrjTai tQv ueupiuv. It belongs to the class
of the so-called irapabbaeL'i (see Rem. x, p. 256). The surviving portions (on side A,
the right-hand two of eight columns, and on side B, if there were so many, the
left-hand two) are part of one and the same section, in which are enumerated
the debts upon ships and apparatus handed on from previous years and still
unpaid.
The name Ctesicles (A
1),
archon 334/3 B.C., is supplied by Koehler. The
date cannot be earlier, because in B b 33 sqq. mention is made of an expedition
undertaken in the archonship of Euaenetus, 335/4 b.c. It cannot be later
than 331/0 b.c, because on a similar stele of 330/29 b.c. (IG ii 2, 807a 188)
debts are mentioned as wholly or partially paid which in our inscription
are described as still outstanding (see B b 25 sqq. and 78 sqq.). And as in
both places the payment was made by the heirs of the deceased debtors we
may infer that the date is nearer to the superior than to the inferior limit,
though of course this is not certain.
A
1. Trapedoaav and irapeboixev are used to denote what the iirifj.e\7]Tal handed
on to their successors, the correlatives xapeXa^ov or 7rapeX6.j3oiu.6v of what they
received from their predecessors. For material or debts recovered, e.g. from the
trierarchs, the word is &Tre\a(3o/j.ev
; for vessels or rigging delivered by the
trierarchs the official term is dwodovvai or 8ovvai.
Note that in the demes following the order of tribal precedence is observed
for the eirLixek-qTal, who were ten in number, one from each tribe ; thus ^rjyaia
belongs to the Aegeis, which was second, and 'AXuireK. to the Antiochis, which
was tenth in order (see Rem. vi, p. 127, and note on 44 6). On the abbrevia-
tions $r)yai. ($r)ycueijs, ^rjyaiTjs) etc. see 35 6, 112 4.
5. 'ApLaroKXelovs: see 39 introd.
119]
FINANCE: NAVAL. 341
A a
6. tclijt7)v ktX. The enumeration is continued from a column lost on the
left. The nature of the formula may be gathered from 11. 1425 below, which
introduce as here t(vutt)v ktX. in 1. 26. Trierarchs were bound to hand over their
vessel as they had received it, or to build a new vessel and return the beak
(,u/?o\os) of the old one to store, unless they could make good in a diadicasia
their o-Krjxpis Kara xew&va,
a plea that the vessel had suffered by storm (or in a
sea-fight). Cf. IG n 2, 809, col. d, 105 sqq. : oi'5' ocpdXovaiv e'/x/36Xoi;s twv cK7]\pa-
fxhuiv Kara xei/uwi'a.
14. 'l7T7ra7W76s : called 'iTnrrjyds in IG n 2, 809 d, 105 sqq., 811 b, 158 sqq.,
in both of which passages, word for word alike, the previous history of the
vessel is given from 341/0 B.C., when it was taken over by Phaeax, whose
undertaking
(1. 30 below) to build a new one had not been carried out in
326/5 b.c. (the date of IG n 2, 808),
whence he became liable for double the
amount.
15. Av<rt.<rTp&Tov tpyov :
'
built by Lysistratos.' The word fpyov is always in
the nominative, in whatever case may be the name of the vessel ; cf. 76 sq.
below.
19. Yapy-q : i.e. Yapy-qmos. Similar abbreviations in the following will be
easily recognised.
29. Aeo}8dp.avTos : i.e. the orator, who is described as an Acharnian,
Aeschin. c. Ctes. 138, Dem. c. Lept. 501.
35 sqq. Debts on stores (o-Keijr}) taken over. Et's ^Kiadov :
'
to watch
Sciathus.' Possibly the reference is to the events of 343 b.c. described Dem.
Chers. 98 sqq. ;
cf. Schaefer Dem. u 423, note
2
; Kirchhoff Abh. Ak. Berl.
1867, p.
10.
37. rpirjpap: =Tpir]papxoL. 50. Tpirjpa. = Tpir)papxos.
41. aKeuT)
2x
0V(TL ' but Menestheus, 1. 49, actually
^x
ei - The explanation is
that the words in 35 sqq. have been transcribed unaltered from the entry in a
previous irapdboais. The aKevr) are either of 'suspended' (KpepLaard), rigging,
or 'wooden' stores (i^Xo/a), spars. Boeckh, See-Urk. p. Ill sqq., 132 sqq.
,
enumerates the details of <jKevr) KpefxaaTa ivTe\9j (such as virou>ixaT<x, iarlov, axoivia,
etc.) and aKetirj %6\iva eureXrj (such as rappos, irrjddXia, 'hjtos, etc.). The place of
store for the former was a aKevodrjKri (see no. 126), for the latter, a vedxroiKos.
42. i-rrl tt}v 'A. :
'
for the Amphitrite
'
; cf. 55 etc.
46. laria Xeirrd, the more valuable, are opposed to irax^a, the coarser and
less valuable. Cf. IG n 2, 811 col. c 168 : to-Hex Xeirrd
\
\' dvrl toijtcov irape'Socav
wax^a. duo.
48. 'I0t/cpdrons : the famous general ; see Diet. Biogr. Menestheus died
before 335/4 b.c, because in that year (IG n 2, 809 c 12) his heirs paid the
arrears due from him in respect of equipment taken over.
58, cf. 70. A trierarch in arrear was liable to have his debt to the treasury
doubled.
60. EtiiroXis YLpovd-rrovs : probably grandfather and father of the Eupolis of
Isaeus irepl rod 'AttoXX. kX. 18.
66. <$>lX6/j.7)Xos : Lycurg. Leocr. 24. D.
73. XaBpLov : the famous general ; see Diet. Biogr.
79. UoXveiJKTov : a trierarch 357/6 b.c (IG n 2, 793
/,
15
;
probably also
ii 961, 7).
D.
342 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [119
84. Aiuu : mentioned in other marine documents, IG n 2, 809 d, 116, 811 b
138, 165. D.
Ab
12. The
T
here =TTaprv/j.6piov
;
see Rem. iii, p. 44.
19.
'
Afia^avT : 'Ap-a^avne^s. K.7] <p ia65oros appears again IG n 2, 808 a,
57 sqq., 809 c 200. 20. 2vj3. = 2v(3pl5vs.
22. Qopniwvos: trierarch in 342/1, dead 325/4 b.c. Boeckh See- TJrk. 254.
27. diaypd/uL/xaTos. For the various meanings of this word see Boeckh
See-Urk. 204 sq. Here we must understand the inventory of equipment which
was in the hands of the eTnfieXvrai. See 1. 70 sqq.
53. 'OwfjTup : cf. 77 and B a 23. Against the father 'Ov-qTup Demosthenes
delivered two speeches. The persons liable for the debt were Conon, Onetor,
and Euboeus together with Phaeax (strangely omitted here). They are noted as
being quit of the obligation (incurred in 338/7 b.c) in 326/5 B.C., IG n 2, 808c,
58 sqq. , 809 d 194 sqq. ; cf. A a 14 above.
71. /card,
p
1
,
and below, Kara fivdu rod 8iaypa/jL/j.aTos. The meaning is by
no means clear. Boeckh's explanation, See-Urk. p. 209, hardly suffices:As
the exact cost of the trierarchy could not be calculated beforehand, a table or
didypafx/j-a was drawn up setting forth the proportion or percentage, the amount
of drachmae per mina, which the several crvvTpi-fjpapxoi would be responsible for:
this sum was called the (TvvTpivpdpxvp-o.. The expression Kara p.vdv recurs IG n
2, 809 c 26 sqq. Here all that can be said is that the amount to be paid by
Pausanias appears to have been five times as great as the sum to be paid
by Onetor : perhaps the explanation was contained in the lost lines. By oi
eiKoai Koehler thinks the Tiye/moves of the twenty trierarchic symmories are meant.
B a
1 sqq. A list of sureties exacted by the state for the triremes which had been
lent to the Chalcidians of Euboea (Schaefer Devi, n 492). Cf. IG n 2, 809 c 42 sqq.
Among the sureties is Demosthenes, the well-known orator. For references
concerning many of the other names see D's notes and the Indices to the IG.
46. St0vi(os). The names of foreigners as trierarchs are rare in these
marine documents For the form of the name cf.
'
AvriXeidvs, D 509, 5
(Euboea). D.
59. 5 is unusual in these enumerations.
66 sqq. Hypsimus was previously a trierarch. The expression rafiias [ttjs
irapd]\ov occurs (as restored) in IG n 1, 109, 7. The Hippodromia, when
approved for service (56kl/j.os), was handed over to Antisthenes, passed on to
Hypsimus, and by him to Hippolochides. Antisthenes had received it tG>v
eis irXovi^ Xafibvrwv, from the trierarchs under whose command it had been
put out to sea.
70. The meaning of
fy
d[7rr]ewe is by no means clear
;
perhaps
'
with
reference to which the trierarch Diphilus had paid all his dues.' See, however,
Koe. and D ad loc. 75. Kvdr)pp(ios) : for the
pp
see Meisterhans Gr. 97.
B b
18. ^iX6p.7]Xoi : cf. 51 11.
23 sqq. This sum due from Stesileides was paid by his heir in 330/29 b.c
(IG ii 2, 807 a 185 sqq.); cf. introd. note.
120]
FINANCE: NAVAL. 343
34. Cf. 120 introd. 35. For the vocalisrn of \eiarGjv cf. 44 4.
38. Aristonicus proposed an addition or amendment (cf. 7 70) ;
hence
his name is, somewhat unusually, joined with that of the proposer of the
decree.
64.
AAKI AAHC ;
but cf. IG n 2, 808c 26, 809 d 166, where we read
U&vdrjp Ar]fioviKov Aa/adS^s.
69. Nauat/cA^s : cf. 85 and lOO h 2, 15.
77. Xapl8r)fAos : dead in 330/29 B.C. as is shown by IG n 2, 807 & 18 sqq.,
where his KK-qpovo^os is mentioned.
87. IYAINA.
120. Part of an inscription on a slab of Pentelic marble in eleven
fragments, found in the Piraeus
;
broken on the left and below ; H. 1.82 m.,
Br. 0.52 m., Th. about 0.09 m. Boeckh See-Urk. xrv p. 450 sqq.
; add. p. xv
;
IG ii 2, 809 ;
D 153.
Alphabet, type 1
;
occasionally Q=ov.
( :)
before and sometimes after
numeral signs and after abbreviations.
Column a 165232
(r65) ^tj<j)ior]yLta kcl& o irapeXafte
MiXTjtaS?;? t9 rpiy-
pcis] fcal rerpripei*;
Kal t]? TpiCLKOVTOpOV<$
5
Kal] ra (JKevrf
(170) K-t]$\.cr]o<f)COV AvCFMpCOVTOS
'Xo\a]pyevs elirev dya-
0ff
rv^rj tov
Stffiov
tov
'AQt)v]aicov, oVft)? av tt\v
10 T<xyJ.a-\T7)V irpaTT7]Tai
(175)
to faZJoy/ueva toj B^fiay
ircpl t]t)?
eh tov 'ASplav
diroij/aa?, eyjrrj^LcrOat, toj
8t]jjl]6l> tovs fiev tgov ve-
15 <api]o)v eVt/LteX^ra? ira-
(180)
paZo]i)vai Toh TpL7]pd[p\-
01s x]a<> vai)<; Kal ra cr/cevr}
KaTd rd] BeSoy/jLeva toj S77-
p.w to]u9 8e rpirjpdp^ov^
20 tovs Ka^OearrjKOTa^ irapa-
(185)
Kopi^i]^ Ta? vavs eirl to
X<op.a f\v TOJ M^OVVL^LOJVL
p.T]vl tr]pb TT)S SeKarr}?
ia-rap.i]vov Kal irapeyeiv
25
ira.pur\Kevacrpuevas eh
(190)
irXovv*] tov he TrpcoTOv ira-
paKop-QoravTa aT(f>ava)crd-
tw 6 Srfjyito? xpvcrcp aTecfya-
va> a-Tr]o :
H
: hpa^jJLWVy
30 tov 8*] SevTepov euro : HHH
(195) 8pax^]^^,
to^ &e jpiTOv d-
tpo . . .
.]
: /cat dvayopevad-
to) o kt]]/duJ tt)? {3ov\r)<; %ap-
yy\Ki(av\ toj dya>VL tovs o~re-
35
<j>dvovs]* tou9 8e a7roSe/CTa9
(200)
jxpio-a]t to dpyvpiov to
els tov]9 o-Tecfjdvovs, ottco-
s dv t)] cfjavepa rj <f>c\oTC-
\lloi
1]
i]9 TO^ hl)fJbOV TOt9
40
Tptt]pd]p^ot9. 07ro)[s]
5'
az/
(205)
Kal] at
GKrityeLS elaa^Owari,
tov]9 Oeo-fjLoOeTa? irapa-
tr\\rjpcoaac BtKaaTTjpca eh
344 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[120
'iv\a
teal Sia/coaiovs toj
45
o-T^paTrjya) t&> eirl ra<; avpb-
(210)
\i\opLas rjprjpieva) ev tw
M]ovvi^iojvi \lt\v\
rfj
Sev-
rjepa larapbevov kcu
rfj
-K^e/jLTTTT) larapbevov, rov
50 Se puadov StSovat tols
(215)
81 fcaarr)plots tovs rapul-
a]? toijv rr)<; 0eov Kara rov
v6]ptov. 07ra)9
8'
dv virapxv
Ttojt Srjpua) 6is rov airavra
55
~Kp]6vov eparopla otKeta kcli
(220)
o-iT^oTrofjLTTia, kcli vavarddpuov
oIk\lov KaraaKevaaOev-
to]9 virdpyei <$>v\aicr) eiri
Tvp^prjvovs, KaX ^AiXrid-
60 8tjs] 0LKiarr)<; /ecu ot eiroi-
(225)
Kot 'd\]coatv yj>r\aQai oiKel-
a> vav}rLKO), teal rwv 'EA,-
Xri'vwv k]gu
fiapfidpwv
01
irXc'ovTe]? t^i/ OaXarrav
65 do-<j>aXws e]tcr7rA-e&)crti/ et-
(230)
s 'ASpiav, opp.o]y to 'Adrjvaloov
vava-Ta0p.ov '^xo]^T6?
zeal r[d] aX-
Xa . . . . 18o]t69 on ....
Column 6 139
1S
-
Si eav 6e ris pur) iroiqaei,
01s
eKaara irpoareraKrat, rj
dpyusv rj ISiojrrjs, Kara roSe
to yjrij^iapba, ocpeiXerco pur)
5
irorjaas pbvplas opa%p,a<s
tepas rrj Atrrjva, real ev-
dvvos Kai oi irdpeSpoc e-
irdvaytces avrcov Karayi-
yvwaKovroov r\ avrol o<f)ei-
10 Xovrcov. rr)v Se (3ovXr)v rovs
P
: eirtpLeXelaOai rov diro-
aroXov KoXd^ovaav T01/9
draKrovvras rcov rpir)-
pdp^cov Kara rov<$ vo/jlovs'
15 TOL/9 Se irpvrdveLs iroelv
fiovXrjs
eSpav eirl ^copLaro
irepl rov diroaroXov av-
ve^cos, eoo9 dv 6 diroaro-
X09 yevrjrar eXeaOat Se
20 fcai diroaroXeas rov Srj-
ptov hetca avSpas e 'A-
Orjvaudv diravrcov, rovs
Se aipeOevras iiripue-
XelaOai rov diroaroXov
25 Kadcnrep
rfj
/3ovXfj irpoa-
Tera/craL. eivai Se
rfj
fiovXel teal T0Z9 irpvrave-
atv 67ripLeXrjOeLO~cv rov
diroaroXov crre^avcoOrj-
30 vat VTTO rov Srjpiov ^pveray
arecfydvw diro :
X
: Spa^pbtov.
eav Se rov irpoaSeet roSe
rb 'yjnjcfcicrpLa tgov irepl rov
diroaroXov, ttjv ffovXrjv
35
icvpiav eivat yJrr)<f)L%ea6ai,,
pur) Xvovaav ptrjOev rdov
eyjrrjcfrtapLevoov ra> Srjpuw
ravra S' eivai airavra
6t9 (pvXaKTjv rr)<s ^copas.
The decree here given is incorporated in a very long marine inscription of
the type of no. 119. The decree itself with its heading is contained in
lines 165232 of column a and lines 1
39 of column b : there are five columns
in all. Though there is a lacuna of uncertain length at the end of col. a there
is no doubt that lines 1
39 of col. b belong to the same decree. The irapadoais
(Rem. x, p. 256) recorded in the inscription was that of 325/4 B.C., doubtless also
121]
FINANCE: AMPHICTYONIC. 345
the year in which the inserted decree was passed. About this time, as we learn
from the titles of the speech of Hyperides -rrepl rrjs cpvXaKrjs tup Tvpprjvwv and the
TvpprjvLKos \6yos of Dinarchus, the Athenians sent a fleet to the Adriatic with the
view of defending their trade against Tyrrhenian pirates (cf. 119 B b 35) and the
decree shows that the proposed foundation of a colony had a close connexion
with the despatch of vessels (dTroaroXos)
.
Col. a.
2. MiXriddrjs. In the irapddoais portion the demotic Aa/adST/s is always
added, whence it appears that he came from the famous family of Miltiades and
Cimon. He was doubtless chosen boni ominis causa, because his ancestor
Miltiades had successfully conducted a colony to the Thracian Chersonese.
31 sqq. For the proclamation of crowns at the Thargelia (about May 24, 25)
cf. the law ap. Dem. Mid. 517.
35. For the dirodinTai. see 4 8 ; for ixepi(xa\i 39 44.
40 sqq. For the aKrj\pis cf. 119 A a 6 sqq. The president of the court
summoned by the thesmothetae was the war-minister, whose business it was to
arrange the tax-payers in symmories
;
see D.A. s.v. crvpL/xopiai, and cf. 36 19.
51 sq. tovs ra/nias kt\. This arrangement may have been for a special
court ; at all events in earlier times the pay of the dicasts came from the chest
of another board, the KuXaxpercu (cf. Boeckh St.
3
i 213 sq.).
55 sq. So D for the e/jaropia olKeia /ecu atTOTro/xTria of Boeckh.
66. Restored by D ; for other readings see IG. The actual locality of the
colony is a matter of conjecture.
Col. b.
6 sqq. D, referring to Wilamowitz Ar. u. Ath. n 537, note 22, points out
that as a rule the evdvvos was allowed to examine a complaint with his assessors,
and if it appeared to be ill-founded to dismiss it, but here he had no option
(^Travaynes).
20. On the diroaToXeis, ten in number chosen e
,
Adr)vaiwi> dwdvTwv and not
tribally, see D.A. s.v.
32. irpoadtei (subjunctive; for
EI^HI
see 31 3 and Meisterhans Gr. 171) is
vouched for by Koe. against the
PPO^IAEITAI
of Ross. The personal use
of the verb is uncommon
;
cf. Eur. H.F. 90 : Xt^s n irpoadeh, rj 0t\ets ovtoj
cpdos ; For the formula cf. IG n 1, 666 Frg. c 10: idv 8e [tov ivdees rj rdde t]6
i//?7[^)]t(T^,[a], t[t]\v [p]ov\[i)]v Kv[p]iav eluai.
39. See 59 17.
121. A fragment of marble; H. 1 ft. 6 in., Br. 1ft. 3 in. IG i 283 (cf.
Suppl. p. 74) from a copy of Koehler, from which it appears that certain letters
on the margin as copied by Ross in 1833 have disappeared ; H 50. Cf. Homolle
BCH vm 283; V. von Schoeffer De Dell ins. rebus (Berl. Stud, ix
1889), p.
29.
Alphabet, type 1; but
E
still-e, ei and
O
= o, ov
; f
does not appear
;
v is
frequently v
A
; $
is sometimes
2
;
\ may precede or follow numerals, or both.
346 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[121
a
AtO([avTO$ OV Ato[<j>avT]S
. . . . ~N]eav6r}<; or K\]edv6r)<;
BovXafcXr/s ?
&.7]fjLo6aXri<;
'Az^a^S^yLto?
irapd] ArjXtcov
6(f)LX6vT^<av
eyevero teal at irapa
K<}>aXaiov dp-yvpiov] crvfjarav
PPHHHHA
10
acov to ftaXavelov coptcrav t[o ?
($Ko]ofjL7)o~av, rr/v
'Ptfvecav copcaav av
ehdveuaav
PTTTTAA :
7ri8e[icdTois tokois itcvtc
^TT] W<TT dlTO-
SiSovat tov]9 Saveicra/JLevovs
4^TTTX X X A[A A>
T T apxaiov
434/3
eSajvelcravTo. Xpovos apyei M-erayecrvcwv /jltjv ^ K6rjv\y\a-\.v'
B.C.
dpxovros KpaTT]Tos
15 cv] &r)X(p he Bovcfrovlcov /xr]V dpyovTO^ ^Lvirrepovs. \rr\v yt\v
TT\V V At^Xw TT\V
ijepav i/jiicrOcoaav real rovs Krjirovs kol tcls OLKias fcal
[
. . .
Setta ttj. Xpovos dp-
\\ec Yioathriiwv fir)v A$rjvr]cn apyovio^ KpdrrjTos, e[v A-qXa>
8e IlocriS^itov jx-
y\]v dpxovros FjV7rTpov<$, cocrre dirohihovat T7}/jL {iio-6(ocr[iv
d7rdvTwv TOVTttV TOVS p.-
\ijta6cofji6Vov? Kara ra?
vyypa(f)ds.
/ucr#<wcre(a>?) tfe<[dXaiov
TOV p.V irptoTOI) ^TOVS
20
HHHAPh
\to)v Be aXXcov ercov]
P'HHHt-
ttjv -y^v tt)v
V 'PtJV1~
a rrjv lepdv e/jLLa6(oo~av Beica err). Xpovos
[apx"
'AQr\vr\<rw
Ta\L7\\ioiv
433/2
yj^y apyovTOS 'AyjrevBous, ev AtjXq) 'lepbs [\t-f\v dpxovros
pov, ware diroBihovau to//, ^ieyno
6
^cofielyov tKao-Tov toS 'drovs tx\[i
(oaiv
: TXHA :
T
V
V OdXarrav tt)v tto
25 rrjv ev 'Vriveia ifjaaOwaav hetca [2ttj
The document records certain transactions, emanating from the so-called
'Adrjitaluv afxcpiKTvoves, who were charged with the administration of the property
of the temple at Delos. Probably the names in the opening lines are those of
122]
FINANCE: AMPHICTYONIC. 347
members of this board. The transactions clearly belong to the year of the first
archon named, 434/3 B.C., but the engraving is either of a much later date or
is an example of an early official use of Ionic characters in state-documents.
M. Homolle I.e. suggests that the inscription began with the words : QeoL
'
rdde 'iirpa^av 'Adrjvatwu
'
' A[x<pLKTvoves oide : cf. 122 2.
7 sqq. The lines apparently referred to the recovery of loans due to the
temple.
10, 11. uipwav. Exact definition of boundaries was a necessary pre-
liminary to the /jdadooais 1. 16 sqq.
13. The restoration of the numerals (due to Boeckh, Erklarung einer att.
Urk. uber d. Vermogen des Apoll. Heiligthums auf Delos, Abh. Berl. Ak. 1834)
gives us the following sum.
Capital lent : 9 talents 20 drachmae 54020 dr
interest at
T
Vth for five years : 5402dr x 5 27010 dr
Total of Capital and interest 81030 dr
i.e. as in the text 13 talents 3030 drachmae.
14. xpovos apxet- Cf. 84 29. For the Delian months see D.A. s.v.
Calendarium.
16 sqq. Leases of temple lands in Delos. For fxiad<t)(ris = [xiaduna 'rent'
see Lexx. 19. ^vyypa(f>as :
'
covenants
'
; for another use of the word see 9 3.
20 sqq. Leases of temple lands in Bheneia. The iepos yJr\v began in
February and corresponded to the latter part of the Attic Gamelion and the
earlier part of Anthesterion (Homolle BCH v 29 sq.).
24 sq. Lease of a fishery belonging to the temple. Strabo 642 mentions
the fisheries of the Ephesian Artemis: Pausanias i 38, 1 speaking of the 'Pet-rot
or salt streams at Eleusis (cf. 19) says: tovs i'x#Cs e avrwv to?s iepevcriv ianv
alpetv fxovois.
122. Two portions of a marble slab, found in Athens; one in the Library
of Trinity College, Cambridge (the
'
Sandwich Marble
'),
which has been re-
examined, the other in Athens. CIGr 158
;
CIA n 814 ; D 86 and Add. p. 641
;
H 104. Cf. Boeckh, St.
s
n p. 68 sqq. Lebegue Recherches sur Delos p. 295
;
Homolle BCH viii
(1884) p. 290
; V. von Schoeffer Be Deli ins. rebus 54 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1; O
=o, ov, cf. note on 1. 31; E
= in KXeirdpxov 1. 21;
fi
is somewhat smaller than the other letters. HroLxr]56v.
6 e o i
rdhe enrpa^av
*
KfjifyiKTvoves 'AOrjvaloov airo KaWeov dpyovTos
^XP~
i tov fyapyrfkioivos /jlt)vo<; tov eirl ^YirirohaiMavro^ apyovTos A6rjv7jo~c,
iv ArjXa) Be dirb ^TTiyivov; apyovTOS fAeypt T0^ cLpyrj\io)vos /J,r]v6s
5
rod 7rl 'Ittttlov dpyovTos, ypbvov 6aov K,aaTo<; clvtwv rjp^ev, ols Ato-
8(opo<;
y
O\vfjL7rio$ojpov ^Kapb^covihr]^ eypafi/judrevev, dirb Xapiadvhp-
ov dpyovTo<s *I$igot7]<; Seoyevovs
'
Ayapvevs /^eypc tov
f
E/caTO/z/3atct5^o-
9 /jLrjvb's rod iirl IirTToSd/jLavTos apyovTos, ^(ocnyevrjs GocndSov Hf7re-
Taicov iviavTov iirl KaWeov dpyovTO^, 'Ykiriyevrfe MJeTayevovs etc Ko-
348 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [122
io lXtjs, Avti/jlclxos Fivdvvo/jLov Mapadoovios, ^[ir]t/cpd[rr\]<; Mevearpdrov II-
aXXrjvevs. AiSe twv iroXeoyv t[ov] to/cov d7reSo[<r]av Mv/covlol
XHHPA,
Xvp-
loi
XXHHH,
Tyviot
T,
Ketoi
[F>HHH]H[P]AAhhll IIC , tepfyiot, XPH,
XXXHFAAAAIIII,
'Irjrai
FHHH,
[nd
P
to]t
XX PHHHHP A A,
Oivaioi
eg '1/cdpov
X
XXX,
pfialoi eg 'I/cdpov
HHH[H-
Kt](f>d\aiov tokov irapd tqqv iroXewv
TTT
15
TjXXXnHHHHPAAAAIIC.
Oi'Se tvv ISlo)(too)v tov tokov direhoaav
'Apiara)-
v] AtjXlos virep 'AiroXXoboopov AtjXlov
nHHHH)
'A[p]TU<rt[x]a)? ArjXio?
virep
YXavfcerov AtjXlov
PHH,
'TyjroKXeTjs ArfXcos
HH[H]>
' A[y]ao-[i]fcXer)<;
AtjXlov vtt-
ep Qeo/cvBovs AtjXlov
HHA[AP]>
SeoyvrjTOS AtjXlov virep "TyjroKXeovs
AtjXl-
ov
] HHHAhHIl*
' AvTLTrcLTpos AtjXlov virep 'TifrofcXeovs AtjXlov
HHPA
AAPhh
20
1
1]
I,
IIoX .... 9 Tr/vios virep M . . . puevovs Ttjvlov
HHHH>
Aev/ccvos
At'jXl-
o]9 virep KXecrdp^ov AtjXlov
PH[H..AA]A>
Aeaxji&v AtjXlos virep
TiiaToge-
vov AtjXlov
HHHP,
Uarpo/cXer}? [A^Xjto? virep 'T^oicXeovs AtjXlov
HHH,
'Apia-
reiSr)<; Ttjvlos virep Olvdhov Ttjvlov
HHA-
[K]e(f)dXaiov to/cov irapd
TCOV l-
h\icoTO)v
FHHHAAP-
Yilae7rpd^0rj jiTjvvOev etc toov ^irLcrOevov? AtjXlov
HH
2
sH]PAAA.
YjlaeirpdyQirj /jLTjvv6e[v] irapd Uv6covo<; AtjXlov
XH-
Eac
twv eveyvp-
cov tcov 0)(J)Xtjk6tq)v t9 St'/cafs],
tljxtj^ Ke[^\dXaLov
XPHHHAAAP.
Mlo-Ocd-
<76fc9 Tejxevoov eg
e
TjveLa<; eirl dpyovTwv
'
AQtjvtjctl
Xapicrdvopov, lirir-
oSdfiavTOs, ev AtjXw Se TaXalov,
f
l7r[ir]ou[T]TXHH[A]
A-
Miadcoae^
Tepuevw-
v ey ArjXov eirl t&v civtoov dp^ovroov
XXHHHHPAAAhhhh
Olklwv
fjLLcrOoo-
30 o~L<; eirl 'lirirohdjiavTos dpxovTos
'ABrjvTjaL, ev AtjXo) Be 'lirirlov
HHP
1
122]
FINANCE: AMPHICTYONIG. 349
A]AAAPhh
AwaTo? Ke<t>a\aLov
PTTT XXXX PAAAA h hhH I C.
'A7T0 TOVTOV
rdBe avr)\co0T}' ^Tefyavos dpicnelov tw Oe(p, icai tgo epyacrap,evco-
c fjuados
XP
TpirroBes vi/ayrr/pia roi<; %opols Kal rw ipyaaafxev-
(p
pLiados
X[-]. 'Apxedeoopois
"J\
Et9 /copLtSrjv tmv dewpoov teal twv
XP^~
35
v] 'Apri/jua^o) <>i\(ovo<;
r
Ejp/jLei(p rpajpap^o)
TX
^AptOfjub^ (3owv rebv e-
ls rij> co/dt^i/ oavrjdevrcDV
HP II II
. T^ toi/toi;
TXXHHHHAPhhhh
IleTaX-
a
xp
v<r
]^
*ai. ^/oucrcaret fiicrdo?
HAAP-
Et9 t<z 7Tpo6vfiara t?}? kopT?i<;
. . . HLop]t,8r) TW^ rpiTToScov teal rcov
fio&v
[ko.1 ttcvJt^/cocttt; a/ Tpo[<|>a-
l tois Povo-]t, tfal v\a)v tl/jLtj tgov 7r[l ti]v -y&jwpav ]z> TtyU-[Tj] . .
40 . kcltclW
<7
aal
we
kv\l
tf[a K](/>a\cu[ov ?
45
at T
p]"?/oa[pX"
.... ? /cal fc[s] V TftH %[opa> ?
t rov 7reX[o \\opela r [ica
I
'
A[i.$iKTJV0(TLV 69 t[cL ImTTJJoeta KCLI ^[paufJiaTei Kal viro"ypa|JL|AaT-
i
]
AAA'
K(j)d\aiov dv[a]\(0/j,aro<;
[PT
TowrSc e8ave-
50 crap.V l]7Tt TH9 avrals <TVV07]fcai$ /ca[0dirp oi alXXoi Xpr'|iOTO ira-
pd tov 'Air]o\A,G)i>o<? roO AtjXlov Sehavetap\ivo\. clo-l
&)
P*
nao"t/cXeet Aetfcpdrovs Tr)v[C(o
ft)
AAAPhh*
&OlVlK\[i]l A6C07Tp67r]ovS
- -
Ar}\i(p
AAP'
K(j>dXaiOV dva\d)/jba[ro<s <rvv 01s eSaveiVafiev
P
55TTXPHP]APH-
-rrepleaTL
TX X X PHHHHP A A P[h hhhC.
TaSt 'i\irpa%av A/LKpLfcrvoves [djird rov S/a[po<|>opuovos |atjv6s tov cirl 'Iir-
iro8da]a^T09 dp-^ovTO^
fii^pi 2&>/c/oaTi8[ov dpxovTos 'A0TJv7]<rt, 4v Ai^X-
<p 8 d]7ro naz^/zou /jL7]v6<;
fAZXP
1 Tlvppald\ov dpxovTos, ots AidSwpos 'OX-
vp.Tri]o8(dpov ^EfcafiftcovLSrjs iypa(iiM('neve\y, 'AQ^vaCw
60 ... . Sou 'OrjOev,
Nucofj,e[v]r)<;
f
I[e']/0ft)i/O9
f
A\a[ivs, 'E-n-i-yevTis MtTcryt'vovs I-
k Ko]\t79,
AvrifJLaxos EvOvvo/jlov M.apa0w[vios
}
'EmKpdrTis Mcvco-rpdr-
ov TLa\]\7]Vv<;, 'Avhpiwv Aa/jid\r]<; Aa/xd\ov
[
. Ai]coyopi[s]ou, eoTe\7)<; 'AvSpo/cplrov, Me
jxi<re]ft)cret9 T/JLV(DV e[|] 'P^z/efC]^'
THHHH
[ui<r6w<rts T6Uvwv
7
6
5
AtjXov]
XPAAhh- At[i>0a>o-ei? otV[i]o3z/-
HHPAA[AAhh
350 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[122
\]rj
{ifjiCLTOS K(f)a\aiov
TXXXAhh*
diro [tovtov t68 dvT]\<o0Y ds Upd t-
a KJa-Ta fif/va Kal /jlovo~lkjj<; ddXa Kal yvp^y
. k\oL aakiriKTel Kal Kr\pvKi Kal tw v
. . KO .
X(r
R
)HFAAhhlllllC
TO Tl%lOV avOL[Ko]So/JL[i\crai t6
70 .
.]?;
/ecu et'9 eirio~Kevrjv tov iTrcaraatov [ko]1 tov a[ Kal ls
i.v\ddea<a>iv tov are^dvov Kal 6t? t? <t . . . . o~i8a[s Kal t
01]?
eVl Tft? ot/ca?
7T6fjL<f)62o-ov V7TO t[t}s] (3ov\r)<$' 6V
. . cov
P F
1
A/JL(f)iKT[v]oacp 'AOrjvaiCQV
eh [r]dir[i]Tr]SL[a Kal ypap.p.aTci Ka-
l vTr]oypa/JL/jLaTL
X X P
1
HP P h[h]h*
'A/jL<f)iKT[v]ooriV 'Ai^fptwv els TdmTT]86t-
75
a*
XX]H
fce(f)d\aiov dvaXoo/AciTos-
TXHA AP hhhh 1 1 III C
KefydXaiov tov TrepcovTOS avv r[w] etc tov 7rpo[ripov \6-yov*
TPPHHHPA
|-|. 'Atto] tovtov TolcrSe iSaveuaafiev AtjXlcov e[ir]< Ta[i<$ avVats crwGtJKai-
s,
Ka0dir]e/C> 01 aKKoi tcl [l]e/)a
%/
3?
7/
i' <XT
[
a
]
T0^ 'A7roA,\w[vos tow AtjXCov ScSava-
o-fie'vot]
elalv,
-XXX"
tovto 6<pi\ou[<r] iv 8aveco-T[aC
80 . . . 'AtrjoWoScopov K.oij3cov Tr]\[iii\v yjcrTov
'
Apia\r
-
-
-tcXel&OV 'A/)TL'(7t[\e]&>9 NiKapyov
vt . . t[S]?7? A[i] ovvoroSoopov
"ZJGOCTTpdTOV TI[a
*Ap] tCTTOTtyU,09
85
ov] }Lv6vfcpaT[r\s
'i]pOv[av]TOV T
-lOV A[r\ik]ofc\-
-
Ai)]fJLO(f)dvr)<z Ar}[\i.o-
Sov 'ApLCTTOOV 'A-
90
-9 Tvvvwv (*)e-
tov UaTpo/c[\ei\s
-9 Ti/jLCOvat;
-ov Se[p]t</uo
HHH
Trapeo\o\^v
95
1 Aa/judXei kcl\\
l]e/307rotc3, IIi;[0-
ft)
PH[H]H
K(f)dX[aiov
i[h]i e5[op.]ez/
TTT.
vacat
aio-0]ft)cret9 TWV T6p,e[y(av eirl XapurdvSp-
too ov dp\ovTos 'A9T]VT]cri, 4v Ai]]A,ft> o\jk] I clXcllov
P]*
iyyvrjTrjs Nt/c-
cirl 'Iiriro8d|xav]ro9 apyovTOS 'A[0t]vt]o-i, ev At]\u> 8 'Imrfov
'ZTr\]o-LfjL^pOTOV A[rj\ios
122]
FINANCE: AMPHICTYONW. 351
ArJXio? to ^cop[iov
105
-09
HHP'
iyyvrirrjl*
'QTrio-devovs To-
k]yyV7)Tr)S Nlkt]-
Iirl SwKpaTiSou <xpxo]z;[t]o9 'AOrjVijao [ev Aij\u> 8c UvppaiQov
-po?
1 10 AtSe twi^ iroXecov tov to[k]ov, ov eSei avras eVt rfjs rj/jieTepas
apxffs
aTToSovvac, \k\ve\arov, kcli o\v\k direhoaav ra>v Terrapa)-
v ir&v. Keloi
X X X XH A AP hhl
C,
Mvkovlol
HHHHAA,
Sv/hoi
XXX
XPHHH,
Xtyviot, XXF'AAAPhhhHI,
TtJvcol
XXHHHH,
epfiaio-
1 if; 'Iicdpov
HHHH,
Udpun
TTTTX PHHHA A A,
Olvaloi
ef
'I/cdpov
"5
TPAAA-
AlSe twv iroXecov tov tokov ovk aire&ocrav tov eirl tyj-
9 r)/JLTpaS
CLpXV^
TTTCipCOV fcTCO^ 7Tl ap^OVTCOV A6r)Vr)0~(,
~KaXXeov, XapoaavSpov, 'iTTirohdjjLavTO^, ^oofcpaTiSov, ev ArjXw
8e 'JLTriyivovs, TaXalov, '\iririov, YlvppalOov Nafto*
TX X X P
H,
"Ai'S-
piot
XT>
Kapvo-Tioo
TXXHHHH,
(erasure). OtSe tcov IScco-
120TW1/ tov tokov ovk direhocrav tov eiri ttj^ fjfieTepas
apx*)?
T-
eTTapcov 6T(ov eVl dpyovTwv Adrjvrjcri "KaXXeov, Xapiadv&p-
ov, 'InrTroSd/jLavTos, ^.cofcpaTiSov, ev ArjXco he ^irtyevov^, YaXai-
ov, 'Ittttlov, IlvppalOov.
'
AydOap^os 'AplcrTCDVOS, A^[\t]o9
HHHH,
'A7-
a/cXe'779
t
T
/
\|ro:Xeof9 Trjvios
HH
EvcfrpaiveTO? Yiv\&\vtov Aij-
125X^09
HA,
y
AXfc/ji,ecovL$r)S %paav . . . ov 'AOrjvalos
PA,
YXav/cnrTr-
09 KXeiTap^ov ArjXcos
HHHHA,
(DV KapvaTLO?
HH,
^kvXXl-
a<; "AvSpios
HH,
"T^frofcXeT]^ eo{_yvvi]rov ArfXios
HHHH,
Tlpiavev-
9 ^vpios TaXrjao-Los
AAAAPh,
fcXei8r)<; pacravvva(8)ov
At/Xlos
Phh',
"Appcov pdo-(ovo<;
2[<J>iitt]09 HHPAAA,
Aa^? ^a^-
13077T09 ^Teiptevs
PHH,
f^atac .... NvfMcfyoScopov ArfXcos
HAA
A A,
pdo-(ov "Appcovos </)^TTto[s . . ., 'A]/0a-T77/S?79 Aeivofiev-
of9 T?7i/to? 77-
ep
OlvdSov, K.Xeo .... [Tj^i/iou
HHA-
OtISe uxpXov AtjXlcov
ao-efteia? [lirl X]apo-a^8poL> ap%ovTO<$
Adrjvrjci, ev ArjXcp Se TaXaiov.
Tfi^jxa] to [k\7rcy[y]pa/jL/jbevov
i35K]al dei^vyia, oti [k][i] e/c tou /o[ov tou 'A]7roXXcovos tov Arfxiov rj-
yov TOU9 A/jL(j)LfCTVova<; icaX erv[-Krov' 'ElTrcyevr)^ TloXv/cpaTOV-
9
M,
UvppcuOo? AvTtyovov
M
, HaTpo[K\i]r}<; 'EirLaOevovs
M ,
(erasure)
(erasure) WpLaTO(j)cov A[tvKi]7T7rov
M
, "Avtu^wv Hvvvw-
v]o9
M,
['0]SotTeX,?79 'A^Tt7[dv]oL'
M,
T?7\[<{>av]?79 noXuap/coi;9
M-
140 OtV[<u] ev A?;[\o) l]e/3<2t toO
'
AttoXXcovos t-
ov] AtjXlov. OlfCLa ev KoXa)[vw], 77 971^ Ei;[<j>av] to
v, y
yeiTwv "AXetjos'
Td] Kepajxela, a rjv Ei)^>a[vTov],
oft] 9 Yetfi-ov]
to fiaXavelov to Ap-
352 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. V.
[122
i<r\rcovo<;
ifju
irehiw o/[kici], rj r)v Aev\YLlTc\rrov,
fj
yeiTCOv ['Ajy^cr/-
Xao]?* olfcla, rj r)v 'E7rto-#e[vov]?, r/[i] 76t[Tv] r) 6[8o]?* xakfcelov o rj-
T45 v AJevfciTrTrov, (b jlto)v I Sewv oiKr/fjuara' ol/cia

\o~\licLa, 7) r)v '^jTuaOevov-


s,
tj
7
^twv at T]o-av] AevKiTrirov als yel-
twv
yiJLTCO Oltcrj/jL^a-
ra] a a r)v Ei)[<|>-
150 dvrov ceo . .
This document is a register of accounts of the Athenian commissioners of
the Delian temple from 377 to 374 b.c. At the close of the Peloponnesian War
the Spartans had restored to the Delians the full possession of their own temples
and temple-treasures (cf. Ro. 1 267). The Athenians probably regained their
control over Delos at the formation of the new Athenian Confederacy in 378 b.c.
They seem to have appointed at first a board of four Commissioners, who were
called Amphictyons because in theory they were representatives tQv 'Iloviov re
/cat TrepiKTiovuv p-rjaiuTuiv (Thuc. in 104). After three years a change was made
;
five Athenian commissioners were appointed and some commissioners from
Andros were associated with them (1. 62). Accordingly the accounts of the
first three years are kept separate, 11.
1
55. Then follow the accounts for the
fourth year, 11. 56
76. After these come lists referring to all four yearsfirst
of sums lent out at interest, 77109 ;
then of arrears of interest still due from
states and individuals, 110132; and then of fines still due, 133139. Finally
there is a list of houses confiscated to the god, 140end.
The following list of Athenian and Delian archons will be useful
:
B.C. Athens Delos
3776 Calleas Epigenes
3765 Charisandrus Galaeus
3754 Hippodamas Hippias
3743 Socratides Pyrrhaethus
2. fjt-expt- tou Qapyr)\iu)vos [atjj'osthe accounts were made up to the month
Thargelion; the great festival was held on the 6th and 7th of this month (May).
5. oh Ai68a)pos...ypa/j./x&Tevei>. Diodorus was secretary to the Amphictyons
throughout ; their names follow, Idiotes for the second year only, Sosigenes for
the first year only, and the other three for the whole time ; cf. 1. 60.
11 sqq. The loan of money on interest to states and individuals was one of
the chief sources of revenue of Greek temples
;
cf. 109 and Rem. x, p.
256
7.
The numerals are in some cases not clear ; but the correspondence of items and
total makes the readings here given fairly certain.
24. \x7)vvQv :
'
part of a confiscated estate which was concealed by the
offender and afterwards claimed by the magistrates upon information given' (H)
;
cf. 1. 144.
25. e/c tup ivexvpw. from goods seized by distraint.
26. fjuo-duxreis : rents of land and houses belonging to the templeanother
usual source of income.
123]
FINANCE: PIRAEUS. 353
31. cbrd toutov:
TOTO-
The first
O
represents a genuine diphthong, a
confusion found from about the middle of the 4th century. So 0\<
= ovk, 115,
120; cf. 84. These are the expenses of the Delian festival; from their
amount they must refer to the greater, quadriennial, not the smaller, annual one.
34. Ko/uudrj : travelling expenses.
36. iriraka : gold leaf for gilding the horns of the oxen.
38. irevTrjKocTTrj : export-duty of 2 per cent, levied at the Piraeus or another
port.
39. 7r[l tt]u yecpvpav] : so J. Taylor (Cambridge
1743) ; Nicias made a bridge
in his celebration, soon after 436 B.C., between Delos and Khenea (Plutarch,
Nic.
3),
or more probably, as Jebb (JHS i p. 22) suggests, between Delos and
the small island now called 'Pe^artdpi.
119. After the entry about the Carystians is an erasure of 11 letters, once
containing doubtless the name of a state which had subsequently paid its
arrears.
128. TaXrjcraLos : probably the name of a village or district in Syros.
136. These men were evidently the leaders of the nationalist party in Delos
in a riot against the Athenian officials. Epigenes and Pyrrhaethus are probably
to be identified with the Delian archons mentioned. The sentence of banish-
ment pronounced against them would not prevent a subsequent election . as
archon ; for it would not apply to Delos itself, which ranked as extra-
territorial (H).
140. olKiai...iepai: probably confiscated in connexion with the same riots.
The names of two of the owners are those of fathers of the ringleaders.
144.
x
a^KeL1' '
a bronze-foundry
;
for Delian bronze cf. Plin. N. H. xxiv 2.
123. The left-hand upper corner of a slab of Pentelic marble, 0.039 m. in
thickness. Koehler Mitth. in 49 sqq.; IG n 2, 830.
ABTAE (=6, u even in
retxo-) . HOIKAMNO (=
o, ov)
PPTY4>X . A
AlyetBos Ti^o7r[oio\
394/3 b.c.
eV
1
Ev/3ov\l8ov alp[eQvT6s (x-
erairvpyiov dva
\ido\oyrj{Metros ['Av-
5
TLKpdrr]*; : Ke( : 7r[a ... or 7r[\ ....
M M X X X F
av4Pa[\
H
A h h h
lii>g. K.6v(ov
^HHHPHII
e[r
LLia. EvyeiTcov
[
This interesting fragment gives a portion of the accounts relating to the
repair of the walls of the Piraeus in 394/3 b.c. The moving spirit was Conon,
R. II.
23
354 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[123
as we learn from Xen. Hell, iv 8, 7 sqq. Conon effected part of the repair by
the help of Persian gold and the sailors of the Persian fleet (cf. Diod. xiv 85).
Among the aAXcu iroXeis which helped was Argos (IG n 1, 161).
From the mention of Alyeldos Teixoir[oLoi] (1. 1)
we conclude that the
Athenians distributed the work among the ten tribes, which in their turn each
appointed a building-commission. The members of this commission, called
tcixottoioI, were provided with the necessary funds from the state-treasury,
arranged for contracts and were answerable to the state for the execution of the
work. Cf. IG ii 2, 833 (a fragment probably relating to repairs of the walls
after the battle of Chaeronea), Nep. Tim. 4 and Schaefer Bern, i 178 note 2.
In 1. 2, 3 fxeraTrtjpyiou (cf. Time, in 22, 2)
= /xecroirvpyLov 'curtain.' In 1. 5
Ke<p. = K<pa\r]dei', 1. 7, 9 /jU(r. = fii<rdo}Tr]s. The numerals were apparently
crowded in later than the rest of the text, hence the overflow of
H
in 1. 6.
124. A slab of Pentelic marble in two fragments, containing the beginning
and the end of the inscription; a middle fragment is missing. Found at
Eleusis. IG n 2, 834 6, v
p. 198; D 587. Cf. Tsountas 'E<.
dpx-
1883,
p. 118 sq., 253 sq.
;
Foucart BCH vn (1883), 388 sq.
; id. vm
(1884),
194 sq.
;
Choisy Etud. epigr. sur Varch. gr. 217 sq. ; Nebe Diss. phil. Hal. vm (1886),
69 sq. ; Swoboda Wien. St. x
(1888), 279 sq. ; Durrbach VOr. Lycurgue, 96 sq.
;
Rubensohn Mysterienheiligtiimer in Eleusis, 1892 ;
A. Koerte Mitth. xxi
(1896),
324 sqq. ; Haussoullier Rev. Cr. 1900, p. 25.
Alphabet, type
1; A
appears frequently as
A,
and
O
as
O-
2toix??56i>.
The mark
( :)
occurs before and after numeral signs. Abbreviations as <jkt)v.
=
(tktjvItov,
K<f>&.
= KecpaXcuov as well as abbreviations of deme-names are frequent.
The symbol for
50,
given as
H
in the text, frequently has the form
[2J
.
(The text is given on
pp.
356
7,
358
9.)
The inscription was of great length and contained in two columns the
accounts of the iiri<TT&Tcu "EXevaivdOev and of the tcl/j.icu rotv 6cow. For these
officers see no. 104. The complete document contained the accounts for the
ten prytanies of the year 329/8 b.c. In the missing portion were the accounts
of the end of the second prytany, the third, the beginning of the fourth, the end
of the sixth, the seventh and the ninth. The text given here represents the
accounts of the first prytany only, but a skeleton of the whole is appended in
order to give some idea of the extent of the document.
1. 'Avtio[x]i-8o[s. Either here or in 1. 37 (eirl tt}s
'
Avtiox^os devrtpas irpv-
Tavtias) there must be an error in the name of the tribe.
2. rb irepibv kt\. :
"
the balance in the hands of the treasurers
"
The
signs
T, X
at the end of the numerals =TTapT7]fx6pLov, xaA/coOs; see Rem. iii,
p.
44. Both here and in what follows it will be noted that the syntax of the
entries is rarely complete
;
cf. the notes on 98 11, 109 4. Why a balance is
said to be in the hands of one of the treasurers (rajmia) is not clear. In 1. 3 the
words 'NLKo^lXip' AXoirenrjdev are doubtless repeated in error from 1. 2. For the
form of the dual roiv deioiv see 2 C 11, and for deLoiu see 39 introd.
4. airo[v]8o(p6poLs. Cf. 2 introd., 83 5 sqq., and Aeschin. F. L. 133: rols
124]
FINANCE: TEMPLE-TREASURERS. 355
cnrovdocpopOLS rots ras fxvaT-qpaJjTidas airovdas iirayytWovcri /jlovol tCjv 'EXXtjpwj/
<J>w/ce?s ovk euireiaavTo ;
and D. A. s.v. Eleusinia. For the date of the Greater
Mysteries, which began on the 13th of Boedromion, see 2 B 17 sqq. and
Mommsen Feste p. 206. drjfioaiot. were frequently attached to financial officers
;
cf. 60 42, where one appears as avnypcupetis. In IG n 2, Add. 737, 19,
two, -whose names are given, are attached to the ^-rtcrrdT^s irpyravewv
;
see
further D. A.
6. irporavdas. Meisterhans Gr. 24 quotes eight instances of this vocalism
(elsewhere found only in Lesbos) between 329 and 285 b.c. Cf. Hoffmann
Gr. Diall. n 363 and Meister Gr. Diall. i 52, where it is suggested that the
Lesbian irporavis is due to a popular (and in this case correct) etymology
connecting it with irpb.
7. Aeiwi/T[t<5os : see 39 introd. IG n 1, 176, 3 shows that the tribe Leontis
had the ninth prytany in the preceding year, 330/29 b.c, to which year also
the tenth prytany (of the Oeneis) belonged.
8. viro\oy[rj]s. The reference, D thinks, is to the foundation (for -Xoy- cf.
XidoXoyLa 1. 97, XidoXdyrjfxa 11. 47, 76),
elsewhere called arpQuLs, of the wall of
the peribolus, alluded to in 11. 24, 39 as StaTei^t^a, 1. 44 reixos.
9. opyvas : see 109 10.
10. Qrjatov : Meisterhans Gr. 43 collects four instances of this spelling.
This Theseum (to be distinguished from the temple commonly but erroneously
called the
'
Theseum
'),
was a sanctuary of Theseus probably situated on the
northern slope of the Acropolis. For the many uses to which it was put,
including the storage of building materials, see Frazer Pans, n 145 sqq. The
names of victors in the Orjaeta were engraved in the Theseum, 61 16.
There was another Theseum in the Piraeus; cf. 131 3: /c]ara rdde ixicrdovaiv
Iletpatels UapaXiau /cat 'AX/j.vpi[5]a /cat to Qqaeiov /cat rdXXa Te/meur) diravra.
10. e[t(s) <r]^>[??i']a[s T]a\a[v~]Ta kt\. : "ten talents-weight of wood for
wedges, each talent costing 1 drachma, 2 obols."
11. 8 irpoekafiev kt\. :
'
which he received in advance, on the order of
Lycurgus.' The well known orator is meant; cf. for inscriptions which were
the outcome of his administration, nos. 41, lOO. What was his exact status
here is uncertain. He was not one of the epistatae or the treasurers, for we
know the names of all who held office for this quadriennium
; see for the latter
1. 248 of this inscription (D 587, 248) : Na<6<pi\os, Kepd/xw, and for the former
104 6 sqq.
12. avTcypafeadai : see note on 1. 4 above and 60 42. For /miXros (' red-
earth
',
'ruddle') in commerce see 71. This entry shows that a ararrip (0*012
of a kilogr.) cost 3
obols.
13. <tkt)v(Itov) :
'
stall-owner ', perhaps engaged in making preparations for
the festival. Cf. IG vn 2712, 71 [Acraephiae), where it is said of a public
benefactor and entertainer : ov Tra.pfkt.irev 5e ovde' tovs (TKrjuiras /cat avvKoa/uLovvTas
tt\v koprr\v.
14. dXeti^at : for the infinitive of purpose cf. 21 7. fieXauTrjpia, here used
as a wall-colouring, elsewhere denotes only the blacking used by shoemakers
(H. Blumner Techn. a. Terrain, i 277, note 9). So in 1. 15 the nrjKis, which
usually means 'gall,' well-known in dyeing (Blumner ib. i 244), here must be
used for dye generally; it is clearly identical with /jlIXtos 1. 16.
17. a.vaXr)fxjj.a : a supporting or terrace wall ; see the Lexx. This meaning
232
356 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT V.
[124
Text
of
\6-yos Imo-TaTaJv 'EXeuo-ivoBtv Kal Tja/xtci)[v toiv 6jeot[v ]7r[l Kt]]<^>tO"-
S TrpcoTTjs irpvTaveias' t6 irpi6v Trapja T<Z/Zt[aiv t]o[v 8JetOt[v
XPP
<pi\cp 'A\<a Kal ir]a[pd Tap.t]<Xt[v] TOLV [0]oi[v] NtACo[<}>iX]ft)
.
.*
diro tovtov TaSe a.vr\]XcoTar Giro\y\ho($)6poiS eV[l z/]^[o-]&)^ t? fJbva-
5
dv8pd]cr[i]^ Se/c[a ItttcI Kal t]c3 [eirio-Tdrr)], T^[s i)p-']/3[as] Tft) dvhpi
o\gicdv /jLtcrObs t^? 7r/90Ta^e[as
A'
Tot
s Ta] <yp//./Aa[ra l]7rt/co-
ta :
Phhh
^al 7Tt t?7? Aet&)^T[C8os tk]s Tju']/m9
[: hll
^[]pw
heKaTr)<$ irporaveias \o-n\ia |-
1
1 P*io-6o)T'l tov Teiyovs
Ikovvtl, XiOovs avToo 7r[a]/G>['xiv Ka]t 7r[pos Tw]t epyw, rijs opyvds
io a/cXeiSov /c tov Qrjcreov, e[ls (0")]</>[Tiv]a[s
T]ciXa[v]Ta
TAl?
to
oXXvtoj oIkovvtl fjLta<a>6b^
[AA
af\^i\j\eKT0VL, b
avecis /JLicrObs
-FAAhH
TrjXocfiiXcp [t]<w /cfej^e^oroz^/zei/a)
arrjpes:
AAP>
o ararrjp'.
|||C, /ce<a :
A h h h[h]lll
C : 7rao
Tei)0<; aXeiyjraL, irapa Uap,[^]iXov cr/e?; :
("Alhl
-
'
i*>eXavTv\pLa<$
\$irapa TlafKpiXov gkt\vI'. kt\kI\%o\^ rpia rffjaefCTeta, r) %oan()
tl rovs a<f)r)vas Kal rrjv TriTT[a]v [Ka]t tt\v /meXavTrjplav Kal
fjLio-dcorel rf}<z To/bur}? tgov XlOgov Kal Trjs dycoyr/s Kai rr/s Oeaecos
evalvi t?79 iepeias ^KydOwvL ^AXcoire: oIkovvtl, tov XlOov :
hhhl
:
fiLaOcorel rfjs dvaKaOdpaecos tw [eira . . .]a> rov dvaXijfM/jLaros
20 ktltov rrjs Oecrecos Kal rov Alyivaiov els to dvaXr^fjufjua to irapa
lav :\-\ TeTpanroUai:
HHHPAA, K(f>d:
dpyvp(i)ov
HHHPAA:
ov tovtcov, to/jLt} Kal ko/jlloi) Kal 6ecn,<; tov XlOov: \-\-\-\, K6(f>a:
(oyfjs, (hv eiXKvae \vkov(p)yos MeX^rei;?, tgov ^iXlcov
:AP,
1 tov hiaTei^io-fJuaTOS dveXovTL Ta aairpd Kal tgov irvpywv Kai
25 ov
ctXP
L T?
?
? 7tvXl8os t?}<; diravTpoKv tov hoXiyov QCXoKXei iv
vi olkovvto(<;) et'9 tov TTvXwva ps,
Tifxr) Kal KO/jii&r) tgov %lX[ojv
acriv Ta irepl tov irvXwva Kal tov irvpyov Kal Ta ^vXiva
to) OLKoai:
hhlll' K(f>a:
HPAAAPhhlll-
fJao~6(OToh tols
iv Kal TnfXohevcFTOVo-iv Kal Ta vXa dvaKOfiiaacrcv Kal tov
30
\-
1 1
1
: rffiepwv :
AAP
:
ice^d
:
HHAA[P' ]
v 7r
P
i T0
09 K tov r)(TL : eiri^eaT6L Kai V7rayo)[yjL T0t9 ipyaaa/juevoLS
v TrvXoova, Trjs ?7/xe/o<x9 hvolv olkoo-ltoi[s
hhllllj
vfiepwv
APM-
ot9 iv too lepoj avSpdatv SeKa dirb tt}? T6TpdSo<; laTa/nevov tov
TJfiepoov
:AAAA
: xe4>d:
PH
'
&XP
L T3
7
?
TpiTrjs eirl SeKa tov
35
pieaTLv irapd Ta/xiaiv toiv Oeolv
:XPPPIITX-
fcal irapa Tajjbia
Kal irap eiriaTdTais ^XevaivoOev
AAIIIICX.
37
X0709 iirtcrTaToov 'RXevaivoOev Kal Tafxtoov toIv Oeolv iirl Tr}<>
pibv irapa Ta/jaatv toIv Oeolv k.t.X.
124]
FINANCE: TEMPLE-TREASURERS. 357
no. 124.
[o<|>c3]^to[s] dp%ovTO<; iirl
H^fs]
'Avtio[x]l8o-
Z^PI ifTlX,
[x]a[l irapd] Ta/ALa toIv Oeolv Nl/CO-
\\[\<a:
XXX],
#al
[V
i^io-TaTacs ^\evcnv6de\y
rrjpia ra [peya]\a
HfHr^n
*
hrffwaioLf; rpo(f)rj[$
(5): |||: K6(f)dXaio[v]
HHHAAhhhh
= eiriaTCLTr] SrjfjL-
\dtyao-iv iirl to dv[d]Ot]/jLa iv ra> 'EXeucrmw ctlt-
:
AP 1 1 : Ke<f>a\cu\
APhhh[h]l[lll]
:
Wt
eVt
rfc
OlvrjiSos
TJ79 viroXoy[r\]<; TLvdv/bLiSei iv KoWvra>
0-
Phhh
K(f)d :
HH*
[|vX]a iXdlva els (cr)(f)fjvas irapd 'Hp-
(10)
raXavrov :\-\\ :
K(f)d: Ahhhl[l*
n-pjicrt? o-(f>r)vwv, 'A[p]icrT(ovi iv K-
irpoeXaftev, Av/covpyov KeXevaavTos, rij^ irpor-
dvTiypd(f)adai ra ava\icr/cop,i>a
Pf-*
/ullXtov <tt-
TlafMpiXov tov (Tfcrjv : 7t/tt^? 8vo fc[t]pd/jLca, ra vXa ra irepl r-
Bvo /jLeSt/jivoi, Ti/jbr) tov [y^ehi/jivov
Phhh
#<
APh
(i5)||l,
K(f>a:
I pl|- : irapd Yla/x^iXov atcr/vl, : toj dirayayov-
rrjv
fxiXrov 'EXeufo-t.]
AiOKXelSa ficcrObs :
Pf-HII*
et'9 to dvdXrj/jL/jLa to KaTa ttjv ouciav ttj(v) EX-
K(f>d: \l6u>v
PHHHrAlAA^.l,
fC(f>d\aiov dpyvpio(v)
Aa&) iv LvBa : oIkovvtl
HAP'
[ucrOtoTel tov 'A-
(20)
tov irvpyov to{v) aTpoyyvXov tt}v TeTpairoS-
XiOou dpovpatoc avTiTiOefievot, dpiO/jbos :
HPP
"
dpyvpi-
HHHHPAAAAM I II*
^t[a-]0a)Tt twv ir\iv6wv t??? dy-
Qepe/cXeiSei Bokotlo) Sc[a] :
MMFX :
HHHPAAAA"
HMrOwTe-
TOV TTvXtQVOS KCtl TOV TTCLpa TOV Kr)pv/CQ)V ol/C-
(25)
Ko/ot. oIkov :
HHH
: ttXlvOol irapd Adov 'EXeucrt-
AAAPhhh

HPAAAA'
refCToatv toIs 7r\iv0o/3o\r/o--
ipyaaa/jUEvocs, dvSpdcriv Tpiaiv, TJ79
r/fiepas e/cda-
iiri tov irvpyov teal tov irvXwva irXiv@o<f)opovcr-
fcepcLfAOV, dvSpdacv
efj,
tu> dvSpl ol/coaiTO)
(30)
T6t%0?
AAPC^-
O-TCLTrjp
\-\-\
f
K<f)d
I
PPhhHIIh
TTCipd <>i\cOV-
67TL TO) ITvXoJVl KCLl T(?) 7TVpy(p Tft) TTCipd TO~
K6(f)d:
AAAAhhlll
: P*lo-6o)tol<; tols ipyaaa/JLev-
c
^KaTOvpaiwvo{s), to5 dvSpl 1koaitw[y\
\-\\\,
MTayetT<o> : tcefydXcuov dvdXcop.aTO^ :
TPHF
1
AAPhh[l llC
'
Tre-
{ib)
Tw Qeoiv NcKo<f)iX(p 'AX&)7re :
AAAhhlll
Avtio^lSos SevTepas TTpvTaveias' to ire-
358 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[124
Text
of
79113. Remains
of
accounts
of the fourth prytany.
ii4
,
Eir]t rf}<; Ke/cpoTTL&os irepLTrrr]^ Trporaveias to ireptov irapa
137
A0709 iirtaTaroop [''E]\v[<r]iv66ev /cai Ta/jL(t)(i)v rolv Oeolv eVl
epuov irapa Ta\xiai\y\ rolv 6et<v>olv : k.t.\.
213215. A few icoi'ds, remains
of
accounts
of
the ninth prytany.
216 E7Tt rr)<; \\.fca{Aav[T~\i[Sos ScKaTTjs irpwraveias k.t.X.
-263296 T/79 eTrap^rj^ rolv Oeolv tov atrov K6(j)aXata rrjs cf>v\r}<; eKuarr]^'
r)fiiKTia Svo yoivuces* Alyrji&os tcpi.
PAAAIIII,
irvpwv Svo
2g- ir]ep teariv
HH[PAA]API 1 1 1
1'
rovro 7rap&ot)tcap,ev lepoirotol^^
rols ey {3ov\r}<; /cai i "\pL(Spo[y r\r)q airap-^rj^, 01 vcrrepov
(eJkOovres rrj<; 6vcria<; rjv ifco/jbicre ^aipeo-rparo^
*
Avayv-
paaios 7rvp(t)v jxehipivoL
AAAPI
$etca>
VlA}~
298 eKTi(a) e^ovres [r]r)v i7ri/3o\rjv rip,r) rovrcov
HHAAh
K.T.X.
appears clearly from a late inscription of Corinth, CIG 1104, 21 sqq. : ra
dvaXriiJ.fj.aTa vtto aeio~fi)v /ecu iraXatdTrjTos 8t.a\eXvfxeva e-rreaKevaaev, and on a stone
belonging to the substructure of the
Xeaxv
f tne Cnidians at Delphi (BCHxx.
636)
are engraved the words: KvtSiuv 6 8a.fj.os to dvaXap-fxa
'
AttoXXwvl. It is also used
for the great enclosing walls of a theatre, ttj(v) 'EXevrivt. is D's restoration for
T H 21
; this passage and 1. 127 : tt\v oiidav tt\v iepav ov 77 iepaa ot'/cei, 11. 75 and
91 : 7) iepd oUia, must refer to one and the same building, oiida, dwelling house,
must not be confounded with oIkos, a curia or assembly-house, below 1. 24.
18. The line ends with the word dpyvpio(v) and the numerals
XX PH-
have been inadvertently omitted by the engraver.
19. By avaK&dapais may be meant the clearing away of rubbish or soil ; cf.
126 8 : to aXXo dvaKadapd/xevos ^ttl to (xrepicpov, and below, 1. 46 sq.: to; dveXovri
Kai dvaKad-qpavTi. tov irvpyov to XtdoXoyTjfJLa iwi to arepupov.
tov 'Aktitov : sc. Xidov, the stone quarried in the peninsula of the Piraeus
called 'Akttj. D quotes Ar. 'A0. tto\. 61, 1 : Svo 8e (xeipoTovovai arparriyovs) evl
tov Ileipaiea, tov p.ev els tt\v Howi^t'cif , tov 8e eis ttjv 'Akttjv. Cf. 126 16, where
Fabricius notes that ancient quarries are still visible in this part of the Piraeus.
21. dpovpaioi : i.e. rough, unworked, just as they come from the soil or
quarry. Perhaps by dvTniQefxevo\. is meant
'
substituted for ' rejected stones.
23. di[d]. Two sets of numerals follow, and the word dpyvpiov must be
supplied between them. Thus there is no need, as D points out, for Tsountas's
emendation of (fx)ia[66s] for 8i[d]. 26000 bricks at 15 drachmae per 1000 come
to 390 drachmae. For the language cf. 1. 182 sq. : irXlvdoi eis to 'HXevcriviov to ev
aorei
XPH
8t exaTov
PhHM.
24. 8iaTeixL<TfJ-a-Tos : see note on 1. 8 above. On the KrjpvKcav oTkos see note
on 1. 17 above, and 84 30.
25. diravrpoKv : see 44 4, 102 23, 104 58. By rod doXlxov, as Tsountas
suggests, may be meant the stadium which is mentioned in an inscription
(127 6) of Eleusis containing a contract for works.
124]
FINANCE: TEMPLE-TREASURERS. 359
no. 124 continued.
(114) rafiiaiv rolv 0eoiv :
XP'FAPIITX:
k.t.X.
(137)
T179 HclvSiovlSos eKTr)<^ Trpvraveias' to ir-
(263)'E/3ex0etSo? KpL.
AAA[MMM
ie]vp[mv ....
fjueSl/jivovs kirra yoivacas' [n]ai/[8]t[ovt8os k.t.X.
'The lines from 297 0 311 (the end
of
the inscription) are double the length
of
those preceding.
Nothing is known of the deme Kopt .... unless we have here a mistake for
Kopv(8a\\u)) (D). Aaos is one of several names of slaves or foreigners in the
inscription. For the formula 'EXei/criVi olkouvtos compared with, e.g., AvKovpyos
MeXtretfs 1. 23, see 1. 7 above and 118 passim.
28. oiKoac : i.e. ot/cocrtry
;
cf. 1. 29. 29. TrrjXobevoTodaiv : perhaps 'mortar-
mixers.' Cf. the use of 5etfw, Xen. Oecon. 10, 11 : devaai /cat /*dat.
31. The eTn^<TT7}s smooths down finally the inequalities and roughnesses
on the stones when laid. Cf. 1. 177 : rots diro^iaaaiv rets irapaarddas. The
word vwaycoyevs here clearly denotes a workman (some kind of plasterer?) while
in Ar. Av. 1149 it means a tool : cf. Schol. ad loc. : virayuyea 5e tov v<TT7jpa.
TrXaru 84 i(TTL (rLSrjpov, ip ^vovat tov irrjXov.
34. Merayetr < o> (viwvos). Thus the entry extends to the first six days of
the second prytany.
263 sqq. The words
ewapxo
and aTrapxv appear to be used indifferently in
the sense of 'first-fruits.' The practice of paying first-fruits of corn to the
Eleusinian deities, established by decree in the fifth century (see no. 9),
was in
force in 329 b.c. as we see from this inscription. Note that the tribes here are
enumerated in their usual order of precedence, Erechtheis, Aegeis, Pandionis,
Leontis, Acamantis, Oeneis, Cecropis, Hippothontis, Aeantia, Antiochis. Cf.
Rem. vi, p. 127, and 44 6. k/h. in what follows is for Kpid&v and the signs
AAATMMM]
denote thirty-three medimni.
297. For the lepowoiol ey (HovXtjs see 9 9. The construction is confused.
The words fjv Kbp.i<re Xcup. 'Avay. refer to a-rrapxrjs, but are clumsily interposed
in the expression ol varepov eXdbvres
(HAOONTE5I
on the stone) 7-775 0i;<rt'a?
trvpQiv fiedipivoi (for the nominative, cf. 97 5).
298. The meaning of iTri(3o\rj is not clear. The word occurs in 284 sq. :
/cat tepoTrotots
y
/3oi/X?}s
| A
(J-48ip.vot /cat e-mftoXr] -kv&
>
17/Ai^/CTeia. Qu. 'overweight.'
360 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[125
125. A slab of Hymettian marble, broken below, found on the Acropolis
;
Th. 0.110.13 m. IG n 2, 839.
Alphabet, type 1.
[] o L
247/6
WQttI AiofcXeovs apyovTO<$ Zfcipocfropioovos' \6yos rcov alpeOevrwv
vito rov Sr'/fjLOV eVt rrjv KaOaipecriv /cat rr)v iiricr/cevnv rwv iv to5
'
AcrKXrjTrLeiO)' rdBe fcaOecpeOrj irapovTos rov Upeoos rov 'Acr/cX^-
5
7TLOV Fivarpdrov Olvaiov Kai tcov eip7]p,ev(DV eirl rr)v KaOaipe-
criv Kai rrjv Karaa/ceurjv Kara to
yJn)(f)i(T/jLa,
b Te\ecr2vo<; 'Eo^teix?
eiire'
k] tov SrjpLov ^tKO/jbd^ou TLacaviea)?, TXavKov 'Vafxvovaiov, Rv-
- -
ov] Olvaiov etj 'Apevirayiroov 'Oiraooios QaXr/pea)*;, dde6yvi$o[s
K^)8a0T]]^[a]6e&)9 Kai aTparr/yov rov iirl tjjv Trapao~Kevr)v''Apcar ...
10 . . . 'EXevjcTLVLov Kai Sri/jLoaiov rod dvriypacfro/jLevov A?7
/
u[t)t-
piov tov veotT^epov rdSe KaOeipedri' apyvpco/jLcircov r)S[viro-
rihiov' $CXa]7p09 'A\ktov akdfiacnpov, oXkt)
HP*
[(pc]d\r]v
-
y]opa, o\Krj
AAAA*
aWrjv 0eo/c\j7<? Olvalo[<; ....
^/la\.0ciK7], o\Kr)
AA'
K<f>a\ai,
a? H
15
av0T}Kv], o\fC7) |||- Kt7?ctco tvttou<;
j-' QiKlTTTTriS TV7TOL [lTVT
This fragment belongs to a report of the commissioners appointed for
breaking up and re-making the dedicatory offerings in the Asclepieum. Diodes
may be the third archon of that name (the others held office 109 and 287 b.c.
respectively) ; see the list 144, Col. 11 13. On Kadaipecris and other technical
terms see 60 26.
4 Kadeipidt], 5 eipTjfjLevcov : see 45 37. Cf. the formula in IG vn 303
(Oropus), 53 sq. : rdde avveKOTrrj t&v avadrj/jLaTUjv Kara to \l/r}(picr/JLa, 6 typa-j/e
lUpyrjs.
8. 'ApeviraycTiZ'v : for the spelling see 60 26.
9. iirl T7)i> irapa<jKewf)v : see 60 26. 10. drjfxoalov kt\. : 60 42.
11. -rjdvrroTidiov : Koe. 7]8[v7t6tlov]
; but cf. IG vn 303, 72.
12. etc. 6\kt) : for the loose sjmtax see 97 5, 99/, g,
h, Col. 3, 7.
13. d\\r]v : SC. avedr)Kv.
15. The female name Kt^o-w appears IG vn 303, 77.
126. A stele of Hymettian marble; H. 1.16 m., L. 0.54 m., Th. 0.10 m.;
found near the harbour of Zea. Al. Meletopulos, 'Avk5otos i-Tnypa^-q. H
aKevodrjKT] tov QiXuvos. 'Ej/ 'A^t^cus 1882; P. Foucart, BCH vi
p. 540 sqq.
;
E. Fabricius, Herm. xvn 551 sqq.; E. Bohn Centralbl. d. Bauverwaltung n
no. 33, p. 295 (a translation, with plans); W. Dorpfeld Mitth. vm
p. 147 sqq.,
taf. viii, ix
;
Choisy VArsenal du Piree (Etudes epigr, sur larch, grecque i,
Paris 1883) ; IG n 2, 1054 ; D 537.
126]
FINANCE: PUBLIC CONTRACTS. 361
Alphabet, type 1.
A
frequently appears as
A- "Zroixridbv, except that
sometimes | with an adjoining letter occupies only one space.
e]eo[i
'Zjvvypac^al rrj<; G/cevo0r}/cr]s tt}? Xi0ivr)s tols /cpefjuaGTots a/ceveatv
Kv6vh6fjLOv Ar){i7]TpLov MeXtTeo)? QlXoovos 'Ei;r)/ceGTLhov 'JLXevGLvlov'
cr/cuo0r)/crjv ocKoSo/jiTjaac tols icpefiaGToZs cnceveoiv ev Zeta ap%a-
5
fjbevov diTO rod irpoirvXaiov rod e dyopas irpoGLOVTi e/c tov oircaOev tcov v-
ecoGoi/coov tcov bfioTeycov, jjufJKO<; rerrdpcov irXe0poov, irXdros irevrrjKOvra tt-
ohcov /cal irevre gvv rols tol^ols. /caTaTe/xcov rod ^copuou j3d0o<; dirb ro-
v /jLereaypordrov rpels irohas, to dXXo dva/ca0apdfjLevo? eirl to GTepicf)-
ov OTTpcdfiaTiel ical dvaXrjijreTai lgov icaTa ice(fraXr}v dirav opObv Trpb<z t-
io ov 8ia/3r}T7)v. GTpooybaTiel he ical tois kloolv diroXeiircov dirb tov toi%-
ov e/cdTepov irevTe k\oX SeVja iroha<; gvv too irdyet tov klovos, dpiOfibs
tcov klovoov e/cciTepov tov GTOiyov irevTe teal Tpid/covTa, hiaXeiiroov h-
ijohov too 8r)/jL(p Sid /x6cr[ti]? t?}? Gtcevo0?']icr)<; TrXaTOS to /jLtclv tcov klo-
voov ei/coGL irohcov. 7ra^o? [8]e Tror/Gei to GTpoofia TeTpdirovv, TtOels tov's
15 XiOovs evaXXa^ $>op\y.T\h\bv /cal irapd /ATf/cos. oiKoho/Ji^Gei he tou?
to^X'
OUS" TTJS
G/CVO0)]/Cr)[<$ ko]1 T0VS K10VCL<$ WfCTLTOV XlQoV, #61? v6uVT7)p[-
av tols TOiyois [ir]\aTO? Tptoov irohcov, irdyos Tptcov TjpLLirohioov, fir/icos t-
eTpairohoov twv X[yti\oov, eirl he rat? yoov'iais TeTpairohoov ical Tpioov iraX-
clgtcov. ical 7rl t^? eb0vvTr\pia<$ 67rL0r']o-t opOoo-Tdras irepl fJbzcrr) rrj-
20 1 ev0vvT7]pi[a] fjurj/cos TeTpaTrohas, Trdyos irevOrjpbiiTohioov teal Ba/cTvX-
OV, V-^fOS TpLTTohaS, TOV<?
8'
7rl T<Zfc? yOOViaLS /ATf/COS IC TOV p,TpOV TGOV Tp-
cyXixficov, SiaXeLTTcov Ovpalas icaTa to TrXaTos tt}? o~/cvo0i}/cri<;
}
Svo e/c[a-
Tpco0v, irXaTos ivvea iroBcov. /cal ol/coSo/jLtjaec [xeTwirov /caTpco0e[v
ev too /xTa[i-]v tcov 0vpoov, irXaTos Slttovv, et? Be to eiaco oeKairovv. /cal ir-
25 epiKaprtyet tov Tolyoy
^\?
1 70} v irpcoTcov klovcov, irpos ov dvou^eTat r/
0vpa e/caTepa. eirl he tov bp0oGTaTov ttXiv0lgiv oLfcoho/jurfGec tov? t-
oi~)(pvs, pirj/co^ TeTpdiroGLv, 7rXaT0? irevTe rj/niTrohlcov, eirl he Tat? yoovl-
at? firj/cos e/c tov fieTpov tcov TptyXv(j)cov, irdyos Tpi-qp.iTrohioi^.
v*tyo%
h-
e TrocrjGei tcov Toiywv diro tt}? ev0WT7]pia<; eiTTa /cat el/coGt irohcor ov-
30 v tt) TptyXv(f)(i) viro to yetGov, Tas he 6vpaia<$ vyjros TrevTe ical heica tto-
hcov /cal rj/jLLTrohiov. ical e7rL0rjGet virepTovaia Xl0ov TlevTeXr/l/cov
fjurj-
icos hcohe/ca irohoov, irXaTOS LGa tols tol^ois, v\jros hiGTOC^a, irapaGTah-
a? GTt]Ga$ Xi0ov HevTeXrj'i/cov rj "T/jL7]ttlov, ohovs viro0el<^ "TfirjTTiovs.
/cal yelGov eTU0r\Gei eirl tcov virepTovaioov vrrepe-^ov Tpia ij/jLiirohia.
35
ical Troir'iGei 0vp[ha<$ /cv/cXco ev diraGLv tols toi-^ol? /ca0' e/caGTOv to
jjueTa/cioviov, ev he too irXaTel T/oet? e/caTpoo0ev, i/^/ro? Tpioov irohoov, it-
362 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[126
AaTo? Bvolv tto&olv, Kal evapfi6a(e)i el<; eKaaTrjv tt)v 0vpi8a ycCkica*;
6-
vplBas apixoTTovcra<s. Kal eiri6r]aei eirl tov<; to'i^ovs jelaa kvkXo) k-
al tovs alerovs oiKoSofirjaec Kal yelaa eiridr'jaei /carcueTia. Kal ar-
40 ijaei Tou? tciovas V7ro6el<; arvXo^drrjv Kara Ke<paXr)v caov tt} evOvv-
Trjpla 7ra^09 rptcov r)/jLC7roSiO)v, ttXcltos 8e rpowp iroowv Kal iraXaarrj^,
fjurjicos rerrdpeov iroowv ird)(OS tcov klovcov KarcoOev Svolv wooolv teal r-
ptcov iraXaaTwv, /jltjkos aw tco eiriKpdvw Tpid/covra tto&mv, atyovhvXw-
v e/cacrrov kirra /jltj/cos rerpair
6
ooov, tov Se irpcoTOV TrevTeiroho^' tcl Se eir-
45
i/cpava eiriOrjaei eVl tov
1
; Kiovas XlOov UevTeXrjLKov. real e7ri6rjaet
iirtarvXca vXova eirl tovs iciovas KoXXrjaas, irXaTos irevTe r)p,L7ro$L-
cov, 1/^09
evvea iraXaaTwv etc tov vyjrrjXoTepov, dpiO/Ao? Se/cao/CTcb e'(/>' eicd-
Tepov tov tovov. Kal fieaopiva^ e7ri6r)crei eirl tovs Kiovas virep Tr)<$ 01-
oSov, irXaTos kol v\jros laa to?9 eiriaTvXiOL^. Kal eiriOrjaet
Kopvfyala
50 irXaTOS kiTTa TraXaaT&v, vyjros 8e irevTe iraXaaTwv kol ovolv SaKTvXocv
dvev 7-779 KaTacfropds, viroOels V7r66rj/jLa eirl tt)<$ /^ecr
0^779 fxrjKO^ Tpcoov
ttoSwv, 7rXaro9 Tpicov r)/uLL7roSicov, kol Stap/juoaec Ta Kopvtyala KepKtai-
v eirl Toov fieao/jLvoov. Kal eTriQr\aei a$r\KiaKov<$ Trdyos SeKa SaKTvXwv, tt-
XaT09 Tptojv iraXao~T(tiv Kal Tpio3v SaKTvXcov, hiaXeiirovra^ air dXXrjXo)-
55
v irevTe iraXaaTa^. Kal eTriOels ifidvTas irXaTo; r)p,nrohlov, irdyos hvo-
Iv SaKTvXotv hiaXeiirovTas air dXXr/X(ou T6TTapa<; SaKTitXovs, Kal eV-
t#e<9 KaXvpufiaTa 7ra^09 SaKTvXov, 7rXaT09 e SaKTvXcov, KaOrjXojaas
tfX-
ot9 criSypois, Sopoocras KepapLooaei Y^opivdico Kepd/xa) dppbOTTOVTi it-
/309
aXXr]Xov. Kal ifti6rj[ir\ei virep tgov Ovpwv eirl to, fieTWira K tov ivTO?
60 6po<f)T]v XiOivrjv XlOov "T/jltjttiov. Kal 6vpa<; eTriOrjo-ei ttj aKevoOrjKT]-
1 dpixoTTovaa^ et'9 t9 dvpaias, ^aXKas e^coOev iroLrjcras. Kal avvo~Tpd>-
aei to eSa(/)09 XlOols to vto<; dirav crvvapjjlottovo- 1 irpos dXXijXovs k-
al iireprydaeTai 6p66v Kal o/x<xA.t9 dvwOev. Kal hiatypd$;ei to fxeTao~TV-
Xiov Kao~Tov opOoGTaTai^ ovolv XiOlvols vyjros Tptwv 7roScov, Kal ev
65
rc3 fieTa^v KivKXiha eirt6y)ae\C\ KXeio/Juevr^v. Troirjaei Se Kal ra9
6po(f>-
a9 t9 $td pieaov,
i<fi
ojv Ta aKevr] KeuaeTat, to evTos tcdv klovwv eKaTep-
coOev
fA)(pi
tov Toiyov Siapfjb6aa<; Ka6 eKacrTov tov Kiova Kal irapd to-
v toc^ov 6KaTepco0ev Siepelo-fiaTL 7rXaT09 irevTe iraXaaTwv, vyjros ttoB-
iaiw, iiri^dXXovTL irrl /nev top Tolyov Tpels nraXaaTa^, irapd Be tov k-
70 iova irapaaTaBta aTr/crec XiOiva. Kal eirl tcov BcepecafMaTcov eirLOrjae-
l o-(pr)KLaKOv<; cTTTa
ifi
eKacTTrjv tt]v ycopav, o~vv7rXr)p(i)V p^eypi twv klovco-
v, 7tXto9 Tpiwv TraXacTTcvv, Tramps rjfinrooiov, Kal crvvcrTpojo-ec iriva^iv
dirav to ywpiov, avpi(3aXcQV Kal KoXXr/aas, irXaTos Tpiiroha^, 7ra^09 Svol-
v SaKTvXoiv. 7TOL7ja6L S[k KJal
p,ea6/Livas,
eft
wv KeiaeTau Ta v7rod)p,aTa k-
75
al TaXXa aKevr], Trap eKaTepov tov toi^ov, OL7rXd<; to v\jros, Kal eTTLKapb^-
126]
FINANCE: PUBLIC CONTRACTS. 363
l irapd tovs 7r\[a]Ytot>? tol^ov^, /cal Kara tovs klovcls eiri/cdiA'tyei kclu
i/cdo-rrjv rr)v y<opav v\jros &e Troirjcrei diro rf)<; 6po<j)f)<; rerrdpcov itoowv, r-
r)v Se f.Trdvco fjbeaofxvrjv diro ttj^ erepas dire-^ovaav irevre 7ro8a9* LKptwr-
rjpa cmjaas diro rfjs Kara)
6po(f>{j<;
p&XP
1 T
^
?
^V( opocf)rj<^
7r\aT09 rj/unroo-
80 iov, irdyos
ef
Sa/crvXcov, Siepeiaas Siepelafiara et? tov? iKpLcorrjpa-
9 to avro irdyos Opdvovs eirtdijaec Siavt/cels, eva etcarepcoOev, irdyo^
%
Ba/crvXcov iravra^rj, /cal iirl tovtcov eirtOrjaeL iriva/cas crvv/coXXrjcr-
a?, /jbrjfcos TerpdiroOa^, irXdros rpliroha^, irdyo^ Svoiv ha/crvXoiv, /cal [k-
aOr)Xd)(TL crvvapiJLOTTovTas ilj lctov tols Opdvots. fcal /cXipbaicas Troir)-
85 cret %vXiva<z dva(3aLv6iv enri rd? peaopbva^. iroirjaei Se /cal Kifiwrovs
rot9 Icttiols kcll Tofc irapappvpLacnv rot? Xev/cols, dpt0fJLOV e/carov
rpid/covra rerrapas, 777)09 to irapaSetypLa iroirjaa^, /cal drjaei Kara ro-
v Kiova eKCLGTOv /cal piav eh to /caravrpo/cv yuipiov, /cal Troirjcrei dvo-
tyvvjjLevas, rwpi puev 77-/309 tw TOiyip /ceipueva>v rop, irpoadiov tol^ov, t-
90
gov 8e Kara rovs /ciovas tceipevcov dpL^>orepov^ tovs irXayiovs ro/^of-
9,
oVa)? dv
f)
opdv airavra rd cr/cevrj Sie^tovcriv, oiroa dv
f)
ev
rfj
a/cevo-
drjKr). oVa)?
'
dv /cal
1^0^09 y
ev
rfj
cr/cevoOrj/cy, orav olfco8op,r} rov-
9 rol^ov^ 7-779 o-fCvo0ij/t7]<; SiaXeiyjrec tgov 7tXcv6l8cov ev rot9 dpp,oZ<s r\-
1 dv /ceXevy ap^tre/cTwv. ravra nravra i^epydaovrac ol puo~6(oo-dp,-
95
evoc Kara t9 crvyypafyds teal 7T/0O9 rd puerpa /cat 7rp09 to 7rapd8eiypLa,
dv (f>pdr) dpxire/cTGOv, /cat ev to?9 xpovois diro&cDcrovcriv, 01$ dv pllo~-
6d)o-covraL e/caara rwv epycov.
The inscription contains the specifications of a public contract for the building
of a aKevodrjKrj, an arsenal or naval store-house of stone, intended for Kpe^acrra
<TKe6r} (see 119 A a 41). The building is known in literature as the (XKevod-qK-q
of Philo. There was an older storehouse
(7? apxo-lo. a-KevodrjKTj IG 11 2, 807 6, 153)
also of stone, but it was supplemented by o-KevodiJKat v\ivai <ri<eije<nv rpiripoji'
(IG n 2, 807 c, 26) till its place was taken by the aKevodrjKrj of Philo, built within
the period 347/6330/29 b.c. The inscription itself probably dates from
347/6 b.c.
; cf. IG 11 1, 270, 9 sqq., an honorary decree concerning two metoecs
passed in
302/1 B.C. : et's re rr\v oiKo8op.iav tQiv vewcro'iKWv /cat ttjs CTKevodrjKris
ei<j(f)ipovTes ras eiacpopas kclO' eKaarov rbv eviavrbv tcls eis rd 5^/ca rdXavra
(cf. 32 68) /caXtDs kclI Trpodv/nws arrb Qepi.i<TTOK\e'ovs apxovTos (347/6 B.C.)
fJ.e'xP
1
Kr]<piao5[dbp]ov
(323/2 b.c). The building too seems to have been begun in 347/6.
In that year at a meeting of the eKKXrjo-ia in the Piraeus (Dem. F. L. 359) the
question was debated Trepl tQv iv roh veupiois. Foucart conjectures that the
speech of Philo mentioned by Cic. De Or. i 14, 62 (cf. Val. Max. vm 12, 2)
may
have been delivered on the same occasion. Aeschines, c. Ctes. 25, says with
reference to the archonship of Eubulus, 345/4 b.c : veupiov kclI a KevodrjKrju
(pKo86fx.ow. The building of both, already begun, was stopped on account of the
war on the motion of Demosthenes, 339/8 b.c (Philochorus Fr. 135 = F. H. G.
i
p. 406);
hence the expression r)/xlepya in a honorary decree of Lycurgus,
364 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [126
Plut. Vitt. x or. 852 a. And there is little doubt that the work was finished
under the administration of Lycurgus (see Index) in 330/29 b.c. ;
for IG n
2,
807 b, 88 shows that at that date the roof (cf. 1. 57 below) was finished : rfXwv
aid[rjpu}]u tCjv cltto 7-77S (TKvo8[rjKri^] TrepLyevo/J.evuv fivd kcliv&v
^^P,
and the
same inscription c 48 sqq. mentions the removal of a new door, probably
because it did not fit. The payments mentioned in IG n 1, 270, quoted above,
for the years down to 323/2 b.c. may well have been repayments of sums
borrowed from various public sources during the construction.
The inscription represents not so much a contract as a list of specifications,
avvypacpal 1. 2, drawn up by two persons, Euthydomus and Philo. The former
is mentioned IG n 3, 1177, 7 (before the middle of the 4th century). Philo is
identical with the trierarch of IG n 2, 803 e, 135 (342/1 b.c.) and is the famous
architect mentioned by Cicero and Val. Max. II. c, Strab. ix 395, Vitruv. 159,
Plin. xV. H. vn 125, Plut. Sull. 14, Appian Mithr. 41. Euthydomus is probably
an iTTKTT&TTis associated with Philo for the purpose of drawing up the document,
perhaps used for working purposes and not issued by the whole of the eiricrT&Tai
(see Index s.v.). Hence the use of the genitives and the absence of an intro-
ductory decree, such as we find in IG n 2, 167 (307/6 b.c) ordering the restoration
of the fortifications. For the genitives cf. ib. 1. 35.
The directions given in the document are so full, clear and precise (cf.
Frazer Pans, ii 18 sqq.) that we now know Philo's arsenal from roof to
foundation better than any other building of ancient Greece, though not a
stone of it has been found. This arsenal, the pride of Athens, was burnt by
Sulla in 86 b.c
A reference to the plans given in the works quoted above will serve to make
clearer the explanations given below.
4. Zeia: in IG n 1, 380, 10, 793/, 54, 807 c 33, 808 d, 100, 809 e 59
(3EEAI),
811 c 8 it is written Z6x. Cf. 39 and Meisterhans Gr. 45.
5. There were in Zea in the fourth century 196 of the 300 vewaoiKot or
shipsheds (Boeckh Seeurk. p. 68) and they were 6/j.oTeyeh
'
under a continuous
roof.' In these vew<xoiKoi were deposited the various stores that were not KpefxacrTa..
6. Note that in Attic measure a 7r\e#j0oi'=100 7r65es = 29.6 m.
;
a irovs
=4 TraXaarai or Tra\<XL<jTaL = 0.296 in. ; a iraXaarr] (dwpov,
dox/^v)
=
^ 8o.ktvXol
= 74 millimetres; a d&KTvXos = 18.5 millimetres.
715. Preparation of the foundations. Ka.Ta.Te/jLveii>
'
to cut below the
surface
'
; avaxadaipeadai
'
to excavate and clear away the loose earth ' ; cf. 124
19 ; o-Tpwixa.TV(;eiv is
'
to lay the foundation
'
(orpw/xa) for the walls
;
there was a
separate <XTpu}/j.a for the columns (1. 10). dca^-qTrjs : level {libella); so we have
also the verb dia^rjTi^eLv ;
cf. IG vn 3073, 186 (Lebadea) ; diafirfTi'goixevos /card
KecpaXrju. The aTpCj/ixa must be eva\\d| (pop[/u.^]5bv /cat irapa. /jltjkos, must consist
alternately of 'binders' and 'runners.' For the use of (pop/x-qbov 'like mat-
work' and so 'cross-wise' cf. Thuc. n 75, 2, iv 48, 4 and IG vn 4255, 12
(Oropus) : drjcrei Xidovs tous [lev ev tlo e8d(peL <pop/j.T)8bv avvTideis. By dvaXa/x^dveiv
(1. 9)
is meant the raising of the foundation above the level of the ground ; cf.
the noun dvdXr/ixixa 124 17. tto-xos, 1. 14, probably denotes the horizontal,
not the vertical dimension. Where, as in 1. 17, the expressions /lct/kos, ttX&tos,
it&xos all occur, the first denotes the greatest, the last the smallest dimension.
1531. The external walls.
126]
FINANCE: PUBLIC CONTRACTS. 365
16. 'AktItov \ldov : see 124 19. evdvvT-qpia : the sill, or base of the wall
resting on the arpQ/na. It derives its name from the fact that it covered and
levelled the foundation, which often consisted of irregular stones
;
cf. Hesych.
evdvvTTjpia' to ev e8a<pei crv/xfiaypia virb tQ>v
6.px
ireKrov{jiV- So in IG vil 3073, 105
(Lebadea) virevdvurrjpia is used of the substructure of calcareous rubble.
19. The opdoo-T&Tai, spoken of collectively in 1. 26 as 6 opdoardT-qs, formed
a course of blocks, the narrower sides of which rested Upon the evdvvTrjpia,
along either side of the centre line, so that they appeared to stand upright
like a o-t^Xt?; cf. 117 60, 124 17. In fact in an inscription of Thyatira in
the Pergamene territory, Mitth. xxiv p. 235, the word itself is used for the
cTrjXr} of a tomb. The words e/c rod fierpov tQ>v rpi-ykvcpuv, 1. 21, probably mean
that the length was so adjusted as to allow the last triglyph to come up close to
the corner.
22 sqq. Ka.Tepude[v] : at each end, indicated also by the words kclto. irXdros.
With dvpaias supply ovas
;
dvpa is the door proper. Cf. Amnion. 72 : dvpa fieu
yap iaTL to iiride/ma to k twv cravibtov, dvpaia (v.l. dvpai) 5e to dvoiyfxa avrb Kal to.
XaXacryuara ttjs dvpas. The word fxtTiairov, properly the space between the eyes,
is here applied to the wall with its end two feet in breadth separating the doors
and projecting ten feet into the building itself. The walls also where they meet
the hinge-side of the doors turn inwards at right angles to the first of the
pillars on each side, and to this portion of the walls the name p.Twira appears
to be given in 1. 59.
26. irXivdiGLV. stones in brick-shape; so irXLvdoi is used 117 10 sq., 95 sq.
The diminutive in this sense appears elsewhere only in Callixenus's description
of Alexandria, Athen.
p.
206 c: ALyinrTioL...Tovs toixovs Xcvkcus re /cat /j.e\aii>ais
dicnroiKLWovcri TrXivdiaL.
30. Trj TpLy\v<pip: the singular is collective in sense; cf. note on 1. 19.
31. v-rrepTdvaia: 'lintels.' Cf. Pollux vn 120: to. 8e inrepdupa inrepr6pcua.
The usual word is virepBvpov ;
cf. 117 90, IG n 1, 167, 56.
32. dLaToixa.: equal to two courses of stone. Cf. IG n 1, 167, 55: i)\f/os
ttolQ[v tov f^]e[v] eiraX^iov Tpels irodas, t[tj]s 8e dvpidos detect CTot'xoi'S and 1. 57
virepTduaia. . .waxos <rro[t]xta?a. An equivalent of ctto'lxos in this sense is 56/mos in
Hdt. i 179.
33. 656s (Ion. ovdos) is a threshold or sill. The form occurs IG n 5, 834 b
i, 52 (329 b.c.) ; see Meisterhans Gr. 27.
35. dvpibas: here 'windows,' but below 1. 37 'shutters.'
36. fxeTctKioviov: intercolumnar space, ev Tip xXdret : i.e. in each end wall,
denoted also by eKctTepcodev
;
cf. 1. 22 above.
37. ivapp.6cr(e)i : so D for
E N A P M OX. A I
of the stone.
39. 7e?<ra Karaierta : oblique or
'
raking ' cornices. For the form aleTos
('tympanum') see Meisterhans Gr. 31. The form without t is first found
298 B.C., IG ii 1, 613, 6 ([dje'ro^a).
40. aTv\ofta.Tr)i> : probably a continuous stylobate, not, as Fouc. supposes,
a separate one for each column. The length of four feet is that of the
individual stones.
42 sqq. The diameter of each pillar below is 2| feet ; the height 30 feet
(the lowest acpovdvXos
'
vertebra
', '
drum ' being 5 feet in length, the remaining
six 4 feet each, the capital iwiKpavou, 1 foot). From the relations of the
diameter to the height,
2| : 30 or 1 : 10.9 Dx Doerpfeld [Mitth. 1. c.) argues that
366 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[126
the order to which the columns belong cannot be the Doric, for in the Parthenon
the proportion is 1 : 5.6 and in the temple at Nemea 1 : 6.6. It cannot be the
Corinthian, else the height of the capital would have been much greater. It
follows that the order must be the Ionic. Similarly we find that in the interior
Ionic columns of the Propylaea at Athens the proportion of diameter to height
is 1 : 10. On the divergent views of Foucart and Fabricius see further
Doerpfeld /. c. Foucart notes that the columns are much more slender than
those of temples, because the roof-structure which they have to support is
entirely of wood.
46. The eiruTTvXia or
*
architraves ', which are united at the ends (KoXXrjcras)
,
do not occupy the whole upper surface of the capitals, a ledge being left for the
ends of the fxeabfxvai (beams across the central nave from column to column) to
rest upon. The eirLarvXia are 18 in number, for each rbvos or
'
span,' i.e., each
tti.ctv\lov, extends over two fieraKibvla. On the connexion of
fj.ea6fj.vr)
with the
Homeric fxecbofir} and 5e/j.u) see the reff. in Meisterhans Gr. 85, who notes that
the inscriptional form is found also in late-Greek glosses. For another use of
fxeabfxvq see 1. 74 below.
49 sqq. Kopvcpaia are the 'ridge-beams,' the topmost longitudinal beams of
a room which ends in gables. Beneath these and resting perpendicularly upon
the centre of the ixeabfxvat are vTro6r)fj.aTa, and the Kopvcpcuov, vTrbdr/fia and
fieabfivT} are riveted by bolts, KepKides. The Karatyopd (cf. IG n 1, 66, 167) is the
slope made by cutting away the KopvcpaTov on both sides to receive the acprjKcaKOL
or rafters, the lower end of which rests on the eiri<TTTjXiov. The ifiavres are
tie-beams resting horizontally on the c<pr)KlaKoi. The KaXvfj.fj.aTa were wooden
planks, on which the tiles were laid. The KaXitfifxara were sometimes of marble,
as we learn from 118, Col. i 34 sqq., where they are enumerated under the
works of the Trpiarat.
58. dopwaas. The word should be connected with the group 5^pw, dep/ua,
5opd, etc. and means primarily to overlay with a skin or covering of any kind.
Here it denotes the act of covering the whole of the timbered surface with
mortar or cement. In IG n 1, 167 we have the fuller expression (1. 68 sq. , cf. 73,
Kal 8o[p]wa[e]i wr]\ -rjxvpufJ-evw tt&xos TpidaKrvXip. In the cement the tiles are to
be embedded, as is expressly stated in IG n 1, 167, 1. 70 of the Tiyefibves and
naXvirrTifpes (the coping-tiles and the semi-cylindrical tiles), where the tiles are of
Laconian make or style (Aa/cwpi/cw /cepd/ncp), while here they are of Corinthian
(KopivdLw Kepaficp).
58 sq. wpos dXXrjXov. This appears to be the only instance of the singular.
Perhaps it is justified by the use of Kepdfj.^ as a collective noun and is therefore
due to a kind of attraction. Cf. Meisterhans Gr. 198.
fxerwira : see note on 1. 23.
63. eirepydaerai: see 117 36 sq. IG vn 3073 (Lebadea), 145154, 182188,
contains an exact description of the technical procedure in the laying and
levelling of a floor of marble slabs (KaTaaTpcoTrjpes).
Siacppa&i. There is to be a low partition-wall, three feet high, between the
columns, interrupted by a lattice which could be closed.On the preponderance
of et over 771 in forms like /cAeiw see Meisterhans Gr. 36.
65. The stores are to rest upon opocpal, or floors which are 81a fxeaou,
i.e., between the roof and the ground-floor. From each column to the side-wall
is extended a stout supporting-beam (dupeia-fxa) to bear the weight of the wooden
127]
FINANCE : PUBLIC CONTRACTS. 367
structure. Each beam has one end inserted {iirifiaXhovTi) for a depth of three
palastae into the wall, while the other end rests upon an upright stone support
attached to the column {irapaaTabia \iOiva).
71. acpTjKiaKovs: cf. 1. 53 above. They are placed on the diepeiapLara and
parallel to the wall.
x^P
av ma
y
De rendered 'section,' 'compartment,' 'bay.'
On the <i(p7}KiaK0L were laid planks {ir'ivaKes) and thus a continuous floor was
completed for the length of each of the side-naves. The opocpa'i are distinguished
as i] k&tu) and y\ avio, so that there was a ground-floor, a first floor, and a second
floor for storage.
74. fieao/iivas. Cf. 1. 46 above. These p.ea6fxvai, a kind of shelves, are to
line the length of each wall of the building ; they are to be continued at right
angles opposite the pillars, so as to reach from the walls to the pillars, and are
also to run along the end-walls (irapa tovs irXayiovs) till they reach the doorways.
By dnrXas to iixpos,
'
double in point of height,' is meant that there are to be two
rows of shelves, one above the other. The first shelves are to be four feet above
the opocp-q, the second are to be five feet above the first. On the ixeaofxvai are to
be stored, among other tackle, the viro^djjxaTa
;
see 119 A a 41.
78 sqq. UpicoTijpa ar-qcras kt\. These lines describe the structure of the
/jLeaSfivcu. Vertical shafts (iKpiwTrjpes) are to be erected reaching from the koltoj
6po(prj to the aw 6po<p7). To these shafts are to be attached the ends of horizontal
supports (dtepeiafxara), the other ends of which are inserted in the wall. Upon
these diepeia/nara are laid continuous spars (dpavoi) parallel to the wall, one
along the side of the wall, the other marking the limit of the shelf-structure
(hence eva eKartpudev 1. 81). Upon the dpavoi again are placed planks (wivaKes),
which are to be nailed and fitted flush with the dpavoi (e iaov rots dpdvois).
85. Chests or lockers (/a/3wroi), made according to pattern, to the number
of 134, serve as receptacles for the sails and the white Trapappv/xara or deck-
guards. On the distinction between Aev/ca and rpixi-va irapappvixara, see
Diet. Ant.
88. KaravTpoKv : see 124 25, airavrpoKv.
89. By toixov is of course meant the wall or side of the *i/3wr6s.
127. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Eleusis. D. Philios Mitth. xix
(1894) 179 ;
cf. Keil ib. xx (1895) 41 : IG n 5, 1054 d ; D 538.
Alphabet, type 1. The letters are not deeply engraved and
O
and
O
can
rarely be distinguished. Srotx^56i', but not accurately.
e e o l
354/3
TaSe efiLa0co07] eVl Alotl/uLOv dp^ovTo? ^lovvi^ccovos rerpciSc
lara/Jbevov ^LXevalvi ev tc5 lepw irapa to votlov rel^o^ to tov
tepov, ap^d/juevov diro tov iarpcofjuevov o to?? kioglv eo-rpcorao
5
Tot9 TrpoaOiois, rdobpov opv^ao 7rXaTO? okto) ttoBcov, iatjkos rpid-
tCOVTCL TToStoV,
fidOoS
^XP
L T0^ 0-TpL(f)OV, KCLl 6fC(j)Op7J<TaVTa TTjV 7-
rjv e.^co tov tepov et? to OeaTpov to eVl tov cttclBiov TtOevat to-
vs X'iOovs Trjs jjLaXaicrjs ireTpa^ irpocrenTiTefjivovTa ov av 17 ireTp-
B.C.
368 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[127
a, crvvTiOevra rovs ap/iovs crrepifyovs appbOTTovras iravTayji,
io/xt}/co? Terpdirohas, ttXcltos harohas, irdyos rpcr]fjLC7ro8iov<;, Kal
eirepyd^eaOai Kara tov GToiyov eKacrrov Siavefcf)' iirl he tovt-
(dv TiuevcLL KaraXrjTrrrjpas {itjkos rerpdirohas, ttXcltos TrevOrjfn,-
7TO$LOVS, 7T^09 7TVT7ra\d(JT0V<; TGOV K TT)S aTOCLS /Ca6cupOVfjLl>-
Giv i^6pyaadfjLepo(v) 6p6ov<$ Kal evyooviovs iravTayrj Kal roi><; d-
15
p/jLovs iroiTjaavra eirl Tjpairohiov avvriOevaL dOpavarovs Kal
dpfiorrovras iravrayrj Kal e7repyacnip,evov 6p6d Kal evrevi).
MiadcoTrjs 'Avrt/jia^o<; NeoKXeihov K^^ucrfceu?
:
Kill J HHHH'
iyyvTjTrjs NiKoarparos 'Apeatov Uetpacevs. XrYjaai rovs ki-
ovas rovs XiOivovs Tou? vvv viroKeifJuevovs vtto
rfj
arod Kara r-
20 avra irpoae^epyaaapievovs <r<fioi>8vXov eKacrra) r&> kiovl tov [ck pao-
e&)? vifros 8i7ro8a, rr)V avrrjv ipyaaiav to5 klovc
API'
/-uo"[0wti]s
-
7]<; Ylajifyikov [A
"
ky\yvr)T7]s 'Ej7Tlk[- Ae-
VKOVOi[evs'
The inscription contains a contract for making the stylobate of a row of
columns in an unfinished arod (to be distinguished from the irpoarQiov of Philo
128
3),
bordered by the South wall of the Eleusinian precinct. The contract
also provides for the erection (19 sqq.) of sixteen columns lying on the ground
below the arod. The work consisted (a) of digging a trench for the foundations,
(b) carrying away the excavated earth to the ardhov eirl tov dedrpov (cf. 124
25),
(c) laying blocks of /ulclXclkt] irerpa, (d) making solid and accurately fitting the
joints, (e) making the stones level, row by row, continuously,
(/)
superimposing
KaTaXrjTTTrjpes, according to D marble blocks occupying (Ka.Ta\a./jL(36.vu>) the
surface and forming the uppermost layer of the stylobate.
Koehler assigns the inscription to the archonship of Diotimus 354/3 B.C.,
not to that of Diotimus 286/5 b.c, because the latter date does not seem to have
been one at which the Athenians could have undertaken public works at Eleusis
or elsewhere. The solitary instance of
Q
= ov (irevreTraXdo-Tovs 1. 12) is also, if
it is worth reckoning, in favour of the earlier date.
4. The trench begins from the earpcop-evov i.e. the stylobate already com-
pleted for the front row of columns (rote -rrpoadioLs) parallel to the peribolus-wall
of the iepbv. The inscription is concerned with a stylobate for a side-row of
columns, of thirty feet in length, reaching to the wall, that of the corresponding
opposite and unmentioned side-row being apparently finished.
6. /J-txpi rod (TTepicpov: cf. 126 8. The excavation was to be continued so
as to reach solid ground and, if necessary for obtaining a level surface, rock was
to be cut away (1. 8 sq.).
11. iwepyafadai : cf. 117 i 37, 126 63.
13. t<2i> ck rrjs prods Kadaipov/nei>oji>. The expression is strange if, as 1 think,
the arod is the one for which the stylobate was to be erected. The words would
rather imply that the KaTaXrjirTripes came from some previously existing
dismantled crrod.
14. iepyaad[j.vo(i>). The stone has
MENO!.
With the frequent
128]
FINANCE: LEASES ETC. 369
interchange of the direct and the indirect construction in these documents
the mistake is a natural one.
17. The relation to one another of these numerals, which probably indicate
sums of money, is obscure.
18. The /cioves are probably the whole of those intended for the front and
two sides.
20. <r<t>6v<)v\ov: cf. 126 43. tov [ex /3dcr]ews: restored by D. For the
preposition he compares Soph. El. 742 : updovd' . . . . e opdwv b'uppuv. The
bottom drums of the columns were, it seems, not yet finished. The number 16
in 1. 21 is that of the columns.
Note. Besides no. 127 = IG u 5, 1054 d other inscriptions of the same
kind, IG n 5, 1054 b, c, e,
/,
have been found at Eleusis. They are all closely
related in date and subject, and describe the details of building of the portico
constructed at Eleusis, 317307 B.C., by the architect Philo
(126) under the
regime of Demetrius Phalereus. The two longest of the inscriptions, 1054 b, c,
unfortunately much mutilated, deal with the general structure of the portico
erected in front of the Hall of Initiation (see the plan in Frazer, Pans, n p. 504)
;
from the prescript it may be inferred that the contracts for the individual pieces
of work were arranged for by the eVicT-rctrou 'EXevaivlov. The last clause is
interesting, and prescribes that the lead and iron for the stone-clamps should
be supplied by the state. The other two inscriptions, 1054 e and/ (=128
below) relate to the structure of the columns only, the former giving details for
the capitals (cf. 1 sqq.: to. eirinpava tCjv Kiduwv tQu els to TrpocrTU)o[v] to "EXevcrcvt
TeTTcipaKaldeKa dyayeiv Ule^TeX^dev "EXevaivade), the latter making provision for
fitting together the drums, <T(p6i>8vXoi, by means of ttoXoi or bolts.
128. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken below, found at Eleusis. D. Philios
Mitth. xix (1894)
184
; IG n 5, 1054/; D 539.
Alphabet, type 1. Once in 5<xktvXov 1. 14 Q
= ov. ^tolxv^ou, except 1. 17.
O []
Et? to lepov 'RXeucrivdBe rots atyovBv-
\ol<; Toov klovcov tov irpoo~T(pov et9 to-
i>9 ap/JLovs 7ro\ov<> Trorjaac kcli e/JL7ro\ca
5
%a\/ca, Bvo et? eKaarov tov appiov ifnro-
\ia teal eva iroXov, ra p,ev /cdra> rd irpwra
eySdfcrvXa Travra^fj rerpdywva, rd Be
dvcordrco irevTeBaKTvKa iravra^y, tc B-
e dWa a/LiL/3ofiva to Xaov dirb tov fiey-
io laTov eh to iXd^iaTOV tou9 Be irokov-
9 o-Tpoyyv\ov$ tov(s) fiev /caTco fj,rj/co<; irev-
TeBarcTvXovs, 7ra^09 Be BLBa/cTvXovs, t-
r. ii. 24
370 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [128
oi>? Be avco fAr/fcos puev 7raXao~TiaLovs, [ir]a-
p^o? Be BaicTvXov kcu ^/ucreo? Ba/CTvXov,
15 tovs Be aXXovs a/jLt/3o/jLevovs rw firj/c-
L zeal T&) Travel, to Xaov airo rov pieyia-
rov et? tov i\d%t<TTov' ^aX/cov Be epyd-
aerat Ma/K&>9 tce/cpafievov rrjv BooBe/caT-
rjv, rd evBeica fxiprj ^aXfcov, to Be BooBetca-
20 rov KCLTTiTepov- teal a7roBwo~ei ra fiev e-
p,iroXia 6p0d kol aaTpa<pyj /cat evywvta,
tovs Be ttoXovs Topvevaet crTpoyyvXo-
f? 777)0? to wapaBecy/ja Kai evapfjuoaei
a? Ta efxiroXta dp/jL0TT0VTa<; Kai opdo-
25 i>? teal evTopvow; iravTa^fj, oVta? dv to
clvto TTOiwcTLv irepiayopuevoi' /MaOwae-
tcll Be KCLTa fjLvdv kol diroaTTjGei tco ae-
l irapovTi twv eTnaraToov rj tco Btj/jloctl-
(p
rj to) dp^LTeKTOVt' d7roBcoaec Be Ta e-
30 pya fir) ottokcoXvwv toi;? epya^opuevovs
tov<; Kiova<$' e/jbtcrdoodr) r) /juva
:||| ||CD* pno~-
6coTr)<; B\e*7rato? Sa)[KX]eou<? Aap, : e[y]yvr)T-
?)?
K.T) <f)ia[oi^](jt)v KecfraXtcovos
i
A<f>(c)Bvato<;.
For the date and subject see the Note above p. 369.
2. For <j(p6v8v\oL see 126 43. ttoXol are cylindrical pegs connecting a lower
drum with the drum above it. They were inserted not directly into the drums,
but into cubes of bronze, ip-irdXia, fitted into the drums so that their upper or
lower surface was flush with the horizontal upper or lower surface of the drum.
Cf. Hesych. iniroXuvTo- ive^aXXouro. So Philios. Van Herwerden Lex. suppl.
compares IG 11 5, 1054
gt
: rerpaVcu 8e Kai to[is] i/j.7roXiot.s Kai fAoXv(38oxoy&ai
6[t]cli> 6 apxi-fiKTUV KeXevrj.
9. a/jLei(36fj.eva : altering (i.e. diminishing) uniformly. For the measures see
126 7.
11. tol'(s) niv. The stone has
TO Y MEN.
17.
x
a^Kv fe ktX. "The material used shall be bronze of Marium, with
an alloy of one-twelfth." Bronze of Cyprus was famous in all ages of Greek
and Roman antiquity. Cf. H. Bliimner Techn. &c. iv p. 60 sqq. Marium is
frequently mentioned in literature {Steph. Byz. s.v., Diod. xix 79, 4,
with
Wesseling's note), but there appears to be nowhere else any mention of the
mines of this town in particular. A twelfth part
(8
p.c.) of tin is the mean
amount of alloy in Greek bronze coins which have been examined (2 17 p.c);
cf. H. Bliimner ap. Pauly-Wiss. Real-Enc. in, 1 p. 896 (D).
21. opdd Kai darpa<pq:
'
straight and rectangular.' Cf. IG vn 3073, 102 sq.
(Lebadea): irpwrov jxkv ipydrat.
(
= epydaTai) rds /Sdcreis opdds, da r pa
(3
eis,
dppayeh.
129]
FINANCE: LEASES ETC. 371
25. 67rws av kt\.: 'so that they may revolve evenly.'
26. fxtadhjaerai kt\.: 'shall contract to supply them, according to the
mina-weight and shall weigh them etc' The iin(jr6.ra.L are certainly oi
i-maTOLTaL oi 'EXevaivodev, with which also Koehler identifies the eirio-T&Tai rov
'EXevo-iuLov of IG n 5, 1054 &, 2.
30. pr) o\ttok(j}\v(jov kt\.: cf. IG vn 3073, 34 (Lebadea) : ovdev eTriKuXvovra
rb tpyov.
31. For the numerals see Rem. iii, p. 44.
33. Kr}(pio-[o(p]ui> : cf. 38 38. The stone has
A <P A A I O .
129. A marble now in the Museum at Leyden. CIG 93 and Add.
p. 899
;
cf. note on CIG 214; Janssen, Mus. Lugd-Bat. inscr. Gr. et Lot. Tab. 1;
IG ii 2, 1055
;
Dareste etc. Inscr. jur. xiii bis ;
K. Keil zur Syll. Inscr. Boeot.
p. 621 sq.; B. Keil Herm. xxix 363, note 1; D 535.
Alphabet, type 1. Occasionally
O
= ou.
KardBe e/jLicr6(oaav Ala)veL<; rr)v <>LX[X]elBa
Avro/cXel Avreov /cat Aurea Avro/cXeovs rer-
rapaKOvra err], e/carbv irevrrjKOvra Bvolv Bp-
ayjxwv eicaaTov rov evcavrov, e</>' (pre icai (j>vre-
5
vovra(<;) ical aXXov rporrov ov av ftovXcovrac rr)v B-
e /jllctOcoctlv diroBiBovai rov
f
E/"caTOyu./3a.0)^09 /xr)-
vos, edv Be fxr)
diroBiBodo-iv elvai eveyvpaalav Al-
^oivevaiv teal etc ra)v copalcov rwv etc rov ywpiov kcli
etc rwv aXX(ov drrdvrwv rov
fir)
drroBiBovros.
fir) e-
io ^elvac Be Al^wvevaiv fir]re drroBoo-Oat /irjre fiicr-
Scoaai fir/Bevi aXX(p, eco? av rd rerrapaKOvra er-
i] e^eXOel. edv Be rroXefitoi e^eLpycoat i} BiadyOelp-
wai n, elvai Al^couevcriv twv yevo/ievcov ev rw
y^-
copco) rd rj/iiaea. erreiBdv Be rd rerrapaKOvra err/
15 e^eXOel, irapaBovvai T01/9 fiefiiaOwfievovs rr/v
r)fi-
iaeav T//9 yr)s %eppov koX rd BevBpa ba dv el ev tw
yj-
copta), d/nreXovpybv
8'
eirdyeiv Alcovea<; rols erecr-
l rol<i reXevralois rrevre. xpovos
dp-^et rr)<$ fitaOoo.
345/4
T0V Ay/jLrjTpLov KdpTTOv EuySofXo? dpywv, rov Be v\iv-
ov 6 fier RvfiovXov. rr)v Be fiiaOaxriv dvaypayjsavras e-
Lcm'jXas XiOivas rov? rafiias rov? eVt ArjfioaOevov-
9 Br]fidp%ov<<;> arrjaai rr)v fiev
ev ra> tepay tt/9"H/3?79 ev-
Bov, r?]v B' ev ret Xea^ei, kol opovs eVt rco ^copia)
fxr)
e-
24
2
372 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [129
Xarrov rj rpliroSas eKarepcoOev Svo. Kal iav rts ela-
25 fyopd
vrrep rod ywpiov ylyvrjrai els rrjv rroXiv, Al^cove-
as ela<f)epeiv, iav Se ol fxicrOcoral elaeveyKooai, iiiroXo-
yi{%)eo~6ai eh rr)v /ull<t6coctlv. rr)v Se yrjv rr)v eV rr\s yeoo-
pv^las fir) i^elvac i^dyeiv /xr)Se(v)l aXX' rj els avrb to %-
oopiov. iav Se rts eXrrei i)
i7rtylrr](f)LO-eL rrapa rdaSe rds cr-
30
vvOrj/cas, irplv ra err] i^eXOelv rd rerrapaKovra, elv-
ai vitoSikov rots fXtcrOcorals rrjs /3Xd/3r)s. 'JLreoKXrjs
'Ztcdcovos Al^covevs elrrev' iireiSr) ol paaOooral rrjs <&i\-
(X)elSos AvroKXrjs teal Avreas o~vyywpodcriv ware itc/co-
^rat rds iXaas Al^covevatv, eXeaOai dvSpas, olrcves
35
fierd rod Srifxap-^ov Kal roov rapuodv ical rod /uuo~0corov arr-
oScocrovrat ras iXaas rep rb irXelarov SiSbvri, rod Se
evpbvros apyvpiov Xoycad/jievot eVl Spa^/xel rbv ro-
kov rbv rj/jLVcrvv afyeXelv diro rrjs fiiadoocrecos Kal ivy-
pdyjrai iv rats crrrjXais rocrovrcp iXarrco rr)v fiiaOoocrLV
40 rod Se dpyvpiov rrjs rc/jirjs rcbv eXaoov Xa/j,{3dvetv Al^cov-
eas rbv roKov. rbv Se rrpca/jLevov rds iXaas ifctcoyjrai, i-
ireiSdv WvOlas rbv Kaprrbv Ko/jLiarjrai rbv fxer 'Ap^ia-
346/5
v dp^ovra, irpb rod dpbrov. Kal fxvKrjras KaraXtrrelv p,r)
eXarrov rj (rr)aXa{a)rtaiovs iv rols rrepiyyrpio-p,ao~iv, o-
45
7ra)9 dv al iXdai cos KaXXcarai Kal fjueyiarai yevcovrai
iv rovrocs rols erecrc. oiSe ypeOrjcrav diroSbadai rd-
S iXdas' 'QreoKXrjs, Navacov,
e
Ayvbdeos.
The subject of this inscription is a lease of an estate by the Aixonean deme
for 40 years to Autocles and his son Auteas, at an annual rent of 152 drachmae,
with certain conditions attached. On the period 40 years B. Keil Herm. 1. c.
remarks:
'
eine ganz merkwiirdige Befristung....Sie ist fast wie ein directer
Beleg fur das Bestehen des 40-jahrigen Cyclus in Staatswesen.'
1. Ka.Ta.de: see 82 15. The land is described as rr\v 3>tXXet<5a (sc. 777V) and
1. 32 tt}% $t\\ei5o$. This, after Janssen, is D's reading in preference to ttjv
<f>e\Xeu5a etc. of Koehler and others, who quote from Poll. 1 227 (peWLs
(777)
and
the word 0eXXei/s, an epithet of barren and rocky ground. But a word having
reference to some proper name is clearly needed here, and the evidence points
rather to 3>tXX. than 3>eXX. Thus 77 <i>iXX?)s or 4>iXXeis
(777)
may be derived from
<i>tXXts or 4>iXXeas.
4. e0' core kt\. The stone has
ATE
and
4>YTEYONTA.
Perhaps the original draft, thus carelessly copied, had (pvrevouTas
^x
eiv - ^n *^e
following for ttjv (8)e the stone has
THNAE
according to Janssen, though
older copies give
A
far
A;
soincJ>|AAEIAAl.l (cf.
33).
6. The rent is to be paid in Hecatombaeon. In 131 14 the dates are
Hecatombaeon and Posideon
;
in IG 11 1, 565 the payments are made in Heca-
130]
FINANCE: LEASES ETC. 373
tombaeon, in the seventh month, Gamelion, and in the eleventh, Thargelion.
So in a lease of Amorgos (D 531 1.
4),
the most important of this kind that we
possess, the payment is to be made in Thargelion (the eleventh month in
all Ionic calendars, as at Athens).
7. euexvpaalav : see D.A. and cf. 85 37.
12. For other instances of special conditions in case of molestation by a
foreign enemy, cf. DI 1222 (Tegea), 1. sqq. : el 8e ttoXc/jlos dictKwXvaei tl tQv
kpyiov tQu eadodevTCOv
(
= K(5odevT<j)i>) 77 twu rjpyacrp.ei'iov tl (pdtpai
(
=
<f)deLpai) ktX.
16. xtppov'- 'uncultivated,'
'
fallow.' In the last five years of the lease the
deme may send a vine-dresser to the estate, apparently to ensure that the vines
shall be in good order for the next lessee.
18. For xpovos <xpx
et KT^- c^ **5 29. ixurdd) = /xLedibcreios.
19. tov Ar)p.r)Tpiov KapiroO: so used to denote corn in Theophr. C.P. 2, 4, 5.
22. A temple of "H/ify is mentioned in I(x 11 1, 581, a deme-decree found in
the same place as our inscription and probably belonging to the Aixonean deme.
23. On the Aecrxcu or club-houses, sometimes, as in the case of the famous
Lesche of the Cnidians at Delphi (cf.
p. 358), architecturally and artistically
adorned, see D.A. s.v.
24 sq. nal tav tls eiacpopd ktX. A similar clause occurs in a lease of the
Piraean deme, 131 7 sqq. But sometimes the lessee himself has to pay the
eiacpopd; cf. 130 12 sq.
27 sqq. tt> 5e yrju kt\. Cf. 9 57, 131 9 sqq., 139 7 sq.
33 sqq. It was lawful iKKoirreiv, to cut the olive-trees down close, but not
iKTrpefxvi^eLu, ei-opvTTLv, to remove them roots and all ; cf. Dem. Macart. 1073.
For the expression to evpbv apyvpiov ('the price which it fetches') cf Aeschin.
C. Tim. 96 : tov -7677 evpiaKovros dvedidoTo, Xen. Mem. 11 5, 5: orav tls oiKeTrjv irovqpbv
TnoXrj, d7ro5t5oTcu tov evpovTos. A more natural use of evpeTp occurs 79 18.
38. T\p.vavv\ see 32 45
;
the form is common in the Accounts of the Delian
temple. 42. 'Avdias : the lessee.
43. /AikriTcis. piVKrjs, properly a fungus, here clearly denotes the stump of
an olive-tree when cut down. In Theophr. H.P. iv 14, 3 ,uik?7s is used for a
disease of the olive-tree ; cf. Nicander Georgic. fir. 78, 3, 0. Schneider ap.
Athen. 11 p. 60 f (quoted by D). For
[
T]a\a[(r]Tiaious
(TAAANTI AIOY^T),
due to Boeckh, see 126 7. Trep<.xvTpi<Tp.a.Ta 1. 44, are the holes, surrounded by
pottery-fragments, in which individual olive-plants are planted (Boeckh). So in
the inscription of Amorgos (quoted on 1. 6 above) we read (1. 28 sqq.): rds
Tpa<pa[s] (i.e. T&cppovs) opv^ei kcxI to. <pvTa ep-ftaXei. . . .apnreXovs . . . .cvkcLs.. .. /cat
eiroiKodopLrjaei Teixi-ov (maceriam) virkp yijs.
46. airodocdai : for the infinitive of purpose cf. 217.
130. A marble found in the Piraeeus. C. Wescher Rev. Arch, xiv (1866)
p.
352 sqq.; A. Kirchhoff Herm. 11 p. 169
;
M. Frankel Herm. xvin
p. 314 sqq.;
IG 11 2, 1058; D 834; Dareste etc. Inscr.jur. xin ter.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but

is
2
, it is tt., .
WyaOel Tv%ec eVl QiXittttlSov lepe-
ft>9' Kara rdSe e/Jbladaxrav 'A^rt-
yu-a^o? W/jL^c/jbd^ov, <&i86<TTpaT0<;
374 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V. [130
^Avijcrcydpov, Ar/fjudpeTOS AecoaOevo-
5
V, KTT^CTta,? ^T7]CTi(j)(x)VT0^, YLTrjGLTriros
KT7](TL(f)(i)VT0S, K.T7]CTt')^dp7]^ J^TTJCTKp-
wvtos, YLrrjo-ias TtfAO/cpaTOv, Xcupea-
9 Mv7]G tydpov
',
Kv07]pL(t)v ol fieplrac,
to ipyao-Tijpcov to iv Uetpael teal r-
io r/v ol'fcr}o-[iv] rr)v irpocrovaav avr<p
KCLL TO olfCTJ/jLUTLOV TO Trl TOV KQTTptbvOS *? TOP CLlTaVT-
ay^povov E^vKpaTec JLIjtj/clov'
A<fit,Bval(co)L Bpa^fjLCJv^l-^^TO-
v iviavTOV 6Kao~Tov aTeXes aTrdvTcov,
eft
core BcBov-
ai Ta?<9> fiev
AAA
y T(
p
EjfcaTov/3aLo3vc, tcls B* elKoai ko\
15
T6TTapa<; iv toj TiocriBecovi, iirccrfcevdcrai Be to) Beofie-
va tov ip(y)ao~T7]piov icai tt}? ol/crjo-ecos iv toj irpoJT-
<p
ivcavTOJ' idv Be fir) aTroBtBoj ttjv /j,lct6ojo-lv kclto, to,
yey
pa
fAfieva rj pur) iiriaicevd^ei, ocfjelXetv civtov to Bltt-
Xdcriov /cat airievai YiV/cpaTr/v i/c tov ipyacrTripiov pL7]-
20 Oeva Xoyov XeyovTa' ivyvrjTr/s tov Trorjaeiv tu yeypa-
/jifieva Ef^/aa? 'AcfjiBvaios iv toj yjjovoj toj yeypa-
fjL/jLevcp' fteficuovv Be ttjv filaOcoatv Kvdrjptcov tovs fxepi-
tcl<$ JLv/cpciTei Kal tocs iy[y6vois] avTOv, el Be p,rj, 6<peiXeLv
BpaxfAas X'
dvaypdyjrcu [8e rdJcrSe Tas avvOrj/cas Ev-
25
KpaTTjv iv crTTJXet XcOlvet fcal crTrjaat [irapd ro\v rjpw ed-
v Be [n?] ela<f)Opd
yiyvrjTai rj aXXo tl d7r[ori]iapua(l) Tpb-
TT<p ot(go)lovv, elcrcfjepeiv YiVtcpaTr/v naTa to Tlp/r]p,a kcl-
6'
eTTTa jjbvds. eot.
This is a lease in perpetuity granted to one Eucrates by eight persons called
Kvdripiuv ol ixeptraL. It is a lease analogous to those of the class called
'
emphyteutic ' in Eoman Law, and represents a stage intermediate between a
lease in the ordinary sense and a sale. So far as Greek usage is concerned, the
party granting the lease is almost always a corporation (a city or a temple)
having a longer life than an individual and desiring to secure the services of an
individual and his heirs for the satisfactory management or cultivation of the
property. The most famous example is the Tabulae Heraclienses (cf. 21 33).
At Chios we find several leases of this kind granted by the community of the
Clytidae. Other examples are: the Olympian lease, Ro. 1 300 {o-vv[6]7jkcu
Qt)p<jjp[l k'] At'xAtdvopt ireirduTO} tov iravra
xpt>
vov
)\
an inscription of Gortyn,
Comparetti 154 11 ([0]toi. rav i\y~\ K^cr/cwpa /ca[i] rav ep. TldXa irvTaXiav
(
= (pvraXlav)
<e> 2\8uKav a tt6\is Trvrevaai (
= <pvTevcrat).). See further Beauchet Hist,
du Droit Prive de la Rep. Athenienne in 309 sqq. Among many interpretations
of the expression Kvdrjpiwv ol /xeplrai it may suffice to quote that of D. He
regards t& Kvdrjpia as the name of the property, having no connexion with either
the deme Rvdrippcoi. or the island Kvdrjpa. By fxepTrai is meant 'joint-owners,'
131]
FINANCE: LEASES ETC. 375
according to the definition of Pollux vm 136. The written character shows
that the inscription may belong to the second half of the fourth century or the
beginning of the third ; cf. the note on 1. 4 below. The name of the priest
Philippides, 1.
1,
probably the priest of the temple in which the stone was
deposited, seems to appear also on a dedication found in the Piraeus IG n
3,
1333, 1, assigned by Ross to the third century; though Koehler ad loc. thinks
that an archon is meant.
4. ~ttvr)aix&pov, Aeuadevov. For the form of the genitive see 53 2.
14. ra<<r>s fxeu...Tas de. For the articles with numerals see 61 19.
19. EvKp&Trjv. For the form of the accusative see 53 28. fxrjdeva \6yov
\tyovTa: 'without further parley.' The forms ovdels, fxrjdeis begin to appear
from 378 B.C. and from 330 to 60b.c. In the period of the
'
Atticists ' of the
empire the older forms greatly prevail. Meisterhans Gr. 258.
25. 7rapd to]v r/pu) : restored by D. Inscriptions give both ijpu and r/pua for
the accusative. Meisterhans Gr. 139.
26. arr[oTi\Lap.a : for the forms in retcr- see Meisterhans Gr. 36, 180. The
same word occurs in the iepa avyypcuprj of Delos, quoted BCH xiv
(1890) p. 431.
27. Kara to rifXT}p.a kt\.: according to the ratable value calculated at seven
minae. The rent of 54 drachmae (1. 12)
paid by the lessee comes to
7f-
per cent,
on the seven minae. Boeckh St.
3
i 178 (cf. u note 227) refers to Isaeus irepi
rod 'Ay^. k\. 42, where in a similar compact the rent is
8f
per cent. Cf. 85
introd. (the percentage there is on the purchase-price).
131. A stele of white marble in the British Museum; H. 1ft. 2 in.;
Br. 1 ft. 3 in. CIG 103
;
BMI, i 13
; IG n 2, 1059
;
Dareste etc. Inscr. jur. xm
;
D534.
Alphabet, type 1. Sroix^oi'
"
but without the precision which marks the
inscriptions before Euklid."
A
is frequently
A
and
O
is
O-
321/0
'Etj-^
'
Ap-^LTTTTOV OLp^OVTOS, QpVVLCOVOS 8r)[Id
p^Ov[vTOS"
318/7
kJato rdSe fiMrdovcriv TLetpaLels YlapaXiav kcli A\/j,vpi-
8]a teal to ^rjaelov kclI ToXKa re/iivr) diravTa' tov$ fiiaOco-
<r]a/jLvov<> virep : A : Spa^fid^ KaOiardvai diroTi^'qp.a t?}? /jl-
5
i\o~
6
gktecos d^io^peayv, tou? he ivrbs A hpa^/x(a>)v eyyvr]T7j-
v] drrohthoiievov rd eavrou t?}? fjuaOoocreoos' eiri Tolshe
fi-
i\o-0ovaiv dv7riTifjL7)Ta /cat arekr)' iav he tis elo~(f>opd y-
C\yvr)Tai diro rcov ywplwv tov Tifirj/jLaTOs, tovs hr^jjLOTa^ e-
i]cr(j)pLV' rr)v he (l)X(v)v tcai rrjv yr)v /jltj e^earw e^dyetv ro-
io v]? fxtcrdaycra/jLevovs fi^re iie rod S^aelov fjurjre eV ruiv dW-
G)V re/JLevoov, /jirjhe ttjv vXrjv dXXoa r\ to3 yjuapiw' o't yiucr[0a>-
ad/jLevoL to ($ecr/J,o(fi6piov
kcli to tov ^^olvovvto^ kcll (t)-
aXha evvoyuia ttjv /jLLO-6(<o[cr]iv kcltcl6i]govo-l Tr/fx fxev rj/xla-
eav ev toj 'Kkclto/jl/Scllgovi, Tr/v he rj^iiaeav ev tw Hocri&e-
15
wvr ol /xicrdcocrd/jLevoL Tlapakiav kcli
'
AX/ivpiha kcll to 77-
376 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. V.
[131
crelov Kai raWa el ttov n ecrrlv, ocra olov re kcli Oeynrbv
eartv ipyaatfxa nroelv, Kara rdhe epydaovrat' ra
fxev e-
vvea err] 07T&)? av fiovXcovrai, tc3 Be hetcdrcp errj rrjv 77-
fiureav dpovv teal /jlt) 7rXel(o)), 07tg>9 dv ra>
fJLtaOcoaafxevw
20 fxera ravra
ef/>
VTrepyd^eaOat diro rfjs 6ktt}<; eVt 8e/c-
a tov AvOecrrrfpioovos' edv he ifKelcd dpbaei rj rrjv rjfJULcre-
av, Ttov SijfioTWv earco 6 KapTrbs 6 irXeicnv rrjv ol/clav rrj[v
kv
e
A\fju>p]tot areyovaav irapaXaficov Kai opOrjv, Kara r[a-
vrd
---_-____
_]j, bpOal
This is a general law setting the terms of leases granted by the Piraean
deme, not a contract between the deme and an individual lessee. The deme
appears to have found it necessary after the end of the Lamian War and the
occupation of Munychia by a Macedonian garrison to re-let its properties and to
publish or republish rules affecting leases. The date may be either 321/0 or
318/7 B.C.; there was an archon Archippus in each of the two years.
2. UapaXlav ktX. By HapaXla is probably meant some portion of the large
district of that name on the southern and eastern coast of Attica. For
'
A\/j.vpi[8]a, doubtless so named from the brackish nature of its soil, cf. Hesych.
aX/nvpides" aryiaXoi" Kai tottos ev
rfj
Attiktj irapa ras eVxaridj, ov roi)s veKpotis
e^e^aXov ;
but the places may not be identical. By Q-qaelov may be meant the
Theseum between or near the Long Walls (cf. Andoc. De Myst. 45). See Frazer
Pans. 11 p. 149 and Index s.v. opoi.
4. cLTTOTifXTjixa: 'security'; see Index s.v., and cf. 78 18.
5. 5paxt4_u]p :
APAXMAN.
Those whose rent is less than 10 drachmae
must furnish a surety who can sell his property, i.e. whose property may be
seized and sold, to pay the rent. It probably differs very little, as D suggests,
from the irpdais ewi Xv<ret ;
see Index s.v. opoi.
7. dveTriTi/xTjTa Kai dreXTJ kt\.: cf. 85 13sqq., 129 4sq., 130 25 sqq. Here
the deme remits the reXy i.e. the taxes or rates due to the deme itself; the
eiacpopd, which it cannot remit, it undertakes to pay for the lessees.
9. ttjv he (l)X{v)v. the stone has
Y A I N,
which IG and BMI retain; but
the comparison of 21 23 justifies the correction. Here ry
x^P^-V
(not, as in
129 28, els to x^plov) ma
y
De taken as a dativns commodi (D).
12. ^xoivovvros. The word being clearly the name of a place, not of a
person or hero, the genitive must depend on ewofuov :
'
the lessees of the Thesmo-
phorion and of the pasturage-tax of Schoenxis and the other pasturage-taxes.'
For (r)dXXa the stone has
21 AA A A.
For the times of payment cf. 129 6.
18. %tiq. The change from
y
to ei in the fourth century b.c, (cf. 31
3)
as the result of approximation in pronunciation is common enough ; but the
converse substitution of
#
for et, as here, and IG n 1, 52 c 12:
hoK-fi
(indicative)
is very rare; see Meisterhans Gr. 39. For ttjv TjfxLcreav ktX. cf. 129 15, and for
the orthography rjfiiaea see Meisterhans Gr. 150.
19. ,rXef():
PAEIA.
23. artyovaav ktX. Cf. D 531 (Amorgos), 25 sq. : riyr) areyva irapt^ei /c[cu
Ka]raXei\f/as -rrapaduxrei (cf. IG II 5, 314 c 24 sq. : TrepiaXe[i\f>a]i tovs (3io/xoijs).
opdbs
'
in sound repair ' is so used Thuc. v 42, 2 and 46, 2.
Section VI. Administration of temples, regulations for
ritual, oracles, edicts of priests, foundation of a sanc-
tuary, erection of a taurobolic altar.
132. Two slabs of Parian marble, much fractured, found on the Acropolis.
Slab A is too imperfect for reproduction ; slab B only is given below. Lolling
'Ad. 1890 p. 627 sq. ; id. AeXr. 1890
p. 92 sq. ; Doerpfeld-Wilhelm Mitth. xv,
1890, p.
420 sqq. ; IG i Suppl. p. 137 (cf. i 18 and 19; Suppl.
pp. 57, 58 and 128).
Cf. Dittenberger Herm. xxvi, 1891, p. 472 sq.; Furtwaengler Meisterwerke der
griech. Plastik p. 159 sq. ; Doerpfeld Mitth. xxn, 1897, p. 159 sqq. ; Frazer Paus.
ii p. 560 sq. ; Koerte Rh. M. Lin, 1898, p. 265 sq. (cf. p. 239), whence the text
is mostly taken.
A&AAE(=e,
ei,
v)TH(=h) OIKUMN (X*
=
?)
O
(=o, ov, to)
PF>STY<J>X
~LTOLxr)bv except at beginning of A and end of B
; <p<j =
\p does not occur in
what remains ; the sign of punctuation is
Slab B.
Td dyyia(?) rd k\fJL iroXei
\ ocrots ^pcovrat ir\k^)v 6o~a
Io-tI Iv o-crr)\i]acr/jLevoi<;

OLK7jfi[acrt k\dfjb irap ifcacrT-
rovs ra/jLL-
f
te^ovpyovvr-
Ka]ra rr\v itoKlv
\
ypd[tya<r]0ai
a? a
\
rd tepd :
c
oi e'[. . .]i/
5
dvai %VTpav

/jltjB av firjBe
/MrjBe to 7rvp
\
dz/[dirrciv edv 8]e Tt? r
ovT<av ti Spa el]$<w?
|
itjeivat 0[od]v yLte^[pt rp]t(ov [d-
peXwv TOi<rt r]a/jLia<Tl

ToU9 [Upovp-y] o0^Ta[s] yLt[r| d*yeiv
fir)[Bkv 4k tov v]ew

Kal TOV irpo\yt\Lov Kal r\ov /3[oi]/JX)v

[Kal v6-
io roOev
\
t[ou v]ew

ivrb<; rod k[vk\ov Kal Kara '\dirav
\ to
'
E-
Karo/jL7r[tZ]ov
/i^8' 6v6o\y\ eyXjiyciv
\
lav 8]e tls

rovrto-
v tl $pa[i] e[l8<os 4]f[et]i/a^ : dtodv
\y-i\xP
L T
P
L<*> V
: o/3e\w-
v
Toltrt Ta/ji[Ca<ri

Tds]
'
iepea[s] tcls /jl iroXet Kal r-
a? fafcopow; [ui^ ' i\nv ol]/crjfj,a rafjutelov \
t'/x iroXec

fju-
378 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI.
[132
15 rjoe i7TV[ve<rQa\.
dv 8c tls t~\ovt(wv) tl 8pa

evOv-
^e[o-0ai ' KaTov] Spa^firja^i xal] Tou? Ta/JLias
\
iav e'&>-
crt : v0vvo-0cu] tca.TOV Spa^firj[(7L
] T olKrj/juara
Tol ev tw
'
EKaT]oyLt7re8co avolyeiv [tovs] ra/jLias
\
p/r\
6-
\tllov t) Sis t]ov fjL7]vb[<$] OeaaOau \ ra[<$ ' 4v]a$

??[p.pa]?
20 Tas irpo tt}s vov][jL7)vta[<; ]i T17 et
to
'
T][i]to-u 7ra[p]oz/Ta[s '
oi>s
8'
av \ii\iTr]
\
hvv-
a-ros uv
; diroTtveiJz; CVO opa^fjL^d ^Kao-rov ; <nrp]<7TTet-
v 8 To(p) ir]pu[Taviv a~\v 8e /Jbij, Ka[rd rd vop.ij;op.va] V0-
vve<r]6cu

(f>a[i]vLV Se

To(yit) 7r[pvTaviv to, d81.Ktip.aTa] to-
25 is] rafjiiaai

t eV tc3 Xt[0a)
^Ypapptva.
T^Ot' eBo^ev

to3 ^^[ua e]7rt ^[iXoKpdrous apxovT-
0?
ra eV ro?^ A.(-'#ot[v Tovr]ot^.
This inscription, as may be seen from the formula B 26, might equally well
have been placed under the head of Decrees ; but the subject-matter deals with
the duties of the Ta/xiai, who are mentioned in A 1, in protecting the various
precincts, temples, and sacred objects on the Acropolis. It was conjectured by
Lolling that the slabs formed part of the pronaus of the Old Temple of Athena.
The inscription is commonly known as the Hecatompedon inscription from
B 10 and 18
;
and on its authority, the name Hecatompedon has been assigned
to the Old Temple; this, however, is doubtful; see notes below.
The text is divided into sections by marks of punctuation,
\ \ ;
there was
perhaps another in 1. 4. The enactments, of which the restoration is partly
conjectural, seem to be as follows

11.
14. The ran'iou shall make an inventory of all sacrificial vessels not
kept in sealed chambers.
11.
4
8. Regulations for sacrifice, and prohibition of lighting fire (probably
on the altar) ; fine to be imposed by the tci/jlLcu, up to 3 obols.
11.
813. Prohibition to remove anything from
"
the temple, the pronaos,
the altar, and south of the temple within the enclosure, and throughout the
Hecatompedon; fine to be imposed by the ra/itat, up to 3 obols.
11. 1317. Prohibition for priestesses and female sacristans to have any
private store-room on the Acropolis or to bake there ; fine 100 drachmas ; the
same for rafilai allowing it.
11. 1725. Order for the ra/xicu to open the store-chambers in the Hecatom-
pedon and to inspect the contents not less than twice a month on prescribed
days. Those absent at inspection to be fined two drachmas. Duty of the Prytanis
to exact fines and report violation of regulations to rafxiai.
1. 10. kvk\os (F's restoration) may mean an enclosure; not necessarily
circular. Cf. Hesych. kvk\os' 7rept'/3o\os, and kuk\oi of divisions of the market,
Wachsmuth Stadt Athen 11
1, p. 462.
<Ltto,v to "EKarofxTredou. The order here, as Korte points out, makes it hardly
possible to interpret Hecatompedon as referring to the old temple, mentioned
just before. He identifies it with great probability with the 7rept/3oXos S. of the
133]
RITUAL ETC. 379
Old Temple, in which, as we know from 2 C 30, treasure-houses existed, cf. 1. 17
rot, olKrifxcLTa to. ev tu "EixTo/j.Tn?5u. This precinct may have partly coincided
with the site later occupied by the Cella of the Parthenon, News 'EKaro/inredos.
23. rb/j. TrpvravLvprobably the president for the time of the college of
TafiiaL. Korte restores A. 1 'Ek Tja/Mwv [/xeVeif eKaaTore ']eva ev tt}[i 7r6Xet, and
suggests that this one was the prytanis.
133. A slab of Pentelic marble broken below (H. 0.52 m; Br. 0.21m;
Th. 0.11 m) found in the Piraeus. The stone is inscribed on (A) the front,
(B) the left side, (C) the upper surface, (D) the back. Dragatsis, 'E0.
dpx-
1885
p. 86 sqq.; IG n 3, 1651 ; D 631. Cf. v. Wilamowitz Isyllos von Epidaurm p. 100
;
Fritze De Ubatione Graecorum, 1893, p. 35 sq.
Alphabet, type 1 ; no
f", E
~
e >
s O
= o, ov.
B
HXlcd
6
dpeaT7Jp[a]
fCTjplov.
M.V7]/jLO-
5
avvy
dp6a[rr\]-
pa
/crjpLo[v.
V7](f)ci\[i]
ro oi rpels
/3
CO/AOL.
c
[Nr\]<f)d\iOL
rpels
jSco/jLOL
D
NrjcfraXcoi.
o i
Kara rdSe irpo6veo~6a-
r MaXeaTy iroirava rp-
icl' AiroWcovo iroirava r-
5
pla' Eipfirj iroirava tpi-
ce lacrol iroirava rpla' 'A-
Kecrol iroirava rpia' Ua-
vaKeta iroirava rpia'
fcvcrlv iroirava rpla' /cv-
io VTjyerais iroirava rpi(a).
vacat
E l^ V S
)|
|1A o ?
lepevs Acr/cXrjTriov
rds crrr}Xa(; dv0r]K[i
1 5 T9 ITpOS TO?? (3tO}JLols,
ev ais t iroirava irpooros
e^rjKaaaro, d ^prj irp[o-
6vO-0[ai ....
The left side (B) is thought by Dragatsis, on examination of the characters,
to be a later addition. But Koehler remarks that All sqq. appear to be by a
different hand from that which wrote 110, and yet they must have been
inscribed at nearly the same time. Lines 110 certainly belong to the early
years of the fourth century B.C.; note also, 1. 13, O
=ou in 'AaKXrjmov. The
inscription contains directions concerning the kind of sacrificial offerings to be
made to various deities. Compare 138, where not only the offerings but the
months and days on which they are to be made are specified.
380 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI.
[133
A 2. Trpodueadai. Sacrifices are to be offered to certain deities before (irpo-
;
cf. 122 37 irpodvixara) they are offered to Asklepios, 1. 13 sqq. Among these
deities besides the three daughters of Asklepios appear Apollo and Maleates;
here they are separate personages, but in the Troezenian metrical inscription of
Isyllos (IG iv 950, 29 sqq. ovbe" ne QeaaaXias ev Qpliacr] ireip-qdeiris els dbvrov
Ka.Taf3as 'AaKXyTTLod, el /at)
i(f)
dyvov irpZorov 'AttoWcovos (3o)/ulov dvaais MaXedra)
they are identical. Possibly, as Wilamowitz Isyllos p. 100 thinks, the confusion
was a growth of time.
5. Hermes is not often reckoned among physician deities. In sacrifices he
is however connected with 'T7ieia; see W. H. Roscher Lex. d. gr. w. r. Myth, i,
2 p. 2379.
6. On 'Idaib and Ilcu/d/ceia see Diet. Biogr. 'A/ceo-w was daughter of Asklepios
and Epione (Suid. s.v. 'H-movr)).
9. Kvaiu

nvvyiyerous. There is some doubt as to whether actual animals or


8aL/j.oi>es are meant by the former; and consequently whether KvvrjyeTai are
merely keepers or themselves dai/xoves. That dogs were kept in the Asclepieum
of Epidaurus appears from IG iv 951, 125 sq. (an inscription recording cures
effected in the temple): o'[ros] inrap virb kvvos tQv Kara to lapbv 6e(pair)evbixevos
rods 67r[rt]XXous (eyes) v[yiri]s, airrjXde. If dogs are meant the word irpodveadcu
can be used only loosely of the supplying of food to them.
17. e^rjKacraTo: 'divined' the correct number to prescribe.
B. Krjpiov. Honey cakes were ranked among vrj<pd\ia tepd, or wineless
offerings, the altars on which they were placed being here called vrjfidXioi. fico/mol,
unless by (Bu/xoL is meant, as D suggests, cakes in the form of (SwfioL; cf.
Pollux vi 76: KeKXrjvrac 8e drrb rod
o~xVf
JLaTs> wairep koA 6 (Sous' irijxixa yap ko~ri
Kipara
^x
ov Treirrjyixeva. For the offering to Helios and Mnemosyne, cf. Polemon
ap. schol. Soph. O.C. 100: vrj<pd\ia jxev iepd dtiovai (sc. 'Adrjvdioi) Mvrj/xoavvrj,
Movcais, 'Hot, 'HXty, "ZeXrjvrj, ^v/xcpais, 'Acppodirrj Ovpavia. In dpeaTrjpa Krjpiov
both words are substantival
'
a honeycomb as a propitiatory offering.' The form
dpeo-rrjp is vouched for by Pollux I. c. Cf. IG n 3, 1662: Moi/jcus dpecrTrjpas
[l]ll,jpa|||.
134. One of the Choiseul marbles, now in the Louvre. CIG459; Froehner,
Inscrr. 48 ; D 590 ; IG n 3, 1654.
Alphabet, type 1 ; no
f
nor
\p ;

in the restored 1. 5.
'O] #eo? e^prjaev tco ^rjfjbtp tco
'
A0r)[ya.i<)v dvaGeivai
r]r)V ol/Ciav TTjV AtJ/jLCOVOS teal TOV tc[r\irov tov irpo<r6vTa
TCO
'
Aak\7]7T ICO fCdl CLVTOV ArjflCOVa [UpX ctvai avTOV.
f
Iepeu?
Atf/jicov Ay/jLOfjueXovs Ylaiav[i6v<s dvQr\Kev
5
teal tt)v oiKiav teal tov ktjttov irpoa[ra^avTos tov Geov,
teal TOV Btf/JLOV TOV 'AOrjvaicov Sov[ros Upea ctvai
tov 'Ao~fc\7]7riov kcltcx Tr]v fiav[rdav.
135137] RITUAL ETC. 381
The restorations are mainly Koehler's.
Demomeles, whose son Demon on the bidding of the oracle
(6 debs probably
=Apollo) dedicates his house and garden to Asklepios, was cousin of the orator
Demosthenes, but he was older than the orator, as we may infer from the fact
that he had a house while the latter was still a child (Dem. c. Aph. A 816).
From this relationship and the alphabetic characters we may place the date not
later than the middle of the fourth century b.c. Koehler notes that we have
no means of knowing where the shrine or temple of which Demon became
priest was situated. It was certainly not the temple of Asklepios on the
southern slope of the Acropolis.
135. A cippus of Pentelic marble found in the Piraeus. Pittakis 'E0.
dpx- 2784; IG n 3,
1661.
Alphabet, type 1. Ztolxv^ov.
'ApTe/LuSo?.
Apparently directions are given to the
>
A
/-\ r\ aKokovdoi (cf. 2 B 12) and dovXoi of a
temple to sacrifice to Artemis each their
ll0V0fA<pa\Xa.
fxov6fj.(f)aXa, perhaps cakes with one knob;
cf. davls 6/ii<f)a\6ea(ra Horn. II. vi 118.
novo-
^ne inscription should belong to the
fourth century B.C.
AovXJot
136, 137. Two altars of Pentelic marble, found on the Acropolis.
(136) Kumanudis 'A0. v 329; IG n 3, 1665
;
(137)
IG n 3, 1666. Cf. Koehler
Mitth. ii
(1877) pp. 249, 250, note 1.
(136) HPAKAEA^
OYEINTPIAMONON4>AAA
(0
is
7 )
%vei,v rpla fjLOvovfyaXa.
lu
(137)
iPEIEBAOMOYBOY
Qvtiv r]pl<; e/3B6/jLov<i /3ov<;.
These inscriptions containing ritual directions, to judge from the alphabetic
characters, may belong to about the end of the third century b.c or a little
later. This appears to be the earliest inscription in which the form 'Hpa/cXe'ws
is found: see Meisterhans Or.
p.
133. For ixovbv<jja\a see 135. Hesychius s.v.
e(38o/j.os /3ous (see also /3o0s e/35o/ios and /3ous) explains : eUos 7r^uaros Kipara
Zxovtos. See Muller Frg. hist. Gr. i p. 362, 10.
382 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI.
[138
138. Two fragments of white marble, intact on the left margin, found at
Eleusis. A. N. Skias 'E0.
dpx-
1895 p. 97, n. 12; D 628.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but

is
2
.
a.
v et? EXefo~ivio\y
irevirrei lara/juevov
ipo(fxivTr) Kal Kt'ipvKL
el]? apiGTOv tt)v eoprrjv
5
Trpoayopevovcnv rwv
(-Ml
YIpOT)pO(TLCOV.
e/3$6/jL7) larafjuevov
A A
A A
'AttoWodvi UvOlo)
[a]t'f
f
te[p
Kal TCL
$'
lepols, 7Tp6(r)0V0V Te\
io Kal tcl /jLerd to[vt]ov no<ret[8tovi
rpaire^av Koa/jurjaac 7re\(a)[vos
tq) 6ea>, lepeooavva ie[p~\el. iX . e . ?
tpo(f)dvT7] Kal ra[i]?
A A
15 cepetal? rats [ev] 'EXfeJucrt^i
iv rfj 7ravv[v)')([C
1
\8L
irapk'yeiv
^raicTTa Kal r
b.
7r[p]o? [t]o fxeyapov
.... fierpa
rfj
lepeia
rf)
rod TLXovtcovos lepeia
era? rolv ecryLto[<f)6poi.v
5
1 Kavovv
? v\a eirl rov (Sa)}i6v Kal ....
We have here an account of disbursements made to various Eleusinian
officials in connexion with festivals. The alphabet points to the end of the
fourth or the beginning of the third century b.c.
2. The month is Pyanepsion if D (ad Inc.) is right in arguing, as he does
at some length, that the llpoTjpoaia, 1. 6, were celebrated in this month. For
the Hpo7]p6(Tia cf. 65 28. D also points out that A. Mommsen Feste p. 192,
note 5,
was wrong in doubting there was any mention of the Uporjpoaia as an
eoprrj
;
see 1. 4.
8.
'
AirbWwvi Ilvdiio. D refers to Harpocr. s.v. Uvavbxf/ta' 'AttoWJjvlos Kal
ax^^bv iravres ol Trepl t&v 'A6t]utj<tiv ioprQv yeypcupbres \\va.ve\piCjvos i^db/xrj ra
139]
RITUAL ETC. 383
Tlvavixpia 'AiroWtovi dyeadal <pacrii>, and concludes that the festival referred to in
the text is undoubtedly the Pyanepsia and the month in question Pyanepsion.
9. t& e^' iepoU. D would identify these with the [0tf]<rrpa of a Coan
inscription P. and H. 38 1. 24: [du~\<XTpa didorai ra 0e eXcu[ov] re-ropes KorvXiai
kt\. ;
cf. 141 24. Trpb{T)ovov is D's restoration for
PPO TO N-
The meaning
is 'a covering' for the table; cf. Pollux x 191 where a -rrporbviov is included
among (xpaafiara as parts of iepa uKev-r).
11. rp&wefav
KoapLTjaai : cf. 155 2. For ire\av6s in col. 2. (restored by D)
see 9 36.
12. ie[p]ec:
I E OE I For ieped}<rvva cf. 84 4, 87 6.
13. The blank should be filled up with some day having reference to the
Thesmophoria (of. 1. 16) which took place before the middle of Pyanepsion
(Mommsen Feste p. 19 note 3). D.
15. Restored by D.
18. \pcu<jTa: cf. Schol. Ar. Pint. 138 : {xpataTov) &\evpot> eXaup 5e8ev/xeuov.
b
An altar of Pluto is mentioned in the Eleusinian inscription (part of which
is given in no. 124) IG n 2, 834 b.
139. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken below, found near Athens.
Pittakis'E0.
dpx-
3139 ;
IGr n 2, 841; D 568. Cf. Martha Sacerdoces Atheniens
p. 91 (transl.); Haussoullier Vie municipale en Attique 109 sq.
Alphabet, type 1
; f
is not present
;
is
2
. Pittakis gives
A
throughout, but
Koehler thinks that both he himself and Pittakis were misled by the smallness
and indistinctness of the letters, and that the date is not much later than the
end of the fourth century b.c.
A
frequently appears as
A
and
O
as
O.
%Ol.
O lepevs tov
'
AttoXXcovos tov 'EtptOaaeov 7r[p-
oayopeveo ical dirayopevet virep re eavr[ov
real twv Sr)[\io]ra)i> ical tov Brj/xov rod
'
A6rjva[C-
5
gov firj
(fc)67r(r)eiv to lepbv tov
'
AttoXXcovos fir/Be
[<f>-
epei{v) vXa /xrjBe xovpov /xrjBe (ppvyava fir)8[l
4>vXX6[$]oXa etc tov lepov' av Be rt? Xrjcf^Oel [k-
otttcov r)
(frepayv
tl tcov d[ir]eipr]/jLevcov etc tov [i-
epov, av fiev BovXos el 6 Xr][$\6eL$, /jLao-Tiyco[<r-
io Tat 7revTT)K0VTa TrXrjyds, teal TrapaBcoaet [a-
VTOV Kol TOV BeCTTTOTOV TOVVOfia 6 lepevs [t-
o3 ftaacXel ical Tel (BovXel Kara to y\rrj^>ia\y.-
a Trjs /3ovXr)s Kal tov Bijfiov tov
'
A0rjvalayv
av Be eXev0epo<; el, 0(a))daec avTov 6 lepev[s
15 fiTa tov Brj/jLap^ov TrevTr)Ko{v)Ta S/oa^y-iat?
384 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI
[139
Ka(l) 7rapa8a>cTi tovvo/jlo, avrov tw /3aat,\[tl
Kal rel /3ov\el Kara to 'yjrrjcfuo'fia r^<? /3ov[\-
?}? Kal hrjfiov rod 'A6r)vcd(ov.
This is an edict of the priest of Apollo Erithaseus; for the epithet cf. Hesych.
'Epwct0eus (read 'E/n0a<rei/s or 'Epidao-eos) ' 'A7r6X\cov kv rrj 'Arrt/cT/. The edict
concerned the sanctuary of some deme, but its provisions were also enforced
by the superior authority of the drj/xos twv 'Adrjuaioju (1. 4 and 18).
5. k6tttiv. The k and the r, and below 11. 15, 16 the v of -kqvto. and the i
of /ecu are added above the line.
6. Kovpov: probably from /cetpw, 'faggot'; u\a, 'logs.'
7. <puA\6jSoAa : perhaps
'
fallen leaves
'
; <pv\\o(36\os
'
deciduous,' as a
botanical term. For the prohibitions in the following cf. 9 57, 129 27 sqq.,
131 9 sqq.
9. fAaaTiyuxreTai : so used in a passive sense in Plat. Rep. ii361e: fxaari-
yuaeTcu, crTpefiXuxxeTcu, dedrjaerai; cf. 126 25. For the flogging penalty inflicted
on slaves cf. 47 41.
10. 7rapadu}(XL avrbv Kal...Tovvofj.a. The zeugma may be one of the 'vestigia
sermonis rustici' noted by Koehler as a characteristic of this and other docu-
ments emanating from demotic authorities. Cf. below 1. 16, and the use of
d(ix))a<rei, 1. 14, for w/juw<rei.
140. A slab of white marble. Found at Athens in a private house.
B. Latyscheff BCH v
(1881) p. 262 n. 2; D 632. Cf. Haussoullier Vie
municipale en Attique p.
154.
Alphabet, type 2; 7r = 7r
4
; /3, ,
do not occur; in 1. 5
fin. Y
is written
inside
O-
'\ephv to Tefievo[s
tov ^Ko-KKr/Tnov Kal
Try 9 1 yoeias.
Bveiv tov$ yecopyovs
5
Kal tovs irpocr^wpov^
toIv Oeolv,
f)
Oefjbis,
Kal t<x? fxolpas ve/ieiv
T<p T elcrafjuevo) Kal
ret) 6erjKo\ovvTi.
io tcov Be Kpeoov
fir)
(f)ipea6at.
This precinct-regulation probably belongs to the first century b.c. It
prescribes that in sacrifices the founder, 6 eio-a/xevos (cf. Hdt. i 66, Thuc. in 58,
Plut. Thes. 17, Lb. 1754 1. 7 pw/j.bv eacanevos) and the derjnoXos shall receive their
due shares. Cf. the more elaborate regulations laid down for the sanctuary of
141]
RITUAL ETC.. 385
Men Tyrannos, no. 141. At Olympia, as we learn from Pausanias v 15, 8
(Frazer Paus. in 576 sqq.), the der/KoXos or deoKdXos had an official house, the
derjKoXewv.
10. Tuiv 8e Kpe<2v kt\. Cf. IG vn 235, 31 (Oropua) : twv be Kpewv /x?) elvai.
K(poprjv |w rod. re/j-eveos; D 615, 26 (Myconos): eVa> ov de/xiv daivvadcou avrov.
141. A stone found near Sunium. Kumanudis IlaX. 1868 Sept. 23 n. 1;
P. Foucart Ass. Ed. p. 219 sqq., n. 38; IG m 1, 74; D 633. Cf. Ziebarth Gr.
Vereinsw. p. 38
;
Perdrizet BCH xx
(1896) p. 84 sq.
Alphabet, type 11. Iota mutuvi is generally omitted, and is sometimes
wrongly added, as 11. 17, 18, 20.
'<dv0o<i Av/clos Yatov ('0)p/3lov KaOeiSpvaaro iep[6v Mtjvos
Tvpdvvov alperiaavro<; (ro)v (d)eov eir dyaOf/
Tvyij. teal [jiT]9e'va
dfcdOaprov irpoadyeiv' KaOapi^eaTCD Se dirb a(fc)op$(ov fca[\
xo^'wv
ko\\ y]vvcufco<;' Xovaapuevovs Se fcarafcecfraXa avOrjpiepov etfa-iropev-
5
ea0a(t)' Kal etc tgov yvvatKecov Sta eirra r)pepwv Xovaafxevrjv ^[axa-
fcecf)a\a elairopevecrOai avOrjpuepov, Kal dirb ve/cpov Sua r/pepwv S[kcl
Kal dirb
(fidopas
rjpbepwv rerrapciKOvra, teal purjOeva 6vacd^ecv dve\y
tov KaOetSpvaapuevov to lepbv' edv Se ti? /3ido~r]TaL, dirp6aSeKTO<^
r) Ovaia irapd tov Oeov. irapkyeiv Se Kal toj OeS to /caOrj/cov, Se^ibv
io cr/ceXos Kal Sopdv Kal Ke<f)aXr)v Kal iroSas Kal gt7]6vviov Kal eXatov
eirl ftcopov Kal Xvj(yov Kal Gyi^a*; Kal anrovSrjv. Kai etvetAaro?
yevoi(r)o 6 #eo? tois OepaizevovGiv dirXf)
tt}
^VXV'
(lv & rtva
dvOpdrmva irdayji
rj daOevijar) rj diroSrjpLrjcrr) irov, pur/Oeva dvOpoo-
ttcov e^ovcriav eyeiv, edv pur) oj dv auTO? irapaSu>. b\ dv Se 7roXv-
15
rrpaypLov-qo-rj to. tov Oeov rj 7repiepydo-r]Tai, dpapTiav 6(f)iXeTco yirjvl
Tvpavvo), rjv ov pur) SvvrjTat e^etXdaaaOat. 6 Se Ovacd^cov tt) e(3S6prj
Ta KaOrjKovTa irdvTa 7TOLeiTco<i> rc5 Oeoj' Xapb/3aveTco<i> Se tt)?
Overlap
77?
dv
$6/077 aKeXos Kal topbov' Ta Se Xoiird KaTaK07TTe{T)a)<i> (ev tu>)
iepo). et be Tt?
<el Se Tt?>
TrpoacftepeL Ovaiav tw 0ea>, ey vovpLrjvias p*z%pi irevTeKat-
20 SeKaTrps, edv Se Tt? Tpdire^av irXripcp tco Oew, XapL/3aveTO)<i> to
r)puo~[y'
tov<; Se (3ov\opbevovs epavov avvdyetv Mr/vl Tvpdv(v)o) (i)^ dyadfj
o/u-otco? Se Trape(J;)ovaiv 01 epavtaTal Ta KaQi)KOVTa tcd 6eco, 8e[|i6v
GKeXos Kal Sopdv Kal kotvXi^v eXaiov Kal
X
ovv wov Kal z/o[|Aio-|xa ov-y-
r. 11. 25
386 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI. 141
Kialov teal icf)Lpa rpt<i>a kcu koWv{3(ov ^olviKes Svo kcu
dfcpo[QCviov
(?)
kcu e-
25 av fcaTatcXiOcocriv ol epaviarai, kcu are^avov kcli \r}/jLvicr[Kov'
kcu eveiXaros yevocro rots clttX^ 7rpo(T7ropvo/u,evoi[s.
An inscription dealing with the same subject, but more uncouth in com-
position and containing barbarisms, was found in the same place and is given
IG in 1, 73. Dittenberger suggests that the slave Xanthus engraved the inscription
himself and, not feeling satisfied with the work, entrusted an Athenian with the
task of editing a more correct document. The date appears to be the end of the
second or the beginning of the third century a.d. Dittenberger lays stress (with
regard to IG in 1, 73) not so much on the forms
e, c, go,
which are found earlier,
but the dotted iota
(T)
and other indications.
A Lycian slave, Xanthus, in the employ of Gaius Orbius, founded a
sanctuary of Men Tyrannus, a lunar deity, whose worship prevailed extensively
in Asia Minor during the Koman Empire. That it had been introduced into
Attica in the third century b.c. appears from IG n 3, 1587 : Aiovvaios nai Baj3v\ia
r ~Mr]vl to lepbv dvtdeaav, and ib. 1593 : MtrpaSar^s nal r\ 'yvvrj ~Mt)vI [dvedeaav].
For the epithet Tvpawos see Perdrizet, op. cit., who quotes a variety of epithets;
in Thrace the worshippers called this deity Kvpios.
Besides framing regulations Xanthus invites persons to form an eranos
(cf. 88 21 an inscription relating to a thiasos). We see hence the germ out
of which a religious association might spring. That a slave should be capable
of founding such an eranos need not surprise us if we bear in mind that in these
religious associations members seem to have been freely admitted without
reference to their grade or country, provided that they complied with the rules
of the guild (Newton Arch. Ess. 172 sq.)
1. Taiov 'Op/3tou. (For
O
the stone has
O.)
Cf. Andoc. De myst. 17:
Avdbsb $epei<\ovs (sc. 5ov\os). KadeidpvaaTo : for the ei = t see 67, 93 58. IG in 1,
73 has KadeidpovcraTo ;
this change of v to ov in contact with
p
and
/3 (e.g.
xP
0XJm
<r6s, IG in 2, 1433, 910, Zovppl5ys, ib. 1, 1137, 16, 172/6 a.d.) is found from
the end of the second century, a.d. Meisterhans Gr. 30.
2. aiperifa for aipew is as old as Hippocrates.
3. KadaptfeaTw : IG in 1, 73 has Kadapia^evTw, which Blass, Ausspr. 117 (Tr.),
quotes as evidence of the pronunciation of
f=sd.
This un-Attic termination
eGTi>) = e<jdo) is common enough in some other dialects; see Ho. i p. 351 (Locrian
dialect).
3. a(i<)6p8u)i> . i.e. aKopoduv; the abbreviated form is common in late Greek.
For
K
the stone has
N

x
0L
P^
a}1/ i s restored from IG in 1, 73, 11; for e = et see
26 33. For some of these provisions see D 566 (Pergamum) and notes.
4. KaraKecpaXa: having washed by throwing water over the head. In
Geopon. 10, 30 the word means 'head downwards.' For avd-qp-epov IG in 1, 73
has avdeifj-epi
,
probably =av67]/xeprj.
5. K t<2v yvvcuKuv = aTro (K)aTaiAT)vLwv in an Egyptian inscription, Rev.
Arch. 1883 n p. 181, 1. 13. D.
6. dirb ueKpov. D 566 (see above) contains a similar rule.
7. airb (pdopas: premature birth. Cf. D 567, 12 (Lindus) : dirb (pdopeiup.
For dv<nd?eiv IG in 1, 73 has dvaidcrfriv. At the end perhaps aue[o as in IG I.e.
142 RITUAL ETC. 387
10. <TTT)dvvt.ov. Lobeck Phryn. p.
384 shews that it was a late diminutive of
arridos. Cf. Pollux ii 162: rd 5e arrjdQv fxeaov ar-qdvviov.
11. eveiXaros (IG in 1, 73 evLXaros) : the word occurs on a gem CIG 7045;
cf. LXX Ps. 98, 8 : eviXaros eyivov airrols.
12. yevoc(r)o : the stone has
JZ
for
~[~.
13. iraaxv
' sc- Xanthos.
18. /cara/co7rW(T)w<t> :
E IE
GO
I ; cf- 14 10- In Tvpdv(v)v (4)tt' 1. 21 the
v and the e are added below the line; in 1. 22 wape()ov(riv the storje has
E
for
^E,
23. v6[/j.iafxa ovy]Kicuov: so D: possibly an uncia,
T
V
of a Xirpa which =an
Aeginetan obolus = Latin libra or as. L and S s.v. Xirpa.
24. i(f>iepa : cf. 138 a 9. KdXXvfia are probably small cakes ; Hesych.
k6XXv(3cl' TpuydXta. D, who in the Corpus had altered
x'
LVLKes to
X
ot,/ "fas
>
now
leaves xot^/ces untouched. The well-known ancient use of -es for -aj in Achaia
(e.g. avfX7roX/j,r]aauTs, ace. plur., DI 1612, 8, Dyme) and elsewhere is also found
in inscriptions of unlearned men.
142. 'Lapis Daivkinsianus Oxonium translatus.' CIG 523 (where Chandler
Marm. Oxon. n 21, and previous editors are mentioned) ; Lb. Att. 403; IG in 1, 77.
Cf. v. Prott Leges Graecorum sacrae p. 3 (and 45, 59);
Bruckner Mitth. xvi
(1891), p. 230. Prof. P. Gardner of Oxford has kindly re-examined the stone.
Alphabet, type
2;
is both
ft
and
f2
w is 7r
4
;
does not occur. There is
no iota mutum. The sign for iota sometimes is taller than the other characters.
M.TayiTVLwvo<; Oeals
ft
rov tt)? iravreXelas iroiravov [SwSckov-
<f)a\ov yoiviKiaiov Te vrjcfxiXcov
HoTjhpofjLi&vos yi NefyOvi teal 'Ocr/ptS[i
5
aXe/crpvova Kapiroocreis airelpcov irvp[ovs
tcai icpt,6as, airev&cov neXiKparov'
fy
Arjfir)-
rpi Kopr)
8e\<fia/ca avvirepdercos' fji rpvy[r\-
rov Acovvaq) koX tois aWocs Oeols aj/[vir]e/o[0Tws.
Tlvaveyjrioovos 'AiroWwvi teal
'
'KpTefiihi
f
ir[6-
io iravov %[oiv] iKialov 6p06v(j)a\ov tcai tcadr')fjLv[ov
o(ook6v$>cl\ov.
Mai/u,aKT7)piQ)vo<; Ail Teoopyo) k iroiravov
yoiviKialov
6p06v(f>aXov SooSetcovcfraXov,
vaarov yotvacialov iiriireirXaofievov,
15 iravtcapiriav vr)^>aXiov.
Tloo-iSecuvos rj lara/jLevov iroiravov
yoiviKialov
8(o8etc6v<f)a\ov tcadj]/jLe[vov
252
388 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VI [142
YlocnBcovc ^afiat^rjXa) vrj^xiXiov'
0\y
dve/uLOLS ttottclvov yoivucialov opBov-
20 (f>aXov ScL>8eKov(f)a\ov vr)<j)dXtov.
Ta/jL7]\i(t)vn<; tciTrcocreis Alovvctovs 6l.
'
XvOecrrrjpiwvos lepel<; e/c Xovrpcov.
'E]X[a](/)77^oXia)^o9 el Kpovrp ttottclvov
ScoSetcofjLcpaXov KaOijfxevov, iiri-
25
ir\]acre<? {3ovv yoivacialov dvvTT[pQt-
Tft)?. M.ovvv^ta)vo<;
/3 dviovros
f
H[pa-
fcXel Kol SeLQ) aXe/cropa?
/3,
ttottclvov
^oLvikos ScoSeKO/jLcj^aXa (sic) 6p66vcf)aXa (sic)
dvvTTep6erco<;.
The complete omission of iota subscript, the use of t for ec, the position of
the unit before the decimal in the numeral signs el,
ff,
rji, di, (as in coins and
inscriptions of Syria, see Head, H.N. p. 641, 646) led Boeckh to the conclusion
that the inscription was not older than the imperial time ; that it was not later
than the time of Hadrian is clear from the fact that the year does not begin
with Boedromion, as it did from and after 125 a.d. (Schmidt Chron. 738). The
document sets forth a list of sacrifices to be offered on certain days. The month
Hecatombaeon is missing at the beginning, and Thargelion and Skirophorion at
the end. The regulations evidently refer to a private local shrine, not to state
worship. On the use and origin of the numeral alphabet see Index.
2. iravTeKtias : 'consummation,' a word used with reference to initiation at
the mysteries, Plut. 2, 1061: iravrtXeia tuv dyaduv, E, id. 2, 671 d; TpieT-qpiKr]
iravTeXeta. The offering to be made to the goddesses (i.e. Demeter and Kore) on
the loth of Metageitnion was a cake with twelve bosses made of a choenix of
flour without wine. For the epithet v-qcpaktov cf. 133 B, C, D.
4. Xe0#us : an Egyptian goddess, the infernal consort of Osiris. For Osiris
see Diet. Biogr.
5. Kapiruxreis: You shall make offering of a cock, sprinkling wheat and
barley, and pouring libations of mead. For the use of Kapirdu cf. LXX Lev.
2,
11, and Hesych. and Suidas s.v. The word implies complete consumption on the
altar, as is usual in the case of offerings to infernal gods.
6.
fr.
The 17th of Boedromion was the day of the great Eleusinia called
Ova.
7. dwirepderajs : perhaps
'
without delay.'
TpvyrjTos, according to the Grammarians may mean the fruit itself, as well
as 'vintage,' and the former is the meaning here. The offering was made on
the day of the Greater Eleusinia called KaXadot.
9. UvavexJ/iwvos. The sacrifice was performed at the Pyanepsia and
Oschophoria.
10. 6p66v(pa\op : 'with an erect boss.' Kadrjixevov >5u8eK6i><pa\ov: 'with twelve
bosses and depressed centre.'
12. Boeckh thinks that the sacrifice to Zeds Teu^yos took place at the
~\iai/j.a.KTripia, so named from Zet-s Mat^a/cr?;?.
143]
RITUAL ETC. 389
14. vavrbv: sc. irXaKovvra, a 'well-kneaded' cake (vdatroj). eTnireirXaafxevov
Boeckh explains
'
pulte infusa conditum.'
15. iravKapniav : Athenaeus, xiv p.
048 b, describes a cake of this name :
irpLa
5'
icrl ravra crvvTedpv/jL/xeva fxerd yUeAiros e\f/6p.eva. Cf. Theophr. H.P. x 9, 7.
In Athen. xi 473 c and Eur.
fr.
912 it means a dish of various produce; and that
is the more probable meaning here.
18. Hoai8<2vi xa/Uxu^Xy : i.e. xOoviip. The same epithet is applied to Zetfs,
Orph. Arg. 929 Herm.
21.
'
On the 19th of Gamelion you shall crown with ivy the images of
Dionysus.' The iepeis 4k \ovrpwv (1. 22),
priests connected with ablutions,
Boeckh thinks had reference to the Hydrophoria or Hydriaphoria ; see Diet. Ant.
;
but the meaning is doubtful.
25. fiovv xoiVLKiatov : cf. 137 and also /3ous e/35o/xos.
27. By deiip Eurystheus, cousin of Alcmena, may be meant; cf. Eur. Her.
9868. But v. Prott thinks that 0e?os was an unknown hero or a proper name.
143. On a 'taurobolic' altar, found at Cephisia, and brought to Athens.
Eustratiades IlaX. 27. Aug. 1866; Conze A.Z., 1867 p. 9;
Henzen Bull. d. inst.
1867, p. 174. Heydemann, Marmor-Bildwevke p.
144 no. 380; IG in 1, 173;
D 667.
Alphabet, type 10 ; no
, 0,
\p.
Abbreviations marked by
'
placed over a consonant.
387 a.d.
MeTa TrjV vttclt
'.
'Ovcoplov /cal
JLvoSlov, irpo e fca\ '. 'Iovvloov
apx'.
'JLp/jLoyevovs ireXeaOr]
TavpofBoXtov ev 'A^rjrat?, o-
5
irep Trapa\af3(t)v IsHovgcovios
6 Xa/JL. T179 reXT7]<s to <jvv-
Orjfia top {3(i)fiov aval-
drj/ca.
A considerable number of Latin inscriptions (OIL vi 497 sqq.) have been
discovered beneath the site of the Vatican, and in many other places (see
Wissowa Religion u. Cultus,
p. 267), engraved on votive altars connected
with the rite of the taurobolium. Our inscription and IG in 1, 172 (which is
slightly older) are the only documents of the kind hitherto found at Athens.
The date of the inscription before us is fixed by the reference to the consulship
of Honorius and Euodius, i.e. 387 a.d. A special feature of the mysteries (see
Diet. Ant.) was the baptism of blood from a slaughtered bull or ram (tauro-
bolium or criobolium), which was supposed to regenerate those who were so
sprinkled (taurobolio in aeternum renatus CIL vi 510). In the reign of Julian
persons of the highest rank and the great priesthoods of the state participated.
The following (CIL vi 499) may serve as an example of the Latin inscriptions
:
390 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. VI. [143
Matri Deum Magnae
j
Idaee Summae Pa
\
rente Herrnae et Attidi
\
Meno
Tyranno Invicto
\
Clodius Hermogenianus
\
Caesarius F(ir) C(larissimus) pro-
cons(ul) Africae
\
praefec(tus) urbis Romae
|
quindecimvir s(acris) f(aciundis)
taurobolio
|
criobolioque perfecto
|
xiiii Kal. Aug. Diis animae
\
suae mentisque
custodibus
|
aram dicavit
|
D(omino) N(ostro) Gratiano Auc)(xisto) ter
|
et...
Aequitio conss. (374 a.d.).
2. irpb %
Ka\(avd(2v) 'lovviwv. This Latin form appears only in Attic inscrip-
tions in the abbreviation Ka\. ; cf. IGr in 1, 48, 16. For the formula, cf. a
Senatus consultmn Lb. Voy. Arch, n 852, 8 (no. x of Viereck's Sermo Graecus) :
Upb rj/Aepiov reaaapcov voovuv Jlaifwc].
3. The archon here named is probably the archon eponymus, not the priest
of the taurobolic ritual. It is not only written with a compendium, but is also
closely joined to the names of the consuls and the date.
ereXeadT] corresponds to the words 'perfecto,' 'facto,' 'fecit,' 'feci' of the
Latin inscriptions. A frequent variant is ' percepto,' 'percepi,' which seems to
be represented by the irapakafiwv of our inscription. Probably the meaning is
'
having received the purificatory blood of the slaughtered bull.'
5. Moiktwj/ios kt\.
'
I Musonius, most illustrious, dedicated the altar as
the symbol of the mystic rite.' Cf. in metrical inscription CIL violl : augentur
meritis simbola tauroboli, and in the metrical inscription IG- in 1, 172 : fiwixbv
edrjKe 'Yey
I
'ApxeXews, reXeTrjs avvd^fxara Kpvirra xapct|as | ravpofioKov.
7. avaidrjKa: see 92 introd.
Section VII. Official Lists of various kinds; magistrates,
prytanes, priests, ephebi, arbitrators, crews of ships, mercen-
aries; agonistic lists.
144. Four fragments of a slab of Hymettiau marble, 0.08 m. in thickness,
found near the ancient agora. Eustratiadis 'E-rrcyp. dvei<5., (pv\\. devrepou 1852
p. 19 sqq.; Meier Comment. Epigr. p. 69 sqq.; H. Sauppe De creatione arcJiontum
att. Gott. mdccclxiv p. Isqq.; IG n 2, 859 and 5 p.
210. Cf. Ferguson Corn.
St. x p.
40 sq.
Alphabet, type
1; |
is
.
2
,
no for <p.
Frg. a, b
io
5
Bao-. '0\vp]7rL68(tipo<; A^a.
n-oX. Ev]7rdXeyL60? Upocr.
Qto-\L]o06TaL
At]]/ao/cX^9 i/c KoX.0).
YloaeLhnnros Ylaiav.
'AX/ayStaSr/s Aevtcov.
AupiXos
^
AyepBovai.
AvaifcXelSris
(
^a/j,v.
ap%. Aeco^dpTis UaW.
15
p]acr. t&tXo/cpaTrjs Uaoa.
ir]o\. ^iXctirdSr]^ <Pv\a.
Q^ea/jLoOerat
Saxjxivrjs KvBaOrjva.
Wp^i/ia^os <&r]yai.
w]z/
<> -
-
- - -
779 'Avacf).
&
]p[x>
-
]
y
^PX
ce-
/3acr. <Pi\i[rr\Tri$r]<; Kec.
7ro\. OtVo[<J>i\]o? TLaio.
0G/ju)d(e)Tai
Naucrta? ^Arrivev.
Ar}/jLO/c\f)s [l,]v/3p[S7].
HpOfc\l87)[s]
'Afyye.
'A^/;z/t7T7ro[s] Wcf)i$v.
Apo/jLOtc\r)[<s] YliOev.
'HpaySrjs <&a[\]r)pv.
ctpX-
Ato/cXr}? HvSaO.
ftaar. %pa<j(jav [- pa . . (-)
7to\. Ala^plcov [-
p
-
-
Oeo-fjLoOerao
tyeotcXrj? iy [M.]vppi.
AlvBos [B]ep[t]vifci8.
Apxi/cXrjs Gd[o]piicio.
392 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[144
20 'AyaOofcXr}*; Kttcvvve. MaT^ta? Aa[K]id8r)<;
'H^yr/alas QXvevs Arj/jLo/cpcros *v7ra\.
Q]paav/jL7]8r)(;
"
Avcucai. Xat/oea? TIaWrjve.
KaWiaTparos QaXrj.
&PX'
El^'Xt/tov
Upoft.
cL]ox-
eo</nXo9
e'f
OTof /3acr. Navfcpdrr)?
'Afpjaf.
25
(3a]cr. Ilpo^e^o?
'A(f)i8v. 7roX. KaXXt/cX?79 'A^ap.
iroX.] Secopos pidaio. Oea/jLoderai,
Qi\a/jio9iTat K\o8r)/jio<; KvSaO.
QlXaypos KoOcoklSt]. 'AiroXXoScopos [A]a/JL7r.
E#/3ouXo9 Aafurrpev. Ar)fjLrjrpf,os Befpjew/c.
30
Ei^Sr^ito? Ylatavceix; Kt^T/cria? Atf[]i/ei5.
'lepOfcXrjs Ylatovihrj. AevicaoTns ^[aXj^pe.
A]?7yLt6crTp<2TO? OXfeu. HavTa/cXfjs II[a]XX?7.
'Io-Jo^tXo? 'AfjL(j)iTpoTTr).
&PX'
'Hpa/oVetTo[s 'A]^o.
apX- 'EjpYO^ap?;?
^(firjr. ftaa.
7]pa/jLev[t]s . . .
Frg. c.
35
|3ao- 7roX.
[.
t] . . . .
iro\]
]?
K^TTt. 6
6<T
fJLoOe[ra.\.
0o-(xo0eTa]t ^ AyaOo/cX[r\s ....
/juos Aapbirrpe. ZtfAcov Ko
A]a/jL7rpia<; (dopaievs 'Hpa/cXetS^fs . . .
40 .... KOL<fipi(DV Ua/jL/3(OTd. JLvVlKOS 2[<j>Tyr.
~E[v(f)L\T}TO<; 4>Xue^? "AS/jltjtos II
M]vt]<jl6os Ko7rpet09 "AvSpcov A/a . . .
Avatarparos 'Fafivov.
a]p%. NiktJttjs %/ca/jL{3(ov. Erg. d
45
p]ao\ av6(f)avT0<; Keipi. it . . ar]?;?
f
AXate.
iro]\. 60Tt/xo? AafiTTTp. 'Hp]a/cXetS?79 ITreXea.
e]ecr/uo^eTat Alveas
'
Afxa^avrev.
Xa)KpdT7}<; Qopaievs EU/A77X09 Olvaloq
KaXXtTeX??9 IlXeo^eu.
5
ap%. M.evfcpdrr)<; 'Or)6.
50
0]pdacDV Ki/cvvvevs /3aa. Alvrialhrjfxos 'Evir.
A\vaavhpo<; " A^apve. ir]oX. KXeo/u-eSft)^ 'At^ia
'tfy^cr^tfo? <!>Xf6^9 Oea/jLoOercu
'VLpoaKafxavhpo^
'
'AXa)7r. 'lepoov AlOaXiBrj?
CLPX'
'
AvTLCplXo? \\<j)L$V. IO "E]X7TtCTT09
'
AvCLKCLL.
1$
p]acr. AoopoOeos
(
\inroTO. 'Hp]a/cXe/S?79 ^fXai'S.
7roX. Up(OT0{iev7)<; EtVe. .... 9 K/ttjo?
145] OFFICIAL LISTS: ARCHONS. 393
Q]a/xoOerai .... 9 Al<yi\iev<;
EivOvXo^o^ Tapyrjrri. Tpt/copvcr.
AvTLTrcLTpos TLepyacr.
15 apx-
Aio\i.&]cov AXcoire.
60 ^Mr/TpoScopos
^
AOfiove. pacr . . . <a~\v KoAAu.
Apa)Trl8r)<; K.iJttl. ttoX
]? IPafiv.
QtXLIT7ri$7]S Il[aia. 0crfJ.o0TCu]
@eo7TO/U-[iros .... Aipa8]ift)T77.
20 at . . .
The inscription contains a list of the nine archons for a series of years.
The researches of scholars have enabled a continuous list, with the exception of
three or four names, to be made of the eponymous archons down to 271/0 b.c.
Ferguson, I.e., argues that the eponymous archons given here from Leochares to
Herakleitos range from 236/5 to 221/0 b.c. (v. Schoffer, PW Real-Enc. 1 589
prefers 233/2219/8 b.c). In the archonship of Ergochares (234/3 b.c, Ferguson)
the tribe Ptolemais had not yet been created; in the archonship of Menecrates
(229/8 b.c) do, it was in existence; it is represented on the board of the
Thesmothetae by the deme AlycXLa d 13, transferred from the Antiochis. (See
at the end of the book the lists of Denies and Demotics, which will also explain
the abbreviations). Cf. Bates Corn. St. viii 28 sqq.; if he is right in assigning the
creation of the Ptolemais, in honour of Ptolemy Euergetes, husband of Berenice,
queen of Cyrene, to 229/8 b.c, the statement in Rem. vi, p.
128 needs to be
corrected; see Appendix. For the dates of the individual archons in this
inscription see further Ferguson I.e. The inscription itself was engraved
probably not much before the end of the third century b.c. The general view
of the period to which the archons enumerated belonged is confirmed by the
fact that Aiv-rjcridrjfxos, d 6, and Evvlkos a, b, col. ii 40 were ephebi e7rt <$l\6voj
apxovTOS IG 11 1, 338, 24, 30, probably 272/1 b.c
145. One of the Choiseul marbles in the Louvre. Chandler Inscr. P. 11
n.
54, p. 59; CIG 180; Froehner Inscr. 80; IG 11
2, 863. Cf. H. Sauppe De
creations arcJiontum att.
p. 14, cf. p. 21; Latyscheff BCH v
(1881) p.
260 sq.
The Alphabet conforms to no one type. The following will give some idea
of it.
ABT AE
(nof) HOI KA MNE.
7r
4
7r
5
, plP
.
2
, <r
x
a.
2
, T Y
9
(no
f)
w
6
u,
7
.
pJacrtX.eL'?
Olvo(f)L\[os] \\/jL<f)iov 'AcfriSvalos
7ro\e/jLapxos
5
0[o-]fAo0e<i>Tai
394 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[145
^Aoa^iwv ^ilevdvhpov <t>i\athr)<;
1
Arrival
f
H/oa/cA.[eL8]ou <J>\ueu?
Tldrpcov UoXe/jLCDvos YleptOol^r]^
^
AOrjvohwpos W[Qr\v]oB(iopov Al%(DVV<;
10 Uoarj<; \\p[<Tr[<a]vo
i
s QaXijpevs
Tljacricov 'JLpfiatcncov Wva<f)\vaTi,o$
Kr}pv /3oiA?5?
ef
'Apelov Trdyov
Eilpr)vaio<; Elpr\vaiov [E]tfa//,/3aWS?79.
The name of the eponymous archon in this list, to which is added that of
the Herald of the Areopagus (cf. 146), is lost. Latyscheff, I.e. refers the
inscription to the first part of the first century b.c. Hoarjs 1. 10 may well be the
son of the Kufxydiwv iroLrjTrjs 'ApLarwv Uoaeovs 'Adrjvaios, who appears in a list of
victors in the games of Amphiaraus at Oropus IG vn 540, 14. The name of
the Polemarch <t\wras 1. 4 appears in a dedicatory inscription, Korte Mitth. xxi
p.
296 sq.
146. A marble about 2| feet long by 1^ feet broad found at Athens, after-
wards brought to Paris. CIG 181, and authorities there quoted; IG in 1, 1005.
Alphabet, type
5
; no
f,
nor
$;
ft
is
fa,

is
2
,
7r is 7r
4
.
"Apxeov
real lepevs Apovaov vTrdrov
Elevcov Mevveov QXvevs
/3aat\ev<;
5
f
Hpa#\tT09 WptcrTOfcXeovs %^>tjttlo^
iroXefJLap^o^
i
A\Kerr]<; WXtcerov UepiOoiStjs
OeafioOerac
Aev/cios ~TnrLO<; K.i](f)i(Tiv<;
io $t\ftJTa? (deoBoopov iy XlvptvovrTTis
Ar)/jLr)TpLO<; Ktveov Kv&adrjvaLevs
SefcrTO? AevKiov AipaSiooms
'AOrjvoScopos Evjltovo<; Qpedppuos
WXe^avhpo^ WXe^dvBpov typidaios
15 /crjpvi; tt;? e 'Apelov Trdyov ftovXfjs
Ae(oviSr]<; Aeoovihov MeXtreu?
/crjpvi; apyovTi
147]
OFFICIAL LISTS: ARCHONS. 395
20 'IaL<pt\o<; 'AaK\rj7rtdBov '
A.6
fiovev?
f
Eo"Ttato? Aiovvalov "MiXrjaios.
This list of archons, followed by the name of the Herald of the Areopagus,
as in 145, and other officers, must be later than 9 B.C., the year in which
Drusus died during his consulship (cf. Eph. epigr. 1 p. 116) ; it is probably
earlier than the reign of Hadrian, in which the priesthood of Drusus appears to
have been abolished ; cf. Dittenberger in IG in 1, 1009. The rare name 2e7T7rios,
1. 9, may help to fix the date of our inscription more accurately. It occurs in
an Ephebic list IG 11 1, 482, shown by Koehler to belong to the period 3932 b.c.
If our 2^7T7Tios was an ephebus at that time, he might in one of the years
following 9 b.c. have held the office of thesmothetes. This conjecture is
confirmed by the occurrence of the name Leonidas of the Melitean deme, herald
of the Areopagus, which also appears in IG in 1, 1276, a list of yevvrjrai of the
Amynandridae, assigned to the time of Augustus. For the varieties of the
vocalism in the inscription (t=et, ei = i) see 93 58, 141 1.
12. 2^(ttos. Other variations in the spelling are S^/ccrros, 2e/cros, Ztjcttos.
See Meisterhans Gr. 93.
18. For the symbol see 68 fin.
21. Xirovpyos, i.e. \eirovpy6s, at this period is used not in the older sense of
choregus or the like, but merely to denote some kind of public servant, whether
belonging to the class of drj/xoaioi or to freemen. Cf. 64 54.
147. A slab of Pentelic marble, H. 0.30 m., L. 1.00 m., Th. 0.13 m., now
in the Museum of the Archaeological Society at Athens. IG in 1, 1014, and
authorities there quoted.
Alphabet, type 9; a is a
4
, a
8
; 6 is 6.
2
, 6
4
; no
; <p is
<p
7
\ no yp.
. . . o[$]o . . 'A|>
Af/a[o-Kos ? Uv0ay[6p]a<; M
Atovvac[os M^Seto? AtoSeopo? 'Ajm'o^o? Xap[/j,
eoSft)pt[8Tjs MrjSeios AvaavSpo? TloXvaivos KaXXifcp . . .
5
AtOTtyLto? M^Seto? AvcidSrjs Zrjvcov Tldfi(f)t\o^
lctacov avapyla ArjfjbrjTpLO^ A\i\(ovLhr)<; ^ep^iaroKXi)^
Nt/aa? feat <&iXdvdri<; ATj/xo^dpr]^ eo(/>A.o? Olv6<f>iXos
'I<TLyevr)<z . . o$[v]t?79 . a B]o?;[0]o?
A]r)/jLr/T[pio<s
This list differs from the list, no. 144, in that it contains apparently the
names of eponymous archons only. The xal in col. i 1. 7 remains unexplained
and the occurrence three times successively of the name M^Seios col. ii is strange;
396 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII
[147
and the insertion of avapxt-a- col. ii 1. 6 is noteworthy. No successful attempt
has been made to fix the dates of the archons which cover a period of at least
35 years. In col. iii, as in no. 66, the names Avaavdpos and Avaiadrjs succeed
each other; but the date of no. 66 is quite uncertain. See the note ad loc,
where the years 32/1 and 31/0 have been suggested by v. Schoeffer for the names
respectively. See further Dittenberger IG in 1, 1014; Neubauer Comm. epigr.
p. 133; Dumont Fastes epon. d'Atlienes
p.
52 n. 62; Th. Bergk Rh. itf. xix 605;
K. Keil PJiilol. xxin 611; v. Schoeffer I.e.
Remark xii. Lists
of
Prytanes. It has been shown by Koehler,
Herm. v
(1871) p.
331 sqq., Mitth. iv
(1879) p.
97 sqq.. that there
are three distinct classes of these lists, chronologically separate :
(1)
lists inscribed on dedicatory offerings made by the prytanes in
recognition of the honours they had received
(148, 149);
these belong
to the fifth and especially to the fourth century B.C.;
(2)
lists
appended to decrees of the senate and people passed in honour of
prytanes and their subordinate officers
(56;
IG n 1, 394);
these
documents approach in time the Augustan period
; (3)
lists inscribed
by order of the prytanes on stones or Hermae, having no connexion
with decrees or offerings
(150);
this class dates from the imperial
period.
148. A base of Pentelic marble found on the Acropolis. Kumanudis 'A0.
iv
(1875) p. 196; IG n 2, 864.
Alphabet, type
1; O
=o, ov, pointing to the end of the fifth or the beginning
of the fourth century B.C.; no
"
nor \p. Ltoixv^ov.
AecavrlBo?
VLKTjCraVT
K]>)TTLOl
'
A/jL(f)iTe\T]<;
5
'AflCpCTeXlBoV
TeXeCTLTTTTOS
Ueco-lov
'Avtlk\l&7i<;
^
AvtiKkel.
o'AkljfMOVCTLOl
U]pe<T/3vx[^]pvb
ApL<TTLQ)V0[s
irpvTaveLS
9, 3
(6)
f
a v
Qpeappuoi
'AvTC)(ap7]S
<Pl\lg)vo<;
<
I
)
tXea9
<>l\lcovo<>
YlecOidBvs
AioSoopov
*Apl<TTOfc[p](ZT7)<;
WplcTTCOVOS
JtLvdyyeXos
A iV e ft)
T CO h T) T)
p,
CO.
Tlr/Xrj/ces
QikoOrj.
f
l6/3o/cXet'8[i]s
<Pel8covos
c
T/3dSai
%L/jLCOV
^LfJLCOvSoV
Xaipicov
H6X\i8o<;
148]
OFFICIAL LISTS: FRYTAXES. 397
NtfojpaTos
Aeayfcparous
15
%OVKplTO$
Kr)(f)io-oBcopou
YiordfJLLOL KCL0V.
yiaplvos
20 QiXlTTTTOS . . . . <
Il]oTa/xtot i}[ir]e^. tovvLrj<;
Xa[i]p\[T).
Ad/3r)TO<;
4>a.^o8^/A09
e/J,L<T0Ofc\ri<;
.... <r]TpaTO?
K]X,[]r/[v]fc/co?
v
TT)(japyov
S7r[u]crt[KX]>79
A'>;/X^T[p]tOL'
Nt]/COyLta^09
30
25
^KCLfJufSwyihcLL
'
AvTUCpCLTT)*;
~EvK]pdrov[<;
IIv0]oS&)po9
'AptcrT^t'8779
'Iftepaiov
A]ev/covoir)s
K-aWlfia^o^
^AXklov
XapuiSrjs
X]aLpotcXeov<; Uordfiioc
UoXv^evos
TioXv/cpa.
^fiL/cpcov
AeipaScdoTai
'
A<yva>v
Tt/jLo/cXeovs
Xacpecfxjov
35
Al6yV7)TO<i
Aioyevovs
Xo\\]r}tSao
40 'A\]/ao"0eM;9
'AXj/a/^aSou
Nk]<xp^09
NiK]o^e^of
Ni'/cco^
LrparoviKOs
i Otov
TXav/cos
YXav/cirov
r
Ej/caXeLrjs
^>eiSeo-rpaTo[s
^coo-L/cXeovs
Kpco7r/Sat
"Ez/St7/u,09
\\pp(e)vr]iSov
UcllovlScu
M.6vearpaTo[s
Olvo^ikov
Seoyevrjs
f)eo8copov
<$>i\60r)po<;
tyeocfrpdaTov
EiVTrvpiBat
$etSe'crT[p]aT[os
^atpear[pa.rov
AvTLprjTOS
Ala^eov
AWaXihat
KT?;crt7T7ro9
K.Tr)o-Q)vl8ov
EjVKXeiSrjs
Eu/cXeoL'9
KoA,o)^j?9
Me7/ecrTpaT09
Me^e/cpaTOf[s
E^yLtoS<ypo9
See Remark xii, p. 396. From the word viK-qaavTes 1. 2 Koehler infers that in the
fourth and fifth centuries the popular assembly annually granted the honour of
a crown to the piytanes of some one tribe. Leos to whom the statue is dedicated
is of course the eponymous hero of the tribe.
Col. i 17, 22. Besides these two divisions of the deme Horafxbs a List of
Piytanes, Mitth. x 106 sq., shows that there was a third: 11otcl/j.lol AeipaStun-cu.
The Paeaneans also are described as Kadvirepde and vireuepde IG 11 2, 871.
Col. ill 16. 'E/ca\ei7?s. For the various forms in -^77$, -^ej, -eies, -77s, -ets from
stems in -eu see Meisterhans Gr. 140, and cf. 7 57.
398 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[149
149. A base of Hymettian marble, H. 0.46 m., Br. 0.78 m., Th. 0.78 m.,
inscribed on three sides. Hauvette-Besnault BCH v (1881) 361 sqq. ; E. Gollob
Wien. St. m 209 sqq. ; IG n 2, 872 ; D 496. Cf. Koehler Mitth. vn (1882) 102 sqq.
Alphabet, type
1;
=
2
.
AO
frequently appear as
AO; E
= et in -n-pv-
raveLS 1. 32.
A Front.
341
/
AlyrjtSos rrpvrdveis aviOeaav ol tt\ Nt/co/xa^ou
dp^ov[ros
(TTecfxivojQevTes viro
ttJs fiovXrjs
kclI tov Srjfxov aptTrjs eveK[a
koll hiKaiocrvvqs.
col. i col. ii
'E^tet? 'I/capteis
5
Qappias appid8ov TipbOKpiTos Ti/jLOfcpdrovs
KuS/a? AvatKpdrovs 'AptaT0(f)dv7)s JLvtcXeiSov
Xaipea? YlapafivOov 'Ap^evavrr]^
'
ApyevavTov
$\v\ap'%os Ylapa/jbvOov ^ILpdrow ^paTioovos
H6^o[k]X['ii]9
Ka\\m[8]oiv
'
A]plyv&)T09 l$a/3vpiov
io Uo\vK\L8[r\\s KaWcarpdrov ^artaiel^
Ta[py]rjrrtoc TloaeLhLTnros Y.aWiKpdrov\s
AtoScopos <&{\o/c\eov<z Baret?
Metfta? 'Hyrjaiov Avatarparo<; UoXvevKTou
*!E/jLi,fcpLa<; <>l\o/oJ8ov<; Ik Ko\g)vov
15
'
Ap\i\aia<; Tiauatov K.aWi(f>dv7]<; KaWifcXiovs
<>t\at$aL 6617779
Aiovvatos 'H^aiaricovo? KoWvreies
JLv6vKkr}<$
'
AfxeivLov l^aipe^>o)v pdacovo<;
Fiv6v8c/co<; A/jLlvlov "AXe^9 XcoaidSov
20 K\vSavrlSai (PepeKpdrrjs QikoKparovs
TlvOlcov Ala^payvlSov TlXoodels
Arj/jLoarparos [A]t?fjLoar[pd]rov ILaipLas ILaiplov
*lcovi8ai 'Orpvveis
M]7]\cev<i 'lX[t]oz^ea)9 <Pi\Ipo<; QeoSoopov
25
'Ept/cee^?
'!&7ra/jLLV(ov ^iraivkiov
col. Hi (parallel with cols, i, ii)
'AXcueis
(5)
Avaifia^thri^
Avai7ro\i$o<;
Ei//?to9 AvroaOevovs
149]
OFFICIAL LISTS: PRYTANES. 399
'A7ToX/Vo8ft)/90? 'Ap^lOV
FiVvocrTiSr)? %eotydvTOv
KaXki/AijSrjs
y
Ap^fjidx
ov
(19)
Teidpdcrtoc
Arj/Aoadevrfs &7}/jLO(f)(bvTo[s
A77
fjLOifcikos
At]fAo/cXelovs
Ka[\]XtCTT/0<XT09
UpoKXetSr]^ Tipo^evihov
(15)
<>7]>yaiels
1
Afctfparos 'Ap%e8i]/jLOV
Se6/jLV7](TTOS
e63o)/oo? (")eoyvi&o<;
'Apacpyvioc
(20)
'EX7Ti^09 ^(ocnyevovs
LaW[/jLaxo<; MvrjcriOeiov
ey lAvppivovTTT)^
0^)tXo?
'Ay/cuX?}^^
(25)
EuySto? JLvftiorov
Ato/jLoel<;
Atopodeos eo$d)pov
*
AyKvXrjOev
1
S/leXr}(Ti'TT7ro<i yLeXrjatov
30 Q]appia<; 'Ep^eu? elirev ey\rrf<^ia6aL rols <f>v\erac<;, iireiSr]
Yloaeihuinros 'YLariaioOev 6 rafxta<;
ttj]?
<f)v\r}<; /caXw? [<]a[l SikcuJco? irafiievae [tois <j>]uXeT[ais]
zeal to. tepa direOvae virep twv irpvrdve-
v o<r]a eSe*. rvOrjvai, eiTacv[icrai cu>]toj> a[pTr]? eW/c[a Kal 81]-
KaLocrvv7)<; tt}? 7T6>1 tol'9 irpvrdveLS
Kal <rTj(^a[vw](rat #a[\\ov arT]e[4>]a^[<o]t.
B
Left side.
'
Apiaro(j)dp7}<; 'Ifcapiev
1
; elirev eyjr7](f)La6[ai tJoI? ^ufX^Tat?,
erraiveaai, eireiSrj /caXco? *;[al 8i];aia)[s
35
eireiJLe\r}dr)aav t?}? avWoyrj^ rov
Brffiov
/cat rr}<; [8t]aSocre(w)?
tco^ crvv{36\cov Kal eirorjaav rr/v hu>pei\d.v
Tot9 (ftvXerais, eiraivkcrai avrovs a/oeri}? evetca Kal SLfcaiocrvvr/s
400 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[149
avTO)v eicacrTov OaXXov arecpdva) dperfjs eveica teal 8t/caiocrvvr)<;
7-77? 6t9 tt)v <f)vXijv
AioScopov QcXo/cXeous Tapyijrnov TifioKptrov Tifio/cpdrov
'Ifcapiea (~)appiav QappidSov 'E/r^tea.
fyappia<s EpyLevs elirev eiraLveaac tov$ iepoirouovs tovs ra
/jbvcTTijpta lepoTTOLyjcravTas 'EXeucrti^i
40
Kai crrecfravcocrai avrcov eicaarov OaXXov ar(j)dvu> dperrj^
evetca /cal Bi/caioavvTis rrjq 69 tov[$
(frvXeras,
YioaeihiiriTOv EiartaioOev Ti/jLOfcptTov 'I/capta \\pi-
arocfrdvrjv 'I/capcea ^Lcuptai' UXooOeia
KaWuTTpaTOv TetOpdaiov UvOccova KvSavTiSrjv 1Lv/3lov 'xA/y-
Kv\9j6ev fyeofAvrjarov ^r;^/-
aiea Qeo(j)iXov iy ^Sluppivovrrris M?/Xtea ^Iwvihrjv.
in corona : in corona:
6 8?]{io<;.
7) ftovXrj.
C Right side.
45
AioSwpos Tap~\yi]TTio<; elirev eiraiveaat
'
ApLcrTo[$\dv7]v Kv-
/cXeiB[o]v Ifcapiea 8[ikcuoo--
vv]?79 verc[a] tj}<? et'9 rrjv A[i]yel(8)a
(frvXrjv
Hal <7T6(f>ava)aac
avrov OaXXov arecfydvco.
This dedication and list of Prytanes of the Aegeid tribe is followed by
decrees of the tribesmen, one in honour of a Treasurer, and on the left side a
second in honour of three of the Prytanes, and a third in honour of 10 Prytanes
as iepoTTOLoL. Another of the Prytanes is similarly honoured on the right side.
17. KoWvriies: cf. 'Ixapieies 151 n 8 (325 k.c). This substitution of the
et for l may be added to the examples noted under no. 39, 74 22. Others
accent KoWvreTes, KoWvreies, etc. Cf. 148 col. iii 16. In 21 Mv7]ai0iov= -deov.
25. In the vacant space, where however Gollob says there is no trace of
letters, we might have suspected that the name of a fiftieth Prytanis stood
;
forty-nine only are enumerated.
24, 28. 'AyKvXrj appears to have been a divided deme
;
we should have
expected a distinguishing mark as in the case of Rotcl/ulos and Uaiavri; cf. 148
col. i 16, 21, Dittenberger Herm. ix 409.
30. reus <pv\eTCLis: not rrj (pv\r); only the fifty Prytanes of the Aegeid tribe
were concerned.
31. The raixlas here performed the sacrifices which it was the duty of the
Prytanes to cause to be performed before the beginning of meetings : Cf. IG i
390, 32 ; 408, 9.
34. On the confused construction Koehler notes that in these inscriptions
the same care was not observed as in state-documents.
150]
OFFICIAL LISTS. 401
35. rrjs o-vWoyrjs rod Sr)/j.ov. The Prytanes were frequently commended for
the duty, e.g. IG n 1, 390, 12. The persons actually praised by their tribesmen
are the three members of the prytanising tribe who formed one-tenth of the
board of avWoyeis rod 8t}/jlov (cf. lOO A a 19) and assisted the X^i'apxot. See
D.A. s.v. rrjs [5i]a56<re(w)s kt\ : the stone has
AO^IEO^-
The av/m^oXa
were the tallies received by those who attended the assembly in order to secure
payment of the paadbs e/c/cX^crtao-rtKos. Gollob I.e. notes a similar use of the
word in Ar. Eccl. 297. dwpeiav : coronam auream conficiendam curaverunt.
Gollob. For the form cf. the note on 1. 17 above.
39. On the various kinds of iepoTroioi see 9 9. Here the lepoirotol ey ^ovXrjs
are meant. They were ten in number and elected for the performance of
named sacrifices, in some cases from the whole council, one from each tribe: in
other cases, as here, the whole ten from the Prytanes, to whose period of office
the ritual in question, here ra fiv<jTr)pi.a, belonged.
ISO. A slab of Pentelic marble found among the ruins of the aqueduct of
Hadrian. Kumanudis
(?)
Avyr) 1870 Sept. 21 ; G. Hirschfeld B. d. Inst. arch.
1872 p. 118 sqq.; IG in 1, 1023.
Alphabet in the main type 9 ;
a is a
1?
5 is 5
1}
6 is
2
,
is

7
, <p is
<p
l
, <p
7 ,
^
is
\f/2
', no /3.
^z=g~ = eKTrjs, col. i 6. In iv 7 ~\\] = 7rpa^vTepos,
|\J
= fewrepos.
[The inscription is in Jive parallel columns]
col. i col. ii
Ai]/aWto? AcrKXTjiriaSrjs
Alkivvlos 'At-h/co? [teu?
Zooirvpos AireWov Ep^-
'
AafcXTjTTLo&copos
)
'A.y\a6fj
rvyr).
'Eirl
apxJoz/ro?
Upajjayopov
)
rod
Teij/LLodeov (dopo/ciov el airo tt}? irpGorrjs -
5
ov
(
ABptavov t?
'
A6rjva<; 7ri&r)/uLLas jjutjvos Ta/jL7]\t- Zooirvpos 'Epao-eiv[o]v
wi/o?, eVl T?}? Alyr)t8o<; r irpvTaveLas,
fj
eypapifjud- Ar)fii]Tpio<;
)
revev ^Lpvcroyovos
)
t&Xvevs, ol irpyrdvei^
reifi Xa/9779
)
<r\avT<$ clvtovs kol tovs aicreiTovs dveypayjrap
YapyrjTTLOL
'E\7tcopv/jLo(<=;)' 'Epfielas T\avtcov Aikivvios
['
'Apptavos
<&ovpio<; ^Slap/cos
Ev8t)/jLOS
(
}Lp/JL6LOV
Ep/uL6pa)<; Aa/Jbevov
EXevaeivLos
col. Hi
0(bpaaTos no[irXio]f
'
AXe^avhpos M . . . . vos
Tlop,7roovLO<; Zco
R. 11.
col. iv
ZooTrvpos YlvOeivov
Tldwv^os 'Hpa/cXelSov
etc yivpcvovvTrjs
A\ei;av8pos HXtoScopov
col. v
[
vos
Fj\tTIVIKOS \\pT6/jLCO-
'
E(TTiai606l>
W6r)v68copo<?
)
26
402 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[150
(5)
'
A\/ca/jLev7]<; 'A( . . . ,
AoopoOeos Tlpor[ei[i.ov
Ai,/civv[i]os ^Attikos
JJpelfjLOS TlpOT6l/Jbo[y
QicrL&copos Scocr . . . .
(10) 'Ac^poSetVto? 'AX . . .
'Rpifccuels
AiotcXrjs
'
AXe^dvhpov
'EX6fcrt^[i]o9 'OXv/attov
yLa/capevs
)
irp.
MaKapevs
)
ve.
JLvrjfjLepos Ma/ca/oe(o))?
. . o&copos %rcap,dv8pov
. . . S(t)pOS iVO~^7]fjiOv[o<S
Aioficuecs
Ba^Q^o? Net/crjcpopov
^6LK7]cf>6po(;
)
1
Apa$>r}VLOL
'
AvTLITCUT
p0<Z TLvTTOpOV
A(TKkrj7Ttd^)7]s JLvirop*
dtaeiTOi
fcrjpvj; /3ovXrj<; [i<]a[l 81
For the ataeiroL (deiairoi) whom the Prytanes in this list include with them-
selves among the persons to be honoured see 68 p. 188. The 15th year (col. i
151. A square base of Hymettian marble found on the Acropolis. Pittakis
'E0.
dpx-
725 ;
IG 11 2, 943. Cf. Hubert Be arbitris atticis Leipzig 1885
p.
24 sq.;
M. and S. Att. Proc. 48, 1009 sqq. ; Pischinger Be arbitris Atheniensium publicis
Munich 1893 p.
12 sq.
Alphabet, type 1 ; no
\p.
325/4
A 1] a t T 71
B.C. '
r a I I 77 t A V T
d]
V I <x a v a T(j)aV(O04
*E[p]e^01/$>O9 AXatee? AetpaSiGorai
AapbiTTpees Ni/ajparos <J>tA.&)z/
5
Nt/aa? 5
To/jbodeos 5 'AraXocfrpcov
JLv6v(f>pQ)v
TapyrjTTtoL RvOvkXtj^
l^apicrio<s 'JtjTTL/cXfjs <Ppedppcot
i/c JLtjSgov 'I/capLetes <$>iXoKr)hrj<;
A^fJLOKXrj^ edSa>/90? %rpdro)v
IO Eu&)^U/A66? 10 KXeatWro? 10 Xov[v]iL<;
At'cr^pato? Ato/i-ete? *A/UL(f)LK\f}<;
Eu/3to? A(Dp6d0<s %fCafjLf3(OVL$CLL
<l>avvXXo<z 'Ecrrmtet? <>v\aKL87}<;
^.cofcpdTrjs
'
Hry?7cr/a?
15
AvayvpdcriOL 15 TlXwOees
1
AtcafjbavTihos
'Ap^[8]ayu,09 WiavriOeos 15
YipoairaXriOi
Kr\]<picrcis
'A/o^/Sa/xo?
Arj/jbdparos Hav8iovl8o<s <J>iXo;/)T7;9
AtoTreWrjs YlpofiaklcnoL NttfdcrTyoaTO?
20 t&rjyovcriOL ^Lretyavos
NlKOGTpCLTOS
151]
OFFICIAL LISTS. 403
1. 4 sq.) from the first visit of Hadrian to Athens, which Dittenberger says must
be either 138/9 or 139/40 a.d., more probably the latter; so A. Schmidt Chron.
738 sqq., who also argues that the coincidence of the sixth prytany with
Gamelion, col. i 5, shows that the civil year in this Hadrianic era must have
begun with Boedromion, not Hecatombaeon.
Col. i 3. The sign
)
seems here to be superfluous; see 68 Jin.
Col. i 4. For the numeral signs et instead of ie, see note no. 142.
Col. i 5. Is = els, and col. iii 9 Eio-t'5a>/)os='Icr. etc. see 91 37, 72, 93 58.
Col. iii 11. 'Epi/ccuets, col. v 5 Ato/iatets : see 92 init.
Col. iv 3. 4k MvpiuovvTTjs : Meisterhans Gr. 84 quotes other examples of this
nasalised form ; cf.
'Aptififias (40 7 etc) and 'Apu/xfias.
(151)
This inscription, containing a list of Sicur^rat, might equally well be
classed under the Section Dedications.
On the numbers, and functions of the Sicur^rat, their distribution among the
tribes, the distinction between public and private Statr^ra/, see D.A. s.v. Here
the numbers mentioned from the several tribes vary between 16 in the Cecropis
and 3 in the Pandionis, in all 104 names. The usual tribal precedence is
observed ; see Rem. vi p. 127 and 44 6.
I IC
[X i o v s ap
V T [s v ir 6
TlreXedcrLOL
ATjfiijrpios
5
*
A^apvees
Ai'cr^ea?
'Ei7ri%dpr]s
io A6r}v68copo<>
Tlv66Scopo<;
AvTi^dprfs
'5
K.Kp07Tt8oS
VTT6TCLLOVe<$
^vv8pop,o<;
Ef/c\?79
MeXf/crai/Spo?
20 AXaii<;
X
o v t o s
t o v 8 v\
p,] o
\y
MeXir[Us
H<yr](Ti\
L
a<s
5
KXeeuVero?
K]?;0/crt09
^E>\U69
Xaplas
r
J7T7ro6covr[Bo^
io e' Oiov
AvToStfCOS
ApLCTToftovXoS
Otvaloi
<>avLa<;
15 KaWta?
Ueipcueis
HayKpdrrjf;
Aptarwv
Kowpecoi
20 Soj[o-TJpaT09
Av<TL(TTpaTO<;
AvcriarpaTos
5 A(f>cSvaiot
TeXeCFLTTTTO^
(paXTjpees
(
Hyr)cria<;
MapaOcoviot,
10 OXv/jLTTLoSwpos
Tpi/copvatoi
Aucrt/i<x^09
Avtlo%l8o<;
15 )paav[^a]^o<;
^potdhai
KaXXiTeXr)?
HaXXrjveef;
60TiyL609
20 KaXXiarpa[tos
262
404 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[151
AcovvcroScopos
KaWatcr^po?
AlyrjcBos
KoWtrree?
25
TXavKCi)vt87]<;
HLvSavTiSat
KaWtTeX?;?
HdpaaeLas
30
'E/o^ee?
'E7Tt7e^?7?
20 VLaiaviels
NeavSpos
A6&)7'[ti8o]9
AevicovoeZs
25 AiSv/nia^
Yvd6(Dv
Aeivia\%
Srparco[v
30 ^&)[oa|ios
20 XoXapyees
'ApLcrTaiveros
Soplfccoi
y\.vr]cr'i(TTpaTO^
Xaipeas
25 Ayvovauot
Ilo/otot
O] 0/77$) 09
3o'0^]^
K]Xea^Spo9
Me^e:/9aT779
15 2. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken on three sides
;
on the left, it had
been joined to another slab. Found in the Dionysiae Theatre. Khusopulos
'E0.
dpx-
n. s. 168 tab. xxm
;
IG 11 2, 945.
153. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken on three sides; from 1. 12 the right
margin is intact, but on this side another slab had been attached. IG 11
2, 946.
154. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken on three sides; on the right side
another slab had been attached. Said to have been found on the Acropolis.
Pittakis 'E0. dpx-
1046; C. Keil Sched. epigr. p. 34; C. Bursian Philol. x (1855)
p. 178
;
IG 11 2, 947.
On all three inscriptions see Koehler, Mitth. vn
(1882) p. 96 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1; once in 152

is
2
'>
O=o, and generally ov; no
\p.
Punctuation (:)
in 153
(152;
10
Ypa]yU,/x[aT6vv'
oi'8]e SieSi/cacrai^To
Kara to tov hrjjiov [v|ni <
f
>L<r
i
xa
IlvdoSojpos Uv0
- -
-
-
- -
dvTi 0]eo8a)/9Ol/ 2<0O<7 LGTpCLTOS Kt^L^kiwvos
-
d v t I II] X v K
p
a r o v 9 KrjpvKiwv 2axxtcrT[pdTov
-
- -
ci v] t t At;
fir) t
p
1 o v (PiXo/cpdrris <&c\o
- - -
-
*E/xi/cpa)VL$7)<; Me
-
^ApLcrravSpos Av
-
'OvrjTCdp Ova<javTi&ov
-
5
'ApLo-(r)o(pouP Nav/c
- - -
152]
QiXoKparr}*;
ArjjjLOKpiTOS
25 K.a\Xt(f)dp7]<;
AacBaXiSai
Elevo/cXfjs
'A0fiovees
30 Xacpecficov
Eu/3to?
OFFICIAL LISTS. 405
'
Ayep^ovauou At<yiX[i]e[is
'
'
Apyehrjyu-09 'Acrrf/Lt^Seov ?
'A
77^7/9
y
Ap%e8[t)iLos
JLv6v/cpaT7)<; 'A\w]7re[K^s
25 KaWtTefXris
25 AlavriSos
Olvalou
^7rL%dpr]<;
c
Vafivova[ioi
30
Nt[KWV ?
<>eihicpaTr)<; A]p
Kt/)o"&)^ <$>pvvov
PoiA;o9 ^tXtyov
M.v(r))cTLaTpaTo<z
<> -
-
KaXXtyLta^o? Me
-
QukocFTpaTos [M
-
Avkcov T\avKe[rov
Tlpaos aevoK
-
-
'ASetcrro? IIo
-
'152 continued)
15
20
%eoi
Sarupos
Ni[k
25
30
35
We
*[\ - -
.
IIoXi;/cX[tj
S
--
AayLt7TT|0e[vs-
'ApiCTTO/Cp
Aa/jL7TTpv[s
1
a>p
406 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII. [153
(153)
6 Seiva dvrl - -]ov tov Xa/3
-
6 Seiva $r\\yov. dvrl H[ tov
6 Seiva dvrl
]?
tov A?;yU,[T]Tpiov
6 Seiva

avJTt Apio~TO(f> g3[vtos tov

5
6 Seiva a]z^T[l 'AvjTfiSoTJou tov Et/
-
6 Seiva
-
dvrl -]ft)^o[s r]ov XifMOVOS
6 Seiva dvrl] Yiv66[%\(i)pOV TOV e/UO-r[ov
6 Seiva djvrl AewireiOov^ rod Aioye
6 Seiva dvrjt Arj/noKpdrovs tov Ar}fjLOKp[a.Tovs
io 6 Seiva dvrl TSovXrj/cXeovs tov l^ovXapylSov :
-
-
6 Seiva -]t(-) : dvTL ^(oarpaTOv tov %a)cri/cXeov<}
<>
6 Seiva "] 0i
(")
: dvrl Tvfjiohrjfjiov tov TifAOfcXeovs
- -
-]p(-) : dvTl Arjitjevov tov KvSifcXeovs : Oi[vaiov
-
]
dvTi paavhdov tov 'AXk/jLcovl8ov : 'Ac^tS.
-
dvTl] 'AptSr/Xov tov M.v7]o-dp^ov "Qa6ev
- -
Aap.]7T I aVTl A67TTLVOV TOV AvTitycOVTOS
^(j)7JT.
-
-
]
dvTL J^rjc^tao^copov tov Tlavaicryov^ Ayap.
-
]
: dvTl <>i\ofcpaTov<; tov QiXo/cvSovs Uaia.
- - - -
-] dvTi AeovTos tov
'
AyaaucXeow; 'KXev.
20 6 Seiva dvrl] J^T7jcri7r7Tov tov Hl/jlvXov : Kvdrjppcov
6 Seiva
]K~)
dvTL^eiSoKpdrov
9 tov 'AptaToSt/cov 'A//,<[it.
6 Seiva dvrl Te\iadvBpov tov K.7] (f)icroSa>pov 'AcfriSv.
6 Seiva dvTi
-
-k]X-oi;9 tov pao~v{3ovXov yiapaO.
tov -^ohwpihov 'Adfiov.
25
t]0V NlfCCOVOS *AfJL(f)lT.
tov Teiaapyov YlaXXr).
tov Av\KLVOV ' AOfJLO.
t]ov ' AvhpoicpdTovs Ke<a.
tov 'Apio-Jro/cXeou? K.v8a0r).
t
Seiva
c
Seiva
15 6 Seiva
c
Seiva
Seiva
6 Seiva
6 Seiva
30
-<r-
Ii\poo~7raXTiov
154)
- -
09
- -
otcXiovs
- -
ov
- -
9
t&rjyairjs
Meye\ea>9
apfflyeTrj?
dvT[\
-
'HpafcXrjs dpxrjyeTT]*; dvTi -
AlOGKOpO) aVTL NlKOGTpa\rov
YYoTafJbLOL
155]
OFFICIAL LISTS. 407
fxov
'AvTifcXfjs <&iXo$;evov dvrl <X>
v]Spov KvSaOrjvacrjs
tcXeuSov KaWtdSr)^ Nt/co/xa^ou dvrl - -
-
a-^rpdrov 'AyfcvXeirjs
10 AvalBrifios Avaiov dv[r\
/cXelSov Upacnrjs
Nav/cpdrT)? Aafiacrlov dvrl A
o/juevovs etc KrjSoov
Tl(,<jTO<yevT)<; I1l(ttok\OV<; [dvrl
15
- -
Ka\]\co-rpdrov QiXoTi/jLLSr)
1
? tyeoTLfiov dv\r\
'ElV0K\ei&r)<; He^o[CTov dvrl
The
O
= o, ov points to the earlier part of the fourth century b.c.
Koehler (Mitth. 1. c.) shows that these fragments, which are parts of
documents of considerable size, represent the results of various 5ia56/ca<rtcu, suits
instituted to determine the claims of certain persons, as against certain others,
to be exempted from certain Xeirovpyiai. Thus in 152 6 one whose name is
lost is to undertake the duty in place of Theodoros, [avri Q]eo5u)pov. There
is not much to indicate the specific XeiTovpyLai to which the inscriptions are
to be referred. No. 152 was found in the Dionysiac theatre, hence perhaps
the liturgy may be the choregia. In no. 153 no reference to tribe or deme is
observed ; this indicates the trierarchy as the liturgy in question. Again as we
have evidence (cf. Dem. c. Polycl. and Thumser De civium Athen. muneribus
p. 57) that the lists of persons liable for the irpoei<r<popd were settled according to
demes, possibly no. 154 is concerned with the irpoeurcp'opd, and the liability to
perform the burden on the part of certain sanctuaries, 154
2
4 is quite in
keeping with this supposition. It may be noted that the psephism mentioned
in 152 3 was not necessary for authorising the 5ia8iKaaLai themselves. Perhaps
it contained provisions for securing a speedy settlement of the cases in hand
;
that they formed a numerous class appears from [Xen.] Resp. Ath. in 4.
155. Two fragments of a slab of Pentelic marble found on the Acropolis.
Koehler Herm. vi (1871) 106; IG 11 2, 948; D 613. Cf. Foucart BCH vn
(1883)
387 sq. ; Toepffer Att. Genealogie 50 sq. ; Mommsen Feste
p. 254, note
2, p. 258,
note 5; Haussoullier Rev. Gr. 1900 p. 25.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but ir is ir.
2
.
TOVCT$6 7Tia)'vJr[aTo] O lpocf)dvT7)<; [ri\v kXivt^v <rrp<3-
(TCLL TO) TI\0VT(Dv[i] fCdl TTjV TpaTT^av KO<TfJlT](rai
Kara rrjv fia[v^relav rov [0ov*
K.piT6Srj/iiov [''E]v8iov Aa/jL7rr[pia
5
Yj,iriK.pdT7)v [lli\icrtdvafCTO<;
QpdcrvXkov [<d]paav\\ov [AtKtXtea
408 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII [155
WvriyepT]^ SefvJo/cXeou? ['O]j/[0v
Tlvppos YYvOohwpov ['A]^e/)S[oij<rios
BouXap^o? [B]ou\ap[x]oL' ^[Xxkvs
TO
'
A7T0W6B(0pOV ' A7ToWo8(L)[pov
'Ereo/cA.?/? Xpe/jLa)VL8o[v AlBaXCSrjs
t&iXoTLfjLOs ['AK\eaaTodefjLi[Sos
'A]pL(7T[io)V ?]
y
ApL<TT0<$7]/jL0[v
The characters and the absence of the <xtolxvo6v arrangement indicate the
last part of the fourth century b.c.
The list is that of persons selected for the temple-service of Pluto by the
hierophant.
1. eiruo\J;aTO. Cf. Suidas : iriu)\pa.TO' rarAe^c, e^eXe^aro. 2<xti 8e 'Attikov.
6 ftaaiXevs tiriocxpaTo dpprjcpopovs. olov KareXe^ev, eeAeaT0* UXdriov iu Nolens
(Lefjg. xii 947 c). Koehler remarks that the variety in size of the letters in
different lines makes it clear that the names of the selected were inscribed by
different hands. For the sense cf. IG n 2, 949, 1 : iepo(pdv]Tr]s Rovcppddov Uepi-
6oL8t)s dve[ypa\f/ev] tous Tn.o(pdvTas v<p' eavrou.
2. Pausanias i 28, 6 testifies that Pluto was worshipped along with the
Eumenides in the Areopagus. The fact that it is the hierophant who chooses
persons to prepare the lectisternium shows that there was some connexion
between the cult of the Chthonian deities and the Eleusinian rites, in which also
IIXovtcov was the name of the king of the infernal regions. D. For the
restorations in these lines cf. IG n 2, 949, and for the expression rpdire^av
Koafj.r)<rai cf. 138 11.
7. 'AvTiyevris: for the negligence of construction evidenced by these
nominatives in enumerations see Meisterhans Gr. 203 who adds IG n 2, 811 c
22 sqq. (323 b.c) : /cXi/xa/aSas, larou ktX

dyKvpat. A flagrant example is afforded


by an Olympian inscription, 01. v. no. 36 (D
98) : virb [eXXa]vodiKai> 'Ayiddas,
$>iX[wv] . . . BddvX[Xos].
12. 'AK]ea(TTode/ju[5os. For the numerous examples in Attic inscriptions of
-era- before k,
x,
t, 6 see Meisterhans Gr. 89.
156. A stele of Hymettian marble found in the Dionysiac theatre.
Kumanudis 'Ad. vi p. 381 ; IG n 2, 953.
a
p
e 6 top
A^XAAA AA A
AAELFTAEElZHoOl K A M NZoOPPRTY<P + X .
O
For
-\-
(p see 51.
'E]7rt AvaodSov apyovTos oiSe iepoiroir\aav'
X]pvaL7T7ro<; i1~ Olov ^pu/cvdlcov 'Avayvpdo-io?
156] OFFICIAL LISTS. 409
YiroXepLala
5
'
Ao-k]\7][tt]i68oto<; Tleipaie. 'AvrLTrarpos Uecpaievs
N]i,/co<yVT]<; t&tXatBTjs
'Av]6ecrTrjpio<; ey Mvppiv.
Mva]crayopas
'
AXetjavS.
ILJavcrlXviros Tleipaievs
io 0]eo[<|)i]Xo9 Hetpcuevs
'A]7rWrj<; Xovvteix;
'A]/oi[pa]o9 Tleipaievs
'A]v8pea<; HaXXrjvevs
"A]p(TTO<; M.apa0a>voo<;
15 Ni/co/u-a^o? YlepiOoihrj.
AaK\rj7TLo8copo<; %ovvc.
&~\iXi7nrl8r)s <&Xvev<;
'E]p[jj.6]S&)/90? QpedppLos
4>]etSt7r7ro? <&Xve.
20 T]i/jLT)aL0o<; 'Rp^ievs
QdrjpvXos l\i6ev<;
^Eiropios
(
Va>fjucuo<s
'^ppbwva^ "Ep/juetos
'ApXLfcXrjs Acucidhri<;
AvKLGKOS i OiOV
Tiv6iKO<;
'
Apacfrijvios
<&iXt]/jlcov JLipecriSrjs
Me^eXao? lTetpateu?
Kparep^uo?
f
Pa/ii/oi;crt09
Aeo^Tf^o?
'
Axapvevs
'AXei;av8po<; ^Orpvvev^
Ba/c^fo? 'AOfAovevs
TSaaiXeL&rjs TleipaLev<;
'AyidSas Tapyrjrrios
SeXeu/co? Ae/ceXeeu?
c
l]e[pa)]^ (or -ecov
?) 'A^V/z^ei;? AetjavBpos \\.va(f>Xv(TTio[<$
T\]av/cia<; ($ttoX6s
IlpcaJroXao? Sf7r<x\77TT.
A]toz/ucrto? Kpioaevs
25 n]a^atTto? PoSto?
AJrj/jLocfrcXos
Ueipatevs
(d\pd<TLinTOs 'l/captevs
"l\o)V
'
A/jL(f)LTpO7rf)0V
"AJXetjts Mapa^wj/to?
30
Bji'aw 'Af7z/iev9
K]j0aTt7T7TO5 'Krj<f)L<TlV.
'Ajp^eXao? Xf7raA,>/TTt.
0]eoSa>po?
f
Pa/xyoucrt09
'A]^>6<jTa/D^o? Aeutfovoeu?
35
M]e/jLV(ov Sa/3ia[v]o9
K]aXXtpaT?79 'AyyeA^TiGcv
Acju/ao?
The inscription probably belongs to the first half of the second century B.C.
;
cf. the note on no. 51 init. The lists are those of the iepoiroioL who officiated at
the 'Pwfiata and the U.To\e/xaia. In col. i 25 H]aualTios 'F68ios is probably not the
well-known philosopher.
MrjTpoScopos Heipaietx;
M.rj8eio<; Tletpaievs
MevavSpos Tieipaievs
YlocreiSotivios Aafi7rrpev[s
IloaetScopio^ Tlecpcuevs
'EcrTtato? (drjfia/cevs
'ApLcrrapxos 'Yapivovaios
'
A7roXX68a)po<; Ueipaiev?
1
'ActkXtjtt m[8]?7? Ueip[aivs
A
- - - - - -
410 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII. [157
157. A stele of Hymettian marble, broken above, found in the Acropolis.
Koehler Mitth. vn (1882) 7; IG n 2, 958.
Alphabet, type
5;
fj.
is /x
1
, ir is tr
4 ,
is
X
and
<p
7
, w is w
x
and w
6
.
KXetSovx.os] KCL\\ irvp<j>6-
p]o?
' A\7roWoB(Dpo<; NiKayopov
'Va/jLvovaios
5
ijepet"? ^coKpdrrjf; 'Eapairl-
covos K.f)(f)LC^Lv<;
(cf. IG in 1015)
r
'
ey M.vppLvovTT7)<;
10 HXtoS&)pO? ^OXvjlTTLohwpOV
/cat
7rvp<fi6pos.
The fragment contains the remains of a list of the annual sacerdotal officers
of the Asklepieion. The surviving lines form the end of the list. The
/<\et5o0xos is mentioned IG n 1, 453 b 18 and 453 c 13, 14. There was a irvpcpbpos
connected with the Eleusinian ritual; seeD.,4. A Delphian list, D 611 (102/1

94/3 B.C.) begins with Tlvpcpbpos rj iy AeA0co[i>], the priestess who carried the
sacred fire from Delphi to Athens.
158. Four fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. Pittakis
E0. 1344, 1401, 276; IG n 2, 959.
Alphabet, type
1;
is
l5 2
; no
\j/\ E
= e, and
O
= o, ov, indicating the
end of the fifth or beginning of the fourth century b.c.
Frg. a b
.... o? . o
-
-
.
x]^
7
??
A/Lt[eiv
-
T]rjpv<; 'A7roXXft>[vi8ov
- -
K]rua?
'
E7rcfcpdr[ovs
5 lLv<f)p(ov
'
Ap^Br)[\iov
'ATToWoovtos
y
ApcarofjL6vov<; 2]
'Upa/cXei&rjs Uvppos T
<$>L\<Dvi')(Lhov
'
Aprefjbco\y
io
^TpOfji{3iXL&r)<;
(
HpaK\ei[S
-
XapcBrjfjLov Eu/360"
-
158]
OFFICIAL LISTS.
<X>omf ^v^elpov Sap7r[TJ8(ov
Navacov fyeocfriXov TIaverhttpar
-
Tpiripapyw
'
ApiaTohrjfjj
-
15
Upcoro/jLa^o^ K?7<jh. Avatarpar
-
T$]avai(TTpaTOS St6. Kaplcov K?;[<j>i<r
k\iri(3aTai ^jp/bLa<pi\o<;
y^aiprjficdv
*
AypvX. Kr^crtAcXe
-
Mv\qaias
'
Aypv\r). JL7rifie\ri[TT)s ?
20 . .l^vpap^o^
^
Aypv. nafO"icrT/9[aT
-
'A(x<j>]t/cX779 'Aypv. Mapwi; Me
-
-
-
oJSayita?
'
Aypv.
,
A^TtyU,a9
-
<o]v
'
AypvXi). AtO^L'crfc[o
-
-
<r]rpaTO<;
'
Aypv. 'Ayddoov
25
- o]? Jrj(f)icn. A[d.K]cov[os
E . .
-
Aap,.
E .
.-
-
A]efi0[o
-
Tpjt/co.
(
Rp/JL(OV
~ -
30- - - Ar}/ULT][TpiO
-
- -
779 ^recp. Krrjac
-
-
- -
t]?;? 'Etp/jLCLL
-
-
- -
779 Xepp(ovr]<TiTr)<;
?)
%drvp[o$
- -
t]?/9 pa
35
- -
S779 e/c Ke. Ila-
-
-
- - t]?79 A---
- -
7?9
TLt6.
_
K6]7rp.
40 trivrt\K6jVTap'^.
- -
\]?79
Uai.
411
OlvCLl.
45
vavTai ar
-
-7f
-
l<r]TOt
Ki7<.
412 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[158
Fn
T)]?
- -
9
?
Kr)<fii.
to -
-
t]J9
XoX.
cirtPctTaiJ
Aa]/jL7TT.
A]a/J,.
Aa/ji.
15 Aa^.]
---
-(-)
Frg. c?
10
2 -
^cXocrrparo^ [2
QoZvtt; 'AXe^t7T7r[ov
Tera9 AXe%iir7r\ov
Acravpios
'AXef/finrov
Eutu^o? IT/)a^/8[ov\ov
Ad/uLCOV XapicrLov
Ha)fcpaTT)<; Xapicrlov
'Ap^6^)iXo9 AilTOV
Ylavaavias 'Apiara-
Tpt/3aA,\o9 'A^tcrTa
-
r^yof? 'AttoWcovl^ov
HcfxiLCTToScOpOS
'TirepavOos
Kapicov A/jlvvt[ov
Su/0O9 'AyU.[vVTOV
- -
<nc
-
- -
- -
^09
K

vavTaJt acrroL
- -
t09 Ko#eo.
- -
o/cXrjs Kod.
yL6<X^09 K?7^).
AjatSaA./.
- -
/X09
(
A)va(f).
I
- -
X]?79
'
AXl/jlov. E
- -
t]%09 'I/ca/o. K
9 Tleipac
K]e</)a\?7
The stone contains fragmentary lists of ships' crews.
The order observed in the lists is as follows. First come the trierarchs or
trierarch, then the e7rt/3drat or hoplites serving as marines, thirdly the Kv^epvrjraL
(steersmen), KeXevarai (boatswains), TreurrjKdvTapxoi (subordinate to the /ceAei/<rrcu),
KpuipaTai (look-out men at the bow), fourthly the oarsmen enrolled from the
number of citizens (vavrai daroi) ;
lastly, the oarsmen belonging to the class
160]
OFFICIAL LISTS. 413
of freedmen and slaves. The names of the freedmen and slaves (see frg. c,
col. 2) are followed by those of their patrons or masters, and not by the demotic.
For the order of precedence among the officers cf. Xen. Oecon. vin 14, where
the irpcppeijs is called the diaKovos of the Kvf3epvr)T7js, and Aristoph. Eq. 543 sqq.:
<pa.(TKv
|
ipeTrjv
xpV
pai TrpcoTa yepiadai rrpiu 7T7]5a\Lois iirix^ipeTv,
|
/car' ivrevdev
Trpojparedcrai nal tovs avifxovs diaOprjaou
\
Kara nvfiepvav avrbv eavro). The number
of marines is small, on an average ten to each trireme ; cf. Thuc. in 95, 2, iv 76.
1, 101, 2.
159. Three fragments of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. Eoss
Dem. p. 18; Hang. 1259, 1279; Pittakis 'E0. 320, 2113; IG n 2, 960. Frg. a
only is given below.
Alphabet, type 1; E
= e, ei(?)
; O~o, ov.
K\r\pov
x]ol
19---
t o i cr 8 18
6] rj K A. Tj O O 9 e
[ff I - - - - d
p x
o v t o s
'Epx9i{Ko?
Aw]^[ti8os
- -
7]s Xtf<z//,[p<ovi8(u
5
- -
o? KaWiov JLvvifc[os
- -
-
9 ILvvo/jlov AevKovo[ii<s
- -
?7?
Avaiybayov "AvBpco[v
AafjL7rTp]^? KaOvirep. AlOa\l[Zai
-
p]oiAo? 'la^vplov
(
Ayvlas: [E
- -
-
xo 9 ^Icryypiov K.?]ttcoc
- -
a]? <>l\lvov Arj/uLap^o^
Aap,iTTp]?79 irapaXoi
4]
Olov
The list to which these fragments belong gives the names of cleruchs, to
whom lands were assigned, possibly in Samos or Potidaea; cf. IG n 2, 699 col. i
20 sqq.
, where among the dedicators of golden crowns to Athena is mentioned
6 5t}[/x]o[s
6]
iv Hdp-ip, and IG n 1, 57
(
D 82), 8sq. iav a\yveveyKri
'
Adrjvaiois
7rifxxp[a]aL tovs KXrjpovxovs is IIor[et5ata^]. The date of the latter inscription is
362/1 B.C. and in it, as in our inscription,
O
= o, ov : rQs KXrjpQxQs.
160. A base of Hymettian marble, found in the island of Salamis
:
H. 0.58 m.; L. 0.79 m.; Th. 0.50 m. The letters for 0.35 m. of the lower part
of the stone have been designedly erased. Lolling Mitth. vn
(1882) p. 40;
IG ii 2, 962.
Alphabet, type 1;
cp is both cp and
-4-
(see 51) ; no
f,
\>.
414 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[160
lirirap^o^
%eo<ykvr\$ %eofjLr)hov<; 'EXeucrmo?
At0iXos <t>i\wrd5o[v A.]ap.TpeiJS
5 Ni/das Eu/crcuou Eu7reTcua;i>
Euo"t/)o0os EiryeWSou Yieipatev.
^LKdcrrparos Nt/cocrrparoy XoXap.
E]i>K\rjs Avffiov MeXirevs
~Kapap.avTlbt)s Sw/cXeoi; Evuvv/Jie.
10 ~Nav<ru<\rjs l$cLvcn.~yei>ov
'
Avayvp.
QCkbtjTpaTos TeMTdvdpov Tletpa.
2ft)Kp]dr?7S EvSpd/xovos 'Acpidva?.
'Apio-Jro. e[-
- - -
'Ava/yvp.]
4>iXeas Ato/c\eofS EXouownos
'Z/x'ucvdos ^coaiinrov Ai^wvefa
KXeocpavros KXeocpQvros 'EXei/cr.
Et)/crcuos Ni/a'ou Si;7reTatwv
KaXXtas KaXXt/cpdrou KoXaw/Jfl.
6 drj/xos HojkXtjs 'AXe^l/ULCLXOV ~Ev(VPVIJ.1JS
Qeoyfryv HpoKXyjs'Ep^iyevov KoXXvreiJS
EiXevcrLvtojt EuaX/aS^j
'
AXkljulclxov iic Kepa^u.
'HjTTLKp&Tris AiocpavTov Heipaeij.
KaXXias Swjj'dirrou KoXcovTJde.
ov *E\]eu.
The -\-
(p makes it probable that the inscription is not earlier than the
second half of the fourth century b.c. Lolling I.e. supposes that linreh who
make the dedication to the heroine Salamis belonged to the cleruchs
;
for at the
period indicated Salamis was occupied by cleruchs. Moreover if the dedication
had been made by the Athenian cleruchs as a body, the names would not have
been given, and the dedication would have been made to Athena rather than to
Salamis. In 1. 6 Etiarpcxpos may have been an ancestor of Qeodoros Evvrpbcpov
Ueipaieijs mentioned in IG n 1, 594
(
= 82
3),
595 (about 127 b.c.) as one of the
principal Salaminian cleruchs.
The lower part of the inscription may have been destroyed in consequence
of the events of 318 b.c, when Cassander took possession of the island and the
Athenian cleruchs were expelled.
161. On the lower part of a block of Pentelic marble, used in the Byzantine
age for the base of a pilaster, which was placed in the ancient temple of Athena
Polias. Pittakis 'E<p. 1400; IG n 2, 963.
Alphabet, type 1
;
is
2
.
distinguish on the stone.
Koehler notes that
O
and
_Q
are hard to
AlOVlHTtOS
TIapfjLVL(TfCOS
Tlypplas
ILv&rjfjLOs
'Iir]7n,a9 KjjqpivBioi
162]
OFFICIAL LISTS. 415
10 ^rpdrcov
'
Acr/c\7)7n68a)po<;
0<X9
Alovvctlos
15 Zft)t'Xo9
TlapfjLeviwv
20 Koz^ojz/
TYarovfJLacrrjs
Ai/SvOos
ktX.
2....
Me
r
H^><Zt[<TT
Ka^ucrTtot
Ato/cXr}?
Kvfyfcyvot
Aio<f)dvr)<;
Aiviave?
'
Ayifjua^o^
Apuarcov
5
AfjLvvras
Aiicaiapyos
Apdic\ja\v
kt\.
\A.jx]em%o?
A<yed<;
Acificov
Jao-ets
^a/jLid8r)<;
' A\iKapvacra[tls
Moa^tcov
QiXnrrreZs
'
^LpfAoXvKOS
Av/ao
AyaOcov
YipaKXecorai
kt\.
(76 Zmes in a/ remain
of
the inscription)
Koehler thinks that the fragment contains part of a roll of mercenaries.
Col. ii. 46 sqq. contains the names of five inhabitants of Cassandrea which we
may infer from Diod. xix 52 (^/cricre 5e /ecu ttoKlv eiri r^s UaWrjvrjs ofxibuv/xov avrov
Kaao-dvdpeiav) was founded about 316 b.c The date of the inscription was
probably the end of the fourth century or a little later.
The strangeness of some of the names in col. i
1
46 leads to the conclusion
that they belong to the district of Thrace or Bithynia
; cf. Harov/ndavs, Ua.Tov/j.as,
AovXrjfeX/uus, Aplafa.
Col. i 47. AevKauoi. The Lucanians appear to have been held at Athens in
much the same estimation as the T/n/3aA\oi : cf. Isocr. irepi dpfyvs 50.
Col. ii 33. 0ea77eXa (plur.) was a town in Caria, perhaps identical with
SovdyyeXa.
162. A slab of Hymettian marble, broken on three sides and imperfect
behind
;
now in the Museum of the Archaeological Society at Athens. Kuma-
nudis'A0. iv p. 218; IG 11 2, 860.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but w is ir
2
.
eirl t<xs irpo]<Jo8oL'9 OiBe K)(tpo[r]6vr)VTar
et'9 to (JLvXcoOpucov
v]9 ^>p6/c\y]<; 'OfjOev
eU rb dproTTcoXi/cov
5 ZeXev/cos W^appev<;
eVl ttjv (TLTrjpav
r]ev<; Tifi[oK]pdT7)s opLKLO<;
-
-
Aia^ivr)<; Tiaiavievs
416 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[162
eoSoro? etc KotX/?;?
10
^H''
T
V
V olurjpdv
A^a[pvus
The inscription is probably not earlier than the latter part of the third
century b.c. It contains a list of persons, arranged in two columns, elected to
collect certain public revenues, and may have been preceded by a psephism.
The taxes in question appear to have been those levied upon millers, bakers,
corn-factors and wine-merchants, The adjective <xltt)p6s occurs D 554, 18
{Magnesia ad Maeandrum) : e/c tQu air^pwv [<J)]i>Qv
{^)[po-x](f
J
'V)
1' ^[tav diro]86ro}aav
rep lepeT.
163. A slab of Hymettian marble found in the Piraeus. IG n 2, 861.
Alphabet, type 1 ; but

is
2
, -rr is ir-^ ,
7r
2
, ir
5
.
Ti/AOfcpaT7)s
^
Aptarayopov S^/ao/^/S???
'IO/jlovi/ccx; AvTiaOeveihov JSepevLKiSvs
eo<yi^9 ArjfjLTjTpiov Ayapvevs
Tificov Ti/jloXo^ov Uatavcev
1
;
5
K.\edpaTo<; Alovvctlov AapLTTTpevs
ypa/jL/jLarevs fcXrjpcoTOS
AtoSoros (deohoopov
'
AfjLa^avrevs
<ypa/jL/j.aTei)<; aiperos
TipLO<yevris Alcr^picovo<; A<^uSmto?
io vTToypa/jLfjLarevs
ZcoTTvpccbv Teyywvo^ Tlpo/3a\i<TCo<;
rovaBe icrrecfxivcocrav ol avvdpyovre^
in corona
:
in corona
:
Ti/jLOfCpaTTJV 'I6/jLOVLKOV
S?;/jia^iSrjv ^epevLKihrjv
in corona : in corona
:
i$ tov kXtjpcotqv ol apyovTzs
ypa/jLfiarea top alperov
A toh or o v ypa/jL/jbarea
Afjia^avrea TcfMOKpdrr)v
1
'A(pL&valov
This is a list of a board of five members, e.g., the jx^rpovbp.oi or the dyopa-
v6p.0L of the Piraeus, belonging probably to the earlier part of the second
century b.c. Of each kind of officers there appear to have been five for the
city and five for the Piraeus; see D.A. s.w. and Boeckh St.
3
n p.
14*, note 91.
On the forms Tt,/j.0Kp&Tr)v, Ti/xoyePTjv see 53 28, 130 19.
164]
OFFICIAL LISTS: THIASOTAE ETC. 417
164. See
pp.
418419, 420421.
165. An altar-stone of Pentelic marble, 1.40 m. x 0.64 m., provided with
three
icx&P
- 1 - IG n 2, 986 b.
Alphabet, type 1. = o, ov.
^Ljxoavo^ KvSaO
\
iepecas Hpa/cXeou? /cat kolvov dtaacorcop
;
$&/?
-e-
o
e
<!;

s
<5j H
^"^ ">.
Oo
^
-s m^
C/*
o
2
a
9
H
-3
H
e
q
e
>o
8
3
C
* $*
o
e
A
q
H
8
so
o
3
8
CO
8
<to
H
O
*0
<> oo >
s
o
o
db <! OO
m
r
*^o
3
e>
ft
^ r
d"
1
1 1
UvOalos Avcravias
\'
AvrL6eo<s

'AfufilOeos
\
HyrjjjLcov
:
Appearparo? ;M
Koehler assigns this inscription containing names of thiasotae to the
beginning of the fourth century, b.c.
166. A slab of Hymettian marble adorned with an epistyle, found near the
Itonian gate. Pervanoglu Philol. xxv 338 ; Kumanudis 1101X177. 16 Jan. 1865
;
A. Dumont Rev. arch, xxi
(1870) p. 319
;
IG n 2, 982.
Alphabet, type
1 ; but tt is 7r
2
. {The text is given on p. 420.)
The inscription contains a list of subscribers to the restoration or construc-
tion of a tower and another building. Cf. a similar list subjoined to a decree,
no. 59. The form of tt precludes as early a date as 342 b.c, when also a
Sosigenes was archon. W. Ferguson Corn. Stud, x p. 54 puts the date at about
200 b.c, basing his conclusion upon a pedigree of the Echedemos family (1.
3),
which he has compiled from inscriptions. Five of the names in our inscription
appear in the list in no. 59, whence the demotic names are conjecturally added.
1. Xwaiytvov. For the form see 53 2.
2. avidvKau : or dvedeaav
;
see Meisterhans Gr. 188.
r. II. 27
418 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[164
164. A shield of white marble, of which the rim is broken with the excep-
tion of a part on the right side. Diameter 2 ft. 10 in. Found at Athens about
1748 by Anthony Askew, M.D. Corsini Fast. Att. torn, iv, prol. p. 9; Taylor
Combe, Anc. Marb. pt ii, pi. 36; CIG 284; Lb. Att. pt. i 558; Ellis, Townley
Gallery, ii p. 299; BMI xliv
;
IG in 1, 1165. Ke-examined in the Br. Mus.
Alphabet : a
3
, a
7
,
ft,
j8
3
(in the heading),
ylt
S
2
, e
lf
e
2
, e
4
,
5 , ft, Vn h> h.*
"2>
*3> \> \> fh>
v
n ^7>
i> s
7r
4' Pi j
<r
2> s
ff
% (
in a correction), r
lf
u
x
,
6
,
7 ,
Xx,
no 1//, w
1?
w
4
.
'Epe^etSo?
Avp'. At]fjLrjrpto<;
5
'IctTt^o? Zcottv.
Za)7rupo<;
)
ZaxTifjLLavbs So< . . .
^azna? MivcrTitfoi)
'Hpa^Xe^?;?
)
io J AlyetSos
WLeytcrToScopos
)
Ka/37T09
)
\\.7reWr)<;
A(f>po$'
'.
15
EuTir^a^os
A(f)po
.
1
ActkXtjtt cdSrjs
^
Aito .
Aiofckrjs /cat Tpvcf)'.
Aecovihrfs Zonal.
Zi(D<Jt/jLO<;
)
20 latSoTos 'Kpfjt'.
FiV(f>p6<Tvvos
(
Rp/j,'.
J II roXefiatSos
Tiros
)
Nt/COCT/DaTO?
)
25
Tt/jLO/cpaTrjs Nttco .
Zonirvpos Nt#o'.
Avp. naz^Tati/09
67TVypa(f)0t
KXa. ^Ovofxaaros
30
^tXtz^o? MucttW.
NeiK7)(f)6po<;
KvS'
.
'E/D/Lldc/uXo? El)S'.
TTo/x7r'. Mapcoi/
'AX/cayLte^of?
Xv/jt(f)epa)v MeXiV.
MeXtcrcro?
)
5
A070?
)
Ei)eX7rtcrTO?
)
Hez^o/cX^? 'Ovrjcri.
J
'
AtcapLavTihos
KptTCOV
)
10 NIkojv JLvtvx'.
X.pvcrav0os ^cocrt.
' AOrjvaios Qua .
J
e
ASptaviSos
KX'. IlpwTa/yopa?
15 e/ OlvetSos
'EtlcLBoTo?
)
^AXe^avSpos Elt.
'AflfjLGOVLOS
)
Al<j)t\os 'A(po'.
20 <Papvd/c7]<; 'EXei/.
Ma;peti/o? <J>tXo.
A(f)po8eta to<s
t&tX,.
Ke/cpoTrlSos
E7repacrT09
'
AOtjvIco'
'.
25 KX. ITavXet^o?
KX.
r
Pr]Topi/c6<;
kirkvypafyoi
Tleptyevr]^ "Tyiv.
30
'Ayd6o)P
)
Sra. EuTu^a^o?
'Epa. Acoo-^eo?
164]
OFFICIAL LISTS: EPHEBI. 419
The letters were originally ornamented with red pigment, of which traces
remain. The mark J, not a common one, denotes the occurrence of a fresh
tribe. For D see no.
68, p. 188. The mark
'
,
as in Nt/co'. = NiKdarparos, denotes
o
abbreviations. UottXios, col. iv 7, is written by a common symbol TT. All the
letters have late apices
; H
and
B (A?)
are ligatured ; 11.
6, 7 in col. iii are by
another hand over an erasure.
io
k o a /jl r\-

(j>7) /3
O I
AifipoSeicrios
)
'laTpo/cXfjs
)
5
AyaOoirovs
IttttoOoovtlSos 5
%eotyavri<; O t \ e
p
w t
<>t\otcpdTr)<;
AcocfravTos <J>tX.
io Eivtcparris <PiX.
Yiviroptaro^
AlavriSos
15 Hre<l)avos Tpo .
Mi\ft)v
)
Repairlclkos Ei)/c.
<>o2(3o
i
s Aopvcf)'.
Aopvcfropos
)
20 KXa'. Ydios
AyaOo/cXrjs
)
Zojoti/jLos 'A<y<z.
Apre/jLiScopos A.
Me. 'Azm^^/So?
25 AtX. Aiovvctlos
KXa. Nu/u<to9
f
HXtoS&>po9 'Ap/c.
SoXaw ApKoXv.
iirevypacpoi
30 Eutu^?79 Ta Ma^tyLtO?
IT/3fc/L609
)
\\7roW(t)VC.
Zicocras npL YlXarcop
^ttlktcl? Ei)/ca/97ra9
15
IT^ft)TOT?7T09
)
&l6(f)aVTOS AtOP.
pacrv/3ov\os
o 9 ATTa\tSo9
IIo. AtA,. At<tXo9
ITo7rXto9 Tai}*y^-
aVTLKOO~fjL7]T7] 8e OV-
k ixprjcrdfjLTjv Sea to
ev to) vofjLw Trepi tov-
tov /JL7)8ev yeypd-
<fi0ai,
aXXa>9 t teal
TCp VLOJ
^p7]adfjL7)V
6t9 TCLVT7]V T7)V
7rc/jii\cav
M. AvprjXlo)
AXKCLfjuevei Aafi-
TTTpel.
^V/jLCJlOpOS
)
Uav0lcov
'A</9oSt<Xt09
Eu/cap7ra9
272
420 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII
[164
Text
of
'OXf(yu,)7r//co9 Ta(v)vfJLr)hr)<$
35
'A<po8etcri09
)
Aa/xa?
EtVtSoro? Ato'.
35
K6pv/jb/3o<;
Bot^l*?
f
}lpaK\e[$r]<;
^ZfJLVpvos
NeavOrjs
'TcrtSoro?
40
IcriSa)/)0?
'E7ra<^)/oa9
On the shield are engraved the names of Ephebi; see Rem. vii, p. 145. They
are arranged according to tribes which are given in the sequence usual in the
Imperial period (Bates Corn. St. viii 63). Havdcovis is missing, perhaps because
it supplied no Ephebi. The iireyypacpoL, col. i 28 etc., are foreigners (chiefly
Greeks) who had come to Athens from various parts of the Graeco-Koman world
for education and had become attached members of the Diogeneion
(65 24).
The native Athenians are sometimes by contrast called irpuTeyypa<poL.
If the ko(tix7)T7)s Alcamenes is the same person as the arparvybs iirl to, 6ir\a
of IG 68 12 sqq. (209/10 a.d.), our inscription should be later than IG in
1,
1147 (180192 a.d.) in which the son M. Aurelius Alcamenes, col. iv 74 (here
col. iv 9 sqq., auTiKo<rp:r)Tr)s), is no longer an ephebus.
Text of
166 (for commentary see
p. 417.)
'E7Tt %G)(TLyVOV OLpyOVTOS o[>'S t Kal
tov TTvpyov
av\i\0[T\KO.v
'E^eS^/xo? M.vr)(TL06o[v Kv8a0t]vaiis
Mcklcov Kvpvtc\e[LSov Kt]<JH<rivs
5
lepo/cXys Ie/o[. Sowwvs
"?
QiXayv Zco(f)[&vovs
Xp<LKV0o<; X
YIo\vk\i[tos
Atcr^pft)[v Ilcuavicvs ?
10 'Ap^/a? A
K]v$i7TTr[os
. . K
167] OFFICIAL LISTS: EPHEBI ETC. 421
no. 164 continued.
'
Attik'uov
35
Zyjvwv
Ulvos
KXa. HcQTTjpL(OV
'
ApT/jii8(op'
40 Za)Trjpi%o<;
ZtGocri,fjLO<z
Atf/jLTjTpLS
Z/judpaySos
Aewv
J~l(i)a<f)6pos
Alovvctlos
ZtoTTVpoS
J^vcfrpavTLKos
KA . JLvTv%r)<;
A07)l>L(0V
'ApTe/xa?
e68oTos
'Apre/uLiScopos
^(OTrjpL^O^
A metrical epigram, of which fragments remain : . . . . opos d\Krjs and alev
is dvxefJ.d[xovs] : ran round the rim of the shield.
Col. i. 7. Zuaifiiavos. Proper names in -iavos are common in documents of
the 3rd century a.d. and commoner still in the later Imperial period (R. Neubauer
Coram. Epigr.
p. 75).
Col. i. 16. 'A71-0. :
Afol
on the stone; perhaps 'AiroWodupos. Most of the
other abbreviations in the text will be obvious.
Col. ii. 42. 'E7ra0pas. In the classical period these abbreviated forms in
-as would have been used only of slaves and persons of low rank.
167. Part of an inscription on 48 fragments of a large stele of Pentelic
marble. Eustratiadis 'E7rtY/>. aviicb., <pv\\. rplrov 'Ad. 1855 (cf. <pv\\. irpwTov
1851; M. H. E. Meier Comm. epigr. 1 and
11);
Pittakis 'E0. 2484 (Lb. 517),
2488 (Lb. 440) 2489; IG 11 2, 985.
Alphabet, partly type 1, but with ir = ir
2 ,
=
2 5
partly type 3.
A heading of four lines occupies the breadth of the stele at the top. Below
this are contained in two long columns the names of those who a-rredwKav ras
dirapxo-s.
If we may accept Koehler's restoration of the first line, it will appear that
the architheorus, elected as head of the dewpoi by the Attic cleruchs in Delos,
published lists of the dirapxa-i- paid by Delian priests and certain Attic magis-
trates to the Pythian Apollo during an iweerrjpls, or period of eight years. This
period perhaps was designed to recall the time when the Pythian festival was
celebrated once in every eight years. It is called irpibT-q possibly because the
Athenians had given up the practice of sending a theoria to Delos and did not
reintroduce it till the end of the second century b.c On the connexion of the
oktaeteris- (ennaeteris-) calendar with the worship of Apollo see Schmidt Chron.
61 sq.
The iuveeTTjpLs in question extends from 103/2 or 102/1 to 96/5 or 95/4 b.c,
the key to the dates being the mention of MTydetos as eTnfieXrjT^s in Block D ii
14, 15 and 'Ap7etos as archon ib. 18. See the note on no. 65.
After the heading the portion of the text given for illustration is 11. 1658
of Block E, col. i.
E 17 (TTpaTTjybs kt\. : 36 19.
21. The sixth dea/Aodirris was perhaps accidentally omitted.
422 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA; SECT. VII.
[167
'O d
p x
i 6 ( o>
p
o s tov I v A r\ X w
8]
rj
p,
o v tov
\i| v tcov Ocwpwv aira*yovTa>v ras a tt a]
p
%
a
9
--ave-ypa\|/v twv i
p
c <o v KaiJ ap^oVTWV
to i|s ij <j> i <r |i a tov 5rjp.oii,
S
-
I
^
M v
p
p
i v o i] T-
(Here begins column i)
Portion
of
column i
of
block E combined from several fragments.
o'tSe airehdOKav Ta? airap^a^ iirl MrjSeiov
<jTpaTTj
r
yo<s iirl ra oirXa 'A7ro[XXo'8]&)/)09 [M
- -
s HH]
apxw]^
[M]^[oios Ileipcuevs H]
PaomXevs
- t]SeT . 9 Y\poj3a\\lo-\.o% H]
20 iroXep-apxo]? 'AvTLTrarpos KfSa[-
s
Q^ea/jboOirat [H]
- -
09 E[tK0v]fyU,ei/9 [H]
'ApTe/jLL&copos Be[pe]z;//a8?79 [H]
(PvXoTC/JiOS KlkVVVV<> [H]
25 A7T0AA<gW8779 A<X:t(28['q]9 [H]
IIo7rXfc09 AXaievs H
fcrjpu^ 'ApeoTrayrrdov eo^a/ot? iic Kepa/jueoov [H]
arpaT7]<yb<; iirl rr\v irapao-Kevr\v
AiovvaoyevT]? Av\a.^v\pdaio<;
p
1
30 7rifl\r}Tr}s II[ipai]ft>9
K.7](f)Lcro$(opos A[l*yiXi]ei/9 H
e7ri[A\r}Tr/<; A[t]Xov]
KaWt(7T^aT[os
-
-]eu? HH
67rtyU,6X77T^[s TOV p.]7TO^Ho[v
35
'ApLCTTLCOV [l] OtOU HH
a[-yop]a^o/>tot
- -
u]o9 /c YLepapecov
'
A\eav8po<; HH
168. A slab, entire at the bottom, found at Koulouri in Salamis.
G. Fougeres BCH xvi
(1892) 299 sqq.
A. AAE
(=e, ei,
[rf\ . . . I KU . N . O
= o, [ov,
] PPCTV. .
2toi%7;56j'.
iraiBl iraXaio-TTJ- 5
avBpl 7raXata[T^'
SJeffTepw*
Sevrepq)'
P\
ayv[dtp iraXaio-Tfj* .... UaiSl TTVKTr)'
A...
hevrepw' SjefTfeJ/oa)* |||
168]
OFFICIAL LISTS: TIIEORI, PRIZES. 423
'A #
7] V a LCO V 6 K^6lpOTOv[t\[l.iVo]^ 7tI T7)V l^dlT <TT
O-
rr/s irpooTt)^ evveeTri\${.%o% 'EiriKpajr?;? E7r carparov ITe-
r a 9 a ir a
p
%

9
H
>
'A 7r o [X X v i t] Tl v l
(p
k a[r
&]
t
77 9 eiir ev.
(Here begins column ii)
(Here is col. ii
of
block E)
Col. i, block E, continued.
67rt ra iepa
Ae[i]Wa-9 naX\77^eu9 H
40 <Pc\r}ficov H
yvjjLvaaiap^o^ eh <ts>A[r\\]ov
AtovvaoScopo^ Ae[ipa8uoTT]]9 H
Krjpv^ 6t9 ArjXov
^SAvpcov Aevicovoevs [H]
45
iepevs AttoWoovos ev ArjXco
^KvTLfcparris
'
E77- a:
77
0tcrto
9
[H]
lepevs
y
Apre/jLi8o<; [f\v vr/ap
*i\o]/cX^9 [-
-
8]e^ H
lepv]9 Ato[vv<rov
50
'A]aK\7]7rid[Sr\s - -
]l>9
P
lepevs
f
P&)//?79
Ar)/u(r))TpL(o)s Atfw[vii]? [H]
lepevs Aviov Nv/ncpoScopos
F
1
e/c Kepafiecov
55
lepevs dyvfjs 6eov ev Ar/\a>
'ApLCTTOvow; Ylpcordp^ov S<??TTt09 [H]
lepevs ^apdinSos ev Arj\[<o
0eo/3to9 Aiovvalov
^
A^apvevs (H)
(168)
']7
e
^[

]
t
V
7t^^t[ti' hevrepw'
\\\
10 hevrepw'
||| 15 dyeveia) 7ra<ytc[paTiov
dvhpl ttvktt}'
A
Sevrepa)' |||C
oevrepo)'
PI
avSpl ircryKpaTiov' ....
IlcuSl 7ra7^aT[iov' . . Sevrcpco
This inscription belongs to the same class as no. 169 and the notes
there given will suffice to explain this also. The written character shows
424 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII. [168
clearly that the inscription belongs to the fifth century b.c. The small value
of the prizes indicates perhaps some local festival. In 1. 13 after TrayKpariov
understand vlkCovtl; cf. 169 b 32. For the rdyixara

watdes, aytveioi, avdpes see


61 13.
169. Two fragments (a, b) of a slab of Pentelic marble, found in the
Acropolis. The inscription is in two columns (a) Pittakis, Vane. Ath.,
p. 382, 'E0. 170
;
Rang. 961 ; Lb. Att. 854. (b) Pittakis 'E0. 136; Rang. 960;
Lb. 855 (H. Sauppe, De inscr. Panathenaica, Gott. 1858). (a), (b) IG n 2, 965
;
D 668. Cf. Boeckh Staatsh.
3
i 270.
Alphabet, type
1 ; no
,
i^; = 0, ov, hence the date is probably the beginning
of the fourth century b.c.
Frg. a
. X
[X]HH
[r*]H
to[HH]HH
HHH
HHH
h'
15
[-HH]
H
20
[-H]
[-
Col. i.
irpa)T(pJ 0"[Te'4>avos'
S\rr]
6/0 CO*
KiOapwhols'
irpoiTw
GTefyavos
OaXXov %pvaov<$,
apyvpiov
p
hevrepw'
TpiTW'
A
rerdprcp'
ire/jL7TT or
p
1
avSpdcrc av\<p8ois'
irpcorw tovt[ov o-t]-
A
Sevrepcp' [ecjxivos'
dvhpdai Ki6apL<JTaZ<$'
7TpO)T(p TOVTOV,
<TT(pavo<; HHH*
Beurepcp'
rpirw'
av\r)Tal<$'
TTpCOTO) TOVTOV 0~T-
StvTt]pcp [i(f)avos
The inscription contains a list of the prizes
offered to the victors in musical, gymnastic and
equestrian contests. The amounts on the left of
the columns represent in some cases the money
prizes in drachmae, in others the value of the
crowns, awarded to the successful competitors, in
others (cf. b i 5 sqq.) they are merely numerical
signs. Thus ail. 5
sqq.
the first singer to the harp
receives a golden olive crown worth 1000 drachmae,
as well as 500 drachmae in money; the second, third,
fourth and fifth in order of merit have respectively
1200, 600, 400 and 300 drachmae. That the con-
tests in question were those of the Panathenaic
festival seems clear from the mention of the oil in
b i 1. 6 (cf. b i 1. 20 and note), where Sauppe
quotes Schol. on Soph. O.C. 701 6 de 'A/hcttotA^s
/ecu reus vLKriaaai to. Uavadrjvaia eXaiov rod e/c [MOpiQv
yivofxevov didoadal (prjaiv
;
Lucian Anach. 9 irap'
i]/juv de tols Uavadqvalois to ZXaiov to K ttjs /Utopias
;
Pind. Nem. x 35 (64).
The inscription t&v 'AdrjuTj-
dev ad\wv (elp.1) on a large number of vases found
not only in Attica, but also in Italy, Sicily,
Cyrene, the Tauric Chersonese and elsewhere,
refers to these prizes ; though the ornamental
vases were probably accompanied by others more
suitable for holding oil; cf. also the statement
169]
Frg. b
OFFICIAL LISTS: PRIZES.
Col. i. Col. ii.
425
10
[- - d|i<|>opTJs IXafov]'
[- SiVT^epa)'
nrirwv ttcoXi/co) ^evyei
[fecovTL A A A A dpL<f)o{p)fjs eXaiov'
-n-aiSl <ttcl]Siov [y]i- PIN
SevTepqy'
e\a]lov
dfjL(j)opr]<;'
Xttttwv ^evyet
aSrjcfxiyq)
Sevrepw' \kcovto
HAAAA
afi&opfjs eXaiov
irathl irevraOXov vl- AAAA
Sevrepa)'
TroXepuarriploLs'
LTTTTW KeXr/TL VLKMVTL
A P I dp,(f
>opr}<; iXaiov'
UN
Sevrepo)'
lttttcqv ^evyeu vucwvtl
AAA
d/Ac
froprjs
eXaiov'
P
| Sevrepo)'
^evyec tto/jlttlku) vikwvti
(III
d/i(
f)opr)<; eXaiov'
I
Sevrepq)'
a<fi'
LTTTTOV CLKOVTl^OVTl
P
aiAcfropr/s eXaiov'
I
hevrepw'
VCfC7]T
7Jpt[g'
H
Trai
o-lfi 7rv[ppi]x^Tal((;) /3ovs'
H
dyeveiois 7Ti;[pp] t^crratV /3ov<;'
H
dvSpdcn TrvppL^iGTCus {3ovs'
H
evavBpia
(f>v\rj
vucuxrei /3ov<;'
H (f)v\fj
vLKCocrr) /3ou?'
SjeuTepco' \kwvti
AAA
XapLTraSycf^opo) vlkwvtl o[pa'
d-yevcfo] irvK.Tr} vi- vL/crjTrjpia vetov dp,iX\r)<$'
3o[~AAAA
dp.<|)opTis IXjatOL'.
HHH
rij <f)vk{) TJ}
vlkoo(t[i\. pos Tpcis
?,
["Pill
StvTe'pw]' [/caW*,
HH
#[al] ei? kaTiaaiV
[d"yVta) Tra-yKpanov vtj-
HH
T1
?[
l Sc Sevrtpa p6es 8voJ
of Schol. on Pind. Nem. 1.0. (ot)/c &rri <5e etjayuyij eXaiov e 'AdrjvQv, el /xri tois
vikwgl) that the Panathenaic victors alone were allowed to export oil duty-free.
Cf. Boeckh Staatok* i 54 sq.
b i 6. Here the prize is 50 amphorae of oil ; the amount varies in the
inscription from 4 to 140 amphorae ; in one case, b ii 1. 18, it is only one
amphora.
pi
A
AAA
d/uL<j)opr}$ eXaiov'
P I SevTepoy'
[koovti
TratSl TToXaiaTel vi-
[A]AA
d/jL(f>opr)s eXaiov'
P I
hevrepep'
\kcovtl
TTdiSaS TTV/CT6L Vi-
l
5 AAA
dfi(j) opr}^ eXaiov'
PI
SevTepo)' \ko)Vti
TTCLthl TrayKpaTiOV VI-
[A]AAA
dpL(f)opr}<; ekaiov'
PHI
SeuTepa)' \kS)vtl
20 dyeveicp GTahiov vi-
PA d/jL<fiopr}<; eXaiov'
All
SevTepw' \/co)vtl
dyeveicp TrevTaOX(p vt-
A A A A
dpL(j)opr)<; iXaiov'
2
5(P)lll
hevTepcp' \ko)vtl
dyeveup TTa\aicrTel vi-
fAAA]A
d/jLc
froprjs
eXaiov
[Pill
426 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. VII.
[169
20. dyevelio. D quotes Phot. Suid. JlavadrjvaLa- /cat dyuvlfcrai wais
'IcrdniKov irpea(3vtepos (i.e. older than one qualified for the Isthmian contest;
cf. D 206, 10 and the frequent expressions iraidas 'lad/xLKots, watdas UvOikovs) /cat
aye ve los kclI dvrjp, whence it appears that the gymnastic contests for men
were enumerated in the lost lower portion of this column. For the order, irdis,
aytveLos, aviqp cf. IG n 2, 966, 967, 968, 970, and see the note on 61 13.
b ii 3. lttttcou TTioXiKip
fcvyei: 'for the pair of young horses first in the chariot
race.'
6. linrLov e6yei adrjcpdycp: 'for the pair of full-grown (db^cpdyij)) horses.'
Cf. Harpocr
: ddrjcpdyovs rpi-qpets' Notice 8e e/c p.era<popds rCov reAeiW /ecu dyojviaT&v
Xeyeadai, ohives el&Qaaiv 'e'bp.evai adr/v /card tov iroii)T7]v Horn. II. 5, 203. In the
later lists of victors (IG n 2, 966 sqq.) the team is called {evyos rAetor. D.
9. iroXe/jiiaTT]phis' ittttu: neXrjTi vlkGivtl: 'for the race with horses in full
armourfor the single charger first in the race.' The simpler expression for
the lttitos KeXrjs iroXepnaT-qpios in contests is 'lttitos TroXepuo-rripios or iroXepuaTris
(IG II 2, 968, 29, 32, 36. Phot. Lex. iroXepnar^s 'lttitos' oi)%, cos av tls olrjdelr], 6 eis
tovs 7roX4fj.ovs eiriT7]det.os, dXX' 6 ev tocs dyQxn
axvi^
- <pzpwv Cos els irbXep.ov evrpe-
wiap.e'vos' r\v yap toiovtov dywvicrp.a). S.
13. 'iirirwv feuyei vlkQivtl. The words fall under the general heading 7roXe-
Ixio-TrjploLs 1. 9 above. The expression ap/iari 7ro\e/xtcrr77pi^ occurs IG n 2, 968, 56
;
969, 20. B, 10: avvupldc iroXe
l
xLaTr,pla IG n 2, 968, 62; 969, 28. Cf. Aristoph.
Nub. 28 iroaovs dpo/movs eXa rd 7roXe/Ju<TTr]pia (sc. dpfxara).
16. By a
fcvyos tto/jlttikov vik&v is probably meant the best equipped two-
horse chariot-team for processional purposes.
22. viKrjTTjpia : prizes of sole winners only. So D ed. 2.; but Sauppe
perhaps more correctly distinguishes them as prizes conferring honour only
from ddXa, which the victor himself enjoyed.
23 sqq. An apt illustration of the boys' Pyrrhic dance will be found on a
relief in H and V, Athens, p. 347. The Pyrrhic dance, being warlike in character,
was associated with Athena, and was danced at the Panathenaea.
26. In the dywv evavdplas each tribe sent in for competition a number of its
members distinguished for height, strength and comeliness. The handsomest
'
squad ' received an ox as a prize. Cf. Harpocr. s.v. evaudpla, Xen. Mem. in
3,
12, Athen. xin
p. 565 f., and no. 44 introd. note. In the next line D thinks
that the name of another contest has fallen out before <pvXrj, by error of the
engraver.
28. The contests previously enumerated probably occupied the time of the
festival to the evening of the 27th of Hecatombaeon. Then began the pannychis
(cf. 42 1. 30) with its Xa/xTradrjcpopla. The course lay from the Academy
through the Ceramicus. In Miiller Hdb. Bd. v A Tab. v 7 is given an illustration
of a torch-race from the Villa Albani.
29. The regatta, ve(bv d/xiXXa (cf. 65
20),
probably did not take place till the
29th of Hecatombaeon.
32. Koehler thinks that the reading may have been ttj[l 5e devr]epa
;
there
is a considerable space after
TH.
170. Eight fragments of Pentelic marble containing at least three columns
of an inscription which originally spread over several slabs. Pittakis'E0.
dpx-
170]
OFFICIAL LISTS: VICTORS. 427
1839; Palaeologos ib. 1886
p. 267 sqq.; Keil Mel. greco-rom. n 79; Leo Rh. M.
xxxiii 142; Bergk ib. xxxiv 301, 331; Pittakis Vane. Ath. 168; Koehler Mitth.
in
(1878) 104 sqq.; J. Lipsius Ber. Sachs. Ges. Wiss. 1887, 278 sqq.; Lolling
Sb. Ah. Berl. 1887, 1198; IG- n 2, and v 971; D 694 (Frg. a), 695 (Frg. b).
Below are given only Frgg. a, b and part of Frg.
/.
Alphabet, type
1;
=
2
Frg. a.
. Trpta^TOV KW/JLOL TfOCLV t[wV
. *Bi^\voK\eihr\^ i^oprjyei TIav&iovl[s dvSpwv
Mjdyvrjs ihihacrKev KXeaiVr[os .... exopifyci
rpayopSaiv fC(o/jL(p$[>v
5
Ylepi/cXrjs XoXa/3. e^opr). a[. . .
IxoprJYci
AtV^uXo? e[8]/8a<j/ce[v
Frg. b.
Kwp,a)8c5v
Ilata[vius
xopi]Y
t
. . . o? eo[C8a(TKv
Tpa-y(a]io oo
v
5
. . (a]v UaiavLe[vs
exop'W
61
Mejve/cpdTrjs eS/[8a<riv
virJo/cptTr)? Mvvv[t<TKo<s
k\iri
'
'
AXkcllov
lmrodayvrt^ ttcllScov
io 'ApicrTapxo's Ae/ce. i^opijyec
Alavrls avhpoiv
A.7]/jLo<T0evr)s i^opyjyei
K(o]yLtft)o[(ov

XP]hb
Frg.
f
{part).
.... ixoprj-
iSlSacTKev
lirl <l>iXo]/cXeof?
Oi]vr)i<s iraiotav
Arj/jLoSo/cos iyoprjyei
'IttitoOcovtI^ dvSpoov
JLv/CTr/pLoov KXev. e^opr).
JLvpv/cXelSrjf; iyppriyeL
Rvcf)p6vLO<; eSiSaaKe
Tpayop&cov
'tHevoKkrj's
'Acfrt&va. ij(pprj.
AtV^uX-o? ihlhacTfcev
iirl ' Afipoovos
'E/oe^^t? ttcllBcdv
Xapta? 'AypvXrj. e^opfrj-yei
Aecovrls dv&poov
AetvocTTpaTos ^o[pryi
KCD/jLCpScOV
bdoprjyl*
Koeliler thinks that the inscription contained a list of victors in the musical
contests at the Greater Dionysia probably from the beginnings of the represen-
tation of tragedy and comedy on the stage at Athens. He suggests for the first
428 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[170
line: . . .
d(f>
ov irpG)]Tov kQ/jloi ^aav t[&v rpaycpdCoi' /ecu t&v KupupbCov ktX. In
the fragments given above the archons named are : frg. b 'AX/ccuos 422/l B.C.,
frg.
/
<tXo/c\67s 459/8 B.C., "
kftpwv
458/7 b.c. After the archons are named
(1)
the tribe which had been victorious in the lyric contest of boys or men, with
its Choregos,
(2)
the victorious Choregos and Chorodidaskalos in comedy or
tragedy,
(3)
in the case of tragedy (not attested before 423/2 b.c frg. b 7)
the
Protagonist, viroKpir-qs.
The special interest attaching to the fragments given above is that in frg. a,
belonging, K. thinks, probably to 467 b.c, the year of the
'
Septem contra
Thebas,' Pericles appears as Choregos, Aeschylus as Chorodidaskalos. Again
in frg.
/
13 (459/8 b.c) Aeschylus is tragic Chorodidaskalos ; cf. the 5i8a<rKa\ia
prefixed to the Agamemnon : i5i5ax&y to dpd/xa iiri dpxovTos
< tXo/cXeous oXv/j.-
wtddi dydor/KoaTrj rei devrepix). irpwros AiV%^\os 'Aya/uLepLvovi, XoTj^opots, Ei)/x.e^tcri,
Hpiorei aaTvpiKip, ixopriyet EevoKXrjs
'
Acpidvcuos. In frg. b 12 Arjfioadevrjs is
the well-known general in the Peloponnesian War.
Possibly the whole document may owe its origin to the activity of the orator
Lycurgus; cf. 41, 42.
171. Two fragments of a slab of Hymettian marble, mutilated on all sides
but the right, found at Athens near the theatre of Dionysus. Koehler Mitth.
in
(1878) p. 112; Kumanudis 'A0. vi p. 476 n. 1, 2
;
IG n 2, 973 ; D 696.
Alphabet, type 1; but ir is occasionally tt
2
. The
Q
= ov in Ei)pi7ri5oi> (11. 2, 19)
is doubtless an exact copy from some earlier document.
iraXatja" N^otttoXcjaos
'I$\.yz]vLa JLv[piiri]8oV
ttot]] : AarvSdfias
'AyijWer hire : eTTaA.09
5
'
AOa/xavTC V7T6 : NeoirroX^os
'Av^TLyoVT)' V7T6 :
'
A0r}v6So)[po<s
Evjapero? S[v
:]
Tev/cpq)'
vir]e : 'AOrjvoSoopos
'A\i]X\,er v[tt(~\ : (derraXos
IO 6]. L>7r[ : Ne]o7rToX6yao?
T
Jp/
: (Jl^eXiaaiv'
iiri. : NOTr]To\.e/ao?*
'Op<TT7)' [vire :
y
AQr{\v6S(i)[pos
Au7[t)]
#
v7T : err<x[X6s
15 vtto : Neo7rToX,e/Lto9 vlk\o.
341/40
'E7Tt NtKOfjbd'xov aaTvpt\K&'
VtfjLOKKr)^ Av/covpyw
iraXatd : Neo7TToA.e/-t[os
^Opecrrrj KvptiriSov
171]
OFFICIAL LISTS: DIDASCALIAE. 429
20 ir]o?7 : 'A<TTV&a/jLa$
YYapOevoiralw vire : eTfxaXos*
A]f[Kd]oz/f V7re : Neo7TToXe[|ios
v-rn] : eTTaXo?
25
018] tVoSr l>7T6 : Neo7rToX[t|xos
Ei)[dp]eTo? rpi'
fjue
. . i' vTre : OeTrafXos
8r) : {7re : Neo7rTo[\6(xos
viro : QejrraXos ivi/ca
340/39
30 'Eirl 9eo](j)pd<TT0V' craTv[piK<a'
B.C.
>*. /
r
cp
p/acrLi
iraXcua' NiKj0(7T^[aT0S
Ev]pt7Tt[8ov
The written character points to the middle of the 3rd century b.c. The
inscription furnishes a good example of didaaKaXiai, i.e., lists of all the plays
represented in the theatre of Dionysus, arranged according to years. Whether
they are to be referred to the Greater Dionysia or to the Lenaea is uncertain.
Our inscription gives the list of tragedies from 342/1 to 340/39 b.c. For the
formula ovk iyevero used (e.g. IG 11 2, 975 iv. 14) of a blank year cf. 82 31.
1 sqq. 'Neoptolemus (as protagonist) won the first prize with an old tragedy
(i.e. one composed by a poet of a former time), the Iphigeneia of Euripides.'
LI. 19, 33 testify to the favour in which Euripides was held. For Neoptolemus
see Dem. de pace 58, F.L. 344.
3. iroTj(Tai): the poets are enumerated in order of merit; the name of the
third, Tpi(Tos) 1. 11, is lost, v-rre: ^vireKplvaro, sc. the protagonist. Astydamas
is the younger of that name, for the elder brought out his first play in 399/8 B.C.
and died at the age of sixty (Diod. xiv 43, 5).
4. QerraXos : see Plut. Alex. 29 where he is mentioned as an actor who.
enjoyed the patronage of Nicocreon, king of Salamis, and Alexander; cf. Athen.
xn p. 538. In Plut. I.e. Athenodorus
(1. 6)
is mentioned as a protege of
Pasicrates, king of Soli.
li.
iPITEAIAC'N.
15. viro(KpLTrjs), whence it appears that there was a special prize for the
protagonist; cf. 170 bl.
16. aarvpiKLp: sc. dpafxan. The text shows that satyric plays were at this
time separate from the tragedies and exempt from contest, since not more than
one was produced at each festival (D). For Timocles see Athen. ix 407 d.
20 sqq. Note that in this year only two plays were produced, not a trilogy.
23. 4>t]\o/cX^s: brother of the younger Astydamas
(1. 3),
great-grandson of
the elder, who was nephew of Aeschylus (Schol. Ar. Av. 282; Suid. <iXo/cX?}s).
32. NiK](krrp[aros : so Koehler (with hesitation), conjecturing that he may
be of the family of the actor Nicostratus mentioned Xen. Synq). 6, 3.
430 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VII.
[172
172. A slab of Pentelic marble found on Lycabettus. Kumanudis XpvaaW.
iv
(1866) 589; H. Sauppe Nachr. Ges. Wiss. Gott. 1867 p. 116: IG n 2, 978;
D 669.
Alphabet, type 1.
O-ySot) KCU TpiaKOCTTTJ ItI0T]
iraiSoov ireVraOXov Kal IviKa
EuTeTu'Sa? [AaKwv*
[iija Kdl Te[<r<rap]a[KO<rTT] ItIGi]
ir\aih(>v Trvy/jLT] [ko,1 Ivfoa
$]i\i>ra<; *v{3api[rr\s'
5
irijvTTTr) [k]<x/
[flf^Koo-Tfi
It] 607] o[tt]\6[tii]9,
fj
[ivfoa
L\r]fjbap[aTo<s 'H]pa[tvs*
T^piry /cal eVe^[-r]Koo-TT)
kjreOr) avvcopls teal [IviKa Eva-yopas 'HXctos*
jo k\vdrr) [k]clI eVe^^Koo-TTj
It] 607] ttgoXcov a/3o[Xv apua
Kal] 6VLKCL El)pf/3t[d8-r]S AaKuv.
otto tJt}? 0\vvTTtdho\s tx\% pads Kal
Iko<ttt|]? ol8e vevifcrj^Kacriv'
15
Sivrijpa Kal et[Ko]<TT[TJ ....
. . . o?
na^Taf^Xfris
. . &i]av\ov ev
The fragment gives the dates at which the contests at Olympia were severally
instituted, with the first victor in each, followed in 1. 13 sqq. by the beginning
of a list of victors. The restored lines preceding 1. 1 represent 01. 38 = 628 B.C.;
1. 5 gives 01. 41 = 616 b.c. and so on. The date of the inscription, as Kum.
saw, must be previous to 264 b.c, for in 01. 129 = 264 b.c, for the first time since
01. 99
= 384 b.c, a new contest, the awcopls iruXiK-q, was introduced (Paus. v
8, 11). In 1. 11 we have still the four-horse team of colts, ttuXcov afiokuv ('with
teeth not yet shed') app-a, but no mention of the avvwpLs.
It will furnish a useful object-lesson in re-construction to examine the
following passages: Pausanias v 8, 9, 10; 9. 1, Euseb. Chron. 1 p. 196, 28;
200, 12, 20; 202, 29; 206, 7 (Schoene), Philostratus irepl yv/nv. 13 p. 268,
5,
16 (Kayser), Plato Legg. vni 834 c: on which the restorations of the various
editors are based.
13. Why the compiler should have begun from the 21st Olympiad is not
clear.
Section VIII. Dedications, public and private, including
Agonistic and Choragic Dedications, and inscriptions on
Statue-bases.
[Facsimile texts
of
the inscriptions marked (F) in this Section are given in
the Plates at the end
of
the book.]
(F) 173. A bronze plate broken on the right; found in the Acropolis; H.
0.11m., L. 0.25 m. Kavvadias Ae\r. 1888, p. 55; JHS ix (1888) 125; IG i
Suppl. 373
238
p. 199.
The first letter on the left was Q.
f
Ot rafxiai rdhe yaXicia . . .
crvv\e^avT6<; A',o? tcparep[o$povi ?ovpt) . . .
Wva^lcov real Eu(H?o? kol Z, . . .
teal
'
AvSo/clBtjs /cat Afcrt/za^os or [iStjs . . .
Koehler, on the ground of the form
^
(though the writing is left to right) in
conjunction with the
Q
and
T,
refers the inscription to the middle of the sixth
century b.c. at latest. No. 176, though written K to L has the later
H
; from
the ^
nothing can be inferred, for in the L to R direction it might become
$.
The racial (supply avtdeaav) are probably those of Athena Polias.
(F) 174. A bronze fragment found in the Acropolis. A. G. Bather; JHS
xin p. 126, no. 17 and Tab. vi. Cf. Larfeld Hdb. Ep.
pp. 57, 395 sqq.
Ho\v/c\r)<; dve6r)KV
'
o /cva(<j))ev<; rdOrjvaia
The writing indicates the period 625575 b.c The
for in xvcupevs is
merely an error of the engraver.
175. A marble discus in 11 fragments with the painted figure of a bearded
man. On both sides are holes for fixing as a votive offering in a temple.
Dragatses AeXr. 1889, pp.
80 and 151 sq. ; IG i Suppl. 422
14
,
p. 185. Cf.
Dragendorff Jahrb. deutsch. arch. Inst. 12, 1 sqq. with Table.
432 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA- SECT. VIII.
[175
^o^o^
yivrjfia toS' Alveiov
ao<fiici<;
larpov dpuarov.
The alphabet belongs to the period 575525 b.c. An AtVetos is mentioned
by Steph. Byz. s.v. Kws in the pedigree of the Nebridae, to which family the
physician Hippocrates belonged.
(F) 176. Abeam of white marble, L. 1.10 m., having traces of red pigment,
found in the Acropolis. IG- i Suppl. 373
105
,
p. 90.
JJa\(X)dS' 'AOavala Aixrcov avkQi)Kev airap^rjv
gov avrov kt[o]vo)V,
rfj
Se dew yapiev.
7]/3d8r]<; efiroirio-c
v-' \vov 7rat? toK ajaXfjua
See the remarks on no. 173. Note the unusual form ' Kdavala and the
elision of the i in IIaX(X)d<5i. The non-gemination of the consonant (X for XX)
is common in archaic inscriptions
;
see Ho. i, p.
65.
177 = Ro. i 64. IG i 333; cf. Wilhelm Mitth. xxm
(1898), 489 and
Tab. 9, 1.
ftT^T
HE I
I)
rA^A/VAOYHQ
ms&m
fOTAlx/^/V
*Tp*AMri>0&OSrvi,0/vA<
lA^TV^IAirElMO/VK HA/AM
E
A/O
178]
DEDICATIONS, PUBLIC. 433
f
EXXa[8a yif)v] irdaav SovXco[v %ap I8iv
7
H pa\a 8t| Klvoi raXaKa'pSioi
'
ot pa
tJOT aij^fJbrjv
arrjaafji irpoade itvXwv a/y[pov lir' cabanas
p.apva|xevou
8*
etraaxrav *A8t]vaas iro\vj3ov\]oif
aarv, /3/a rTepcro)^ KXtvd/uLvo[i 8vvap.iv.
This is the restoration attempted by Kirchhoff, who thought that there were
four elegiac distichs, the first two separated by a band of rough stone from the
second two. The date of the inscription was assumed (Ko. i,
p. 101) to be
about 476473 b.c. and Kirchhoff 's conjecture that it belonged to the colossal
statue of Athena Promachos by Phidias (which would bring the date as late as
459 b.c.) was quoted with hesitation. Wilhelm's view however, I.e., which K
now apparently accepts (IG i Suppl. p. 40),
may be summarised thus:
(1)
the
inscription certainly commemorates the battle of Marathon,
(2)
there were two
epigrams of probably two distichs eachthe upper separated from the lower by
a band of rough stone, the lower inscribed space being planed away to a greater
depth than the upper,
(3)
the upper and lower epigrams are by different hands,
(4)
the upper closely resembles the engraving of no. 132, the mark of punctua-
tion in 1. 2 being the same as in no. 132, (5)
there is no reason to suppose that
such a monument would not have immediately followed the event it com-
memorates,
(6)
the date may well be that of no. 132, i.e. about 485 b.c
178. (i) A block of Eleusinian stone found N.E. of the Propylaea.
Kirchhoff Sb. Ah. Berl. 1887 p. 112; IG i Suppl. 334a. (ii) Two fragments of
a base of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. Lolling KaraXoyos i p. 66,
no. 95, Monatsb. Berl. Ak. 1869, p. 409 sqq.; IG i 334; H 12. An impression
of frg. a, recently discovered, was placed at the service of Messrs Hicks and
Hill by Dr Wilhelm.
(i) (ii)
a b
NNiPAIAfc ,AM enaionepam/
TONHIPPO^ 5Ah PPO^AE'A
The older block (i) with its sixth century characters was part of a base
carrying the bronze rkQpnnvov dedicated by the Athenians to commemorate a
victory won over the Boeotians and Chalcidians about 507 B.C. It is conjectured
that this base was destroyed by the Persians in 480 b.c, and that Pericles
shortly after the conquest of Euboea 446 b.c had the trophy restored with a
new base (ii) and a copy (a, b) of the old inscription which is given in full by
Herodotus v 77
:
i 'JLOvea T$oi(DT(t)v kcl\ XaXKiSewv Safiaaavre^
i ircuZes 'Adrjvaioyv epy/juaacv iv nroXefjuov
3
Secr/JLM ev d^Xvoeuri utSr/pea) ea^eaav v/3pcv
4
roov lttttovs SefcoLTTjv HaXXdSo rdaS' eOecrav.
R. ii. 28
434 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[178
Each line of the inscription contained a distich. The portions preserved of
the original are marked with dots, those of the copy are underlined. It will be
noticed that in the copy (which Herodotus and Pausanias, i 28, 1 saw)
the two hexameters are transposed. A possible reason is the subsequent
change of position of the memorial ; cf. Kirchhoff Sb. 1. c. As Frazer, Paus.
vol. ii
p. 353, remarks, the question has greatly exercised the archaeologists.
179. Inscribed round a semicircular base of white marble. Found in situ
in the Propylaea. IG i 335; D 585; H 55; Loewy 53. Cf. H. and V. Ath.
389 sq.; Frazer Paus. vol. n 277 sqq.; P. Wolters Mitth. xvi (1891) 153 sqq.
;
Haussoullier Rev. Crit. l
(1900), p. 25; Lb. i 28 p. 5 expl.
AOEHAIOITEIAOENAIAITEIYAIEIAI
PYPPOEnOIHENAOENAIO
(For the
H
see no. 15 and Ro. i
p.
103 on the early encroachment of Ionic
forms)
AOrjvaloi
rfj
'
Kdr\vala ttj "Tyieia.
Hvppos eTTOirjaev ^AOrjvalos.
Plutarch Per. 13 tells how Pericles in building the Propylaea 437433 b.c.
was shown in a dream a cure for an injured workman and in gratitude set up a
statue T7js 'Tyieias 'Adrjvds. But Wolters I.e. argues that the base is so placed
that it cannot have been set up while the Propylaea were still building. For a
different account see Pliny N. H. xxn 44. A possible date was 430429 B.C.
in commemoration of the Cessation of the Plague. For the work of Pyrrhus
cf. Pliny N. H. xxxiv 80: Pyrrhus (fecit) Hygiam et Minervam, where some
would omit the et. Dedicatory inscriptions show that the cult of 'Adrjvd 'Tyieia
was older than the time of Pericles. Note the omission of the demotic after
the artist's name. Lb. (I.e.) suggests that though Pyrrhus may have obtained
the citizenship he had not yet been admitted to a deme; but cf. 213 13.
Remark xiii. Choragic dedications. These were inscribed
beneath the tripods given as prizes to the victorious choruses.
According to his means and inclination the choregus provided for
the tripod a more or less costly resting-place. A notable example
is the
'
Monument of Lysicrates '
(217).
The following are the chief
varieties of formula in the inscriptions. In the earliest times, when
the tribe was considered as the victor and the choregus the agent of
the tribe, we have the order tribe, choregus, SiSao-KaAos (180, 183) or,
415323 B.C., tribe, choregus, avA^r^g, SiSacrKaAos, archon (cf. 216,
217).
From 385 to 344 B.C. we have choregus, two tribe-names (for
an earlier example see 182) in the dative with 7ratoW or avSp&v,
181]
DEDICATIONS, CHORAGIC. 435
avXr)Tyj<;, SiSao-KaAos, archon. In 320 B.C.
(218)
we have a dedicatory
formula, missing in the preceding categories ; the choregus dve$7]K
viKt]<ra<5, the tribe-name in the dative with 7rai'6W etc., clvAtjttJs,
singer, archon. In no. 184 there are two and in IG n 3, 1282
there are three choregi. Lastly, we have the S^/xo? as choregus,
with an agonothetes elected by the Srjfxos, the order being S77/X09,
archon, agonothetes, poet, protagonist
(219).
A later variety of
formula appears in no. 220.
180. A slab of Pentelic marble found not far from the monument of
Lysicrates. CIG 212
;
IG i 336.
OINEI^ EYPYMENE//// NlkO^TPATOC
ENIKA MEUETEONO^ EAIAAOE
PAIAON EXOPEAE
Olvrjl's JLvpv/j,ev7][s] Ni/co'crroaTO?
ivUa MeA-6T6w^o? iSlSao-fce.
iralhoav. i^op^yet.
See Rem. xiii, p. 434. The character shows the date to be pre-Euclidean.
181. First edited by Osann Syll. n 69 from Fourmont's MSS
; CIG 1037;
Rang. 55 (from the fragment re-diseovered not far from the monument of
Lysicrates) ; Lb. Alt. 458; IG i 337
;
D 701.
O^AOPOOEOAUAIEY
PANTAKUE^E Al A A
...
#
o? AcopoOiov 'AXacevls Ixopifya.
YlavTCUcXrjs iSlSaafce.
See Rem. xiii, p. 434. The victorious tribe, Kirchhoff notes, was either
Cecropis or Aegeis, for the deme 'AAcu
'
Apaty-qvLdes belonged to the latter and
the deme 'A\al 'Ai^covides to the former. The date may be about 450 B.C., for
Pantacles was a contemporary of Antiphon (b. 480/479 B.C.). Cf. Antiph.
de Ghor. 11 : eTretdri
xPV~Ys
KarearddTju els Qap-yrjXia k<xI ZXaxov HavraKXea
didaaKaXov /ecu KeKpoirida ^>v\tjv irpbs rrj e/xauroO (the Erechtheis) ; Harpocr. s.v.
dida&Kakos : on yap 6 HavTa.K\rjs 71-0177x775, dedr/XtOKev 'ApiaroT^Xrjs iv reus Aida-
aKaXLcus; Steph. Byz. s.v. 'Att^t?. K.
282
436 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII [182
182. On the front of a cube (about 1.20 m.) of Pentelic marble. Koehler,
Mitth. vni
(1883) p. 34; CIA iv
p. 79, 337 a
;
D 702.
KAEIOENHEXOPErEAYTOKPATO
EPEXOHIAIAITHIAI
KEAEIAHCEAiAAOE
KXecaOevrjs e^oprjyeu Avro/cpdrovs
^Eip%6r}L8i, AlyrjuSc.
K??SetS?7? i$i8acr/c.
The alphabet shows that the inscription belongs to the closing years of the
fifth century b.c. The combination of two tribes, may be due to the general
impoverishment occasioned by the Peloponnesian War. A poet Krjdddrjs or
KrjKeiSrjs is mentioned by Ar. Nub. 984 and by Cratinus (Bergk Poett. Lyr. in
4
p. 722), who may possibly be the same as the poet in our inscription (but cf.
Koehler and D ll.c).
183. On an epistyle near the temple of Zei)s 'OXu/x7rtos ; re-discovered in the
Gymnasium of Hadrian. IG n 3, 1250 and more correctly p. 348 ; see also
i Suppl.
p.
178. Cf. Kumanudis 'E0. d
PX
. 1885 p.
213.
AMHICEnKA
PYOOAnPOCEPHHAOEXOPHrE
APITAPXOEAIAAl<EXAPIA:>;HPX
Aly7)t<; e\yC\Ka.
TIvOoScopos 'Fi7ri%r)\ov i^opojyei.
415/4
'AplaTapxos iSlSaa/ce. ~X.apia<$
tfpxl*'
See Rem. xiii, p. 434. If the date assigned is correct, the archon of the year
415/4 b.c. is not Chabrias, but Charias.
184. A base found at Eleusis. D. Philios Mitth. xix
(1894) 174 n. 3
;
P. Foucart Rev.phil. xix (1895)
119 sqq.; IG n 5, 1280 b; D 703.
Alphabet, type 1; but
O
= o, ov.
T]va6ts Ti/jLOtc[r\S]ov[s 'A]val;av8pl8r)<; TL/jLa[yo]p[ov
l^oprjyovvres kco/jLwSo[z]<; ivL/ccov.
'
ApL<TTO(ficiv7}S
\Z\lhaGKV.
'Firepa vIkt) rpaywhol^.
%o<fiofc\f}s
i8i8acr/cev.
188]
DEDICATIONS, PRIVATE. 437
From the formula compared with Aristot. ap. Schol. Ar. Ran. 404 (e7rt yovv
rod KaWiov toijtov <pt]<j\v 'ApLaroreXrjs, otl <tvv5vo 5oe
x ?
7
)!^
T<* Aiovvaia rots
Tpaywdois /cat /cw/xySots) Fouc. conjectured that the inscription was not older
than the archonship of Callias, 406/5 b.c. Of the extant plays of Aristophanes
only the Ranae, Ecclesiazusae and Plutus can be considered as possible subjects
of the victory ; the rest were older than 406/5 b.c. We know that the Ranae won
the first prize, but the play here commemorated may quite well be a lost one.
On the relation in date of the victory in tragedy to that in Comedy, see Fouc,
and D. With regard to the tragedy, it is tempting to conjecture that the play
was the Oedipus Coloneus exhibited by his son after the death of Sophocles
which occurred in the early part of 406/5 b.c But the son too was victorious
(ace. to Suidas) seven times in tragic contests.
1. TifjL0K[r)5]r)s : restored by Fouc. from IG n 5, 574
g.
185, 186. Two bases of Pentelic marble found near the Propylaea.
(185) IG i 339 ;
D 18.
(186) IG i 340; D 28; H 59.
(185) (186)
TECAPOI EPOIkO/V
TEEEP ECPOTEIAAIAN
TTjS a7TOt[K(as Ei7TOL/C(OV
rrjs 69 'E^ferpCav 9 TloreiSaiav
185. Kirchhoff connects this fragment with the reconquering of Euboea by
Pericles in 445/4 b.c. after its revolt. The genitives airoiicLas and
(186) eiroinwv
depend upon some word such as avdd-qfxa.
186. Cf. Thuc. ii 70: /cat vcrrepov (sc. after the capture of Potidaea in
430/29 B.C.) iTroiKovs eavT<2i> ZireiAipav es tt)v YloTibalav /cat /cary'/ctcrai/
(429/8 B.C.).
(F) 187. A block of white marble. CIG 23; IG i 344 and Suppl.
p. 40,
from an impression by Lolling, who had re-discovered the stone ; Loewy 9.
dv07]/c[iv
'A]pMTTOfc\r)<; eVd-
rjaev
Larfeld Hdb. Gr. Ep. 404, on the ground of the written character, assigns
the inscription to the period 575525 b.c
188 = Ko. i 52. IG i 351.
EOPTICMKAIOCMIAAkA/^eETE^
APAP + ^TAekA/AAl
EojOT09 fcal
'OtyuiSrjs dvederrjv
dirapxvv rdOrjvda.
According to Larfeld Hdb. Gr. Ep.
p. 427 the characters; indicate the period
525480 b.c Note the absence unusual in so early a period of the sign for
spiritus asper in'E6/3nos.
438 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[189
189 Ro. i 35. Two fragments of hard poros-stone. IG i 355; Suppl.
p. 40.
k^;aio*auay9c
TOf[<|>a'yopas jjl* dviQr\-
Kev
\
Ato? yXav^ci)7riSt, ^ovpy.
The povaTpo(f>T)dbi> arrangement and the koppa are among the characteristics
which mark the period 625575 b.c. See further Ro. i I.e.
(F) 190 =Ro. i 56. IG i Suppl. 373 e, p. 41; H 10.
M-vr/fia roBe
f
779 apxqs
nefcer/crrfparos 'I-mriov ']vib<;
OrjKev 'A7roXXft)^09 Ili;^[]oy eV refievet.
See Thuc. vi 54 and Ro. i I.e. The date of the inscription on these cymatium-
fragments must fall between 527 the date of the death of the older Pisistratus
and 510 b.c, the year in which Hippias was banished.
191 =Ro. i 47. Lolling acutely saw that the two fragments IG i 350 a and
b
(
=Ro. i 47 a, b) must be separated and a joined to IG i Suppl. 373
95
. Lolling
'E<t>. dp*. 1888
p. 73, 74 ; IG i Suppl. p.
181. Cf. Ro. i p. 64 ; Larfeld Hdb. Ep.
p. 409. The inscription is in the flutings of a column.
AD+ED^OEPOIEENO+IO
leiMKfc^ANEOEKE^AOENAIAIPONO+OI
"Apxep/jLos eiroirjcrev 6 Xo9.
'I<fii8LK7] fjb
aveOrjKev 'Adrjvaia iroXLOv^w.
The alphabetic character in general conforms to the type of the second half
of the sixth century b.c.
;
but though the dedicator is an Athenian and uses the
Attic dialect the writer is a Chian and is not at home in the Attic alphabet
of the period ; witness e.g. the form of Q
=
<p,
M
=/j,,
/A
=\
}
^ instead of
$ ;
the second
E
of iirolrjaev appears to be a correction of
H ;
further the spiritus
asper is omitted in 6, as would be natural in an Ionian. The Archermos of our
inscription may be a younger member of the family of the Archermos, the
sculptor of the Delian Nike, commemorated in an inscription given below
(see Ro. i 24 a), in which a Chian has been struggling with the Delian alphabet.
194]
DEDICATIONS, PRIVATE. 439
192 =Ro. i 67. A base of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis. IG i 374
;
Loewy 40.
(a)
A.AAE(=e,[<h).H(=ft) OII<UM/V (XS
=
f)
0(=o,ov,o>)
PP^TVCDX
(b) Letters with ends of strokes thickened, as in u
4
: a = a
6
; y
=
yi
; f*
=
fJ-
6 ;
(a) ILap]6eva) 'E/ccjxivTOV p,e irarr^p dve6r)fee teal
f
vios
evOdK 'Adrjvair),
fjLvrjfia irovcov "Apeo?,
'H^eXo^o?. /jL<yd\r)(v) re (j)t\oi;evLr)<; dperrjq re
irddT]^ /jiotpav e^cov rrjvhe ttoXlv ve/jberat.
KptVto? teal NrjaMOTrjS e
r
rroir\<jdTr)v.
(b) H /3ov\r) teal 6 Stj/aos
Aevteiov Y^daiov
apery? evetea.
On the floruit of Critios and Nesiotes, see Eo. i I.e. Hegelochus the
dedicator was probably an Ionian. He writes, consistently with this assumption
HyeXoxos without spiritus asper.
Inscription b (see IG in 1, 605) of a much later date, is in honour of Lucius
Cassius Longinus, Consul a.d. 30; cf. Suet. Galig. 24.
193. On the right margin of the front of a headless Hermes, of white
marble, found between Athens and Daphne. Koehler Monatsb. Ak. Berl. 1871
p. 393 sqq.; IG I 381.
I 'HMME/VkAUUTEUESHIAPYSAT
A
/VVn|ErrEMI
---
TLplfi jxev Ka\A,iTeA,?79 lSpvcraT[o' tov8
8'
ckcCvov
8]7[-y]oi/0 e(TT7]crav[Q', ots
x<*P
lv avnSCSov.
The complete text (to be corrected by the inscription) is given Anth. Pal.
6. 138. The subject is a renewal by his descendants of a dedication made by
Calliteles. The written character indicating the middle of the fifth century b.c.
forbids us to assign the authorship to Anacreon, as the ms note preceding the
epigram might lead us to infer ; see Kirchhoff I.e.
194. On a square base near the Propylaea. At the top are traces of a
statue. Koehler, Herat, m 166
;
Bull. Inst. Arch. 1865 p. 139 ; IG i 392
;
more accurately, Suppl.
p. 44
;
D 12 ; Loewy 415.
l<AUUIA^HinnOA/||<OAA/EO
m
1
KaWias ^ttttovLkov dve.6 t]k\C\v.
440 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[194
The monument, as Koehler notes, may have been dedicated by the Callias
who fought at Marathon and had the surname \clkk6tt\ovtos; see Diet. Biogr.,
Plut. Aristid. 5. And possibly this was the very base on which was set the
'A<f>po6iT7) of Calamis dedicated by Callias (Paus. 1
23, 2) ; cf. Frazer Pans. Vol. n
274.
195. On a base of Pentelic marble broken on the right; found on the
Acropolis. Pittakis 'E0. d
PX
. 757, 3813
;
Kirchhoff Herm. v
59 ; IG i 395
; D 13.
.^/VA/v
L ULh L
/VA/ . . U
E I AOEA/AIEI
"l]ft)y ai^'GiiKcJz/ a7[a]X[|xa ? t-
fj
hOrjvair).
Kirchhoff suggests that the dedication may have been made by the Chian poet
Ion during his sojourn at Athens. As he died before 422 B.C., the inscription
must be earlier than that date and probably, to judge from the form of v
as early as the middle of the century. Note the Ionic dialect.
196. On a square capital of Pentelic marble found near the Erechtheum.
Pittakis 'E0. a
PX
. 3769 ; IG i 398 and Suppl. p.
44.
ALoyev[y\s
aveOr/Kev
^Alaa^vXov
vvs Ke<[a-
AiOil/V
A/VEOHKE/V
AI^XYAC
HYY^KECD//
AEO^
Neubauer Herm. x 159 points out that the dedication is in the form of a
hexameter. This will account for the unusual insertion of vvs between the
father's name and the demotic (nom. Ke<pa\evs). For the form vvs in Attic see
Meisterhans Gr. 59 sq. and cf. the note on 37 68.
197. On a square base of Pentelic marble found on the Acropolis; H. 0.46 m.,
Br. 0.70m. Boss Arch. Aufs. i 168; Pittakis 'E<. dp
X
. 81; IG i 402; Loewy
46. Cf. Frazer Paus. Vol. n 275 sq.
HEP MOU YKOr
Al E I TPE4>0
APAP XE/V
kPEIUA
EPOE^EA/
Etp/jL0\VK0$
AtLTpi(f)ov<;
airap^rjv.
Kp?;crtA,a9
200]
DEDICATIONS, PRIVATE. 441
'
Hermolycus, son of Diitrephes, (dedicated this as) a first-fruit.' The
monument here commemorated may be the bronze statue of
'
Diitrephes pierced
with arrows ' of which Pausanias speaks i 23, 2. For the sculptor's name of.
Pliny N. H. xxxiv 74 : Cresilas vulneratum dejicientem (sc. fecit) in quo possit
intellegi, quantum restet animae. But the identification with the Diitrephes who
stormed Mycalessus (Time, vn 29) 413 B.C., and had a command in Thrace
411 b.c. (Thuc. viii 64 v. I. Atorp.) is not permissible, though Frazer I.e. thinks
(against Kirchhoff and others) that forms of letters like /VR, which do not else-
where occur after 445 B.C., may have been used on a private monument as late
as 411 or 410 b.c A suggestion has been made (cf. Larfeld Hdb. Ep. p. 444)
that these archaic forms /V P
were due to the foreign artist Cresilas, a Cretan
of Cydonia.
198 = Eo. i 71. An inscription written horizontally in the flutings of a
column. IG i 422 ; D 22.
The alphabet (Attic) presents the unusual combination of
A
(and
A) $ with
Ap ta TO
Kp
OUT
?7?
%/C
e\ 10V
dv eO r\K 6V
Vi KTj era
?[x
op r\y <av
Ke Kp oir IB [l* v\
Tl
iv
r
eo pr
[t
On the identification of Aristocrates with the person of that name in
Aristophanes Av. lib
6 (415 b.c) see the notes to Eo. i I.e. and cf. 99 35.
199

201. Eock inscriptions in a cave near Vari (Anaphlystus), with a


relief, representing Archedemus in a short tunic. CIG 456 ; IG i 423 sqq.
M. E. Dunham AJA. 2nd series Vol. vn
(1903) p. 297 sqq.
(199 = IG423)
A P XE AH MOou
H PA I OCO N YM ^
OAHPTOC 4?
PA A
AIlNYM4>ONT
ANTPONEEHPT
A-ATO
(200 = IG 424)
A P + bA ^O^.OOER
AIO*k -M + OUOfOA
+ ^Th
N/
VA/0AIE+
SOI Y- ^E^EA/
442 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII. [200
(201=IG425)
A P + t A AMOHOOER
AlO^kAPO/V'/VV
M(D-\IEQVTEVEA/
(190)
TjpCLCOS 6
WfJL(f)-
o\?77rTO? <j>pa8-
CLIGL
NvfJL(f)(A)V t-
avrpov itjypy-
d^aro.
(200)
'ApxeSrjfjLOS o r)p-
alos zeal %o\ovo8-
^e? t?)[i] Nvvcfya i%-
<rot:[o86]/X7;cre^.
(201)
1
Ap%e&afjLO<i
f
o 77/5-
ato? kclttov Nu-
fJbfycUS cf)VTVCTV.
Archedemus, a Tberaean, has written these playful inscriptions partly in
Doric and partly in Attic, and has mixed Ionic with Attic characters. Kirch-
hoff (who had not the accurate copies given in AJA) held that there is no
reason to assume, with Boeckh, that Archedemus is affecting archaism and
would assign the inscriptions to a period before 432 B.C., with the exception
perhaps of 199. Inference from the forms of the letters only would lead to
contradictory results. Possibly a considerable time elapsed between the dates
of the several inscriptions. The strange form
x^
0V0
^X
S 200 2, 3 has not
been explained, but it shows that Chandler's original association of Archedemus
with the deme XoWeWcu must be given up.
202. A square base of Hymettian marble found before the West front of
the Parthenon. Boss A.Z. 1844 p. 243 ; Pittakis 'E<. dpx-
726 ;
Hirschfeld A.Z.
1872 p. 22 Taf. 60, 10 (cf. 61, 29)
; Loewy 65 ; IG n 3, 1155.
Alphabet, type 1.
(On the vertical face)
f
H /3ov\r} y] ef
*
Apelov
irdyou *2.d(jLnnrov Mo-
Xocraov 'HXelov.
(On the horizontal surface, along the left margin)
%Tpdf3al; eTroTjaev
The inscription is assigned by Ross to the middle of the fourth century b.c.
In spite of the character of the writing, which agrees with Ross's conclusion,
Bursian (Litt. Ctbl. 1871 p. 888) would bring the date down to Roman times,
205]
DEDICATIONS, PRIVATE. 443
because
(1)
the dedication by the Areopagus more befits the later period,
(2)
in
an undoubtedly late inscription, IG in
1, 791, we have the same artist's name
(2rpd/3a eiroi-qaev). But it is more likely that in the latter case he is a younger
namesake of the former. A *Lafxiiriros also occurs in the time of Hadrian
(67 9:
,
APTu>uios"OJiv\os 'HXeios' Avtwviov 1,a/xlTnrov vios).
203. On a large altar of Pentelic marble found in the southern part of
Athens. Lolling 'Adrjva m (1891) 593 sqq.; id. AcXr. 1891 p. 126 sq.; IG n 5,
1161 b.
Alphabet, 11. 1, 2, type 1 (with 7r = 7r
2
);
11. 3, 4, type 3.
f
H /3ov\r] rj iirl Acovvauou ap^ovros dvedrjtcev
^AcfipoSirec rjye/jiovei tov Sijfiov ica\ XdpicrLv
inrl /e/oeto? NIlkloovos tov Evpv/cXeiBov K^^tcrteo)?,
(TTparrjyovvTos eVt rrjv 7rapao~Kevr)v eoj3ov\.ov tov @eo-
<f)dvov Uetpaiecos.
The archonship of Dionysius is assigned by von Schoeffer to the period 216

206 B.C. (Ferguson, Corn. St. x p. 53). The same archon appears in IG n 1,
401 ; ii o, 623 b. For ^ye/novr] as an epithet of Aphrodite see Hesych. s.v. For
arpar. iiri r. irapaaK. see 36 19, 55 22, 60 26.
204. Nineteen fragments of an epistyle of the Doric order found on the
site of the Stoa of Attalus, formerly erroneously known as the gymnasium of
Ptolemy. Kumanudis Ado yevinal cvveKeiatts tQv eraipuv rrjs kv 'Adrjvais
&PX'
'Ereupfas. 'Ev ' Ad-qvais 1862
p. 7, with plate; IG n 3, 1170. Cf. H and V
Ath. 1720.
Alphabet, mainly type 3 ;
but a =a
3
,
a
]2
; 77
=
?7
:i
; k = k
5
; A = \
4
; v =v
s
; <t = <t
7 ;
B]ao-[i\]eu9 "ATT[aXos] j3a<Ti\[iws 'AttclXov] zeal
/3[a]cr[i\i(r]cr?7? A7roWft)i>[i8os .... dvQr\Ktv.
The dedicator is Attalus II, King of Pergamus, who reigned 159138 b.c.
Cf. Athen. v
p.
212 f. : ava.ftas ovv
(6
'Ad-rjvicov) eiri to p?jfia to irpb Trjs 'Att&Xov
aToas u>KoSo[xriiihov rots 'Pa>p.cuu>j> GTpaTiqyoh
"
ai>5pes 'Adrjvaiot." i<pt] kt\.
It appears to have been the custom to exhibit Ephebic inscriptions of a public
character in this Stoa: see H and V Ath.
p.
18.
205. A square base of Hymettian marble. Pittakis 'E0. 2320 (Keil A.Z.
1855 p.
153 sq.); IG 11 3, 1174. Cf. Koehler Mitth. vn
(1882) p.
102 sqq.; Boeckh,
St.* 11 Note 394.
Alphabet, type 1. The words 6 drj/xos and
77
(3ov\r) are inscribed within
wreaths.
444 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII
[205
Arj/xov avWoyfjs [d]ve[Qr]-
'O 8rj/jL0<; K~\av ol eir\ eeAAou
apx[
ov
~
H
fiovXrj.
351/50
T0(? crT(bavco6evT<z
B.C.
L7TO T?}? /3ov\rj<; KCLL TOV
5 hrjfxov $iKaioavvr)s
For the avWoye'is rod Sr/fAov, see 149 35. As a board they could issue their
own decrees; cf. IG n 1, 607.
206. A slab of blue marble in the Elgin collection, Br. Mus. : H. 11| in.;
Br. 2 ft 10 in. CIG 128 ; BMI 51 ; IG n 3, 1179.
Alphabet, 11.
1, 2, type 1; in 1. 3, \ =X
6
, v = v
7
, <p
=
(p
n
.
'Icpsju? TLavSiovos ^Avriadevrfs
'
A.VTi<$>aTOvs l^v6rjppio<; aveOrjKev.
Ol (f>v\eTai,.
The eponymous hero Pandion had a shrine; see no. 74 8 (not long after
402 b.c). In that inscription is a list of victors among whom appears an
' AvTivdiv-qs 'AvTMparovs Kvdr]ppi.os, possibly the grandfather of our Antisthenes.
Our inscription may be of about the same date as no. 119 (334/3 b.c), in which
the same name occurs B b 74. The addition of ol (pvXirai indicates that the
dedication was made in their name. This addition, in characters of a later
type, may have been engraved at a later time. For the demotic Kvdrjppios
see Meisterhans Gr. 97.
207. A base of Pentelic marble, fractured in the middle, found at Eleusis
H. 0.18m.; L. 1.38m.; Th. 0.38m. Pittakis 'E0. d
PX
- 3799, 3800; Conze and
Michaelis Bull. d. Inst. 1860 p. 180 ; Lenormant Recherches arch, a El.
p. 1
;
Foucart BGH n (1878) 393; Loewy 85 a; IG n 3, 1188. Cf. Koehler Mitth. in
(1878) 237 sq.
Alphabet, 1. 5 type 1, 11.
1
4 conforming to this type, but with the ends of
strokes thickened, e.g.
ft
fa,
cr = a
9
,
t =t
a
.
A
7] fJL 7] t
p
L
[
Ka
\]
K 6
p
e I
E< v o tc\rj <; aeivcBo? %<fir]TTLO<;
dveOrjfcev iirifieXijTfj?
/jl v a r
7) p
l
[]
v <yvofu,vo<;
5
'Api(TTOTi[Q]r)s ['Apurrtov
(?)]
v/JLOv ^vXdacos iiroTjaev.
A comparison of several other inscriptions in which Xenocles is mentioned
shows the dedication to belong probably to the end of the fourth century b.c
Thus he was gymnasiarch in 346/5 b.c.
(215),
trierarch in 334/3 b.c (119 b b
54),
210]
DEDICATIONS, MISCELLANEOUS. 445
agonothetes 307/6 b.c. (IG ii 3, 1289 = 219, 1290), and he is mentioned in
IG ii 2, 808 c 76 sq., 96 sq. (326/5 b.c), 809 d 213 sq., 234 sq. (325/1 b.c), 737 b
8 (306/5
b.c). Loewy I.e. remarks that the addition of the demotic name to
the artist's name would accord with a date later than that of Alexander.
For the ewt/xeXrjTTjs ixvar-qpLuv see D.A. A duplicate copy of our inscription
is given IG n 3, 1189.
208. A stone built into the chapel of the monastery Kalo-Livadi, near
Kalamo in the Oropian district. CIG 179;
J. Martha BCH iv
(1880) p. 260;
D 498 ; IG n 3, 1194.
Alphabet, type 1.
^Tparrjybs eirl Tr\v ^copav ttjv irapaXiav
OVKpLTOS
'
AXkL/jLCL^OV MvppiVOVCTlOS
are(f)avco0el<; vtto rrjs /3ov\r}<; kclI tov hr/fiov
aveOrjicev.
An 'AXkI/aclxos of the Myrrhinusian deme, as we learn from a decree 54 19
was wapedpos of the archon Xi/a'as 'Orpvitevs in 281/0 b.c Possibly he was
father of the Theocritus of our inscription. The varying orthography Geo- Qov-
occurs in Attic inscriptions from the earliest times. On the assignment of
arpaTTjyoL to different departments see 36 19, 60 26, and cf. the notes of
Dr Sandys on Ar. 'A0. IIoX. 61, 1.
D points out that Aristotle I.e. speaks of one aTparriybs tirl ttjv
x^P
av-
Later the office appears to have been divided between two, and one was named
as in our inscription and IG n 3, 1195, 3, or more fully as in IG n 5, 1206 b
:
o-[rp]a[T?77]6s [xip]o[T]o[v]r}dds eiri '~Pa/j.[vov]vra /cat ttjv irapaXiav
x&P
av
i
and the
other had the title arp. iwl ttjv
x-
r
W
tor' 'EXevawos (IG n
5, 619 b 14, 22) or
more briefly arp. eV 'EXevatvos IG n 5, 614 b 59, 64, 70.
209. A block of white marble found in the church Evangelistria. Milch-
hoefer Mitth. xn (1887) 325; IG n
5,
1205 b.
'
Titulus pessime exaratus est.'
Alphabet, type
5
;

in 1. 3 is
2
, 7r is jr
3
, <p is
<p
10
.
E]ua/xe/3[a] ie[peia] yevofievr) Sea /3[iov eirl
101/0
M.r)8eLOv
ap-fcovTos
'Apre/uSf. dveOri-
Qo2vl% iiroUi. KV
For the archonship of M^detos see no. 65. On life-priesthoods (the most
ordinary tenure) see G. and J. Manual p.
205.
210. A square base of Pentelic marble found in the Piraeus. Kumanudis
'A0. vii p. 388; D 497; IG n 3, 1207.
446 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[210
The Alphabet does not conform precisely to any one type. <x = a
4
, =i,
*
2 >
96/5?
J^T]paT7]yol oi eirl tov Uecpatd iirl
f
H-
pafcXelrov ap^ovros (TTe<fiavoi)6evTes
VTTO T% /3oiA?}? /Cat TOO SrjfJLOV EuTToXe/AO?
Zgh'Xou Ham^tei;?, Z^eo^ Mevla/cov
5
'Ep^teu?, 'Aptarayopas TpcotXov Tleipaievs
'Ep/uuel rjye/jLOVLW dvedrj/cav.
For the year of the archon, see Ferguson Corn. St. x 86 ; the late type of the
characters makes an attribution to an earlier archon of the same name less
probable. On the arpaT^yoi see no. 208. In the passage of Aristotle there
quoted two arp. eirl tov II. are mentioned instead of three as here. The dis-
crepancy is probably due to an increase in the number of departments ; cf.
no. 208.
6. 'Ep/Ae? Tjyefx,oi> Lip : Hermes in his capacity of 'guide,' 'EvoSios. Cf. Ar.
Plut. 1159 for this and other epithets. He is called "Hye/jLovt-os and 'Evodios also
by Arrian de Venat. 35 and Cornutus de divis 16. Cf. lOO A a 20.
211. A base of Pentelic marble; H. 0.43 m., Br. 0.50m., Th. 0.80m. It
was probably joined on the right side to another inscribed stone. Koehler,
Mitth. vin
(1883) p. 171 (cf. p. 288) ; IG n 3, 1212.
. I PAP AAOI A . . .
OI PAP AAOI APOl
AHO I P POIET P I H
0]t TidpakoL a[iro twv .... tov.
Ot TlapaXoL airo r[a>v . . . v.
"AvOiinros erpi7][pdp\\..
This is a dedication by the crew of the state-ship Paralus from spoils won
on two occasions. The date appears to be the middle or the second half of the
fourth century b.c. On the lower part of the same base, the upper part of
which was at an early date broken up and scattered, an inscription was added
in the imperial period in honour of Appia Regilla (Koehler Mitth. viii 288).
In spite of the expression in the last line (iTpi-qpdpx^), Koehler, Mitth. I. c. has
shown it to be probable that there was no trierarch proper of the Paralus, the
duties of the trierarchia being performed by the State itself, while the command
of the ship devolved upon the Ta.fj.Las rrjs UapdXov, who was elected by the people,
and who only by courtesy bore the title Tpi-qpapxos. He might even be actually
performing the Tpi-qpapxLo. for another ship: cf. 119 Ba 66, CIA n 2, 808a 79.
213]
DEDICATIONS, MILITARY. 447
212. Two fragments of Hymettian marble, found in the Acropolis.
a Pittakis 'Ec/>. 2876; 6 ib. 1819. Kirchhoff Monatsb. Berl. Ak. 1863 p. 5;
IG ii 3, 1214.
Alphabet, type 1.
339/8
K]e/cpo7rtSo? ol aTpar6[v<r]dfiVoc eirl AvaifJia^ihov dp^ovro^
yl\o\ 6 Ta^iapyos J$ov\ap)([osYApL<TTo/3ov\ov QXvevs*AOrjva.
B.C.
IG ii 1, 562
(
= H 148)
'
quern lapidem eiusdem monumenti cum his partem
formasse inanifestum est
'
contains decrees of the
ftovK-q
and of the Cecropid tribe
(to which the deme Phlyae belonged) in honour of our Bularchus, who had
fought in the earlier engagements which preceded the decisive battle of Chaeronea
:
Dem. Cor. 300, 5t's re <rvfxirapaTa^d[xevoL ras Trpwras, ttjv t ewl rod Trora/JLod
(Cephissus) /ecu ttjv
x^
l
^P
lvy
\
v (the one in the winter) kt\. (H).
213. A square base of Pentelic marble found at Eleusis near the propylaea
of Appius Claudius. Pittakis 'Ec/>.
dpx- 2567; Lenormant Recherches &c. p. 5;
Vischer Kl. Schr. n p. 87 ; D 165 ; Loewy 104 ; IG n 3, 1217.
Alphabet, type 1; but with strokes thickened as in no. 207. The artist's
signature is carelessly written, the strokes being sometimes curved instead of
straight (after the fashion of \
6
,
<r
n
).
In front.
AOrjvaiwv ol rerayfjievoi viro rod Srj/Aov
iv ^Kkevalvt fcal Uavd/cra) ical eVl
<$>v\f}
rbv
arparvybv A7]/jLrjrpiov Qavoarpdrov <Pa\r}pea
o-re(f)ap(ocravTe<; Arffivrpt
/cai Kopei dvedrjfcav.
5
'AOrjvaiwv
ol TTa<yfjL-
voi iv 'RXevo-ivi.
In eight wreaths.
'
AOnvaiwv 'AOrjvaiwv
f
H /3ov\r)
ol reray/uie- ol reray- 6 Sfj/Ao?
vol i/j, Ua- /uevot, lirirap')(r)-
v d k t a). iirl QvXei. aavra.
'H {3ov\r}
O 6 8?}yL60?
arparn-
yrjcravTa.
f
H /3ov\rj
o Srf/jLOS
arparr]-
yrjcravTa.
f
H
ftovXrj
O 8?}/i09
CTTpaTT)-
yrjaavra.
%(oaideo<i
'
Adnvalos iiroiTjo-e.
Ol 67T7ret9
iirirap-
^ijaavra.
448 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[213
On the
left
side On the right side
in two wreaths. in tiuo wreaths.
YlavaOr/- EXeucrt- &r)Xia "JLpficua
i'5 vata ra /jieya- vioi. appeart. dpfxaTi.
Xa apfjbari.
The honours paid in this inscription to Demetrius Phalereus by the garrisons
stationed at Eleusis, Panactum and Phyle take the form of a dedication to the
Eleusinian deities. As Demetrius at the time of the dedication was holding
the office of a-Tpar^yos for the fourth time, the date of the dedication cannot be
before 315/4 B.C.; for we may infer from IG u 5, 231 b, in which honours are
decreed to Euphron on the last day of the fifth month, Maemacterion, of
318 B.C. for patriotic services, that the democracy was not displaced by the
government of the peripatetic philosopher Demetrius, as Cassander's repre-
sentative, till January 317 B.C. (D)
2. HavaKTip. Pausanias i 25, 6 mentions the occupation of this place by
Cassander. 13. See the note on no. 179.
14. ArjXia, "Epficua i.e. the games celebrated at Tanagra and eirl Ayfk'no.
Koehler notes that these two victories must have been won before 312 b.c, the
year in which Ptolemaeus, nephew of Antigonius, made himself master of
Boeotia (Diod. xix
78).
214. A base of Pentelic marble found in the Piraeus. Pittakis 'E0. dpx-
295; IGn 3, 1226.
Alphabet, type 3.
114/3 or
Q[
icftrjfievaavTes iirl ^.coaiKparov apyovros
JLJ.J./0 B.C.
( p
Com. St.
hjpfier<a>
x
/At,oyev7]<; Aiovvaiov ^ A/jL<pLTpo7rrj0V,
Alayplcov HapfMovos 'Or}0ev,
5
'
ATreXXfjs
'
AiroXXoBcopov K.7] (f)icri6v<;,
AlayyXo<; ILdprjTos Uaiavcev^,
1
'
AaicXniridhr)*; A6t)vo86tov Olvalos,
M77 rpoScopo? M.7]TpoScopov Mvpptvovaios
<>avla<; AvcrtfcXeiSov
c
T/3aS?7?,
10 2a>Ta9 Kpeovros MapaOcovios,
Neav8po<; ^cordSov ^OrjOev,
(dpdacov Evapyi&ov Kucvvvevs'
TroaSo]rpL/3ovPTO<; Nect)i>09 'AcpiSvalov.
The
A
and traces of some other letters after 'Ep^eZ 1. 2 are remains of a
previous inscription purposely obliterated.
For the Ephebi and inscriptions relating to them, to which this may be
added as a fifth category, see Rem. vii, p.
145.
217]
DEDICATIONS, EPHEBIC AND CHORAGIC. 449
215. On the front face of a slab of Pentelic marble found in the Acropolis.
Pittakis 'B0.
dpx-
2079; Stephani Ind. lect. Dorpat. 1850
p. 6;
Boeckh St.
3
n
762 ; IG ii 3, 1229.
Alphabet, type 1.
'A]/ca/m[vTl]? ivitca XajjLTrahi YlavaOrjvata
346/5
v
Tx n
' ' '
a
'
U
b.c. ra [Jbeya\\\a eir Apyiov apyovros.
He^o/cXfrj]? iyv/jbvaatapyei.
For Xenocles see no. 207. Boeckh, I.e., points out that where Tlavad-qvaia
alone occurs on inscriptions, the greater or the less festival may be meant
according to the context, but that as a rule and especially in official documents
the greater festival is expressly called IlavadrjvaLa ra fxeydXa.
216. A round base of Hymettian marble found on the right bank of the
Ilissus. Kumanudis 'Ad. i
p.
169 n. 2; Lueders, Bull. Inst. 1872 p. 266;
D 704 ; IG ii 3, 1236. The inscription given below is repeated on the other
side of the stone.
Alphabet, type
1; E
= e, , O
= o, ov.
Alctlos Mpt}ctl{3ov\ov X(f>rjTTlO<>
yoprjycbv ivl/ca 'Afca/navriSt
TlavSioviSc TralScov, Ei^/cX.?)?
&l$acrfc, Et>SayL6t<T/^o? TjvXec,
icov r\pyev.
365/4
xu
B.C.
For general explanations see Rem. xiii, p. 434.
The dedication has reference to the Thargelia, the victors in which used to
dedicate their tripods in the Pythium, situated on the bank of the Ilissus, but
the temple was not large enough to contain them all within its walls, so that
some were outside. In no. 217, which stood in the 'Street of the Tripods,'
near the Theatre, the dedication has reference to the Dionysia.
217. On the architrave of the
'
monument of Lysicrates.' Stuart Antiq.
Ath. Vol. i c. iv; CIG 221; IG ii 3, 1242; D 707.
Alphabet, type 1.
Aval/cp arris AvatOelSou K-L/cvvvevs eyoprjyei.
'AkclplclvtIs ttclISgov ivuea. ecov rjvXet.
'
AvaiaSrjs
'
AOrjvalos eStSaafce. Rvatvero's
VPX
-
For general explanations see Rem. xiii, p. 434, and for a description of the
well-known
'
choragic monument of Lysicrates ' see H. and V. Ath. p. 244 sqq.
The inscription commemorates a victory in the Dionysia; cf. the note on 216.
r. ii.
29
450 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[218
218. On an epistyle of Pentelic marble, in large letters. Beule UAcropole
i p. 102; Keil Mel. greco-rom. n
p. 76; IG n 3, 1216; D 708. Cf. E. Reisch
De musicis Graecorttm certaminibus p. 36, note 3 ; A. Brinck Diss. phil. Hal. vn
(1886) p. 113, no. 55.
Alphabet, type 1.
Ntficjta?
N^[k]o8?7/ulov &v\vr\TCUcbv dve6r)fC vucrjcras
Xoprjyoov K.Kpo7ri8o iraihwv.
YlavraXecDV ^ckvcovio[s] TjvXei. aa/xa' 'EiXTryvcop Ttyu-o-
320/19
6eov. Ne[aix]^[o]9
VPX
6'
B.C.
For general explanations see Rem. xiii, p.
434.
1. Ni/ctas kt\. Names of bis family appear to recur in a list of L7nreis
IG ii 2, 962, 5: Ni/a'as Evktcliov ^.vireranJov , 1. 7: Eu/crcuos Nt/ct'ou ^vTreTcuuv, and
a sepulchral inscription IG n 3, 2367 : 'HSuXtV^ NiKodrj/uov dvydr-qp ^vweraiovos
(D).
2. q.afj.0.
kt\. "the lyric ode was the
'
Elpenor ' of Timotheus. " This
punctuation is due to the acute explanation of A. Brinck I.e. For Timotheus,
the famous dithyrambic poet of Miletus, see Diet. Biogr. D compares D 717,
5 sqq. (Delphi): d^LCjOiura tiribovvai rw deip Kal rocs "EX\7j(yi...a(Xfxa fxerd
xPv
Aiovvaov /ecu Kiddpta/xa e/c Ba^x^ Qvpiirlbov.
219. Two fragments of an epistyle of Pentelic marble; the right portion
found in the theatre of Dionysus, the left near the Asclepieum. Kumanudis
'A0. vi
p. 276 (cf.
p. 367);
P. Foucart, BCH n
(1878) p. 391; CIA n 3, 1289;
D 709. Cf. Koehler Mitth. in
p. 236 sqq.
Alphabet, type 1.
307/6
'O St)/jLO<;
e'[xopii7i
en-' 'Ava^ij/cpdrov? ap^ovros
d<y(ovo
6
[tt]s HcvokXtjs HJetVtSo?
^(fiiJTTios
7roir)T7]S T^a7&)[8tas ^avoo-xpaTJo? 'UpaKXeuSov
'
AXitcap-
vacrorevs
V7T0fcpLTr}<; rpayco[iUas ]cdv JLvavoplSov K.v8a07]vai6vs
5
7T0L7]Tr}<; KCD/jL(p\$La.S' $l\r\\i.U>]v AdfMDVOS &LOfiievs
v7T0KpLT7}<; /e[fa>fj.w8ias' KdXXnr]7ro? KaXX/oy ^owietx;.
For general explanations see Rem. xiii, p.
434.
This is the earliest of the choragic inscriptions in which the drj/nos itself is
represented as choregus. In 1. 1 Koehler has restored the name Anaxicrates
(in preference to Nicocrates, archon 333/2 b.c and a later Anaxicrates, archon
279/8 b.c) both on the ground of the change of practice (the dfj/mos becoming
choregus) introduced about or before 307/6 b.c and from a comparison of
IG ii 3, 1290 which has the same agonothetes and may belong to the same year,
221]
DEDICATIONS, CHORAGIC ETC. 451
or is at any rate not earlier than 307/6 b.c. because the name of a tribe is erased
which could only be that of Antigonis or Demetrias ; cf. Rem. vi, p. 127.
2. For the restoration BeitoKXrjs see no. 207.
3, 5. The restorations are based on IG n 3, 1168 : ^apoarparov 'Hpa/c\ei5ou
|
6 drj/xos 6
'
XXixapvavertwv av407)Kev and in 1, 948 : 3?Lhr)fiuv A&fAuvos Aiofxaievs
KcofjUKos TroLr}T7}s (an inscription of the imperial period, but certainly referring to
the same Damon as that of our inscription).
2 20. On an epistyle of Pentelic marble found between the Asclepieum and
the theatre of Dionysus. Kumanudis 'A0. v p. 330 ; IG 11 3, 1295 ; D 710.
Cf. I. E. Kirchner Rh. M. liii p. 387.
Alphabet, type 1.
c. 275
O 8^0? i^oprjyet, ^coalarparofi
VPX
6
'
(Corn.St.
dy]a)vo06Tiis ^eotyavrjs AiocrKOVplSov JLvcovv/jL6v[s'
x
')
'Epe^^t? dvSpwv ivi/ca,
'Z](OKpdrr](; 'P0&09 7]v\et, 'J^pdrcov 'Ap/ca? iSlSa[a-Ktv.
See Rem. xiii, p. 434 and the notes to no. 219.
Kirchner I.e. and Reisch De musicis Graecorum certaminibus 1885, p. 88 sqq.
from a comparison of names (AioaKovpidvs, Sw/cpdrT/s 'P6<5ios) in IG 11
5, 1402 b
p. 308, 'E0.
dpx-
1892 p. 45 (300-250 b.c), IG 11 5, 251 b, infer for the archon a
date somewhere near 290 b.c. Ferguson Com. St. I.e. says there is no room for
one before 278/7 b.c.
221. A base of Pentelic marble found at Diavolaki between the village of
Marathon and the sea. Sp. Lampros Hapv. 11
p. 727 ; Lolling Mitth. 111
(1878)
p. 261; D 448; IG 11 3, 1324.
Alphabet, type 1; but v is sometimes v
4
. The first four lines, except the
word iepovoLoi, are in larger characters than the rest.
TeTpa7T0X.6fc? Tft) Alo-
vvaco dveOecrav.
AvaavLas KaWlov Tpt/c-
opvaio's
vpX
P
'
tepoiroiol
5
t&avoScopos TtilapaOcovtos
MeX[v]a)7T09 Tpifcopvcrios
<&[pv]vo/c\f)s Olvalos
'AvTL/cpdT7)<; Hpo/3a\L(TLo<;.
The dedication made by the rerpa7roXeis or
77 TeTpd-iroXis contains the name of
the archon of the TerpdiroKis, not of Athens, which therefore affords no clue to
292
452 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[221
the date. But from the mention of the upo-rroibs Anticrates in 1. 8, who was
doubtless identical with Anticrates son of Lysanias of Probalinthus, one of
the thesmothetae in the archonship of Cephisophon, IG n 3, 1186 (329/8 B.C.),
we may assign the dedication to the fourth century, and, to judge from the
written character, to a date two or three decades earlier than 329/8 b.c
The UpoiroLol are representatives severally of the denies which compose the
tetrapolis, Marathon, Tricorythus, Oenoe, Probalinthus. According to Strabo
ix p. 397 the tetrapolis before the avvoLKiajuos of Theseus formed one of the
twelve Attic districts. Afterwards all that they had in common was their
religious observances, the most ancient of which were the rites of Heracles and
Apollo ; but our inscription, like IG n 1, 601, testifies to the worship of
Dionysus as well (D).
Lolling (/. c.) points out that, like the tetrapolis, each deme had its archon
(as in IG n 1, 581, 25, a decree of the 'Aewz/e?s), who should be distinguished
from the demarch, an officer charged with civil duties. D quotes a gloss of the
Lexicon Cantabrigiense
p.
342 Nauck: iTrt.drifAi.os apx^v 6 drj/xov rivbs tCov iv ry
'Armey apx^v-
7. $[pv]voK\r)s : so D from IG n 2, 884, one of the tesserae iudicum (cf.
395

400). Al. $[a]voK\i)s, <[cu]o/c\?7s.


222. A slab of Pentelic marble found in the Panathenaic stadium; now in
the Berlin Museum. There are reliefs above and below the inscription,
described by Paciaudi Mon. Pelop. i
p. 207; Millin Gall. myth. tab. 81, 327.
CIG 455 ; Michaelis Ann. d. Inst. 1863
p. 312 ; IG n 3, 1327. Cf. Beschr. d.
ant. Sculpturen, Berlin, 1891, p. 264 sq. (no. 709).
Alphabet, type 1.
Punctuated by
(:)
after nearly every word.
0/ TrXvvrjs : ^vfji(j)at<; : ev^d/JLevot : dveOeaav : teal Oeols ttclgiv,
Zooaryopas : (Z)coKVTrpov: ZwKvrrpos'. Zcoayopov: SdWos: Aev/cr},
ZcoKparr]^ Uo\vKpdrov<;: 'ATroWocfxivrj*;: Rv7ropL(ovo<;: 2
i wal(7Tparo<;
>
Ma^?: yivpptvrj'. Soxrta?: Swaiyevr]^: MtSa?.
The inscription cannot be much later than the middle of the fourth century
B.C. A dedication by a 7r\ijvTpta in Ko. i 46 a, where it is noted (after Koehler)
that, except in the case of the Physician, the Actor and the Washerman or
Washerwoman, the mention of the profession together with the name of the
person is in Attic epigraphy, apart from Boman times, very rare. A Kvcupevs
appears IG i Suppl.
373/, p.
42.
In 1. 2 the stone has
EE-flKYPPOY-
None of the 7r\vi>i}s (some of whom
are female) has the name of the deme added. Probably most of them were
%hoi ;
those without the name of the father added may have been freedmen
;
the names Manes and Midas seem to be those of slaves ; cf. Strabo vn 304.
226]
DEDICATIONS, STATUES ETC. 453
223. A marble stele found in the Piraeus; now in the Louvre. Eenan
Rev. arch. 1888, 1 p. 5 sq.; IG n 5, 1335 b.
Alphabet, a mixture of type 1 and type 6. The
H
in 1- 2 appears to have
been altered to make .
To KOLVOV TW^ *iBq)VIG)V
Ai07relO(r))v ZiScoviov.
Koehler assigns this dedication to the second half of the third century B.C.
or a little later. Above the Greek inscription is a Phoenician decree of the
Sidonians settled in the Piraeus in honour of Semabaal, son of Mago, who as
holding the office of nasi erected the portico of the temple. The date is the
15th year of the Sidonian era, according to Kenan, I.e., 96 b.c
224. Two blocks of Pentelic marble, found between the Parthenon and the
Erechtheum, forming part of a statue base. Cf. Michaelis Mitth. i
(1876) p. 298;
IG ii 3, 1360. Cf. the note on no. 245.
a b
KONANTIM///OEOTIMOOEOKON.f
Y^ovgdv Tt/ji[o]6eov. Ti/jb66eo<; Koz/o>[vos].
Cf. Paus. i 24, 3 (in the description of the Acropolis) : ivravda Kal Tifxodeos 6
Kopuvos Kal avrbs Kelrai ~K6vwv. The date is probably early in the fourth
century B.C.; note
Q)
= ov.
225. Fragment of a base of Hymettian marble found irapa rrj koivQs
xaKov/xivri IlvXri T^s'Ayopas. Lolling Ae\r. 1888
p. 190; IG n 5, 1363 6.
v04>PONOBO
Atwovp-yos AvKj6(j)p0V0^ Bo[vt<8t]$
The date may be 307/6 b.c. Cf. Paus. i 8, 2 : ivravda AvKovpyos re Kelrai
XoXkovs 6 AvKocppovos. Possibly it is the statue ordered to be erected in the
fragmentary decree IG n 1, 240, which was possibly the same as the decree
given, in an abbreviated form, in Vitt. X. Orr. 843 c, 852. Cf. H and V Ath.
70 sqq. ; Frazer Paus. Vol. n 88 sq. For other inscriptions relating to the
legislative activity of Lycurgus see nos. 41, 42, lOO.
226. A base of Pentelic marble. Kumanudes Philist. i
p. 196, 1 ; IG n 3,
1371.
454 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[226
BAIAEYIAONI.QN
4>IAOKAHAPOAAOA.QPOY
BacrtXeu? XcSovlcov
<&o\ofc\r)$ 'ATToWo&wpov.
D 209 is a Delian decree in honour of this same Philocles dating, according
to Homolle and Dittenberger, from the period 285247 b.c. (Ptolemy Phila-
delphia), to which also may be assigned this dedication. In the decree, as well
as in no. 223, the ethnic is 2i5i6vios, not 1<i.56i>ios.
227. A base of Pentelic marble (H. 0.75 m., Br. 0.34 m., Th. 0.34 m.)
found in the Acropolis behind the Propylaea. Kumanudes 'E0. t&v <bi\otxadCjv
1864 n. 539 ; Koehler Bull. d. Inst. 1865 p. 138 (Hirschfeld, Titt. Statuar.
p. 89,
53 b)
;
Hirschfeld A. Z. 1872 p. 24 tab. 61, 20; Loewy 116; IG n 3, 1383.
Alphabet, generally type 6; in 11. 16 a is <r
10
, in 1. 7 it is <r
5
, and w is ?r
6
.
'AQr{]va zeal U[a]pSp6aq)
o? AiovvcriKXeovs Tpive/Aeevs
tt\]v dvyarepa <>Ch.av dveOrj/cev
ipprftyoprjaacrav.
5
'E7rl iepeias o86tt}<; UoXvoktov
A/n(f)LTpo7r7]0ev.
KdiKocrOevr)*; eTrorfcrev.
The letters of the artist's inscription, 1.
7,
are of a decidedly later stamp
than those of 11.
1
6 and correspond closely to the letters on the inscription
of a Cai'costhenes and Dies (Loewy
220)
generally assigned to the middle of the
second century or a later period. If our dedication is of an earlier date possibly
the artist's name was added later, perhaps by the later Caicosthenes.
1. 'Adrjua. We know from Etym. Magn. (see Diet. Ant.) that the festival
of the af>p7)(f)opia,
pp-r)<popla or eparjcpopia was celebrated in honour of Athena,
and other inscriptions (e.g. IG n 3, 1379, 1380, 1384) confirm the statement.
The addition of Pandrosos gives some colour to the connexion of the sigmatic
form of the word, epav-, with "Epar); cf. Istros ap. Schol. Aristoph. Lys. 642:
ep<T7)(popia' 7-77 7<xp"Ep(Ti7 iro/JLTreijovcn
rfj
KiKpoiros dvyarpi.
5. J1o\v6ktov. The same form occurs as a Thessalian name in DI 345, 75
(Larisa), Hoffmann Dial. 11 no. 46.
228. On half of a round base of Hymettian marble found at Eleusis.
Demetrius Philius'E^. in ser. p. 146, 19; IG 11 3, 1389.
Alphabet, for the most part type 1, but a is a
4
, w is 7r
5
, w is a>
6
;
no .
230] DEDICATIONS, PRIVATE. 455
Avalav Apre/JLcovos Tiaiavea
%0TLfJL0<; SeOTL/jLOV
6J
M.vpiV0VTT7)<;
icai %6oh6rrj AcoatOeov ey Mvpivovrrr]<; Ovydrrip
teal Ovrjcrafca) UpoTL/jtov iy yVvpivovTrr)? dvydrrjp
5 d<fi
ecrTLas fxyrjOevra
AtffirjrpL teal Koprj dveOrj/cav.
Certain persons dedicate to Demeter and Kore a statue of Lysias
"
dep' cartas
fivrjd^uTa,
"
a phrase which occurs, sometimes with reference to a girl (d<p' cartas
fxvqdeiaav), IG in 1, 809, 828,
910
913, 915. As compared with the simpler
/uLvrjdrjvcu, the longer formula d(p' cartas /j.vr)di)vai seems to denote a more solemn
rite of initiation, as though "from the steps of the altar," which was allowed
only to Athenian citizens of the purest blood. Boeckh on CIG 393 (IG m
1,
828)
quotes Suidas:
'A<f>
cartas /xvciadaL' &<$> cartas ixvovjxcvos ' Kdrjvalos r\v. So
Harpocration : /cat d0' cartas p,vc7adat. laalos cv raj Trpbs KaXvdwva' 6
d(f>
cartas
IxvoIj/acvos AOrjva'tos fjv wdvrws, /cat 6pQ> 5c (Boeckh conj. Kdaroop 8c) Ad/cu'// cfxvelro.
If the Awatdcos of 1. 3 is identical with the Aojatdcos [ey] yLvpptvov[rrr]]s of
IG n 2, 985 (cf. no. 167) A 11, the inscription should belong to the latter part
of the second century b.c. Lysias 1. 1 is lepevs 5td j3tov of Apollo IG n 2, 1047,
21 (probably after 125 b.c).
229. A capital of Pentelic marble broken into three pieces found on the
southern slope of the Acropolis. Philios 'A0. v p. 161 ; IG n 3. 1440.
Alphabet, type
1; O
= o, ov.
(ppvvcov ^a/uLvovcnos virep
Aioyvtfrov rod vov dvedrjKev
eirl NiKohrjfjbov iepews.
The
O
=
ov shows the inscription to belong to the first half of the fourth
century b.c. From the place where it was found and the formula it is clearly a
dedication to Asklepios. Cf. the next inscription. For vov (1. 2)
see 37 68.
230. A slab of Pentelic marble adorned with a relief representing on the
left Asklepios, Demeter, Persephone, on the right six men with right hands
raised in act of adoration. Found on the southern slope of the Acropolis.
U. Koehler Mitth. n
(1877) p. 243, Taf. xvni; P. Girard UAscUpieion d'Athenes
p. 43, tab. ii (cf. B. G. H. n
(1878) p. 88) ; IG n 3, 1449.
Alphabet, type 1; O
= o, ov.
(Above the relief)
E [Qe]o8(opL8r]s
}
'E7T6u%?;9, Mvrjaideo^.
456 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[230
(Beneath the relief, in 5 wreaths)
e]oScopi8T]<; 'EcocrrpaTo[s] 'E7reu^?7[s] Atd/cpiTos M[v]^[o-]t[0eos
UoXvfcpdrovs 'ETTLfcpaTOvs Atet^oufs] Ateu^of? M.v\r)cri66ov
The dedication, which should belong to the first half of the fourth century,
has reference to the annual festival of the Epidauria. Mnesitheos and Dieuches
are known as physicians (Girard I.e., Koehler Mitth. ix 80 sq.). From the
fourth century it appears to have been usual for the physicians resident in
Athens to offer twice annually at the public expense at the Epidauria and
Asclepiea a sacrifice in the temple of Asklepios.
231. A cippus of Hymettian marble found on the Acropolis among the
ruins of the Asclepieum. Kumanudis 'Ad. v p. 417, 8; IG n 3, 1485.
Alphabet, type 1.
Me[i8]/a? /cal AavaXs
ev^dfievoL Ag/cXtjttlo)
V7rep twv iraihwv virep
'WhiaTTj^ teal Xcoacfckeovs
5
teal 'OXv/jLTTcoBoopov.
This, a votive inscription, probably belongs to the fourth century b.c. To
complete the sense avedrjKav must be supplied.
232. A base of Hymettian marble found Kara rr\v /j.e<xv^pii'r]v kXltov tov
\6<pov TTjs Movvix<-a.s. Dragatsis 'E(p. 1884
p. 219
;
IG n 3, 1504.
Alphabet, type 1.
'ljo]et'<? ^>opiJi[i(a\v 'H&vXov
'"EXJevcrLVLos
'
ActkXtjtt tco
Kal]
c
T<ytia dveOrjice.
The inscription, according to Koehler, is probably not much older than the
end of the third century b.c. The dedication was to Asklepios and Hygieia
made in the Asklepieion of the Piraeus, not the better known one
"
in the city
"
(to iv cLarei). Cf. Schol. ad Aristoph. Plut. 621 dvo yap elaiv ('AaKXvirioi) 6 fxev
iv &<ttl, 6 5e iv Tlei.pat.eZ; see also no. 66.
233. A marble slab which was inserted in the wall like a console. Found
near the Acropolis in the Sanctuary of Amynos. Korte Mitth. xxi
(1896) p. 296
no. 2.
Alphabet, type 1.
Ai6<f>avTo<; KaXXtou e-
k Ke/9. Wfivvco^i i]v^d/jievo[<s
236]
DEDICATIONS, VOTIVE ETC. 457
This votive inscription dates probably from about 350 B.C., if the dedicator
is the father of the ephebus of the year 305/4 B.C., KycpLcrios son of Diophantos,
IG ii 5, 251 b frg. h, i. The votive inscription was painted on the front of the
console-slab
;
the colour has vanished, but under its protection the painted
portions have suffered less by corrosion, so that most of the letters are legible.
In other inscriptions Mitth. I.e. p. 294 sqq. Amynos is associated with Asklepios
or Hygieia.
234. On the upper margin of a slab of Pentelic marble, found beneath
the Propylaea. Burnouf Rev. arch. 1874, xxvm
p. 316; IG n 3, 1532.
Alphabet, type 1.
TeAecrta? TeXecrrov Upo/3a\Lcrio[s
ttjv Ovyarepa
'
AXkLtttttiv dvedrj/cev.
The dedication by Telesias is probably that of a portrait of his daughter
painted below the inscription. If Telesias is the person of that name mentioned
in IG ii 2, 811, 49 (cf. 1020 in 12 sq.), 325/4 b.c, the dedication will belong to
the second half of the fourth century.
235. A square base of Hymettian marble found near the Stoa of Attalus.
Koehler Mitth. v
(1880) p. 284; IG n 3, 1406 ; D 298.
Alphabet, type 1; but a is a
4)
it is ir
5
.
KapvedSrjv 'Atyviia
"Att<xXo9 /cat ' Apiapd67}$ %V7ra\r)TTi[o\.
aveOijfcav.
Carneades, whose statue is indicated, is the famous philosopher of Cyrene
(213129 b.c). Of the dedicators Attalus was son of Attalus I and Apollonis,
Ariarathes was son of Ariarathes IV, and became king of Cappadocia 162 b.c.
as Ariarathes V. The dedication was clearly made before Ariarathes became
king and when both he and Attalus were studying philosophy at Athens. The
mention by Diog. Laert. iv 65 of letters from Ariarathes to Carneades is
evidence of their intimacy. C. Wachsmuth (Die Stadt Athen in Alterthum i 636)
points out that the Academic philosophers enjoyed great favour with the father
and grandfather of Attalus. The demotic 1. 1 shows that Carneades had been
admitted to citizenship.
236. An inscription probably originally belonging to a temple or portico.
Gruter
p.
cv 9 (whence Meurs Arch. Att. iv 20; Vandal Dim, p. 416); Cyriac
p.
x n. 72 (whence Corsinus F.A. 1 p. 142, cf. iv
p. 139); Clark Itin. P. n S.
ii
p. 592 (first four lines) CIG 478; Pittakis VAnc. Ath. p. 277; Lb. Att. 251;
IG in 1, 63.
Alphabet, a mixture of types 1 and 2; but full reliance cannot be placed
upon the original copy.
458 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[236
c
0]
8r}yu-o? 6ea Voo/xr) teal
X^Pcio-tJgS Kalo-api o-rparrjyovvro^ eVl
t[ovs
oifkiras Tlafifjbevovs rod ZtJvcovos M.apa6coviov lep6a><; Oeas
'Yco/jLrjs /cal Xe{3ao~TOv Xcorrjpo^ eV cucpoTroXei, eVi lepeta^
WOrjvas
TloXidSos M.eyL0-T7)<; Tr?9 *Ao-fc\r]7ri8ov
'
A\cueo)9 Owyarpos
5
eVl apyovTos ^ Aprjov [tov AJ&joi&wo? Ilata^tea)?.
The date of this dedication is determined by the name Augustus, which
shows that it cannot be older than 27 b.c, and we may assign it rather to the
earlier than to the latter part of the reign.
1. 6 drjfios: sc. avedrjKe. The first inscriptional example of Koma personified
and deified occurs in a bilingual inscription of 168 b.c.
,
found at Eome (IG xiv
986). For the CTpar-qywv eiri tovs oirXiras cf. 36 19, 67 4.
3. The priestess of Athena Polias, is mentioned not because she was of
sufficient importance at this period to be mentioned in public documents, but
more probably because the dedicated building was on the Acropolis near the
Parthenon.
5. On "Aprjos for "Apeios see Meisterhans, Gr. 47, who shows that this
spelling was common in the second and first centuries b.c. and a.d. and
especially in the Augustan period
;
cf. 253, 330. See also Blass, Ausspr. 59.
237. A slab of Pentelic marble inserted in a tower built in the middle ages
near the Propylaea. Kumanudis
'
Ad. iv
p. 201; IG in
1, 70a Add.; D 582.
Alphabet, type 2; a = a
3>
ct
4
;
i? =
%;
7r 7r
4 ;
=
7
.
<r\
-] ' '
r
Dittenberger (Comm. pliil. in lion.
O a-z\uLVQTCiT05 ay\<a-
& v 1
,
Th. Mommseni conscriptae p. 244 sqq.)
voejeTT?? T(*)V
fM[yd-
has endeavoured to show that Dexippus,
Xcov] Y\.ava6rjva\y(av who makes this dedication, was ayw-
Kdl ilepevs 7rava\\r\s
voder-qs in the 35th Panathenaic festival
-i/
\'tv
(to which the Panathenaic inscription
5
Epjez^o? AefL"r-
IG m 1?
1202 belongs) and that this
iros] UTo\efialo[v
festival took place in 01. 260. 2 =
"E
PH
L]e^09 to dfCp[o- 262/3 a.d. Publius (cf. IG in 1, 714

<rr6]\tov
rfj
tt6X[i
717
)
Herennius Dexippus of the Her-
-,
q
. A
rs mean deme was a well-known historian,
"
s
J
'
who flourished in the reign of Aurelian
io os o-Kd](f)7)s
Kdl TO eSo-
and Probus. Excerpts of his works
s
ttj]<? Oeov aveo~T7]-
are given by Photius. With the
Athenians, whose general he was, he
conquered the Gauls (Treb. Pollio
Gallien. 13) about 269 a.d. For the aKpoaroXtov, one of the objects dedicated,
see 52 14. D points out that a new or at least a repaired image appears
to have been conveyed to the temple in a chariot driven by Calpurnius
Proclus, one of the ephebi, a kinsman of Dexippus. He is at any rate
mentioned as
V'X*
UaWddos in IG in 1, 1202 (see above), and this is the only
mention of such an officer in the ephebic inscriptions.
238]
DEDICATIONS BY THE DEMOS ETC. 459
13
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b
it
ID
The tribe Oeneis, through the members of the tribe who had contended with
distinction in the Dionysiac chorus, honours with a statue the archon and
director of the Dionysia, Ga'ius Julius Antiochus Epiphanes Philopappus of the
Besaeean deme (cf. IG in 1, 557). For the technical terms ididaaKe etc. see
Rem. xiii p.
434.
460 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[238
Dittenberger assigns the date to the period 90100 a. d. on the following
grounds.
(1)
The inscription must be older than the institution of the tribe
Hadrianis (circ. 126 a.d.), for the Thriasii (col. v), here belonging to the Oeneid
tribe, were subsequently transferred to the Hadrianis.
(2)
4>a0o-ros TXavniov
(col. v) cannot be the son of T. <A. TXavKias 'Axapveus, who appears in a list of
Ephebi, IG in 1, 1092, belonging to the latter years of Trajan's reign ; for that
ephebus could not have an adult son before 126 a.d.
;
he must therefore be the
father of the ephebus TXavKias.
(3)
Philopappus (1. 4) appears as archon in a
list of prytanes of the Erechtheid tribe of the same year as our inscription
(IG in 1, 1020). In that prytany-list a Theogenes, son of Theogenes, is named
first as being the oldest (see Dittenberger I.e.) among those of the Cephisian
deme ; but he was an ephebus (IG in 1, 1081) in the reign of Claudius, in the
Archonship of Metrodorus. If we may assume him to have been 40
50 years
of age, when he became one of the prytanes, the prytany-list, and therefore our
inscription, will fall within the period 90100 a.d.
The arrangement after line 7 is somewhat confused ; apparently we should
read : (tyreo-rarei Mepavdpos) <>v\acnos, evXei (for which there is no need with D to
correct to yflXei, see Meisterhans Gr. 172) ^IXtjtos MeviaKov Ko\ojvi]dev, ex^pevov
' AwoWdovcos 'Orjdev kt\.
For the sign 3 see 68 p. 188.
239. On a Trporofx-q of marble found in the metroon of the Piraeus
G. Papasliotes (after A. Postolacca, A. Anz. 1856 p.
243*; IG m 1, 94.
Alphabet: a
3
, e
4
, d
Y
,
k
3
, fx.
2
, 2
, tt
4
, <7
6
, <p
7
,
a>
4
.
'E7r! ap^ovros <>l\l(ttl8ov Me\c-
rivrj Tlpl/jiov ifc Yieavteodv
leparevcracra avedrj/ce eirl lepecos
<&L\rj/jLovo<; rod Tlpai;tT\ov<;
t&Xvecos.
There were two archons named 4>iXtcrri577s or $i\i<TTidr)s, the first 164/5 or
165/6 a.d. (IG in 1, 1128), the other towards the end of the second century
(ib. 1159 and notes). Probably the earlier date is that of our dedication.
On e = at- ILeavieuv see no. 92.
240. On a base of Pentelic marble found
'
irapa rbv ayiov Arj/j.rjTpLOv
KaTTjepopT). Kumanudes Philist. n p. 187 ; IG in 1, 106. Cf. R. Neubauer
Cur. Epigr. p. 9.
Alphabet, type
3; v

Va Z
=
%6>
tt = t
7
.
^EiTriTatyta Xa/joraSa vei-
K,r\(ras ev raj iifl ^AttoXtj-
241]
DEDICATIONS, AGONISTIC ETC. 461
tjiSoS % Ol'oV 6VLCLV-
5
tc5 JLpiAr), TracBorpo-
jBovvros <>i\lov tov
)
ve[<tiTipov
<&peappiov Kal AttoWoj-
vi]8ov tf?peapp\lo\v, v7roira\i-
SoTpifiovVTOS A7)/jL7)[Tpt-
io ov rod Aev/clov
r
A\cue[(os.
This dedication to Hermes is occasioned by a victory in the funeral-games
and the attendant torch-race ; see Diet. Ant. s.v. Thesea.
The paedotriba, <$i\ios 6 <&i\Lov cannot be the son of <>l\cos 6 AioxXeovs who
holds the same office in IG in 1, 104, 105 (probably in 61/0 b.c. and shortly
after) ; for the word veibrepos (like wpeafivTepos) is added only when the names of
two persons would have been otherwise indistinguishable. It is more likely
that the #iXios of our inscription was grandson of the other and that this
inscription is considerably later than the other, and perhaps not far from the
end of the century. For the office of paedotriba cf. Rem. vii, p. 146. For
the 3 1. 6 see no. 68 p.
188.
241. A stele of Hymettian marble, found near the Acharnean gate. There
were two sepulchral inscriptions on the same stele. Pittakis 'E0.
dpx- 3884;
IG in 1, 114.
Alphabet, type 2.
corona
King Rhoemetalkes or Rhoematalkas
CN
is the younger of that name, son of
J
V
Cotys. For his joint rule of Thrace
with his brothers see an inscription of
jy
P
-i Cyzicus D 365. The dedication pro-
[
J
bably dates from the year in which
roLfiaTaAstca
king Rhoemetalkas was archon at
aywvL^o/JLevos
Athens 37/8 a.d. (IG in 1, 1077, 1284).
^6oa7TiQ)v
f
^^ie Tav
P
0KaQi
'
n'Tris was probably
n
,
something like the Spanish toreador.
ravpoKadanrr^.
The wQrd occurg in CIG n 2?59 h M^
(Aphrodisias) where L. and S. strangely
explain
'
the stuffed figure used at bull-fights to enrage the bull': <a,ut\ta
Z7jvo}v[os]
|
tov 'T\j/iK\eovs
j
tov 'T\f/iK\tovs | tov 0i/<rei Zr)vu)\vos 'T\f/ix\eovs, dp-
Xiepecos, fxovo\/Adxwv Kal /caret |5ikg;i> (condemnatorum) Kal TavpoKa[6awTQv]. Cf.
CIG in 4039, 45 sqq. (Ancyra): 6/noLus 8e Tavpo/naxiav
\
Kal [Tavpo]Kadd[irT]as
Kal fj,ouo/xdxu[i>] fcv[yr] cWe]j/; and n 3212 (Smyrna): TavpoKada-^ioiv rj/jitpa j8.
In an inscription of Pergamus (Perg. inscr. 523, 16) of the time of Caracalla we
have the word TavpoKddaxpw which may be for TavpoKadaxj/wu or the accusative of
a form in -is.
462 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. VIII.
[242
242. A base of Pentelic marble found in the church of Uavayla IIvpyiuTLo-aa.
Kumanudis 'A0. 1860 Nov. 26 (11. 131) ; Pittakis 'E0. 4096
;
Kumanudis Phil.
i p. 329 no. 12; IG in 1, 129.
AABrAGTH0l kA.UN50TTPCTY$x .00
Iota mutum is omitted.
^AyaOf) T
VXV
OvajAepto? ''E/cXe/cTO? 2^co7rei>?
PovjXeuT^? Kal
'
A07)valo<; Kal AeA(o?
PoujAefT?)? Kal 'HAetOs- Kal '5iap8iav6<;
5
povJXet'Tr/? Kal Tiepyaios ftovXevrr)?
k\(l\ Net/caei/? ftovXevrrjs Kal aXXcov iroX-
Xcov iroXecov 7roXeiT7j<; Kal ftovXevrr)<s,
Krjpvf; 8icr7repLo8os, veiKyjcras dywvas le-
povs oIkou/jLplkov^ tovs VTroyeypafAfie-
io vovs' ^OXv/jiiria iv Yieiar)
ft'
, TlvOca iv AeX-
c/>ot?
ft'
, Neyne^a iv "Apyet
y,
"\a6fjua
8'
, Uava-
Orjvaia
8'
, UaveXX?jvLa, rrjv it; "Apyovs dairi8a,
Y^aireTooXia iv 'Ygd/jLT)
y
'
, ' AOrjvas Upofid-^ov iv
Yco/jlj]
y
',
rov ^etXcerrj iv Ycofir),
itf>
o irec-
15
fjLT)6r)v xpvcru) ftpaSelo) fiovos Kal irpwros rcov air al-
covos KrjpvKcov, Yvaifteia iv TIotloXols
8',
^eftaard
iv Nea7ro\et
8
'
, "AKTia iv ^\iK07roXei, ^OXvfjLiria iv
^Yj
,
TTi8avp(p
ft',
'UpaKXeta iv
Qyjftats
y
, TpocfiGovei-
a iv Aefta8eia
ft,
'OXvfi7rca iv Bepo/a
ft',
YlvOta iv <$>l-
20 XanroiroXei
ft'
, Kevrpecaeca iv
<
iXlttit oiroXei,
Seftaara iv Bv^avrlo), ^evrjpeca iv Ne^/eo/u^Set-
a
ft '
, kolvov TSetOvvias iv Net/coyu/^Seta
ft'
', Xevtfpei-
a iv Net/cea y', l^pvadvOiva iv ^dp8ecnv, koivcl 'Acrta? iv
^Ldp8ecriv, WvQia iv TpdXXecn, "OXvpana iv 'Ec^eo-w
ft',
25 JSapftlXXrja iv 'Etyeacp
8'
, A8pidveta iv 'Ec^ecrco, 'OXv/j,-
iria iv ^/uLvpvrj
ft',
f
A8piavd 'OXv/LL7na iv ^fivpvrj
ft'
,
koivcl 'Acrta? iv
^.fiypvp,
Avyovcrreia iv Tiepydfiw,
^OXvfJLTTLa iv K.V%LK(p, Al8v/jL60a iv MtA^TCi)
ft',
Tlvdta iv ^epoiroXei, "AKTia iv Tvpqy, ^.eftacrfjueua
30 iv Aa/xacTKaj
ft'
, rov irepiiropfyvpov iv *2.l86vl
ft'
,
'ArrdXrja l^airerdiXia iv
,
Acf)po8eccnd8L.
f
T7ro (pGdvaaKov M. Avp. ^Aovaalov rov Kal 'JLop-
rdaiov, Xap8cavov yepovacacrrijv,
AeXcfrbv
242]
DEDICATIONS, AGONISTIC. 463
ftovkevrrjv, teal 'HXelov teal 'AcppoSetacea apyjiypap,-
35
/xarea, Tc/jLr]6evTa vtto 'HXeicov teal
&.e\(f)a)v
avhpiaai puovov teal nrpcorov tcov eirl (f)cova-
cr/cia.
Valerius Eclectus, a citizen and councillor of many cities, having been
victorious in a long list of games in various places (a common formula, cf.
CIG 5913), dedicated a statue on the base of which his successes are inscribed.
The date is approximately marked by the allusion to the ludi saeculares (tov
XtXter?/, sc. dycava 1. 14) by which the emperor Philippus celebrated the thousandth
anniversary of the city of Rome in 248 a.d. An inscription on a base of the
same victor, found at Olympia, shows that the actual date of our inscription
must fall between 01. 258 and 259 (258. 1 =a.d.
253); cf. Gibbon Rom. Em
p.
ch. x, and for the ludi saeculares see Diet. Ant.
Eclectus had the honorary title of (3ov\evTrjs in several cities (cf. for the
formula CIG 5913). He had farther (1. 8)
the title of herald and was dia-rrepiodos,
i.e. had twice won victories at the four great festivals. Cf. CIG 2682 (Iasus) :
veiKf/aas tt)v irepiodov, IG ill 1, 120: Krjpv^ irepLodove'iKws.
9. oiKov/nepiKotis : open to the whole world.
10. kv UeUrg, kv Ae\<pois etc. These distinctions of place were necessary,
because in course of time festivals were established in several Greek states in
imitation of the more famous Olympian, Pythian, Isthmian and Nemean festivals.
Cf. the expressions lco\6iAirio$, iao-rrvdios etc.
12. tt]v e "Apyovs dairiba. This well-known formula occurs on a large
number of inscriptions (e.g. IG n 3, 1320, CIG 1068). The shield was given as
a prize at the Argive Heraea or Hecatomboea; hence perhaps the expression
dy<av xaXKeos Pind. Nem. x 22. Diet. Ant. s.v. Heraea gives an explanation of
the dairis rejected by Boeckh Annot. Pind.
p. 175.
13. 'Adrjvds Upo/xaxov kv 'Pw/xt?. The same games, as well as others
mentioned in this inscription, appear in CIG 1068 (Megara).
15. (3pa[3eLy. Cf. CIG 3674 (Cyzic us): rifxrjdeis x/wcrety /3pct/3eto;. dir aluvos:
from time immemorial.
16. Evaej3eLa ev IIotioXols. The same games occur CIG 1068 etc. There
were Evatpeia also at Neapolis, IG m 1, 128, CIG 1720 (Delphi). In CIG 5810
(Neapolis) they are called dyQves wioi. They were instituted by Antonius Pius
in honour of Hadrian and belonged to the class called el<re\a<rTiKol (as we learn
from a Latin inscription Tito Aelio Hadriano Antonino Aug. Pio constitutors
sacri certaminis iselastici), i.e., games held on a triumphant entry; cf. Plin Ep.
Traj. 119 (120) : Iselasticum time primum mihi videtur incipere videri, cum quis
in civitatem suam ipse elarjXaaev; and CIG 2932 (Tralles), 3426 (Philadelphia).
20. KevTpei<Ti.a = Kev8pel<na (see P. and B.), games in connexion with the
Kevdpureis a tribe in Philippopolis.
22. koivop Beidwlas: sc. dywa; cf. CIG 1720, 3428.
23. Net/c^ : i.e. Nikcu'ci. Cf. 230 : TLeavieoji' and 92. For the Xpvadvdiva.
(at Sardis) cf. CIG 3208 (Smyrna), 5913 (Rome) and the BappLWva (1. 25),
ib. 3208, 5804 (Neapolis), 5913.
The BappLWria (called Ba\/3t\X77a CIG 2810 6 16, Ba\/3f\\a 5804.
22)
derived their name from Barbillus, an astrologer under Vespasian ; cf. Dio
Cass, lxvi 9.
464 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. VIII.
[242
23, 27. kolvol
'
Aaias. ra koivcl or oi kolvoi 'Aaias dywves were celebrated in
various cities of proconsular Asia, which were designated as fxrjTpo-rroXeis and
vewnbpoL, under the presidency of the Asiarch. See Boeckh on CIG 5804, and
Diet. Ant. s.v. Asiarchae.
26. 'AdpLava: i.e. founded by Hadrian; cf. 1.
31
'ArrdX^a KaweTLoXia.
30. top irepiiropcpvpov ev 2eldovt. The epithet irepiirbpcpvpos, with ead-qs, is
used to denote the toga praetextata ; but its application to d7w^ is not clear.
32. virb (j)wvaaK6v. All these prizes (apparently for music, singing or
declamation) were won under the guidance of his trainer, M. Aur. Musaeus,
surnamed Heortasios. Cf. for a similar formula CIG 3208 {Smyrna).
243. A slab (H. 0.4m.; Br. 0.337m.; Th. 0.04 m.) containing on its
surface a figure of a half-moon, with a star between the horns, beneath which is
the inscription. In the Sabouroff collection at Athens. Wieseler, Nachr. K.
Ges. d. Wiss. z. Gottingen, 1874 p. 14; IG in 1, 140.
Alphabet, type 2, with a = a.
i
, w = w
4
.
f
Iepev{s) (TToXi<TTr)<; "IcrtSo?
teal ^epdirthos Avp. '^Tra^poSet-
TO? T(p OvpCLVLG) M.7]VL v%a-
p]i[<r]rr)piov ave07]fca.
The dedication cannot be far off in date from nos. 244, 327. The words
<jt6\i<tt7]S (cf. apxt-TTo\iGTr]s, TrptOToaroXiaTris) aroXicrfios, crroXtcrreta occur frequently
in Egyptian inscriptions and papyri and have reference to the ancient custom
of robing the images of the gods. Cf. Herm. xxni
(1888) 594. On the Bosetta
stone CIG 4697, 6 we read : oi et's to cLSvtov elcnropevbpLevot vpbs top aroXia/xop
r<2v de<2v.
244. A slab of white marble, found in the wall of the Church of the
Panagia Spiliotissa ('Our Lady of the Grotto'). H. 1ft. 5 in. ; Br. 10 in. In
the Elgin Collection. CIG 481 ; Keil, Rh. M. xix 1864, p. 256 sq.; IG in 1, 162.
Alphabet, type 3, with e e
7
, tt = tt
7
,
a oi
9
.
T<x] KIOVICL KOi TO CLLTCO/jia
k\cu t9 /civkXlScls zeal rrjv
'A](f)poSeLT7)v
rfj
deco eic
twv IBlcov aveOrjKev, i-
5
TTLGKevaaacra /cai avrrjv
tt]v 6ehv fcal ra irepi avrrjv,
245]
DEDICATIONS, VARIOUS. 465
ovaa teal \vyyairTpia av-
Tr/9 /cal ovetpoicpLTis.
$
SroXt^o^ro? Klfjbikiov
io'Att]lkov MeXtTeo)?, Upar^v-
ovtos laK^aycoyov Acovu-
aiov M.apa9(oviov, %a/co[p-
evovros ayia(f)6pov
EiVap-
7701;.
This inscription records the dedication of a statue of Aphrodite, together
with certain small columns and a pediment. The dedication includes a latticed
partition or railing (klvkXl8s 1. 2). The offering seems in fact to have consisted
of a miniature shrine, containing in its cella an image of Aphrodite, and
adorned in front with a pair of columns supporting a pediment. The whole
was placed in the temple of the debs of lines 3 and 6 and fenced off by the
KiyK\L5es.
But the goddess to whom the dedication was made was not Aphrodite. The
ministers mentioned, dpeipoKpLrLs, iaKxayuyos, ayiacpbpos, aroXLarris belong not to
the worship of Aphrodite, but to some more solemn and mystic rites. The
practice of dedicating an image of one deity in honour of another, was not
uncommon (see Keil, Syll. Inscr. Boeot., p. 87). Here the deity was (Boeckh I.e.
and Keil, Rh. Mus. I.e.) the Egyptian Isis who had a temple at Athens as early
as 333 b.c. (see 43 44). Moreover GTokicrfxbs (cf. 1.
9)
was a characteristic
feature of Egyptian ritual : cf. note on 243.
Again Isis and Sarapis were both deities who sent dreams to men, especially
by eyKolfxrjais in their temples. This will explain the title dveipoKpiris.
'
Ayia<popos
1. 13 may be a synonym for hpa<f>6pos (see Plut. de Is. et Osir. ch.
3)
or iraaro-
(popos (one who carries a iraaros or shrine in procession), titles of frequent
occurrence among the Egyptian priesthood (CIG in p. 305).
For the combination of the office of 'laKxayuyos with another office (here
that of priest of Isis) cf. no. 327 21: Ko<rfx-qrevovTos
'
lanxaywyov AiovvaLov
Mapaduvlov, the same Dionysius as that of our inscription, which may be of
about the same date (circ. 127/8 a.d.).
1. dlTojp.a : a strange corruption of aerw/na, for which see the note on 126 39.
5. a{iT7]v tt)v debv : i.e. the goddess to whom the statue of Aphrodite was
dedicated by her 'lamp-lighter and dream-interpreter' (11. 7, 8).
9. The same aToXtarris appears on IG in 1, 163, in which also ExjKapiros, the
{dicopos of our inscription, figures as erecting and dedicating (Kadeidpvaev) a
statue of Aesculapius. The forms {aicopos, {anopevw (for 5ta-/c) are imported into
Attic from elsewhere; cf. e.g., fddeos and Aeolic a/3dX\co.
245. An inscription cut in the rock, N. of the Parthenon, near where the
base no. 224 was found. Heydemann Herm. iv
(1870) 381 sqq. ; Kumanudis
naX. 8 Nov.
1869; IG in 1, 166. Cf. Frazer Pans. Vol. n 299; H and V
Athens 414 sqq.
R. ii.
30
466 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. VIII.
[245
Alphabet : a
3
, a
7
, k
3
,
/x
5
, ?r
4
, <r
2
, <
8
.
t^,

T^
Cf. Paus. I 24, 3 : icrrl 5e icai yrjs
I/79 r^ap-
^ , T , , ,
A
,
' r
ayahfia iKeTevovcrjs vaai ol tov Aia, etre
TTOCpopov
avTofc
6/jt,fipov
derjaau 'Adrjt/aiois, etre kcu
KCLTCL LLCLV-
tois Traatv "EWtjiti avfMJUas ai>x^o$.
T[av
The inscription probably belongs to
the time of Hadrian. The mention
of it by Pausanias shows that it was older than 160 a.d. The image to which
the inscription relates may have represented Earth as a woman rising from the
ground, an attitude in which she is often depicted in vase-paintings. See
Frazer I.e., H. and V. I.e.
Section IX. Inscriptions on the seats of the Theatre
of Dionysus.
246. On the uppermost of five steps (of Hymettian marble) leading from
the orchestra to the scena in the Theatre of Dionysus. IG in 1, 239.
Alphabet: a
3
,
a
n
, 5
l5
5
2
, e
4 , f2>
6
4
, /c
3
, \
5
, fi
2
, 8
,
cr
6
,
7
, w
4
.
Sot roSe koKov erevtje, (j)i\6pyi,,
firjfAa
Oerjrpov
<>al8po<; ZcocXov fiioScoropos 'At^/So? ap^os.
The written character of the inscription and the careless style in which the
steps are built point to a time later than Hadrian

perhaps as late as Septimius


Severus and his sons. Dittenberger ranks it in point of age with the latest of
those given under 247

307 below. The dedicator may be the same as the


person named in no. 308.
247

307. Inscriptions on the honorary marble chairs in the cavea of the


Dionysiac Theatre. IG in 1, 240298 (with 299 and 300) and the authorities
there quoted. See also H and V Ath. 271 sqq.; Frazer Paus. Vol. n 222 sqq.
;
Larfeld Hdb. Gr. Ep. n Taf. 1.
The inscriptions are arranged below according to the position of the chairs
in the blocks (icepKldes, cunei) from A to N, G being the central block, in which
was the chair of the priest of Dionysus himself. The enumeration both of
blocks and seats is from West to East. The arrangement is borrowed from H
and V I.e.
Notes on the forms of the letters are given at the end.
IG Block A
(6
seats) Approximate dates
247 298 t
r
Iepeo)? 'AttoWco- Not before 2nd Century A.D.
vos Aa(j)vr)(f)opov
248 297 2 'lepers Not before Hadrian.
Av\coveco<;
Aiovvaov
249 296
3
'Ie/3eo)9 Not before 2nd Century A.D.
\tdo(f)6pov
302
468 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IX.
[250
Not before 2nd Century a.d.
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
250 295
4
'Iepe&)9
251
&94 5
'lepeft)?
Ato9 TeXel-
ov fcai fiov^vyov
252 293 6 'lepeox; r)
fju-qrpos Not before 2nd Century A.D.
/cat QeppefyaTTT)*;
Block B
(5
seats)
253 292 i
f
Ie/oeo>9
'AiroWcovos Av/crfov
Time of Augustus.
Time of Hadrian.
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
254 291 2 Qathwrov
At09 'OXv/jlttlov
ev daret
255 290
3
'JepeaK
AVCLKCOV
real 'Hpeoo?
E7rtTe7tov
256 289
4
f
Ie/oeo>9
Ovpavias
Neyu-ecre&)9
257 # 5
f
Ie/3W9
H^NXtCTTOL'
Block C
(5
seats)
258 ##7 I
f
Ie/D(9
'Ao"/<:\?77r<,oi)
259 # 2
f
Ie/36&)9
Mofcrc^z/
260 ##5 3
f
Iepeo)9 Ato9 QiXiov 1st Century A.D.
261
##4 4
f
l6/oeco9 Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Ao)8e;a ^ewi^
262 283 5
^aiSi^Toi) Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Ai09 e/c IIe/cr?79
Block D (5 seate)
263 281 i
f
Ie/oe&J9 Later than Hadrian.
At09 <At09> Scot[i7]/do9
kcl\ 'A#[?7]z;a9 ^coreipas
Not before 2nd Century a.d.
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
273] THEATRE OF DIONYSUS. 469
264 280 2 '16/960)9
'
AvTLVOOV
yopeiov i/c re-
Time of Hadrian.
265 279
3
'16/960)9
A7roXXo)z/o9
ITa.T/o[o)Ov]
Not before Hadrian.
266 278
4
'Ie/960)9
Atovvaov
^AeXirofjievov
iic re-xyeiTwv
Not before Hadrian.
267 277
5
'Ie/)e
,
o)9
Eiy/eXe/a.9 /cat
TLvvo/jllcls
Block E
(5
seats)
Not before Hadrian.
268 276 I
16/960)9 Little before Christian era;
IIoo-6t8a)yo9 but see the notes below.
Taajo^ov /cal (a, *;, i/, 7r are of the type
'E/96^#60)9 of a
15 .)
269 275 2 '16/960)9
'A/9T6
/
/LttSo9
KoXamSo9
Not before Hadrian.
270
274
3
'l6/960)9
MeX7ro/iteVof
Afo^ucrof
6^
QvVL$(tJl>
Not before Hadrian.
271 273
4
Bou^v^ou
'l6peo)9 Ato9 eV
IIaXX.aSto)
Later than Hadrian.
272 070
5
'Ie/960)9
Ato9 BovXaiov
/cal
'
AOrjvas
Boi/Xaui9.
Block F
(5 seats)
Not before Hadrian.
273 271 i lepocfx'ivrov Not before 2nd Century a.d.
470 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IX.
[274
274 270 2 'lepecos Not before Hadrian,
A7ro\\(ovo<;
A.T)\lOV.
275 269
3
'lepiax;
YloaeL&(t)vo<;
QvraX/jLLov.
276 268
4
f
Ie/9e&)? Xapircov
teal
'
Apre/jLtSos
,
j7ri7rvpyiSia<;
7TVp(f)6pOV
277 267
5 tf
'EgrjyrjTOV
ii: YiViraTpihwv yeipo-
TOVTJTOV V1TO TOV
Brjfiov Bed
fflov
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Before Hadrian (see the
notes below).
Not before 2nd Century A.D.
Block G (5 seats)
278 24S 1
f
Ie/oe&>9
AtO? 'OXvfATTLOV
279 &/ 2 Hf^O^/O^CTTOL'
'E^^^tou
280 &0 3 'IEPEH2 AIONTSOT EAET@EPEn2
1st Century A.D. (e
8
,
a
2 .)
Hadrian.
Not before Hadrian.
Little before Christian era.
Os,
0"
2 .)
Not before Hadrian.
Not before Hadrian.
Reign of Augustus.
281
21$ 4
t
lpico<;
Ato9 noXteco?
282 244, 5 vr)x6ov
Block H
283 251 I 'YepOjJLVqiAOVOS
284 #5 2
f
Iepe&>9
/cat ap^tepecos
%e/3aaTov Kalo-apos
285 #5$ 3 'Iepew? Hadrian (except 1.
3).
*A.hpiavov
^XevOepalcos
4, 5
Missing.
Block I
286 #. I "A/3^0^[tos]
287 255 2 Bao-tXe&)[s]
300]
THEATRE OF DIONYSUS. 47
288 256
3
noAeyLtap^of
4, 5
Missing.
Block K
289 257 I %6(TfJLo0eTOV Not earlier than Hadrian.
290 258 2 (dea/ioOerov
291 259
3
%6afjbo6erov
292 260
4 %eafjiodeTOv
293 261
5
'lepofcrjpvicos Time of Hadrian.
Block L. All missing.
Block M
(5
seate)
i,
2, 3
Missing.

294 000
4
lepeco? Hadrian.
295 263
5
r
Iepe&>?
1
KaK\rjiTiov
Ila[(]a)[v]o9
Boc& iV
(6
seate)
296 0fr i 'Iepe&K
nupc^opof
ef
W/cpoiro-
\6G)9
Hadrian.
297 265 2 'Iepew? Arj/jLov
koX Xaplrcov
Augustus.
298
06'
3
K^pu/co? Ha^a/yoi)9
/cat
f
lpea)9
4, 5,
6 Missing.
Hadrian.
Scattered seats behind the front row.
In Block D
299 0S0 Hh row
f
Iepea)9
'
kdrjvai
In Block F
3rd row
? 'Adrjviov Hadrian (Ditt.)
300 688 H 7TO\t9 Hadrian.
472 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IX.
[300
M.dpK0) OvXtTIG)
I C L
Rv{3i0Tq) TW \CLfJL-
irpOTCLTW VTTdTl-
KCp /Cat eTTCDVV/JLO)
apyovTi to) evep-
yery, avray teal rols
veiols avrov Teccrafie-
va> KaX yia$;ip,to
In Block G
2nd row
(2
seats, one double)
301
2Jf6 (a)
f
Iepe&)9
Nifcrjs
302 2^6 (b) AaSovxov Not before Hadrian.
303
ftlfl (c) 'Iepetw? (7r
5 ;
see the notes below.)
^AttoWcdvos HvOlov
3rd roiv (double chair)
304 24S (a) ^rparrjyov Not before Hadrian.
305 250 (b) Kr)pvKos Not before Hadrian.
Mh row (double chair)
306 299 (a) Aioyevov? \
(y,
e,
p,,
it, a, r, v of the
type of
7
2 ;
v
=
v
vt >
v
4
.)
y See the notes below.
Ejvepyerov
307 300 (b) 'lepecos
^ArraXov
'Fd7T(0VVpL0U
[Besides the marble chairs the benches or tiers of the adjoining rows exhibit
inscriptions, for the most part very carelessly engraved. See IG 111
1,
303384.]
Though the chairs themselves are of the date of Lycurgus (337323 b.c.)
the inscriptions on them are nearly all late and vary in date. In as many as
fourteen it is evident that an earlier inscription has been obliterated to make
way for the existing one. As Miss Harrison justly remarks, merely to read
through the list of those who, ex officio, attended dramatic representations
gives a lively impression, not only of the complexity of Athenian worship, but
also of the great importance of the ritual of Dionysus.
The dates of nos. 306, 307 are discussed below. Of the remainder
1. 268, 281, 303 are shown by the characters to be the oldest, and
possibly belong to the second century b.c. To this period may belong also
many of the inscriptions which were erased for re-engraving.
307]
THEATRE OF DIONYSUS. 473
2. No. 284 is shown by its subject to belong to the time of Augustus. In
the style of letters 297 resembles it, and nearest to these two in point of
engraving and probably age is 253. Nos. 260, 280 and perhaps 277 are
later than the first group described, but earlier than Hadrian.
3. To Hadrian's time belong nos. 254, 264, 285, 299, 302 (cf. the note)
as is clear from their substance, though the character of the letters varies.
No. 254 has the form
7
which is not common before the second century a.d.
Hence 247, 252, 262, 273, 275, 276, which have the same form, may
belong to the same period as 254. Inscriptions written over an erasure appear
to be in nearly every case not earlier than Hadrian (248, 263, 265, 267,
269, 270, 274, 279, 282, 283, 291, 295, 304, 305). No. 302 may
have been by the same hand as 304 and 305; also 273. Some inscriptions
(e.g. 274, 275, 276) though containing
P!
are probably not as old as
nos. 268, 281, 303
( 1).
4. Nos. 263, 271, 285 (cf. line
3) appear to be later than Hadrian and
perhaps of the same date (to judge from the carelessness of the characters) as
no. 246.
As a rule the inscriptions assigned above to the time of Hadrian are in
larger letters than those of the older period.
248. The same epithet AvXupevs is assigned to Dionysus in IG in 1, 193.
That it was a place in Attica, not necessarily a deme, appears from IG in 1, 61
A 45 (part of which is given in no. 96).
249. Nothing is known of the functions of the Xido<p6pos, and the same
remark applies to many of the titles inscribed on the chairs.
251. For the title j3ov^vyr]s cf. IG in
1, 71 and below 271. The glosses
explain : 6 tous iepovs aporovs iTUTeX&v or 6 r&s iepas /Sous rets ev 'FiXevaivi dporpiwaas
rptcpuv. Cf. Hesych. s.v. (3ovvyr)s. The word (Bov&yov must be joined with
iep^ajs, not with Atos.
252. <t>eppe0<xTT7?s. See Meisterhans Gr. 100. Moeris
p. 360 notes:
QeppecpaTTa, 'AttlkQs, Hepaecpovrj, 'EXXtjvlkQs. The first is the normal form on
prose inscriptions (vases and treasurers' accounts) ; the second, with Qepaecpov-q
is poetic. In decrees Koprj is substituted.
253. On Avktjov see 236 {"Aprjos).
254. On the spelling (fiaibwrov see 69 16. The office must have been
instituted on the occasion of Hadrian's visit to Athens when he dedicated a
Statue of Olympian Jove in the Olympieum.
255. In explanation of the "Hpws 'EwtTeyios Vischer plausibly conjectures
either that he was Adonis (Ar. Lys. 389 o r 'Adooi'i.acrp.bs ovtos ovttl tQv reyCov) or
that he was some tutelary deity of houses such as Atj/j.^tt]p 4iroLia.Ua at Corinth
and 'Ep/^s eiridaXap.iTT]s in Euboea.
263. The stone has ZorrEpos, 'AtfEyas.
266. In IG in 1, 20, a decree of the Council of Dionysiac artists, a iep]evs
Me\Trop{4]uo[v is mentioned; cf. 270.
268. IG in 1, 805 (6 lepevs Uoaeidtov[os]
\
"Etpexd^ws yairjoxov) shows that
Posidon and Erechtheus must here be identical. Cf. H and V Ath. p. lix.
269. For KoXaivis see Ar. Av. 874 and comm.
270. Evvecduv : a famous citharoedist family of Athens
;
see P. and B.
For ~Me\irop.vov cf. 266 above.
272. Zeis (SovXaios and
'
Ad-qva ftovXaia are mentioned IG in 1, 683.
474 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. IX.
275. QvtclKiaIov. This title of Posidon is found on no other inscription at
Athens. It was known at Troezen, Paus. n 32, 8; Erythrae, D 600, 80; and
Ehodes, IG xn 1, 905.
276. Vischer notes that this is the same Artemis who in Paus. n 30, 2 is
called "Ekolttj eTrnrvpyidia. The word wvp<p6pov must be joined with tep^ws
:
cf. 296.
277. Another of the three official e^rjyyjrai appears in 279. The third,
the ^777777-775 e Eu
/
uo\7ri5toi>, is mentioned IG in
1, 720; cf. 9 36.
279. Cf. the last note. Hvd6xpvffTs denotes 'appointed in accordance
with the Pythian oracle.'
280. On the epithet 'EXevdepevs (' worshipped at Eleutherae
')
see H and V
Ath. 254.
282. Gvr)
X
6ov. Cf. 117 79.
283. This must be the Amphictyonic hieromnemon; though there were at
Athens also hieromnemones belonging to local and gentile organisations
:
cf. no. 113 A 5, iepo/jLvrj/noves "H.pai<\ovs. See H. Sauppe De amphictionia
Delphica deque hieromnemone Attico. Gottingen 1873 p.
10.
284. By Se/3a(rr6s is meant Augustus, not the emperor for the time being.
The priest here named is therefore to be distinguished from apx^pevs tQv
285. For the date indicated by the cll = in 'IZXevdepalus see no. 92.
292. The letters Top . . . possibly belong to another inscription. The two
missing seats in Block I next to that of the iroXfjLapxos were those of dea^o-
derat.
294. 'Ia/cxctYwyoO. Cf. 244 11.
295. In the last line Rhusopulos restored r/pwos; Vischer thinks the line to
be the remains of an older inscription
;
Dittenberger restores JlaLuvos, which, in
the forms YLai-qwv, VLaiav, appears as an epithet of Asklepios in IG in 1, 171, 2.
298. The title iepevs iravayrjs occurs IG 111 1, 716, 6, 717, 5.
299. The name is apparently 'Adrjvios. A feminine form, 'Adrjviov, occurs
IG in 1, 61
(96)
A
11, ('Appia ['A]dr]isLov) and 668, 13 (iirl iepeias tt}<; 'Adrjvas
'Adrjviov).
300. On a seat assigned by the city to M. Ulpius Eubiotos, consular and
eponymous archon, and his sons. For the ei = i in veiois cf.'OXu/ATreia IG 111 1,
127, 5 (after 117 a.d.), 120, 6 (138/161 a.d.). See Meisterhans Gr. 49.
301. Divine honours were paid to the Olympian Nk77 after the time of
Hadrian (Vischer Mus. Helv. nov. in, 1863, p.
3543). He had instituted
Olympian games at Athens; cf. IG in 1, 127.
304. Dittenberger remarks that the only seat for a strategus is that of the
o-TpaTrjybs iiri ra 6w\a. (See no. 36 19.) No other is mentioned in the imperial
period, nor is the word quoted in the plural. It would appear that the other
officers bearing the name of o-Tpar-qyos had ceased to exist and this alone
survived; cf. 311 4.
305. KrjpvKos: possibly the herald of the Areopagus, who in the decree
no. 68 14 (209/10 a.d.) takes the next place to the archon eponymus and the
strategus, and these three would appear then to have been the chief magistrates
of the republic. (Dittenberger.)
306. 307. Koehler (Herm. vn p. 2) in spite of the late form of the letters
argues that this Diogenes is identical with the Macedonian phrourarch who
THEATRE OF DIONYSUS. 475
liberated Athens after the death of Demetrius, son of Antigonus, in 229 b.c.
Both of the inscriptions probably date from the time of Demetrius and Attalus.
Note on the forms of
the letters. A great variety prevails, rendering unsafe
in almost every case inference of relative age from the forms themselves. Even
as regards nos. 268, 281, 303, which Dittenberger is inclined to refer to the
second century b.c, it would be quite possible to find all the forms in inscriptions
of a much later date. Among the forms appear the following; a
4
, a
n
, a
15
,
a
16
e
3'
e
8>
e
9> fl> $2> %' ^5' #1> ^2> #4 > #5>
l
3 '
K
1 '
K
3* ^4 > \> ' ^7 > ^8' /*9
^
"^J
7r
5
, 7r
8
, <r
2
, ff
3
, ff
6
,
<r
6
, <x
I2
,
r
3
,
7
,
8
, w
4
;
no. 284 follows type 3.
Remark xiv. The later numeral alphabet. An account of the
regular Attic numerals was given in Remark ii on
p. 44 ; a different
system is found in inscriptions of Imperial date. This system,
continues in use to the present day, and is commonly called "the
Herodianic." The letters are used in their alphabetical order as
conventional signs for the different numbers. This system is
supposed to have been invented at Miletus ; further, as the system
makes use of the signs
p(j)
and others obsolete in the Ionic alphabet
of the fifth century, it is commonly supposed to be of very early
origin, though no actual example of its use can be quoted earlier
than the middle of the fourth century B.C. (at Halicarnassus).
Though the complete system was unknown in Attica until
Imperial times, the practice of labelling things in batches by letters
of the alphabet was common enough
;
cf. no. 100 b. Good examples
of a really numerical use of the letters of the alphabet may be seen
in nos. 95 and 96. The forms of letters used are much the same as
in the ordinary writing of the time, viz. :
A
= l
|
=10
p
=100
B
= 2
K
=20

=200
r=3 A
=30
T
=300
A
= *
M
=40
Y
=400
E
-5
N
=50 cp =500
L
=6 = =60
X
=600
Z
= 7
O=70
y
=700
H
=8
n
=80
n.
= 8oo
= 9
S
=90
T
=900
Numbers above 1000 are distinguished by a stroke on the left
of the symbol, either above or below the line,
'A
or
J\
: but this
may be omitted when there is no danger of ambiguity. In earlier
476 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA; SECT. IX.
Imperial times the order of the symbols is the same as that of the
numbers when written
;
the higher denomination usually precedes,
but from 11 to 19 the units are written first (cf. no. 142) e.g.

|
= TrtvTeKaL$eKa
;
after about the middle of the first century of our
era the order used to the present day becomes universal, e.g.
\
=
15.
The symbols which were obsolete as letters varied considerably in
form
;
thus we find
Q , fT" (95),
etc. = 6.
In order
1
to distinguish numerals from ordinary letters, it was
customary to place punctuation marks,
\
or
:
, or sometimes only an
empty space, before and after them in the usual Attic system
(see Index); if the number came at the beginning or end of a line,
the punctuation mark is usually placed only between it and the
ordinary letters, but there is always a good deal of irregularity even
in official documents. The later numerals, of Imperial times, are
often distinguished by a horizontal stroke above them,
'
,
> < before
and after, or other signs. Throughout, from the earliest to the
latest times, we find numbers frequently written out in full ; there
appear to be no rules about the matter other than those implied by
considerations of convenience.
Section X. Artists' signatures, Inscriptions on Statue-bases
and other Honorary Inscriptions.
308. On a marble sun-dial, now in the Elgin Collection, British Museum.
CIG 522 ; BMI 72 ; IG m 1, 427.
Alphabet: ct
n
,
5
2
, e
4 , ^2
, X
5
,
ir
4
, a
6
,
7
.
QaiSpos

Z(oc\o[v
Tlaiavievs
\
iiroLe\y.
Phaedrus can hardly be other than the person of that name in no. 246,
nor can the formula 6 deiva eiroUt denote anyone else than the artist himself.
But it is strange (notes Dittenberger, IG I.e.) that the same man should have
been sculptor and have attained to the office of
'
apxte' (246).
309. A base of Hymettian marble found near the church of Panagia
Pyrgiotissa. Kumanudis 'Ett. &v4k5. 1860, n. 78
;
IG in 1, 428
;
D 346.
Alphabet of the type of v
e
, a
5
.
e
O 8t]/jlo<;
T^d'iov \ov\tov Kat[<rapa
a^p^tepea kcli SLKrd[ropa] rov
ka\vrov acorrjpa kcl\\ evep-ycT^v.
The precise year is uncertain. Caesar's first dictatorship was in 49 B.C.,
his second 48 b.c. He became annual dictator on 1 Jan. 45 b.c, this term
reckoning as his third dictatorship ; his fourth began on 1 Jan. 44 b.c Cf.
Th. Mommsen CIL i p. 451 (D).
310. In the National Museum at Athens. IG in 1, 430.
Alphabet: a
4
,
4
, /c
3
, <r
2
.
KvTOKpd\r\opo(;
Kalcrapos, Oeov
vlov, Xefiaarov,
t]o0 KTidTOV.
478 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. X. [310
2. deov : Julius Caesar. The title Krlcrrrjs, here given to Augustus, was a
very common complimentary description in inscriptions, e.g., of a successful
general who was regarded as the restorer of liberty; cf. BMI 211 (Mitylene)
:
Tva'up Hovrrrfl'iip rVcuco viip
|
MeydXy, avroKparopt, ry ev\epyeTq. /ecu <rw|T^/)t /ecu
Kriara. The genitive is thus used frequently to denote the person honoured
with a statue, cf. IG in 1,
431434.
311. On a base of Hymettian marble. Ross Bern. n. 141 ; Pittakis L'anc.
Ath. p. 159; IG ml, 457.
Alphabet, type
2;
=
], 2
>
7r
=
7r
4'
Tcftepcov KXavBiov
Kaicrapa ^efiaarbv Tp[\Lavi\/cov Avrofcpdropa
\6
8r}/j,o<;
7]
(3ov\r} tj
ef
'Apelov irdyov tcai r\ j3ovXrj roov k^cucoa'udv zeal
<rTpa,Tr)<yovvTO<; eirl toi>? ottXItcis rod teal dycovoOerov irpcoTOV
5
rwv XefiaaTcov dycovcov Noi^ou rov QiXeivov
ef
Oiou.
3. On the senate of 600 see Rem. xi, p. 127 and cf. nos. 312

314.
4. <TTpaT7]yovvTos kt\. See the note on no. 304.
312. An inscription recovered from the east architrave of the Parthenon
by E. Andrews, student of the American School, by following the traces of the
nails which formerly served to attach the letters of the inscription. Naturally
the exact form of the letters cannot be given. JHS xvi, 1896, p. 339
;
Jahn and Michaelis Arx Ath. p. 97 no. 13.
H e Apeiov irdyov /cal rj
fiovXr) twv
%
/cal 6
Srjfjios o
'
AOrjvaicov Avro/cpdropa /jueycarov Nepoova
Y^alcrapa KXav&tov *5Le(3acrTov Yep/Aavi/cov Oeov vlov,
(TTpaT7]<yovvTO^ eirl tovs onrXira^ to oySoov rov
5
/cal 7ri,/jLe\r)Tov /cal vo/jioOirov T. KXavBlov Novlov
rov QiXivov, eirl iepeias
- -
rrjs
- -
dvyarpos.
The reference to the eighth term of office of Novius fixes the date at 61 a.d.
and the whole inscription probably commemorates the erection of a statue of
Nero, perhaps in front of the Parthenon. For Novius cf. no. 311. In an
inscription of the same year, marked by the archonship of Thrasyllus, IG in 1,
1085, Novius is 7ri/j,\rjTi)s rrjs 7r6Xews did /3tou and, besides other offices, also
VOfJiod^TTJS.
314]
STATUE-BASES, EMPERORS. 479
313. A base of Pentelic marble found west of the Parthenon, containing
also IG in 1,
44750 and n 3, 1395. Pittakis 'E0. 149 and 209; Ross Arch.
Aufs. i p. 184; Jahn and Michaelis Arx Ath. p.
116 no. 120; G. Hirschfeld
Tit. stat. 32 a 1
; IG in 1, 462.
Alphabet : a
]5
, e
lt
e
3
,
r)
5
,
2
, K
:i
,
/b
1( 2
, tt
4
, <r
2
, <r
g
.
AvroKpdropa Kaiaapa Nipovav Tpaia-
vov ^6J3aarbv YepixaviKOv Aclkikov 6e-
6v 6eov vibv ave'ucrjTOV rj e
'
Apeiov ird-
yov /3ov\r) teal r) (3ov\t) tcov
.%.
/cal o Stj/jlos o 'A-
Orjvaioov top tSiov evepyirrjv koX acorrjpa
tt)? OLKovfjuevris.
The surname Dacicus shows that the inscription on the statue of Trajan
must be later than 103 b.c. The title corresponding to optimus which was
adopted into the series of adjectives from 114 a.d. is missing; and the title
optimus princeps, found on coins and inscriptions from 105 a.d., is unrepresented.
In an inscription, which is apparently so careful to accumulate the titles,
Dittenberger thinks that there would have been no such omission, though the
practice indeed varies ; hence he would place the date between 103 and 105 a.d.
(cf. Eckhel D.N. vi p. 418, 448, 458).
314. Four marble bases, found in the theatre of Dionysus. Rhusopulos
Eph. nov. 184, 125, 106 (cf.
p. 155); Kumanudis Phil, in
p. 565, p. 463, p. 364;
Pervanoglu Bull. d. Inst. 1862
p. 162 ; W. Vischer Mus. Helv. nov. in
(1863)
p. 63
;
IG in 1, 466469.
Alphabet of the type v
6
, <r
12
, with e
4
,
4
, 7
, v
2
,
7
.
N E
are once ligatured.
AvTo/cpciTopa Kaicrapa, 6eov Tpaiavov
YlapdiKOv vlbv, Oeov Nepova vlwvbv
*
Ahpiavbv XefiacrTOV, rj e 'Apeiov
ird<yov (3ov\r) real rj
ftovXr) rci)V X /cal
5
o Sr}/xo<? 7rL/JL\ov/uLVT)S rrj<; rEpe%0^8o9 IG III 1,466 ) (fivXfjs.
]
'
A KCLfACLVTibOS 467
(oivTjtBos

468*,
*
Of 469 only part of the first two lines is preserved.
From the position in which these bases, originally supporting statues of
Hadrian, were found, it is clear that there were twelve statues arranged through
the cunei according to the regular order of the twelve tribes. The mention of
the senate of the 600 shows that the inscription must be earlier than 126 a.d.;
see no. 67 and cf. no. 323.
480 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. X.
[315
315. A round marble base found in the Olympieum. Rhusopulos Eph.
nov. 50
;
Henzen Bull. d. Inst. 1862
p. 135; Kumanudis Phil, n p. 432; IG in
1, 479.
Alphabet, type 2, with a
3
, a
7
, d
lt
5
2
, e
l5
e
4
,
<r
2
, a
3
,
oj
1
, w
4
. Iota mutum
generally omitted.
Avro/cparopa Kalaapa deov Tpaiavov
vlov Oeov Nepova vlcovbv Tpaiavov \Ahptavbv
^ej3aarov 'OXv/nirtov tj iroXts 'lovXtecov to)v /cal Aao-
St/cecov to)v irpos 0aX\_6^\aar], rrjs Upas /cat aavXov real av-
TOVOjXOV
5
vavap^lSos avvyevtSos (f)tXr)<; avp,p,ayov /cotveovov Bijfiov
'Vco/jLaucov, itjaiperws TeTetfiTj/jtevrj Soopeais /ca6a>$ teal (al) ev
Ka7T6-
tooXlg) SeXroc ireptkyovatv Sea eTrtfieXrjTobv /cal irpea(3ev-
twv 'Ap^eXdov rod Tet/Jtap^ov. /cal M. > OvicreXXiov Yatov
vlov KoXXtva TLpetcr/cov icai Y. Y^opvrjXtov Yatov vlov Kvpeiva
io Wla^l/biov, /cal
'
AiroXXcovlov (tov) AtoyvrjTOv iirt/caXov-
fievov Yatov.
The base supported a statue of Hadrian. Laodicea by the Sea having a fresh
grant of freedom from Julius Caesar, was hence called Julia and began its era
from that epoch (cf. Eckhel D. N. in
p. 316). On coins the inhabitants call
themselves 'IouXte?s AaoSi/ceis and more frequently 'Iov\ieh oi icai Aaodinels, as in
1.
3,
qualifying their city as iepa icai avTovo/xos. Our inscription adds the titles
davXos and vavapx^, the latter having reference to the great maritime inter-
course which it maintained, according to Strabo
(p. 752) especially with the
Egyptian Alexandria. It was further said to be (1. 5) 'of the same kin
(avpyepidos)
;
the friendly ally and partnei of the Roman people.' It was (1. 6)
'
signally honoured by privileges according to the content of the records in the
Capitol.' deXros in this connexion is used by Josephus xiv 10, 3.
Note (1. 7 sqq.) among the curators and deputies, through whose agency the
Laodiceans erected the statue, the thoroughly Roman designations of two,
M. Visellius Priscus, son of Caius, of the Colline tribe and C. Cornelius
Maximus, son of Caius, of the Quirine tribe. In 1. 9 possibly we should write
KoWLva, Kvpeiva.
316. Found near the half-ruined church of S. George, Chandler Inscr.
P. ii n. 38 p. 57; CIG 347; IG m 1, 529.
Alphabet, type 2.
Av^ro/cparopa Kataapa Tpatavbv
(
AS]ptavov
'
AvTcovtvo[v]
Xefiao-rbv JLvo-efirj, A[vto-
Kp]aropa to /? virarov to
.y., iraTepa nraTpthos a\y-
verr{iy\avt;r)o-avTa t? tov 6eov iraTpbs ai/To[v tvcpyetrCas
318]
STATUE-BASES, EMPERORS. 481
The date of this inscription on the statue of Antoninus Pius is shown by
1. 3 to be 140 a. d. The accusatives avroKparopa &c. depend upon some such
formula as 77
ttoXls erl^ae or dvedrjKe: cf. 53 35, 318

321.
317. On a base of Pentelic marble found in 1837
;
now in front of the
temple of Theseus. Ross Arch. Intell-bl. 1838 n. 34; id. Bern. n. 66;
Pittakis
L'anc. Ath. p. 494; Schoell Arch. Mitth. p. 121; IG m 1, 532.
Alphabet, in the main type 1, but with tt
4
, <r
3
, <p
7
. Iota mutum omitted.
'E7Tt veiKrj KCU
vyela twv
Oeicdv teal <pc-
XaSeXcfxov Av-
5
To/cparopcov Map-
kov AvprjXiov
'
Avrcovetvov
teal Aovklov Av-
pr)\lov Ovrjpov'
TO 77 L/jL6\7)Tl'oVTO? YvdlOV AlfCLV- <$
vlov ^Attlkov TapyrjTTiou. <$
The date of this inscription on a statue of the imperial brothers M. Aurelius
and L. Verus must fall between 161 and 169 a.d.
2. The spelling vyeta and vyia is found after 100 B.C.
10. iirt/j.eXrjTevoi'TOs: SC. rrjs iroXews; cf. 312.
318. On a base among the ruins of the temple of Demeter and Persephone
at Eleusis. Spon Itin. T. m P. n p. 126; CIG 351 ; IG in 1, 534.
Alphabet, type 2.
AvTO/cpdropa Katcr-
apa M- Avprj\i,ov
'
Avtcovlv-
ov Tepfiavt/cov YYapOiKov
^ArjhiKov
'
AiroWwvLarai
5
ol Kara Y^vpr)vr\v 8ia M-
'IovXlov Tipd^cSos
TlaveWr/vos.
M. Aurelius assumed the surname Germanicus in 172 a.d. On coins indeed
the name JSledicus is not found after 167 nor the name Parthicus after the death
of L. Verus (169 a.d.). The absence of the name Sarmaticus points to a date
before 175 a.d. M. Julius Praxis, who was commissioned by the Apolloniates to
dedicate the statue was a Panhellene, or delegate sent to the Panhellenia; see
68 13.
R. II. 31
482 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. X.
[319
319. Found at Athens in 1743. CIG 357, and authorities there quoted
;
IG m 1,
541.
Alphabet, type 2.
HaaiXea
'
'Api,o/3apavr]v ^iXoirdropa, rov i/c fiacriXeGOS
'Apioftap^dvov QtXopcd/jLcuov Kal fBacnXiaar}^
'
ASrjvathos QiXocTTopyov, ol KaraaraOeyres
vtt avrov eVl rrjv rov 'QtSetov KaraaKevrjv
5
Ydios kcCi Map/co? XraXXtoc Yatov vol Kal
MevdXi7T7ro<;, eavrcov evepyerrjv.
The king commemorated is Ariobarzanes II, king of Cappadocia. IG in 1,
542 also is in his honour, and 543 records a dedication to his son. The Odeum
of Pericles, which the former restored, had been burnt down (Vitruv. v 9, 1) in
the Mithridatic War, 01. 173.3 =
86/5 b.c. (Appian Mithr. 38). Dittenberger,
after Boeckh, gives the following genealogical tree:
Ariobarzanes I, Philoromaeus =Athenais, <pi\6<rTopyos, natu major
(9159 b.c. or later)
r
'
Ariobarzanes II, Philopator =Athenais, (piXoaropyos, natu minor
(6552 circ. , at first with his
father, afterwards alone)
Ariobarzanes III, Eusebes Philoromaeus
(5242, when he was assassinated)
320. On a large base at Athens, now apparently lost. Boeckh CIG 361
(after Fourmont), with authorities there quoted
;
IG in 1, 556.
Alphabet, type 2, with a
4
,
e
8
,
r)
5
.
f
H ftovXr}
r)
ef
y
Aptov irdyov Kal
j)
ftovXr}
twv
%
Kal o $rj/uos lov-
Xiav ^epeveiKrjv fiaaiXiaaav
/jL<yd\r)v 'IovXlov
'
' Aypiirira ftacri-
5
A,eft>? Ovyarepa Kal fxeyaXcov
ftaaiXecov evepyercov tt}<? 7to-
Aea><? eKyovov, Bed rrj<; irpovoi-
<Z9 rov 7rifjLXr)Tov t?}? iroXe-
6)? Ti/3. KXavhiov %eoyevovs
io Tlaiaviea)?.
For the pedigree of Berenice, great-grand-daughter of Herod the Great, see
Boeckh I.e. and the New Testament commentators on Acts xxv 13. The
inscription falls somewhere between 50 and 70 a.d. If the Theogenes of 1. 9
is
the same as the /c%w (sc. povXrjs Kal b-q/xov) of that name in an ephebic inscription
IG in 1, 1085, of the year 61 a.d., our dedication may belong to Nero's reign.
What the claim of Berenice to the epithet ixeyakr] was and how her ancestors
were entitled to be called evepytrcu of Athens we do not know.
323]
STATUE-BASES, KINGS ETC. 483
321. A stone built into the wall of a tower adjoining the church of
Panaghia Pyrgiotissa. There are traces of an older inscription on the stone.
Kumanudis 'E7rtyp. 'EM. iicd. daTrdvr) rrjs
dpx.
iraip. 'Ad. 1860 n. 51 B; IG in
1, 564.
Alphabet, type 1 or 2, with e
lt
e
3
, etc.
to koivov Aeoovrc-
Bwv Aev/cLov 'IovXl-
ov "Kalcrapa evepyerrjv.
The person thus honoured by the council or assembly of the Leontid
tribe is probably the L '. Julius Caesar who was consul with C. Marcius
Figulus in 64 b.c. That it is not L. Caesar, grandson of Augustus, by his
daughter, seems clear from the addition of the name Julius, which neither
Augustus nor his adoptive sons use. (Dittenberger, IG I.e.)
322. In the church of Panaghia Pyrgiotissa. W. Henzen (after G.
Hirschfeld) Eph. epigr. i p. 219; IG in 1, 613.
Alphabet, in the main type 2.
Several of the names are separated by the mark
'

'
TIottXlov Me/X/XtOZ^ PrjyXov [v-iraTiKdv, nrpeo-fievTJTjv
TtfiepLov

Kaicrapos

zeftacrTOV /c[al dvTia-r^pdTrj<yov


real Tifieplov
KXavSuov

K.ai<rapo<; Hefiaarov
YepfJiaviKov,

A6r)i>aicov o eirl tovs oirXlras crrparr)-


5
70?
Kal a<yGOvo0eT7)<; rccv Tofteplov KXavSlov Ka/cra^o?
Xeftao-rov dycovcovNoi;t09 QiXeivov it; Otov
rbv eavrov evepyerrjv ifc roov Ihicov dvedrj/cev.
P. Memmius Kegulus was consul suffectus in 31 a.d. As legatus pro praetore
he administered the combined provinces of Moesia, Macedonia and Acbaia from
36 a.d. to the beginning of the reign of Claudius. Though he was legatus of
three emperors, two only are mentioned, the accursed name of Caligula being
omitted.
323. A base of Pentelic marble found east of the Parthenon. Pittakis
'E0. 363; C. Bursian, Ber. Sachs. Ges. 1860 p. 218; Dittenberger Eph. epigr. 1
p. 245 sq.; IG in 1, 622 ; Jahn and Michaelis Arx Ath. p. 134, no. 457.
Alphabet, type 2, with
<p
7
, \p^
.
TpLTTo\LTO)V rrjs
t&OLveLfcrjs, t>}9 lepas Kal d-
crvXov Kal avrovofiov
312
484 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. X. [323
/eal vavapylhos, ol dpyov-
5
re$ tcai
7)
/3ov\r) KCLl o hrjfXO^
Al/jLlXlov 'lovy/eov, irpeafiev-
Tr)V %e(3a<TTov /eal dvTLarpd-
T7)yov, rbv eavrcov iroXei-
ttjv zeal evepyerrjv, evyapicr-
io ticl<s eve/eev Sid irpeafievrov
Yatov \ov\iov Ilpo/eXrjiavov
dveOrj/eav, eiri'^rrj^iaapbevT]^
Trj<s e Wpetov irdyov f3ov\r}<$
leal tt?? f3ov\f}<? rcov
('
/eal rod
15
T)pLOV TOdV 'AOtjvcilgov.
eirl lepelas &X. Qaivaperr)*;.
Aemilius Juncus, honoured by the city of Tripolis, was legatus Augusti pro-
praetore 11.
6
8 (cf. 322 1, 2). He must have held this office shortly before his
consulate, which was in 127 a.d., but not earlier than 126 a.d. because of the
mention of the Senate of 500 (see nos. 67 and 314). Tripolis was a colony of
the three towns Tyre, Sidon and Arados. Like Tyre (IG xiv 830, Puteoli) and
Laodicea (cf. 315) it had besides other titles that of a<rv\os 'inviolate' and
vavapxis 'mistress of a fleet.'
324. Two large bases of Hymettian marble, each containing the same
inscription, one of them (IG in 1, 621) much mutilated. Pittakis '~E<p. 59
;
Lb. Att. 334; Beule, L'Acropole 1 p.
340 (C. Keil sched. epigr. 1
p. 41; Herzog
Gall. Narb. hist. app. n. 267; I. Marquardt Eph. epigr. 1 p. 203);
Kumanudis
iv
p.
83 ;
IG in 1, 623, 624.
Alphabet, mainly of the type of e
9
,
6
5
,
k
5
etc.
Iota mutum is not written.
'H
e'f
'Apeiov Trdyov /3ov\r) /eal
7] fiov\r)
rcov i^a/eoatcov
/eal Stj/ulos o AOrjvalcop
YLoivrop TpefteWiov 'Povcfiov
5
KotWof vlov, Aa/nTrrpea, dp%i-
epea Trpwrov lirapyeia^ 7-779
i/e Napftcovos, /eal virarov Kai-
veivY]V(jiv tepcov Srjfiou Ywfxai-
(ov, /eal TrdcraLS ret/xat? iv rrj
325]
STATUE-BASES, VARIOUS. 485
10 irarpihi ToXcocrrj t6Tl/jl7)/jl6-
vov fcal apyovTa eTTtovvjAOv
ev
'
A.6r)vais, Kal lepea Apovcrov
virdrov, Kal lepea Eu/cXe/a? koX
Eui'O/ua? Sid /3lov, real
^pvaocfio-
15
pla hid {3lov TeTeiixrjjxevov /cat
yfrr) (filer
/mart avaOeaecos dvhpc-
dvrcov Kal elfcovcov ev iravri va-
o5 Kal i7rtar)/jL0) rf}<; 7ro[\]e&>9 [t]o-
7Tft), fieya\oylr[yxias <!vKa ko]1 dperrj
1
;
20 k]oI evvoias [tt^s els kjaurov?.
The person here honoured, Q. Trebellius Eufus, with his extravagant list of
titles, is not a consul; the word v-n-arov, 1. 7, merely denotes 'summits' (cf.
expressions like summits haruspex etc.). But the meaning of 'KaiveLvqvGi.v
*
Caeninensem
'
is not clear. Marquardt, laying stress on the mention of the
priesthood of Drusus, 1. 12, assigns the date to the reign of Tiberius ; but
Dittenberger reminds us that this priesthood survived to the time of Hadrian,
as is shown by IG in 1, 662, where Vibullius Hipparchus, archon towards the
end of Trajan's or at the beginning of Hadrian's reign, is recorded as holding
the office. The same date may be with probability assigned to our inscription.
The mention of the Senate of Six Hundred precludes a later date than 126 a. d.
(cf. 67, 304), and the prolix enumeration of honours, together with the con-
sistent representation of long iota by
E I ,
points to the second century a.d. A
still more elaborate list appears on a base found at Eleusis, D 409 (165169 a.d.).
e7rapxe^ a
V
* K Nap/3w^os is a variant of the phrase irrapxela ~Nap(3u)vi](Tia used
IG xiv 750 {Neapolis).
14.
xp
v(X0(
P
p'
l 9-- A
xP
vcro(f>opos appears as a dignitary in an inscription of
Tralles CIG 2929. On the right of priests and magistrates to wear gold see
Colin BCH xxiv 1900, p. 120 sq.
325. A marble stele found on the supposed site of the ^ovXevrripiov.
Eustratiadis "E-myp. Av4k8.
<f>v\\.
2. 1852 p. 6; C. Bursian Bull. d. Inst. 1855
p.
xxx ; IG in 1, 645.
Alphabet, type 5.
'H ftovkr} Kal 6 Srjfios
tHevoKXrjV SeoTrofAwov
VajXVOVCTiOV, el(T7)*y7]T7]V
yevofievov rod ctitgovikov
5
ra/jiieiov Kau atrcovrjaapra
0I9 Kal (TTparrjybv eirl tovs
486 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. X.
[325
OTrXeiTas <yev6fj,vov
rerpaKis, aperfjs V/ca
koX evvolas T17? els iarovs.
Xenocles, the person honoured, had introduced a law
(elavyvTW yevbfxevov)
for the establishment of a treasury for the purchase of corn. The mention of
ra/xiat tuv gituvikuv in IG in 1, 646 shows that the treasury had been established
before the date of that inscription, i.e. shortly after the beginning of the
Christian era (cf. Dittenberger on IG in 1, 106 =
240). The spelliDg birXeira^
did not become common before the imperial period (Meisterhans Gr. 49), but the
forms iaTov, earrjs appear as early as 74 b.c. (ib. 154). The repetition of the office
of a-TpaTrjybs iirl tovs birXlras (1. 8 rerpaKis) appears to have been more common
in the times of the earlier emperors than at any other.
326. A stone found at Eleusis. CIG 399 (where previous editors are
enumerated) ; Keil Philol. xxm 1866 p.
242
;
IG in 1, 702
;
Loewy 456.
Alphabet, type 2
;

=
2
, ir =7r
3
. Iota mutum generally omitted.
ArjfjLrjTpt teal Kop?7
7)
lepa yepovcria M. KvprjXiou
Ac6o(j)6pov TlpoaheicTov
TlMTTOfcpdrovs Y^etyaXrjOev
5
irpecrfievaavTa Trpotfca,
TifjL7]0vra Be vito Oeov
Ko/jLfioSov
rfj
r
P(o/jLaLcov
iroXeireia, ap^avra rod
Krjpvfccov yevovs, ap%av-
io ra Trjs lepas yepovalas,
eucre/3e/<z9 eveKa.
'Attikos EjvSo^ov X</>?7TTto? iiroiiqae.
The description of the Emperor Commodus as debs shows that the dedication
is not earlier than 197 a.d., the date of his deification by Septimius Severus.
The iepa yepovaia which dedicates the statue is the Eleusinian council; cf. 91
132 and the expression lepbs yipuv IG in 1, 1062. Prosdectus, who was
honoured with a statue, had undertaken an embassy to Bome at his own expense.
In 197 a.d. he was an old man, for in 169/170 a.d. (IG in 1, 1030 n 1112) he
is prytanis of the Acamantid tribe.
The references collected by Loewy show that 'Arrt/cos (1. 12) was at the date
of the dedication about fifty years of age. He was an ephebus in 171172 a.d.
(IG in 1,
1133 i 83). It is doubtful whether he was the sculptor or the giver of
the statue ; if the latter, eirol7)<re =statuam collocandam curavit, not fecit. Loewy
points out that after the first century a.d. the formula of the artists' signatures
began to vary.
327]
STATUE-BASES, VARIOUS. 487
327. A base of Hymettian marble. Kumanudis Phil. p. 381 (cf. Keil
Philol. Suppl. ii p. 593); IG in 1, 735.
Alphabet, 11.
1
23 of the type of k
5 , Xs-
In U 2426 a = a
8
, e = e
4
,
X =A
5
,
<r
= cr
6
,
w = w
4
. Joto mutum is not written.
^AyaOfj rv^y iirl Tiflepiov KA,.
AyaOfj Tvyr)
Ol iiri Ti/3. KXavSlov 'Upoo-
Bov MapaOcovlov ap-
5 'xovtos, rptrov airb
rrjs e7ri8r)fiia<; rov
fxe-
yiarov Avrofcpdropos
Kcucrapos Tpaiavov 'ASpia-
vov Ze/3acrToi) (f>r]/3oi, al-
io rrjcrdfievot irapd 7-779 itj 'A-
peiov irdyov /3ov\r]<;, Yv. Ai-
Kivviov AtKivviov Appia-
vov ^epy. vlov 'Attokov Yap-
yrjTTLOv, rov eavrwv crvv-
15 6<pr)/3ov real dpcarea Kal ap-
yovra Kal yvfjLvaaiap^ov
dve6r]Kav evvoias T779
els avroijs Kal (piXoret/jil-
a? eveica.
10 K^ocr/nr/revovros 'laK^aycoyov
Alovvctlov yiapaOcoviov,
TraihorpijBovvTos Arjfirjrplov
rov Ejlatyevovs ^a/xvovaiov
K60~Tp0cf)v\dK6C YjVTV^I-
25 Srjs WafcXrjTrcoScopov
Al%G)vev<;.
If Hadrian's 4wi8rifda at Athens took place 125/6 a.d. (Dittenberger IG I.e.;
cf. 1107), the date of this ephebic dedication will be 127/8 a.d.
13. Sep7(/a) ;
i.e. of the Sergian tribe; cf. for the Koman formula 315
9,
328 4.
15. dpxovTCL : of course not the municipal officer. On the various ephebic
officers see Rem. vii, p. 145 sqq.
20. Koa/ut.rjTevot'Tos 'laKxayuyov : cf. the note on 246.
488 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. X.
[328
328. On a base of Hymettian marble, found in the Theatre of Dionysus.
Khusopulos Eph. nov. 182
;
Kumanudis Phil, in p. 564 (cf. iv p. 170) ; IG in
1,
769.
Alphabet: a
4
,
a
15 , y2
, e
3
, e
9
,
ij
5
,
rj
6
,
2
, k
5
, fx
2 , 6
,
tt
4
, tt
7
, P,
<r
3
, <x
5
, r
2i
t
3
.
Iota mutum not written.
r
H /3ov\r) t] it; 'Apeiov irdyov
Kal
7] {3ov\r} TOdV k^CLKoaiwv
KCU O BrjfjLOS
HH
KolvTOV Tio/JbTTTjlOV
K.otvrov vlov KoWelva K^airtrcova iroit]-
5
rrjv TlepyafjLrjvdv rov Kal 'KOrjvalov,
iravrl fjuerpw Kal pvOfiw rrjv
fieya-
\0(f)Vr}
T?79 7TOl[r\](TCDS dpeTTjV TTl$ld-
fievov KaipiKals d7ravy\iao[s], bid re
rrjv ev tw 67TLTr)$ev/jLaTL vrrepo-^v Kal rr)v
io irepi ra rj6r} ae/jbvorrjra.
A statue-base bearing the name Menander, of a much higher antiquity, was
found near the base dedicated to the otherwise unknown poet here honoured
for his
'
excellence in his profession and dignity in point of character.' Possibly
our poet is the person of whom Dio Chrysostomus (xxxi p. 400) says 'rbv Selva
de tov
evx^pv
\icnv ttoltjttjv, 6s /cat 7rap' v/uuv wore eiredeL^aro, ov fxbvov xolKkovv
k<XTaK<xGLv (sc. oVKdnvaioi), aWa /ecu irapd M&av8pov.
,
The date is before 126 a.
d.;
cf. 314.
4. For KoXXetVa (or KoWeiva) cf. 315 9.
8. KaipiKcus diravyeXlais :
'
seasonable recitations.' Cf. L and S s.v. diray-
yekia.
329. A base of Eleusinian marble, found west of the Parthenon. C.
Bursian, Bull. d. Inst. 1855
p.
xxx (Jahn and Michaelis Arx Ath. n.
506);
IG in 1, 866. (Another base found at Eleusis, Skias 'Ec/>. 1895, 110 n. 26,
bears an inscription word for word identical.)
Alphabet, type 5.
(
&}/ao? ^evirpwviav, AevKtov
Ovyarepa, AevKiou TeWlov
YYoirXtKoKa yvvatKa,
dperrjs eveKev.
Dittenberger (IG I.e.) has shown with probability that the husband of our
Sempronia was L. Gellius Poplicola, who was consul in 36 B.C.; that her brother
was L. Sempronius Atratinus, consul 34 B.C., and her father L. Sempronius
Atratinus, both of whom Cicero mentions in the pro Caelio, i 1, 2, the former
as accuser of Caelius, the latter as accused by him.
331]
STATUE-BASES, VARIOUS. 489
330. At Eleusis in the church of S. Demetrius. Spon Itin. T. in P n
p. 124; CIG432; IG in 1, 886.
Alphabet, type 2.
'l\e{p)6<j)avTiv 'A/jL(f)LOV <$>i\d[Sov QvyaTt-
pa evcre(3ria<; eveicev rrjs [irpos tcIs
Oeas aveurjfcev.
Boeckh (CIG) remarks that the word 'lepdcpavris stands in place of the
discarded name of the person who held the sacred office. Cf. IG in 1, 900 :
~M.r]Tr]p MapKiavov, dvyaTTjp Arj/xyTpiov elfii
'
oijvo/xa (TLyacrdu)' tovt
,
airoKkrioixv7),
edre fxe Ke/cpo7riat Atjoi diaav 'lepocpavriv,
avri] d/xatyua/c^rois eyKar^Kpv\pa fivdols ktX.
The orthography evae^rjas (cf. depdwrja, Uprja etc.) possibly indicates the
Augustan period. The examples range from about 171 b.c. to 57 a.d.
;
the same
phenomenon and for the same period is presented by Doric, Ionic, and Aeolic
inscriptions: see Meisterhans Gr. 48 and cf. 236 5, 253.
For the restored demotic $l\6[5ov] cf. 150 Col. iv 10.
331.
'
Bddpov \idov wvppov
'
found near the monument of Lysicrates. IG 111
1, 943. Cf. Lugebil Jahrbb. Suppl. v p. 539 sqq.; H and V Ath. p. 229.
Alphabet : a
4
,
a
10
,
5
lt
8
2
,
e
lt
e
8
,
tj
5
,
2
, \,
X
2
, fx
2 , 2
,
tt
4
,
a
2
,
<r
3
, <p
7
,
w
10
.
K.6Spov tovto 7T6<T7]fjLa M.6\av6eiSao [avaKTos,
%elve, to real /jieydXrjv \\cr18a Teiyi<jaT\o
acofia 8 vtt aKpoiroXrjl
(fiepoov
rapyycrev ['AOtjvcW
Aa.09, ? aOavdrovs ho{^)av detpafxelyos
1, 2.
'
This is the place where King Codrus fell, son of Melanthus,
Stranger, which also gave walls to great Asia.' Lugebil, citing Euphorion ap.
schol. Dionys. Perieg. ad v 620, ingeniously suggests that by 'Aaida not Asia,
but Attica is meant: but the explanation may be that by the death of Codrus
(besides the liberation of Attica from hostile invasion) the effect was also that
the shore of Asia was bounded by fortified towns ; and the /ecu favours this
interpretation, Possibly in 1. 2 there is an allusion, obscure indeed, to Codrid
oecists in Asia Minor. The poet seems to have intended to say that Codrus fell
in this place but was not buried there ; his body was solemnly preserved near the
Acropolis. For the meaning of iria^ixa here given cf. the use of
17 paxy
Xen.
An. 11 2, 6 to denote the place where the battle was fought. On the spot assigned
by tradition, perhaps a late tradition, to the death of Codrus, see H and V I.e.,
and cf. the notes on no. 21.
4. The stone has
AOZAN.
Section XI. Boundary Stones and Mortgage Stones.
332. A boundary stone of Pentelic marble, found in the Odeum of Herodes.
IG i 498.
H O R O *
"Opo?
TOT^^A/C
TOV T/jL6VOv[s.
The alphabet indicates the period 575525 B.C.; see the table Ko. i p.
106

7
and Larf. Hbd. Gr. Ep. p.
410.
333. Found in 1839 near what Chandler held to be the bema of the Pnyx;
of Pentelic marble. IG i 501.
, {j p Q
pi
'Opo-
Probably before 445 B.C.
$ p Y
1< ?
IIm-
1
O 5
v]o?.
334. A square column of Pentelic marble, found by Pittakis ov /naKpav rov
B?J/y-ttTos rrjs Uvkvos. IG i 502.
U /\ l< I A AO/V
Aa]fa[a.]8o0V
T P I T T Y
<> tpittvs.
Probably before 445 B.C. Cf. IG i 500 : [Kep]a^wj>
j
[t/>]ittus, and the note
on 338.
335. Of poros stone. IG i Suppl. 505 a,
p.
51.
O
f/
0[pos
ECOAO
t]^9 6Sov
TEEAfVINAAE
t^ 'EXevalvdBe.
The engraving is careless. The stone is assigned by Larfeld {Hdb. Gr. Ep.
p. 435) to the period before 445 B.C., but the date may be much later. Note the
Ionic form of X.
340]
BOUNDARY STONES.
336. Of Hymettian marble. IG i 507.
491
^
o <l o H
o!
ONA A^X
Opos
'Eiavdiov.
Probably the boundary stone of some private property. The direction of the
writing points to a date as early as the sixth century
;
the appearance of
^
in that case is surprising.
337. IG i Suppl. 507 a, p.
51.
OPO^H
MAT05M
O P Y XO
"Opos arj-
paros M-
opvyov.
Before 445 b.c. Note however
$
with
H
=7
?;
cf. 196.
338

340. Three cippi of poros stone found in the Piraeus. D 435, 437,
436; IG i 517 (cf. Suppl.
p. 52), Suppl. 517 a, 517
6, p.
1201. Cf. C. Schaefer
Mitth. v
(1880) p. 85, Dittenberger Herm. xvi p. 184, no. 4.
(338) (339) (340)
Y^IHIOH EYPEPA L i i t PA
ITTY $ T EU \NIONTP ! 1 EOA/T P 1 T
YTA IPEPA.I TTY 5 T E U 1 T Y $ T E I E
N
i
O N AE T P ITT YTA 1 A P XE TAI O P 1 A 5
Y< AP X E TA 1 TAI LE
f
Y 1 ONA E A P X
PPINO^ 1 ETA 1 T P IT
3 1 TP 1 T TY*
Aeup.' 'EXe- Ajevpe Ua[i Aevp
j
E7ra[K-
VGlVltoV [Tp- avc&v rpi- pewv rpcr-
TTi>? TeA.[e- tti>? TeXe- ti>? reXev-
vra, Ueipa[i- vra
}
apxe-
ra, Spcaa-
dov Se rptrr- rai & M.V-
/ 0> V >/
itov oe
apt-
u? apyeraL. pptvovorl- eral TplT-
(OV TplT- TU?.
TVs].
All three inscriptions should be earlier than 445 b.c. ; see the tables Ko. i
p.
106107. The stones marked the plots in the dockyards assigned to the
492 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XI.
[340
several trittyes. Cf. Demosthenes Symmor. 184, where he would assign
30 triremes to a phyle, 10 to a trittys. Each phyle was for naval purposes (and
perhaps for military purposes; cf. Busolt in I. Muller's Hdb. i
2
159, 218, 314)
divided into three trittyes, the personnel of the fleet being raised by demes;
cf. Dem. Polycl. 1208. See also 334. In 339 note the contracted form of
HaiavLu)v
t
the only form from words in -terjs in pre-Euclidean inscriptions.
341, 342. Found in the Piraeus. IG i Suppl. 519 a, p. 121, i 521.
(341)
EMPOPIO
-'Efiiroplov
KAIHOAO
ical oBov
H O P O *
'
opos.
(342)
EIO/VHO P
MOHO PO
UopOfjb-
6LCOV Op~
fiov
f
opo-
No. 341 marked the boundary between the emporium in the Piraeus and the
public road; no. 342 marked off a space within the emporium assigned as
anchorage for transport vessels. Both probably before 445 B.C.
343 345. Three cippi found in the Piraeus.
p. 121, 122; a =T> 460, b =~D 459.
(343)
P . TE
AE
'
E *
AO TO
-i
PO 5 TC
1 ME
W
-
nA/VA
EMO S
O/VE
<
A]tt[>] t^[<
Be t?7?
f-
oSoV TO
7rpo? TOV
5
\\ipiev\o%
'-
d]irav B-
7)p>6<j\l-
bv eo"[n.
(344)
AXP I T .
HOAOT E
5 AE
T
O t-
$T YT E I
AEN E NE
META I
"kxpi
t[t[s
OOOV
T7J-
3\
if
to a-
GTV Tjj~
5
he veve-
fxrjTai.
IG i Suppl. 521 a, b, d,
(345)
N P I .
AE TE S
IOAOTE
I AEHEM
O/Vl X I A
$ E ST!
A/E
MHH *
<r]Se Tr}9
iSe
'
t? M-
5
ovviyia-
9
ecrrl ve-
jJL7)Gl<;-
350]
BOUNDARY STONES. 493
Probably all three earlier than 445 b.c. The word darv in 344 can hardly
be applied to the Piraeus ; it is more probably the portion of the city extending
between the Long Walls. vv4/jl7)tcu: the area here occupied is city-ground; so
in 345 uefxrjaLs: the occupation of this area belongs to Munychia. No. 345 is
of topographical importance
;
it was found in situ.
346. A cippus of white marble. Brueckner Mitth. xviii
(1893) p. 209 sq.
;
IG ii 5, 1074 b.
Alphabet, type 1, but \-\ = h survives in opos.
e
'Opos
TUvov<;
The altar of Aphrodite at Ke0a\^ is
' * i
/ mentioned by Isaeus irepl rod Mev. k\.
Acppooirrjf;
ai
K.(f)a\f}6ev.
347. On a rock in the northern part of the Acropolis. Bhusopulos Eph.
nov. Ser. 122; Pervanoglu Philol. xxiv p. 460; IG m 1, 409; n 2, 1077 (after a
better copy).
Alphabet, type 1; but ir is once 7r
3
and a is a
6
;
the symbol before 7r65es is a
P
with
^]
inscribed.
t]o0 Trept7rdTo[y
TreploSos
Tr(evre) a{rdhLa) 7roSe?
A PHI
Probably shortly after the middle of
the fourth century b.c, in spite of the
lunar form of a, which, as Koehler,
Mitth. ii (1877)
*p. 281 and on IG n 2,
1152, shows, is found, chiefly on
boundary stones, from the fourth
century.
348

350. A marble cippus found near Sunium. IG n 5, 1078 b.


Another found in the village of Kamaresa. IG n 5, 1078 d. See Milchhoefer
Mitth. xn
(1887) p.
300301. A cippus found in the district of Lauriunu
Bourguet BCH xvm
(1894) p. 532 ; IG ii
5, 1078 e
(p. 307).
Alphabet, type
1 ; but in 350 /j. is
fa, fa,
it is tt
s
.
(348) (349) (350)
K]/o(o it lBtjs KaTeXafte UpO(T- <$>i\r)fjb-
ai]vaad^L/jLov iraX- OVLCLK-
fjueraXkov ticlk- ov fxe-
'A^)fcS(^)ato9 6v. raWov.
flvr]Trj<;
Tlo\(l>)/bL7)\-
o? AafiTTTpe-
f?.
These are boundary stones marking mining properties. For explanations
494 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XI.
[350
see the notes on 112 3, 4, 13. UpoairaKTiaKov : belonging to the deme ra
Hp6<nra\Ta; cf. 153 31. i>t\T]fxoviaK6p: named after a former owner ^iAt^ion/.
351. A tall stele of Hymettian marble. Kumanudis 'A0. iv
p. 121; IG n
2, 1098.
Alphabet, type 1.
'
Opo? ywpiov KOI- A boundary stone of the fourth or
VOX) ElfCa$L(OV
third century B.C. On the EUadeis
\
o '^^ see no. 86.
/jur) avvpaWeuv
et? rovro to yu>-
5
piov fjarjOeva
/jL7]0eV.
Remark XV. Mortgage-stones. Hypothecary inscriptions or
inscriptions on Mortgage stones in Attica are of four kinds
:
I. 'A7ron/x77/xaTa, divided into (a) mortgages as security for the
property of minors, (b) mortgages connected with the payment of
dowries. II. Contracts in the form of a sale subject to redemption.
III. Acts of simple sale, with an attached condition. IV. Mort-
gages with a condition of reciprocal usage (avrixprjcris).
I. For the meaning of aVoTi/x^/xa (of which nos. 354, 355, 357,
358 furnish an illustration), it may suffice to quote Harpocration :
A7TOTifxr)Tai kcll airorl per)
fia
kcu aTroTifxav kcu to. arr avrwv ol /jLtadcoaa-
jxevoi tovs tmv 6p<paviov olkovs Trapa rov ap)(ovros Iveyypa ttjs p.urOiDcrews
7rapL^ovTO- eSei Se t6v dp^ovra Trkpvntiv tivcxs aVori/x^o-o/xeVovs (to make a
valuation of) to, ivixvpa (the property to be mortgaged). Tot fxev
ovv
ivexypa to. aTTOTipni)p,va iXiyovro a-KOTip.r\p.ara^ ol 8e 7Tp,7r6p.voi 7rt tw
air or lfxt]
oaa
6
'at aworl/xyjtat. ..JLiwOecrav Sc kcu ol totc, i yvvaiKt ya/mov-
fJievrj irpolKa SuSoiev ol TrpocryjKovTes, atreiv Trapa rov dvSpbs wcnrep ive)(vp6v
Tt Trjs 7rpotKo? aiov, olov oi/a'av i] ^lopiov. Thus diroTipjqpLa came to
denote a property mortgaged to the guardian of a minor by lessees
of the minor's estate (no. 355)
or a property given in mortgage by a
husband as security for eventual repayment of the dowry she brought
him (no. 358, cf. Dem. c. Onetor. n 876, 878 sq.). Another case we
learn from Dem. c. Spud. 1029, where Polyeuctos, who gives his
daughter a dowry of 4000 dr., of which 3000 dr. were paid down, the
remainder being payable at his decease, gives a mortgage (aVoTt^/x.a)
on his house, as a guarantee for the payment of that remainder, and
causes Spot to be set up on the property. II. "Opou also mark
354]
MORTGAGE STONES. 495
property which is sold with the reservation of right to the vendor
to repurchase (7rt Aucret; nos. 352, 357). III. In no. 353 it
is stipulated that the person acquiring the property remains a
debtor for the price agreed upon. IV. In no. 356 the property
is mortgaged with the express condition that the occupation
and possession shall belong to the creditors. The produce thus
balances the interest on the loan and the mortgage guarantees only
the capital.
(For a fuller account of the whole subject see Dareste etc. Inscrr.
jurid. grecques, Fasc. I, 108142, Inscriptions Hypothecates, where
examples are also given from Amorgos, Lemnos and Naxos.)
352. On a square slab of rough stone. Kumanudis 'Ad. iv p.
122
;
IG n 2,
1103
;
Inscrr. jur. viii 25.
Alphabet, type 1; but
H
= h survives in"Opos;
O
= o, ov.
Opo<; ywpiov For the phrase iirl \tiaei see Rem.
7T67rpa/jLevov
xv
' P*
^95.
7rl Xvaeu :
X
353. Found at Acharnae. CIG 530; IG n 2, 1134
; Inscrr. jur. vm 61.
Alphabet apparently type 2, with
^
=
ijl
2
, ir = ir
z
, <r = o-
2
;
but the copy cannot
be relied upon.
313/2
'EttI eocbpdarov See Rem. xv, p. 495.
B C
rather
apX<*VTO<; [o]/0O9
340/39
KP
Lov Ti
^
evo<pi\o/jbiv-
7)<; ^avoarpdrcp
Tlaiav.
XX
354. A slab found at Spata in Attica : now at Athens. Koehler, Mitth.
ii
(1877) p. 277 sqq.; Dareste, BCH n
(1878) p. 485; IG n 2, 1137; D 818;
Inscrr. jur. viii 17.
Alphabet, type 1
;
but

is
2
, tt is tt
1
and 7r
2
or 7r
5
,
and once e is e
4
(see the
note to 347 on a).
496 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XL
[354
305/4
'E7T6 Eteviir(ir)ov apy-
b.c.
f;
,
rA
OVTOS' opos ^COpiCOV
/cal ol/ciwv a7roTL/bL7]-
/jlcltcdv irpoiKos *<evap-
5
LCTT60 TlvOoScopOV Y(ip-
<yr)TTiov Ouyarpl' r-
b Kara to rj/xvav teal to
i/c tovtov ytyvo/jiev-
303/2
ov avTel et? Aecoa-
TpaTov apyovTCL
XXHHH[AA]h
The circumstances indicated by this
record may be classed with the case
quoted Rem. xv, p. 494 from Dem. c.
Spud. The steps in the transaction
appear to be these. In 305/4 b. c. Pytho-
dorus assigned a dowry for his daughter
of 4000 drachmae, but the money was
not paid down. By 303/2 b.c. half the
amount with two years' interest had
been paid to the husband, leaving the
half or 2000 drachmae owing, with two
years' interest at 18 per cent, erf ewea
6(3o\oi<>, i.e. 720 dr. (721 in the text),
if the restoration in 1. 11 may be
accepted. The inscription is a renewal
of a former document dating from the archonship of Euxenippus. The mention
of the first date may have been intended to secure to the hypothecary creditor a
claim prior to any subsequent claims on that estate.
6. to Kara kt\. :
'
the amount in arrear to the extent of one half of the
dowrv and the interest coming to her from it.' For rjfivav see 32 45, 129 8.
355. A stele of Pentelic marble found at Acharnae. IG n
2, 1138, Inscrr.
jur. viii 5; D 820.
Alphabet, type 1. Ztolxv^ov.
302/1
>
E]7Tt NiKO/ekeov-
B.C.
f,
9 ap")(ovTO^' opo-
s]
ywpi(>v /cal ol-
KZ9 KCLl TOV VOa-
5
t]o? tov irpocrov-
t]o? tols yjoopioi-
s KJXr/pcov hvelv
air]oTTLfJLr)/jLev-
wv Tr\acalv opefra-
io voi]? TOt9 Xapu-
ov l]o-oTe\o09 X-
aip]t7T7Tft) fCCll X-
apijCL.
See Rem. xv, p.
494 for general
explanations. The land and house
mortgaged carried an easement of two
shares of a certain supply of water.
In some of these mortgages on behalf
of orphans the word irais occurring
alone is to be understood of a irais
opepavds.
356. A slab of Pentelic marble found at Athens IG n 2, 1139; Inscrr. jur.
viii 62; D 821.
358]
MORTGAGE STONES.
Alphabet, type 1
; a is once <r
6
(see the note on no. 347).
497
f/
Opo9 ywplov /cat ot/cla<;
V7rOKe(,/UV(DV
nHhlH
bpax
(%(TTe
X
elv KaL K
P
a
'
retv [t]6v Oe/xevov Kara
5
<rvv0r]Ka<; ra<; K.et\xkva%
irapct Aetvia ILvcovvfjtei.
See Rem. xv, p. 494. The mortgage
in this case is a security for a loan.
Other examples are IG n 2, 1140 and
5, 1116 6 c.
357. A cippus of Pentelic marble found at Spata in Attica. Milchhoefer
Mitth. xii
(1887) p. 88 ; Dareste BCH xn
(1888) p.
302 sqq. ; Inscrr. jur.
viii 50; IGn5, 1139 6.
Alphabet, type 1.
r/
O/?0? yutp'tov /cat ot/c-
tas ireirpafjuevov eV-
l Xvaet
r
\epojAv-
rj/jtovt
e
A\at
5
fa Kara rds avvO-
rjfcas ra<; irapa Avat-
arpdra) /cet/jteva[<s
/cal 8eicaSterrain
\-\
(A) A A
feat* aTTOTL/jLri/j,-
io a ipavtarats rot[<s
fjuerd SeoTreiOovs
*\tcapiu><;.
See Rem. xv, p. 494. The 5e/ca5t(rrcu,
1. 8,
according to Koehler were a guild,
perhaps so named from holding their
meetings on the tenth of the month.
Cf. elicadeis 86 4 sqq. The formula
1. 10 sqq. indicates that Theopeithes
was president of the guild of ipavLaral.
358. A stone found at Spata in Attica; now in the Central Museum at
Athens. Koehler Mitth. n
(1877) p. 277 ; IG n 2, 1149
;
Inscrr. jur. viii 20.
Alphabet, type
1 ; but tt = tt
1
,
ir
2
, <p
=
(p
4
. For other varieties in the form of
<f>
see 51, 52, 62.
Opos ^cop'toy KCiL
OtKtCLS dTTOTt/JLT)-
/ma irpoiKos Tiv-
Oocrrpdret Me-
5
voXkov
'AvacfrX-
vgtlov larp[ov
XXX
According to Koehler the characters
indicate the beginning of the second
century b.c
For general explanations see Rem.
xv, p. 494.
R. II. 32
Section XII. Sepulchral Monuments.
359. =Ko. i 69. The 'Nointel Marble', now in the Louvre. CIG 165;
IG i 433 ; H 26 ;
D 9. A new impression kindly sent by the authorities of the
Louvre has been examined.
AAfcAAE (= ,
[et,]
1?)IH(=
h, sometimes omitted)
O I l< U M
N
N H
[X5
=
f]
O
(=o, ov, <o)
PRPP^TYVTQcbX [$*
=
#]
^Kpe^OfjSo^
*]otSe

iv tS

7ro\e/JL(p

aireOavov iv Ku7rpco iv Aly-
vit]t&)

iv <t>oivL/cy, iv
'
AXievatv, iv Alyivrj
'
Meyapo-
l\ rod a v t o v iviavrov.
5
S]r[pa]T??7c3i/
(
l
)
[pvvi]%0?
Yi[a.vT\aXea)v
YloXvarparos
Ap^aKovrlSr]^
10 . . /xocn-[p]aT09
. . /xea?
EvJ/tXei'S^s
. . Kpdrrj^
Xa]tpeS^/u.09
15 . . Tycrta?
. . r)aav8po<$
Av]lc6(f}p(DV
'A]7ToXX6&Q)pO<;
'A]/9icrTOTeA,979
20 Il]p&)Tta9
Apd/caXos
M.7]^avicov
Tu/jboyevT]^
25
XaplaavSpcx;
MJeve/cXrjs
<&dvvXXo<>
X[p6]z^to9
JL[yy]LTCDV
"Ap[x]t7r7ro9
Af[or]t/c\l79
Ke[x]euo"o?
Eiy[0]uS?7/xo9
Al/caios
<J>t\[Y]z/09
Naf<Tt/cXr;9
[T]/z?;cr/#eo9
[Mv]?7criyevr)?
U[o\\v/c\fj<;
'AA|Y]/<29
Wfiv8pi7r7ro<;
'
Air0XX6Scopos
Topyias
Nodapxo?
UapfjLOv[i]8r]S
HdfCCOV
UCOtov
"AKpVTTTOS
Ti/jLOfcpdrrj*;
'A/^e\a9
EvOvfcpdrr)?
UarpoK\i8[r\s
'AXfc/jLecDViBlris
TXavrccov
Arj/JboviKO^
'Ava^iSoopos
TXav/ccov
Upo/cXr)?
AvTL(f)COV
*Avai;lXa[s
'A^^e7ro\t[s
4>/Xc6z^t^o[s
TLv KXel,8r)\s
AtoScopo?
Nt/ca/)^o9
E7TtT6X,?79
359]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PUBLIC. 499
M]e\a^ft)7T09
KJXeovflporos
*
AJpLaTO/cXeiBrjs
30
0]ovKv8i8r)$
JLvOuStj/jlos
K]aWtKpdT7)<;
'AJptcrTeiSrjs
35
<l>]t\oS?7/xo9
~K.]r}(f)LO-68oTOS
li]co(f)i\o<;
''EJiraLveros
40
i
'E]pyalo<;
Atoyevr}?
<$>pvvos
ILJTTjcriaSr}*;
K]o/3otySo?
45
KjpaTfXXo?
'Zjvvcfrepfitos
N]t/aa9
AvcrLKXeiSr)*;
Qpovpapxos
50 Xa[po-]ai>fy)09
'
O[Xvjjltt] tayoaro?
X
.... o?
M^[<r]t0tXo?
55
'Ap^o?
Al/aj>09
KaXXta?
60
'
A/jLcpL/cr/Srjf;
Afo-ta?
^coarparo<;
t&tXivo'z
<>L\cu6o<z
tpcXeraLpos
ScoreX?;?
Afcrta?
'ApiaToyevr)<;
KaXkcoviSrjs
KaXXt^e^o?
AeiVLCK;
TifioSrj/jbos
Averts
'A/cecr/as
'lepoovvfios
'Az^a^tXa?
Xcaplas
f
Hpa/cXetS?;9
'
Aycuti/cXr)?
'AX/ea?
K?7^)t(Jo8oTO?
KaXXt/cXi}?
K.7}(f>ta68copo(;
Nov/jltJvios
P,VO<f)tXo$
Tirepfiios
f
Ayvwv
YioXv^evos
'Ep%LfAV7]<;
NiKCOV
X[a]t/9ta9
A?7/u,rjTpto[s
*Ap(ce<Ti\a<z
jv6oivo<$
Arj/MJrpLOS
Topycov
%TpClT[<a]v
*
ApLcr\T\o(\)civri\s
T\a[v]/c(ov
Ay[v]68r]/jLO<i
AiofcXrjs
<>av6aTpaTo\s
EvfjLTJVLOS
6[6]Sft)po<?
. . . uXea>9
E[(f]Sofo9
II [o]Xi/77X09
r[\]ai;/aa9
'H[p] lyevrjs
*
AvTiyapT)<$
QlXlCTTl8r\\%
'
'A/jL<l)lfc\L$[r\s
Qpovpos
Tltcop
JLv/3io<;
KaXA,t/3[ios
Neato9
'E^YOTefX-ris
"
Apcu0[o<$
Hrparriyds
'YiTTrohdfJLas
i\j6vfxa^os
'El/ Alvutttq)
These additions seem
L
to be by a later hand,
TeXeW/cos
perhaps on the evidence
of
a later 'casualty list'
;
322
500 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[359
65
Etz/^Xo?
:
MdvTLS ef.
the
T
and
,
for Y
'AvSpoaOevr/s and
$, of
$pvvos I. 67.
To^orat <&pvvos
rp
70 'AXefi/ia^o?
The military operations to which this list of the killed belongs are described
in Thuc. 1 104, 105. The expression rod avrov iviavrov 1. 4 seems to show that
Diodorus (xi 77, lsqq., 78, 2, 79, 3) is in error in ascribing them to different
years. D agrees with Busolt Gr. Gesch. in 1, 305 sqq. in assigning the events
to the civil year 459/8 b.c.
"This is evidently one of ten similar stelai for each of the tribes; for the
Athenians in battle were drawn up Kara 0iAds (Plut. Aristid. 5, Cim. 17 ; Lysias,
pro Mantith. 15; Theophrastos, Char. 5ei\6s ad fin.), and those who fell were
buried Kara <j>v\ds (Thuk. ii. 34). Each tribe furnished one of the strategoi
(Arist. 'Ad. IIoX. 61. 1; Plut. Cim. 8). Our inscription gives us the names of
two, Phrynichos (1. 6)
and Hippodamas (1. 63). The latter was presumably
Phrynichos' successor ; for Droysen's suggestion (Hermes, 1875, p. 8),
that
though a member of the Erechtheid tribe he acted as strategos of some other,
cannot be accepted." H I.e.
1. 'Epexdydos : so D, after Meisterhans Gr. 37, on the ground that the ei of
the third and second centuries b.c. indicate contraction of the vowels in the
final syllable of 'EpexQys, Afyvfc,
Olpys.
5. arparyyiZv : probably nominative.
360. A slab of white marble, now in the British Museum. CIG 170 and
Add.
p. 906; IG 1 442; BMI 38; H 54. Cf. Bury Hist. Gr. 393, where a
photographic reproduction of the stone is given. We have re-examined it.
A . AAE
(e, ei,
77). H (= h)
OII<UMN[X
=
f]
O (= o, ov,
)
P PTY
4>
X [4> Z
="+] ^roL
X
nhbv.
(The letters in brackets
(
)
in lines
2
4 are those which have been lost since
the first copy was made by Fauvel. From his copy we learn also that the
inscription was formerly surmounted by a relief representing a group of
warriors.)
'Eyu, II T [t i 8 a a 'o(8i direGavov--
A6dvaT(6/jL /JL6 0a)[vov<riv
<jr\ix,aiveiv (dpeT)[r\v
teal 7rpo<yovovs (Oevea ?)
5
vlktjv eviroXepLOfji [/jlvtj/jL eXa|3ov 7ro\(\i.ov.
AWrjp /me/A T/rtr^a? virehe^aro, a(t)[\iara 8e \Q<av
361]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PUBLIC. 501
tcov$' TloreiSaias
5'
d/xcpl irv\a<$ e'/\.[v0v.
%0pGOl>
8'
01 /jLV eyOVGl TOL(f)OV fjLCpOS, '[oi 8e <{>\ry6vTS
Tet^o? ircaroraTrjv 'eXiTiS* eOevro [|3Cov.
io"Avhpas fie/ji 7roXt9
f
?;Se irodel teal $r}[\ios 'EpcxOcws,
irpoaOe TloretSaias ol Odvov /jl 7rp[op.&xpis,
7rac8e<s ^AOrjvatcov ^ir^a?
8'
dvrlppo[Tra Ge'vres
rj\\\]d!javT dperrjv teal 7rar[piS'] vtc\[&o-av.
The stone commemorates the Athenians who fell in winning a victory before
Potidaea, 432 B.C. See Thuc. i 63 and Plato Charm. 153 b. For the suggested
restoration of the heading cf. no. 359.
5. viK7]v evwoXefiou : the same phrase occurs in Horn. Hymn to Ares 4.
ff(pTepou, usually read at the end of the line, does not suit the extant traces of
letters.
7. \[6deu] is due to Dr 0. Benndorf.
9. 'e\irL8\ For instances of Old Attic aspiration see Meisterhans Gr. 86.
11 and 13. For the restoration cf. Tyrtaeus, ed. Bergk ix 23
Autos
6
iv irpofxdxoi.cn ireauv <pi\ov wXecre dvixbv,
acrrv re kclI Xaoiis /cat Trarpid
1
ei)/cXetcras.
and no. 361 51.
361. A slab of Pentelic marble now in the National Museum at Athens.
Kumanudes 'A0. x
(1881), 524 sqq.; Kirchhoff Herm. xvn
(1882),
623 sqq.
;
v. Wilamowitz Herm. xxn
(1887), 243, note 3; IG i Suppl. 446a, p. 108;
Wilhelm Oest. Jahresk. n
p. 221, note 1; Ed. Meyer Forschungen z. alt. Gesch.
n(1899),
p. 20; H 46.
ABAAE <,
l,
v) iH(=^)OII<UMNA/ [X
=
f]
O
(= o, ov,
)
PP^TY^X O
is smaller than the other letters.
iy Xeppov7]cr(x) e/x Bv^clvtlco
'AOtjvcliojv : 'ouSe
'
AOrjvaicov :
e
ot[
direOavov aireQavov
Ti7TLTe\r)s : arparrjyo^
TIvOoScopos Nifcoo-Tparos
5
'AptaToSlKOS ^tXoKCOfJLO^
Tr/\<po<;
TIvOoScopos
io
AlyfjSos
AlyfjSos
502 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[361
^Yiiriyapr)*;
M.V7)(rl<f)i\o$
IIa^S(,<WSo9
^>aiSi/jLt87]<; ^XtcrT/B^ 10
Adxn*
15
Nt/co^uA-09
AewzmSos
HolvolovlSos Afcrt/xa.^09
Av<TL/c\rj$
AecovTiSos
'AfcajLta^rtSog
XeU/9>79 KaWtcr#ez>?79
Oiz'tJSos 15
20
Otz^Sos KaXXfc7T7ro?
(
Po8o/c\r}s
^vpvftoros
Uo\iTr)<; Ke/cpo7uSos
r
Hpo/c\L$7)<s Kvlcfxov
Arj/jboreXr]^
25 KeKponCSos 'iTTTTodcOVTiSoS
20
Aplarap^o^
Aicra^
Kapvo-Tovtfcos
e6/jLV7)CTTO<;
'
Apcarap^o^
Ata^rtSo?
30
J^v/cpdrr)?
Nt/co8?7/xo9
Nttf0yLKZ^09
'A^rto^iSos
e
l7nro6a)VTiSo<;
<$>avias 25
XooreXlSrjs
HoGelhnnros
35
AlavriBos Ila^Sto^tSo?
At^>tXo? 2t/xgovlStjs
At'cr%i;\o9 'ApxeiroXts
'X/jLl/CpLCOV
XapoTrLhrjs 30
NaftaS?79
'Az^tioviSo?
AeG)imSo9
361]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PUBLIC. 503
Kpdroov
'AvTtKpdrrjf;
40 EuSofo?
e
OiSe iv rols d\\oL<;
noXefJLOLs direOavov
^pe^OfjSo^
Avaavia?
'Akcl/jlcivtiSos
Ylpcorap^o^
TLeicponTihos
'Aarvdvai;
AvaLcrrpaTos
(
IttttoOcdvtiSos
Ttfjiovodos
'
Avrccpdvrjs
AlavTtSov
K\LVO0O<;
KaXXL/cXrjs
^HLXevOepdOev
35
40
45
f
OtSe 7rap'
f
RWr/aTrovrov dirwiXeaav dyXaov r}(3r)v
/3apvdfAvot, a(f)6Tpav
8'
ev/cXeicra/jL irarptha,
(
war e^Opovs GTevdyeifx iroXepbov Oepo's ifCKOfiicravTas,
avTOts & dOdvarov fivrjfi dperrjs eOeaav.
(In Col. 1 lines 15, 18, 19, 35, 36, as indicated by underlining, and in
Col. 11 1. 28, 'Apxe-roXis, have been added subsequently by another hand.
Perhaps also the epigram at the end.)
This list of those who fell in the Chersonese, at Byzantium and kv rots d'XXois
TToXi/jLOLS 1 41 sqq., 11 26 sqq. , was thought by Kirchhoff to refer to the operations
of Alcibiades on the shores of the Hellespont, and to have been erected after his
return to Athens, 408 b.c. Others, with whom Messrs Hicks and Hill agree,
point to the letters which indicate an earlier date and would refer the inscription
to about 440 b.c, when, at the time of the Samian revolt, Byzantium cast off
her allegiance to Athens (Thuc. 1 115, 117), and the whole of the Thracian
region was disturbed
;
see Hill, Sources
for Greek History
pp.
141, 142.
Col. i 5 etc. 'Epex&ySos etc. For the orthography see 359 1.
Note that the tribes come in their official order of precedence (Rem. vi, p. 127)
;
but the Acamantis is absent from Col. i as having no list of dead.
i 19. Xaiprjs: i.e. Xaipeas (Wilhelm I.e. quoted by H).
Col. ii 48. 'EXevdepai : on the confines of Attica and Boeotia; not a deme.
Epigram 1. 51. For the form j3apvdfxevos, a favourite one in epigrams,
cf. Ro. 1 99 (Corcyra), 106 {Acarnania). For evKXt'iaav cf. 360 13.
52. Cf. Aesch. Pers. 822: irayKXavrov fa/x<jt dipos; Agam. 1655: dXXa /cat
rdd' i^a/nrjcraL 7roXXd dvarrjvov 6 po s.
504 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[362
362. An epistyle of finely sculptured Pentelic marble found in the outer
Ceramicus. Koehler Ber. Berl. Ah. 1870, p. 272; D 68; H 87 ;
IG n 3, 1673:
A. Bruckner Mitth. xiv (1889) 405 sqq.
;
H. and V. Ath. 576; A. Martin Les
Cavaliers Athen. 415 sqq.; Kopp, Arch. Anz. 1895, p. 25.
Alphabet, type 1.
i Oi'Se t7T7re?79 direOavov iv Kopuv6<p. MeXrjaias
i
Ovr)TopL&r)<;
i
<f)v\apxo<$
'AvTMpdvrjs fo)eay<ye\o<; <>dv7]$
(i) A.vai6eo<$ Tidvhios Nt/co/x-a^o?. 'Ez^ Kopcovela.
(2)
Ar)fjLOfc\er}<; Ae^iXecoi; "Ei^/xo?. Neo/eXetS?;?.
The inscription runs in two continuous lines from the left margin of the
stone; the right-hand portion is un-inscribed. For the date 394/3 B.C. see
no. 371 and the allusions to the battles of Corinth and Coronea Xen. Hell, iv
2,
923, and 3, 16. It has been conjectured that the inscription contains the
headings of columns of names, but this is not certain. The name Neoclides
only belongs to the words 'Ei> Kopuveia. It is not clear that the words of
Pausanias 1 29, 8, kciptai 8 (on the road from Dipylon to the Academy) /cat oi
irepl Kopivdov Treaovres refer to this monument which seems to commemorate
only a phylarch and ten knights as having fallen before Corinth.
1. For the form iirirri<s see 7 57, 148 111 16.
363. =Ko. 1 36. A base 0.705m. in breadth found at Sepolia. IG 1 463;
Suppl. p. 47
A^APAA
^OKTA
PITO;^
r rot-^M I
TA X A YT A T
OAVPAI^fc KO
| r&$ T
^
O
eAAA/^AAHl
ElV ao-Tojs Ti? dvrjp elre feVo<?
|
ak(X)o6ev iXOcov,
Tt(t)^oz; olfcripa\<;, dvSp' dya66v, Traplrco
iv 7roXe/xft)
| (J)6l/jlvov, veapav r)fir)v
6\eaav\ra.
ravr airohvpdfjLevoL velcrOe eir\l itpayp! dyaOov.
For the single consonants X and r in &\(\)odev, Tl4t(t)ixoj> standing for XX,
tt, see Meisterhans Gr. 94, who gives as the earliest instance of gemination
in archaic Attic stone inscriptions IG 1 Suppl. 373 e p.
41 = 190 (527510 b.c
)
:
'Att6\\o}vos. Our inscription may go back to the middle of the sixth century b.c.
367]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PRIVATE, 505
364. (a) on a base, (b) on a superposed sepulchral stele, with a relief.
E. A. Gardner Hdb. Gr. Sculpture, Fig. 33
;
IG i 464; Loewy 10.
a b
API ST I 0^0 5 EPAO/VAPISTOKU^OS.
'ApiaTLcovo<z. ''JLpyov 'Apiaro/cXeovs.
The name in the genitive, 'Apio-riWos, is that of the deceased. Loewy I.e.
mentions four artists named Aristocles but thinks it unsafe to identify our
Aristocles with any one of them. According to the alphabet the inscription
should belong to the last quarter of the sixth century b.c. For a
'
stele of
Aristion',
A P I T I AN,
of a later date, see H. and V. p. 582 (IG n 3, 3493).
(F) 365. =Ro. i 37. A fragment of Pentelic marble irregularly cut,
measuring 0.42 m. x 0.52 m. Pittakis, 'E</>.
dpx- 167; IG i 467. The dotted
portions are given on the authority of Pittakis, who saw the inscription before
it was mutilated.
o
3^
t
*$oa^
'EvlciXov, 6v<yarpb<; EttovSlSou
|
fcepafi(e)co<; ctttJXt).
The character of the letters belongs to the end of the seventh or the beginning
of the sixth century b.c. The nominative of 'Eui&Xov is probably 'EviaXov.
Similar neuter forms of female names are common in the manumission
inscriptions of Delphi.
It is just possible that in Kepa/m-Qs we may have a case of contraction and
not of omitted e; see Meisterhans Gr. 141, where however the examples quoted
are those in which an iota precedes the genitive and accusative termination.
366. =Bo. i 38. A square base in which is fixed a sepulchral column,
broken, but retaining traces of colours, found at Velanideza, IG i 468. Cf.
Kekule Die ant. Bildiv. im Thes. p. 155 ; Mitth. iv 36 sqq.
UY*.fcAI&r
/
AAfc*fc
Avaia ivOdhe aij-
^APATfcPSfc/^Offc
pa irar^p
Zfaav
e-
P^!^^ iridrjicev.
367. = Ro. i 43. A stone inserted upside down in the wall of the church
at Merenda CIG 28; IG i 469 and Suppl.
pp. 47, 112: Lolling Mitth. i 174 sq.;
Loewy 12. See next page.
On the left face Lolling I.e. has recognised letters which he restores thus:
['
Apijarlwv Udpt.[6s jjl eTr]6[r)]ae ;
cf. Ro. I 44 (IG i 466) and, for a similar restora-
tion, i 44 a (IG i Suppl. 477 6). The characters are those of the first quarter
of the sixth century b.c
506 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[367
^/*A4>PA^IKUIA^: Xrjfia Qpaaitckeiw
l<OPfc:l<fcl<U^O/* Al
Kovprj KK\rja-ofiat
>
/
Alfcl Af^TI AA/^O
aL6i, aVTL ryaflOV
PAPA0^orTOYTO
P**e>
tovto
UAXO^O^OfA
\aj(ova ovofia.
368. On the upper of four blocks of a sepulchral monument found at
Vurva near Velanideza in Attica. Stais AeXr. 1890 p. 103, no. 18 and p.
Ill*
tab. in 4; IG i Suppl. 477
p,
p. 189.
kvMUU-PAIAO*
Af^YTAPiCDAlAI r(M:kPAA*A
O"
Mv^ uv-vw <5|8]e) , .
,
r, i
,
n
\
(ptA??? 7ratoo<i KareuTiKev.
Or EIkov' sj--
T7i|vj8]ej
r '
KaXbv ISeiv
\
aFvrap ^aihi/jio^ Lpjdo-a\[r]o.
Kirchhoff places the monument not later than 550 b.c. For the
F
i n dpurdp
the vapvwrjyos of IG i Suppl. 373
234
(p. 198),
on Naxian marble, is compared,
but the possibility remains that both are of foreign origin. See Meisterhans
Gr. 3, 4 ; Larfeld Hdb. Gr. Epigr. n 389. The long a of koKov is remarkable in
an Attic inscription. Note that in elpydaaro the to is written right to left.
369. On a square base or stele. IG n 3, 1682.
Alphabet, type 1.
KaAXtcTTco
NL/co<fii\ov
'
AyyeXrjOep.
This is a common type of sepulchral inscription and belongs probably to the
early part of the fourth century b.c
370. A sepulchral amphora of late form. From the Elgin Collection.
BMI80; IGn 3, 1850.
TIMO^AN, Tifiof&v
TIMOITPATOY Ttfioarpdrov
ANATTPAIIOI 'Avayvpdaios
The amphora is fluted on the surface and the letters are engraved in the
flutings. Possibly the inscription is much later than the date of the
373]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PRIVATE. 507
amphora (note the
Z),
for fluted amphorae are not inscribed, and the custom of
placing fluted amphorae on tombs ceased after the end of the fourth century.
(Kumanudis 'Arr. e-rnyp. 7rcTvjuij3. Prol.
p. if
sq. ; but Mr Hicks BMI I.e.
thinks that the letters may well be contemporaneous with the amphora.)
371. A sepulchral stele with a relief, found in the Ceramicus. IG n 3,
2084; D 67; H 88. See also for a description of the monumeut, among other
authorities, H. and V. Ath. 579; E. A. Gardner Hdbk
of
Gk Sculpture Fig.
94;
A. Martin Cavaliers &c.
(1886) pp.
415 sqq. ; A. Bruckner Jahrb. d. Inst. 1895,
p.
204
;
Kopp Arch. Anz. 1895, p. 25.
Alphabet, type 1.
Ae^Xeo)? Avaaviov Qopi/ccos
414/3 b.c.
iyevero eirl Teicrdv&pov ap^ovros,
394/3 b.c. aireOave eV Rv/3ov\l8ov
KoplvO
/
<y )\opLvu(p roiv irevre tirirewv.
"Among the thousands of Attic tombs that we know of, this one alone bears
a date
"
(H). The name of Dexileos occurs in no. 362 and therefore fixes also
the date of that inscription. From 1. 2 we can correct Diod. xni
7,
1 who gives
the name of the archon marking the birth of Dexileos as Ii.elaavbpos. As
no. 362 shows that more than five knights fell at the battle of Corinth, the
expression tu)j> irtvre iirwicop must refer to some unrecorded episode of the
battle unless, as has been suggested, it is a military title (Bruckner, Jahrbb.
1895 p. 204). In 394/3 b.c Dexileos would have only just ceased to be an
((prjPos ;
cf. Rem. vii, p.
145.
372. A small stele of Hymettian marble. Dragatsis Hapv. 1883
p. 82;
IG ii 3, 2265.
M I AT I A AH
I
Mi(X)Ttd8
V
s
O+EAOY '0<f>4\ov
AAKIAAHZ AaKidSys.
For the demotic Aa/ad^s cf. the note on no. 120, col. a 2. Probably the
inscription commemorates a member of the family of the famous general. For
the form of cp in 1. 2 and the limits of date which it indicates see 51.
373. A stele of Hymettian marble, the tomb-stone of an 'isoteles.' IG
ii 3, 2723.
Alphabet, type 1.
AydOcov
icroTe\ij<;.
508 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[374
374. A stele of Hymettian marble, the tomb-stone of a foreigner (Ancyra).
Found in the Acropolis. IG n 3, 2735.
Alphabet, probably type
2
; w is 7r
2
, a is <r
2
.
'
AirO<l>W(DVlOS
'Attlvov
'Avicvpavos.
Probably not earlier than the second century B.C.
375. A stele of Pentelic marble, with a pediment and a relief. The
inscription is bilingual, Greek and Phoenician. Henzen and Gildemeister
Ann. d. Inst. 1861 p. 321 sqq. ; Kenan Corp. inscr. Sem. i p. 139 sqq. and
photographic plate 21 and 23 n. 115; Kumanudes 'E7ri7p. kiriri^. 1607; Kaibel
Ep. Gr. 96; IG n 3, 2836. Cf. Kekule Die antiken Bildiverke im Theseion 57;
Usener De Iliadis carmine quodam Phocaico, Bonn 1875 p.
33 note; Wolters
Mitth. xin 1888, p. 310.
Alphabet, type 1.
AvTlTTCLTpOS A(f)poStatOV
'
A(TKa[\oivCrt]S
AoyU,craA(W9 Ao/xavo) XtScovios dveOnKe.
[Phoenician inscription.']
[Relief.]
yinOel^ avOpooirwv Oavfia^era) elicova rrjvhe,
cbs irepl \xkv
fjue
Xeatv, irepl Sey irpwp* (e)yKrerdvvaTac.
5
rjXQe yap e<L>^0poXecov rdfia OeXwv airopdaar
dWa <f)i\oi
r r^fivvav kcil jjlol Kreptaav rdcfyov ovrrj,
ovs e6e\ov cf)i\G)v, lepds dirb vnbs lovres"
^olvlkvv Se \i7r(cb)p relSe yQovl aoifjua tceKpvvfJbaL.
The date should not be much later than the end of the fourth century B.C.
The Phoenician inscription has been thus interpreted : Ego
sheemfi), Jilius
Abdastarti, Ascalonites. Quod crexi ego Domsaloh,
filius Domhannonis, Sidonius.
Cf. G. A. Cooke North Sem. Inscrr.
p. 93 sq. ; S. A. Cook Jewish Qu. Rev. xvi 282.
Usener explains as follows: In accordance with the superstitions of Semitic
peoples a dead man who had not been properly buried was carried off to
the shades by some evil Jinnee, and this Jinnee is represented here by the figure
of a lion. Antipater seems to have died at Athens and, there being a doubt
whether he was duly buried, the burial rites were performed by certain sacred
deputies who had arrived at the Piraeus in a Phoenician ship. Domsalos, 1.
2,
may have been the president of the deputies. Koehler, IG, quotes from the
Corp. inscr. Sem. i 114 Tvpov /ecu SiSuwos [ei/cjoms ol e/c Tvpov iepovavrai 'AttoWojvl
ai>edr)Kav. For another explanation see P. Wolters I.e.
4. irepl 5ey: qu. 5e iy K, the e/c being an anticipation of e/c in eyKTerd-
vvcttcu (kt) ?
380]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PRIVATE. 509
6. The metre halts in ^fxvuau. For ovttj cf. the Boeotian ovtou, ovto etc.
8. In K^Kpvv/xai we have perhaps an archaising imitation of orthography
such as that of irovn-q, avvfx6ux0}V etc.
376. "In Lusierii Museo, olim Athenis; ex schedis Kosii" Boeckh CIG
851 ; Kumanudis 'Emyp. iiriTt/Mp. 1800 ; D 69 ; IG n
3,
2982. The stone is lost.
Alphabet, type
1; O
= o, ov.
J^XeoSriaov
^ne unfortunate Thasian hostage
, .
rn
died, it appears, before he could be
TOV Api(TT\i 7T- , , , ,. ,
rm.

r L J
restored to his country. The m-
f
TT<'Tr>ov vyacFLOV
scription may be as early as 408/7 B.C.,
OLLTipov.
when Thasos was recovered by Thrasy-
bulus. Cf. 23 7.
377. A stele of Hymettian marble with a rounded pediment. Kumanudis
'E7ri7p. iwLTvtxp. 2953; IG n 3, 3234.
Alphabet, type 1.
f
H/9<z[K]\e/8[a]<? Mucro9 Kar[a\7raXra(f)eTa<;.
The Doric form of the words is accounted for by the nationality of the
deceased. Probably not later than the second half of the fourth century b.c.
For Macros Kum. reads Meyiaros. On /cara7raXra0^ras see Rem. vii, p. 147.
378, 379. Two examples of common types, a. CIG 6969; Froehner
Inscr. 227; IG n 3, 3978. b. IG n 3,
4019.
(378)
a, AAOIXEMOIXOYXAIPE
Mo<7
%
e Moaxov
x
al
P
e-
(379)
b. NIKH
Nt/7
XPHCTH
Xp
W
T7J.
380. A stele of Pentelic marble, with a rounded pediment. Kumanudis
'Eirtyp. tortTti/tp. 3292; IG n 3, 4112.
Alphabet, type 1.
Z,avv(b
By KVKXiarpia is probably meant
X/or?<TT7?
a
^
aucer f some kiud. The interval
on the stele between the upper two
and the lower two words seems to
Ayaui)
have been occupied by a relief figuring
KVKXiarpia.
a KVKXLaTpia.
510 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. XII.
[381
381. A stele of Pentelic marble, found near the cave of Pan, now at the
entrance to the Acropolis. CIG Add. i p. 919 (part); Wordsworth Ath. and
Ati.$. 144; IGm2, 1424.
Alphabet: a
x
, a
n
, e
1?
e
4 ,
"
2
,
2
,
k
3
, X
g ,
fi
2
, 7r
3
, 7r
4
, <r
3
, a>
3
.
No iota mutum.
IlapaSiScofjLL to[is
Ka-rayOovLot's
6\y
Ot9 TOVTO TO 7]pcp6[y
(f>v\dacriv, TI\ov-
5
to)W Kai Arj/jLTjrpi,
fcai Tiepae^ovy
Kai 'FjpivvcrL teal iraai
rols Kara)(0ovloi\%
Oeols' el Tt9 diroico-
io afilerei tovto to r)pa>-
ov rj arroaKOvrXcocrrj
,
r) e[l'] tl teal erepov fxera-
Keivrfcrei r) avTos rj
St' aXXov, Tovrcp
fir)
15
yrj
fiaTT),
pur) Oakaacra
irXwrrf, aWa i/cpeo-
^coOrjereTe 7ravyeve[i'
iracn roc<s zealot? 7re[l-
pav $a)crL, Kai (j)pel-
20 Krj [k]o.[i] nrvpercp Kai re-
ra[p]rala) Kai
i\e<fia[y-
t[l k]<z[i] oaa KaKa /c[al ird-
Orf dv0pco7roi[s yC-
yverat, ravra e[a-
-25 t(&>) T(p ToXfirjcravrt
eK to\\i\tov tov r)pa>-
o[v] fieraKeivrjaat [ti.
The inscription belongs to the
Imperial Period. A similar series of
imprecations occurs in IG in 2, 1423,
which is headed by the lines : 'AvTwvia
7] Kai 'LwKpOLTlKT) TLp "y\vKVT OLT
ip
[XOV
avbpl
|
'A<eTi6xy t Kai "Zweaitp iiroiT)-
aaro to ijpipov tovto
|
tcXos Ka/xaTtov.
On the general subject of impreca-
tions and devotiones see introd. note on
406-8. 'As wealth and luxury in-
creased (Newton Essays p. 200) and
republican simplicity decayed, sepul-
chral monuments on a much larger
scale became the fashion and took the
form of a small distyle temple, heroon,
such as we see in the vase pictures
after Alexander the Great's time....
The inscriptions on the tombs of the
Roman period are constantly asserting
the freehold rights of the family to
whom the tomb belongs.'
10. airoKocrp-lo'ei i.e. ijcrei ; see note
on 1. 16.
11. aTroo-KovTkdoo-rj: 'shall despoil
of its pavement.' We have also
o-kovt\u)o-is and o~kovt\&pios. The deri-
vation is from the Latin scutula
(Vitruv. vn 1, 4).
16. iKpeLfadrjaere : i.e. iKpifadrj-
0-erai. See the note on no. 91 and
compare the debased orthography of
no. 383. Another instance of late-
ness, and perhaps of the influence of
the kolvt], is the era of (pvXdaaeiv, 1. 4,
and ddXacrcra, 1. 15. Cf. the note on
89 4.
382. A stone found in a vineyard Hiripov S/cot^St? near the shore, now in
his house at Athens. On the same stone, which was afterwards inverted, was
engraved an older inscription given IG in 2, 2601 a. IG in
2, 1425 a.
ONHCIMOC
'O^g-^09
CuuCirGNOYC
ZaaLyevovs
384] SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTIONS: PRIVATE. 511
ttAiAnig yc
Anticopycchmoi
attotoykatoxoyay
orroAeconicuuMG
TABATuu
Tlaiavcev<;
'
Av 77-9 OpvaCTT) fJLOL
airo rod Karoyov 8v-
5
O 7ToSe9 07TtCTft)
fJL~
rafidrco.
'If anyone digs a grave I beg that he will remove two feet behind the
k&toxos.' Can this mean the sepulchral stone itself? Cf. Hesych. kcltoxol'
\idoi oi ewi fxprjiuaat ridepLevoi. irodes in 1. 6 is due to an ignorant engraver, and
must not be classed with examples such as riropes = r^ropas [Delphi).
383. A stele of Hymettian
IG in 2, 1433 (in cursive only).
KXTj/jbarel-
ov 8ov\o<$ TL-
fjuetos klt ev
TOJ TOTTU) TOV-
5
T(p Upl/jLOS. "E Tt?
rpofirjar) roj
/3aaTpvapL(D-
v, /cara{3a\r}r
ra> ra/jLcei(p
XP
0V
~
IO 0~OV GDfCLdS Tpfc9.
marble. Kumanudis "Ewtyp.
e-mrvfifi. 3268;
For the orthographical corruptions
see note on no. 91.
3. KIT = KeLTaL.
5. "E = ei'.
6. Dittenberger strangely explains
rpofx-rjarj by ToXfx-qaec, but even so the
meaning is not clear.
7. fiacTTepvapLoi should be carriers
of bastemae (litters) or feretra (biers).
rep may be a mistake for tQv.
8. Ka.Tal3a\7)T = KaTa(3a\e'LTCU.
9. For xpovtxov cf. 141 1.
10. cbKias = ovyK:Las, vncias.
384. A sepulchral tablet of white marble: H. 2 ft. 7 in.; Br. 1 ft. 10^ in.:
now in the British Museum. CIG 606; BMI 81; IG m 2, 1445. With a
relief representing a bearded man seated and medically treating a youth who
stands by him naked. A conical vessel on the ground Mr Hicks thinks was the
cupping glass, cructa, cucurbita, found also upon the coins of Epidaurus, with
evident reference to the worship of Asklepios.
The alphabet conforms to no regular type; it contains a
7
, S
2
, e
4
, #
4
, X
5
,
/a
4 ,
7r
4
,
cr
6
, w
4
. The mark ' is used to denote abbreviations; in 1. 4
$
= KaL.
'IdcrcDV 6 teal Ae/cyico?
'
Ayapvev^ larpos.
Alovvctlos 'Iacro^o9
-^X
a
P
'
J
0V(
P
^ QeoScopov
'
AOpiovews.
Se6fiv7]o-ro<; Alovvctlov 'A^ap' teal EilprfvTjs rr)s 'Iacro^o? 'A^ap'.
$i]\oerrparr) 'AcfypoSecalov rod D Vapuv . /c(al) Wpiarlov r??9
5
ov rod... MeXtre. [KapTroSoop-
512 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XII.
[384
Mr Hicks, BMI, remarks that the genealogical pedantry of the epitaph is
characteristic of late Athenian society. From a comparison of the names of
the pedigree with those of other inscriptions he would assign the date to the
earlier half of the second century a.d., and with this the written character
agrees.
1. Mkixos. Perhaps Decimus was the original name, and Jason assumed in
allusion to his medical skill (Idoixat).
2. yovcp 34. Cf. IG in 2, 1706 Upa^tKXrjs
|
JZixppoviov,
\
yovtp 5
\
KaXXi/cpdrou
|
QopiicLov.
3. 4. The abbreviation
'Axp'.
denotes 'A^apeus not 'Axapvews, for the
person adopted passed into the deme of his adoptive father (Keil Rh. M. 1865
p. 535). For the D in 1. 4 see p.
188.
385. Found near the church Hagia Triada.
p. 166 n. 62 (Tab. in
7)
; IG in 2, 3436.
Ch. Bayet BCH n
(1878)
Alphabet: a
8
, a
13
, e
4 ,
/a
5
,
<r
6
, <p
7
,
+ KffJL7]r\r]-
piov l^v(f)pa-
aelov olaXa
K6 Yevvahi-
5
? +
The
-f-
is a common mark of a
Christian inscription ; so also the
use of the word Koifx-qr-qpLov (but cf.
nos. 388

9).
Here we have the
debased late form kv/h-, as we have the
converse change in oiaXa for uaXa,
'glass-worker.'
386. Found in the Ceramicus. IG in 2,
3486.
Alphabet : a
8
,
yx
, y2
,
3
2 ,
+
KoL{l7]Trj-
piov Xe/x/t-
ov [JbtfCpOV,
TTpa$LCLS
5
'\wavvov ve-
ov, fjLrjvl <>\e-
/3ovapi(p iv-
&iktl(go)v(o<;) iy.
+
^45 Vs>
l
3>
K
5>
X
2' A*5 "6' 1 3>
ff
6 >
T
3 >
U
l>
V
S '
W
8'
The meaning of rerpabia 'luavvov
veov is obscure. The Cycle of Indic-
tions was, according to the gene-
rally received account, established by
Constantine in a.d. 312 and was a
fiscal period of 15 years. The dates
given by Indictions are necessarily
vague because the number of the year
only in the Indictional period, and not
the number of the Indiction itself is
specified. On the difficulties attending
the whole subject of the Indictions see
v. Gardthausen Gr. Palaeogr. 384 sqq.
387. Found in Salamis. CIG 9303; Kumanudis 'ETrryp. t-KiT-uy.fi. 3540;
IG in 2, 3509.
Alphabet: a
14
,
e
4
,
6
2
, fx
5 , 8
,
7r
4
, <t
6
,
co
8
. No iota mutum.
389]
SEPULCHRAL INSCRIPTLONS : PRLVATE. 513
+
-\-OIko<; clIwvlos
'AydOodvos dva-
co
<yv. zeal
TLv<fir)fjLLa<;
ev Sval 6r)fcai<;
5
ihia e/cdarq) rj/uucov
6 06 Tt9 TOW LOLO)V
et Tp6$ Tt? TOX-
/AVcrr) GW/Jba tcara-
Oeadai ivravOa
io irape% tgov Bvo
rjfjbwv, Xoyov Say-
7] tw Bed) teal a-
vade/ma rjra)
fjiapdv d6dv.
+
Kirchhoff assigns the inscription
to the fourth or fifth century a.d.
For the quotation at the end see the
commentaries on N. T. Ep. ad Cor.
i xvi 21.
2. dvayvdi.: i.e. dvayvibarov.
7. ei=7? points to a period when
they were identical in sound.
388, 389. Two inscriptions on Pentelic marble shown by the figures of a
seven-branched candelabrum to be of Jewish origin. 388 CIG 9313; BCH
ii
(1878) p. 167 n. 65 (tab. m
4)
; IG m 2, 3545. 389 BCH ib. p. 168 n. 66
(tab. in
3)
; IG in 2, 3546.
Alphabet of the same general type as the preceding. In 389 the 8 has the
form
d.
(388)
Kot/ULTjTripiOV
fJL7)rpo<i 'A6rj-
veov zee eoz^-
5
KTUTTOV.
(389)
Kv/J,7)Trj-
piov e-
oSov\a[s
teal Mcoo"-
ws].
. In 388 3, 4 'Adyviov k=-"Ad-qvalov Kai: cf. 92. For the existence of a
Jewish Colony at Athens cf. Philo Legatio ad Caium; N.T. Acts xvii ; Dumont
Epheb. Att. i 112 sq.
R. II. 33
Section XIII. Miscellaneous.
390. =Eo. i 34. On a painted terra-cotta vase found in 1880 in the
Dipylon. Studniczka Mitth. xvm 225 sqq. (taf. 10); IG i Suppl. 492 a,
p
119.
"<jJ$t&]
sT^Jq
^tV1"nitk1<w*<
'
o? vvv op'xrjGTWv iravTwv draXcoraTa irai^ev
to(v)to heKCLV /jLIV.
This, the oldest known Attic inscription, is according to Kirchhoff un-
doubtedly older than the beginning of the sixth century b.c. The reading of
the second line (an Adonius) is due to Studniczka I.e. He thinks that the
vase or rather wine-vessel was a prize won probably at a public contest and
placed in the tomb with the winner. But the explanation of denav as =
5exe<r8cu
is more than doubtful.
TOTO
for tovto is a unique example at so early a
period; cf. 84.
{F) 391. A leaden dXr^p found at Eleusis. Philios 'E</>.
dpx- 1883, 190;
IG i Suppl.
*422
4
,
p. 105.
(
A\(\)6/iVO<; vi/crjcre-
v 'E7rati/6T09
ovve/ca rovBe
r
a-
Possibly a second dX-nJp was dedi-
cated at the same time by the victor.
The 'a . . . . of 1. 4 might have been
continued as aXr-qp (or perhaps it
was rodde olXttjpos) on the second
a\T7jp. The date may be earlier than the beginning of the sixth century b.c.
(F) 392, 393, 394. Ostraka, containing votes for the banishment
respectively of Megacles, son of Hippocrates
(487/6 b.c), Xanthippus, father
of Pericles
(486/5 b.c), and Themistocles (the first banishment, 483 b.c, rather
than the second, 470 b.c ,
or shortly after, because the form
A
does not
396]
MISCELLANEOUS. 515
appear after 480 B.C.). On the extensive use
of
Ostraka for official
and
commercial purposes see the important ivork
of
U. Wilcken
"
Griechische
Ostraka
"
Vols, i, n, 1899.
(392)
IG i Suppl. 569. (393) ih. 570 (another, 571). (394) Mitth. xxn 345.
Meyafckr/s': advOiiriro^ %6fJLi(j6oKkr}^
t
Iiriro]fcpdrov<;

'Applcfrpovos. Qpedppios.
A\w7T6Kr)6.
For the form Qep.iadoK\r)s cf. 148 18.
395

400. Tesserae judicum. These are small bronze plates, about


y^
of
an inch thick, which served as Athenian Dicasts' tickets or irivdicia. For a full
discussion of these relics see the authorities quoted below. Each is stamped
with a letter indicating one of the ten divisions of judges, and with the owl
or gorgoneion. These irivaiaa must not be confused with the av/x^oka, the
vouchers which enable the dicasts, when impanelled to try a case, to receive the
rpidofioXou. Nor are the letters those by which the various courts are marked.
From the fact that some of the irivaKia were found in tombs it has been inferred
that it was usual to bury a dicast's ttlvolkiov with him : hence possibly the jest in
Ar. Phut. 277 : iv rfj
cropip vvvl Xaxov to ypd/mfxa abv 5iKdeiv,
|
crv
5'
ov (3adLeis;
6 5Xapu)i> to %vixfio\ov 8L5(t)<TLv. Nearly all the tickets which have as yet come
to light appear to belong to the fourth century b.c. (P. Girard BCH n (1878)
p. 524; C. Curtius Rh. M. xxxi
(1876) p.
281 sqq. ; O. Eayet Ann. de VAss.
pour Vencouragement des et. grecques 1878 p. 205 sq. ; A. Dumont Rev. Arch.
1868, xvn p. 140 sqq.; Schoemann Opusc. i 203 sqq. ; Att. Proc. 127; K. F.
Hermann Gr. Staatsalterth. r
5
876; Dar. and Sagl. s.v. Dikastai.)
(395) IG ii 2, 876.
A AlONYIOiAI
ONYiEKKOI (c)
(a)
b
&LOvvaio<s At-
ovv(aiov) i/c Ko/(\?7?)
On the ticket are stamped three
symbols; (a) an owl between two
letters
A
and
O , with traces of
H
above (i.e.
AOH) ;
{b) two owls united
with one head, with the letter
A
on
each side
;
(c) a Gorgon's head.
(396)
IGn2, 885; H 151
(1).
r
o
APIT04>_n.NiAPI
TOAHMOYiKOOAK
r 'ApLCTTOcfxvV 'Apt<7-
On the left is stamped an owl in a
wreath with the letters
AOH
attached.
332
516 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XIII.
[397
(397)
CIG 208; IG n 2, 886; H 151
(2).
[J
AEINIAC
(a) AAAIEY \F (c)
r Aeivias
f
AXatetx;
(a) An owl in a wreath
;
(b) two
owls with one head
;
(c) Gorgon's head.
Note the omission of the father's
name.
(398)
IG ii 2, 887.
r PAPAMONOC^ANOA (c)
(a) MEAITEY^I |Tj HM
Y TlapdjuLOvos t&avoSrj/uL^ov)
Me\tTeu9
Symbols as in no. 397. The
ticket has been used a second time.
Under the name Hapa,uovo$ can be
distinguished
Aucrt'crrparos
AldaXidrjs,
and between Xvalarparos and the de-
motic are traces of another name
Krj<pL(Todd)p(ov), marked by dots only
;
perhaps the father's name added by
Lysistratus himself.
(F)
(399) IG ii 2, 900.
E :
'AvTifcpdrrjs : Euact(t7/xo^o?)
O
'Al%G)VVS. O
For the facsimile text see the Plate
at the end.
(400) IG ii 2, 909.
There are four symbols on this
^O
+
i
ticket,
K
(I), (o), L in no. 397,
|-=-|
, >
j
except that (b) is upside down
;
(d)
I \W j appears to be a seated griffin.
I KaWta? K.aXXco^ov
401. A slab of Pentelic marble, broken on the right and below, found in
the Acropolis. IG n
2, 991. Cf. Grotefend, Ztschr.
f.
Alterthumsw. 1857
p. 18 sqq. ; Dittenberger Herm. ix
p. 409.
Alphabet, in the main type 1; but tt is sometimes 7r
2
.
401]
MISCELLANEOUS. 517
'EpexGciSos
IIpop]aX[iv8os L'fp-ywvCSat
10
'5
20
'A-ypvXii Ka0virp]#. Z,Teipi[a.
'AypvXi] virevcp. ^^Yatet?
Aap.i7Tp]al KaOvirep. Yparj<;
Aap.Trr]pat virevep. 'Oa>7?
Kt]8]ot Ae&)imSo[s
IIa|x]/3ft)Ta8at
"Eib\a>VV/JLOV
Iljepyacrrj KaOvirep. II otcljjlos
Tlepyacrrj viriiepd. [iorafio^
2]u/3/36S[a]t
A]t76t8[os
Ko]\Xu[t6s
A.yicvk\x\ KaOvirep.
A.<yicv\\j\ virevip.
Ai6p,[tia
2a
- -
ile[pp8ai
TTTCopet^a.
^Ka/jL/3(ovL[Sa.i JLvvocrrlSaL
AeVKOv6[r\ McXaiJz^ei]?
K]?7TT09
25
'E]<r[Ti]a/[a
Bar?;
'Ept/ce[ia
Orpvvrj
VapyrjTr[6s
Tiaiovlhai
e
TfidB[a]l
TlrjXrj/ces
Y^pwirihcu
ILvTrvpiSaL
Oi[a
-
AKap.avJTt009
K]epa[p]ei9
I[<pi.o-]TiaSaf.
Etpecrt'Sat
f
E/D/XO?
XoXapyel?
EtVea
X(/)?;t[t6s
K
-
--
KcpidScu ?
E[Xaiovs
?]
This is part of a list of denies arranged under the heads of the tribes to which
they severally belonged. The date is ascribed by Grotefend and Dittenberger
II. cc. to the period of the twelve tribes, and more precisely to the period between
265 B.C., when the tribe Ptolema'is was created, and the creation of the Attalis in
200 b.c. The statistics gathered from inscriptions and other sources show
that e.g. Ilpo(3d\ivdos was transferred to the Attalis on its creation; here
col. 11 4 it is placed under Pandionis. On the other hand Qvpyuvidai and
TLeppidat appear in a tribe in col. in which must be the Ptolema'is, to which
they were transferred from the Aeantis.
Col. i, 2. The tribe Erechtheis of course heads the list ; see 44 6.
5 sqq. KadvTTp]d(v), virvep(dev) etc. These appear to be the only abbreviated
forms in the inscription.
Col. ii
4
8. These demes belong to the Pandionis.
12, 13. Uora/jids. See the list of demes p. 525 sq.
518 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XIII.
[401
25.
O I
Z
1
on the stone, but the most familiar name of the deme is Olov.
Col. iii 5. Koehler would restore KA]w[7rt<5cu.
402. A corner of a stele of Pentelic marble, broken at the top and bottom
and so that the remains of one set of lines ends at, and the first part of another
set begins from, the angle. Found in the Piraeus. Kumanudis, 'A0. i p. 5
;
G. Hirschfeld A. Z. xxxi
(1873) p. 106; Wilamowitz Anal. Eurip. p. 138;
H. Haupt Jahrbb. 1876 p. 671 ; IG n
2, 992.
Alphabet a
a
,
a
2
, a
3
,
2
,
4 , 2
and also with a form like
IE
with the middle
stroke slanting, not vertical, 7r
5
,
i>
15
v
6
, <p
lt
<p
7
.
--------
k\k
- -
------
- - j3atvo - -
------
s]
Me\eaypo[s]
______
Tr~\epi Ala^v(X)o[v]
5
- - - - -
'A\i]^av8pov Atcr[e]-
a7raT<5v? KiQ^aptCTTrjS Aclkt[v]-
Xios
- - - -
3
A\]k/jL6cov aAX[o]-
-----
s
Av]rao?
'
A/ji(f)iapa-
os
- - - - t~\ov 6(f)0aXfjLov
io
- - - - 'KvK\i]tBov Ala^lvrj^
- - - -
KJaia Xa(p)iav /ca-
era rd irepl
^
AOri-
v
___--] _\*
T(VV /JL6TCL
Ka/rja l^apiav kcli Aa-
15-----
a'
'
Ayaiov 'Ejoyt-
vos
- - - -] AcrKKrjTridDov
------
i]?" %i\r)vov Xpv-
o-
_____ _
r\\voScopov Solvit;
_______
or Xo(potc\e-
_0 ovs
- - - -
-](f)pVV7]S i/c T-
-----
k]/c rod kvkXov
______
p 'AfjL(j)cdpao<;
-----
'TXkje/crpa Hpa-
tcXfjs
-
v Mfcro-
25 1 - - - -
M]ovaac 'AXe[av]-
8pos
- _ _ _ Al6]t07re9 A
- -
- - - 'Iiriro8d(iJeta ['Ij7r[ir6vovs ?
II
T-
-
p\yr\
- - dvTi-yp-
<2(^>o[v] A[v
- -
? tov
-
o-
v J^pdr7]r[o<5
- - - -
TrvidcrTpia [-
- - At]-
/jLoaOevov /cafrd - -
-
cov JLWaVLKOV [- Aujn-
Xou _^>aTTo/xe^[os Alp^o-i-
TL)(7}<> Ttj6t] 'A7r[opdTT]S 'E-
tfaTT? _T/3<XTtft)T[TlS -
-
irevral
(?)
_uz^co[pls
<
i
>
i\d8\-
cf)o<;
Te\ecria<<z>[V EvpwrtSov
^fcvptoc _,#ez;e/3[oia __Kipwv
[<ra]Ti;po(i) _t(7L'[<}>0S 2vXVS
[0]uecrT?79 77a [evs Aiktus
Aavdrj IIoXi;[i8os ITcXid-
Se?-
f
AXa^(-)- n[\io-eVT]S ITa-
\a/jir)c]7)<i [IT
n^xeu? n[eipi6ovs Hp&>_
Tai\ao<;
------
<
I
)
tXo/CT?7T77[s ^ae'Gwv 4oi-
^t t&pi^os ^[oivio-o-at
- - -*
'A<t&/[ai(-) 'Apx^'Xa-
[os *AXk]/x?7^77 'AXe[av8pos
['AXoitt]] JLvpvcrd(e)vs
- - -
-
Tt? - - -
10
15
-O
25
404]
MISCELLANEO US. 519
The fragment probably contains part of a list of books presented or dedicated
by the ephebi to the library in the gymnasium. The written character points
to the first century b.c. Several of the ephebic inscriptions record dedications
of this kind : e.g. IG n 1, 468 25 sq. [avid-qxav 8i] Kai (3v(3\ia els ttjv h UroAe^cu'u;
(3v^\iodrjKT]v ko.tqv Kara
\
[to \pi](f)iayxa]. It will be observed that in some cases,
and notably in that of Euripides, the works are arranged in groups according
to their initial letters (/caret vroixeiov), though the groups themselves are not
alphabetical. The order probably represents a traditional and popular one.
Col. i. 2. Haupt I.e. restores MereK/3cuVou<rcu. Suidas attributes to the
tragedian Nicomachus of Alexandria the authorship of the Eileithyia, Naumachus,
MereK^aivovaac and eleven other tragedies. Meineke however (Com. Gr. i 496 sq.)
on the ground of the fragments of the first two preserved in Athen. vn 290 sq.
and Stob. Jior. 38, 10 assigns these, and with more hesitation the MereK^aipova-ai,
to a comedian Nicomachus (cf. Bernhardy on Suid.
p. 989). Possibly the
names ElXeidvia, Nai/^axos were also originally on the stone.
3, 4. Hirsehfeld I.e. makes Chamaileon the author of the irepl Alaxv^ov.
Haupt I.e. thinks that MeXe'aypos was the author, the same as the MeXeaypos
quoted by Eustath. on Horn. A p.
814 as a commentator on Homer.
5. Ai.s[ea7raTU)i>] ktX. These are names of Menander's plays. 'AXKfxeuv
I. 7 is new.
10. EuK\eL8ov
Aiax^Vs - So Haupt, comparing Suid. EvKXeidrjs Meyapevs
o~vveypa\pe diaXoyovs
'
AXki[3l&87)i> Ai<Txivt)v Kpircova <J>cuVi/cas Aapbirpiav 'EpooriKov,
and Diog. Laert. n 108.
19. In the remaining lines of col. I, and probably the beginning of col. II, is
contained a list of Sophoclean works. The name Moucrcu in 1. 25 (note Mvcoi
just before) shows that Casaubon and Dindorf were wrong in altering the ms
reading of Poll, x 186 4v Motiacus to k Mvaols. Similarly Nauck has wrongly
altered, in Bekk. Anecd.
p. 83, 22 (e/c t&v <l?pvvlxov), Soc^o/cXtJs Motfcrcus to Mvcrois.
Col. II 11. Here begins the list of Euripides' works. It is interrupted in
II. 16, 22 by the insertion of 'AAcu-,'A0i5i'[cu-, possible abbreviations for 'AAcuetV,
'Acpidvaie'is, which may denote respectively the demes to which the donors
belonged, as Wiiamowitz, I.e., suggests.
403. A Herma of Pentelic marble in the Acropolis. Pittakis 'E0. dp%.
3722; G. Kaibel Eyigr. Gr. 1092; IG. m 2, 3822.
Alphabet, type 2; ir is 7r
4
,
tp is
<p
7
.
yivrjixa roSe Qpovrcovos'
|
e? "A'i&os elOv veolfjbrjv
j
irplv %pv(Tov Se^Oai
|
irprj^ixaTo^ ov^ oaiov.
The inscription is one of a class which may be more properly described as
memorial than sepulchral ; cf. nos. 404

406. The dialect exhibits di-


vergences from Attic which are not uncommon in metrical inscriptions. The
form Trpijxfia is found in Chios, Smyth Ion. Dial.

182, 350. The written
character may be that of the second or first century b.c.
404. In a ruined temple of Aphrodite near the sacred road to Eleusis.
CIG 508; A. Conze Philol. xiv
p. 150 ;
IG in 2, 3823.
520 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA; SECT. XIII.
[405
405. On the promontory of Sunium, on an architrave. CIG 516 ; IG in
2,
3824.
406. On a rock, near 'Ayxf>i6s, N. W. of Athens. CIG 513 ; IG in
2,
3826.
(404)
Alphabet: a
4
, e
4
,
0.
2 ,
Hi
7r
4>
cr
2-
'FtfivrjcrdTi iir aya6(p
T\v6ovitcr]s ISAdapfcos
ORBIVS.
(405)
Alphabet : <x
4
,
cr
s
,
'> 0:
OvrjGlfJLOS
XpV<TT>nS.
(406)
Alphabet: a
3
, e
4
,
d
2
, <r
6
.
aOrj 'Aya-
dls teal %/cv-
In 404 note the name Orbius in Koman characters. The use of double
vowels to denote a long vowel ( Mdctp/cos) appears in Latin inscriptions from the
time of the Gracchi to the Mithridatic War (75 B.C.).
The person or persons commemorated in no. 406 may be UoXe/uLOJu and
Aofieriavos, whose names appear on a rock inscription (CIG 512) found close to
this, engraved
'
evxys
X^/
31
"*'
407, 408, 409. Three examples of the inscriptions on leaden plates
published by E. Wiinsch as an appendix to the CIA and entitled Appendix conti-
nens Defixionum Tabellas in Attica regione repertas : Berlin 1897. The}' go by the
name of Defixiones or Dirae
'
spells ' or
'
curses ' directed against some enemy,
known or unknown, of the person imprecating. For vigour and virulence their
language may be compared with that of no. 381. Wiinsch in his Preface gives
an account of the history of magic and superstition connected with the practice
of imprecating curses, compares cognate inscriptions, Greek, Latin, Oscan, and
reviews the literary tradition on the subject of Defixiones. The oldest and
most numerous of these inscriptions come from Attica. Wiinsch therefore
infers that the custom of writing the formulae on leaden plates spread on the
one hand from Attica to Magna Graecia and Italy, and on the other to North
Africa and C}*prus. The heathen formulae of exorcism were modified by the
Gnostics, and possibly the anathemas and exorcisms of the present day may
owe their origin to those formulae. Eemarkable parallels to the formulae and
language of these leaden plates are found on papyrus-rolls. The most notable
Greek inscriptions outside Attica containing Dirae and engraved on leaden
plates have been found in Boeotia, Corcyra, Italy, Cnidos, Megara, Alexandria,
Carthage, Hadrumetum, Cyprus. To judge from the written characters, most
of the Attic plates should belong to the third century B.C., a few to the fourth
and second centuries ; one of them Wiinsch doubtfully assigns to the fifth.
(407) A folded plate pierced by a nail, Wiinsch op. c. no. 43.
407]
MISCELLANEOUS. 521
3/OTyOT
TOUTOf?
A n A N T AS
airavTas
KATAAil
fcaraSoo
NHfiniX^A
' Ap^inT7rr]v
N HT3 N 1 An 3
'RTTCUVeTTJV
NH.inMYAO
'0\v/jL7ri[x]r]v
NA3AKOMIT
Tifjb6fcXe(a)v
NHTHNIOIA
AioyvrjTTjv
NAINAM
M.avlav.
The inscription is written in a style imperfectly (3ovaTpo<pr}86v ;
i.e. not all
the letters face Right to Left, or Left to Right, as in archaic ftovaTpcxprjdou
writing. KaradQ> originally denoted the act of fixing by a nail; the Romans
clavum
ftgunt,
the Greeks 17'Xoj Seovai, whence the Greek dime were called
KarddeafMot; as the person imprecating the curse binds with a nail the folded
leaden plate, so the victim of the curse will be bound by avayicr}.
(408) Found in the Piraeus ;
opisthographous. Wiinsch op. c. no. 66.
Alphabet apparently type 1, indicating the beginning of the fourth century b.c.
O
=
o, ov. The direction is Right to Left, but the letters always face to the
Right.
a. KaraSco Rvdparov'
Kal bcroi ctvvSlkoc k-
al T\<tlvo(v) t{o)v 'ISlootov Kal T7)v ^vyj)v Kar-
a8(2> 'ISt^^rov, yXcorrav ko\\\ avrbv : fier E-
vapdrov a(v)virparrcoat Kal oaot av a-
(v)v8iko<; /jlt Fivapdrov Kal tovs Kv-
apdrov Kal ttjv yjrv^rjv Kal yXcor-
rav.
b. Kai e(t) rt? ivavri{a) e(t) rd tovtcov 6(t(t)1
a\Xo<; 7rpaTT<i>C /jlol.
To obtain the sense of side a it has been necessary to rearrange portions
;
thus the first and last lines on the plate run as follows :
vorapaveuidaTCLK var
KlOKldwaLOaOLCLK.
This inscription is more detailed than no. 406 in that it embraces in the curse
the associates of the victim and the parts of his person. Sometimes the property
and occupations are added. Possibly for <t(v)p8lkos we should read <tw5Lkovs
and the intention may be: (Kara8(p) avudiKovs 0001 av /act Euapctrou <x{v)vTrp6.TTucn.
Perhaps side b should be restored : /ecu ei tls a\\os tovtojv earl, 6s evavria
Tp&TTei i/j.oL.
522 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: SECT. XIII. [409
(409) Wiinsch op. c. no. 109.
-^^oAiAfrr^YE
iOTN
AZ ap
n*A
'<>**
NiAA\E^OTAK
HMfE IAKIAK I
AlZ A
P^iU
^'^y.EA,
A
^
/A0-1N/rApTt(nAnE
,ai<a,
t
^^Trfi^
AiNN
^
lATETATI^H
N
A^/^!^^^
A
^7^^tlHNAA^f^ETAKE^oT
FMvn
tXETAK
IA K' A'
E/^P-P, A A '^EaV i
Maz^^ KaraSco teal teareyco' vfie-
? Se (pi\cu Yipa^ihitcai Kareyere avr{o)v teal 'Epfir}
ted-
to% Kcire^e Mai'rjv teal ra Ma^oO? teal rrjv epy-
a[o-i]av rjv \k\pyd^eTai M[a]z^9 a[Tra]crav els Tavav-
iia teal iirapicrTepa yiveaOai IS/iavel' v/jllv
eyoo Tlpa^iSiteat teal 'Ejppbr} tedroye Mai/o-
vs] teateoos Trpd^avros evayyeXia 6vaco.
The inscription is one of the more carefully written. The deities invoked
are the Praxidicae, or Avengers, and Hermes. The writing is Right to Left and
begins with the last line and ends with the first. Hermes is /car i^o\Vv called
6 k&toxos; cf. Schol. Aristoph. PI. 1132: otl Kai tQv %&vtu>v koX tQjv TereXevTi]-
kotoov apxei- The phrase evayyiXia dveiv occurs Xen. Hell, i 6, 37. Wiinsch
compares Papyrus Par. 1. 2094: reXeaov daifxov rd ivdade yeypaixjxha' reXeaavTi
5<? aoi Overlay airobwaw, and CIL x 8249, 14:
'
Si Mam videro tabescentem, vobis
sacrificium
'
eqs.
410. A slab of Pentelic marble, found on the Acropolis in 1884; broken
on all sides, but edge of slab preserved on left; a few letters from another
column visible on the right. IG n 5, 4321 and
p. 305. Gomperz, Uber ein
bisher unbekanntes gr. Schriftsystem, 1884, and Neue Bemerk. uber den altesten
Entwurf einer gr. Kurzschrift, 1895 ; Gitlbauer, die drei Systeme der gr. Tachy-
graphie, Taf. i and p. 3sqq., 1894; Wessely, Ein System altgriech. Tetchy-
graphie, 1895; Gomperz, Sb. Ak. Wiss. Wien cxxxn
(1895),
June; Larfeld, Hdbch.
gr. Epigr. n p. 537.
Alphabet, type 1 in the main.
(A L II O II
=a, e,
v,
&> v).
The restoration of the text and consequent translation are mainly those of
Wessely, op. cit.
77-
pa eyovtr ev [p.6vov k
pa]? [ TO & irkpblTTOV
TWV (f)COV7]eVT(OV T'
5 TpJKX
/J*V, 7r[piTTT|V 8e TT|V
(The third vowel can easily be
joined to another to form diphthongs,)
"having one bar only,
|,
The fifth
vowel,
Y,
has three bars, but the
vertical one is superfluous, just as the
410]
MISCELLANEOUS.
523
ojpurjv
^xL
l
'
w<rirp k<xI
to] 7rp(t)T0\v -A- TT\V V0iaV*
irp]ocrXa/>t[pdvL
8'
4k t'
dpt]o"Tepo[v Kal Seijiov
io rat]? fcepaiaLS d/jL(po[r4
pais,] tj}? 6p6rj<; air\ov-
<rt]S' t\j}V OVV (f)(Ov[r\v \ikv
8ei y]pa(f)CV Ov[rois.
Tuv]
8'
d(j)(6vC0V T) [|XV
15 v]6ela Kal /3pa[xela.
ypa]flflT)
to]0 <f)0)vr}VT0$ [eirl piv ti)v
dpx]r}v reOelaa Su[vaTai
Se'XrJa,
20 p.e'o-1]] $ rav,
irp6s 8]e ret reXevrel vv'
ir\ayC\a
8'
7rl ttjv dpyrjv
IJtev ir\poa7]yfievT) Tret,
irpos 8^] Tet TeXet'Tet \xv'
25 Kara 8 to y.k\orov 7Tj00?
|xcv t]?}^ ap^rjv Trpocrr]-
ypijvrj /3fjra.
horizontal bar in the first vowel,
A,
is superfluous. And it can be joined
to another on the right and the left,
by both its bars, the vertical one being
omitted. Thus then the vowels should
be written.
As to the consonants, a short hori-
zontal bar placed at the beginning (or
upper end) of the vowel sign means
5,
at the middle, r, and at the (lower)
end, v.
A sloping bar joined to the upper
end means tr, to the lower end /x;
joined to the middle, if sloped towards
the upper end, it means /3.
"
This inscription is evidently a de-
scription of a system of short-hand
writing, and is the earliest evidence
for the existence of such a system.
The date, from the lettering, must be
the end of the first half of the 4th
century; after 368-7 b.c, according to
Larfeld, because of the form
\\ =v.
This system is assigned to Ar-
chinus by Wessely, with some proba-
bility ; if so, it belongs to his old age,
for his recorded reforms in writing
belong to the time of Euclides, 4032 b.c. Larfeld suggests Aristotle, who
was in Athens 367347 b.c.
The latter part of the inscription is fairly intelligible, and does not leave
much room for conjecture. The bars were doubtless added before or after the
vowel sign, according as the consonant came before or after ; thus di would be
written
~~
),
<
\~
,
Sid
T.
The arrangement of short bars, added to the vowel
|
;
may be tabulated thus
;
Thus seven consonants are provided ; seven more could be made by long
bars, implied in the mention of short ones. Thus all the fourteen consonants
are provided for; the double consonants,
, , 1//, perhaps having no special
signs, apart from those of the simple sounds of which they are compounded.
524 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA : SECT. XIII.
[410
It is however useless to conjecture the details of the system, when specialists
are divided even as to the principles to be recognised in the extant portion.
The first twelve lines are more obscure ; the interpretation given above is
that of Wessely, who refers this part of the inscription to the manner of
writing diphthongs, by adding i and v to other vowel signs. The description of
the other vowel signs doubtless preceded ; but what they were can only be
guessed, on the analogy of later tachygraphic signs. They must have been of
a simple form, to enable the bars to be added to them. The part preserved, if
rightly interpreted, certainly suggests that
A I
V were used for a, i, v re-
spectively. It is impossible here to discuss the relations of the system to later
Greek tachygraphy, as preserved in papyri ; for these see Wessely and Gitlbauer
opp. citt.
APPENDIX I.
LIST OF DEMES, WITH DEMOTICS
(from Cornell Studies, No. vin. Appendix B. F. O. Bates, Ph.D.).
The demotics are indicated in brackets ;
*
denotes that the
deme was transferred to Antigonis,
f
to Demetrias,
|
to Ptolemais,

to Attalis,
||
to Hadrianis. In the case of a double deme the sign
is added to the first name when it cannot be determined which part
was transferred.
EreclltheiS. 1 'AypvXrj /ca#.* (-dev), 2 'A. virev., 3 'Avayvpovs (-curios), 4 Evwvv-
fiov (-eus), 5 QrjfxaKosX (" e^s)> 6 K77801 (k Krjd&v), 7 K?70icrid (-ievs), 8 AafMirrpal
nad* (-eys), 9 A. virev., 10 Ua/j.(3u)Td8a<.
||
(-adrjs), 11 Uepyaai) nad. (-dev), 12 II.
vire'v., 13 2u/3oi8cu (-1877s), 14 ^tjyous (-otVios).
Aegeis. 1 'AyKvXr) nad.

(-#ei>), 2 'A. virev., 3"AXcu 'Apacprjv. (-aievs), 4


,
Apa<pr]v
(-vios), 5 Bar?7 (-c^ev), 6 TapyrjTTOs
*
(-tios), 7 Aidfxeia (-eetfs, -eietfs), 8 'E/)//ceia (-eJs,
-eietfs), 9 'Epxia (-tei/s),
10
'Ecrriaia (-ofle*'),
11
'I/capia
*J
(-ieus), 12 'IwiuScu (-1877s),
13 KoXXirr6s (-ei>s), 14 KoXuvds (e/c KoXw^oO, rarely -rjdev), 15 Ki5aj/ri5at
J
(-/877s),
16 MvppivovTTa (e/c M.vppivovTTr}s), 17 'Orpvvrj (-evs), 18 IIXd>c?eia (-0etfs, -eietfs,
-eetfs, and -iadev in Roman times), 19 Teldpas (-curios), 20 $r)yaia\\ (-cuetfs),
21 4>iXai5ai (-1877s).
Pandionis. 1 'AyyeXrj (-rjdev), 2 Too^s (-evs?), 3 KaXerea (-ecus), 4 KovOvXtj
X
(-dev, -vXidrjs), 5 Kvdadrjvaiov* (-cu.evs), 6 Kvdrjpos (-pptos and -pios, mostly Roman),
7 Mvppivovs (-ovaios), 8 Ilaicu'ia /cat?.* (-ieus), 9 II. virev., 10 IipaaiaL (-tetfs),
11 n.poj3&Xivdos (-urios), 12 ^reipia (-ievs), 13 $>r)yaia (-aievs), 14 "Oa, "Oa
||
("ftat?ei>,
Oct-, Oi'a-, and,
"
Cockney," 'Oaieus, 'Oaei^s).
Leontis. 1 AldaXISai* (-1877s),
2
'AXi/xous(-crios), 3 Aeipa8iurrai
*
(-t??s), 4'E/caX?7j
(-dev), 5 EuTrupidai
(-8175), 6 Kt^ttos (-tios), 7 KoXi&yi; (-<?ez>), 8 Kpunrioai (-1877s),
9 Aev/cofOT? (-oetfs), 10 OIoj/, Kepa/meiKdv (e Oiov), 11 IlaioWdai (-L8r)s), 12 IIt^/ccs
(-77^,
rarely e/c II77X77*101'), 13 Hora/mbs /cat?, (-/uos), 14 II. virev., 15 IIoTa/i6s (-/uos,
AeipaSiwrTjs), 16 Zica/xpwvldai
(-1877s), 17 2oww

(-ieus), 18 'T/3d5ai (-877s),
19 QpeappoL {-ppios), 20 XoXXeiSai (-877s).
Acamantis. 1 'Ay^oOs

(-o-ios), 2 Eipecri8ai (-1877s, 'EpeaLdrjs and, Roman,
'Hoecr-), 3 Eirea
*
||
(-ea?os and, Roman, 'It-), 4 "Ep/xos (-eios), 5 Goprnds (-tos),
6
'I<pi<rnd8ai (-d8?7S, also 'H0urr-, 'H0orr.), 7 Kepa,uei/c6s (e/c Kepap-eW) , 8 Ke0aX^
(-0ei>), 9 KLkvvvo. (-vvevs), 10 KupreiSai (-877s), 11 II6pos (-10s), 12 npocrTraXra
J
(-10s), 13 S^TjTros (-10s), 14 XoAcuryos (-ei/s). IIorayu.6s is mentioned once (IG 11
1,
469) under Acamantis.
Oeneis. 1 'AxapvaL (-eiJs), 2 Bourd8ai
J
(-877s), 3 'EiriKricpLala (-igs), 4 Qpla
j|
(-doios), 5 'iTTTToro/idoai
f (-S?7s), 6 KoduKidou (-877s), 7 Aa/cid8ai (-877s, rarely e/c
Aa/cia8tDv), 8 Aowid (-ieus), 9 "O77 (-dev, 'Mjdev, Oir\dev), 10 Tlepidotdai
(-877s),
11 llTeXea (-doios), 12 Tvpp.el8cu

(-877s), 13 QvXr) (-Xdaios).


526 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. ATTICA: APPENDIX I.
Cecropis. 1"A6/j.ovov

(-evs), 2 Ai^tovq (-etfs), 3 'AXcu, Ai^wviKaL, Ai&vides ?


(-atetfs), 4 Aat5aAi'5cu
||
(-dys), 5 'E7net/a'dai (-S^s, and Roman 'EireiK-, 'Ettlk-),
6 MeAtTT;
t (-revs), 7 AvrreTr)
f
(-ratwv), 8 IIt#os (-etfs, also, Roman, Hirdeus,
Ihdeevs), 9 HvTraXyjTTds (-tos, 2i//3<xX-), 10 Tpti^/xeta {-eevs, -eteus, rarely -cue^s,
-o/xaieus), 11 $\va
X
(-^s)- In IG" u 2. 944, ca. 325/4 B.C., Kt/cwi/a is mentioned
under Cecropis.
Hippothontis. 1 'Afavia (-cevs), 2 'Afia^avreia (-revs, -reievs), 3 'A/xvp-uvri
(-veevs, -vauvs), 4
'
AvaKaia (-aievs, -aei/s), 5 Avpidat (-8r)s), 6 'AxepSoOs (-crtos),
7 Ae/ceXeta (-eevs, -etetfs), 8 'EXcuous
||
(-crtos, -eowrios),
9
'EXevert's (-aivios),
10
'Epotd-
5at (-5t7?), 11 Qvfj.aLTa.8ai (-drjs), 12 Ketptddcu (-5v;s), 13 KoiXtj
+
(e/c KotX?}s and
rarely KotXevs), 14 Koirpos (-eios and, Roman, -ios), 15 KopvdaWos

(-evs),
16 Oivbt)
%
(-vaios), 17 OIov, AeneXeiKov

(e' Ol'ov), 18 Ileipcuevs (lTetpatevs, Roman


and rare -teiJs, -evs), 19 IIoX
(?),
20 2<pev5aXr} (-dev).
Aeantis. l*A<pidva%\\ (-cubs), 2 Qvpycovidai
X
(Sr/s), 3 Kv/cctXa (-etis), 4 Mapa-
dtbv (-vios), 5 OtVo77
||
(-vatos), 6 HeppldaiX (-5^s), 7'Fap.vovs (-crtos), 8 Tira/ciSai

(-Siys), 9 TptKopvvdos
||
(-Actios), 10 SI/ac/>ts (-tcfys).
AntiocMs. 1 At'7tXt'a
X
(- ^s)> 2
'
AXcotreK-rj (-dev, and rarely -etevs), 3 'A/xc6t-
Tpoirrj (-dev), 4
'
Avd(p\vcrTOS (-ios), 5 'Ati^??
+

(-evs), 6 B?)cra
||
(-cuevs), 7 Et'rea
(-ecuos, and Roman 'Irecuos), 8 'JZpyadeh (-evs), 9 'Epotd5cu (-5t;s), 10 Gopatf
(-cuevs), 11 KoXtii'Tyt (-dev, not found in singular), 12 Kptwa (-evs), 13 Ae/v/coi^?),
14 AevKoirvpa (Aevnoirvp ), 15 MeXaivai
X
(-ei^s), 16 HaWrjvr] (-evs), 17 HevreX-qX
(-dev), 18 'L^fj.ax^o.L,
tcad. ? (-Stjs), 19 2?7p.., virev.l 20 'Qvppt.vrjcrcoi (-tos, 'f'v/w^crios).
Traces of a deme-name (Ae
- -
-) under Antiochis are found IG hi 1, 1138, 174/5
a.d. In IG in 1147, 190/1 a.d., occurs AevKo, in 1163, 201/2 a.d., AevK., in
1034, ca. 170 a.d., Aev-. These may be for AevKovo-r) or for AevKoirvpa.
Antigonis. 1 'AypvXrj, 2 AidaXidai, 3 YapyrjTTos, 4 AetpacHtDrcu, 5 EtT^a||,
6'1/captaJ, 7 KvdadrjvaLov, 8 AafxirrpaL, 9 Ilcucu/ta, Kad.l
Demetrias. l'ATTjvr), 2 06pat, 3'l7r7roroyud5cu, 4 Koduicidai, 5KoiXrj, 6 MeXtr??,
7 EvireTr} ; and possibly ' Ay^ovs.
Ptolemais. 1 AlytXia, 2 'A/cvcntis (-evs), 3"A0t5j>a
||
, 4 BepeviKidai, 5 BourdSat,
6 'E/caXiy, 7 E^ocrtSat (-cfys), 8 Qrj/xaKos, 9 Qupytcvidat,, 10 'I/capt'a, 11 KXw[7rt5cu]
([-8t7$]), 12 KoXwj/??, 13 Ko^X??, 14 Ki/5aj/rt'5at, 15 MeXau'cu', 16 Olvdrj, 17 Ilej/reX^,
18 ITepptScu, 19 IleraXtat (-tetfs), 20 IIp6(r7ra\ra, 21 Hrj/nax'-dai, 22 Ttra/cdcu,
23 'TTrujpeta (-a0e/), 24 <Xvd.
Attalis. 1 'AynvXrj, 2 'A7/ovs, 3 'AypvXrj, 4 "Adfxovov, 5 'ATroXXowtets (-tei;s),
6 'ATrjvrj, 7 KopvdaXXos, 8 OiV6tj||, 9 OIov, AeKeXeiKov, 10 ILpofidXivdos, 11 Soi/vtoi',
12 Tvpp.ei8ai.
Hadrianis. 1 'Avrtj'oets (-oei^s), 2 "A0t5^a, 3 B?7cra, 4 Aat5aXi'5at, 5 Et'rea,
6 'EXcuous, 7 0pta, 8 Oivor], 9 IIa/x./3 wrdSat, 10 S/ca/x/ScoftSat, 11 TpiKopvvdos,
12 Q-qyaia, 13 "fia, "Oct.
APPENDIX II.
COMPARATIVE TABLES.
INSCRIPTIONES GRAECAE.
CORPUS INSCRIPTIONUM ATTICARUM.
IGi = CIAi Ro. ii IGi = C1Ai Ro. ii IGi=CIAi Ro. ii IGi=CIAi Ro. ii
1 2 170-173 97 334 178 423 199
2 77 179 98 335 179 424 200
5 3 188 99 336 180 425 201
9 5 189a 99 337 181 433 359
18(
132
226/
106
339 185 442 360
W| 227} 340 186 463 363
31 8 240 107 344 187 464 364
32 10 260 108 350 191 467 365
33 12 273 109 351 188 468 366
37 17 274 110 355 189 469 367
40 15 283 121 374 192 498 332
45 18 298 114 381 193 501 333
51 23 301 115 392 194 502 334
56 22 319 116 395 195 507 336
59 24 322 117 398 196 517 338
61 25 324 118 402 197 521 342
96 16 333 177 422 198
IG I Suppl. =CIA iv 1 Ro. ii IG I Suppl. -CIA iv 1 Ro. ii IGi Suppl. =CIAivl Ro.ii
'
i
No. Page No. No. Page No. No. Page No.
3 1 2 51 507a 337 121 521a 343
10 27a 7 54 543 17 121 5216 344
13 33 12 57 la 1 121 521d 345
13 33a 13 57 16 132 126 61a 26
13 37 17 58 19 132 128 16 132
14 466 20 59 276 9 131 373
229
1
15 51 23 63 326 10 133 1 2
18 61 25 65 35c 14 137 18-19 132
18 61a 26 66 37 17 140 26a 6
22 96 16 66 53a 21 140 37 17
24 116/i 27 74 283 121 146 298 114
35 274 110 78 334a 178 164 la 1
37 298 114 79 337a 182 164 27c 11
40 344 187 90 373<
105
)
176 178 337a 183
40 355 189 105 422
4
391 181 373
95
191
41 373c 190 108 446a 361 185 422
14
175
44 392 194 112 469 367 : 189 477 368
44 398 196 119 492a 390 192 569 392
47 463 363 120 517a 340 192 570 393
47 469 367 121 5176 339 199
373*38
173
51 505a 335 121 519a 341
|
528 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. APPENDIX II.
IGii=CIAii Ro. ii
|
IGii = CIA.ii Ro. ii IG n=CIA ii Ro. ii
(i) 3 29 (i)Add. 1156 39 (ii) Add. 741 100
11 30 162 41 8416 84
17 32 4896 66 9866 165
38 31
54 33 (ii) 804 119
(iii) 1155 202
62 35 809 120 1170 204
112 34 814 122 1174 205
114 38 830 123 1179 206
115 40
839 125 1188 207
162 41 841 139 1194 208
163 42
859 144 1207 210
168 43
860 162 1212 211
172 44
861 163 1214 212
203 46
863 145 1217 213
235 48 864 148 1226 214
246 49 872 149 1229 215
247 50
876 395 1236 216
297 51 885 396
1242 217
308 58 886 397
1246 218
314 52
887 398 1250 183
316 53
900 399 1289 219
329 56 909 400 1295 220
331 55 943 151 1324 221
332)
57
945 152 1327 222
333
i
946 153 1360 224
334 59
947 154 1371 226
403 60 948 155 1383 227
408 62 953 156 1389 228
444 61
958 157
1406 235
467 65 959 158 1440 229
475 63 960 159
1449 230
476 64 962 160 1485 231
545 70 963 161 1504 232
546 71 965 169
1532 234
550 72 971a&6 170 1651 133
551 73 973 171 1654 134
553 74 978 172 1661 135
564 76 982 166 1665 136
570 78 985 167 1666 137
573 79 991 401 1673 3b2
594 82 992 402 1682 369
600 85 1054 126 1850 370
609
86 1055 129 2084 371
610 87 1058 130 2265 372
741 100 1059 131 2723 373
742
101
1077 347 2735 374
754 102
1098 351 2837 375
766
103 1103 352 2982 376
768 105 1134 353 3234 377
777
111
1137 354 3978 378
780
112 1138 355 4019 379
784 113 1139
1149
356
358
4112 380
(i) Add. 576 34 (iii) Add 1250 183
COMPARATIVE TABLES. 529
1Giiv = CIAiv2 Ro. ii IGiiv=CIAiv2 Ro. ii IGiiv=CIAiv2 Ro. ii
16 28 5916 81 1078a
1
349
576 34 597c 83 1078c 350
104a 36 6186 88 11396 357
1096 37 7676 104 11616 203
1796 45 8346 124 12056 209
192c 47 8416 84 12806 184
314 52 859 144 13356 223
3186 54 1054a
1
127 13636 225
475 63 1054/ 128 4321 410
5636 75 10746 346
572e 80 10786 348
I
IG iii=CIA in Ro. ii IG iii=CIA in Ro. ii IG iii= CIA in Ro. ii
(i) 2 67 (i) 428 309 (i) 1023 150
5 69 430 310 1165 164
10 68 457 311
16 89 462 313 (i) Add. 70a 237
22 90 466-469 314
38 93 479 315 (ii) 1424 381
39 92 529 316
1425a 382
48 94 532 317 1433 383
57 95 534 318
1445 384
61 96 541 319 3456 385
63 236 556 320
3486 386
74 141 564 321
3509 387
77 142 605 192
3545 388
78 238 613 322
3546 389
94 239 622 323
3822 403
106 240 623)
324
3823 404
114 241 624
\
3824 405
129 242 645 325
3826 406
140
162
243
244
702
735
326
327
166 245 769 328
CIA Append.
Defixionum
173 143 866 329
ed. Wunsch
239
240-300
246
247-307
886
943
330
331 43 407
409 347 1005 146 66 408
427 308 1014 147 109 409
CORPUS INSCRIPTIONUM GRAECARUM.
CIG Ro. ii CIG Ro. ii CIG Ro. ii CIG Ro. ii
5 3 82 78 118 69 156 109
23 187 84 31 123 64 157 100
28 367 86 30 124 63 158 122
70 77 93 129 128 206 160 117
71 2 102 79 139 97 162 112
736 5 103 131 143 17 165 359
74 12 108 81 147 99 170 360
76 10 115 56 155 102 179 208
R. II. 34
530 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. APPENDIX II.
CIG Ro. ii CIG Ro. ii CIG Ro. ii
1
CIG Ro. ii
180
I
145 356 94 522 308
181 146 357 319 523 142 Addenda
208 397 361 320 530 353
Vol.i
212 180 399 326 606 384
p. 176 78
213 74 432 330 851 376 p. 890 2
221 217 455 222 1037 181
p. 890 5
284 164 456 199-201 1688 70 p. 897 31
347 316 459 134 2910 89 p. 897 78
349 90 478 236 6969 378
p. 899 129
351 318 481 244 9303 387
p. 900 81
353 68 508 404 9313 388 p. 905 109
354 92 516 405
p. 906 360
355 93 513 406
p.
919 381
DITTENBERGER, SYLLOGE INSCRIPTIONUM GRAECARUM, ED. 1 & 2.
Dl D2 Ro. ii Dl D2 Ro. ii Dl D2 Ro. II
2 8 5 152 45 365 585 179
3 9 359 112 153 120

587 184
7 12 194 121 165 213 368 590 134
8 13 195 123 167 48

605 82

16 6 136 188 51

613 155
10 17 7 143 197 52 374 620 100
11 18 185 162 213 55

628 138
12 19 8 163 214 57

631 133
13 20 9

227 58 378 632 140
14 21 10 164 232 59 379 633 141
19

108 220 298 235 380 634 42
22 22 198 268 346 309 382 636 54
23 24 13 295 429 76 384 646 2
24 25 12

431 80 387 652 69
25 26 98 297 433 79 394 667 143

27 14 299 435 338 395 668 169


26 28 186 300 436 340

669 172
27 29 16 301 437 339 405 694 170
29

109

439 84 406 695 170
32 33 15 304 448 221 407 696 171
33 34 18 310 459 344 410 701 181
40 41 110 311 460 343

702 182
42 49 23 333 495 38

703 184
43 50 24 334 496 149 411 704 216
44 51 99 335 497 210 415 707 217
45 52 25 336 498 208

708 218
46 53 26 337 500 47 417 709 219

56 28

519 75 418 710 220
49 59 29 346 520 53 420 712 74
55 67 371 347 521 65 426

88
56 68 362 351 530 119

737 91

69 376

534 131 435 818 354
57 72 30

535 129

820 355
58 74 31 352 537 126

821 356
63 80 32

538 127 440 834 130
70 86 122

539 128
78 100 33

550 21
83 105 34 355 551 43 Add.
88 111 35 356 558 66 p.
641 122
105 137 39 359 568 139
106 138 40 363 582 237
COMPARATIVE TABLES.
MICHEL, RECUEIL DESCRIPTIONS GRECQUES.
531
M Ro. ii M Ro. ii M Ro. ii M Ro. ii
4 13 560 98 687 60 1009 73
6 30 561 109 690 66 1019 190
10 34 564 110 691 140 1020 179
70 7 569 99 692 142 1023 203
71 9 570 121 702 70 1025 208
72 8 571 117 743 351 1027 210
73 11 572)
118
744 346 1028 151
74 15 573
1
754 245 1029 205
75 10 574 19 810 132 1035 186
76 18 577 122 811 97
1036 221
77 19 578 127 817 104 1039 207
78 25 579 126 819 102 1040 209
80 28 580 44 821 103 1041 227
81 29 581^ 124 823 125 1042 228
85 31 597 359 824 100 1045 222
86 32 598 361 840 134 1049 195
94 33 599 362 860 247-307 1050 199-201
98 37 600 35 879 170 1051 194
99 40 602 119 880 169 1053 191
100 38 603 75 881 171 1057 231
104 33 604 120 884 61 1253 224
110 45 605 161 886 168 1254 202
114 47 607 53 915 180 1255 213
116 48 608 59 916 184 1259 225
123 51 610 65 921 217 1261 226
126 52 645 148 923 218 1264 235
129 55 648 149 925 219 1351 131
130 57 649 144 926 220 1354 129
136 74 650 163 929 191 1355 130
139 76 669 2 930 198 1357 85
140 78 670 3 931 182 1365 355
142 80 671 4 932 216 1367 354
143 79 672 133 941 215 1371 352
158 81 674 36 961a 84 1374 357
159 82 675 135 9616 84 1377 353
401 71 677 136 964 83 1378 356
556 106 679 42 970 88
557 6 684 54 979 87
558 114 686 139 988 141
HICKS, MANUAL OF HISTORICAL INSCRIPTIONS, ED. 1 & 2.
Hi H2 Ro. ii HI H2 Ro. ii HI H2 Ro. ii
4 1
9 10 190 38 50 121 52 69 20
27 12 178 39 51 12 55 72 110
19 26 359 40 52 13 56 74 24
23 32 5 41 53 98 57 75 23
24 33 106 42 54 360 62 82 29
28 40
7 36 55 179 68 87 362
29 41 8 45 59 186 69 88 371

46 361 44 60 15 82 104 122


33 47 114 46 62 109 119
x
15^ 396
37 49 10 47 64 17
119o 151.
2
397
342
532 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. APPENDIX II.
INSCRIPTIONS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM.
B.M. Ro. II B.M. Ro. ii B.M. Ro. ii B.M. Ro. ii
1 77
13 131 36 112 50 92
2 2 19 69 38 360 51 206
5 12 34 102 44 164 80 370
12 79 35 117 49 90 81 384
BULLETIN DE CORRESPONDANCE HELLENIQUE.
B.C.H. Ro. ii B.C.H. Ro. ii B.C.H. Ro. ii
ii 1878 x 1881 xiii 1889
p.
88 230
p.
262 d. 2 140
p. 171 114
p.
166 n. 62 385
p.
361 149
p.
253 75
p.
167 n. 65 388 Tab. 5 37 p. 433 36
p.
168 n. 66 389 vi 1882 xiv 1890
p.
391 219
p.
525 81
p. 177 6
p.
393 207
p. 540 126 xv 1891
p.
485 354 vn 1883 p.
136 48
Tab. in 3 389
p. 387 155 xvi 1892
Tab. in 4 388
p. 388 124
p.
299 168
Tab. in 7 385 viii 1884 xvin 1894
iv 1880 p. 194 124 p.
532 350
p.
225 9 p. 283 121 xx 1896
p. 260 208
p. 290 122 p.
84 141
v 1881 xii 1888
p.
194 37
p.
129 11
p.
260 145
p. 302 357
MITTHEILUNGEN DES K. DEUTSCH. INSTITUTS ATHEN.
Mitth. Ro. ii Mitth. Ro. ii Mitth. Ro. ii
11876
p. 237 207 p.
288 211
p.
171 18
p. 261 221 ix 1884
p. 174 367 iv 1879 p.
52 55
p. 184 7 p. 33 115
p.
117 1
p. 197 34
p. 36 366 xn 1887
p. 298 224
p. 79 119
p.
88 357
ii 1877 v 1880 p. 300 349
p. 150 71 p. 85 338-340
p.
325 209
p. 174 66 p. 284 235 xiii 1888
p.
243 230 vn 1882 p. 489 )
177
p. 249 136-7
p. 7 157 Tab. 9. lj
p. 253 66
p. 40 160 xiv 1889
p. 277 354
p. 96 152-4
p.
405 362
p. 277 358
p. 102 149 p.
410 2
[ii 1878
p.
102 205 xv 1890
p.
49 123 viii 1883 p.
420 132
p.
104 170
p.
34 182 xvi 1891
p.
112 171
p.
147 126 p. 153 179
p. 172 105
p. 171 211
p.
230 142
p. 236 219
p.
211 45
COMPARATIVE TABLES. 533
Mitth. Ro. ii Mitth. Ro. ii Mitth. Ro.n
xvn 1892
p. 179 127 p.
324 124
p. 193 57
p. 184 128 xxn 1897
xvm 1893
p. 238 80 p.
159 132
p. 209 346
p.
248 91 p.
345 394
p. 225 390 xx 1 895 xxni 1898
Tab. 10 390
p.
41 127 p. 466 1
xix 1894 xxi 1896 xxiv 1899
p. 163 19
p. 296 n. 2 233
p.
241 3
p. 174 n. 3 184
p. 320 9 p.
321 1
E$HMEPI2 APXAIOAOriKH.
'E<|>.
'Apx-
Ser. I
Ro. ii
'E<f>. 'Apx-
Ser. I
Ro. ii
'E<f>. 'Apx-
Ser. I
Ro. ii
'E<p. 'Apx-
Ser. in
Ro. ii
59 324 1401 158 3813 195 1883
p. 81 83
81
197
1819 212 3884 241 1883
p. 90 391
136 169 1839 170 4096 242 1883
p.
118 124
137 365 2079 215 1883
p. 146 n. 19 228
149 313 2113 159 1883 p. 253 124
170 169
2320 205
Ser. ii Ro. ii
1884
p. 319 232
209 313 2484 167 50 315 1885
p. 86 133
276 158 2488 167 106 314 1885
p. 213 183
295 214 2489 167 122 347 1888
p.
1 84
320 159 2567 213 125 314 1888
p.
25 36
363 323 2784 135 182 328 1888
p. 73 191
520 94 2876 212 184 314 1888
p.
113 36
725 151 3139 139 211 238 1890 p. 69 52
726 202 3722 403 415 96 1894 p. 35 9
757 195 3728 3 1895
p. 97 n. 12 138
1046 154 3769 196 p. 155 314 1895
p.
110 n. 26 329
1344 158 3799 207 p. 168 152 1897 p.
177 4
1400 161 3800 207 Tab. xxiii 152
A0HNAION.
'A6.
i
p.
5
i p. 169 n. 2
iiip. 262
iv p.
121
iv p.
122
iv p. 196
iv p.
201
iv
p.
218
v p.
76
v p.
101
v
p.
161
v p.
168
Ro. ii
402
216
60
351
352
148
237
162
7
34
229
16
'A0. Ro. ii
p.
329
p.
330
p.
417 n. 8
p. 152
p. 276
p. 367
p.
381
v
V
V
vi
vi
vi
vi
F
. u
vi p. 476 n. 1, 2
vii p. 388
viii
p.
405
x p. 524
136-7
220
231
37
219
219
156
171
210
9
361
534 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. APPENDIX II.
AEATION APXAIOAOriKON.
AeAT. 'A.p\. Ro. ii AeA/r.
'Apx- Ro. ii
1888 p. 55 173 1890
p. 92 132
1888 p.
118 1 1890 p. 103 n. 18 368
1888
p. 190 225 1890 p. Ill 368
1889 p. 6 114 Tab. iii. 4 368
1889 p. 90 175 1891 p.
126 203
1889 p.
151 175 1892 p. 48 59
1889 p.
254 6
LE BAS.
Lb. Ro. ii Lb. Ro. ii
Att. I 470 218
28 179 517 167
251 236 558 164
334 324 854 169
403 142 855 169
440 167 Mon. Fig.
458 181 xxxvii 2 44
EOBEKTS, INTKODUCTION TO GKEEK EPIGBAPHY, I.
Ro. i Ro. ii Ro. i Ro. ii Ro. i Ro. ii Ro. i Ro. II
34 390
43 367 56 190 69 359
35 189 45 1 64 177 71 198
37 365 47 191 65 3
38 366 52 188 67 192
APPENDIX III.
ADDENDA AND CORRIGENDA.
P.
1, no. 1. The text of this inscription, as restored by Judeich in Mitth.
xxiv 1899, is as follows ; and although it cannot be regarded as certain in all
details, it indicates the probable sense so well as to be worth quoting.
"E]8o^ep rw drj/xcp r[ov (s) 2]aXajo(ivi KaroiKOvvra
oUeiv id(s) SaXa/aW [Kai iro]\eiv [irapd 8 'AGtjvaCoi.-
ai TfeXjeiV /ecu crr/)ar[6V<r0]at
t[6v lavrov KXrjpo(p.)
p.-
j] /m[ctQ]ovv. 4d(/j.) /jl7] oiVfrj Ki ']o [kcItoikos roy KXirjpo-
v 5e [p.]icr0oi, d,7rort[viv to((x) fj.Lo-0ovp.ev6v re Kal t6(jji) p.-
Lddovvra 'e/cdre[pov to TCTpairXdonov tov p.io~0ov
is 5[r|]/x6crto[v, IcrirpaTTCiv 8e tov 6ki a-
px[
v
]
ra
'
&P [ttfAtXTJ, a]t)[Tov ocjScfXeiv; t-
d 5e ['JoVXa 7r[apX.O"]0a[t rj KaraBcivai
j T-
pid[K)oi>Ta : 5p[ax,fi.ds] o[s dv OcXtj, dir6 tovtw-
p 5 [t]6v
apx[VTa Ta< 'oirXa avT(3 irapi\-
iv\ [tt]i r?7s /3[ovXtJs Tqs irl
In e(s) ZaXa/wi/t (1. 1), kX%>o(/a) ju.77 (1. 3),
&c, the final v is first assimilated
and then the double consonant is written as single ; cf. ed(,u) ixr) (1. 4).
According to this restoration, the regulations refer not to new Attic cleruchs
in Salamis, but to the old inhabitants, who are allowed to reside and retain
their land under certain conditions.
P. 4, no. 2 A, 1. 43. Read rjris d' av.
,,
C, 1. 28. Dele tQv, which makes the line too long.
,,
,,1.
2932. The restoration here given, which is generally-
accepted, is inconsistent with the traces of letters on the stone. The first
letter of 1. 31 is T, and the first letter of 1. 32 is T ; and there are traces in 1. 30
inconsistent with 7repi/3]6Xa;[t. It follows that the topographical reference in iv
tcJj irepifi6\u> t<2 voTodev tov tt}s
'
Adrjvaias dpxo-lov velo 4/x irokei must be given up,
as all the essential words in it prove to be erroneous.
P. 11, no. 5, 11. 324. The following restoration is due to a suggestion of
Dr Wilhelm communicated to Messrs Hicks and Hill (H 32)
:
iav 5i tis ['a]Xw[t irpo-
8i]5ous to[i]s Tvpdvvois t7)/jl irokiv [t]Qv 'E/H'c9pat[w]>, /cat [avT]6s [v-
T]iroiV]t Tedvarw [K]a[l] iraTSes 'oi i$- ed[v] firj [oIkcC- (vel iiriTt)&iC<as)
us] ^xo^[tS kt\. Cf. BMI 3.
P. 19, no. 8, 1. 11. H reads /3ovi> bk Kal 7r[av'oirX|Cav. Cf. below, addendum
to 17 46.
P. 45, no. 17. The restoration of 11. 17 sqq. is given as follows in H 64
lav 8
'01
TTpvTavcts |at) If-cve'-yKcoJcn c^[s] tov dij/xov k . . . v
fj [jltj xpt](j.aTio-(oo-i ]7Ti cr[<}>]cDj/ avT&v 60[iXiv \iXtas 8pa\pds 'icpds rr\
1 'A0]77i/a[ia 'eKao-Tov twv ir]/)[vTavo)v Ka]i tcu[i] drjpioalip '[c^-qKOVTa rj v0vvo-0a>
pvpijacrt
1. 20. Spa\]/xT)[<ri 'eKao-Tos t<3v irp]vrct[vwv' /cat edv tis dWcos 5t[a)(ipoTovTJo-T)
TJ
V7TT] T)
p.1]
KT\.
1. 42. Kal tov[s l<ray<>>yias <rdye\.v irepi tovtwv
S
t]6 diKaaTrjptov.
1. 46. /3o[vv Kal iravoir]A[iav. (Cf. addendum to 8 11 above.)
536 GREEK EPIGRAPHY. APPENDIX III.
Three more fragments of the inscription have been identified by Dr Wilhelm;
see Jahresheft d. Oesterr. Inst., 1 Beiblatt,
p. 43. Add also to list of authorities
Bannier Rh. Mns. 54, 1899, p. 544 sqq.
P. 68. Note on no. 25 10. On the 0iAo/3acri\eis (Pollux vm 111) see Paton
and Hicks Inscrr.
of
Cos, no. 37, p. 85, where it is suggested that j3a<ri\els in the
phrase yepeacpopos fiacrikiwv may correspond to the <pv\oj3acn\eis at Athens and
reference is made to Aristot. Pol. vi
8, p. 1332 b, 26 sqq. Cf. also D 616
note 15.
P. 82, no. 32. Note on o-wrd^eis. Cf. BMI, no. 400 = Dittenberger Orientis
Graeci Inscriptiones, no. 1 (an edict of Alexander the Great), 11. 13 sqq.: ttjs
|
de ovvTaeo)s dcpirjfn rr\p\ Hpir)\v4o)/j. ttoKlv kt\., where D notes that Alexander also
appears to have used avvra^is in preference to the invidious term <p6pos.
P. 89. Remark v. An inscription with a list of ^ovXevral in Mitth. xxix
(1904) p.
244 (Kirchner) has a remarkably full list of officials, viz.
ypap.p.aTevs Kara irpvTavdav
ypa/uL/jLarevs Tip d-qpup
dvaypa<pevs
iirl rd \p7]<pi<xp.aTa
dvTiypa<pevs
Tapdas ttj f3ov\r}
rapiias tQv is to dvdQt)p.a
KTjpvi;.
The date is probably 3354 b.c. For this same time Arist. 'A0. IIo\. 54
says KXyjpovai 8e /cat ypap.p.aTea top /card irpyraveiav Ka\ovp.evov KXrjpodffi 8e /cat
ttI tovs vop.ovs erepov 6s TrapaKadrjTac ttj (3ov\r) yjeipoTovei 8e /cat 6 drjp-os
ypap.p.<xTea tov duayvoxxop-euov avTcp /cat ttj (3ov\rj. The second and third of these
seem to be equivalent to the e7rt rd \J/T)<pL<rpi.aTa (also called sometimes ypap.fAa.Tevs
T7js (3ov\t)s) and to the ypap.p.a.Tevs t< drjp.cp respectively. The inscription also
shows that not only the av
ay
pacpevs but also the avTLypa<pei>s was at least at this
time a distinct official. Pollux vm 98.
P. 128 (cf. p. 393). Remark vi. Pausanias (i 5, 5, i 6, 8, i 8, 6)
regarded
Ptolemy Philadelphus, who died 247 b.c, as the eponymus of the Ptolemais.
But Dr F. O. Bates {Com. St. vm 28 sqq.) argues that the actual year of the
foundation of the new tribe was 229/8 b.c, not 215, in honour of Ptolemy
Philopator, as stated on
p. 128, but in honour of Ptolemy Euergetes, husband
of Berenice, queen of Cyrene, who died in 222 b.c In 236/5 Phlya, which was
re-allotted to Ptolemais, is still under its old tribe, Kekropis. The same is true
for 233/8. Ptolemais, therefore, was not yet created. But in 229/8 we find
Ptolemais represented on the board of thesmothetae.
'
It was not till this date
that Athens was freed from Macedonia, and as this country was hostile to
Ptolemy it is inconceivable that the Athenians could have created a tribe in his
honour while they were still under Macedonian domination.'
P. 196, no. 70 34. Cf. DI 5403 (Ceos) : t
P
ltttvs and Bechtel's note, in which
the doubtful relation of irTolva (4264) to the Bhodian /crotVa is mentioned.
P. 236 and 241, no. 91. See Errata p.
xxiii.
P. 243, no. 91 134. Cf. DI 800 (Thespiae): "Opos ras
|
yds ras [ta]|/>ds twi>
<t[iij>]
|
dvrdiov rap:
\
Muxrdwi' EticrtoSetwi'.
P. 378, no. 132 26. In the left-hand margin insert 485/4 b.c
P. 385, no. 141 20. Cf. Tpdir[ei;av Koo-p.rjo-ai'] 155 2 and the verbs
Tpaireffiv,
'to place a banquet on the table,' Inscr. of Andania Mich. 694, 87 Sera Ka oi
dvovTes itotI to. updvq. TpairefavTL, and Tpa-rre^ovv DI 216 (Mytilene).
P. 441, no. 200. For the meaningless xoXovoSx^s tt)[i] N^j/0a Hiller von
Gartringen, Hermes 1904, p. 472, suggests, as the intention of the carver,
Xw\6(s)
6(p)xv
a
"
r
vi
s
]
Nw0a.
GREEK EPIGRAPHY Plate I
&
y
173
174
"V3X*|AnA^3^a3 HA^O^YvllA^AAeAl & A
si
An
A^nIAA/AAoT^IAT oV
> 3 *3 A A 3 3
176
187
190
GREEK EPIGRAPHY Plate II
394
GREEK EPIGRAPHY Plate III
Types of Post-Euclidean Alphabetic Forms.
/ ^ 5 4 5 s 7 8 9 /0 72 74 7J 16
A A A A
A A
A A A A A
A
& A A A
B B B
r r
r
A A
E E e e e E S E E
I Z
H
H
H
H
H H
O e
o
e e
1
I I
I
K K K
K
K
A A
A A
A A A
M M JA M JU,
M
M
M M
N N N /V
N
N
3E 2 S 3.
2 1
O
O
o
P P n n F V
IT IT
P
P
p
P
i
z c
s 2
c
S
i <
C
T
T
T T
Y T Y
Y y V V
*
<j>
+
t f 4>
+ $
<#>
I
9
*
X
X X
Y V
t
*
n o
n
0) LU

A
w
c^
/I
GREEK EPIGRAPHY Plate IV
Types of Post-Euclidean Alphabets.
a
7
8 e
t
V
e L K A
M
v

7T
p
a T V
|0 x Y
CO
"1
A B r A E I H o 1 K
K
A M N E o r p
z
T Y 4> X Y n
2
A B r A E Z H o 1 K A M N o
p
n
n
p z T Y <P X Y n
3
A
B r A E Z H I K AN
^^
o It
p
3
T Y * X YA
4-
A B r A E z H e 1 K A M N o TT p z TY 4> X
t
n
M r
1
i
5
A B r A E z H 1 K A M N J. o TT
It
p z TY <D X Y a
6
A
B r A
E z H o I K A
M N
N t
1
o P
n
p z T 4>
X t n
7
A B r A E Z H
e
I K A MH
>
<
>
(
o
TT p X T Y $ X YA
A M n
a
A
A
B r A E z H
o
1 K A M N 5 o TT
r
p
p
c
c
T Y
V
4>
X Y UJ
9.
A B r A e z l-l 1 K A XI N ^ o n p c T Y 4) X Y 0)
10.
A B r A E z H e 1 K A M N
I
o n p c T Y 4> X Y LU

/V
11
A B r A E z H o 1 K A M N z o TTR c T y X
Y
0)
A e A
3-
c Y
4)
A
e
M I
12.
A B r A z H 1 K A A\ N 2 o TT p c T Y
<t>
X t 00
A A K
M
i n|P
-X = 1 //-/,,.
Symbols in No 96. $>
A
r = * + , = 3
dfrf
-
=
y
"

denarius AP G
-) =
5
+
i
+
i. = 7
ad P
36
6 36 72 8
^4"*
"
^ =j q = kop
P
a=dO
C
=
4
" apat=/+j.=i /A
= <w
INDEX.
Note,
y
appears under
g
; e and rj under e ;
spiritus asper under h
;
F under
/; f
under z; d under th
;

under
#
; o and w under o;
9
under
g
;
<p under ^/t
; x
under ch
; ^
under ps. Numbers in Clarendon type refer
to the numbers of inscriptions ; numbers in italics to lines of inscriptions,
lines of verse authors, or sections of prose authors ; numbers in plain type
refer to pages. In every case the number before that of the page is in
Clarendon type or italics. A + denotes that the word occurs more than
once in the inscription referred to.
a, forms of 4, 28 72, 29 75 76, 36 94,
39 108, 47 124 132, 87 231, 124 354,
126 361, 131 375, 139 383, 145 393
395, 149 398, 150 401, 156 408, 192
439, 204 443, 210 446, 228 454, 235
457, 237 458, 239 460, 245 466
;
re-
version to archaic forms of 198 441
abbreviated heading of inscription 93
245
abbreviations 89 234 281, 111 310, 112
312, 123 353, 124 354, 129 372
;
'
A
X
ap.
45 47 120
;
pov\y tQi> .
X
. 67 10 183;
povXi] tG>v
<f>.
68 27 185, 69 37 189
;
'BXeuo-i. 45 3 122; in deme-list 401
517; inventory lists 288; late ap-
pearance of, in decrees 93
;
marks
of 103 281, 143 390 401 403, 164 419,
384 511 ; marks of punctuation after
111 309; in demotics 35 6 93 158
340 341 ; of names 164 418 ; various
marks of 146 18 394 ; various 119 171
428
'A/3%htcu 32 B 3 80
d/3o\oi, TrcDXot 172 11 430
Academic philosophers and the family
of Attalus 457
acanthus-pattern in Erechtheum 334
accidence, erratic 240
accountability of magistrates 16
accounts, Eleusinian 196 ; examples
of 60 80 161 ; kept on in-vaiua 26
;
public 256 257
;
public stele con-
taining 115 315
accusative, forms of 130 19 25 375
;
in s-stems 53 28 138
;
in -rjv from s-
stems 130 19 375;
plural, forms of
387
Achaeans, alliance of, with Athens 34 91
'AxapviKT) 7r6\r] 96 35 253
'Axviddat 227
Acropolis, certain tribal assemblies
held on 207 ;
building for police of
13
;
priestesses not to bake on 378
;
siege of 323 ; topography of 9
;
vessels restored to, by Lycurgus
113
;
weights kept in 64 54 176
Acts xvi 12 62
;
xvii 513
;
xxiii 24
251 ; xxv 13 482
additions, later, to inscriptions 58,
227 454
a8eta 10 B 17 33 ; vote of 263
;
when
necessary 306
ddricpayos 169 b ii 6 426
Adiabenicus (Severus) 187
adiKdav 94 43 251
&8Lk7]IJ.ol avvreXeiv 204
admirals censured 31 79
Adonis 473
adopted person belongs to deme of
father 512
adovciaaaaOcu 65
;
(0uX^s) 57
'Adovaios ('Adocnos) 21 3 57
'A5pt.a.i>6s etc., see under H
Adrianis, 13th tribe, when formed 184
expressions, ttjv apiar^v 14
LD
adverbial
19 38
Aeacidas, son of Arybbas 111
Aegiua, list of men fallen in war
359 498
;
stele sent from 70 191
Aeginetan mina 175
Aeginetan standard of coinage 195
Aegos Potamos, battle of 60 74 332
deicpvyia 5 30, 122 135 351
deiaiTot, late date of 188 ; list
(diViroi) 188
;
priestly and lay 188
dtxwv 5, 25 17; &kuv 25 34 67
of
R. II. 35
546 INDEX.
Aelian,
fr.
11 152; Var. H. vi 1 18
Aenianes, hieromneinons of 204
Aeschines, c. Ctes. 138 84, 68 102,
497 sqq. 195, 27 207, 41 221, 109 231,
67 269, 23S 341, 25 363 ; c. Timarch.
107 35, 222 93, 202 106, 121 312,
96 373
;
F. L. 337 49, 61 102 107,
267 179, 133 354 ; school kept by
161
Aeschylus, Agam. 226 7, 1655 503;
/m^m. 240 279, 210 286; Persae
&2 503
;
as cborodidaskalos 170 a 6,
f
13 428
Aesculapius, ritual of, transferred from
Epidaurus to Athens 182
;
temple
of, in Kos 161
Aetolian League, official style of 200
Aetolians and Demetrius, war between
144
aeTdifxa, aierbs 365
'
'
Ae^wvets, decree of 452
dfvrdp 368 506
dyaX/na 38 19 104 ; to bpBbv 102 42 280
dyaX/naroTToiKov 118 c i 23 329
'Ayd/xeia
('
AydfiTi) 57
Agamemnon of Aeschylus, di8a<jKa\la
prefixed to 428
dyadrj
tijxv 38 6 103 ; offering made
to(?) 4l'ce 19 112
Agathocles, expedition of, against
Carthage 127
ayeiv (intercalate) 27; (of weight) 60
86 160
dyeXaioi of Lyttos, oath of 153
dyevtLot. 166 424
'AyKuXr), divided deme 400
dyCov Kaivbs (rpaycpbQv) 55 76 142
dyibvoLS 72 17 200
dyuvodeaia 134
dyuvoderris 219 2 450, 220 2 451, 322 5
483 ; annual 134 ; Aiovvaiuv 238 3
459 ; elected by brjimos 435 ; of
Panathenaea, dedication by 237 458;
of Qrjaeta, services of 613 162
;
ru>v
T7js 2e/3acrT^? dydovoov 187
dyopd 87 16 233 245 ; i/x HeipaeT, decree
concerning 47 124
;
ecpopia 25 27 69
exclusion of homicide from 22 27 67
gift of, to deme Sunium 80 5 216
Kvpia 205 ; of thiasotae 88 8 234
; of
deme 211, 79 10 215 ; building in,
forbidden 80 17 216
;
stele set up in
80 24 216; of Salamis, decree to be
set up in 82 35 218 ; of Sunium,
boundaries of, defined 80 8 216
;
stele placed in 59 24 155, 65 56 +
177
;
votes counted in 84 86 224
dyopai, tribal assemblies 206
dyopdv iroLeiv 76 23 210
dyopavdfXLov 47 11 + 125
dyopavbfjLoi 167 E i 36 422
;
duties of
47 25+ 125; funds at the disposal
of 47 15+ 125; number of 416
dyopavbjuos (ephebic) 147
'Aybparos, reward of, for assassination
of Phrynichus 65
dyoparpoi 73 8 204
dyopdfew 80 14 216
'Aypal, procession to 179
dypdcpov /uLerdWov 5Lkt} 312
cu, change in jjronunciation of 188
;
= e 244
; date indicated by 285 474,
150 iii 11+ 403
AldvTtia 65 24 177, 82 32 220
Ai'as, sacrifice of ephebi to 65 25 177
aldecracrdcu 25 13 68
aid 24 33 64
aleraios {Xidos) 117 ii 73 326
at Ka 70 19+ 192
Mvlol 32 B 7 80
-ais, dative plural in 306 ; indicative
of date 31
dtaeiToi (deicr.) 150 i 9+ 402
-cucri, -rjai, latest examples of 58
;
datives in 42
diatTos 56 41 147 149
'AiaaxvXos 196 3 440
dircc^ta, dedication of 244 464
Aixonean deme, 40 years lease granted
by 129 372
dKaju-rrias, aKafxirros, dKdfiinos (sc. dpb-
fios) 61 81 165 167
'Anapvaves 32 B 10 80
'A/ceo-u* 133 A 6 380
dKivdKat 97 9 260
'A/c/crioccrt 135
dxoKovdoi, sacrifice offered by to Ar-
temis 135 2 381
dKOPTLo-Trjs (ephebic) 146, 65 52 111
aKovrifav d<p' 'ittttov, contest at Qrjcreia
167
aKpodaeLs, attended by ephebi 65 36 111
dKpowbXv 39 29 110, 41 ab 13 113
aKpocrrbXiov, dedication of 134, 60 72
160, 237 7 458
dKporeXevTLov of oracle quoted, Thuc.
ii 17 28
'AktIttis {Xi9os) 124 29 358, 126 26 365
Albani, villa, illustration of torch-race
at 426
Alcamenes, M. Aur. 68 13 187
Alcetas, son of Arybbas 111
Alcibiades 63 ;
capture of Selymbria
by 70 ; confiscated property of 308
309 ;
influence of, in doubling tribute
49 ;
operations of, on the shores of
the Hellespont 503
Alea 51
dXeicpeadat 65 33 111
dXei(po[iei>oi, oi 82 6 219
Alexander, frees the cities of Asia
Minor 84
;
(of Macedon ?)
crowns
INDEX. 547
presented to 100 A col. 3, 5 272
;
edict of 536
;
patron of QerraXds,
actor 429
;
the Great 111
Alexander, of Pherae 88 ; son of
Craterus, contest of Salamis with
217; son of Neoptolemus 111
Alexandria, description of, by Calli-
xenus 365
;
(Egypt), intercourse of,
with Laodicea by tbe Sea 480
Alexias, archonship of 28 6 74
'AX/ce'ra? 32 B 13 80; king of the
Molossi 83
'AXKLfxaxos, irdpebpos of archon 54 19
139
dXXrjXov, use of, in singular 126 58 366
alliance, relating to decree 34
90
;
naval 92
alliances : see treaties ; Athens and
Ptolemy Philadelphus 57 19 151
;
Lacedaemonians, Athenians and
(xv/x/xaxoL 57 8 150
;
with Achaeans
57 24 151 ; with Areus 57 26 + 151
;
with Caphyeans 57 25+ 151; with
Cretans 57 25+ 151
;
with Eleans
57 23+ 151; witli Mantineans 57
24+ 151; with Orchomenians 57
24 + 151 ; with Phigalians 57 25 +
151 ; with Selymbria 70
;
with Te-
geatans 57 24+ 151
allies, reassessment of the, in fourth
year of Olympiad 41
aXXoi deoL, oi, sums borrowed from 306
d\V &v 70 10 192
alloy in Greek bronze coins 370
alphabet, Attic, imperfect use of 191
438
;
periods of xi ; date indicated
by 2 4 7 9 11 13 20 25
;
of Chios
438 ; of varied forms 242 462, 238
459
;
post-Euclidean xiii sqq.
;
re-
markable variety of forms in 164
418
;
varieties of 246307 467 sqq.
alphabets, not conforming to one type
235 ; types of, Plate in,
p. 541
a\(p
v
21 15 58
aXcpLra ireXavos 27
altar-slabs, inscribed marble used as
10 28
altar- stone, inscription on 165 417
altar-table, base supporting 7
ambassadors appointed 121
d/me^ofxevos 128 9+ 370
'Afxeivias, KovjXTjTrjs 53 24 136
amendment of decrees 16, 42 7 114,
84 68 226, 343
"A/xuojy, early recognition of, 100 A a 32
270
Ammonius 72 365
'AfAopytitos 102 2+ 279
Afx6pyioL 32 B 28 81
Amorgos, archaic inscription of 138
;
important lease from 373
dfnrexovou 70 27 192, 100 18 279
d/xireXoi, care for, stipulated in lease
229
'Aficpiapaos 41 c e 21 112
Amphiaraus, games of, at Oropus 394
;
temple of, at Oropus 161
;
worship
of 106
'ApLcpacTioves 73 23+ 201
'AfX^LKTLOVlKds 70 6+ 194
1
A/A(plKTl6vU)V KOLVOV 73 41 201
'AfupiKTvoves 33 17 86, 352, 70 16 194
;
assaulted 122 135 351
'Afj.<pLKTvovs 'Ad-rjvaiuv, inscriptions re-
cording transactions of 121 345
Amphictyon 195
Amphictyonic Council 204 ; decree,
Attic date quoted for 191
Amphictyons, Delphian 109
; duties of
196 ; kolvov of 191 ; letter of 73 233
;
oath and imprecation of 231 ; secre-
tary of 70 191
Ampbictyony, Delian, accounts of 257
;
Delphic, decree of 70 191
a/j.<pL8eai 100 B c 4 274
d/j.(piTripi5es 91 43+ 237
ampbora, sepulchral, inscribed 506
amphorae, of oil as prizes 169 b i 6 +
425
;
striped, placed in tombs 507
;
striped, not inscribed 507
dfxcpopevs 93 47 246
d/xvy8aXai
x^
w
P
a
'
L 64 26 175
;
(ijrjpai)
175
Amynos, and Asklepios or Hygieia 457
;
sanctuary of 233 456
dv, position of 10
dvadexecOat- 119 A a 65 337
dvayvwaTTjs, sepulchral inscription on
an 389 513
dvayopevcns arecpdvov 52 67 133
dvaypcupi) 64 50 173 ; of documents by
ypapL/uuxrevs rijs (3ovXr}s 9 49 25
dvaypacprjs 25 68
dvaypacpevs 47 1 125 536; two kinds 89
dvaipeiv (of oracles) 36 50 95
dvaidrjKa 143 7 390
dvaKadaipeadai 364
dvctKadapcris 124 19 358
'AvaKeia, 'AvaKia 78 6 213
'Avdneiov 213
"AvtxKes 213
dvaxpto-is 84 72 223
dvaxpoveiv 334
dvaXa/u.f3dvetv 126 9 364
dvdXrjfM/uLa 124 17 355
dvaXivaas, avrfXibaas 82 8 16 219
dvapxia, 77 79, 147 6 395
'Avdppvais (Apaturia) 226
dvaad^Lfxa 112 13 312
dvacrd^ipLov /j.eraXXov 348 493
dvao-Tptcpeadai 83 7 220
;
(conduct one's
self) 65 95 178; (return) 65 24 177
352
548 INDEX.
dvaarpocpd 72 8 199
dvaredrjKOTLov 60 38 159
dvddrjtxa etc. 9 41 24 ; 38 <S+ 103
avadruuLara 256
dm^ecrij/ iroi-qaaadai 66 .20 181
avxeV-o-X01 421
anchorage -places, boundary stone
marking 342 492
ancon 326
Andaman mystery inscription 12 536
Andocides, Be Myst. 15 32, 17 386,
35 308, 45 376, <S2 68, 53 291, 84 68
289, 94 68, 96 5 68, iJ6 27, 121 190,
i7 226, 132 6 ;
De .pace 7 14, 9 49
;
Be red. 24 21
;
(Pseudo-) c. Alcib.
11 49
'Avdotidris (orator) 74 col. 2 21 207
avdpes (agonistic) 424
;
and 7rcu5es in
contests 207
"Av5
P
iol 32 B 16 80
"Avdpui, 6 apxuv 6 iv 35
'
AvdpoviKos 6 QerraXos 33 16 88
"Aydpos 35 7 93 ; commissioners from
352
;
garrison maintained in 93
;
purchase of
dpxv
in 35
Aiulrotion, speech of Demosthenes
against 101
ave[o 386
dveirretv arecpavov 52 61 133
Anemaeae 196
dverriypacpos 60 68 160
dvemrrjdeiot. arrjXai 32 A 35 80
aveTTLrifxriTos 131 7 376
dve\}/Loi, rights of, in prosecution for
homicide 25 22 67
dv\}/iCov 7ra?5es, rights of, in prosecutiug
for homicide 25 22 67
dve\p(.0Tr)s 25 15 67
d^ep^a 104 4 286
dvtdrjKav, dvedeaav 417
dvdr,Kt, ellipse of 60 35 161
dvedeaav, dvedrjKav 180
di/e<?e'0i7 9 44 26, 27
averos 36 30 95
di/o^oAc^etV 99 a 20 266
dvofxoXoyr/pLa 99 a 17 266
flftfa 325
;
inscription on 93 245
Antalcidas eludes the Athenian fleet
79
;
Peace of 77 83 84
avrapx^v 68 13 187
Anthela 204
dvdiepevs 91 9+ 236
Anthologia Palatina 6 138 439
dvde^iov 103 31 284, 117 i 47 324
avdenov 116 5 317
dv8lit itacta 269
d^Traros 187
;
93 55 246
'Avrcyovls, tribe, duration of 128; list
of demes transferred to 526
'AvTiyovos 50 16 130 ; defeat of, at
Ipsus 52 18 132 ; fleet of 144
Antigonus Gonatas 134 217 ; war with
217 ;
words relating to, erased 143
dvTiypd<peadai 124 12 355
dvTiypa<peus 62 2 168, 355 536; drj/noaios
161
;
(late) 68 hi 14 186 ; of deme,
functions of 205
dvriypa^ov 73 51 202, 79 8 214, 84 21
222, 118 c ii 32 329
di>TiKr)pv 68 9 186
dvTiKoci*r)Tr)s 147 187, 164 iv 9 419
dvrlfiopos 117 i 6 324
Antiochus I Soter, letter of 2
Antiphon, de Chor. 11 435 ; speeches
of, concerning tribute 17
' AvTio-<ra7oL 32 B 20 80
'Avria8hy\% 74 col. 4, 7 207; 'O770-1-
<puvTos Teidpdo-Los praised 56 5 148
dvTHjTpaTr\y0% 187 188, 323 7 484
dvriQr)\xara 324
Antoninus Pius, decree dating from
89 235; full titles of 90 5 235;
games instituted by 463
; statue-base
of 316 480
;
titles of 316 480
dvvTrepdtTtos 142 74 388
aorist and imperfect interchanged 74
5 206
;
marking single action 51
;
unique use of 117 7 323
drrdyeiv, of tribute 17 33 46
;
(<pbpov
etc.) 21
drravyekiai, KaipcKai 328 8 488
drravrpoKV 124 25 358
aTrapairriros 93 56 246
d7rapxcu 106 a 2 293
;
dedicated to
Athena 288; inscriptions containing
lists of persons conveying 167 421
;
paid to Pythian Apollo 421 ; conse-
cration of, to goddesses of Eleusis 25
drrapxas drrdyovres 167 2 422
; dirohi-
bbvai 167 E i 16 422
dirapxr) 26, 41 c e 18 112 ; as compen-
sation for use of Opisthodomus 33
;
dedication of 41, 109 7 299, 197 470,
188 437 ; (errapxr)) 359
;
{rr, UapdhJ)
23 48 63
drrdpxto-Oai 9 4+ 22
Apaturia 225
diretpos 104 16 286
drreidia of tax-farmers 92 2 244
drrehevdepos as agent 93 1 7 245
apex-writing xv sqq.
dcpaipeladaL \J/r]<pi<T/j.a 8 A 22 21
dcpavi^etv (fiirpov) 64 5 171
d(pe5piarevu> (dtptdpijoo), Boeotian 183
d(pec\rj(p6Tas 23 20 62
dipeiprjuevris 100 B c 7 274
d(peipedri 104 35 286
d^r/ais 100 B c 7 274
dcperr/s 147, 65 53 177
d<pL5pv/uLa 66 13 181 ; significance of
66 13 182
dcpiardvai (weigh) 128 27 371
INDEX. 549
'AfpodeLrri 91 124 243
'
AippodLaia 78 5 213
AcppodurtaKov, epyacrTTjptov (mining) 112
5 312
Aphrodite, boundary-stone of rip.evos
of 346 493; rj-ye/jLovr], dedication to,
by /3ovXrj 203 21 443
; foundation of
temple to 43 11 + 116
;
gardens of
109 78 307 ;
Ovpavia, dedication to,
by woman of Citium 116 ; statue of,
dedicated 244 464
;
the, of Calamis
440
apices xv sqq., 164 419
aplustre 134 162
'Airo., abbreviation 164 i 16 421
airbda^iv iroLeicrdaL rrj (3ovXrj (ephebi)
65 42 177
airodexTai 31 17 79, 37 43 100, 120 a
35 345
;
functions of 39 45 110
;
introduced by Cleisthenes 10, 58
;
rare mention of, in inscriptions of
5th century 58
dTroSt/cdfeii/ 84 22 225
dirodoi 91 102 242
dirodovvai, use of 340
airoypacpr), compulsory, in oil for ex-
port 93 20 246
;
ttjs owlets 64 14 171
aTToypdcpeaBcu 84 117 224, 93 11 245,
112 11 312; as law term 310
diroypdxpaadai ((pvXyjs) 65
diroiKia (decree of colonisation) 20
;
sent to Brea 8 19
airoiKt.ap.6s 21
cLTroiKiaTaL 8 A 5 21
dTOKTjpV^LfXOS 64 5 171
diroKocrpeiv 381 9 510
diroKreivoj 17
d7ro/cua
/
ueui' 5 li 12, 10 A 13 29
diroXaftelv, use of 340
Apollo Erithaseus, edict of priest of
139 383
Apollo, joined with Leto and Artemis
in oaths 70 8 192 ; Pythian, precinct
of 438
;
rites of 452
; sacrifices to
133 A 4 380; temple of, at Hali-
carnassus 36
Apollo-worship 421
Apollodorus of Megara, accomplice in
assassination of Phrynichus 24 40
66
'AiroXXwv, JJapurjo-aios, worshipped by
EZ/tadets 86 24 230; Uarpipos 227;
Hpo<rTa.Tr)piu), sacrifices to 62 9 168
;
IIMios, goat offered to 138 a 8 382
'A-n-oWwvia 78 8 212
Apolloniates erect statue to M. Aure-
lius 481
'AttoXXuvlos, decree in honour of 37 99
Apollonis, queen 204 443
Apollonius Rhodius i 425 179 ; SchoL
in 847 270
dir6\oyLcrp.bv 4u ttj fiovXrj 65 90 178
d-rroXoylfro-dai 56 16 148, 61 18 163, 82
19 218
dwopiadovu 4 A 6+ 9, 6 10 13, 21
6 55, 24 34 64
;
(iroAelu) 9 5i 27
dwcxpaiva, of accounts 106 a # 292, 108
7 299
dirocpao-is 94 4,2 251
d-rroxj/rjcplteo-dat. 84 5i + 225
a7rocr/cofTXouj' 381 _Zi 510
dwoaTaalov diKrj, dedication following
288
diroo-ToKeh, election of 345
dirdo-ToXos 120 b 11 + 345
diroTipdv 494
diroTip.7]p.a 131 4 376, 494
dirovaia 162
dTro-^e?^ 359
appeal, against assessment of tribute
51 ; examples of 226
;
of allies to
Athens 16, 17 ; to eKKXrjaia in as-
sessment of tribute 291
Appia Regilla, inscription in honour
of 446
Appian Mithr. 41 364, 38 482
dxpvx^v (5t'/cat) 68
dirvpos 104 17 286
dpdpduros 117 i 55 324
Arabicus (Severus) 187
Aratus bribes Diogenes, cppoupapxos 180
arbitration between cities 4 71 154
'Ap/ca5ta, fortress in Zacynthus 85
Arcadians, alliance of, with Athens 34
91
dpxai, at rerrapes 256 ; tribute paid to
290
dpxouov, to, principal 2 C 31 6
apxca-peaiat 31
archaism, affected xvi, 199-201 442
dpxv,
i? in tribute-lists 32
;
in Andros,
purchase of 35 ; = logistae 295 ; term
of office of raplaL 109 14 30
Apxtpios 44 8 117
Archedamus (Archedemus) of Thera,
inscriptions in Doric and Attic bv
199-201 442; 35 17 93
'Apxe5i/cos 47 1 124
dpxenx, rd 57 45 152 153
apx^oy 63 21 170
"Apxep^os of Chios, sculptor 191 438
;
family of 438 ; sculptor of Delian
Nike 438
'Apxeo-rparos (<ttparrjy6s) 7 70 18
dpxi(3a.KXos 91 13+ 236
Archinus, decree of xiii ; reforms of,
in writiug 523
architect, pay of 333
architects, Callicrates 9. 13 ; Ictinus 9
dpxLTeKTw 9 11 23, 19 17 53, 117 i 2
318, 124 11 356, 128 29 370
;
eni rd
iepd 60 29 159
550 INDEX.
dpxt-TKToves 10 B 9 30
apxdtupos 167 2 422
apxwv, and eTTLardT-qs, variation in
order of names of, indicating date
14 38
;
(BaaiXevs, at the Mysteries
6,
functions of 9 58 25, 21 6+ 56, in
cases of homicide 68, lists of 144
391, 145 393, sets boundaries 9 54
25 ; iTTLb-qpLLos 452 ; iird>vvfxo<i, func-
tions of. in intercalation 27 28, in
regulating calendar 169, in decrees
3, lists containing 146 394
;
(yevovs)
227; rod yevovs 69 35 189; Herald
of 146 17 394; varepos, archon suf-
fectus 144 ; inscription on seat of,
in Dionysiac theatre 286 470
;
name
in choragic dedications 434
;
name
of Attic, in Delphian decree 70 1
191 ; name supplied from space
available and historical conditions
14 3 38
;
of ephebi 327 15 487 ; of
the Eumolpidae 190; of TerpdiroXis
221 3 451; polemarch, functions of
30 10 77, lists of 144 391, 145 393
;
(president) of Panhellenic contest
187 ; title of Athenian governors of
allied states 35 ;
with father's name
added 66 1 181 ; written in com-
pendium 143 3 390
archons,
'
AyadoKXerjs 35 1 92 ;
Alexias
28 6 74; 'AAkcuos 170 a 8 427;
'Afivvlas 109 37 300
;
Anaxicrates 219
450
;
Anticles 151 1 402
; 'AptlkX^s
45 2 119
;
Antigonus 38
; 'AprtyiXos
144 54 392 ; 'Avrapup 21 3 55
;
'A^etf-
8r]s 98 1 + 260, 121 22 346, 12 4, 13
8 36 37
;
'Apapiavos 69 2 189
; 'Apxias
102 24 277, 215 2 449; "Apxitnros 131
1 375 ; Argeios 178 ; 'ApicrrLiop 52,
18 6 51, 106 a 3 294, 108 2 298;
'ApLtTTodTjfAos 36 12 94 ;
'
ApcarbXaos
61 4 162; 'Apio-rocpwv 45 32 120;
Callias 437; Callimedes 154; Xai-
pwj/Sas 103 29 282; Charias 183 436;
~X.apiK\eL8r]<> 91, 33 I 86 ; XapLaavdpos
122 6 347 ; X,-W 216 449 ;
Ctesicles
118 A 1 340 ; Kt^ikX^ 75 27 208,
100 A a 5 + 268 ; <S>\. Ak^j^s 68 I
184 ; AlokXtjs, Alok\7js 25 2 66 128,
125 2 360, 144 13 391 ; Aio/jl5wv 144
d 15 393, 59 3 155, 88 7+ 233;
Aiopi/o-ios 63 1 169, 203 443 ; Aton^os
134, 127 2 367 ; ApvavTiavbs 69 3 188
;
'~ExeKpd-T7]s 65 5+ 176; ^Eirap.eipwp)
14 3 38; Epaphroditus 91 2 240;
Epicles 82 1 217; Ergocles 82 5 +
218 ; 'Epyoxdpys 144 34 392 ; Etfafre-
ros 119 B b 41 339, 217 449 ; Eipov-
Xidrjs 123 2 353, 371 507
;
EtipovXos
55 58 142, 102 34 277 363, 129 19
371; Euclides 72 75 206; Evkt^wp
134 332, 52 13+ 132, 51 I 130;
EiHpLXrtros 144 23 392; Eu'fltas 52 1
132 134 ; EvdvK
P
LTos 45 71 121
;
Etidvvos 109 <5 360; Euej/i7T7ros 354
496
;
TXafaiinros 99 a I 264, 23 6 60,
24 1 + 64
;
"Aj3pa> 170
/
14 427
;
'l^o-ias 86 22 230; 'H/jd/cXeiro?
144 33 392, 210 2 446
; 'iTTTroSd/zay
122 3 347; "laauos 134, 52 39 133;
"lo-apxos 109 25 301 ; KaXXeas 122
2 347
; KaXXifxa
X
os 102 7 276
;
Kr}<f>i<r68(i)pos 363
;
Kr]<pi(ro<pu>p 124
J 359; Kf/Awi' 55 31 141; K6pot/3os
49 i, 50 2 129; Kpdr??? 115 6 315,
121 14 346 ; Aea>x<W 144 14 391
;
A\j<Tap5pos 66 2 + 181
; Avaiddrjs 66
28 182, 156 I 408 ; Av<rifia
X
l5ris 103
1<S 282, 212 447
;
M
v
8eios 65 2 + 176,
209 445; Mez/e/cXeT/s 53 7+ 135;
MePKpdT7)s 144 cZ 5 392
; Metrodorus
460; Mr)Tpo<pdvr}s 62 2 168; MoXwp
34 I 90
; MvarixLdris 205
;
USawiviicos
32 A 2, 35 80 ; N<*cuxaws 47 2 124,
218 2 450; Nt/cT^s 100 A c 5 270,
144 44 392 ; Ni/das 445, 53 1 135,
54 J 7 139, 55 20+ 141; NikokX^j
355 496; ^LKOKpdrrjs 43 2+ 115, 100
A a 29+ 269, 119 A 4 335 ; Nu-6-
juaxos 171 16 428, 149 1 398 ; ITapd-
Atoj/os 63 2 169 ; n0i5?7,uos 57 2 150
;
$>iXhtt187)s 239 2 460 ; ^tXo/cXe'^s 170
/
3 427; ^op/mew 84 20+ 227; *ptf-
7iXos 119 B b 51 339; Polyeuctus
220 ; Praxagoras 150 i 2 401 ; llpa^i-
(3ovXos 55 10 140; Procles
178;
Ilvdeas 70 2 194; Uvdodoros 38 2
+
102
;
Bhoematalkas 461 ; ^wxpaTidris
122 57 349; Sosicrates 214 1 447;
2uaiye'p7)s 158, 166 2 417
; Swo-iVrpa-
ros 220 2 451
; Srparo/cXeT/s 17 45 49,
109 27 300; T. Coponius Maximus
67 2 183; Tci<rap5pos 371 507; 0e-
/jLKTTOKXerjs 37 2 99, 363 ; Theodosius
178; 0e60iAo? 102 20 277, 144 24
392
; Oeocppao-Tos 353 495, 171 30 429,
103 9 282; OepaLXoxos 58 2 154;
QpaavcpQp 60 6+ 158; Thrasyllus
478 ; Theellus 205 2 444 ; Zepocpw
55 45 141 ; dates of, blank for 55
years 396
;
(Delphian : 'Apiariup 73
52 202; ArpjLoaTparos 73 40 201;
'lepup 73 2 200;) eponymous, con-
tinuous list of 393; 'list of 182,
144 391, 147 395; nine, lists of
144 391, 145 393, 146 394; of
denies, functions of 78 12 213
;
receive portions at sacrifices 42 11
114; Thesmothetae lists of 144 391,
145 393, 146 394 ; time of entering
upon office 261 ; Athenian, in allied
states 23 45 63
;
(ephebic) officers 65
INDEX. 551
94 178; ybovs 83 19 + 220, 86
231
;
(magistrates) 68 8 187
dpxbs 477
'Apelov irdyov, i) /3ov\t] tj e 26, 36 19 94,
311 3 478, 312 1 478, 313 3 479, 320 i
482, 324 i 484, 327 iO 487, 328 1 488;
decree of, in honour of Geta 68 184
;
dedication by 202 442 ; Herald of
145 12 394, 146 395
;
his precedence
474 ; sacrifice offered on 42 10 114
"Aptjos ("Apetos) 236 5 458
"kprjs 'EvvdXios, priest of 67 5 183
dpearrjp 133 B 2+ 380
dpea-T-rjpiou 60 46 + 159 ;
restored 36 58
96
'Apedovaa, spring of 84
'Apedouatoi 32 A 82 82
'ApeviraylTca 125 8 360 ;
election from
60 51 159
Areus, death of, in battle 152 153
;
reign of, at Sparta 153
Argilus 42
Arginusae, battle of 39 65 72 263 332
Argos, help of, in repairing walls of
Piraeus 354
dpyvpoTapiiai 92 8 245, 93 66 248
Ariarathes V, of Cappadocia, dedicates
statue to Carneades 235 457
Ariobarzanes II, of Cappadocia, statue-
base of 319 482
;
pedigree of 482
Ariphron, brother of Pericles 306
dpicraTa 5 6 12
dpiara = arista 26
dpiareTa rrjs irdXews 256
dpiaTeiov 122 32 349
Aristides p. 421 27 ;
Eleusis p. 417 26
;
Panath.
p. 167 26; Panath. Schol.
p. 55 26 ; the rhetorician 26
'A/oto-riwf, sculptor 367 506
Aristion, stele of 505
Aristocles, artist 364 505
'ApLCTOKpdTTjs, son of 2/ce\ias 99 a 35
267; dedication by 198 441
'ApiaTo8ap.ea (-eta) 102 24 280
'Apiardp-axos, proper name of "Hpcos
'larpos 161
dpidTov 138 a 4 382
'Apia-TOTreidTjs, sculptor 207 444
Aristophanes Ach. 348, Bentley's res-
toration of 231 ; ap. Eustath. 93
;
Av. 125-6 441, 282 Schol. 429, 521
27, 832 28, 874 473, 988 27, 1142
332, 1149 359, 1422 50, i536 sqq.
57, 1550 sqq. Schol. 273; Eccl. 18
Schol. 252, 07 401, 684 68 ; ?.
543 sqq. 413, 729 Schol. 180, 1406
Schol. 279; frar/m. 309, 7 279;
.Li/s. 45 Schoi. 279, 113 279, i50
279, 513 215, 359 473 ; Nub. 28 426,
331 Schol. 27, 385 Schol. 11, 386 21,
984 436; Pa.r 305 17, 733 Schol.
243, i0i9 Schol. 270, 1047 18, i0<94
27 ; Plut. 138 Schol. 383, 277 515,
621 Schol. 182, 628 and Schol. 166,
663 241, i259 270 446; Ran. 330
Schol. 190, 363 290, 797 Schol.
225
;
Thesm. 261 279, .95 7, 936 17
;
Fes;?. 659 308, 707 21; dates of
plays of 437 ; Ranae of, wins first
prize 437; trainer of chorus 184 3
437
Aristoteles, expedition commanded by
42 ; Mapaduuios 32 7 82
; ap. Schol.
Ar. Ran. 404 437
Aristotle, 'AOrjvaiuv YloXireia 4 2 2,
7 and 48 10, 9 18, 4 2, 8 3 263,
32 1 309, 34 74, 4 18 146, 42 4
138, 43 i 107, 43 2 147, 43 4 122
157, 45 17 18, 46 39, 47 107,
49 10, 49 4 147, 50 2 126, 5 291,
53 18, 54 26 32 115 536, 55 18,
56 140, 57 I 269, 57 3 68, 57 4 68,
6i I 358 500; Dr Sandys on 61 1
445; Be Mundo 6 18 175; Politics
vi 8 26 536, vin 6 5 12 ; ProW. 19
50 175 ; PJk?. n 23, 25 84 ; statement
by, of penal powers of (3ovXr) 17
dpovpaioL (Xidoi) 124 21 358
Arrian, Epict. i 2 26 219 ; de Venat.
35 446; 4w. in 6 272
dppw<popLa, ipprjcpopia, eparjcpopLa 454
arsenal, inventory of the 107
Arsinoe 153
Artemis, Brauronian, precinct of
9,
41 a 23 112
;
Ephesian, fisheries of
347;
joined with Apollo and Leto
in oaths 70 8 192; 3 4
7;
dedication
to, by life-priestess 209 445
; lepov
of 88 12 233
;
sacrifices to 135 381
;
'Ayporepa, procession of ephebi to
65 8 176 ; BovXaia, sacrifices to 62 9
168
articles with numerals 130 14 375
artisan, daily wages of 333
artists, signatures of 308 477 ;
formula
of, varied after 1st century a. d. 486;
pay of 334
dpTOTTwXLKOV, TO 162 4 415
'ApvPfias, 'Apvfx^as, 'Apv(3as, king of the
Molossi 83, 403 ; decree protecting
40 110; expelled by Philip 111;
genealogy of 111 ; decree protecting
sons of 40 111
-as, abbreviated names in 421
Asclepiea,
'
AaKXvirieia 100 A a 14 269
270 ; sacrifices offered at the 456
'AaKXwTneiov, inscription containing
list of officers of 157 410 ; "camping
out
''
in 241 ; door put to
9
; offer-
ings in 125 360 ; site of 281
; at
Epidaurus 161 ; dogs kept in 380
'A(r/cA7?7rios 41 a 21 112 ; dedication to
552 INDEX.
229 455, 232 456
;
daughters of 380
;
sanctuary of, in the city 182 ; sanc-
tuary of, in Piraeus 182 ; worship
of 511; 'TyUia 66 9 + 181; ri/xevos
of 140 384
dae(3eia, penalty for 122 133 351
aarj/Aov, xptviov, a source of revenue
259
-a<ri and -770-1 of dative plural 12 42
50 379
Asia, connexion of Codrus with 57;
proconsular, /^rpoTroXeis of 464,
vecoKopoc cities of 464
Asia Minor, Codrid oecists in 489
Asiarch, functions of 464
'Ao-t's 331 2 489
&<tkoL 104 22 286
aa/aa 218 2 450
Aspasia 263
dacpdXeia granted to rex^rai 204
do-iridiop 60 62 160
aspirate, additional, due to mispro-
nunciation 62 ; in consecutive syl-
lables 26 ; abnormal use of 97 7 258
;
laxness in use of 332
aspiration, Old Attic (eX-jris) 360 9 501
dairis, 77 i- "Apyovs 242 12 463
assembly, character and plan of,
specified 86, 205
assemblies, Amphictyonic 70 191
;
ordinary and extraordinary 102
assimilation, 7-770-7-77X771' 11 28 35
;
/x
for v 26 20 70
;
v to
7
28 17+ 73
;
v to X 32
;
neglect of (Xavftdveiv) 5
12, (irovtrtuiv) 5 : see also under the
consonants concerned
assessment of tribute 49 77; appeals
against 151
daradfjios 97 17 259
daTaros 10 B 25 31, 103 1+ 282
'Ao-reas irpo^evos 17 <$ 51
dcrrpaYaXot bopKadiot 103 #5 283
da-rpd7a\os 117 ii 50 326
'Ao-rpaiovcnoi 32 B 2 81
'AcrrpaTratos, Zei/s 200
darpacprjs 128 i 370
"Aarv, to 19 5 52
'AoTuo'd^aj 77-01777-779 rpayipdias 73 5<S 201
d<TTw6fj.oi 198; dates of 47 17 126
dtxTVPo/nos (ephebic) 147
Astydamas, elder, nephew of Aeschy-
lus 429
davXia 72 16 199 204
dcrvXos, as title of cities 480 484
dav/ufiXTjTOv [xerpov 64 1 7 171
drcLKTOS 289
Atarneus, Hermias Tyrant of 17
drAeta 7 55 15 198, 72 1 7 199; de-
creed 33 44 87 101 ; exemption from
expense of sacrifices? 78 7+ 214
dreXris 15 9 39, 87 3 231
'ATrjvr} 435
'Adrjvd 315
;
ancient temple of, on
Acropolis 6 33 325 378; dedication
of d7rapx?7 to 188 437; dedications
to 414, 195 440; dedication to, by
Kva(f>evs 174 431; dedication to, by
soldiers of Cecropid tribe 212 447;
dedication to, by ra/iiai 173 431;
quota of tribute paid to 49
;
treasure
of 33 ;
monies borrowed from treas-
ury of 84
;
povXaia 272 473
;
'H0cu(rria
38 20 104; 'Tyieca 42 9 114; early
cult of 434; Ni/07 42 22 114; sums
borrowed from 306 ; temple of 263
;
priestess of
9
; temple of, rebuilt
1836
9
; and TLdvbpoaos, dedication
to 227 473, IToXids 42 22 114, crowns
dedicated to 37 34
99,
priestess of
236 3 458; statue of 325, stele
deposited in temple of 57 44 152,
sums borrowed from 306, temple of
260 263, cella of 322; Poliuchos,
bowls dedicated to 288 ; Promachos,
colossal statue of 433
;
games of, at
Borne 242 13 463
'Ad-qvda 4 B 5 10
Athenaeus: in 72-73 175, iv 138 f
140 f 241, \ 196 c 280, v 206 c 365,
v 212 f 443, vii 290 sq. 519, ix 407 d
122 429, xi 473 c 389, xi 476 a-e
260, xi 486 e 260, xn 538 429, xii
587 c 280, xii 565 f 426, xiv 662 b
279, xiv 629 e 280, xiv 648 b 389
'
Adrjvaia, 'Adrjvda, 'Adrjvd 31 101, 176
1 432 ; e7u IlaXXadLu) 109 71 + 307
;
'Tyieia, dedication to 179 434; wo-
Xiovxos, dedication to 191 438
;
'Adyvaias N]t/C77S are<pavos 97 21 260
'AdrjvauKOv, epyaaT-qptov (mining) 112
14 312
'
'
Ad-qvaLoHji 7 25+ 17
'A^eou^AtfTij/cuoi; 388 3 513
Athenian-decrees, style of, a pattern
for other states 2
;
private life vi
Athenians, hieromnemons of 204
'Adrjuiou (fern.) 474
'Admiral 32 A 90 82
;
(' Adrjpai Aid8es) 84
Athens, besieged by Demetrius Polior-
cetes 144 ; capture of, by Antigonus
Gonatas 152; centre of education
420 ; interests of, safeguarded 16
;
Jewish colony at 513 ; league of,
with Thebes, Chios, Mityleue 32 82
;
relations of, to tributaries 82 ; topo-
graphy of 58 ; treaty of, with Phaselis
30 77
dderoL (rrXbdoi) 117 i 10 323
ddXa, exclusion of homicides from 22
28 67
deXoderac 37 27+ 99, 99 a 5 263;
functions of 47 33 125
INDEX.
553
Athmonean deme, decree of, concern-
ing ephebi 75 207
cuTLfiia, penalty of 32 A 55 81
aTijxovv 26 10 70
Attalis, tribe, creation of 517 ; demes
transferred to 526
Attalistae 235
Attalus, ephebic inscriptions in stoa
of 413
Attalus I, gives name to a new tribe
128; II, dedication by 204 443;
son of Attalus I, dedicates statue to
Carneades 235 457
'Atthis,' attributed to Androtion 101;
authors of 106
Attic-alphabet xi sq. ; foot, length of
322; Old 153
Attica, vases found in 424
'Atticists' 375
augment of pluperfect extended to
perfect, to participles, subjunctives
and nouns 219
Augusti
)(
Caesars 250
Augustus 395; statue in honour of
310 477; titles of 310 477
av\r) at Eleusis 2 C 40 6
av\7]T7]s 434
avaavT&v, -rdv, -reus 200
avdr)p.epbv 141 4 385, avdeifxepl 386
avrdxcip 68
avToicnv 4 A 16 10
avrovo/xoL, Selymbrians permitted to be
26 6 70
avrovo/jLos, as title of cities 315 4 480
avToaavrov 72 5 200
avTov ifxavTou 70 4 192
ala 70 11 194
'Aioxos, uncle of Alcibiades 63
oL^wv in Draco's legislation 68
amoves and
Kvpfieis 68
/3,
forms of 4, 156 408
Bacchic rites, Persephone associated
with 243
pabeifrLv 69 27 189
BaKxe'ia 91 43 241
Bukx^ov 226, 91 101 239, 91 8 241
balance-sheet of temple property 162
PaXaveiov 121 10 346, 122 142 351
;
'lad/xovcKov 21 37 56
fi&pfiapoi,
Gauls defeated at Delphi 166
Bap(3l\\7ia (BaA/3.) 242 25 463
Barbillus, astrologer 463
j3apfdfxevoL in a metrical inscription
361 503
fidaavos, 77 22 b 6 59
BaaiX-rj (Basileia), see Codrus 56; ac-
cent of 57
/3acri\eia crrod 68
j3a.cri.XeLs, Lacedaemonian, included in
treaty 57 37 152 ; oi 25 11 67
(3ao-iXevs, archon 58, 68 ; functions of 36
25 94; inscription of, in Dionysiac
Theatre 287 470
Basilistae 235
Bassae, temple of 'AiroXXtov 'E7ri/cotfpios
at 258
Paarepvdptoi 383 7 511
parpaxis 102 16+ 279
Bekker Anecdota 293 5 on irporeXeLa
7;
reading of 83 22 confirmed 519
Bevbibea 233, 100 A a 22 270
Bendis 232; chapel of 233
Berenice, statue-base of 320 482
bier, covering for 279
bilingual inscription at Borne 458
;
Greek and Phoenician 375 508
bills, drawing of, in Treasury 267
birth, nobility of, in relation to
(pparpia 69
Bithynian names 415
/3\a/3?7 aKovaia 5
boards, competent to issue decrees 444
Bodmelkarth 127
Bo8fj.iXKas 48 4 126
Boeckh, A. 12 57 58; Annot. Pind.
p. 175 463; CIG m p. 305 465
Boedromion, year beginning with 388
403
Boeotia, confederation of, and Athens,
refer dispute to Lamia 154 ; double
calendar in 169
Boeotians and Chalcidians, Athenian
victory over 433
BoLTjSpopiLwv 52 3 134
BoitOTWV, TO KOLVOV TO 58 10 154
(36Xip.os =fi6Xv(38os 284
BofxiXKas, Boa-, Bod-, Bov-, Bomilcar
127
pup.oL 133 B 11, C 380
^LOfxbs of NiK?7 42 20 114; fieyas of
Athena 42 19+ 114; votes taken
from 84 1 7 226
bonds, depositing of, with a third
party 215
books, list of, inscription containing
402 518 ; dedications of, in ephebic
inscriptions 519
(3oivv 175
powvelv 42 17 114
powia 100 A a 9 269
/Sowj/oi 42 18 114
Bosporus, kings of, honorary decree
for 37 99
(3ovkoXlk6s 91 123 243
BovXaia ("ApTe/JLis) 62 10 168
ftovXapxos,
of guilds 313
/3oi'X?7, action of, independent of e/c-
KXT]o~ia 32 ; beginning of term of
263 ; could summon XoyiaraL 32
;
decree in honour of 56 147 ; decrees
of 447
;
decree of, concerning ephebi
554 INDEX.
75 207 ; decree of, not probouleuma
106 ; dedication by 203 443
;
elected
by lot 147
;
i/a. povXevTrjpicp 66 5 181
;
functions of
10
;
(7/
e 'Ap. irdy. 64 59
173;) 01 e^aitSaioi 64 7 + 171 ; lepd iv
'EXevaeivLu) 67 3 184; honoured with
crown by dy/mos 102 ; in the 6th
century 2
;
increased to 600 127
;
independent proposals made by 57
;
jurisdiction of 93 47 246; meetings
of, at the Piraeus 42
;
number of
members of 166
;
(of Erythrae), oath
of 5 20 sqq. 11
;
of 500 120 6 10 344
;
of 500, decree of, in honour of Geta
68 184; penal powers of 17; reduced
from 600 to 500 in 126 a.d. 184;
reward for good service in 38 5 103
;
session of, at the dockyards 42
;
(at
Erythrae), elected through tirluKoiroi
and (ppotipapxos 12 ; and irpvr&veis,
to see to interests of evep-yerat 24 32
64
^ovKtjs \pri<piojxa 86
;
ra/j-Lai, member of
38 39 107 108
Pov\e6ovTes, Delphian magistrates 200
(3ov\evcjp, povXevaas 68
fiovXevcns 68
(3ovXevTaL, age of, by Attic law 12
; age
of (at Erythrae) 5 10 12; (at Delphi)
200 ; contribute to cost of arecfyavos
38 46 105
;
8oKt/xaaia of (at Erythrae)
59 12
;
prosecution of unqualified
(at Erythrae) 5 10 12
;
sacrifices per-
formed by 38 20 106 ; list of 536
j3ov\evT7jpiou, to 9 29 23; dues paid in
to
79;
(Eleusis) 69 43 189
(3ov\vtt)s, honorary title 242 2+ 463
^ovXofxai., ^-augment of 134
boundaries, definition of 347 ; how
described 229
boundary-stones, in the Piraeus 343
344 345 492
;
found in situ 345 493
;
inscribed 332 sqq. 490 sqq.
Bov<povLwv /j.r)i> (Delos) 121 15 346
fiotiirpippos eKCLTOixfi-r) 7
f3ovs, eftdofxos
38l
/3oi>s rod i]pu)os 70 32 195
^ovarpo(pT]86v writing in inscriptions
xi, 189 438 521
Bovfyy-rjs, inscription on seat of, in
Dionysiac theatre 251 473
bowls, dedicated by freedmen 288
;
silver, dedicated in the Acropolis by
aliens 105 286
ppaPeiov 242 15 463
Brauron, xoanon at 280
Brauronian Artemis, inventory of
clothing dedicated to 102 278
Brauronium 279 ; site of 278
Bpavpwvbdev, r\ lepeia 26
Brea, colony sent to 8 19
Brennus, invasion of 204
bricks, cost of 358
British Museum, inscriptions in 214
266 478
bronze, Delian 353
bronze, inscriptions on 173 174 395 sqq.
buildings, accounts referring to 116 317
Buphonia 270
burial, prohibition of 32 A 61 81
;
Phoenician rites of 508
BvfdvTioi 32 A 83 82
Bv^avriov 15 35 40 ; export of corn
from 42 ; list of the fallen at 361
501 ; revolt of, from Athens 503
Byzantine epigraphy xvii
Caesar, Julius, grants freedom to
Laodicea by the Sea 480 ; statue
in honour of 309 477; titles of 309
477
Caesariani (Caesarien ses, Catholiciani)
,
vexatious acts of 250
Caesars
)(
Augusti 250
calendar, double, in Attica and Boeo-
tia 169
Caligula, omission of name of 483
Callias, commands army at Potidaea
31 ; son of Hipponicus, dedication
by 194 439
Callicrates, architect 13
Callicratides blockades Mitylene 38
Callixenus, probouleuma of 71
cancelli 58
candelabrum, figure of seven-branched,
on Jewish tomb 388 389 513
canephoroe, ornaments of 100 268
capital lent, rate of interest on 347
;
rent produced by 254
Cappadocia and Thrace, caves used as
granaries in 26
Caracalla (Caracallas), association of,
with his father and brother 186
;
full name of 186 ; name of, not
erased in inscriptions 186
Carneades, admitted to citizenship 457
;
statue-base of 235 457
Carthaea, decree of 71 198
Carthaginians, envoys of 127
Caryatids 322 323 325
Cassander besieges Oreus 55 13 141
;
expels cleruchs from Salamis 414
Cassandrea 415
Catholiciani, see Caesariani 250
Caucasus, the 101
causal clause inserted in final clause
138
causeway, remains of, at Eleusis 52
cavalry, maintenance of 99 a 4 263
Cavalla (Thracian Neapolis) 62
Cecropid tribe, decrees of 447; decree
concerning ephebi 75 207
INDEX. 555
Cecropium 322
Cecrops, tomb of 323
Cenaeum, promontory 84
Ceos, alliance of, with Athens 21 198
;
decree of 71 198
;
revolutions at 198
Cephisophon 452
Ceramicus, strangers entertained in,
at Dionysia 212
X,
forms of 2
Chabrias, general 84, 119 A a 73 341
Chaeronea, battle of 354 447
Xaipeorj/jios 44 28 118
Xcu/)77s = Xcupeas 361 i 19 503
Chalcidians and Boeotians, Athenian
victory over 433
;
tribute-quota of,
diminished 17 ;
triremes lent to 342
Chalcis (Euboea), cleruchs settled at
18 ; contingent from, with Athenians
in Sicily 17 ; convention between
Athens and 7 16
;
reduction of, by
Pericles
16 ; formulae in late decree
of 241 ; key of Euboea 16; mines of
260 ; occupied by cleruchs 219
;
treatment of, by Athens 17 ; Zevs
'OXvfAiTLos at 17
%dX/cta, dedicated by rct/xLou to Athena
173 431
Xd\K77, xd\x?7,
see KaXxv
xd\K
V
118 a i 50 333
%a\fC77 arriXrj 57 43 152
XaXKelov 122 144 353
Xa\Ki8er]s (-ees, -erjs) 7 57 18
Xa\Ki8r}s 32 A 80 82 ; dirb QpaK-qs 32 B
5 80
XaX/cous, symbol for 124 2 354
X<ifialfy\os 142 18 389
XCLfxevva 309
Chandler, inscription edited by 74 205
Charidemus of Oreos, decree in favour
of 111
XapctKrr)p /jLoXvftdcvos 64 64 174
Xctpi-O'TrjpLov 65 30 177
Xdpires 3 3 7;
dedication to, by j3ovXrj
203 443
X<xprcu 118 C ii 31 335
Xeip,
dedicated 60 78 160
XtipiduTos 102 6 279
Xetp67pa0ov 64 52 173
Xeiporovelv 15 29 40, 60 49+ 159
Xtfpos
129 16 373
Chersonesus, list of the fallen in 361
501 ; Thracian, colony to 345
Chians, expel Lacedaemonian garrison
77; with Athenian fleet 77
childbirth, garments dedicated after
278
Xt-Xiacrrvs 110
XtA'tTTjs (d7t6i') 462
Xioi 32 A 79 82
Chios, alliance of, with Athens 32 82
83; alphabet of 438 ; facsimile of
inscription of 438 ; emphyteutic
leases in 374
Xiovpyrjs 97 13 260
chisel, use of, in forming letters 135
Xt-QuvLtrKos ktvojt6s 102 7 279
xXauis 102 39 279
Choes, feast of 91 130 243
XoiviKuiios, jSous 142 25 389
'Choiseul marbles' 31 78, 78 212, 99
262, 134 380, 145 393
XLOfJ-cLTt, j3ovXt)s edpa iwi 120 b 16 344
choragic dedications, Rem. xiii 434
choregi 207 434 ; two and three, in
choragic dedications 435 ; two in
number 184 436; victorious 170 428
choregia, exemption from 407 ;
under-
taken by two tribes 182 436
Xupelv ei's"91 62 242
Xwpts ij, construction of 91 50 242
Xovs 47 26 125
XPVf
xaTa cftparlootlkol 37 44 100
XPVI^o-TL^eiu 15 52, 17 20 etc. 40 45
Chremonidean war 135 143 154; de-
cree concerning 57 152 ; sources of
information for 152
;
named from
Xpeficovidrjs 57 7 153
XPT]GT7)piOV 70 33 192
Christian epigraphy xvii
;
sepulchral
inscriptions 385 386 387 512 sq.
Christopolis (Byzantine) 62
chronological equations 182 184 309
Chrysanthemum coronarium 325
chryselephantine statue 315 ; accounts
concerning 316
Chrysis, priestess, honoured in decree
72 200
Xpvadvdiva 242 23 463
XpvcrSKepcos 9 37 27
XpvvocpopLa 324 14 485
Chthonian deities, cult of the 408
Cicero tie Or. i 14 62 363
;
pro Caelio
i 1 2 488
Cimon
77 ; brings bones of Theseus
from Scyros 166 ;
decree of age of 5
11 ; family and deme of 261 ; temple
at Eleusis perhaps rebuilt by 53
Citium, merchants of, ask leave to
found temple 116
citizenship, grants of 65
cives Romtuii qui etc., in late inscrip-
tions 116
Claudius, statue-base of 311 478
;
titles
of 311 478
Cleomedes, statue of 60
Cleomenes, king of Sparta 153
cleruchies, Attic 219 ; iirifxeXrjTai sent
to 220; inscriptions concerning
2;
miniature copies of Athens 219
cleruchs
91 ; at Chalcis 18
; expelled
from Salamis 414; in Delos 421;
belonged to Attic denies 219
; com-
556 INDEX.
pelled to reside 2; decrees, Sala-
minian 81 216, 82 217; designated
by demotic 310; list of 159 413;
in Lesbos 2
;
not liable to tribute
18 ; in Salamis
2
; sent to Cher-
sonesus, Naxos, Andros, Thrace,
Thurii 20
;
sent to Lesbos 21
Clisthenes 221 ; introduction of airo-
5e/crat by 10 58 ; order of prytanies
arranged by 268 ; reforms of 227
;
ten tribes of 127
clothing dedicated to Artemis Brau-
ronia 279
clubs, private, for religious purposes
240
Clytidae, community of 374
Cnidians,
Xecrxv of, at Delphi 358 373
Cnidus, battle of 77
Codex Justiniani x 1 5 251
Codrus, death of 57; tomb of
57;
Neleus and Basile, precinct of 56
coinage, Aeginetan standard of 195
coins, devotion of 286 ; of Epidaurus,
with <riKva 511 ; titles on Imperial
479 481
colony, proposed foundation of 345
colour, traces of, on a sepulchral
column 366 505
;
on letters 1 1
commercial standard, the 174
commissioners to assist architect and
7T(0\T]Tai 9
Commodus, emperor 326 7 486 ; deified
by Septimius Severus 486
compendia, numerical 115 13 315
confederacy, new Athenian 352
confiscated houses, list of 122 140 352
;
properties, sale of 257
confiscation 5 31 11, 8 A 24 19, 32 A
56 81 308 ; by imperial treasury 247
Conon, repair of walls of Piraeus due
to 354
consonants, assimilation of (v to a) 2
;
non-gemination of 176 432
;
not
doubled in archaic inscriptions xi,
363 504
Constantine, cycle of indictions es-
tablished by 512
Constantius Chlorus, edict of 94 250
construction and syntax, notes on 7 9
17, 9 18 26, 119 A a 15 341 364, 131
12 376; unusual inversion of clauses
18; confused 124 297 359, 149 34
400; incomplete 231 456, 316 481;
involved 85 42 229
consul suffectus 483
consuls, Boman, Cn. Cornelius Len-
tulus 178 ; L. Calpurnius Piso and
M. Livius Drusus 170 ; P. Licinius
Crassus 178
contamination of forms, example of
195
contests, gymnastic and naval, at 0??-
aeia 166
contract, time-limit for 13
contracted and uncontracted forms 51
contracts, international 71 ; recorded
on 6poL 494
Cook, S. A., quoted 508
Cooke, G. A., quoted 508
Coponii Maximi, as Athenian citizens
184
copper, alloy of 116 2 317
copying, carelessness in 372
copyist, errors of 92 245
Corcyra, expenses of expedition to 98
261 ; fleet in aid of 37
Coresos, decree of 71 198
Corinth, Areus killed in battle near
153
;
list of l-mreys fallen at 362 504
Corinthian columns 324
;
proportions
of 366
Corinthians, Epistle to, quoted (i xvi
21) 513
corn, export of, from Byzantium 42
;
from the Euxine 42
;
presents of 52
11 132 ; scarcity of, at Athens 122
corn-supply, at what assembly dis-
cussed 122
Cornutus de divis 16 446
corona, names inscribed in 65 177, 56
150
Coronea, i-mreus fallen at 362 504
corporations, leases granted by 374
;
named after a monarch 235
Corpus Inscriptionum Atticarum, refer-
ences to (quoted as IG =Inscriptiones
Graecae after p. 322) 1 170
(97) 33,
179 37, 188 62 65, 194 32, 226
(106)
49 62, 230 62 63, 240 32 63,
242 62, 243 51 62, 244 49 62, 256
62, 257 41 62, 266 50, 273 41 42,
275 63, Indices p. 233 17; n 33
35, 311 611 614 51, 799 d 39, 834 b
27, 1059 32, 1620 c 27; in 5
(69) 27,
38 (93)
42, 659 26, 720 27, 721 a 26,
774 b 26 ; iv 1 19 33, 22 c 34 35,
61 68, 225 c 225
f
53, 225 k 52 ; iv 2
252 e 57, 385 e 733 28, 834 b 65. Also
p. 527 sqq.
Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum
(CIG), references to: 213
(74),
error
in 205
; 393, Boeckh on 455 ; 512 520,
1068 463, 1104 358, 1569 42, 1720
463, 1992 252, 2060 196, 2119 109,
2139 58, 2270 219, 2336 190, 2360
226, 2448 76, 2556 242, 2656 232,
2682 463, 2729b add. 461, 2810b 463,
2929 485, 2932 463, 3173 241, 3208
463 464, 3212 461, 3265 252, 3426 463,
3428 463, 3674 463, 3831 187, 3832
187, 4039 461, 4244 4247 4253 252,
4697 (Bosetta stone) 464, 5804 463,
INDEX. 557
5810 463, 5913 463, 6798 97, 7045
387; Vol. i p. 191 260, n p. 80 sqq.
100, p. i0S 57. Also
p.
viii, 529 sq.
Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum (CIL),
references to : i p. 451 477, vi 497 sqq.
389, 499 (quoted in full) 389 390,
510 389, 511 390, ix 455 254, x 1930
175, 5249 522, xi i. 1147 253
corrections, of engraver 2 C 13 6; in-
serted above the line 32 4i 83
corrupt practices, punishment of 65
Cos, temple of Aesculapius in 161
;
inscription of 536
counterfeiters, punishment of 174
craticulum 318
Cratinus 20 ; in Bergk Poett. Lyr. in
4 722 436
Cresilas, sculptor 197 440
Cretan formula, 'ivopKou kcu. Zvdivov 153
Cretan towns, want of unanimity in 153
Crete, dialects of 195
crews, list of 158 410
Crimea, corn supplies from 100
crioboliuin 389
Crissa, sacred land at 194
Critios, Nesiotes, joint work of 192
439
crops, failure of 180
cross, sign of the, a common mark in
Christian inscriptions 385 512
crowding of letters 3
crown, announcement of, at the
Dionysia in Salamis 82 30 218 ; at
Eleusis 83 16 220; conferred an-
nually 101; cost of, limited 272;
golden, cost of 75 30+ 208; golden,
catalogue of 100 A e 271
culverts at Eleusis 53
cures effected in a temple 161
cursive forms, development of xvi sq.
cycle, 40 years, in public finance 372
cymatium 325 ; inscription on 190 438
Cyprus, bronze of 370 ; men fallen in
war in 359 498; war in 55 8 140
Cyrene, vases found in 424
5, forms of 76 132, 95 251, 150 401 ; in
late sepulchral inscription 389 513
D (Dittenberger's Sylloge Inscriptionum
Graecarum, ed. 2 except where
otherwise indicated) : references to
11 63, 19
1
290, 24 179, 54 84, 88 88
110, 96 63, 112 35, 162 110, 242 28,
258 91, 321 178, 326 153, 342 101,
438 227, 509 342, 519 206, 522 180,
531 373, 545 309, 556 386, 567 386,
588 127, 607 241, 615 115 384, 629
27, 633 (141) 243, 680 174, 616 536,
681 170, 740 241, 743 243, 877 279.
Also
p. 530 sq.
DI (Sammlung der griechischen Dialekt-
Inschriften) references to : 206 536,
345 454, 488 200 215, 489 312, 800
536, 951 169, 1222 373, 1561 b 1564
97, 1612 387, 2502 284, 567 227,
2652 62, 3005 200, 4645 153
Dacicus, of Trajan 313 2 479
8adovxos 6, 9 25 23, 36 13 94; in-
scription on seat of, in Dionysiac
theatre 302 472
Adeipa 100 A b 2 270
5a.KTv\os 364
Daphne, pass of 52
date of inscriptions, various ways of
inferring or indicating : by alpha-
betic forms or character of writing
2 4 7 9 11 13 20 25 75, 74 205. Ill
310, 130 375, 168 423, 171 429 etc.
;
elaborate calculations 99 b 267;
given at end 2; Augustan period
indicated by y
for et 489 ; based upon
a pedigree 166 417; by exclusion
831 ; by historical considerations
2
;
names of secretaries 97 257; names
of treasurers 97 257; by the name
Augustus 236 458; fixed between
historical limits 190 438 ; by refer-
ence to consulship 143 389 ; by term
of office of o-Tparrjyos 312 478; on
historic grounds 213 448 ; how in-
dicated in Delphian and Megarian
decrees 200; indicated by absence
of (TToixnSbv arrangement 155 408;
by addition of deos to Emperor's
name 326 486 ; by at = e 285 474 ; by
archonship 205 ; by ^ov<rTpo<py86v
arrangement and koppa 189 438 ; by
comparison of names 157, 181 435;
by consulship at Eome 178 ; by
datives in -ais 31, in -770-1 25 35 ; by
EI =long iota 324 485; by form of ir
166 417, of 160 414; by Hadrian's
eTrt.8yp.La at Athens 327 487 ; by joint
reign of M. Aurelius and L. Verus
481; by late forms of letters and
dotted iota 141 386; by mention of
Senate of 500 323 484, of 600 314
479, 324 485; by name of ypa/x/xa-
reijs 19 52, of ypap.p.arevs of Prytanes
21 ; by number of fiovky 184 ; by
order of names of archon and iiri-
<rTa.T7)s 14 38; by values of E, 158
410; by value of O 407, 169 424;
by year of reign and consulship of
Emperor 316 481; by addition of
demotic to artist's name 207 445
;
inferred from engraving 71 198;
from name 134 381 ; from careless
style 246 467 ; from comparison of
naval accounts 340 ; from com-
parison of names 80 216, 144 393,
164 420 etc.; from comparison of
558 INDEX.
offices held 207 444, of punctuation
177 433; from condition of Athens
368; from date of Pausanias 245
466; from dTjfios acting as choregus
219 450 ; from dictatorships of Caesar
309 477; from erasure of name of
Antigonus Gonatas 143 ; from form
of v 195 440, 409 523 ; from formula
184 437; from inflexions 109 306;
from institution of tribe Hadrianis
238 460 ; from mention of new
contest at Olympia 172 430, of Pan-
hellenic Council 241, of priesthood
of Drusus 324 485; from name of
ephebus 146 395 ; from name of
herald 146 395
;
from numeral signs
142 388; from = ov 79 215; from
passages in Thucydides 261 ; from
record of confiscation 312; from re-
currence of names 44 118
; from
Eoman consulship 395 ; from Roman
names 184 ; from similarity of names
253; from style of letters 44 118;
from surname Dacicus etc. 313 479;
from vocalism 92 244
date, Latinised formula of 143 2 390;
limits of, for certain forms of
<f>
507 ; marked by allusion to ludi
saeculares 242 463
date of decrees, indicated by name of
archon or ypa/mju-arevs 3; reckoning
of, /car' apxovra 182; Roman nota-
tion of, in Greek inscriptions 94 16
250; statement of, in tribal decrees
etc. 205
;
shown by archonship
coinciding with consulship 170
;
various modes of inferring 240 461
;
variously assigned to 4th century b.c.
and to Roman times 202 442
date-formula : apx
et ^rA. 85 29 229
dated tombs, only example of Attic
371 507
dative of measure 79 18 215
dativus commodi 74 76, 131 11 376
day of month and prytany coincide 131
day of month of assembly in post-
Euclidean decrees 85
death-penalty, assessment of 32 A 61 81
debts, doubling of 341; of trierarchs
paid by heirs 341 342
deceased, name of, in the genitive 364
505
decree, amendment in 16 57, 23 54 62,
42 7 114, 28 32 73; Amphictyonic,
opening formula of 191 ; cost of in-
scribing 83; engraved much later
than time of passing it 121 347;
enrolment of members of diacros 88
233 ; honorary 24 65 ; honorary,
simpler form of, at Athens in fifth
century 34 ; in a marine inscription
120 343 ; Megarian, leading to Pelo-
ponnesian war 96; nature of, de-
scribed 86; of povX-f) only 29 76;
of Delphi, in honour of Athenian
priestess 72 199; of Delphi, letter
prefixed to 72 200; of Delphic Am-
phictyony 70 191 ; of deme Plotheia
78 212; of deme Sunium 80 215;
of EiKadeis, taking proceedings a-
gainst false witnesses 86 230; of
Eumolpidae and heralds 83 220; of
Iobacchi 91 240 ; of Panhellenes 89
234; of Piraean deme 79 215; of
Salaminian cleruchs 81 216, 82 219
;
of Scambonidae 77 210 ; of Ov/xeXiKr]
avvodos 90 235 ; of tribesmen ((pvXerai
not (pvXr)) 149 30 + 400 ; of Erechtheis
76 209 ; Phoenician 453
;
prescript
of 11; regulation for inscribing
16;
sacrifices in connexion with passing
of 16
;
supplement to 22 ; with
amendment passed on same day by
(3ovXrj and KKXr)aia 16
decrees, archon's name not usual in,
before 421 b.c. 3; of Areopagus etc.
in honour of Geta 68 184; assess-
ment of tribute 17 56; concerning
ephebi 75 207; copies of 106 200,
73 30 201 ; restoration of Eleusinian
festival 69 188; engraved by more
than one hand
9 ; engraving of,
officer responsible for 41 ; enclosing
of sanctuary and letting of precinct
21 54; engraving of, by ypa/jL/xarei/s
T7js [3ovXrjs 9 49 25 ; for making a
causeway over a lagoon 19 52
;
formulae of 2 sq. ; honorary, earliest
Attic examples of 11 35 ; honorary,
fulsome language of in later period
34; honorary, hortative section in
34 ; honorary, influence of Athens
in establishing formulae of 34
;
honorary, simpler form of, in
Northern Greece and Peloponnesus
34
;
honorary, style of 34 ; in name
of the people only
2
; name of pro-
poser of 3; of
fiovXT)
alone 146; con-
cerning fxiXros 71 198; of Delphi in
the Metroon 73 205; of Imperial
period Rem. viii 183
;
of Pandionis
74 205 ; order of engraving
121
;
phratria of Demotionidae 84 222
;
prescript of 3; republished 204; re-
storation of Selymbria to Athenians
26 70; revision of law 25 68; privi-
leges granted to Methonaeans 15 41
;
supplementary 15 30 sqq. <56sqq.
40,
23 39 61, 24 65 108, 45 29 120 ; tribal
etc., transitional formula in 205
decretory clause 205 ; absence of 205
dexdai 403 519
INDEX. 559
dedication by a priest, on direction of
oracle 134 380; by ephebi 209, 327
487; /caret ixavrelav 245 466; of image
of one deity in honour of another
244 465; renewed by descendants 193
439
dedicatory offerings, broken up and
remade 125 360
defaulting states, how dealt with, for
arrears of tribute 50
Dejixio written in style imperfectly
^ova-Tpo(p7j86u 406 521 ; written retro-
grade, but with letters facing to right
407 521
Defixiones or Dirae, examples of 407-
409 520 sqq.
deiuvTcu, origin of ec in 215
deities, named in oath of alliance 57
53 152 ; various sums borrowed from
306
deKaxa : 5e/caxct 75
deKadicrrai 497
dexaixvovp 64 55 176
5eK&T7] varepa, irpor^pa 515 129 130
8eK&T7)s, ret 4k ttjs 10 A 7 28
AeiceXeia, in hands of Lacedaemonians
84 53 226
AeiceXeiaaiv 84 67 223
AejceXewjs, AeKeXerjs 84 64 122 227
AeKeXeiQv oTkos 84 33+ 226
AyXca 213 14 447
Delian Confederacy 77; festival, ex-
penses of 352 ; temple, accounts of,
'
Sandwich Marble
'
122 348 ;
trea-
sury removed to Athens 77 288
Delians and Athenians, suit of, before
Amphictyons 109
Delos, administration of temple of
346 ; Athenian control over 352
;
Attic cleruchs 421; iepa avyypacprj of
375 ; Medeios epimeletes of 178
;
management of temple in 109 110;
nationalist party in 353 ; temple
lands leased in 347 ; treasury trans-
ferred from, to Athens 77 288
&?X0a 142 7 387
Delphi 36 44 95 ; decree of, in honour
of Athenian priestess 72 200; Gauls
defeated at 166; Lacedaemonians
at 60
;
manumission inscriptions of
505 ; offering carried to, by Pytbaists
200
Delphian magistrates, names of 88;
oracle 27 113; Amphictyony, decree
of 70 191 ; months 196
8iXroc, al iv Ka7rTwXlu} 315 6 480
drjfxapxos 9 9 23, 35 21 94; duties of
205 215 452
;
name of, marking date
129 21 371 ; receives hide of victim
77 13 211
j
moneys borrowed from,
by cTTpaTTjyol 14 6 38
demes, admission of foreigner to 434
;
formulae of decrees of 205; informa-
tion concerning 332 ; inscription
containing list of 401 517 ; leases
granted by 376 ; list of 525 526 ; list
of members of 56 148; Myrrhinus
belongs to Aegeis 149, to Pan
dionis 149; of adopted person 512
receive portions at sacrifices 42 25
114; redistribution of 127; Rham
nus, note on 170; transference of
to new tribes 393 460 517 525 526
EvweTanbv, inflexion of 154
Arj/jLrjTTjp and Koprj 6, 41 c e 28 113
contest in honour of 52 43 133 ; dedi
cation to 207 444, 213 447; fines paid
to 64 13 171 ; offerings made to 388
(piaXr) dedicated to, by ephebi 65 29
177; statue dedicated to 228 455
temple of, at Eleusis 190
Demeter and Persephone 7
Arj/xrirrjp eTroiKidia. 473
ATj/xrjTpiaKbu ipyacTTrjpiov (mining) 112
3 312
Demetrias, tribe, list of demes trans-
ferred to 526
At)/jL-fjTpios, defeat of, at Ipsos 52 18 132
Arj/xr/rpLos Kapirbs 129 19 373
Demetrius, war of, with Aetolians 144
;
ascendancy of, lost 131; king of
Macedon, death of 180
Demetrius Phalereus 98 ; honours paid
to, by garrisons 213 447 ; regime of
369 ; influence of xv
Demetrius (Poliorcetes) 130; besieges
Athens 144
8r)(j.eueii> 26 9 70
b-qiJubirpaTa 63; account of 111 308 310;
list of 110 308
drjpaovpyoi 118 c ii 28 335 ; in Doric
states 335
8r)/AOl flLKpol 307
ArjfiOKXijs 44 19 117
Ar}ixoKparia 271
Demomeles, cousin of Demosthenes
381
Demophantus, vvyypafavs 68
Demophon, Attic hero 109 68 307
Sij/uos, as choregus 134 435, 219 450,
220 1 451 ; decree of, in honour of
Geta 68 184; decree of, not preceded
by probouleuma 116; dedication by,
to Roma and Augustus 236 458 ; re-
ceives portions at sacrifices 42 15
+
114
8i)fxos = deme 38 20 101
dTjfiocria, rd 4 A 9 9
drjuoaioi 41 ab 6+ 112 395; and their
successors 64 49 173 ; attached to
financial officers 124 4 355, 64 58
173, 128 28 370
560 INDEX.
drj/Aoaios 6 dvTiypa<p6p.ei>os 125 10 360
Demosthenes, adv. Steph. i 1107, cor-
rected 107; adv. Timocr. 706 sq. 291;
Chers. 88 22, 101 26, 98 341; c.
Androt. 598 39, 615 161 ; c. Apk. A
526 381; c. Arhtocr. 650 36, 650 68.
629 631 637 639 640 69, Arg. and
650 111; c. Aristog. 775 307, i 799
334; c. o<?o. dg dot. 1009 91 207
267, 1015 267; c. Co?i. 1264 26; c.
Eubul. 1318 97; c. Euerg. et Mnes.
1145 91; c. Macart. 1069 68, 1073
373; c. Mtd. 5i7 107, 345, 519 140,
5-2?'
5 ; c. Nausini. et Xenopith. 986
991 207 ; c. netor. n 876 878 sq.
494; c. Phorm. 917 101, 918 122;
c. Phaenipp. 1042 102, 2045 1648
122; c. Polycl. 1208 492; c. Spud.
1029 494; c. Timocr. 718 110, 713
5,
736 79, 742 84; c. Timoth. 1186 63,
i.Z93 107; de Cor. 243 161, 64 271,
67 221, 271 226, 75 231, 277 195,
78 79 191, 300 447, 361 84; de
Pace 58 62 204, 58 429
;
F. L. 344
429, 359 363, 401 204, 429 161, 441
26 ; Halonn. 79 124 ; i?i iVmer. 2374
241; in Lept. 462 463 118, 466 467
100 101, 501 93 341; Oi. i 13 111
7re/9t wTdews 275 97; Schol. p. 447
24 Dind. 102; Schol. 973 312
Symmor. 184 492
Demosthenes (orator) 119 B a 7 342
family of 207; motion proposed by
102; text of, corrected by inscrip-
tions 68
Demosthenes (general) 306 ; as cho-
regus 170 b 12 428
demotic, absence of 310; documents,
composition of 384 ; slaves had none
162; abbreviations of 158; omission
of 79 15 215, 179 434; use and
absence of 310 ; abbreviated 45 3
119 281, 35 6 93, 156 7+ 409, 384
340 511, 124 354, 158 ab 15+ 411
demotics, list of 525 526
ArjjuoTiwvidcu 111 ;
decree of phratria
of 84 222
hr\jxov \pT]cf)L<rixa 86
denarius, sign for 95 251 254 ; half,
sign for 254
dentils in the Ionic order 327
depfia 87 5+ 231; perquisite of demarch
77 c 14 211
SepiACLTiKa, accounts of 257, 100 268
;
important source of revenue 268
depfxariKov, to 41 ce 23 113
5evtd 359
device embroidered on ewi^XTj/na 102 31
277
Devotiones, C. Newton on 510
5e|eur0cu 70 11 194
Aet\ews, tomb of 371 507
Se&ovfieva 102 33 280
Dexippus, as Athenian general 458
;
P. Herennius, historian 237 458
did with numerals 124 23 358
diaftrjTTis 364
diaxct-poToveiv 15 5 39
diadicasiae 311 ; in phratria 84 26 225
;
lists of 152-4 405
;
numerous 407
diadiKafau 84 13+ 222
diayv&vai, unusual sense of 25 13 68
di.dypap.ixa, meanings of 119 A b 27 +
342
dtaypacpal ixerdWoJV 112 311
diaiTrjTai, crowned by the oi]p.os 151
402
;
inscription containing list of
151 402
;
varying number of 403
5ta/cdrtoi 70 29 191
dialects, Achaia 387 ; Arcadian 200
Boeotian 200; Delphian 200 203
Elean 200 374; Epidaurus 380
Gortyn 374 ; Locrian 386 ; North
West Greece 200; Tegeatan 373
inconsistencies in 70 191 ; notes on
194, 70 3 10 194 195
8id\ri\J;is coupled with atpeais 144
diaXvetv 26 6
70
;
(vavv) 119 ka 11 +
336
diameter of pillars, relation of, to
height 365
btavofxy] 68 32 187, 69 35 190
didcpopou, to koivov 65 82 178
dtacpp&TTeiv 126 63 366
SiairoGTe'Ckacrdai avTiypa<pov 73 91 203
8t.a\j/r)(pL{e(rdai 84 83 225
dtappoai 53
8tdT
ay
p:a 68 34 188
Siaretxttr^aa 124 24+ 355
Stai/Xos 61 44 165 ; iv ottXols 61 78 165
;
iTnrq) TroXepuaTrj 61 83 167
dicasts, guilty of corruption, prosecu-
tion of
66;
paid by /cwXa/cperai 345;
tickets of 515, facsimile reproduc-
tion of, 399, PL ii 539
8ixop<r)via 2 B 5
8iSa<TKa\Lat. 220; inscription contain-
ing 171 428; prefixed to the Aga-
memnon 428
8i8daKa\os, ephebic 65 31+ 147 177
434
didrachm = stater 195 274
Didymus ap. Harpocr. 115
8njvei<r]S (kojXt)) 87 5 231
Siepeiafxa 126 68 366 367
Ait}? dirb QpaKTjs 32 B 81
Dieuches, physician 456
Digest xlviii 17 250
Au<TWTr)pia, Td 126 ; connected with
naval contests of ephebi 126
Diitrephes, bronze statue of 441
diKadia 103 17 281
INDEX. 561
81kcu, dirb crvfj.j36\o)u 71 75 77; ZkkXtjtoi
77 198 ; e/x-rropiKal 124
At.Kcaoiro\iTcu 32 B 9 80
bLKaaral joined with fiovXr)
in oath 17
8iKa<TTrjpt.a of 201 members 120 a 43 343
8iKau 70 5 194
5i/cdeii', unusual sense of 25 il 68
blfxvovv 64 55 176
Dinarchus i 76 79 ; TvpprjviKbs Xbyos
345
dLupeXLa, -oXia 135, 99 a 10+ 263 268
dioxXew, 8i6xXr)<ns 94 #+ 249
Diocletian 250 251
Dio Cassius xliii 22 215 ; lxvi 9 463
Dio Chrysostomus i p. 16 Dind.
57,
xxxi p. 400 488
Ai6dwpos, proxenos of guild honoured
with a statue 170
Diodorus Siculus iv 5 4 204; Schol. xn
40 2 260, 55 10 44 ; xm 7 1 507, 47
266, 49 62, 64 7 263, 66 4 71, 72 1 62,
164
# ; xiv 43 5 429, 84 3 77, 35 354,
94 4 77; xv 23 3 84, 28 29 83, 9 7
83, 36 84, 30 5 84, 36 5 84, 45 3
85, 47 85, 82 91 ; xvi 31 101, 52 101,
66 204, 72 1 111 ; xvn 48 272; xvm
ii 1 111 ; xix 52 415, 62 5 144, 75
144, 78 448, 79 4 370; xx 22 101, 9
J 153, 43 127
Diodorus corrected 82 101 111 507;
xi 77 1 sqq., 78 2 sqq., 79 3 500; xm
106 8 75
Aioyeveia 180; sacrifice of ephebi at
65 4 173
Aioy&eiou 179 180 420; stele deposited
in 69 42 190
Aio-yefetoi', 6 7ri 147 180
Diogenes Laertius n 108 519 ; iv 65
457; v 35 82, 65 158
Diogenes, liberator of Athens 474
;
(ppovpapxos, honours given to, by
Athenians 180
;
priest of 180 ; with-
drawal of Macedonian garrisons by
157
diOLKrjcrei, 6 iirl 135 ; ol inl
rf? 52 68 133
135 ; functions of 53 34 136, 54 36 139,
55 78+ 142, 59 27 155
;
number of,
reduced 135
dLOLKrjaecjs, 6 iirL 89
dioiKT]<ns 38 27+ 104
Ato,ua[ieus] (AiOytteetfs) 95 4 252
Dione, altar of 118 c ii 49+ 330
Aiovfoia 15 25 40 102 242, 65 27 177;
ej/ aarei 100 A a 46 269, 61 33 163;
in Elaphebolion 41
;
fieydXa 105, 52
62 133, 74 5 206 221 269 429; men's
contest at 206 ; musical contests at
427 ; of the Piraeus 100 A a 6 269
;
rural 269 ; of Eleusinian deme 83
45 221; time of 65 ; victory in, com-
memorated 217 449
AiovvaiciKol Texvirai 235
;
decree of
Council of 473
Aiovvaios 'EXevdipios escorted to Aca-
demy and back 242
Aiovvaios of Heraclea, coin of 45 39 122
Dionysiac theatre, inscribed seats in
27 179 180 190, 246-307 467 ; inscrip-
tions found in or near 15 39 60, 73
200, 152 404, 156 408, 20 53, 27 71,
171 428
Dionysion iv Alfiu ais 58 240
Dionysius Halicarnassius i 67 162, 5
242; Ant. vn 72 15 179; Dinarch.
9 131
Aiowffoi 142 21 388
Aibwaos, chair of priest of 467; dedi-
cation by rerpa7roXe?s to 221 451
;
images of, crowned with ivy 142 21
389; lists of plays represented in
theatre of 428
;
procession for 47
20+ 126, 54 13 139; sacrifices of
ephebi to 54 5+ 139, 65 16 176;
shrine of 240 ; temple of 52 70 133
;
theatre of 131 181
Aidvvaos vtos 90 6 235
Aiovuaov eoprri 38 22 104
AibcpavTos 44 13 117
Dioscorides iv 58 325 ; on fruits 175
Dioscuri, altar to, in Louvre 213
AupiXuov 112 11 312
bicppoi in Parthenon 97 14 258
bKpdepes (=-eus) 94 29 251
diphthongs, spurious xiii
bLTrX&crios, di7rAacricji> 175
biiTTtpvyov 100 38 279
Dipylon vase, archaic inscription on
390 514
Dime engraved on leaden plates found
in Boeotia, Cnidos, etc. 520
discus of marble, with painted figure,
as votive offering 175 431
diseases, various, imprecated on dis-
turbers of tombs 381 19 510
dio-jrepiobos 242 8 463
dissimilation, vocalic 179
Siaroixos 126 32 365
districts, the twelve Attic 452
divine year
)(
archon-year 169
division lines, horizontal 110 308, 111
310
Dobrudja, inscription from the 309
box/^V
364
dockyards, accounts of curators of
257; spots occupied by trittyes in
491
bubeKOfxcpaXos 142 11+ 387
buibeKa deoi enumerated 91
Dodona, oracle at 97
bby/xa 34 13 91; of Amphictyons 204;
of Iobacchi 91 10+ 241; tQi> avfifid-
Xuv 35 11 93
R. II. 36
562 INDEX.
dot 91 61 242
doKi/xaaia, examples of 91 35 241; of
building 323 ; of a duped 55 97 143
ZoKifxa$eiv 70 15 192, 91 35 241
ddKifxos of ships 119 B a 70+ 342
doKoi 325
SoXtxov 61 7 + 164
AoAix05 a* Eleusis
7
ddjuios 365
dvuaats 70 5 194
duped (Swpetd) 71 75 101, 37 6>+ 99
101, 39 3 109, 40 3 111, 149 55 401
;
doKifiaaia of 55 97 143
Doric-columns, proportions of 366
;
dialect, decree composed in 70 191
;
forms 70 191, 103 11 281, 73 200, 377
509 ; encroachment of 180
Doric, Northern 194
dcopodoKelv 24 39 64
8u>pov (measure) 364
bopovv 126 58 366
Aopiria (Apaturia) 84 62 226
Dorpfeld, Dr 6 33 58
boats 263, 109 6+ 300
double calendar, abbreviated formula
of 169; inBoeotial69; tear dpxovra,
Kara debv 62 4 168
dov\oL of temple 135 5 381
dovXos as agent 93 17 245 ; tomb of 383
511
dovvai, use of 340
dowries, secured by mortgage 494
drachma, as part of denarius 254 ; = old
obol 242 ; half, symbol for 254 ; old
Attic, superseded by denarius 242
;
silver 162; Solonic 175 ;
symbols for
254; denoting weight 273
Draco, law of, concerning homicide,
ordered to be re-engraved 25 68
drafts, first, transferred to stone
226
Sp jLTreTTjs excluded from asylum 6 4 13
Dreros, inscription of 153
dpo/xos 70 36 l9d> = \a/uLiradri(t)Opia 166
Apvavrtavbs (e"077/3os) 189
Drusus, consulship of 395;
priesthood
of 395, 324 12 485
dual and plural in apposition 334
dual, feminine forms of, in article 6
AvaXeh, phratria, lease of estate by 85
1+ 227
Avake&v, to koivov 85 2 227
dveiv 355 7 496
dvvaixai, 77-augment of 134
SvctkoXwv (Kaipwv) 55 33 144
E = at 154 460; e, ei 76, 31 78, 35 92;
= et, 7) 70 191; = et 386; for diph-
thongal et 123 353; for et (irpoTavta)
124 12 356
E, forms of xii 28 72, 32 79 83 137, 42
113, 156 408, 239 460, 244 464; lunated
form of, on mortgage-stone 354 495
H
(77),
forms of, indicating date
9;
forms of 192 439, 204 443, 237 458,
240 460
E, values of 74 205, 77 210, 78 212, 80
215, 84 221, 97 257, 98 260, 99 262,
106 294, 107 295, 109 299, 110 308,
111 309. 114 314, 115 315, 116 317,
117 318, 118 327, 119 335, 121 345,
122 347, 123 353, 132 377, 133 379,
149 398, 158 410, 159 413, 168 422,
192 439, 216 449
H
(77)
; see also under letter H
H =
7) with three-stroke a 337 491
H, values of, 97 257, 98 260, 99 262,
106 294, 107 295, 109 299, 114 314,
115 315, 116 317, 117 318, 118 327,
132 377, 192 439
77 after tt/jwtos 84 118 227
77-augment of ^ovkofxai etc. 52 25 132 134
77 for et in augment 112 8 312
77 for ei in the Augustan period 458
77 for et 113 18 376; explanations of 63
ex
for 4k before (9,
0, x
8 A 7 21
4
X
Zdfxov 99 a 20 266
Echelos, rape of Basile by 57
echinus 324
'H
X
c6 190
e^cupos 112 5+ 312
edicts of priests 84 222; confirmed by
demos 384
Tjdvvaro 56 12 147
-677s, -ees, -et'es, -rjs, -eis from stems in
-ev 397
iy in pre-Euclidean Attic 26
yxvp
a 194
iyypa<pai, at 65 6 176
iyyvrjs KaTaj3o\r) 310
eyyv-qr-qs 21 25 56, 26 34 71, 92 11 245,
78 22 212
;
in a lease 130 20 374
;
required for lessee 131 5 376, for
fj.iad(VTrjs 118 c ii 19 329, 127 22 368,
128 32 370
ZyKCLvcris 332
iyKavTrjs 118 a i 22 327
iyKoijULtjats 465
ZyKTacns 117
^yKTr]/xa 83
#7*7-770-19 24 30 65 85, 43 36 117, 45 20
119, 72 18 199 ;
limited by law 122
ZyKviiKov 102 48 279
eyXeyeiv 9 8 26
eyXoyeis 9 14 23
iypafx/ndreve, see formulae
iypav/J-dreve 66 3 182
Egypt, list of men fallen in war in 359
498 499
Egyptian inscription quoted 386 ; in-
scriptions and papyri, words occur-
ring in 464
INDEX. 563
Egyptians, the temple of Isis founded
by, at Athens 43 43 116
et and t confused 91 236
et and t], identical in sound 513; in
augments 112 8 312
et, diphthongal, modes of expressing 54
et, from at in augment 45 37 122 ; for e
119 A 5 340, 124 2 + 354 355 ; for
v
196 274 ; for
v
120 b 32 345, 119 B b
35 343, 125 4 + 360 366; for
v
in
augments 79; in datives etc. 102;
in datives and subjunctives 79
et for i 141 1 386, 146 395, 149 17 400;
early occasional instances of 184
et, non-diphthongal, modes of express-
ing 54
et, numeral, for te 150 i 4 403
et, tendency of, to become t 196
-eta, -uta in participles 180
eidv (i&p) 101, 39 31+ 109
eUdda, /mer' 67 2 183
eUddas, /xer 62 4 168
Et'/ca5etW,
x
w
P
L0V kolvov, boundary-
stone marking 351 494
EUadeh 113 A 12 314 497; decree of 86
230
EtVaSevs, eponymus 86 3 230
elie&s 128
eUcou
x
a^K
V
52 ^3 133; decreed 55 50
142
cIkcov ypaTTTT] ev oirXtp 63 17 170
cIkocttt) substituted for tribute 290
eiKoaroXoyoi 290
etXeiv equivalent of eipyeiv 70 20+ 195
et7re, s<?e formulae
Eiprjwr], sacrifice to 100 A a 30 269
eiprjvapxia 91 254 243
elcrdyav (els (pparpiav) 84 4<S + 222
eiaaycoyr) 20; (ets (pparpiav) 84 70+ 223
eiVaYaryeus 291 ; functions of 17 7 50
;
(ephebic) 147
ia"qyr]Ti]S rod gltuvlkov Tapueiov 325 3485
eiaeXaoriKoi (dywves) 463
elairrjpia dveiv 179
etcroSos 92 5 244
ela(pipeiv 92 3 244
da<popd 33; on estate, paid by deme
129 24 373, 131 6+ 229 376; paid
by lessee 373, 130 27 374
etairpa^is xp^^twj/,
decree concerning
158
LT7]KP 55 94 143
et'0tf 403 519
e"* before
/3, 7, 5, X, /*,
*> 26
enftaiveiv for Trapa(3aiveiv 78
eKexnpi-a 70 48 196
eV/c 32 40 133
eKnaKeladai. 93 54 248
eKKXrjai.a, (3ovXtj acting independently
of 32; eV lleipcuet 86; r/ eV Atofi/crou
102, 38 22 104 ; held in the Pnyx for
elections 107 ; theatre of Dionysus
106 107; in the Piraeus 107, 65 36
177; jurisdiction of 93 53 246; Kvpia
86, 45 72 122, 52 4 132, 57 5 150, 58
5 154 ; Kvpia ev dedrpa) 60 10 158, 62
5 168, 65 3 176;
place of, specified
in decrees 107; wpo(5ovXevp.a to be
brought before 50
eKKXrjaLaariKos, fxicrdbs 401
^kkXt)tol dtKai 77 198
HkkXvtos irdXis 71, 58 12 154 198
eKKOTrretv 139 33 373
KTrpaeu 70 5 194
eKirpe/xvl^eiv 373
ZXatov, culture of 93 2 245
iXaidovrjs 93 00 247
eXatode'cnov 180
eXatou 0eVts 65 79 178
'EAatcwo-tot 32 B 27 81
iXaQv (pVTevrrjpLa 21 33 56
Elaphebolion,Dionysia celebrated in 65
iXar-qp 84 7 225
iXedovqs 93 S> 247
eXtyas, purchase of 114 & 4# 314, 115
4 316
Elean inscription quoted 74
Eleans, alliance of, with Athens 34 91
'EXei/creii'ty, (3ovXi) iepd iv 67 3 184
'EXevaelvos 69 8 190
'EXevaivdde 69 11 190
'EXevaivt. 26, 36 56 96
'EXeimVta 71, 61 34 163, 65 40 176 270
271 388; myrtle crown at 190
'EXevaivtaKds (Xttfos) 117 i 41 319
Eleusinian, deities, first-fruits paid to
359 ; deme, decree of, concerning
ephebi 75 209 ; mysteries 269 ; offi-
cials, disbursements to 138 382 ; rites
408; ritual, decree regulating 3
7;
stone 333
'EXevaiviov, to 124 357; at Eleusis
3 3
7;
(utto rrj TroXei) 9 29 27, 69 14 +
189; to ev daTet 36 7 94 ; bricks for
166; (Acropolis) 2 C 42 6; site of 190
'EXevaivoOev 9 9 26 286
Eleusis, boundary stone on road to 335
490; building of portico (aTod) at
369; Hall of Initiation at 369; in-
scription found at 3 7
; lagoon at 53;
Mystery-festival 4; Mystery-rites at
7; Mystery-truce of 4; old temple
of the Mysteries at 53
;
peribolus of
old temple at 53
;
propylaea at
98 ;
'PeiTo at 347 ; stadium at 358
;
standard weights at 176
;
temple at,
destroyed by Persians 53
iXevdepai iroXeis, ai 188
eXevdepia 187
'EXevdepiov 96 29 253
Elgin Collection 188 235, 92 244
Elgin, Lord 323
362
564 INDEX.
Elgin Marbles 12 36
Elis and Achaia, oligarchical 92
IXXefarew 122 111 351
ellipse, examples of 84 21 226 ; of
antecedent 79 11 215; of subject 64
6 174
ZXvrpov 103 1 281
e/u(3dXXeiv {/xrjva) 9 53 27
emblems, sacred, carried by priestesses
at Eleusis 53
e
fx(3oXd{eiv, e/j.(3oXieiv (intercalate) 27
i/jij3o\i/xVLP (intercalate) 28
ififidXifios 50 6 129
gn(3o\os to be returned to store 341
e/JLflTJVOL bluai 291
^/uTraats 117
emphyteutic tenure 58 374
e/xirbXia 128 4 370
e/niropia oiKua 120 a 55 344
ifJLTTOpLKT] /M'8. 64 34 + 172
ifxiropiKOv rdXavrov 64 35 + 172
emporium and road, boundary stone
between 341 492
fX7ropos, freight of, to be registered 93
41 246
iv, assimilations of, before <xk, <xt 18
iv 194
-Tju, accusatives in, 3rd declension 416
ivaXXd% 46 13 123
frareu, at 91 42+ 237
encaustic colours, remains of 332
encroachments, Attic, censured by
Isocrates 94
ivbeiKvvvai in Ceos 198
&Seiis 21
ivbeXex&s 65 33 177
endowment, deed of 96 253
euexeadai 10 B 18 32
evexvpa. 122 25 352 497
eve.-x.vpa.Gia 129 7 373
ivexvpdfeiv 8 A 19, 85 37 228
ivetfxev 70 4 191
ev title? h7)iifxa 310
ivypd<peadai 91 61 242
engravers, errors of 135, 174 431
;
possible error of 73 21 204
engraving, corrections in 52 1 134
;
cost of 37 48 100, 39 31 109, 40 25
111, 45 27 119, 48 9 127, 51 32 131
162 205; directions for, in tribal
decrees etc. 205 ; of decree by ypa/j.-
ixarevs Kara Trpvravelav 38 13 104, 39
25 109; by
yp.
rijs povXijs 18 16 51,
and frequently; not assigned to
yp.
tt,$ j3. 38 8 103
'EvlaXov, female name 365 505
evibpveaQai 9 55 25
ennaeteris-calendar 421
Enneakrounos 190
evveeTTjpis, irpwTr) 167 2 421
evvbfiiov 131 13 376
^ot
tyypoi 167
evoUiov 87 9 233
ZvowXos 65 .56 178
ev<pavifciv 66 II 181
evravdol, Shilleto on 26
evdavda 84 60 226
evdavdol 9 i3 26
entrance fee to guild, reduced for sons
of members 91 38 241
'Ej/uw, priest of 67 5 183
e7rci7eti' (intercalate) 27
iirayytXXeiv 77 6 2 211
eiraivel or Tt/xa to be supplied 53 35 138
ewaLveaai, Homeric use of, with dative
22 a 3 59, 23 6+ 62 74; in honorary
decrees 34
'iiraivoi 45 24 122
'ErraKprjs 78 30 214; tripolis214; trittys
214
Epaminondas 88
eiravayooyds iiravdyeiv 82 12 218
iiravopdovv 23 49 62, 36 84 96
eirapaadat dpdv 86 3 230
eirapxri, dirapxv 124 263 359
eirapxeia
77
e/c Nap(3u)vos 324 7 484
ewdpyvpos 97 16 260
iireujiivai 88 IS 233
eirep.fidXXeiv (intercalate) 27
eirvypa<poL, foreigners 164 i 28+ 419
eire^rjcpt^e, see formulae
iirepyd{eadai 117 i 37 324, 126 63 366,
127 11 + 368
ewecrTdTei, see formulae
iirireia 257, 99 a 3 263
icpatieladai 70 37 196
'E<p7;/3ta, a military noviciate 145; early
institution of 145
;
importance of, at
Athens 145 ;
later development of,
into a University system 145
ephebic decrees, later, tedious prolixity
of 146 ; discipline, not mentioned by
Plato or Isocrates 145
ephebic inscriptions 137; a distinct
category 145 ; classification of 145
;
range over six centuries 145 ; variety
in composition of 146 ; in the Stoa
of Attalus 443
ephebic-lists 53 40 sqq. 136, quoted
395; officers 146, commended and
crowned 65 51 177
&p?7/3(H, age of 145; annual astynomi
of 126; attend eKKXfjala iv ottXols 65
35 177; attend aKpodaeis 65 36 177;
books dedicated by, to library 167
519 ; classification of 166 ; com-
mended and crowned 65 45177; con-
stitution of, resembling republic 126
;
decrees concerning 75 207 ; decrees
in honour of 186, 53 135
;
dedication
by, to Hermes 214 448 ; dates of 190
;
'("vol 167; form miniature irbXis 147;
INDEX. 565
inscription containing list of 418;
list of, 212 a.d. or later 190 ; of
Lyttos 153
;
of tribe Cecropis and
aoj(ppovicrTr)s make a dedication 209
;
parade of, at Qr/aeia 1G6; procession
escorted by 190; receive honour
from Salaminian Stj/ulos 65 26 177;
sacrifice of, at MovvlxIo. 65 21 177;
sacrifices of, at the ceremony of
iyypcupaL 65 5 176 ; sacrifices per-
formed by 146; triple division of
166; two years course for 138; used
as irepiiroXoL 138; with o~co<fipoi>iaTr]s,
list of 75 207
i(pr](3u)i>, oi e 61 64 164
ecpedpeveiv, -rrpocreSpeveiv, irape8peveiv 180
itfteipcu, tyeais 84 30 226
'E077/xepts apxaio^oyiicr], inscriptions
from, quoted
(1893) p.
129
57, (1869)
404 124
tyeacs 7 74 18, 71 21 198
Ephesus allied with Athens 77
e<peTai, oi, 51 in number 69
<f>l
194
{(piepa 141 24 387
<pLOpKOL/ilL 70 9 194
i<p65i.a, allowance for 36 63 96 ; amount
of 45 44 122
(p68tov 22
tyodos 70 34 196
ectopia (dyopd) 25 27 69
ZcpopoL, supplied 57 57 152
imJ3a\\eiv (intercalate) 27
imp&Wov, to 88 19 233
e7ri/3drcu 412
;
number of 413
Tri[3\7]^a 102 31 279
iirt^oXr) 124 29<9 359
eTix^ipa 194
ewlxpvo-os 259 281
Epicteta, will of 76
emSafxia 72 5 199
Epidauria, dedication relating to the
230 456 ;
sacrifices offered at the 456
Epidaurus, 'AaKX-)]irce?oi' at 161
TTI.8eiKVV/XL 9 60 25
i-mMKaroL t6kol 121 12 346
TTl8eKa.TOV, to 7 35 15
iniSripLLa of Hadrian at Athens 327 6 487
iirt.Sri/JLL0S apx^v
452
eViSiWj'ai 59 16+ 155, 45 9+ 120
f7n5o0j'cu (rpiTjpei?) 119 B 6 66 339
eiriSdaeis 45 12 119, 55 62 142
eTnepyaofj.at., iTTi.epya.o~La 195
emypacprju Troirjaraadai 66 2,2 181
iTTLKapTria 110 II 309
eTTLKX-qpos 76 20 210
4-riKo\&TrTii> 124 6 357
i-TLK0vpL0L, deoi 97 I 258
iwlKpava 369
eTrLKpaviTis 117 i 16 323
ivlKpavov 126 43 365
eTriKpoveiit 118 c i 13 334
ewLKvpovv \j/i)4)L0'f/.a 63 21 170
eirLXeKTOi at G^rreta 61 12 + 163
'E7ri\i/xj'ioj' 81 13 217
iirifxeXriTai in concert with elaayojyeh
50;
;
raw fxvo-T-qpiuv 176 269, 207 4
444; veiopiiop 75, 120 a 14 343; one
from each tribe 340 ; t<2>j> veiopiuv,
irapa86(TLS of 118 340; of orgeones
8715+ 232; of cleruchies 82 37 220;
irofiTrrj'i 54 23 139
; irofxirris Tip Aiovvaco
140;
(tribal) duties of 206; number
of 210; with archons 140
e7rt/x.eX77rrjs eirl tov \i/j,ei>a 63 19 170
174
176;
yv/nvao-iov ktX. 68 12 185;
/cat vop.oQiTT-% 312 5 478; A17X0U 178,
167 E i 32 422; of demes 313; of
families 313; Ileipcue'ws or iiri tov
Ueipaiea 170 176, 167 E i 31 422;
tt)~: 7r6\ews 320 <$ 482 ; ttjs ToXews 5td
/3iou 478; tov e/xiropiov 167 E i 34
422; tou ^p YleipateH Xifxevos 170;
tribal, duties of 76 7+ 210
iirLfxeX-qTevoiv (tt)s 7r6Xews) 317 16* 481
4irifi\6tTduv 7 15 17
'Htjwt? 380
e-riibxpaTo 155 I 408
erri-bopa 50 289
iirixJ/ricp'Lo-is, illegal 32 A 52 81 ; in post-
Euclidean decrees 85
;
penalty for
illegal 87 13 232
iirio-y-iAOs 97 14 260
imaK-j-rTecrdai 86 II 230
eirio-Kevateiv 6 13 13; (j'cx.Oj') 119 A a 47
337
i-TLaKevr) 161
eTnaxevri
)(
Kadaipecris 125 I 360
i-riaKOTTOL 16 7 43; sent by Athens to
subject states 12
eiri.o~Tao-iov 122 /# 350
e7ricrrdTcu, accounts of
5, 114 315
eTrto-rdrat 'EXeucwotfe*' 104 I 284 371;
accounts of 124 354; number of
286
eirLo-TctTaL 'EXevaiviov 369 371 ; for build-
ing Parthenon, accounts of 115 316;
of temples 10 A 18 32
;
tQv Stj/houlo-v
Zpyuv 323; tov veu (Erechtheum)
323; various 32 364
e7rtoTdr7/s, function of, in (3ov\rj and
^KKX-rjaia 16 ; 6 K tQv Trpoe8pojv 36
31+ 95; of Ecclesia in decrees
3;
tQjv irpo8p(j)v 101 ; inference of date
from name of 101 ; of the prytanes
36 39 95, 101 355
;
functions of 88
;
tCjv vojAodeTwv 39 50 109 ; tCov TapaQsv
36 36 98
e-TiaTvXiov 117 i 26 324, 126 46 366;
inscribed, found in outer Ceramicus
362 504; inscribed marble adorned
with 166 417
566 INDEX.
'EwiTdfra 240 2 460, 65 20 177; con-
nexion of with Theseia 179
4TriTr)8ev/xa 328 10 488
7riT7]KT0S 104 13 286
iirldeTOi. eoprai 135 268
iirideTOS dyibv 52 43 133
iirLTijULTjTai 79 6 215
4iri&<rrr)s 124 31 359
<?7t<u/c(h 22, 120 a 60 344
eiroLKol
)(
d,7roiKt'a 437
iirojAvvvat. 84 74 223
e?7ri6vw 309 310
iwoTTTal 2 B 11 5
e'7T7ra<m, e7racris 117
equations, chronological; see chrono-
logical equations
equipment, inventory of 342
ipaviGTai 497 ; law of 241 ; bowls dedi-
cated by kolvov of 105 i 22 288
epaz>os 88 i 233 ; invitation to form 386
epavos paid monthly 241
'EpaacviSys, general at Arginusae 24 5 65
erasures 83 138; designed 143, 160
413, 214 448472; examples of 75
60 209 ; frequent about 200 B.C. 143
;
of tribe-name 219 451 ; in texts 23 7
63 ; lines or words engraved over 23
39+ 60, 164 iii 6 7 419 473
'Epex^Sos etc., orthography of 500 503
Erechtheis, tribe, first in precedence 517
Erechtheum, the, 6 33; the old
6;
inscription found in 8 19; accounts
of building 257; expenses of build-
ing, inscription recording 118 327;
ground-plan of 321 ; inscription re-
lating to building of 117 318 ; Stuart's
picture of 323
Erechtheus, identical with Posidon 473
'Epiatoi. 32 B 21 81
Eretria, colony sent to 185 437
'EperpLTJs 32 A 81 82
'Hp/auSoi 74
ipy&ai/jLos 131 22 376
ZpyaaTpa 60 85 160
ipyaarrjpia 64 9 171
epyaarriptov (mining) 112 7 312
Erotion quoted 280
eppeov, diapporj, ppQyas, ppovv, ppKpeura,
pptxTtov, ppv/jioL, double
p
in 53
ipp7j(popla
(4per-) 454
error, engraver's 118 286 382 6 511
eppwade 72 2 199
'Epvdpaat. 5 13 48 12
Erythrae, allied with Athens
77; fiovX-q
of, elected democratically 12; con-
stitution of, modelled on that of
Athens 147; decree concerning demo-
cratic constitution for 11 ; demos of,
indebted for cost of victims 5 2

7
12; doKifxaaia of ftovXevrai at 5 9 12;
Neleus mythical founder of 57
;
notice by Aristotle of 12 ; oath taken
by (3ov\t) of 5 7 sqq. 12
;
prosecution
of unqualified
ftovXevrai at 5 10 12;
subject to Athens 10
42dfup = 4v 2. 28 40 74
eschara 165 417
eo-xartd 96 16 253
eae\r)\ve[vas] 109 10+ 306
euecrdwv (ecrlrj/uu) 69
-rjat, -r]<n, -d<n, -ai<xi in dative plural of
a-stems 12 25 35, 15 14 41 42 50 58,
114 a 3 b 3 315, 115 1 316, 132 16
378; date indicated by 25 35; latest
examples of 58
is 2a/j.
v
= ev 2. 28 26 75, 99 a 35 267
-eertrt dat. plur. 70 22 192 194
io-T7]X
v
7 59 18, 18 16 52, 23 36 61, 25
7 66, 16 13 43
-eadwu, -oadwv in imperatives 17
-eaTw -adco in dialects 386
Eteonicus, harmost in Thasos 62
eTerdxaro 15 9+ 39 40 41
edipLOi Xirovpylai 91 111 239
tdvwv Tdyp.ara 61 13 163
Etymologicum Magnum quoted 270 310
evayyeXia, (3ov\rj summoned for 68 5 184
evayyeXia dvetv 522
evavdpia, contest of 61 48+ 164; liturgy
of
118; prize for 426
evaitdpias (dywv) 169 b ii 26 426
Euboea, conquest of, by Pericles 20
433; defection of 266; re-conquest
of, by Pericles 437
Ev/3ov\evs, priest of 27
evyo.pi<jTr]piov 464
Euclides, archonship of xii sq. 72 75,
74 10 206
Ei>'<5oos crowned for his dioiK-rjcns 38 27
104
eveiXaros (eviX-) 141 11 387
Euergesia-decrees, how classified 34
evepyerris, evepyerai 34, 18 14 51, 24 28
64 79, 65 32 177 482
EvuXeia and Evvojuia, life-priest of 324
13 485
evKoufxia ttjs j3ovXi]S 38 27 104 ; tou
dedrpov 38 24+ 101
etiicocrfMos, 6 91 94+ 242
eijXei =r)vXei 238 11 459
Eumenides, the, and Plato, worship of
408
EvfxoXwidai 9 36 27, 36 14 94, 69 <5 +
188 ; antiquity of, at Eleusis 221
;
right of i^rjytjcris belonging to 27
Ei}/xo\7rt5cu and Kr/pvues, decree of 83
221
Ev/j.oXirt.5)v, e^fjyrjTris e 27
;
yevos 69 38
189
EvveWcu., citharoedist family 270 473
Euodius and Honorius, consulship of
389
INDEX. 567
Evu)uv/j.?s, deme of the 'Epexdv'k 74
i>07r\ia, control of 61 51 + 164
Eupatoristae 235
evirdXe/uos, vlicq 360 5 501
Eupolis, fr. 212 Kock i p. 316 18; n
p. 545 27
evcprjiula 65 83 178
eixpopla 93 59 247
Ei)7ri/pt5cu, part of rpt/cw/xat 215
Euripides, i<Yar/m. S>i2 389; H.F. 90
345; Her. 986 389; I.T. i559 280,
1448 280 sqq. ; low 1076 190 ; his
popularity 429 ; list of works of 519
;
works of, dedicated to library by
ephebi 519
Eurystheus 389
en-stems, plural inflexions of 397
-evs, -erjs, -ijs, -els, -^as 18
evs, contracted forms of genitive from
505
Evaefieia ev Wotl6\ois and at Neapolis
463
Eusebius Chron. i p. 196 28, p. 200
12 20 p.
202
29, p. 206 7, 430
evarddeta 91 15 236
Eustathius p. 430 66; on Horn. A
p. 814 519
evTa&a 53 21 + 136 ; liturgy of 44 5 118
evdvvai 7 71 16
eutfwas 5t5wcu 61 22 163, 82 iS 218
evdvvecrduv 15 3# 42
eudwoi, functions of 211
etidwos 345
evdwos (single) functions of 211
evdvvoaduv 9 20 26
evduvTTjpia 126 16 365
Euthyna 32
VTove7v 9 30+ 242
euTcma 94 44 250
Euxine, export of corn from 42
e" before 'P. 122 27+ 348; before a 111
310
ea7eii' (dwoiKiav) S A 29 20
eayuTTOL 104 286
e^aywyq said to be prohibited by Solon
247
ifaXetyeiv 10 A 10 28, 21 22 58, 28 30
73, 84 19 222
eSJdAlov 28 24 75
exclamations, common in late inscrip-
tions 241
i^b-qcav) 91 13 241
i^rjyqaLS, right of, belonging to Ei)-
p.oXiri8ai 27
ifyyrjTol 65 < 176
<Fei/cafe<r0cu 133 A J 7 380
e^eXevdepLKai, 0idXcu 238
e^yprj/ueua 8 A JO 21
e<ms, e^acms 280
e^erao-TTjs, functions of 51 3J 131
e^<7Tu>s? 102 30 277
exorcism, heathen formulae of, modi-
fied by Gnostics 520
eZopxovv 7 45 15, 84 35 222
i^opvTTeiv 373
ilwTiicds 91 55 242
f,
in Attic inscriptions 368 506
facsimile reproductions in plates at
end 365 391394 399 408
facsimile reproductions in the text 173
174 176 177 187 190 363 390, also
p.
438
fa\e?OL 74
famine at Athens 1,22
Fauvel, errors of, in copying 12 ; in-
scription copied by 5 10
festivals, names derived from 280
fines 130 23 374 378; amounts of 39
51
109*,
42 35 114; examples of 91
passim, 92 1 244, 120 b 4 344; for
proposing new motion 46 26 124 ; of
various amounts 9 58 25 ; 1000
drachmae 14 20 38, 17 18 45, 21 10
55, 15 38 40, 17 19 + 45 46, 17 4 45 78
jvsco locum facere 251
fishery, see ddXarra
fleet, personnel of, raised by demes 492
flesh of victims, not to be carried away
140 10 384
flogging as penalty of 5t]/j.6<noL 41 ab 7
113
fluting of column, inscription written
in 191 438
foot, Attic, length of 322
foreigner (Ancyra), tomb-stone of 374
508
foreigners, as trierarchs 342; names of
359
formulae, various:
abbreviated 38 4 102
archons' fathers' names and demotic
added later 85
of amendment 18
of choragic dedications 434
cost, amount of, dirb with genitive 38
7 103
decretory,
ti>xV
dyadrj 5e56%#cu 34
of decrees 2
of decrees, example of fully developed
86
of decrees, expansion of 85
of decrees, greater specification in
names 85
of decrees, increased exactness in
date 85
of decrees, loses rigidity in imperial
period Rem. viii 183
designedly omitted 65 44+ 180
(elliptical), tows Aax<Was 65 45+ 177
forbidding counter-propositions 32
51 83
568 INDEX.
formulae, various : (cont.)
introductory, of a irapaSoais 97 260
Latin, translated 251 390
of naval TrapaSoais 119 A a 14 341
repeated, raOra pcev dvaypd\l/atl&1443
transitional, in decrees 32 2 sqq. 82
205
in tribute lists 289
unusual, applied to prytanes 74
votive,
evxvs
X-P
lv 520
formulae, types of:
dyadrj
ri>xv 47 12 125
atpeaOai rovs /3o0s 65 10+ 179
'AXu-rreicTjcTi oIklov etc. 118 a i 2 332
dvayopeveiv top arecpavov 51
dvacpepeiv 10 B 12 13
auade/na tjtoj 387 12 513
dvdOecriv 7rotetcr0at 63 -25 170
dveiirelv rov o~re<pavov 51
&<p' ecrrias p.vr}6r)vai 228 5 455
awo (xtXtW) dpaxp-uv 24 22 65, 37 ^5
99, 60 46 159, 65 40 177, 75 30 +
208
d.7ro(rraret otl et^e 101 A 6+ 276
dp%at, at rerrapes 10 B #6 33
apxet-v
&PXW
65 75 178
apxtw
X
L
P^
V d8iKcov 25 53 67
dpxeiv top XROfov ktX. 5
api<jrivhr\v alpeladaL 25 29 67
dpidp.6v Ta.be 97 9 260
at)rat ra^dp.evai 289
/3ouXr? i] del (3ovXevovcra 64 16 171
(3ovXeveiv Xax&v 56 ii 148
XpVP-OiTi^eLP 43 16 116
Xpwos apxet 121 14 347, 129 18 373
8r)p.ov \f/7)<pia/j.aTa 60 8 158
cJi/cas SiSovaL 16 7 43
dovvcu \pr)(pov 39 ^4 108
^a/x. /x?7 rt ot crrparriyol SecovraL 15 56 41
iypap.p.dreve, 6 help a 11 22 35, and
frequently
eSLSaaKe 238 6 459
el Xloov kgll dp.ei.vop 36 24+ 94, 41 C e
25 113
eZVat 5e ko.1 dWo eupevdai 65 i6 178
eivai e'vawovSov 153
t7rej/, 6 SeT^a 4 A 23 and frequently
et's diKao~T7]pLOP eladyeip 24 43 65
et's ttXcw \a(36pres 119 B a 73 342
et's (pvXaKTjp ri}s
x^P
as 59 ^<S+ 155,
120 b 39 344
els aojrrjpiap rijs iroXecos 157
els tt]p iiriodcrav iKKKr/alap 135, 53 16
136, 60 22 159, 61 26 163
et's rr)v irpwTfjv e/c/cX. 38 i6 103, 39 25
109, 43 14 116, 45 48+ 120 135
K Havadrjvaltov es Hava6rjvaLa 109
1+ 301
e/c twj' els rd Kara \py}<pLo~p.aTa dva-
\io~Kop.epojp (or p.epi^opepojp) or e/c
tQp Kara ktX. 38 8+ 103, 45 27
formulae, types of: {cont.)
119, 48 9 127, 52 72 133, 82 39 220,
37 41 100, 39 39 109, 40 110, 45
44 120, 37 4, 40 25 110 111, 36 62
+ 96
e/c T/)tcDj/
8paxP-&v
65
iK(f>^petp els eKKXrjaiav 45 48+ 120
eKipe'peip els top 8rjp.ov 24 38 64
'EXewtJ/t o'lkQv 124 5 359
e> deo-p.y e've'xeo-dai 25 56 67
ev rrj jrpwry ebpa 24 41 65
eV rrj irpdoTT) innX-fio-la 33 47 87 102
eV rw Tera.yp.epo} eivai 15 47 40 42,
37 63 100
iv roh vop.oderais 39 41 110
evapriop tlov Trpvrdvecov 26 36 70
ivopKov elfat 57 62 152
e
,
Tre\f/r](pi{ep, 6 Seipa 35 6 93 and fre-
quently
eireardreL, 6 Seiva 19 4 52 and fre-
quently
iiri dpxovros rod p.erd 63 2 169
eVt TojOYotVoi; dpxovros (not archon)
109 92 307
iiri Xvaei 495
eVt a<pQ>v avrCbv 17 28 50
iwl TTJoSe tt)s (SovXijs 21 21 55
eVt XT?? (TrpojTrjs, 8evre"pas etc.) 7rpu-
ravelas 17 /-w,
0, ^?,
25 50 etc.
iiri %evia KaXelv 29 27 76
iwl eVta 75
iweiSdv ecreXdrj i] irpvTaveia 15 52 40
7rei.Sdv rds evdijvas 8o3 34 13 103, 75
42 208
icrdyeiv els SiKaaTrjpiov 14 22 38
earjyeio-daL dyadd 28 22 72
ei>xvs
X-P
iV ^20
ey^was 8i86vai 10 A 27 32
evdp.evoi dvedecrav 452
e^ctYeti/ 15 35+ 40
ypibpias a7a^ds exetf 15 28 40
ypojp.T]P Se %v/j.{3d\Xeadat. ttjs jSouXtjs
et's to;/ brpiov 33 24 88, 38 10 103,
43 27 116, 45 60+ 120, 52 56 133,
53 18 136, 55 76 142, 59 14 155,
60 23 159, 61 27 163, 82 24 218
ypdipaadai 8r)pov /cat (pvXrjs kt\. 39 22
110
7? ftovXrj
i) at'et (3ovXevovo~a 24 32 64
?7
yelrwv 122 242 + 351
17 6 SeiVa iypap.pdreve 58 2 154, and
frequently
?7 6 5etVa -rrpdoTos eypap.pdreve 108 2
298, 109 5+ 300
77s iypap-p-dreve 6 Seiva 68 2 184
rjGTiPos b\v aTroypdcprjTai 33 41 88
evpeadai dyadbv irapd 24 29 64, 38
46 105
evpiaKeadai (evptcrdat.) otl dv 8oxri
dyadbv 23 47 61, 45 63+ 120
te/>a /cat 6'crta 138
INDEX. 569
formulae, types of : (cont.)
lepQv KaLofxivwv Kara, 12
$
yeLruv ktX. 85 9 229, 111 3 + 310
oi hv Xdxwo~Lv ktX. 52 53 133
oh yelrwv 112 5 312
07rAa irapexto-Qcu 19 2
oitojs ap ovv K<xl oi dXXoi irdvres elduiai
ktX. 38 13 106, 39 il 108
ocra Swcltov Kal ogiov 10 A 16 32
6'<ra oi6j> re /cat deparbv eari 32
6'croi' ttJ 0ew d,7r6 roO cpbpov iylyvero 15
7 39
otolv e^eXduoiv at t'/c rou vbfxov rjpLepai
52 54 133, 55 68 142
orai' irpCjrov irXr]ptDcr.t diKaarrjpiou 145
U7rep wj/ d.7ra77eXXoucriJ/ 62 5 168
/ecu t'5ta /cat bnp-ocrla 18 9 51
/caXecrat eirl deinpoy 40 #7 111
/caXeVat eirl eVta 16 i5 43, 23 36 61
and frequently
/car' apxovra 161
/caret et/cccrt ertDz/ 229
/caret /up etc roO dLaypdfx/naros 119 A &
75 342
/card #eoi' 161
X6701' <5t<56i>at 10 A 25 32
Aucao-rjodroi/ 'e'pyov etc. 119 A ft J5
+
341
/ie%pt rou Teray/nevov 15 40 40
/xerd rou eldia/j.e'vov
axVf
J- aros 69 15 189
jar/re ddtKeiu /nrjTe d<5t/cetc/#at 15 21 40
^tva a7r6 (rou) raXdvrov 33 41 288,
106 a 3 293, 108 7 299
ovk eyeuero (in 5t5acr/caXiat) 220 429
ou/c ^crrti/ (in inventories) 103 I 281
UavadrjvaLiop, e/c, ei's llai/ap'Tjrata 10 A
27 32
-rai/rt o-^vet 32 51 83, 34 57+ 92,
12 15 36
7re/)t t5v Xeyovcnv ktX. 43 9+ 116, 45
52 120
<pbpov r&TTeiv 15 6 39
(pvXrjs ktX. aTToypaxpaaOai or 7pd-
i//acr(?at 24 i6 65
irbXeis at avrr\v tt\v dirapxvv dirrjyayov
41
irbXeis as 'e'ra^av at ra/crat 50
irpoadyeiv els eKKXrjalav 43 i4 116
irpoadyeiv irpbs ttjv
fiovX-qv 8 B 5 21
irpoadyeiv irpbs rbv brj/xov 45 58+ 120
irpoaayeiv fxera ret tepct 53 i6 136
irpbaobov iroielcrdai 34 ii 90, 63 12
169, 66 S 181
irpbaobos irpbs (3ovXriv Kal brjfxov 40 13
111
TT/otDros eypa/n/JLareve 41, 99 a i 265
and frequently
irpCoTOis (irpCoTOv) /xerd ret iepd 23 59
61, 37 57 100
arpareveadai rds crrparelas Kal elacfropds
elacpe'peiv fxerd 2, 45 50 122
formulae, types of: (cont.)
avvex&s iroelv rds eKKXrjalas 15 54 40 97
rd /card
\J/i) (frier
piara dvaXiaKOfxeva r<p
drjpLip 89
rd /up a7a#d 5e'xecr#at 64 6 139, 62
12 168
rd /xep ctXXa Kaddirep rrj fiovXrj 18, 17
40 46 and frequently
rdde iiravopdovrai 36 54 98
Ta/nieltp Toirov iroielv 251
raura fiev dvaypd\J/ai 32 75 84
ravra fxev evxSai 34 15 91
riXeai rots rou belvov (tCjv delviov) 7 60
18, 29 16 76 and frequently
reXos
^x
iv I5 ^
^1
r< avrou dvaXdbp.aTi 88 55 234
rwj/ dXXwi' c^ewj' 278
r<y irpoebpoov eire\pri(pt.e 57 5 150, 58
5 154 and frequently
rovs Xaxbvras irpoedpovs 88, 59 13 155
and frequently; earliest instance
of 157
rovs irpoedpovs oi (o'lTives) av Xd^wcrt
wpoebpeveiv 33 10 86, 55 07 142
rpaycodoLS orav irpCJTov ylv-qrai 82 31
220
rpirjpeis irapaXafxfidveiv 28 59 73
rtfx?7 d7a6
1
?7 38 0+ 103
Four Hundred, the 68 263
Fourmont, inaccuracy of 171, 176
;
mss of 30 76, 64 170, 68 184
Fpdrpa 74
Frazer, J. G., quoted 6
freedmen and slaves in ships' crews 413
freedmen, how designated 452
freedom, Athens leads movement for
153
freedom, lawsuit for, of metoecs 288
fruits, enumeration of 175 ; measures
relating to 174
future middle with passive use 384
7,
forms of 10; indicating date 9
yaubv 175
yaXad-qvbs 87 4 232
Galen De alivi. facult. 1
(p. 314, 14 ed.
Bas.) 229; Expl. vocum Hippocr. s.v.
hearts 280
Galen, tahles of 254
Galerius Maximianus, edict of 94 250
Gallia Lugduneusis 97
ya/m^pol, rights of, in prosecuting for
homicide 25 22 67
yafxerri 84 110 224
Gardner, Professor P. (Oxford) 387
garrisons at Eleusis, Panactum and
Phyle 213 447
Gauls, defeat of, at Delphi 166
r?7 3 3 7; Kapwo<pbpos 245 466; repre-
sentation of, on vases 466
yeybueta 65 92 178
570 INDEX.
yeypd(parai 15 10 41
yebeadcLL 67 12 184, 69 33 190
yelaa 117 ii 25 325
;
Karaiina 126 59 365
gemination of consonants in archaic
inscriptions, earliest example of 190
504
yevrj 83 10+ 220; 'Ax"i&<>ai, Ar)/j.o-
nuvidai, QepptKidScu 227; formulae
of decrees of 205
yevedXios ij/m^pa 68 30 186
genitive, denotes master, not father, of
freedmen or slaves 413 ; of proper
names of 3rd declension 181 ; of time
91 112 242, 125 2 360; used to de-
note person honoured with a statue
478; in heading of decree 29 76; in
-ov from s-stems 375 ; s-stems, late
forms of 53 2 138; use of 364
yevvrjTai 227 ;
reference to list of 395
yevo/uevov, to, interest 2 C 29 6
yeuvdfAWS 21
;
yewvo/xoi 8 A 6 21
Geoponica 10 30 386
yrjwedov 24 31 66 ;
and oinbireSov denned
66
ye<pvpovv 19 6 52
yepeacpopos ftaaiXeojv 536
Germanicus, title, assumed by M.
Aurelius 481
ytpovres, Spartan, join in oath of
alliance 57 57 152
yepovcria of Eleusis 91 132 243
yepovcTLaarrjs 242 33 462
Geta, associated in empire with his
father and brother 186
Geta, name of, erased 68 6 + 185
Glaucetas, possibly a pirate 144
glosses, late Greek 366
yvw/uLT] o~Tpa.T7)yQv 74 ; tQ>v o~vyypa.(pwv
74
gods, impersonation of 243
yoyyvXos (\idos) 117 i 22+ 323
gold, cost of 315; purchase of 115 21
316; relation of, to silver 315 316;
right of priests and magistrates to
wear 485
gold-leaf, work in 335
yuviaia. 117 i 19 323
Gorgon's head, stamped on dicasts'
TTLVOLKLa 515 516
Topyoveiov 97 11 260
Gortyn, dialect of 374
ypafx/xareiov 10 A 11 29 ; of phratria 84
20+ 222
7pa/x
y
u.arets, various kinds of, Rem. v. 89
ypa/x/j-arevs, date indicated by name of
19 52;
(ephebic) 147, 65 54 177; ewi
to. \f/rj(pia/j.aTa 38 35 107 ; errl to deu-
piKov 38 37 107; alperbs 163 8 416;
in decrees of brnxos an annual officer
126; in post-Euclidean decrees 85;
Kara irpvTavdav 41
68, belonging to
(f>v\r) wpvTavevovaa 149, 68 2 187,
engraves decree 38 14 106, functions
of 39 25 110, 45 22 119 and frequently
;
history of
89 ; kXtjputos 163 6 416
;
name of, omitted in decree 16 116
;
not of prytanising tribe 170; of
Prytanes, date indicated by 21
;
of tribe in decrees 2; wept to (3r)iJ.a
188 ; reads decree to dij/xos 38 10 103
;
t9]% j3ov\t]s 9 49 29, duty of, in in-
scribing decrees etc. 9 49 25 and fre-
quently, functious of, as to iyyvr/Tai
26 35 70, history of 89; /ecu rod Stuuloo
149 ; 6 Kara irpvTavelav 188 ; the same
through all the prytanies 33 3 88;
with avaypa<prjs engraves stele 25 6
66; rod drjfxov 56 48 149, 59 22 155;
tribe of, during existence of office
of avaypa<pvs 126; two kinds of, in
one decree 28 72
granaria, aeipoi 26
ypacprj 20 ; wapavo/Jtcju 66
ypaxpanevos, 6 8 A 3 19, 15 39 42
ypd\pacrdai 15 35 40 ; (pvXrjs 65
Greece, Northern, simpler style of
honorary decrees in 34
Greek, modern, pronunciation of 245
Tpvyxv*i
tribute of 49
guilds, formulae of decrees of 205
yv/xvaaiapxos eis A.rjXov 167 E i 41 423
yv/Avdviov, decree to be set up in 82 34
218
yvvoaKela, rex, 141 5 386
gymnasiarchs at Promethia and He-
phaestia 207; at Ceos empowered to
impose a fine 180
Gythium, inscribed a-rjKcofia found at 175
H, see also under E (with H^??)
H = /*, and koppa, combined 173 431
H = /, survival of 352 495
Habron, son of Lycurgus 135
Hades 57
Hadrian, aqueduct of 401 ; as Athenian
archon 236; celebrates Dionysia at
Athens 236 ; iiri.57)/j,La of, at Athens
327 6 487; institutes Panhellenic
contest 187 ; Olympic games at
Athens instituted by 474; statue-
bases of 314 479, 315 480; <ttocl of
187, 68 13 185; time of 26; titles of
314 479, 315 480 ; 12 statues of, one
for each tribe, in cunei of Dionysiac
Theatre 479 ; visits of, to Athens 236
403 473
'
AdpiavT) ' AvTwveivr), guild 90 2 235
Hadrianic era 403
;
epigraphy in xvii
Hadrianis, tribe, list of denies trans-
ferred to 526
'ASpiavos 89 10 235
ayt.a.(p6pos 244 13 465
INDEX. 571
"Ayvcov, admiral of Antigonus 143; coin
of 143 ; luxurious officer of Alexander
144
alpeais 73 77 204, 81 16 217; common
in later inscriptions 144
aiperlfa 141 2 386
aipeTo%, ypafxfxarevs 163 8 416
aKovaia, rd 2 B 5 5
aXade ixtiarai 58
dXfa 200
Haliae, list of men fallen at 359 498
'
AXiKapvaaaos 11 25 35 ; numeral alpha-
bet at 475 ; temple of Apollo at, used
as depository of state documents 36
'AXfivpls 131 2 376
'AAya 270
dXovpyrjS 102 21 280
aXovpyis Ar. Eq. 967 279
dXovpyo? 102 12+ 277
dXTr/p, archaic inscription on a 391 514
dpta^ai 19 12 52
dp.LXXa (ephebic) h t<2 Xt/ievi 65 21 177;
ve<2v 426
di/d = in respect of 70 4 192
Harma, on Mount Parnes 200
dpp.a TroXefiiarrjpLou 426
;
TrwXwv dftoXcov
172 11 430
dp/xos 117 ii 9 325
Harpocration quoted 20 58 101 215
241 270 280 382 426 435 455 494
Harrison, Miss J., on importance of
ritual of Dionysus 472
drds, arCov 183
arret for dnua 24 45 66
eartp 66 15 181
earovs 325 9 486
"H/3t7, temple of 129 22 373
tp8ofxos (Bovs 137 381
hecatomb, amount of contract for 115
;
number of victims of 115
Hecatombaea, Argive 463
Hecatombaeon, ideal 1st of 169 ; rent
paid in 129 6 372
Hecatompedon 256 378
;
inscriptions
relating to 2 33; inventories refer-
ring to 257 ;
nothing to be removed
from 378; site of precinct of 379
edwXidfciv 79 1 215
edos 102 22+ 280; to apxaiov 102 35 +
280
edpa 118 a i 5+ 332
ijyetxuv 94 42 251; (ephebic) 147
iiyep.6v7), 'Acppodirr) 203 2 443
i]yep.6ves 366
r/yepoviai 134
Hegesander ap. Athen. vi 250 153
He^esippus reputed author of rrepi
'
AXovvqaov 93
eiai/r6v 39 14 109
height of pillars, relation of, to diameter
365
elwep, el 195
eiad/uevos, 6, share of, in sacrifices 140
384
el<TT7]Kus 118 c i 19 219 329
eKa.Top.ftri 70 i^ 192; fiovTrpcppos 7
'E/caroj'/Scutoj' 9 <53 25
eKaTocTTf) 309; accounts of 257, 113 313
eKaToaTidloi tokoi 92 4 245
eKarocTTus 110
&CT77 115 16 316
e/creuy 9 6 26
/ctos, symbol for 150 i 5 401
rfXiaia, 17, rail' deapLoderQu 7 75 16
rjXiacrrcu 17 3 45
fjXiKia devrepa (of ephebi) 61 7<S + 164
;
//ecTT? 166; veure'pa 166; Trpeafivrepa
166
;
Trpan-T? 61 76 + 164, 65 33 + 177,
61 70+ 164
Helios, offerings to 133 B 1 380
'EXXr)i>oTa{j.lai 22, 106 a 1 292, 107 5
295, 109 3 298: appointed according
to tribes, as far as possible 299;
functions of 33, 24 12+ 65, 28 39 74
;
funds in hands of 32 ; number of
299 ; sums paid to, by treasurers 306
;
tribute list drawn up by 288 ; added
at end of tribute list, or named in
heading 295 ; disbursements to 99 a
8+ 264
Hellespont, naval operations near
79
;
tribute from, tripled 49 50; watched
by Athenians 42
'EXXr)o-rr6i>Tios <popos 50, 107 26 296
'EXX7]cnrouro(pvXaKS 15 34+ 42
r\liaip(bv = T)p.epbv 92 13 244
r}ixedairf), 7? 25 30 69
i]p.e5a7ros 10 A 4 28
rpxieKTeoiv (i}/bLieKTOu, rjp.ieKTe?ov) 26
TlfMcvcpfis 102 53 281
7)fii(p6piov 91 40 237
ijfxlaea (-eia) 129 15 371, 131 14+ 376
Tj/xLaaos 70 25 195
wvo-vs 129 38 373, 32 45 83, 354 7 496
eifj; Kal va 129
;
ip.j36Xip.os 59 5 155
;
sacrifices offered on 334
7)i>loxos HaXX6.5os 458
6/os 109 26 307
eoprai eirideToi 135 268
eopr?7 at Lesser Panathenaea 42 30 114
'H0CUCTT177S 50
'H0CU0"TldoCU 106
Hephaestia 206 207
Hephaestus, offering decreed to 106
Heraea, Argive 463
Heracles, e(38op.os (3ov<; offered to 137
381
;
p.ov6p.<paXa offered to 136 381
;
rites of 452 ; shrine of 109 64 307
Heracleum, of deme Plotheia 213
Heraclienses tabulae 57 58 374
Heraclitus, commander of garrison in
Piraeus and Attica 217
572 INDEX.
'Hpa/cXeict (Pontus) 45 39 121
"B.paK\ei8r]s SaXa/xmos, decree in hon-
our of 45 7 119
'Hpa/cXecDrcu, reparation demanded from
45 36 120
'Hpa/cXeom/ca /capua 64 19 171
'Hpa/cX?79, inflexion of 136 381
'HpaoX^s 51
Herculaneum rolls, Latinisms in 251
'Ep/celos (Zetfs) 227
Hermanassa 101
Hermae, lists of prytanes inscribed on
396; mutilation of 309
"Ep/xata 82 7 219, 213 14 447
"Eptteios, demotic 34 5 91
'Eppiijs 'Fivaydbvios 3 3 7; eTrtdaXafxiTris
473;
,
H7e/t6i'ios 100 A a 20 270;
ifyepLovcos ('Ei>65ios) 210 6 446 ; k&toxos,
in Dejix tones 408 522 ; dedication by
ephebi to 214 448 ; dedication to 240
461 ; sacrifices to 133 A 5 380
Hermias, Tyrant of Atarneus 17
Hermocopidae, property of, confiscated
308
'Epp,65wpos, TraidoTpifirjs 53 25 136
"Epptuv 99 a 10 263
hero, tribal, decrees placed in shrine
of' 206
ypto, accusative 130 25 375
Herod the Great, pedigree of 482
Herodas Mimiambi iv 91 27
Herodes Atticus xvii 247 ; as priest 91
9 241; inscription dating from 91
240 ; inscription found near or in
theatre of 27 71 ; Odeum of 69 183
Herodian Philet. p. 439 101
Herodianic numerals 475
Herodotus i 35 35, 66 384, 74 41, 179
365; v 77 433, 82 21; vi 86 211;
vii 5 35, 59 51, 112 50, 115 42; vm
123 226
'Hpoi'crrat, decree of 233
heroon, in vase pictures 510; protection
of, committed to Pluto and other
deities 381 3 510
yjpcos (j3ovs r/pws) 195; larpos, dedication
to 60 158; 'EiriTiyios 255 473
"Epar] 454
iaria koivtj rod drjfxov 65 6 176
Hestiaea, treatment of, by Athens 17
'Eo-Tiairjs 32 B 18 80
eaTtaropeiov 91 141 240
Hesychius quoted 2 5 21 57 58 75 77
106 175 190 196 211 233 241 259
279 281 365 370 376 378 381 384
388 443 473
evpeiu, -rrXtov 79 18 215
EuptTTTTiS^s 74 col. 2 25 207
evpov, to 129 36 373
i^dpiTjvos 72 22 190
hide-money 268
i5p6aeaos 43 i0+ 116; origin of ei in
215
iepd, as title of cities 315 4 480; epithet
of (3ov\r) 184
iepd yepovaia (Eleusis) dedicates statue
326 486
iepd
'
ApcpiKTvovind, exclusion of homi-
cides from 25 28 67
iepd, boundaries of, defined 21 7 56
iepd prescribed by
xPWP-oi
7 64 16
iepd : bata 84
iepd, rd 19 14 53
Hierapytna, treaty of, with Rhodes 17
iepavXrjs 68 iii 15 186
iepea, tipeia 227, 87 4 232
iep-qia 70 i4 192
iepeia (tt)s Ai^u^rpos) 36 <5# 96
iepeis, k Xovrpoov 142 22 389; various
inscriptions on seats of, in Dionysiac
theatre 467 sqq.
iepetov (sheep) 9 39 27
iepei(o>s) 103 18 281
iepeuavva 84 4+ 222, 138 a 12 383
iepevs
'
' Aviov 167 E i 53 423
;
'AttoXXoovos
iv AiyXcp 167 E i 45 423; 'Apews
'Efi/aXiou etc. 67 5 183; 'AprepiSos ej>
j'?7a'a; 167 E i 47 423; 'Ao-kXtjitlou kclI
'T7ietas 66 9 181 ; 5ta (Blov of Apollo
455; Aco^cnw 167 E i 47 423; 6 e7rl
ra> /Sw/xa; 2 C 43 6, 68 iii 4 188;
ory^s 0eoD & ArjXip 167 E i 55 423;
<pua<p6pu)v 68 iii 26 188; 'Pii^s 167
E i 51 423; 2apa7ri<5os <?v A^Xcp 167
E i 57 423 ; rolv deolv 2 C 44 6 ; roD
Stj/ulov /cat twj/
x
a
P
iT<Jiv 65 7 179
'lepoKXerjs, soothsayer 7 66 18
'lepoKTjpvt; 6, 67 I + 183 ; functions of
184 ; inscription on seat of, in
Dionysiac theatre 293 471
iepofX7]via llf^tds 70 44 194
iepop.vr\p.uv 88; inscription on seat of,
in Dionysiac theatre 283 470; Am-
phictyonic 474
hieromnemons, number of 204 ; oath
of 70 191 ; two from Phocians 204
iepoveiKOi 91 134 239
iepwvvpLOt 220
iepofpavT-qs 9 24 23, 36 13 94, 64 48 173,
69 38 189, 138 a 3+ 382; decree in
honour of 83 220 ; functions of 6,
155 1 408 ; inscription on seat of, in
Dionysiac theatre 273 469; of Eleu-
sis, one of deiaiTot 188
iepocpavTis, name of, suppressed 489;
statue- base of a 330 489
Hierophon, expedition commanded by
42
iepoTToioi 2 C 33 6, 3 2 7, 5 4+ 9, 10
13 32, 56 13 148, 87 16 232, 99 a 6
263, 221 4 451 ; annual 100 A a 35
270; ey PovXtjs 26 27 115, 124 297
INDEX. 573
359, number and election of 401
;
functions of 42 6 + 114 115
;
inscrip-
tion containing list of 156 408
;
kclt' eviavrdv 26 115; oi 'EXevawbdev
9 9
26;
prytanes as 149 39 400;
receive portions at sacrifices 42 12
114; represent demes of rerpaTroXis
221 452; special, for the Dionysia
115; special, for the Mysteries 115;
varieties of 9 9 26
iepbs fir)v 121 22 347
lepbs 7rcus 91 55 242
iepwavm 87 6 232
icrrafxtvov 91 3 240
t^res 325, 126 55 366
iW, use of 17 30+ 50, 204
'nrveu<x0ai 132 75 378
'nrirr)S (-rjs, -et$) 18, 362 2 504
'nnreis and eirlXeKToi. prizes of, at
e^o-eia 61 2 163
t7T7re?s, dedication by 160 414; inscrip-
tion containing list of 160 414
Hippias, banishment of 438
lwttw Xa^trpoj, contest at Qrjaeia 61 87
167
'iirino TroXejULicrTrj diavXos 61 83 167
Hippocrates, F p. 863 g 899 h 332
;
Offic. Med. 744 280
Hippocrates, physician 432; how he
gained his experience 161
iirwoL 91 144 243
tiriTOS TTOpLTTLKds 167
Hippothoon at Eleusis 7
laTap.vos {pLy]v) 128
laria \e7rrd
)(
iraxea 119 A a 46+ 341
historic difficulty 91
histrtones allowed exemption from
military service 204
6 KaL in names 164 17 418
olaXd, debased form of vaXa 385 3
512
oXkt) 60 50+ 160, 125 14 360
o\,uos 70 24 192
6p.aXlfa 47 10 124
Homer, Hymn to Ares 4 501
Homer, Hymn to Dem. 155
7
; i7/d v
203 426; vi 22# 381; ix 122 286,
24 318; xix 209 195; Odyssey in
453 179; xiv 383 196, 425 179
b/mrjp^a, 6/J.vpeia 71
6>?7poi 7 47 15; Selymbrian 26 3+ 69;
tombstone of 376 509
homicide, involuntary 69
bp.oydXa.KTes 227
'0/U.oXwi'os, Boeotian month 169
dfxoXoyia between Athens and Chalcis
(Euboea) 16
bp-mrdrepes 227
6/j.ov, symbol for 96 26+ 254
honorary decrees at Athens in fifth
century 34 ; earlier and later style
of 34; Rem. ii. on formulae of 33;
verboseness of later 143
Honorius and Euodius, consulship of
389
honours, prolix enumeration of 324 485
birXdTai, spelling of, in imperial period
486
oirXiTrjs, contest at Olympia instituted
172 6 430; contest at Qrjaeia 61 77
165
6wX6iJ.axos 146, 65 52 111
horizontal strokes over initial letters
of lines 117 318
opia tt]s 'Attiktjs, visited by ephebi 65
22+ 111
bpiCTTal 21 7 57
bplteadai 15 20 40
bpKi&w 70 13 192
bpKwrai 7 17+ 14; allies visited by 17
11 50
bpKovv 7 16 17
opKos, see oath
horns, cost of gilding 196
opoi, determination of 36 15+ 94; in-
scribed 332 sqq. 490 sqq. ; inspected
by iwijueXrjTai of tribe 76 10 209
;
size of, defined 129 23 371
(hs otl 65 1 7 179
oaia : iepd 84
hostage, Thasian, tomb of 376 509
hostages 16 ; conditions relating to 71
'otlvl 70 25 195
otlvos 70 37 192
vdvp, easement of, on mortgage stone
355 496
vdpia 36 33+ 95; for voting 27 2 71
veiois 300 8 472
veis 25 14 67
"Tyieia, 'AaicXrjTnbs 66 9+ 181
'Tyleca, connexion of, with Hermes 380
vyL7]s 276
humeri 323
'T/xr]TTios, XLdos 126 33+ 361
vbs 37 68 102, 55 4+ 140, 84 110 224,
229 2 455, 319 5 482
iiTraYoryei'S 124 31 359
VTrairavTrjais tols lepots 65 9 176
virapyvpos 10 B # 33, 97 7 259
UTrareta 94 16 248
vTraros summus 485
vtttjkool of Athens 11
virripeaiaL 37 59 100
vwrjpeTrjs (ephebic) 65 54 177
VTrepy&leadai 131 0 376
vTT7]pyvpo)/ji^(vos) 103 6 281
virepopia 11 7 35
viripdvpov 365
virepTovatov 126 32 365, 103 4 282
virevdwr-qpia 365
inrl<xxop.aL in oath-formula 194, 84 26
226
574 INDEX.
VTroj3a\eo/j.ai 70 6 194
vitoxclXkos 103 28 281
VTroxpeos, VTroxpews 73 21 204
virodepldes 100 B c 4 274
vTrodi8acrKa\os, late institution of 204
VTroypafxniarevs 68 iii 18 188
V7r0K0a/J.7]T7)S 147
viroKpLT7]s KcopopSias 219 6 450; rpayipdias
219 4 450
'
viroKpirris, victorious 170 428
VTroXoyr) 124 5 355
UTro/z.i'T^ajTa 23 30 63
viroiraiboTpifieiv 240 8 461
vTrodrjKas airoblbocr dai 92 8 245 ; Xvcracrdai
92 9 245
VTrodrjua 126 5i 366
virodeaBai 32 40 83
viroreXeiu {(popov) 7 #6 15
vwovpyoL 118 a i 28 333
i^iAos 97 i0+ 260
iiroidfiara 126 74 367
ws 196 5 440
Hydro(Hydria-)phoria 389
Hymn. Orph. xliv 6 243
Hyperides 7rept ttjs <pv\. t&v Tvpp. 345
Hypothecary inscriptions 352 sqq.
495 sqq.
i and et confused 91 236
l for et 142 388, 146 395; early occa-
sional instances of 184
i of dative elided 176 2 432
Iacchos, festival of 190; statue of,
carried in procession to Eleusis 190
laKxayuyos 244 11 465 ; office of, com-
bined with other offices 244 11 465,
327 20 487
"Ia/cxos, escorted by ephebi 65 10 176
-iapos, names in, common in 3rd
century a.d. 421
'Ia<rc6 133 A 6 380
'Idaojv (<3?epcuos) 85
laairis 103 28 284
Icaria 214
Idtdbrai, <popos assessed by 289
Idiibrys, right of, to give information
24 47 65
-Leys, demotic, contracted form of
genitive plural of 492
Imperial age, writing in xvi
Inscriptiones Graecae (IG), references
to (see also p.
527 sqq.)
58 74, 117 261 262, 118 257, 121
263, 126 128 262, 158 159 262, 180
263, 182 262, 183 d 266, 188 91,
226272 288, S 294, 229 295, 231
294, 257 289 295, 238 295, 240 243
244 257 85,242 290,243 85 289,244 84
289, p.
225 257, 257 258 260 290,
273 b 263, 277 309, 299 315, 303
384 472, 318 317, 322 a 162, 335 115,
390 408 400, 437 234, 467 468 175,
599 490
I Suppl.
62 b 84, p. 151 324, 277 a p. 73 309,
277 d
p. 178 309, 373
1
p. 79 211, 373 f
452, 491
H
p. IJ5 235
II
1
1 b 101, 4 75, 8 85, i4 & 153 159, 18
79, 19 84, 49 85, 59 89, 51 85, 52 85
376, 57 91 413, 62 107, 66 b 98, 74
322, 82 158, 89 84, 299 101 143 342,
119 215, 121 85, 259 6 182, 161 354,
297 135 365 366, 169 85, 273 85, 176
85 86 122 126 355, 177 86, 279 86,
184 235, 287 85, 292 126, 224 134,
238 127, 240 453, 252 135, 252
89,
270 84 363 364, 298 131, 299 144,
399 131 135, 307 107 140 154, 311
135 312, 324 b 134, 329 85, 327 134
137 138, 320 137, 323 166 221, 324
146, 330 146, 332 135, 335 158, 336
85, 338 393, 338341 146, 342 167,
375 108, 379 157, 389 122 364, 390
401, 394 396, 401 443, 494 161, 497
161, 413 161, 429 140, 433 169, 437
169, 445 166, 447 130, 453 & 410,
453 c 410, 459 219, 465471 146,
499 497 145, 468 126 145 519, 469
126, 479 126 179 190, 471 126 169,
477 b 182, 482 145, 482 145 179 395,
554 554 b 555 5579 207, 554 b 205,
555 205, 559 206, 557 205, 558 210,
559 206, 562 447, 594 207, 595 207
372, 567 134, 567 b 206, 572 211,
575 205, 578 211, 581 373 452, 592
593 219, 595 219 414, 692 452, 605
182, 697 444, 611 234, 623 365, 624
618 205, 626 310, 629 621 234, 629
233, 624 219, 628 176 241, 639 233,
642 74, 652 176, 985 179
IP
267 364, 675 280, 678 286, 699 413,
703 130, 798 286, 720 274 288, 724
274, 737 274, 4<fc?. 737 355, 737 808
809 445, 739 157, 741 113, 752 sqq.
278, 754 113, 755 279, 758 280 281,
772 288, 776 288, 782 312, 7823
311, 7858 313, 793 341 364, 803 b
83, 893 e 364, 894 107 207 340 342
343 363 364, 808 122 341 342 343
364, 809 (120) 97 98 157 341 342 343
364, 809 a 75, 811 158 341 342 364,
811 c 408, 813 219, 814 110 323, 833
354, 834 365, 834 b (124) 161, arfd
834 b 166, 834 c 98, 835 162 281,
839 281, 839 161, 842 97 174, 872
INDEX. 575
397, 872 115, 884 452, 949 408, 962
450, 965 118, 966 967 968 969 970
426, 975 429, 985 178 455, 2627 455,
1055 (129)
83 219, 1060 134, 2JZ^^ 312
II
3
1168 451, 1286 452, 2289 445, 1195
445, J^49 234, 1251 207, 12&2 435,
2290 445 450, 1291 269, 2326 463,
1333 375, 2379 454, 1380 454, 2382
454, 2587 386, 1588 116, 2593 386,
1652 1653 227, 2662 380, 2367 450
IP
22 6 107, 22 c 74, 25 c 83, 27 6 85, 48 b
84, 49 & 83, 54 6 93, 59 b 92, 225 &
85, 173 b 134, 282 6 115, 245 b c 85,
252 b 138 146 457, 299 c 144, 368 6
154, 314 c 126 376, 3236 221, 371 b c
217, 373 c 86, 373 ft 144, 385 b 86,
385 c 385 rf 128, 226 b 161, 252 &
145, 510 i 91, 523 & 145, 563 b 206,
573 6 233, 574 b 221, 574 c 98 221,
572 g 437, 622 6 144 445, 619 b 445,
623 6 443, 623 d 225 233, 623 e 170,
622 6 233, 672 c 322, 832 6 98, 1054 b
369 371, 1054 c e 369, 1054
f
107 369,
2652
p 370, 1206 b 445
III
1
2 184, 6 190, 9 83, 20 473, 28 390,
59 252, 62 474, 72 473, 73 386 387,
262 105 461, 266 486, 226 463 474,
127 474, 228 463, 163 465, 265 271,
170 244, 2 72 244 474, 172 389 390,
293 473, 195 213, 265 179, 283 190,
291
(254) 190. 299 180, 534 243,
522 523 482, 557 459, 665 439, 646
108 486, 629 176, 656 108, 661 179
184, 662 485, 683 473, 762 (327) 243,
716 243 474, 727 474, 720 474, 739
219, 757 189, 792 443, 865 473, 809
455, 828 455, 900 489, 910913 455,
925 455, 928 190, 928 451, 1005 252,
2669 395, 2622 182, 1020 460, 2623
187 244, 10291032 1034 188, 2652
188, 1058 190, 2666 189, 1070 240,
2677 461, 2682 460, 1085 478, 2689 a
184 482, 1092 460, 2693 180, 1100 244,
2265 146, 1112 146, 2222 2229 2227
1199 126, 2222 180, 2228 460, 1133
486, 2265 187, 1177 189, 2262 458,
2276 395, 1284 461, 2297 108, ind. vi
5 313, 2 1160 17, 2282 221, 2322 243,
1423 187 510, 2766 512, 2601 a 510,
3859 190
[IV, V etc. see Preface
p.
viviii]
IV
950 380, 951 380
366 6 131
VII
106 243, 235 384, 303 161 162 219
256 360, 540 394, 2225 250, 2722 355,
2868 241, 3073 364 365 366 370 371,
4135 194, 2255 364
905 474
836 484
XII
1
XIV
XV
645 229, 750 485, 759 176, 986 458
Uddas, peer' 66 2 181
"Ikiol 32 A 82 82
iKpia, t& 21 28 58
iVpiWyuara (:/>.) 118 a i 22 332
UpLwaat 215
LKpiojTrjp 126 78+ 367
i/cptoOv 116 22 318
Ilissus, Codrus killed near
57 ; inscrip-
tion found on bank of 212
illness, plea of 233
'IXkvpiKdv 97 19 260
t\fo 21 20 58, 131 9 376
image, colossal, sums spent on 195;
decoration of 195
imitation, archaising 509
imperative, forms of 17
imperfect and aorist interchanged 74 5
206
imperial period, decrees of, Rem. viii.
183; honorary decrees of 34
imprecation, and oath combined 85 2
231 ; sepulchral inscription contain-
ing 381 510
Indemnity Bill 263
index, plan of, described x
indiction, inscription dated by 386 512
;
uncertainty of dating by 512
infinitive and imperative, fluctuation
in use of 51
infinitive, final use of 118 c ii 42 335;
imperatival 18 8 51 ; of purpose 116
18 318, 124 14 355, 126 85 363, 129
46 373; common in accounts 58
inflexions, various : awopriTai 110 ; veu,
accusative 37 35 99 101 ; notes on
200, 84 5 225 258
informers, reward of 198 93 32 + 246
inscribing, cost of (see aho engraving)
33 57 87
inscription recovered by traces of nails
312 478
inscriptions, adorned with reliefs 230
455 ; agonistic 168 422 ; classification
of 225 ; cost of, defrayed by foreigner
honoured 11 22 36 ; duplicates of
576 INDEX.
245 ; engraved by different bands
408 ; erased 472 ; errors of copyists
of 5 10 ; later additions to 206 444
;
lost 5 10, 320 482, 376 509; may
sometimes be classed tinder more
than one head 132 378 ; memorial
403406 519 520; metrical 368 506,
375 508, 403 519; on more than one
block 70 191 ; on rock 119201 441
;
painted 233 457
inscriptions referred to (other than
those in CIG, CIA or IG)
Bull. Gorresp. Hell, v 262 219, vi 83
333, vn 280 194, xx 636 358
Cauer Delectus 527 195
Comparetti 152 iv 9 22, 154 n 374
Dittenberger Sylloge 158 2, 93 200,
122 17, 169 18, 206 426, 209 454,
365 461, 409 485, 411 6, 554 416,
571 226, 600 474, 601 9, 611 410,
627 9, 717 450
Sammlung Griechischen Dialekt-
Inschriften (DI) 717 450, 1780195,
2561 194, 3749 17, 4689 12
Lebas Voy. arch, n 241 b 175, 852
390, 1 754 384
Michel's Recueil 25 53, 1333 195
Mittheilungen etc. (Mitth.) x i06sq.
397, xxiv 35 365
Olympian Inscriptions v no. 36 408
Cos Paton and Hicks 38 383
Pergamus, Inscriptions
of 523 461
Revue Archeologique n I&Z 386
Roberts Introduction Pt I 56 212, 99
503, 106 503, 291 5 229, 295 195,
297 195
inscriptions, rediscovered 183 436, 187
437; restored from Anth. Pal.
{6 138)
193 439 ;
restored from Herodotus v
77 178 433 ; surmounted by relief 360
500, 371 507; votive 233 456; with
relief 384 511
intercalary days 127 157
intercalary years 88 102 122 128 268
309; length of 306
intercalation, examples of 59 5 155;
various words denoting 27
interest, accounts of, on loans from
temples 109 306 ; calculations of 306
;
nominal 306; rate of 306 347 496
international arbitration 71
international contracts 71
inventories and accounts, loose syntax
in 272
inventories, examples of 256 ; of
bronze statues 101 276 ; relating to
Parthenon 33
inventory of gifts in Asclepieum 103
281 ; of properties handed over by
Tri<TT&Tcu '^XevGLvbdev 104 286 ; Tafxicu
to make 378
inversion of order of words 9 29 27
'Io/^d/cxeta 241
Iobacchi, hall of 236 240 ; regulations
of 240
Ion, Chian poet 440
Ionian- Carian tribute 50
Ionian cities, Neleus mythical founder
of 57
'Iw^ia 17 5 45
Ionic alphabet, signs obsolete in 475
Ionic and Attic alphabet, mixture of xii
8, 199201 442
Ionic characters, early use of, in state
documents 347 ; encroachment of 14,
15 39, 23 60, 26 71 434, 335 490
Ionic columns 324; proportions of
366
Ionic dialect, inscription written in
195 440 ; in metrical inscriptions 192
439, 331 489
Ionic order, console in 326; dentils in
325
'IcjfiKos (popos 50, 107 7 295
Ionisms 212 252
iota adscriptum, see iota mutum
iota, forms of xi, 91 236, 141 142 386
387
iota long, represented by EI 485
iota mutum or adscriptum, omission of
63 169 182, 95 251, 327 487. 91 236, 93
245, 94 248, 96 251, 141 385, 142 387,
242 462, 315 480, 317 481, 324 484,
326 486, 328 488; regular omission
of 184; wrongly added 141 385
'lovXirjTdi (Ceos) 32 B 24 81
Iphigeneia of Euripides, re-acted 429
'l<piKp&T7]s, general 119 A a 48 341
Ipsus, battle of 131, 52 1 7 132
irrigation, provision for 58
l, substitution of ei for 149 17 400
is = eis 91 52+ 237, 93 58 248, 150 i 5 +
403
Isaeus, irepi rod 'A7^. k\. 42 375; irepi
rod 'AttoXXoS. k\. 15 16 226, 18 341;
irepi tov Me^. k\. 31 493
Icrrjyopia 187
iarfKvcnov 91 37+ 241
iaepxeadat 91 72 242
Isis, dedication to 244 465 ; early wor-
ship of, at Athens 465 ; temple of, at
Athens 43 44 116 ; worship of, when
introduced into Greece 117
islands, tribute from 50; doubled 49
Isocrates 145 c 135; vn 29 115; De
pace 295 165 on Attic encroachments
94; Paneg. 31 26 180; Plat. 44 83;
7rept eip-qurjs 50 415
iaoXv/xTTLos 463
iaoirudios 463
IfforeXeia decreed 33 49 87
laoTeXrjs 310, 355 11 496; abbreviation
INDEX. 577
for 59 51 156; tombstone of an 373
507
"Io-rao-os 17 z"" 5 51
Isthmian contest 426
'IcrdpuKoi, 7rcu5es 426
'IcrdfxouLKov j3a\auelop 21 37 56
Istros ap. Schol. Ar. Lys. 642 454
Isyllos, metrical inscription of (Troe-
zen) 380
Italici qui etc. of late inscriptions 116
Italy, vases found in 424
Iulis, decree of 71 198
Jewish colony at Athens 513
Jewish sepulchral inscriptions 388 389
513
Jinnee, Semitic superstitions concern-
ing 508
Josephus xiv 10 3 480
judges, ten divisions of 515
Julia Domna, wife of Severus 187
Julian, reign of 389
Justinus vii 6 111; viii 6 111; xvn 3
111; xxvi 2 and prol. xxvi 152
Justinian Dig. xlvii 22 4
k, forms of 204 443, 239 460, 245 466
kcl 70 19+ 192
kclL, abbreviation for 384 4 511
Kaibel Epigrammata Graeca 153 243,
810 242, 1083 57
Kai'Koadtvrjs, artist 227 454
KaiveLvrjais, viraros 324 7 484
Kaivois Tpaycodois 61 33 163
[Kcuvo]To/Ata 112 6 312
KdKovpyoi, liable to diraytoyr) and con-
fiscation 174
KaX. (Calends) 143 2 390
KaX(dvbtov) 94 16 248
KdXadoi 388
Kd\
Xv
117 i 90 325
koXlcls 103 5 281
KaXX/as 4 B 4 10
KaXXiepdv 8 A ,5 19, 65 7 176
KaXXi/cpdr???, architect 4 A 5 9
/caX6z> 368 506
KdMfifiara 118 a i 36 333, 126 5? 366
KaXvirriipes 366
Kd/J-TTT] 97 II
; KaflTTT) 260
/cai/a, possibly given as prizes 82 II 219
Kdvdvs 100 19 279
KaurjcpopiKos k6<t/jlos 41 c, e 10 112
Kavr)(f>6poi., chairs carried behind outfit
of 273 ; receive portions at sacrifices
42 15 114
KCLPTj^opos, father of, commended 54 32
139
KairrjXda 64 9 171
Kapdia, dedicated 103 16 281
KapLKbs <popos 50, 107 64 297
KapTToi, sacrifice on behalf of 140
Kap7r<J)pr)S 93 20 246
KdpTTucris 46 10+ 123
Kapirovv 142 5 388
Kapdaiels 71 5 198
Kapdatrjs 32 B 25 81
Kapros 102 25 280
Kapvanoi 32 A 55 82
Kdcraavdpos (ftacnXeus) 51 14 130
Kara 42 i<5 114 219
KaTd = Ka(r) rd (relative) 70 10 194
kclt apxovTa, /card deov, reckoning of
date 62 4 168
/card, with genitive, of time 21 37 58
/cara-^ea' 334
KaTap&Meiv 'pay' 79, 21 15 55, 47 52
125, 85 43 229, 88 19 233, 91 46 237
Karax^pi-i'eLv, meanings of 52 23 134
KdTdxpvcros 259 281
KCLTaxdovioi, deol 381 5 510
/cardSe 129 1 372
Karadexecrdai 5 25 12
Karadeiu 36 59 95
KaradtKaad^vra, rd 70 5 194
Karadw in Dejixiones 521
Karaydbyia, rd 91 114 242
/cara/ce'0aXa 141 4 386
KaraKoXovdeiv 73 55 204
KaraXTjirTTJpes 368
/card.Xo(7ros
XP
V0S 59 -^ 155
KaraXveiv tov 8r)/xov 34 25+ 90
KaravTpoKv 126 55 367
kcltairaXTa(pTT)s 147 ; tomb of 377 509
KCLTacpopd 126 52 366
KaTa\prj(pl^eadaL 24 45 65
KaTacrrfjuaivecdai, irapaar/fj-aiveadai 36
40+ 95
KaracrKevr] 161, 125 360
KardariKTOs 102 6+ 279
KaracTTpLOTripes 361
KaTareXeiv 290
KaTdTe/uLveiv 364
Ka.Ta.TO/iiri 326
KaTetXtTTeiv epiois 36 52 95
/cafld 73 SI 203
Kadaipeais 161 ; contrasted with ^7rt-
<r/ceu?7 125 4 360
Ka6eL\r)(pws 55 10 140, 57 14 151
Kadecrifxov 61 14 163
KadoXiKr), vewXKia 65 57 177
KadpicpT-q 280
Kaduirepde, vwtvepde, applied to denie-
names 397
kcitoxos 382 5 511; (Hermes) in Dejixio
408 522
kotoi's 82 25 219
KdTpoiTTov 102 25 280, 104 55 286
KdTTiTepos 36 25 91, 128 20 370; high
price of 116 5 317; imported from
Britain 317
Kav/xa.Ta 312
K = Kai 388 4 513
R. II. 37
578 INDEX.
KeiuvTcu, origin of ft in 215
kt)kLs 124 15 355
KeKpoiTLov 117 i 9 323
JUKpo\p, shrine of 75 35 208
KeXrjs, 'iiriros 169 b \\ 9 426
KeXevcrrai 412
Kei/rpe/o-ta, Kevdpeiaia 242 0 463
Ke'0a\os, orator 79
Kepaia and toros for the TreirXos 52 14
132 ; rent by a storm 134
Kepapevs, tomb of daughter of 505
/ce'pa/zos, Kopivdios 126 58 366; Aa/cw-
VLKOS 366
/cepas 97 9 266
Kepxviov 103 19 281
Krjpiou 133 B <S 380
Kepuldes, cunei, of Dionysiac theatre 467
icepick 126 52 366
KepKvpa, KdpKvpa 261
Kep/ci/patot 32 B 1 80
KripoirXdaraL 118 c ii i 334
K^pu/ces 27 50, 61 46 164, 269 ; Daduchus
belongs to 97; /cat EvpoX-Tridai 83 1-2
221 ; not allowed Q-qyeivdai 27
KripvKuv yevos 326 9 486; oZ/cos 124 24
326 358
KTjpvt;, cipxovTi 146 4? 394;
'
ApeoirayitCov
167 E i 27 422; povXrjs /cat Sifruov 187,
150 v 12 402 ; ets ArjXov 167 E i 45 425
;
(Eleusis) 138 a 3 382
;
(ephebic) 147
;
functions of 34 6 91 184; honorary
title 242 8 463
;
joined with ra/jbiac
93 13 245; not a member of <pvXrj
TrpvTauevovcra 56 8 147 ; of the Senate
of the Areopagus 187 ; legacy of 95
252
; IIaj'a7?7s, inscription on seat of,
in Dionysiac theatre 298 471
KtGTpocpvXaKe'iv 327 24 487
K.eaTpo(pvXa$; 147
Kearpos 147
Krjva 196
KLpuTos 126 85 367
kin, degrees of, in cases of punishment
for homicide 25 15 67
King, The Great 84
KivKXides, dedication of 244 464
KtoKpavou, KLovbupavov 162, 117 i 29 324
KLovia, dedication of 244 464
KiTielap =KiTiu>p 43 21 116
Kinds, decree concerning 43 115
kittouv 142 21 388
KAa. (Claudius) 91 9 241
-KXea, kXtjv, -kXt), accusatives from
-
K\hjs 220
KXeo(pu)}>, said to have established 5tw-
/SoXta 263
-KXirjs, genitive of 181; in Roman
period 181
-icXerjs, -kXtjs, -9A07S, in proper names 51
KXeifiovXos, KXeofiovXos 234
~KXei5r)p.os, KXe68r}p.os 234
nXeidlov Trei>Tc(3dXavov 103 27 281
/cXet5oO%os 410
KXeiyevrjs 88 5 234, 99 a I 263
KXeiaocpos Evu)vvp.evs 74
KXeofj.'r)5T)s 22 a 5 60
KAew^edaw, son of Cleon 74 col. 4 23 207
KXrjpovofxos, succeeds to liability of
trierarch 343
KXrjpos 91 127 243, 159 2 413
xXrjpuTos, ypapLp-aretis 163 6 416
KXrjpovxio-t 83
KX-qpouxoi 16 9 43 ; in Mitylene 16 9 43
44
kXtjttjp vrjaiooTLKos 50
KXrjTTJpes drj/uLoaLoi 17 28 50
/cA2/xa 116 18 318
/cAi<rta 91 74 242
kXvtl8u>p oTkos 226
Ki>a<pevs 452 ; dedication by, to Athena
174 431
K65pos, body of, embalmed 489; me-
morial of 331 489
Kudva 104 38 286
KoiXrj 118 c i 58 334
Koip.r]Trjpi.ou, the word a common mark
of Christian sepulchral inscriptions
512
koivt) iaria, centre of official life 179;
rod 8'/jp.ou 65 6 176
/cotz/77, influence of the 180 204 235 510
kolvov, to diaawT&v 88 9 233
KoAatj/t's 269 473
/cwAa/cperat 9 51 25 345 ; functions of
4 B 8 10, 18 19 51; succeeded by
d.7ro5e/crat 58
KCoXaKperui 10
/coAAa 100 B h 17 275
/coAAa*> 126 46 366
KoAAtVa, KfpetVa (or -va, -va) 315 9 480
KoXXvpa 141 24 387
/coau5?7 122 34 353; yew* 14 14 38
/cwpat of Attica 211
/cw^ot 175
Ko^wi/, statue-base of 224 453
Ko7ris 241
koppa, inscriptions containing 189 438;
use of, on Attic vases 51
Kowp&v 47 38 125, 130 11 374
Koirpos, prohibitions concerning 195
Kopat (Caryatids) 322 325
K6p
V
41 ce 28 113, 91 124 243; in
decrees 473
Koprj and A^p^njp 6 ;
dedication to 207
444, 213 447, 228 455
Koprjao-ioi 32 B 26 81
KopKvpa, KepKvpa. 261
Kopoirrj, oracle of Apollo at 98
Kopvcpaia 126 49 366
Kopvard 64 21 175
Ko<Tp,r)T7]s 65 7+ 176, 69 20+ 189;
coupled with aojcppopiarai 146; fines
INDEX. 579
cancelled by 180; functions of 146;
his office an
dpxv
116 ; honours paid
to 146 ; sacrifices at his own expense
85 72 177; sacrifices performed by 146
Kovpeiov, Koijpeov (victim) 84 6 + 225-7
Kovpeu>Tis (Apaturia) 84 28 225
Kovpov 139 6 384
Kparevrai 116 13 318
KpaTivTos of high birth 190; title of
Roman magistrate 91 9 241
KpeavofAia 42 25 114
Kpe/j-aara <tkij7], building for 363
Kp-nwis 117 i 67 324
Kplais, unique example of 106
Kpidai, price of 65
Kpw7rt<5cu, part of tpikcj/mat 215
Kpv(35r)i> ((pepeiv \f/r)<pov) 84 82 224
KTiaTTjs, title of Augustus 310 4 478
KToiva 536
Kvafxetiu 12, 78 13 212
Kijap.oL, Galen's remark on 229
K6a.fj.oi AiyviTTov 64 19 171
Kva/uwv, dirb, election of Erythraean
j3ov\r) 5 7 12
Kv/3epvrJTCU 412
KVK\LaTpia, tomb of a 380 509
kijkXos 132 10 378
kvXlxvIs 103 5i+ 282
KVpLCLTLOV 333
KvjuLT)T7)pioi> 385 512, 389 i 513
Kwrj-ytrat, sacrifices to 133 A 9 380
KVves, sacrifices offered to 133 A 9 380
Kvpfieis and droves 68
Ktipfteis, Solonian 25
Kvpia dyopd 205 234
Kvpia KK\r]o-La 57 <5 150, 58 4 154
;
business at 157
Kvpia, 'ordinary' 86 234
Kvpios {Mr)i>), worshippers of, in Thrace
386
KvpoVV
()J/7)(plO-fXa) 170
KvOrjpa 374
Kvdrjpia, rd 374
Kvdr)plu)i> oi /xepiTai, lease granted by
130 374
Kvdrjppioi 374
Kvdvpptos 74 col. 4 29 207, 119 B a 75
242, 206 2 444
Kvdvos occupied by TXaiy/cer^s 55 10 140
K[uiK77i']oi, araTTJpes 115 15 316
X, forms of xi sq. 14 69 227, 92 244
308, 118 327, 191 438, 204 443, 206
444, 213 477; indicating date 9
LXX Kings iii 6 13 323; Ps. xcviii 8
387; Lev. ii 11 388
Labyadae, inscription concerning 194
;
phratria of 227
Lacedaemonian party in Thasos 62
Lacedaemonians and o-v/j.fiaxoi, alliance
of, with Athens 57 8 150
lady, statue-base of Roman 329 488
lagoon at Eleusis bridged over 53
AaKedai/uLoviot 32 A 9 80
AaKedai/Liovios, son of Cimon 98 8 261
Aaxiddai, deme of Miltiades and
Cimon 261 507
XaKKoirXovros, surname of a Callias 440
Aa[xla as an ^kkX-tjtos tt6Xis 58 12 154
Lamian arbitrators, decree of thanks
to 154
Lamian War 126 143 376
Aafxibtov etc. , female names 60 59 160
Xa/uardda
Tpx
uv 65 13 176
Xap.irabapx&v 61 62 + 164
Lampadedromia 207
Xafxirabricpopla 166; course of 426
Xap.Traor](f)6pos 169 b ii 28 426
Xa/xwds contest of 61 61 164
AdpLiruv (o-vyypa<pi>s) 9 47 27, 9 60 25
Xa/j.wpoj iTnrcp, contest at Qrjcreia 61 87
167
Aa/uL\p]aKT)i>oL, araTrjpes 115 14 315
lands, sacred 256
Laodicea by the Sea, designation of,
on coins 480; erects statue to
Hadrian 315 480
Latin formulae, translation of 390
Latin names in decrees 216
Latinisms 245
;
translation of 94 38 251
Laurentian codex of Thucydides 28
Laurium, silver mines of 311 ; let by
the state 311 ; tax on produce of
mines of 312
laws, made by clans etc. 226
;
procedure
for 291
lawsuit, bowls dedicated for victory in
288
lead for fixing fy5ia 324
lead and iron, supplied by the state 369
leaden plates, Defixiones written on 520
League, Delian-Attic 45 ; the New 94
lease, conditions of cultivation in 229
;
duration of, how expressed 229 ; im-
portant, of Amorgos 373 ; of public
land 46 124; of theatre, by Piraean
deme 78 214 ; with power to purchase
85 229 ; interruption of, through
foreign enemy 373 ;
in Chios,
Olympia, Gortyn 374; by Piraean
deme 376; length of 46 8 124;
20 years 21 13 55
lectisternium 408
XrjSiov 102 43+ 279
legatus, Auf/ustoruni etc. 187; Caesuris
188; pro praetore 483
AeiwySpas (Aeory.) 74 col. 2 22 207
Xr/iov 97 10 260
Xeirovpyelv 44 4 118 ; iv ry iepoj 65 29
177
XeiTovpyicu 55 61 142 ; exemptions from
407
37-
580 INDEX.
Xetrovpyiav drjTOJveiv 64 54 176
Xeirovpyos (An--), public servant 146 21
395
Xexavri 332
Xrififia
114 a 5 + 314, 115 5 315
\r}]/j.\poPTai. 95 10 252
Lenaea, 100 A a 10 269, 429
length of lines 38 102, 109 299
Aeiodafxas, orator 119 A a 29 341
Aewv, eponymous hero 77 a 4 212
Aeojvidrjs of Halicarnassus, decree in
honour of 11 35
Leontid tribe, assembly of, honours a
benefactor 321 483
Leontini, of Ionian stock 36 ; and
Athens, treaty between 13 37 ; and
Syracuse, war between 36
\eovroj3daeis 104 64 286
Aews, hero of tribe Leontis 396
Xeirrov {po/juaua) 91 80 242
Xyprovpyelv 44 4 118
Lesbos, affairs in 38; cleruchs settled
2 21 44 ; dialect of 355 ; spoils from
260; subjugation of 2
Xeaxv 129 23 373; of Cnidians at
Delphi 358
Leto joined with Apollo and Artemis
in oaths 70 8 192
letter prefixed to a decree 72 200
letters, added above line 384; below
the line 387 ;
alterations of 223 453
;
archaic, on late private monuments
441
;
characteristic of administration
of Lycurgus 46 124 ; confusion of, by
copyists 12 ; corrected 191 438 ; num-
ber of, in lines 153 ; with thickened
ends of strokes 192 439, 207 444;
late style of cutting xiv ; with
curved strokes xiv
Leucon I 101 ; his sons, decree in
honour of 37 99
AevKios 44 16 117
;
genuine Greek name
80 4 216
AevKiinros, mythical founder of Mag-
nesia ad Maeandrum 89 I 235
XevKco/ma 226
Lexicon Cant, quoted 452
Xyi-iapxiKov ypafxpLaTeiov 145 179
Xrj^lapxot. 401
library, ephebi present books to 167
;
in Ptolemaion 167
life-priesthoods 445
ligatured forms 64 171, 164 419, 314
479; examples of 89 234, 90 235
Ligurian Alimentation Deed 254
Limnae 58
Lindians, tribute paid by 17
literature, inscriptions preserved in 65
XidoXoy-qixa 123 4 353
Xtdo(p6pos 249 473
liturgies,
xPVy'-
a 118; evavdpla 118;
eurai<x 44 118; performed by a avv-
rtXeia 118
Livy vn 2 204; xxxi 15 128, 44 143;
xliv 11 42
loan, mortgage as security for 356 497;
of deme-funds 78 18 213
Locris, Ozolian, inscription of, dealing
with auXcu 71
Lobeck Pliryn. quoted 387
Locrians, hieromnemons of 204
Xoyiarai 61 21 163, 109 1+ 306; ac-
counts of 257 291 ; diminution in
number of 32; duties of 10 B 8 32
211; number of, before Euclid, 32;
summoned by
fiovXrj
32
Xoyiarfjs (late) 68 33 186
Xbyov Ka.Ta(3aXecr6ai 60 41 159
X6yos, account 118 c i 31 329
Xoi/jlos, exceptions made for
(?)
84 58 223
XoLireh 65 12 179
Long Walls, Callicrates architect of 9
X60os 70 30 192
X<jjtto8vttjs 6 5 13
lot, ran'icu appointed by 256
AcDns 70 26 195
Louvre, Greek inscriptions in 453, 10
28, 70 191, 78 212, 213, 89 234, 145
393, 359 498
Lucanians, low estimation of 415
Xvxva.TrTpLa 244 7 465
Lucian Anach. 9 424; Pise. 47 28
Lucius spelt in Greek with ev 216
L. Cassius Longinus, consul, inscrip-
tion in honour of 192 b 439
L. Sempronius Atratinus consul 488
ludi saeculares celebrated 463
AvkcIov, veaviaKOL
4y 61 67 164
Ay/0701;
(
=
)
253 473
AvkLctkos 50 14 129
A-vkuv (piX6ao{(pos), Lyco Troadensis 59
70 158
AvKovpyos, orator 41 a b 15 101, 112;
activity of 115 428; administration
of 115 124 157 257 268 312 355
364; character of documents belong-
ing to administration of 114 276;
decrees of 41 113; decrees of, con-
cerning religious matters 117 ; legis-
lative activity of 453 ; loans effected
by, for state purposes 113; speech
of, irepl dioLKrjaecos 113 ; statue-base
of 225 453 ; ra/xias tt)s kolp7)s Trpoaddov
113
lunar year, old 169
luni-solar year, abolition of 169
Lupinus albus L. 175
X&Vet, iiri 376, 352 495
Aval/xaxos, paaiXevs 52 10+ 132
Lycian inscriptions, forms found in 252
Lyco Troadensis, Peripatetic philo-
sopher 158
INDEX. 581
Lycurgus Leocr. 24 341
Lysander 60 ; capture of Samos by 74
75
Lysias, 'AttoX. dupod. 3 74, 2 4 115; c.
Agorat. 70 65, 71 65 66, 72 65; c.
Andoc. 4
6
; c. Nicom. 17 25 68
;
U7rp
rwj' 'ApuxT.
XP'
4;^ 267; /card. Ilay/cA.
3 226
;
7repi drffxevaeoos 6 267 ; 7repi tov
arjKov 4 66; i^p Mavrid. 15 500
Lysicrates, inscription on monument
of 217 449; monument of 434
Lysimachus, King, death of 137
M = Map/cos 318 2+ 481
fi,
forms of 56 147, 63 169, 66 181, 67
183, 72 199, 74 205, 87 231, 146 394,
157 410, 191 438, 192 439, 207 444,
239 460, 245 466
Mdapxos 404 520
Macedonian garrisons withdrawn from
Athens 137 157
/xayeipiKdv, to 42 28 114
magic, account of, by E. Wiinsch in
Appendix to CIA on Defixiones 520
magistrates, accountability of 16
Magnesia ad Maeandrum, Aeolian 235
;
inscription found at 416
Magnesia (Eur.), inscription of 98
Mago 453
Mcu/xa/cTT/pta 388
Maleates, sacrifices to 133 A 3 380
malum Persicum 175
Manes, a slave-name? 452
fiavTeia 9 4 26
Mantinea, government of 92
;
battle of
87 91
fxduTLs, a, in the list of fallen in war
359 65 500
mss. readings supported by inscriptions
26
fiapdv dddv 387 13 513
Marathon, inscription commemorating
battle of 177 433
marble doors in Syria and Constanti-
nople 326
Marium, bronze of 128 17 370
Mapuvirai 32 A 87 82
Ixao-xaXiaia (-rXivdos) 117 i 13+ 323
S. Matthew 27 2 251
Maximianus Augustus 250
measures and weights, revision of 174
;
various 364
p.7]U a/mod 30 11 77
fjLTjde eh for
fn~8eh etc. 12
Medeios, epimeletes of Delos 178
Medes, refugees to (Ervthrae) 5 26 11
ntdLfxvos 9 5 26 ; symbol for 124 263 359
Megacles, banishment of 514
MeydX?? M^-njp 57
Megara, list of men fallen in war in
359 498
Meineke Com. Gr. i 496 sq. 519
fietov (victim) 84 5+ 225
Me?is, Mei^tSr/^os, fxel^oj 281
jxeXavTripia 124 14 355
fiekiKpaTov 142 6 387
jueAAw,
v
augment of 134
fieXorroLeiv 238 13 459
fxrJKos 126 17+ 364
memorial inscriptions 403-406 520;
metrical 403 519
firjv, lepos 121 22 347
Mtjj', Ovpdvtos, thank-offering to 243 464
Men Tyrannus, dedications to 386;
sanctuary of 141 385
fih
without 5^ 6 15 14
fArjva e/j.(3d\\eiv 9 53 27
Menander Ehet. 85 21; statue-base of
488
Menander's plays, among books pre-
sented by ephebi 519
fxrjviaia (<popd) 91 46 241
Meviinros 44 23 118
p.y]vueiv 122 24+ 352
fi7]vvo~is at Iulis 71 29 198
mercenaries, employment of 134; in-
scription containing list of 161 414;
used as irepliroKoL 138
merces senatoria 166
fjLepiaai 31 18 79
fxepio-fioL 91 65 242
/xeplrai, 130 8 374
/xeptfeii' 10 B 7 32, 37 42 100, 52 71 133
and frequently
fiepifciv and 5o0i/at 39 44 109
/x?7pot dedicated 60 69 160
/^pos 91 Ii 243
Mesogaea of Attica, inscription found
in 86 230
[xeaoyeiov 96 30 253
fj.eo~6fj.vai 126 48+ 366
fxeraKtovLov 126 56 365
fxeTa-Tapadidovai 64 49 176
fj.eTaTTvpyi.ov 123 -2 353
fj.eTaaTvhi.ov 126 63 362
/^0's, oi'fleis 375, 85 35 228, 130 19 374
Methonaeans, diminution of quota
granted to the 17
;
privileges granted
to 15 41 ; relations of the, to Per-
diccas 15 18 sqq. 40 ; k UiepLas 15 I
30
Methone, one of the -ro\et.s at avTrjv tt)v
dirapxw dirriyayov 41
MyjdvfivaloL 32 A 81 82 ; exempted from
cleruchy 44
fi^TOLKOL, could not hold land 78 a 8 211
310; decree in honour of 363; com-
mended 84; taxes on 84
Metonic cycle 161 184
fiTw-Tov 117 i 30 324, 126 23+ 365
fieTovaia 187
fj.e'Tpa -rpoeacppayLafxiva 64 66 174
582 INDEX.
metrical inscriptions 175179 189 190
192 193 196 (330)
331 360 361 363 368
375 403 ; non-Attic dialect of 403
/j-erpov dcrvfxfiXnrov 64 17 171
fj.eTpoi>6fxot., ol 174; number of 416
fji7]Tpi2ov 64 52 89 173; accounts fur-
nished to 61 21 163; documents
deposited in 73 203; stele set up in
70 191
Michel, C, Recueil, etc. x
Midas, a slave-name ? 452
middle voice, causal use of 10 A 20 32
/iiiKpo(pi\6Tifj.os, characteristic of 140
McXr/criovpyns 97 13 260; kXlvt) 309
Miletus, Neleus mythical founder of 57
Miltiades, family of 345 ; deme of 261
M.i\ti&5t)S (AaKiddrjs) 120 a 2 345
fxLXros, cost of 198 355; decrees con-
cerning exportation of 71 198 ; early
use of 198
mina, commercial 175; Solonic 175
mines, proceeds of 257
mining properties, boundary-stones
marking 348 349 350 493
Minoa, Synalus in command of 127
minors, security for property of 494
mistakes, illiterate 240
fda du<ris 78 23 213, 21 15 58, 42 17 114;
=
fd<r$wfia 121 18 347;
(lease) 85 29
228; (rent) 85 25+ 228, 122 26 352,
129 6 371; terms of 347
fjucdovcrdai 312
MidpTjs Spyas 97
Mithridatic War 482
Mitylene allied with Athens
77 ; block-
aded by Callicratides 38; cities of
Trojan shore belonging to 50;
cleruchs of 16 9 43 ; decree concern-
ing alliance with
79 ; league of, with
Athens 32 82 ; naval force despatched
to 14 38; outbreak at 38
ixvd brjixoaia 175; e/LnropiKr/ 64 34+ 172
MrrjfjLoavvT), offerings to 133 B 4 380
Mnesitheus, physician 456
models of limbs, dedicated, for cures
effected 281
Molossi, Arybbas king of 111
fxoXv^dos, price of 116 12 317
/jLo\vj38ovs 176
money, values of 387 ; various symbols
for 254
/xovdficpaXa 135 5+ 381, 136 381
month, day of, coincides with day of
prytany 57 3 150, 62 4 168, 63 4 169,
65 2 176; days of, how described 128
263; name of, in genitive 205 ; name
of, omitted 45 4 122
months. Anthesterion, intercalary 28
;
Boedromion begins year in a.d. 139/40
187, rents to be paid in 85 26 228
;
Bovk&tios (Delphian) 70 45 196, 73
53 204 ; Bicnos (Delphian) 70 46 196
;
Delian 347; Delphic 196; Elaphe-
bolion, last day of, duplicated 157,
rents to be paid in 85 27 228; ex-
pressed in genitive 88 7 233 ;
'
full ' and
'
hollow '5129; Gamelion , intercalary
28; Hecatombaeon, intercalary 28;
'Ep/j-aiuv (Iulis) 71 34 198; Uavrj/xos
(Delian) 122 58 349; UocreideCov 8ev-
repos 28 122; Wvavoxpi&v or Ylvavexj/abv
or YloLavexj/iwv 5 ; Uvavexf/iuv, Thesmo-
phoria celebrated in 252; Hvave\piu)v,
Orjaeta on 8th of 166; rents paid in
various 130 14+ 374; Thargelion in
Ionic calendars 373
Moon-goddess in calendar 169
mortgage, with condition of avTixpyvis
attached 491
mortgage-stones, description of 494
sq.
;
inscriptions on 352 sqq. 495 sqq.
mouldings (of cymatium) 325
Mowixia, ephebic evolutions at 65 21
177; orthographv of 179
fxveiv 2 C 26 6
fxijKTjs 129 43 373
Mvkovlol 32 B 19 80
fxvXa 70 24 192
Miiller Frg. hist. Gr. i p. 362 10 381
/JLvXoodpLKOV, TO 162 2 415
Munychia, Macedonian garrison in 180
376
[ivpirjcn. for fj.vpLa.cn 21 20 58
M.vpii>ovvT7]s, iK 150 iv 3 403
/LLVppbrjs arecpavos 83 14 220
MvppLvovTTTjs, ey 26
Museion, capture of, by Olympiodorus
138
;
garrisoned by ephebi 137
musical contest, list of victors at 427
musical instruments in Parthenon 258
fivcrrai 2 B 9 G 39 5 6, 21 36 56
/xvcrrripLa 9 25 23 58 (see also mys-
teries), 65 10 176 401; ra ev"Aypats
("Ay/xxj) 5; ra p-eydXa 5, 65 29 177
355 ; ra fJUKpd
5
; ra oXei^w 5
ixvcrrriplwv iirifxeXrjrai 100 A a 11+ 269
MvcrT7ipiu)Tides crirovdai 4 355
lAvTLX-qvatoL 32 A 80 80
Myrrhinus, decree of, quoted 211
Mys, metal-worker 100 B h 9 274
Mysteries, Hall of, built by Philo 98;
initiation into, privilege of Krjpvices
and ~Elvfj.oX7ri5ai
6 ;
police at, main-
tained by iepoiroLol 6
mystery-rites at Eleusis 7
mystery-truce 220; proclamation of 4
v, forms of 9 13, 13 37 76, 42 113, 121
345, 204 443, 221 451 ; loss of, before
ctk err 18; non-assimilation of 131,
66 6 182
vaJ~v7T7]y6s 506
INDEX. 583
name, erased 32 B 15 84; Roman
formula of 328 3 488
Nani Museum, inscription in 63 169
vabs (yews), 6 dpxcuos 322
Naos Hecatompedos of Parthenon 33
nasi, office of 453
vaaros 142 14 389
vavapxi-s, as title of cities 480 484
vavKXrjpoi and Zjxiropoi, guild of 170
vavWos 71 13 197
vavTai dcrroi 412
naval accounts, use of dirohovvaL, diro-
\a(3eiv, bovvai, wapadovvcu, irapaXa-
fielv
in 340
naval contests at Qriaeia 166
naval documents 215
Naxian, marble, inscription on 506
Naxos, battle of 84; omission of in
treaty list 84
v5 =pt'92 11 245
Neapolis (Thrace), loans of, to Athens
62; decree in honour of 23 60
NedTroXts, d7r' 'Adr)vu>i> 85, 107 29 298;
in Pallene 85 ; trap
1
'Avrcaapav 62
;
irapd Qdaov, confused with N. d7r'
:
' KQy]vG)v 63
NeciTroAn-cu 32 B 34 81
Nebridae, family of 432
NetKea = Nt/ccua 242 23 463
Neileus, see Neleus 57
N^Xe^s 57
m-qXelov 21 27 56
Neleus, see Codrus 56
N77XX0S 32 B 37 82
Nelumbrium speciosum L. 175
Nemea, Doric columns at 366
ve'p.ricns 345 6 492
ved, accusative 37 35 99, 52 70 133, 57
44 152
vewX/dct, KadoXicr] 65 37 177
v&av dyuXXa 169 b ii 9 426
Neo7roXtTat 23 2 60, see Ned7roXts
;
irapd Qdaov 23 i? 62
Neo-n-ToXe/xos 32 B 14 80 111; as pro-
tagonist 171 1 429
Neoptolemos, son of Alketas 83
vewpiuv, TrL/uLe\r)rai 119 A 1 335
vewpiov, sessions of
ftovXr]
in 15 53 40
veoopio<pv\at; 75
veupoi 75
pews, 6 dp^ato? 19 8 53
vewaoLKoi o/uLoreyeis in Ze'a 364
vewcroiKos 341
veibrepos 66 U + 181 ; abbreviation for
150 iv 8 401; and wpea^vtepos, how
used 461
V7]<pd\ia lepd 380
vr)(pd\ioi pw/xol 133 B 9 C D 380
i>r)(pd\ios 142 3+ 388
Nepos Tm. 4 354
Ne00i/s 142 4 388
Nero, statue-base of 312 478 ; titles of
312 478
Nesiotes and Critios, joint work of 192
439
!$7)cnu)TiKb$ (pbpos 107 83 298
neuter personal names 96 29 255
New Testament, forms found in 252
Nicander Georgia fr. 78 3 373
Nicocrates, metal-worker 100 B h 7 274
Nicocreon, king of Salamis, patron of
drama 429
Nicostratus, actor 429
Ntxcu
xpw " 10 B ^ 30
Ni/07, pufxos of 42 20 114; Delian 438;
Olympian, divine honours paid to 474
Nike-temple, date of building of 9
Nt/ojparos, son of Nicias 99 a 36 267
N/c?7s tepees 26
vLK-qTTjpia 169 b ii 16+ 426
Ni/das 109 21 307 ; decree in honour of
54 140
NiKi'Sta 103 15 281
Ni/co/cXtjs 44 11 117
NiKoXea (-eta) 102 22 280
'Nointel Marble,' the 359 498
nominatives and accusatives, variation
between 323
nominatives loosely used 102 32 280
vofxio-fxa 10 A 4 28, 141 23 387
vo/xoi eirl rCov Kaicovpywv 64 60 173
vo/uos irepl KCLKOvpy&v [r]p.las] 64 58 173
vop.oderaL 39 41 109;
proceedings before
113
non-diphthongal ov (f3ov\r]) 66
Note, special, on (pparpiai 227
povfxrjvia 128; sacrifices offered on 334
vvp.(po\7)irr6s 199 # 442. See also 536
numbers written in full 476
numeral alphabet 254; later 473
numeral signs, alphabetic 388; cor-
rection of 309; how expressed 38
102 ; mark of separation before 95 14
252 ; marks of punctuation before 100
268, 106 294, 111 309, 113 312 ; marks
of punctuation before and after 109
299
;
punctuated 42 113, 44 117, 45
119; various forms of 95 251
numerals, article used with 61 19 166,
130 14 375; explanation of, difficult
369 ; symbol for fifty 124 354
;
'
Hero-
dianic' 254; in Imperial times 476;
p.er eUdbas 53 3 135; obvious mis-
take in 65 67 80; P
under admini-
stration of Lycurgus 115
numerical symbols, unusual 78 4 213
nux Avellana 175
and co, forms of indistinguishable 161
414
and 6, confusion of 127 367
584 INDEX.
-w, female names in 125 15 360
o, forms of 42 113 135 138, 58 154, 79
214 215
w, forms of vii 137 138, 57 150, 58 154,
62 167, 76 209, 79 214 215 227, 87 231,
122 347, 145 393, 157 410, 204 443,
228 454, 239 460, 244 464
o, later square form of 135
0, representing diphthong 122 31 352
w, symbol for, indicating date 9
O, smaller than the other letters 361 50.1
0, values of, 31 78, 32 79, 33 86 etc.
oath and imprecation combined 85^ 231
oath, between contracting parties and
autonomous states 16; example of
93 15 245; of /3ovXrj and biKaaral for
whole people 17; of witnesses, at
enrolment in phratria 84 108 224;
parties to 92 ; sworn by three deities
12, 70 8 194, 77 b 12 211; taken by
allies (assessment of tribute) 50
;
taken hyarpaTrjyoi, rpirjpapxoi, birXlraL
70
oath, formulae of 12, 36 9 94, 70 3 191;
opKov dovvaL Kal de^aadcu 13 18 37
;
TiGTa Kal adoXa Kal a.7r\a 12 11 36
;
in treaty with Leontini 13 20 37 ; in
treaty with Khegium 12 10 36
obligatio praediorum 96 253
obol and half-obol, symbols for 254
Odeum of Herodes 60 183 ; of Pericles,
restored by Ariobarzanes II 319 482
686s (ovdos) 126 33 365
Oeneis, tribe, statue dedicated by238 459
Oeteans, hieromnemons of 204
offerings, melting down of 272
officers, ephebicl46; naval, precedence
of 413
offices, time of beginning, at Athens
and at Eome 178
official life at Athens, insignificant in
later times 179
6750177 134
01 and v confused in pronunciation 7
o'ikci, o'ikoi 179
olKrjfjLaTa mentioned in Hekatompedon
inscription 33
OLKrjfiaTiou 130 11 374
oiKrj<XLs 'Adrjvrjai, grant of 24 31 64
oIktt)s to receive 50 strokes 64 5 171
oiKia orjixoala 21 36 58
otVta
)(
oIkos 358
oiKovoixelv 56 16 148, 60 41 159, 61 20 163
oiKOTredov and yrjiredou defined 66
oIkos (Kr)pvKU)i>) 124 24 358
oikoo-ltos 124 28 359
olKovfxevr], r/ 90 4 235
oiKovfieviKos 242 8 463
oil, export of 93 247, duty free 425
;
for gymnasia, supply of 93 247
oil-cultivators, law concerning 93 247
olvrjpd,
7) 162 10 416
Olvdpios 23 38 63
olvoxof] 60 20 159 ; cost of making 162
;
weight of 162
oiVwves 64 9 171
QTov AeKeXeiKov and Kepa/neiKov 84 12 225
-otcri not found after 444 b.c. 5
OKXadiai 97 14 260
"OXcts 110 7 309
'OXariKos, wdXe/nos 309
oXeifyv 2 B 36 5, 5 11 10, 9 8 26, 17 1 7 50
olive-trees, regulations concerning 373
'OXv/jLTreia
(
= ia) 4:74:
'OXvfjL-rria 40 47 111
'OXvpnrLeia 100 A a 18 269
Olympia, inscription giving dates of
institution of contests at, and giving
list of victors at 172 430
Olympias, mother of Alexander 83 111
Olympian lease 374
Olympieum 188 200 245
Olympiodorus, Athenians led by 137
'OXv/j-ttios oIkos 68 36 188
Olynthus, fall of 157
ui/xLa 323
omissions 93 21 251 ; inadvertent 180,
66 22 + 182, 75 61 209, 109 14 306 358
-op, female names in 505
<5j/, relation of, to odv 194
-tip, meaning of words ending in 175
oveipoKpiTis 244 8 465
cbveiadai 312
d}vrjTai = ol irpLa/xevoi 79 11 215
J>vr)(Trjs) 112 4 312, 113 9+ 314
'OvrjTwp, speeches of Demosthenes
against 342
ovofxacTTi 15 44 40
&vos (ace. plur. ) 70 14 191
ovv^, crapdovvi; 284
orraiou (orr.) 118 a ii 9+ 333
Ophryneum 110 11 309
6(p6aXfioi, dedicated 60 66 160
; xP
v<Ti
dedicated 103 22 281
ocpdaXfxos in Ionic order 118 c ii 43 335
opisthodomus 6, 10 A 17 32 B, 23 33
256 278, 109 20 307; Dorpfeld's view
on* 33
;
proceeds of tribute deposited
in 33 ; belonging to Parthenon,
arguments for 33
67riado<pai>r)s 118 c \ 5 334
opisthographous marbles 10 28 31
oirwpivT) IluAcua 70 191
optimus, in Imperial titles 479
oracle, dedication by direction of 134
380; Delphian 27; Delphian, pro-
cedure in consulting 97;
directions
of, as to bones of Theseus 166; of
Apollo at Kop67T7), how consulted 98
;
observance of 155 3 408 ; Hporjpeaia
established on direction of 180
;
sacrifices enjoined by 26
INDEX. 585
orators, liable to charge of illegality 18
Orbius in Eoman characters in a Greek
inscription 404 520
Orchomenus, treasurer at 200
order of words, unusual, 6'7rcos av 5k 39
35 109
6peixa\Kiur) (arXeyyis) 103 24 283
Orestes, legend of 280
Oreus, besieged by Cassander 55 13 141
;
Hierocles receives grant of land at 18
opyds (Midprjs) 97; 77 iepa 36 8 + 94; ij
iepa, desecration of, by Megarians 96
dpyewves 87 3+ 227 232; law of 87 231
opyvd 124 9 355
6po<t>r) 126 65 366
opocptacoL (\idoi) 117 i 85 320
Oropus, temple of Amphiaraus at 161
6p<pav6s 2 C 37 6, 355 9 496
Orph. Arg. 929 Herm. 389
Orph. Hymn, lxxiv 1 2 243
orthographical corruptions 383 511
orthography, debased 510; inconsis-
tencies in 70 191
6p96[upa\os 388
opdoo-Tdrai 117 i 60 324, 118 c i 60 334,
126 19 365, 126 26 361
Oschophoria 388
Osiris 388
oawpeveiv 85 3 229
oairpia 229
dadojv, -taQwv in imperatives 17
ostraka, used for official and com-
mercial purposes 515 ; votes on, for
the banishment of Megacles
(392),
Themistocles
(394),
Xanthippus
(393)
515
'other' gods, the 31
of, abbreviation for, misuse of 171 ; ov
diphthongal 221; expressed by O
(?)
5 ; ov for v in contact with
p
and
/3
386; -ov, genitive of 3rd declension
166 1 417 ; ov, symbol for 68 111 19 188
ovde els for ovdeis etc. 12, 7 11 17, 76 11
210
ovdetroKa 70 4 194
ovyKia, uncia, corrupt form of 383 10 511
ovyiucuos 141 23 387
ovv, relation of, to c3i> 194
ods 117 ii 93 326
-ovs, genitives ending in 138
ovdeis, /xrjdeis 375
owl, figure of, stamped on dicasts'
-KLvaiaa 515 516
ox, for sacrifice, price of 70 32 196
oxen (kine), sacrificial, cost of 115
Oxyrhynchus Papyri, G and H Pt 1
lxxx 7 cxli 5 243
ir, date indicated by form of 166 417
7T, forms of 10 132 138 227, 39 109, 51
130, 56 147 etc.
7r with inscribed o- = irivre arddta 347
493
IldxT/s, arpaTrjyos 14 5 38 39
Trdxos 323, 126 14+ 364
Paeanean deme, two divisions of 397
paedotriba 461
irayKpdTLov 61 69+ 165, 168 13 423
iraidves 69 29 189
7rcu5es and dvdpes in contests 207
ircudes (agonistic) 424
7rcu5es eK Trdvrwv 61 48 165
iraLSoTpLfi-qs 65 51
177 ; functions of 146
;
later a life-officer 146
paint, in inscriptions 233 457
;
protec-
tive effect of 457
TlaipLo-ddrjs, decree in honour of 37 99
ttcus = dpcpavbs 7rcus 496
7rcus, iepos 91 55 242
liaXal^v 91 124 243
HaXaurKidOioL 32 A 85 82
iraKaiarpa Tifxeov 61 62 164
irakao'TT} 117 i 35+ 319; (-cuctt^) 364
7rriA?7 61 51+ 165
Palladium 307
UdfKpiXos 44 14 117
Panactum, occupation of, by Cassander
448
UaudKeta 133 A 7 380
Panathenaea 41, 37 27+ 99, 52 15 132,
61 34 163, 77 c 29 211, 78 27 214;
Attic colonists send oxen to 11
;
contributions to, by Erythraeans 11;
contests at 258, 169 424
Panathenaea, Greater 32 101, 7 12 19,
203 14 448 449 ; Greater, assessed
states to take part in 50; Greater,
beginning of financial period 256;
Greater, date of 261 ; originally
annual
196;
proceeds of depfMariKdv
from 270; Pyrrhic dance at 426;
victims sent by allied states to 21
Havad-qvaLa (XafJLTrddi) 215 1 449; r&
/car' eviavTov 42 32 114; rd fxiKpd 32
115
[Travdrj/nei] 23 40 61
Ild^Sta, Td 107, 78 9 213
Pandion, dedication by priest of 206
444; shrine of 74 8 206 444
Tlavdpoo-elov 117 ii 63 322 326
Pandrosos, temple of 322 ; and 'AdTjvd,
dedication to 227 454
Travrjyvpis (Eleusinian festival) 176
Uave\X
V
ues 26 187, 91 132 243, 381 7
481 ; council of, established by
Hadrian at Athens 235, 91 132 241;
decree of 89 284
HaveWrjvca, rd 187
IIaj'eA\77*'ioi' 187
iravyevei 68 28 187 510
iravKapivia 142 15 389
iravwxls 42 30 114, 138 a 16 382 426
586 INDEX.
iravreXeia 142 2 388
Panticapaeum (Kertch) 101
iravreaai 70 22 191
Papyri, Greek tachygraphy preserved
in 524
Papyrus, du Louvre xiv 47 252; forms
found on 196; forms quoted from
53; leaf of [aeXls) 332; Par. I. 2094
522
wapapoXov 102 39 281
irapafibifxta. 87 7 233
wapadetyjaa 128 23 370
7rapadeiy/j.aTa 118 c ii I 329
TrapadoaeLS 256 ; of eTrifxe\r]Tal twv
ve(aplu)v 340
TapadocnpLa 256
irapddoffts 341, 41 c e 7 113
7rapa5ou^ai, use of 340
irapaypdcpeiv 79 20 215
paragraphs denoted by spaces 57 150
;
marked by horizontal lines 115 315,
116 317
Trapa.KaTa.fioK.7] 310
irapaKaTadrjKY} 26 15 70; treasure re-
garded as 33
irapaKoWos 309
vapaKoXovdeip 73 92 203
irapaxpoveiv 118 c i 6 334
irapaXafielv , use of 340
UapaXla,
^
119 B 6 75 340, 131 5 376
irdpaXoL 159 2 413; dedication by 211
446
wapaXovpyrjs 102 -9? 280
Paralns, ship 446
irapav6p.u)v ypacpf) 66
7rapappvp.ara 126 #6 367
irapaa^palvetv 100 B & 5+ 273
irapaaripLaLvecrdaL, Kara<jy]jxalvea'Qai 36
40+ 95
TrapaarjiueLiiMTis 94 17 250
irapacirovbelv 57 5# 151
wapacTTddiov 126 70 367
Kapa.UTa.veiv 91 70 242
Trapacrrds 117 i 75 325, 124 277 359
parchment, original copies written on
215
irapexeiv, of victims 42 -27 114
irapedpeveiv eKKXrjaiais (ephebi) 65 55 177
wdpedpos, of eijdvvos 120 & 7 344
;
of the
first three archons 54 14+ 139 140
445
irapeLTTjcraro
(
= yr) 52 26 132, 55 16 141
irapepfidX\ei.v (intercalate) 27
Udpioi 32 A 59 82
Traplaraadai els 65 77 177
Parnes, Mt 200
Parnessian Apollo, stele placed in
shrine of 86 24 230
Uapv-rjaaios, orthography of 86 24 231
Hapvrjdios 231
parotis 326
Parrhasius 274
Parthenon, the 6; accounts concern-
ing building of 316 ; architects of
9;
back portico of 33 ; ceUa of 379
;
completion of 256 ;
date of beginning
9 13; Doric columns in 366; frieze
of 334; gratings in 33; Naos Heca-
tompedos part of 33 ; Pronaos of 33
;
proper, inventories referring to 257
;
stores for construction of 13
Uapdevos 23 36 63 ; not identical with
Athena 63 ; treasury of, at Neapolis
63
Part Ideas (Severus) 187
Trapvcpr] 102 29 280
Pasicrates, king of Soli, patron of
drama 429
UaaiXea (-eta) 103 9 281
iraaTO(p6pos 465
iraards 70
ivarplai (Delphi) 227
Harpwos (' AiroXXwv) 227
jrarpodev emypaxj/ai 38 20 104
Paul, St, 2nd missionary journey of 62
Pausanias quoted i 2 4 280, 3 3 271,
5 5, 6 8, 8 6 536, 8 2 453, 14 16
317, 19 5 57, 23 2 440 441, 23 9
63, 24 3 466, 25 6 448, 25 7 138,
26 1 138, 26 5 322 334 335, 27 1 26,
28 1 434, 28 5 115, 28 6 408, 29 8
504, 38 1 347, 38 4 7,38 6 1; 1186
180, 30 2 474, 32 8 474 ; in 4 2
97,
6 152 ; v 8 9 10, 9 1 430, 15 8 384
;
vin 41 7 258 ; x 8 2 204, 9 10
60,
37 4 196
Uedvios 188
pedantry, genealogical 512
pedigrees, compiled from inscriptions
417
pediment, column surmounted by 21
54, 90 235, 91 236; with relief 91
236
Ueipaevs 47 9+ 126
lieipaievs, varying orthography of 215
HetpaLOi dearpov, t6 215
ireLpaTiKoi 81 13 217
Heipevs, Heipievs 184
Heipaia, ra. 65 16 176
Ueiacdei8r]s A-qXios 39 16 108
ireXavos 9 36 27, 138 a 11 383; accent
of 27
HeXapyiKov 25, 9 54 28; stones etc. not
to be removed from 9 56 25
Pelasgic wall on Acropohs 9
Pelasgikon 190
ireXedpov 70 27 192
1177X77! (Ii77A77/ces) part of TpiKOjp.ai 215
TrrjXodevareXv 124 29 359
Peloponnesian War 25 35 41 352; im-
poverishment due to 436 ; sums
borrowed for 109 306
INDEX. 587
Peloponnesus, simpler style of honor-
ary decrees in 34
penalties, 8i]juv<ns
xP
7
lf
x^T(j}v 22 a 7 59;
different for slaves and freemen 139
9 + 383; for illegal <?7ri\{/r)<pi(ris 10
13 + 33 ; for making proposals with-
out ddeia 10 B 16 32 ; imposition
of 291
; (pvyrj, ddvaros 22 a 7 59
;
various 25 31 67; for murdering
an Athenian 36 ;
for xpevh^s diroypa<p7}
93 27 246
pentaeteris, accounts of 97 258, 100 268
;
Panathenaic, in the second year of
each Olympiad 31
TrevTaicbvioL, oi 291
TrevTaKOcrio/Liedi./ui.i'oi 22
; ra/xtas appointed
from 256
irevTaixvovv 64 33 175
TrevTej3a\ai>ov, KXetdiou 103 27 281
TTVT^8paxfJ-os 45 i#+ 119
TrevT7jK6uTapxoL 412
TTUT7]Ko<rT7) 198, 122 35 353
irevT^KoaToKoyoL 71 #3 197
ne*>re\77t'/c6s, At'0os 126 31+ 361
7TUTT7]pis 256
TrevdepoL, rights of, in prosecuting for
homicide 25 22 67
IleTraprjdioi 32 A 85 82
rreirXos, the 52 i5 132
ireirpajxivov [xupiov) eirl Xvcrei 357 497
percentage, computation of 254; pay-
able to the state from sale of con-
fiscated goods 309 310; examples of
113 314
Perdiccas, force sent against 18; rela-
tions of Methonaeans with 15 18 sqq.
40 41
perfect and pluperfect passive, peri-
phrastic forms of 41
Pergamon, Bacchic thiasus at 243
ireplftoXos of Upbv at Eleusis 65 11 176
peribolus 6 535; wall of 355
irepixpvaos 259 281
7repixiJTpi<r[jLa 129 41 373
Pericles 263; administration of
9; as
choregus 170 a 5 428; conquest of
Euboea by 433 ; dream of 434
;
Euboea re-conquered by 437
Pericles, son of Pericles and Aspasia
99 a 8 263
irepniyrjTov 100 18 279
Trepueleu 70 18 195
TrepiK&drjaOai eKKXrjaias 180
irepLKoWav 118 a ii 12+ 333
irepiKVjUidTLos 102 17 279
HepivOLoi 32 A 84 82
Peripatetic School at Athens 158
Trepiiraros, dimensions of 347 493
TepiirolKiXos 102 8 279
irepLTroXapxoL 36 20 94
wepLTroXiaTLKT] (<Tvi>o5os) 90 3 235
Trep'nroXoi, mercenaries 138; use of
<-(py)fioi
as 138
;
length of service of 179
TTpnrbp<pvpos (iadrjs) 464
perjury, imprecation on 57 55 152
iripobos 70 16 192
Persephone, analogy of Basile with 57
;
and Demeter 7
Persepolitan sculptures 279
Persian spoils in Parthenon 260
Persians, base destroyed by 433
TlepaiKai 64 18 171
Pertinax, murdered 187
Pescennius Niger, rival of Severus 187
ireo-rjua 331 1 489
wiraXov 118 c ii 35 330, 122 36 353
Trerpa, /xaXaKTj 127 8 368
<p,
form of on a dicast's ticket 400 516
0,
forms of 4 132 395, 51 130, 58 154,
62 167, 66 181, 68 184, 85 227, 92 244,
93 245, 136 381, 145 393, 150 401, 156
408, 157 410, 160 413, 174 431, 191
438, 206 444, 209 445, 237 458, 245
466 497 507 ; development of xvi
(paidvvTrjs {(paidpvvT'rjs) 69 16 190
(paidvPT-qs, Aids e/c Heiarjs 26, inscription
on seat of, in Dionysiac theatre
254 468, also of A. 'OX. iv dtrret 262
468
<paiveiv in Ceos 71 18 198
Phaleric Bay 58
(paXXayu>yia 21
<paXX6s 8 13 21
Phanagoria 101
Phanocritus of Parium, honours
granted to 31 78
Phanodemus, author of an 'Atthis'(?)
106 ; crowned for good service in
(3ov\7) 38 7 103
Phanostratus, tragic poet 219 3 450
assessment of 77 ;
Dorian colony 77
omission of from treaty list 84
treaty of, with Athens 30 77
cpdais 20 21
Pheidias, chryselephantine statue by
315
(prjuas, 6 8 A 3 19
QeppecpcLTTa 252 473
(pevyeiv 25 11 68
(pLdXcu dpyvpou in Parthenon 97 5+ 258
(piaXrj, cost of 65 40 177; dedicated by
'4<p-q(5os to pi-rjTrjp deCov 65 40 177
;
weight of 162
QiyaXela, <&iaXela 153
Philemon, death of 152
Philemon, comic poet 219 5 450
QiXrifMovLaKOv /j-^TaXXou 350 493
Philip, terms of peace with 102
4>iXt7T7ri5?7s, comic poet, decree in
honour of 52 132
<f>tXnriri87}s $iXo/j.r)Xov Tlamj'ie^s, genea-
logy of 131
588 INDEX.
Philippus, emperor, celebrates ludi
saeculares 463
Philo, architect 364 ; arsenal of, burnt
by Sulla 364 ; Hall of the Mysteries
built by
98;
portico at Eleusis built
by 369; o-Kevod-qK-q of 363
Philo Legatio ad Caium 513
Philochorus Fr. 135 =F.K.G. i
p. 406
363
$>i\oKp&T7is 36 55 96
$i\6fx7}\os 74 col. 3 28 207
Philostratus, trepl yvp.v. 13 p. 268 5 16
430 ; Vitt. Soph, ill 2 247, 1 5 p. 236
180, 3 p. 549 242
(piXoTi/neiadai els 61 23 163
<pi\oTi[xia els 65 47 111
(pianos 93 4 247
*X. = *Xaowa 323 16 484
<Ae/3oudpios (jut^) 386 6 512
<\eta<rios <Atd<7ios $\ea<nos 34 3+ 91 92
Phiiasians, alliance of, with Athens 34
91
Phlius 51
Phocians excluded from Amphictyonic
Council 204; opposed to Theban
supremacy 88
Phoenice, list of men fallen in war in
359 498
Phoenician-inscription interpreted 375
508; letters xi
(pwvao-Kia, reward for 242 37 463
cpuvaaxbs 242 32 464
(pop/iri^ou 364
(popos, airb QpaK7)s 107 44 296 ; NT/crto;-
tikos 107 83 298; iiri (airb) QpaK-qs
289; exemptions from 16; 'EXXrj-
o-ttovtios 289, 107 26 296; 'Iwvik6s
289, 107 7 295 ; KapiKos 289, 107 64
297 ; irepvaivbs 290
;
gives way to
avvrd^eis 82
Photius, excerpts of Dexippus' works
in 458; quoted 426
(ppdrepes ((ppdropes) 69, 84 9+ 225 227;
rights of, in prosecuting for homicide
25 23 67
(pparpia, enrolment in 24 16 64, 33 42
87 225; re-admission of homicide to
69 ;
union of 229 ; formulae of de-
crees of 205 ; named after yfrr] 227;
Note on 227
<ppaT
P
Lapxos 84 20+ 223, 85 5+ 228
phratriarchs, number of 229
Qparpios, Zevs 84 1 + 222
Qparpifap 84 37 222
Qpedppios ^pedpios 68
(ppovpapxos and iiricrKoiroL at Erythrae
12
(ppovpta, of ephebi 146; visit of ephebi
to 65 22 111
Phrynichus, App. Soph. Bekk. anecd.
32 14 21, p.
32 1 66
Phrynichus, assassination of 65
(pBLvwv (p.'fju) 128
(pdopd 141 7 386
(pvyadevcrai., transitive or intransitive
33 20 88
(pvXaKT) 'EXevaivos 75 46 208
(pvXaKT]v T7js
x^P
as
i
ets

special impor-
tance of formula 157
(pvXapxoi 34 39 91, 61 79+ 165; take
oath in making alliance 57 52 152
<f>v\apxos among 'nrireijs fallen in battle
362 504
(pvXerai 147; dedication by 206 444;
(not (pvXri) decree of 149 30+ 400
<pvXX6(3oXa, 0i'AAo/36Aos 384
<pvXo(3acriXe'is 68 536
$vTdXfjLios, epithet of Posidon 275 474
Phyle 200
physicians, sacrifice offered by 456
Hiepes ev Hepyd/nq) 17 51 50
pigment, letters ornamented with red
164 419; red, on inscribed marble
beam 176 432
wivaices 126 72 367
Tuvdiaa 515
irivdKLov 9 26 26 515; coins affixed to
103 2 281 ; \e\evicwfifrov 84 62 226
Pindar Nem. x 22 463, 35
(64)
and
Schol.^424; Pyth. 11 10 Schol. 7
7rioi, d,7w^es 463
pirates, Tyrrhenian 345
Piraea 270
Piraean deme, terms of leases granted
by 376
Piraeus, dyopd in 47 9 125 ; ancient
quarries in 358 ; darvvo/xos and 170-
pavbixoi in 126
;
garrison in 134
;
Macedonian garrison in 180; stan-
dard weights in 176; p.erpovbp.oi and
dyopavbuoL of 416; inscription re-
lating to repair of walls of 123 353
Pisander, confiscated property of 66
Pisistratus, dedication by 190 438;
temple at Eleusis built by 53
Plague of Athens 434
TrAato-ty, in
102 9+ 279
irXdros 126 17+ 364
Plato Ale. 1 119 a 31 ; Apol. 32 b 17;
Charm. 153 a reading confirmed 57,
153 b 501 ; Gorg. 487 c 101 ; Legg.
iv 706 a 180, vi 753 c 226, vm
834 c 430, xii 947 c 408; Lysis
206 d 219; Phaed. 58 b 21, 110 d
284; Phaedr. 267 c 83;
Prot. 315 c
101, 320 a 35; Rep. 1 354 a 270, 11
361 e 384; Symp. 183 b 78
TrXaTvaXovpyrjs 102 17 279
TrAeoi' eupe/V 79 18 215
pleonasm, examples of 97
irXidpov 80 JI+ 216 364
irXivdis 126 26 365
INDEX. 589
TrXivdofioXeiv 124 26 357
Tr\tvdo<popeiv 124 28 357
Pliny the elder N.H. vn 125 364; xxn
44 434; xxiv 2 353; xxxm 36 198;
xxxiv 74 441, 50 434
Pliny the younger Ep. Traj. 119 (120)
463; Epp. vn i$ 253
irXola opposed to fxa.Kpa.1 vrjes 144
Plotheia, decree of deme 78 212
HXuideievs, varying orthography of 213
TWovtwv 3 5 7
irXvveh, dedication by 222 452
irXvvTpia, dedication by 452
pluperfect, augment of : see augment
plural, generic use of 109 18 306
Plutarch 2 668 c 7 58, 2 1061 e 388;
Ale. 30 71; Alex. 22 40 144, 29 429;
Arat. 34 180 ; Aristid. 5 440 500, 24
49; Cam. 19 190; Cimon 8 17 500,
12 77; C/eom. i 204; I>e glor. Ath.
350 a 91; de Is. et Osir. 3 465;
Demetr. 12 134, -26 5; 2><ora. 5 127;
Lys. 25 204; Mc. 3 353; Per. 22 20,
13 434, 30 97, 3-2 226, 37 263; Pfcoc.
2<S 190, 32 97, 37 269; Pomp. 31
194; Pyrrh. 1 111; 5mZZ. 3 153, 14
364; Them. 17 226; 27es. i? 384,
24 270, 36 166; X orr. 835 b 207,
843 d 117, 843 c 852 453, 845 e 91,
p. 852 113, &5 a 364
Pluto, altar of 383; and Proserpine,
priest of 27; and the Eumenides,
worship of 408 ; temple service of 408
Plynteria 71
Pnyx, boundary stone of 333 490
7r65es for accusative 382 6 511
ttoSicuos 117 ii 12 325
iroe-Lv 18 9 52, 79 3+ 214, 87 16 232
poet, statue-base of 328 488
irot 70 26 194
ttouZv, iroelv 18
Poiessa 198
Uoiriaatoi 32 A 82 82
TroLrjTTjs, assisted by virodidaaKaXos 204
;
K(t)fxu)8Las 219 5 450 ; rpayoodias 219 3
450
'
TroXfl 23 35 63
jrcoXeiv (aTTOfxicrdovv) 27
TroXets, the allied 15 43 42
iroKefxapxos 17 2 45 ; inscription on
seat of, in Dionysiac theatre 288 471
;
jurisdiction of in diroaraaiov 8iKrj 288
iroXe/JLiGTripios ittttos 169 b ii 9 426
TToXefXMTTTjS ITTTTOS 61 #2 167
Polemo Fragm. in 280; \J/rj<pi<rp.a
quoted from 280 ; ap. Schol. Soph.
0.(7. 100 380
TToXe/xos, exceptions made for
(?)
84 58
223
Poletae 58, 4 A 6 9, 6 ii 13 ; accounts
of 257 ;
duties of 24 34 64 ; functions
of 21 5 55, 36
66'
96 135 308 312;
transactions of 27
ttSXls kkXt)tos 71
7r6Ais for aKpoTToXis 2 C 31 6
TToXis^aKpowoXis 7 60 18, 8 A 18 19, 9
51 25, 10 A 4 28, 11 24 35, 16 44 43,
18 18 51, 26 28 70, 28 39 74, 30 26 77
TToXirea (7roAiTet'a) 71
;
grant of 101
Pollux i 36 4, 227 372; ii 162 387
iv 91 184, 222 215; vi 15 175, 76
380; vn 52 279, 55 279, 220 365
vin 54 63 77, 90 269, 96 101, 98 536
101 28, 207 225, HI 536, 236 374
242 211; ix 49 175; x 36 309, 96
318, 238 284, 186, ms. reading of,
confirmed 519, 191 383; xi 173 333
ttoXos 128 4 + 370
ttwXojp aftoXtov apfia (Olympia) 172 11
430
HoXvoktos, as a Thessalian name 454
HoXucTTpaTOS, wpb^evos 18 15 51
Polybius i 7 8 153 ; ii 62 9 144 ; v 56
5 144, 106 6 628; vi 6 20 174; xvi
25 9 128
7TO/X7T7? 47 20 125 ; at Lesser Panathenaea
42 18 114
TTOfiTreia, rd 10 B 2+ 32
7ro/x7rets
5
; receive portions at sacrifices
42 24 114
tto/j.ttik6v,
fcvyos 169 6 ii 16 426
TTOflTTLKOS LTTTTOS 167
Pontic states, names of 49
TToiravov 133 A 3 + 380, 142 2 + 387
Poplicola, L. Gellius, consul 488
II67rXios, abbreviation for 164 iv 7
419
TTopeia 28 34 74
TTopTrafxa. 70 31 192
TTopdfxeLuv opixos 342 492
portico, Caryatid, unfinished disks on
325 ; hexastyle, of Erechtheum 322
portrait, dedication of 234 457
Iloo-elSiov 15 28 41
IIoo~eLdnnros, decree in honour of 51
130
Uoaecduiv 3 4 7; identical with Erech-
theus 473
Ho<TidQ>v xa^ucu'^Xos 142 18 389
HocreiddovLOV 42
IIoo-^s, comic poet 394
Posideon, rent paid in 372
Hotcl/u,6s, deme, three divisions of 397
Potidaea, colony sent to 186 437
;
capture of 437 ; cleruchs in 91 413
;
inscription commemorating Atheni-
ans fallen at 360 500
TTOVS 364
poverty, indications of 180
praenomen, absence of 96 14 255; use
of, rare after Diocletian 255
wpa<ns 46 22 123 ; iwl Xtaei 376
590 INDEX.
Praxidicae and Hermes invoked in
Defixio 408 521
7rpats ((popov) 41
precedence, tribal 340
rrprjxv-a., a Chian form 403 519
precinct, decree for letting 21 56
;
regulation of 140 384
Trpecrfteia tCov NiTv\rii>a.itoi> 16 15 43
irpea(3eis (12 I) 13 1 36 37; age of 15 16
39; appointment of 32 A 73 81;
entertained 48 1 126; invited to
hospitality 16 15 43; invited to
irpvTaveiov 26 40 70
irpeafievTris (legatus) 323 6 484; special
meaning of 187
irpevfivrepos, abbreviation for 150 iv 7
401 ; and vecbrepos, how used 460
prescript decrees 3
president : see iiriGTaTris
irpLaadat. 312; to take a lease of 79 5
215
priest, appointed by public election
182; appointed through purchase
182; hereditary 66 9 182; modes
of appointment of 182 ; nominates
successor 91 4 241
priestess, dedication of irporopA) by 240
460
;
payment to
9 ;
perquisites of
9 232; of thiasotae 88 14 234
irpiv rj not Attic 58
7J7Hcrrcu 118 a i 29 333 ; work of 366
prizes, agonistic, various values of 169
424; for KidapcpSoi, av\u)dol,Kidapi<TTa.L,
avXrjTai etc. 169 424 ; inscriptions
containing list of 168 422, 169 424;
small value of 424
7rpoaipeats 57 17 + 151; =alpeais 144
TrpoaXiwrai in Paros 200
Trpofiovkeveiv 24 37 64, 45 48+ 120
probouleuma 42 50, 24 65 71, 31 79
92 106 111 116 121 291; amendment
of 18; new resolution based on 18;
complete example of
57;
post-
Euclidean 88
irpoxotdes 286
TrpoxpypciTifcii' 15 55 40
procurator, imperial 250
TrpodtKia 72 16 199
wpoeopla 52 65 133, 53 23 136, 72 16
199; granted 55 83 142
irpoedpoi, oi 51 7 130, 52 5+ 132, 53 4 +
135; of vo/aoderai 110; in post-
Euclidean decrees 85; selected by
lot 88
irpoedpos, 6 91 20 236
-rrpoeiacpopd, persons liable for 407
Ilporjpeaia, id 65 28 177 180, 138 a 6
382
;
(-data), a Demeter-festival 65 28
180; celebrated at Eleusis 180
professions, rare mention of, in Attic
epigraphy 452
irpoii;, security for payment of 358 497
Trpoixavreia 72 16 200
Promethea, the 74 206 207
TrpofxoLpus 67 10 183
Pronaos
256 ; inventories referring to
257; of Parthenon 33
Hpuvvoi 32 B 12 80
pronominal stems, inflexion of 195
pronunciation of modern Greek 245
property, private, boundary stone on
336 491 ; restoration of, lost in war
71
wpocpacns iirapxt-Kos 94 33 249
Propylaea
9
; building of 434 ; Ionic
columns in 366
7rpoirefjarra 84 61 223
irpoirvXaLOL deol 7
irpbirvKov 66 13+ 181
TrpoirvXov, to (Eleusis) 36 56 96
TrpippdraL 412
irpwpeus, rank of 413
wpos with dative 73 1 8 201
Trpoadelv, personal use of 120 b 32 345
wpocredpeueii', 7rape5peveiv, <pedpeveiv 180
Proserpine and Pluto, priest of 27
Trpo<rypd<pLv (intercalate) 27
Trp6<TK\r](Tis 50
Kpoapnadovv 118 a ii 7 + 333
irpocrvoixodereiv 39 43 110
irpoaodoL, collectors of 162 1 415
irpocrobov Troie'icrOai 60 16 159
irpbaobos irpbs tt\v fiov\r)v 23 28 62
UpocnraXTiaKov 349 493
irpoacpuveiv 91 107 242
TrpocTTacris 117 i 59 323
Trpoardrai (Iulis) 71 36 198
UpoaTaTrjpios
'
AttoWwv 62 9 168
TrpoardTTjs of Iobacchi 91 13 241
Trpoaridevai (intercalate) 27
Trpo<jTo\xiaLov 117 i 71 324
npoarOtov 36 27 94 98; at Eleusis 128
3 369; at Eleusis, capitals for 369
protagonist, in choragic dedications
435; victorious 170 428; special prize
for 429
irporavela 124 6 355
irpoiavis (Lesbian) 355
Trp<t)Teyypa<poi 420
irporeXeia 3 2 7
Upwreupvdfxos 91 125 243
irpodvuv 133 A 2 380
Trpodufxara 122 37 349 380
TrpoTOfxrj, dedicated by priestess 240
460
irporbvLov 383
irpoTo{v)ov 138 a 9 383
provinces, tributary, two tolktoli to
each 50
proxenia 75
irpo^evla 72 16 200; definition of 33;
granted 31 79, 26 38+ 70
INDEX. 591
proxenia-decree, earliest complete
Attic 18 51
;
privileges specified in 34
irpb^evoi 17 8 51 ; duties of 33 ; of Phlius
17 15 51
proxenos, Athenian at Delphi 200
Trpo^evos, not a political agent 34; of
avvodos Aios Eevlov 63 18 170
TTpvTaveiov, to 16 16 43 ; irpeafteis invited
to 26 40 70; (irpvTaveou) 71
TrpvTdveis, abuse of power by 17 ; and
fiovkr), to see to interests of evepyirai
24 32 64 ; chairman of 32
;
chairman
of, holds key of treasure 33; duties
of 40 15 111, 36 34 95;
perform
sacrifices 62 8 + 168 ; receive portions
at sacrifices 42 11 114; (of ra/xtat)
132 23 379 ; crowns granted to 148
397; dedication by 149 398 ; duties
of, in Hecatompedon 378 ; functions
of, in prosecutions 39
;
ypa/u/nare^s of,
date indicated by 21 ; inscriptions
containing lists of 148 396, 149 398,
150 401; liable to penalties 17 21
50; list of 56 147 188 189; lists of
Remark xii 396 ; lists of three classes
396; number of 400; of Aegeid tribe,
decree in honour of 56 147 ; of Erech-
theid tribe, decree in honour of 62
168
prytanies, order of, re-arranged 144
;
day of, specified 109 4+ 300; how
described in post-Euclidean decrees
85; increased to twelve 127; order
of, settled by lot 118; order of, under
Clisthenes 268; order of, when de-
termined
88 ; surplus days, how as-
signed to 122; table of 88 128; under
duodecimal arrangement, not always
coinciding with months 128; varying
length of 122 157
Prytaneum, entertainment in 95 11 252
prytanising tribe, formula of, in decrees
2; order of, marked in post-Euclidean
decrees 85
prytany, day of, coincides with day of
month 57 4 58 4 150, 63 4 169, 65 2
176 ; days of, for payments, specified
266; day of, specified 98 22 261;
day of, specified in post-Euclidean
decrees 85 ;
first, beginning in Sciro-
phorion 263 309; periods, inequality
in distribution of 169; sixth in
fifth
month 161
\p,
forms of 66 181, 74 205, 87 231, 90
235, 93 245, 150 401
\pcu<JTa 138 a 18 383
\pt)KTa (fji^Tpa) 175
\}jricf)Lo-iJ.a quoted by Harpocration 280
^f]<pL(x;xa acpaipeto-dai. 8 A 22 21
Pseudo-Andocides c. Alcib. 11 49
Ptolemaeus, Boeotia mastered by 448
Ptolemaeus Lagi 144
n-roAe/zcua 61 34 163, 156 4 409
Ptolemaion, gymnasium 167
UroXefxaios (Philadelphus) friendly to
freedom 57 16 151 ; friendly to Lace-
daemonians 57 21 151 ; decree be-
longing to reign of 454 ; 7rpeaj3uTpos,
embassy to 55 28 141
Ptolema'is, tribe, creation of 517 536;
list of demes transferred to 526
Ptolemaea, institution of 167
Ptolemy and Seleucus, naval war of,
against Antigonus 143
Ptolemy Euergetes, tribe Ptolemais
created in honour of 393 536
Ptolemy, gymnasium of 443
Ptolemy Philopator 128
Public Works, accounts of curators of
257
Tvvypvr] 61 60+ 165; at Olympia, insti-
tuted 172 3 430
trvXayopai (-pot) no inscriptional men-
tion of 204
TTvXayopoi 191
IlvXala eapLvrj 73 3 204
;
birwpivf) 70 191
pulvinar 242
punctuation, marks of 63, 36 94, 38
102, 41 112, 48 126, 67 183, 87 231,
97 257, 99 262, 114 314, 132 377 378
404, 222 452, 322 483; before and
after abbreviations 120 343 ; before
and after numerals 103 281, 104 284,
115 315, 120 343, 121 345, 124 354;
in abbreviations 118 335; with
numerals 476; modes of 22 140;
sense affected by 184
Trvprjves 175
irvp^opos 410, 276 474; iepevs ir. 26
TTvpycoros 102 26 280
Hvppavdpos 32 76 84
Trvppixio-Tal 169 b ii 23+ 426
Jltdia 40 47 111 ; in 3rd year of
Olympiad 204
Hvdia, i), injunction of 26
UvdiKoi, 7rcu5es 426
Uuddxpv(rros t^rjyrjT-rjs
27 ; inscription
on seat of, in Dionysiac theatre 279
470
Hiduv 44 17 117
Pyanepsia 388
Pylae 204
Pylagorae, oath of 70 191
Pylos, fall of 263
Pyrrhic dance, relief illustrating 426
Pyrrhus, sculptor 179 434
Pyrrhus, son of Arybbas 111
Pythai'd, Pythaists 199
Pythia, the 191 196
Pythian festival 421
Pythion, site of 200 212; tripods
dedicated in the 449
592 INDEX.
9
xi 475 ; see also koppa
quaestors, Roman 245
quota-lists v 42
quota of
fo
41
quota of tribute 288
p,
archaic form of in late inscription
328 488; effect of, upon ei, rj 196
p,
forms of 4 14 137, 145 893, 156 408
/>,
loss of 190 280; metathesis of 118
pd/35a>(Tis 118 c i 34 334
pa(38o(popLa 91 131 243
re-construction of inscription from
authors, example of 430
relief, description of 233
reliefs, inscriptions furnished with 15
39, 19 52, 21 54; (rape of Basile) 57,
28 72. 199201 442, 230 455, 360 500,
371 507
reliefs, sepulchral 280
Remark i, ii &c. See Contents
rent, paid half-yearly in Hecatombaeon
and Posideon 131 14
376;
paid in
various months
372;
percentage of,
to rateable value 130 27 375;
proceeds
of, used for sacrifices 115; propor-
tion of, to capital 254; 12 per cent,
of purchase price 229
repayment of borrowed treasure, decrees
concerning 31
rescript, imperial 92 244
reserve fund of Treasury 256
restorations by comparison of inscrip-
tions 138 161, 58 15 154; caution in
accepting 11 ; from authors 98 20 262;
instance of ingenious 109 44 307
retrograde writing xi
revenue-collectors, inscription contain-
ing list of 162 415
pet/cos 102 20 280
Rharian plain, rents of 98
Rhegines, kinship of, with Leontines
36
Rhegium and Athens, treaty between
12 36 37
'Peiros 19 5 52 347 ; etymology of 53
Rheneia, leases of temple lands in 121
20 347
Rhodes, treaty of, with Hierapytna 17
'Pddiot 32 A 82 82
Rhoematalkas, king, archon at Athens
461 ; dedication to 241 461
'Pu^cua 65 15 176, 156 2 408
'Pw/icuot, sanction of, required 73 94
203
'PivfMTj, priest of 179
poirrj 175
pv/jiol, stampedwith letters and numerals
273
pvai&fav 73 84 204
rigging, naval, various 341
rights, freehold, asserted for tombs 510
rock-inscription 245 466
Roma, personified 236 1 458
Roman Law 374
Roman name-formulae 315 480
Roman names 66 3 181, 67 I
-f 183,
68 passim 184, 91 21 236
Rome, 1000th anniversary of city 463
Rosetta-stone, the 464
royalty, Basileia personification of 57
ppupevra 53
pp&yas 53
ppbov 53
ppvfxoi 53
pptiaiov 53
<r, Attic form of 173 431 ; doubled
before k,
x,
t, 6 12; forms of 4 8 9
11 13, 56 147, 63 169, 67 183 184,
82 217, 90 235, 95 251 294, 145 393,
191 438, 192 439, 196 440, 204 443,
207 444, 213 447, 227 454, 239 460,
245 466 ; lunar form of, on boundary-
stones xvi, 347 493, 356 497
2, on a retrograde inscription 336 491
0-, reversion to archaic form of 198 441
<r, three-stroke xii ; reversed form of,
in L. to R. inscription 367 505
-ere-- before k,
x>
t> 408
00 in (pvX&aaeiv, ddXaacra 381 4 15 510
-s stems, accusative of 76 16 210
;
genitive of 76 22 210
0-a aipa 35 8 93
sacoma 174
sacomarii 175
sacred land at Delphi, inspection of
70 191
Sacred War 195
Sacred Way, Eleusis 52 53 190
sacrifice, cost of 162
;
for benefit of
poor 166 ; 100 drachmae contributed
for 61 15 163 ; regulations for 70
191, 133 378 379
sacrifices, before assembly, to 'AiroXXuv
UpoararripLos 62 9 168
;
to "Aprep-is
(3ovXaia 62 9 168 ; bloodless 335
;
days of 338 ; in connexion with
passing of decree 16 ; months and
days of, specified 138 379 ; of deme,
regulations for 211; portions of
(/uepiSes) distributed to officers 42 10
114; to Dionysus 54 7 + 139
safe-conduct conferred by the Holy
Truce 5
sails, stolen 45 37 120
Salamis, ancient population of 311
535 ;
archon in 82 1 217 ; Athenian
claims to 2; cleruchs in 2; colonised
by cleruchs 219 414 ; ephebi sail to
65 24 177 ;
Macedonian garrison in
180 ; not a deme 219
INDEX.
593
Salamis, heroine, dedication to 160
414
Salamis in Cyprus 121
sale, acts of, recorded on bpoi 494
caXwiKrai 61 44 164
Samians, revolt of 503 ; decree in
honour of 22 59, 28 74 ; defection
of 266 289 ; loyalty of, to Athens
54 74
Samos, boundary stone from 267
;
cleruchs in 413 ; democratical party
expelled from 74 ; Ionic alphabet
used at 60 ; siege of, by Lysander
85
;
vessels sent to siege of 18
Za/xodpaKes 32 B 8 80 ; tribute paid
by 17
sanctuaries, land reserved for 21
;
liable to Trpoeiafyopa 407
sanctuary, decree for enclosing 21
56 ; founded by Lycian slave 141
386
Sandwich Marble 122 347
Sandys, Dr J. E., on Arist. 'Ad. -rro\.
quoted 32 122
aavldes 118 c i 30 334
aavidiou 84 124 225
Sannio ap. Harpocr. s.v. ireXapos 27
Sarapis and Isis, dream-gods 465
aapfoov 103 29 284
crapdovvi;, ovv 284
GaTvpiKov (dpa/jLa) 171 16 429
Xarvpos 37 23 99
satyric plays separate from tragedies
429
Satyrs and Sileni on vases 243
Satyrus I besieges Theodosia 101
Scambonidae, decree of 77 210
axa<TTr]piaL 96 16 253
o-Xtfa 141 11 385
axoXah TrapaKadi^dveiu 65 85 178
<xxoXaeiv in authors 180
<rxo\&eiv (piXotiocpQLS 65 34 111
Scirophorion, prytany- order beginning
in 309
Scriptt. Hist. Aug. Vit. Alex. Sev. 6
7, Vit. Tac. 5 241
sculptors, payments to 333
sculpture, cost of 331
scutulatus 279
Scylax per. 58 84
Scyros, bones of Theseus brought
from 166
Zepaarol 250
Ze/Sao-rot aywues 311 5 478
SejSaa-Tos (Augustus) 284 474
; dedica-
cation to 236 458
secretaries and treasurers, chrono-
logical list of in BMI 257
secretary, see ypafi^arevs
Section i, n etc. See Table of Con-
tents
arjK<J}/j.aTa 64 8 171
Seleucus, naval war of, against An-
tigonus 143
o-eXts 118 a i 4 332
Selymbria, capture of, by Alcibiades
70
^tjXvfippiavoi 32 B 29 81
Selymbrians, permitted to have their
own form of government 71 ; re-
mission of debts to 71
Semabaal 453
Semachidae 214
arjfxdov 102 31 277
semester, payment made at end of 10
Semitic superstitions 508
oefjivai deal, vows made to 34 9 91
Senate, see
fiovX-q
separation, mark of, before numeral
signs 95 14 252
Septem contra Thebas, year of the 428
Septimius Severus, association of,
with his sons in empire 186
sepulchral inscriptions, common type
of 369 506, 378 379 509 ; on members
of the Erechtheid tribe fallen in
war 359 498
sepulchral tablet, with relief repre-
senting a medical scene 511
2ep/uLv\ia in tribute lists 63
Zep/AvXcets 23 43 63
service, foreign, disbursements for 257
Severus, titles of 187
2e|(rros 146 12 395
shield of marble, inscription on 164
417
Shilleto on ivravdol 26
shorthand, inscription containing
system of 410 522
Sicilian Expedition 35 ; consequences
of 118
Sicily, Athenian army in 17 ;
Athens
interferes in 36
;
vases found in 424
Sidonian era 453
Sidonians, decree of 453 ;
in the
Piraeus 453
2i56vios, liidujvios 454
Sigean monument xii
alyXoi 104 22 286
signs, superfluous 150 i 3 403
Sileni 243
silver, directions for working 162
;
relation of, to gold 315 316; waste
in melting 162
singer, in choragic dedications 435
aipoi (aecpoi) 9 10 26
GLTTjpa, t) 162 6 415
(TLTrjpos 416
aLTrjais ep. irpvrave'np granted 52 64
133, 55 81 142, 52 64 133
aiTWvla 45 13+ 119
aiTwviKa, to. 122
II. II.
38
594 INDEX.
aiToiro/JLTria 120 a 56 344
Six hundred, Senate of, see (3ov\rj
<TKd<pr}, Panathenaic 134, 237 10
<TKe\os dedicated 103 8 281
<tkt]vLt7)s 124 13 355
CTKTJxpeis dadyeiv 120 a 41 345
<jk9i\j/l$ Kara xiijxOsva. 341
(TKetirj 341
;
Kpe/maard and v\iva 341
(rKevodrjKr) 341 ;
contract for building
126 361
(XKevovpyoi 14 7 38
a-Kids, t) 64 1+ 171
'LKiddip, 6 dpx
<j3v & 35
Zki&Oos watched 119 A a 35 341
Skirophoria 252
(XKopbov, late for vKopobov 141 5 386
crKovrXaptos 510
cr/coi/rAtDcris 510
2ki/0cu as police 14
slave, informer, reward of 71 i9+ 197;
received 100 strokes in Syros 174
slaves, admission of, to guilds 386
;
and freemen, differing penalties of
139 9 + 383; confiscation of goods
of 309 ;
flogged 384 ; had no demotic
name 162 ; names of 359 452
;
public, punishment of 174
Social War, the 93
Socrates, refusal of, to put a decree
to the vote 17
solar year 169
Solon, Kvpfieis of 25 ; said to have
prohibited exports 247
o&v TrapexzLV 78 14 212
2cDj>5pos = 2a>ai'5/)os 53 29 138
o-wci 77 b 7 211
Sophocles, EL 388 231, 742 369; O.C.
683 Schol. 190, 701 Schol. 424
437 ; O. T. 222 18
;
play of, ex-
hibited by his son 437
au<ppoj>i(TT-r)s, elected by drjfxos 75 29 +
208 ; functions of 146 ; revived
during the empire 146
Z,a)T7)p, an epithet of Augustus 236 3
458
HovdyyeXa 415
sowing, stipulation for, in lease 85
21 228
cyfrLv 57 35 151, 76 5 210
spaces, marking paragraphs 82 217
criravoaLTia 45 9 122
ZirdproKos, decree in honour of 37 99
airelpa 117 i 64 324
Sphacteria, capture of 306
acp7]KiaKOL 325, 126 53+ 366
<T(pbvdv\oL 128 2 370, 126 43 365, 127
20+ 369
<T(ppayis 8r)/j.ocrla 36 40 95
spiritus asper, early absence of sign
for 188 437; fluctuation in use of xii
5 22 54 ; frequently omitted 23 60;
misplaced 12 10 37 ;
omission of
sign for 3, 22 59, 99 262, 25 66;
omitted by an Ionian engraver 191
438, 192 439 ; sign for, wrongly
added 118 327 331 ; sign for, wrongly
omitted 118 327 331; survival of
xiii
cr7ri#a,ucuos 84 63 223
airovbocpopia 83 6 221
<nrop8o<p6poi. 124 4 354
arddiov 61 80 164; at Eleusis 368;
HavaOrjval'Kov 27
standard, Attic or Solonic 175
standard measure deposited in Acro-
polis 174
standard, the commercial 174
state, the, right of, to let temple lands
57 ; monies borrowed from temples
by 31
state-documents, care observed in
editing 400
stater = didrachm 274 ; symbol for
115 15 316; value of 195; of
Cyzicus 115 15 316 ;
of Lampsacus
115 13 315
Grad/ALa, crddfjia 175
arad/xof, neuter 103 12+ 281
statue, dedicated by a victor in games
in many places 242 463
statues, erection of, to deities 317
;
bronze, inventories of 101 276
(XTeydfriv 66 16 181
(TTeyovaa (ouaa) 131 23 376
stelae, copies of, ordered to be made
69 40 189 ; cost of, assigned to
rafxias tov <TTpaTiu)TiKu)v 157
;
ypap<-
/jLarevs rr)s (3ov\tjs responsible for
engraving of 16 12
43 ; of post-
Periclean period
25; post-Solonian
25 ; names of debtors to treasury
registered on 41; of victors set up
in ri/xevos of Theseus 61 16 163
(jrtipdvy) 70 28+ 192
Stephanephoros (mina) 175
Stephanephoros, temple of 175
2Te<pavT)(p6pov 8pax/^o.i 65 30+ 177
GTicpavos at death 91 160 243
; xP
vao^ s
24 10 64, 82 28 218
;
cost of 57 27
99, 38 7+ 103, 45 63 120, 120 b 31
344 ; cost of, contributed by (3ov-
Aei/rcu 38 46 105 ; largest sum
allowed for 108
;
proclaimed at
Dionysia etc. 65 48 177, 55 75 142,
61 33 163
;
proclaimed at Pana-
tbenaea 55 77 142; rod Oeov 72 14
199
Stephanus Byzantinus 20 21 78 259
260 370 432 435
o-repupos 127 6+ 368
<TTT)dvVlOV 141 10 386
ari.j3ds, name of festival 91 48+ 241
INDEX.
595
aTod at Eleusis 368
(xroa j3acnXela (or /3acri\etos) 68 83
Stobaeus Jlor. 38 10 519
aToixydov arrangement explained 1
;
oldest Attic example of 1 ;
partially
adhered to 3; when established xiv
7
; deviations from 63, 25 66, 26 69,
44 54; examples of 1 2 4
6
12
1422 24 25 2737 39 46 48-51
53 58 75 78 84 85 88 98 99 (part)
100 102 104 108 111 114 122 124 135
148 168355360; inscriptions engraved
mainly 1 2 4 11 15 21 24 25 26 29 32
35 45 53 54 57 59 106 109 116 126 127
128 131 132
;
irregularities 54
;
partial
11 35, 15 39; variations in 22
a-ToXia-Tris 243 1 464
stone copies of originals on bronze 153
stones engraved on both sides 84 221
stores, naval, various 341
ItTpafioLZ,
sculptor 202 442
Strabo 304 452, 395 364, 396 322, 397
452, 399 312, 446 143, 540 198, 595
309, 642 347, 647 235, 752 480, 790
194
arpaTrjyoi 17 2 45
;
assignment of special
duties to 97 445
;
increased to twelve
127 ; appointed one for each tribe,
as far as possible 299 500; iirl tov
Ileipaia, (three) dedications by, to
Hermes Hegemonios 446; (Euboea)
16; functions of 40 9 110; loans
effected by 14 5 38; receive portions
at sacrifices 42 13 114; take oaths
in alliance 57 51 152
;
(ephebic) 147
aTpaTrjybs twl'Va/nPovPTa /ecu 7-771/ irapa-
Xiau
x
t*)
P
air 445
;
iirl tcl oirXa 97, 67 4
183, 93 50 248, 420, 167 E i 16 422;
iirl rds avfi/mopias 97, 120 a 45 344;
iirl 7-771/
x&P
av 97, 55 24 141 ; e7rt tt\v
yjbpajv 7-771/ tir'
'
EXevaTvos 445; e7ri 7-771/
Xu>paj/
7-77P irapaXLav, dedication by
208 445; ewi ttjv irapaa Kevqv 55 22
141, 60 28 159, 125 9 360, 167 E i 28
422, 203 4 443 ; iirl 7-771/ (pvXaKr\v ktX.
36 19 94
; eis ttjv tov Movaeiov <pvXa.K7)v
53 12 136; iirl to vclvtikov 97, 55 5
140; iwl tu>u veCjv 55 15 141 ; iirl tovs
ottXItcls 236 1 458, 311 4 478, 312 4
478, 322 4 483, 325 6 485
;
iiri tovs
^j/ous 55 25 141
; e 'Eperpt'as 99 a
17 266; inscription on seat of, in
Dionysiac theatre 304 472; 6 e7rt
oVXa 64 46 176, 68 12 187 ; 6 <?7rt ra
#7rXa proposes decrees in imperial
period 184 ; 6 iirl tt)s %c6pas 97
;
office of, held twice in one year 144
o~Tpa.T7)ybs iirl ra oirXa 55 30+ 141
CTTpCLTliOTlKa, TCL 102
o-TpoLTLioTLKa
xpV/
xaTa 37 44 100, 59 28
155
Stratocles, decrees of 113
o~TpaT6Trcu8ov
(
= -edov) 94 30+ 251
Street of the Tripods 449
aTpojjULaTi^eLv 364
(TTpCoffLS 355
crTpojT7)pes 333
o-TvXo^dTTfs 126 40 365; contract for
making 127 367
<7TtV>a 104 36 286
avfiyr) 97 78 260
subject, ellipse of 58 13 154
subjunctive, imperatival use of 204
subscribers, inscription containing list
of 166 417, 59 155; to public needs,
honours decreed to 59 20 155
subscriptions, amount of, limited 59
19 155
Suetonius Galiq. 24 439
o-vyypa<pal 8 A 15 21 25, 21 6 + 57
avyypa<prj 121 19 347, 126 2 364
o-vyypa4>7), iepd, of Delos 375
o-vyyp<i(peiv 4 A 11 + 9, 6 6 13, 19 76 53,
36 68 96
crvyypacp?s 9 3 25
o~vyypa<prj<s 68
o-vyKoXXrjTO
1
; 103 #9 284
Suidas quoted 79 176 180 215 310
312 380 388 408 426 429 455
519
avXat, inscription dealing with 71
Sulla, Philo's arsenal burnt by 364
o~vXXoyr) ttjs fiovXrjs ical tov dr/nov 62 16
168 ; 7-77S ipyaaias 46 19 123 ; tov
Srip-ov 149 35 399
avXXoye?s tov drjfiov 100 A a 19+ 269
401 ; dedication by 205 444
aiXXoyos 87 16 233
avuPip&fav 15 24 40 41
avfxpoXa 71, 64 8 171, 149 35 401
aviifioXa
of dicasts, different from
invaKia 515
ffvfxfioXai, avfxfioXa 16 8 43 75 77
crvixfibXaia 71
o-vfipdXaiov 30 7 76, 85 57 229
avjxpbXoov, SIkcli airb 71
av/jifioXov iroielcrdai 58 77 154
o~v/u.(3ovXViv, Trj (SovXrj, Tip dr/fxip 107
avfifiax^a, Athens and Thessaly 92;
provision for altering terms of 59 60
152
avfx/jiaxoL, ol 38 7,2 106
(Tvp:fj.LKTos 103 9+ 281
avjxixopiai 345
avfxwpbedpoi 85, 51 70 130, 52 132, 53
5 135, 54 2 139, 57 6 150, 59 7 155,
60 73 158, 65 4 + 176 ; ol 68 4 184
;
noted by name 85
crvv and vv 32
sun-dial, inscription on 308 477
sun-god in calendar 169
avfStaTToXep.e'ii' 23 7 62
59G INDEX.
ativdiKoi 93 55 248;
(accomplices) 407
521
avve'dpia, t& 68 8 187
avi>48piov of Areopagites, will made in
favour of 95 252
ffwidpiov of allies 83
;
procedure of 92
avvtdpot 83, 57 27 151; of allies, larger
powers given to 82; of Amphictyons
191
<rvvei\lTTLv 36 31 95
avveueiyKTj 34 9 91
crvpeirididouat 65 80 178
<Ti;^e7ri(7X^etJ' 64 6 174
o-w^eWs, as title of cities 480
Sunium, decree of 80 215; Macedonian
garrison at 180
avvKOfudr) 93 7 + 245
avvobos 63 1 7 170 203 ; Aids Zeviov 63 15
170
;
guild-subscription, of Zeus
Xenios 170
avvoSos opyetovcou 233
<rwoiKiap:6s of Theseus 452
avvtopis TTohepucrTTjpLa 426
avvupls ttwXikt), introduced at Olympia
172 430
avuxpoedpoL 58 7 154, 63 9 169, 66 6
181, 67 4 183
avvcrrif] {=air}) 94 44 251
crvj>Tdeis = (p6pos 35 ii 93 536
awTe'Xeia for the performance of
liturgies 118
avvdijKai
)(
aryjXai 79 11 215
awd-fiK-q 57 61 152
avvderos 103 28 284
avvOvaia 91 134 243
cri-j'TOyuds 112 i5 312
GvvTpirjpapxvV'a 342
suovetaurilia 27
superfluous letters 61 24 163, 64 33
172, 66 7+ 181, 73 44 201, 94 38
250, 103 7+ 282, 124 J3<S 358, 124 34
359, 129 22 371, 130 14 375
supplementary motions 17 40 22 50
sureties for triremes lent 342
crvaarjp.aLv6a6cov 10 A 17 32
swords, Chalcidian 260
syllables, division of 135
symbols, numeral, obsolete as letters
476; various 188 255, 164 419, 238
6+ 459, 240 6 461, 317 10+ 481
symmoriae, trierarchic 91 ; r)yep.6ves of
342
synedrion, see cvvtbpiov
syntax : av with aorist indicative in
protasis 31 14 78; distinction between
present and aorist infinitive 101
;
eVSeirai for evbet 47 39 126; erratic
240; imperfect 185 186 437; ha, use
of 32 ; incomplete 354
;
infinitive of
purpose 39 20 110; inversion 107;
syntax, loose 91 61 242, 98 11 262,
100 A col. 3 7 272, 100 6 7 8 279,
109 4 306, 115 1 316 323, 118 a i 3
332, 118 c i 34 334, 125 12 360, 155
7 408, (superfluous repetition) 106,
(verb omitted) 107, 32 31 83 ; syntax,
notes on 8 A 27 21 26, 17 30 35 50,
18 8 51, 58 59, 23 6 62, 28 3 74, 52 36
134, 53 13 138, 57 32 61 153, 63 7
170 190, 73 3 8 204, 74 5 206 211, 79
18 215, 84 1 225, 86 2 231, 88 16 234
242, 91 136 243, 254 345, 126 58 366,
article with numerals 166,
present
and aorist infinitive 157; tr oielcr6ai
107
;
pregnant construction 10 B 11
32; unusual 35; variation between
recta and obliqua 115
Syracuse and Leontini, war between 36
Syria, coins and inscriptions of 388
Syros, slave received 100 strokes in 174
tables, comparative, of numbers of
inscriptions in various collections
527 sqq.
Tabulae Heraclienses IG xn 645 175
374
tachygraphy, Greek 524
Ta.yp.aTa 424; k tG>v idv&v, to, 61 13
163
Taividtov 103 11 284
TaKTat 289 291 ; eight in number 50
TakavTa, Ta dtica 32 68 84 363
TaXavTov [ATropix6v 64 35+ 172 175
rafila, dual 77 a 1 212, 78 3 213
ra/xtat, appointed airb xvap,ov 32; board
of ten 256
;
(pov\r}s) 38 39 107
;
chosen from pentacosiomedimni
32 ; date of entering on office 31
;
dedication by 173 431 ; duration of
office of 261; dates of 378; Up&v
XpfHJ-aTwv ttjs 'Adr)vas 98 4+ 260;
number of 32 315 ; of deme,
functions of 79 8 214 ; one from
each tribe 32 332 ; rrjs 'Adyvaias
32 33 ; ttjs deov 32 68 84, 36 34 95
;
tt)<s deov, receive portions at sacrifices
42 12 114 ; tolv deotv, accounts of
124 354 ; tCov aWwv deCov 82 ; tQv
de&v, monies due to 21 17 58; tQv
UpCov xp-r)p.aTwv, disbursements of
263; tQv aiTtaviK&v 486
Tapa.aK.bv (dLKaaTrjpLOv) 94 35 249
Tap.ias, elected by
fiovK-f) 147 ; vavuX-qptov
Kal p.7r6pcop Tdbv (pepdpTtov tt\v avvobov
ktX. 63 13 170 ; of prytanes, sacri-
fices performed by 149 31 400
;
irapdXov or ttjs it. 119 B a 66 342
446 ; o-TpaTiioTiK&v 59 1 157 ; ttjs (3ov-
Xr)s, decree in honour of 56 147 ; ttjs
KOLvrjs Trpo<r68ov 113
; tlov (TTpaTttoTiiaop
101
;
tCov aTpaTitoTiKwv, cost of stelae
assigned to 157 ; tCov aTpaTicoTiKiov,
INDEX. 597
office of, established 157 ; tCjv arpa-
tiwtlkQiv, functions of 65 57 111
;
TU)V TpLT)pOirOLlKUJV 39
', TOV drj/xoo 33
56 89, 36 72 96, 41 ce 16 112; tov
drjfj-ov, functions of 37 40 100, 37
47 100, 38 15 103, 39 50+ 109, 40
22 110, 45 44 120, 48 8 127; tov
7&>ous tcDi> JUvfAoXinduiv 69 39 189
;
tribal, duties of 206
rafiicuri 97 2 + 258, 132 8 379
rd(ppos 21 #1+ 58
Tapavrivop 102 4+ 279
rapTTj/xopcou
(|
of obol) 176, 106 B c
13 274 ; symbol for 274
(
of mina)
64 55 176
Taprrj/uLopov 162
Tauric Chersonesus, vases found in 424
taurobolic altar, inscription on 143 389
taurobolium 389
TavpoKadaipiv 461
TavpoKad&TTTrjs, dedication by 241 461
taxes, exemption from, in lease 229;
imperial, farmers of 244
ra^iapxpi 34 39 91; 61 49 + 164;
receive portions at sacrifices 42 13
114 ; take oath in making alliance
57 52 152
Tax'iapxos, dedication by 212 447
rdets 94 29 251
Tdis (arrangement) 66 18 181
;
(06ooi>)
v, 15 13 39 41, 17 2 45
rex^irat, AiovvaiaKoL 235; immunities
of 204; ol 7rept tov Aiouvcrov 73 37 +
203
; ol wept tou Aiouvaov at Athens,
Argos, Teos 203
TlX07T0L0l 123 I 353
Tei/McLf 67 7+ 184
Tet/iT? 93 57 248
Tew-, diphthong in 102 19 280
Tew-, forms in 375
retcra/xevos, Teiaw 281
Tei'ros, with short et 68 i 15 188
re\?7, remitted by deme to lessees 376
TeXelv els 7 54+ 18
T^Xeiov, evyos 426
T?7\^uaxos, ridiculed by Timocles 122
reAeV (ap/xart) 40 48 112
reXwve?^, TeXtoucov 176
rAeos
)(
yaXadrjuos 87 5 231
Te\o-L8po/j.os 3 4 1
Tefxevifeiv 8 A 11 19
Te/u.vos, boundary stone of 332 490
temple at Delos, loans due to 347
temple-treasury
)(
state-treasury 309
temples, e-jriaTdTac of 32 ; loans made
by 352
Tevedioi 32 A 79 82
Ttjulol 32 B 17 80
tesserae judicum 452, 395

400; ex-
planatory note on 515
testimony, conflicting, as to text 268
TeTapTTjpiopLov, symbol for 99 b 17 + 268,
109 63 + 306, 119 A b 12 342, 124,2 354
Tedecxa, late orthography 161
Tedv& 5 29+ 12
Ttdpiinrov, bronze, dedicated by
Athenians 433
Tropes {Delphi) 511
TeTpaxfJ-ou 60 55 160
TeTpadid 386 4 512
TTpd5paxP-ou 97 23 260
TCTpaeTia 41 ce 17 113
TeTpcnrodia 117 i 70 324
TTpcnro\eis, dedication by, to Diony-
sus 221 451
TTpdTTO\lS, 7] 451
TTpd$ 128
T6Tpr)pLs 120 a 3 343
texts confirmed by inscriptions 57
0, forms of 28 72, 36 94, 39 108, 47 124,
132 135 138, 56 147, 59 155, 67 183,
79 214 215, 124 354, 131 375, 139 383
395, 149 398, 150 401, 156 408, 210
446 ; later square form of 135 ; later
developments of xvi sq.
ddXaTTa (fishery), lease of 121 24 347
BaXXov <XT<pavos 53 29 136, 65 55 111,
75 40+ 208 214
QapyrfKia 74 6+ 206 435; contest at
449
;
proclamation of crowns at 345
Qdo-ioL 32 B 4 80 ; decree referring to 29
75;
pro-Athenian, exiled 75
Thasos, recovered by Thrasybulus 509
;
revolt of, from Athens 62
0ea, auditorium 79 2 215
OedyyeXa 161 ii 33 415
deaTpip, eKKXrjaia Kvpia iv 62 5 168; 65
3+ 176
0edT
P
ou 27, 38 24 104, = spectators 226
9r)Payei>r)S 45 46 120
077/3cuoi 32 A 79 82
Theban supremacy, the 88
Thebans free' Thessalian states from
Alexander of Pherae 88
Thebes, league of, with Athens 32 82
der/KoXos (deoKdXos), official house of at
Olvmpia 384 ; share of, in sacrifices
140 381
0eiu = 0u 109
deiolv (0olv) 124 2 354
delos 142 27 389
0iJKai 387 4 513
eepuo-0oKX7)s 325, 148 18 397, 394 515
Themistocles, banishment of 514
Geo-, Gov- vary from earliest times 445
Qeodoaia 101
Theodosia, annexed by Leucon I 101
OeoSdaios 37 50 102
Theognostus (Anecd. Ox. n 103) 7
deoi, ol (jlXXol 278
0eo~iv, Tolv feminine 36 27 96, 2 C 11
6,
9 4 26
383
598 INDEX.
deoXoyla 91 115 242
Qeo/JLvrjcrTos 44 30 118
Theophrastus, C. P. 2 4 5 373 ; de lap.
51-53 198; ff. P. iv 14 3 373, x 9 7
389 ; on fruits 175
Theophrastus Char, vn 110; deiXos
ad
Jin.
500
GeoTroixTros 44 20 117
theoria, sending of, to Delos 421
deupiKov 263; officers concerned with
107
dewpoL 167 2 422
deupQv e^airoffTokij 167 I 422
Thera, names peculiar to 76
depixaoTis, dep/jLacTTpis 190 280
Bepfiot 175
dep^okvxvov 91 252 243
QeppcKiadcu 227
Thesea, excreta, G^trea 61 3 162, 65 20
177 270, 100 A c 13 271 355 461
Qrjaeta, establishment of 166
e-oaeiov 77 a 14 212
Grjatou 124 10 355
Q-qaeiwv dydbv, list of victors in 61 43
164
Orjaelou (Long Walls) 131 3 376
Theseum in Piraeus 355
Theseum, inscription found near the 3
'Theseum,' inscription in 82 217;
so-called 355
Thesmophoria 383; when celebrated
252
6e<rfxo(p6pioi> 131 12 375
deaixbs 94 27+ 249
deafxodeffla 91 133 243
thesmothetae 179; functions of 345;
later name of all nine archons 243
;
doKL/xaaia exercised by 145 ;
inscrip-
tions on seats of, in Dionysiac
theatre 289-292 471
6ea/uLodeTcu 167 E i 21 422
Gea{a)aX6s 235
Oea-aaXia (Gerr-) 89 4 235
drjres and ^evycrai, colonists drawn
from 8 B 9 21
6r)TU)VL0V 176
GerraXos, actor 171 4 429
diaaoi 226 227
dtaawv 233
thiasus, Bacchic, at Pergamon 243
thiasotae 227; inscriptions containing
list of 88 234, 165 417 ; appeal of,
to (pparpia 84 96 226
Thirty, the
79 ; stele destroyed by 75
266 267
6v7]<tko), forms of 12
6<aav 132 12 377
doXia 103 31 284
Tholos, the 174; standard weights
deposited in 176
Qovlos, Boeotian month 169
Thrace and Cappadocia, caves used as
granaries 26
Thracian allies, tribute of 50
Thracian names 415
QpaKrjs, <p5pos cltto 107 44 296; 7r6Xeis
ai iirl 25, 17 5 45
dpavos 126 81 367
Gpaav(3ovXos 32 76 84
Thrasycles, envoy to Sparta 51
Thrasybulus, decree in honour of 24
65; reduces Thasos 62; reward of,
for assassination of Phrynichus 65
;
sent with fleet to Hellespont 62;
Thasos recovered by 509
Thrasyllus, tomb of 112 5 312
GpaTTcu, of Cratinus 20
dpovoi 97 14 260
Thucydides i 36 37, 44 37, 45 37, 50
37, 45 1 2 261, 45 51 261, 45 50 262,
57 18, 61 31, 63 31 501, 104 105
500, 114 16 17, 115 503, 117 18 503,
139 195; ii 13 31 259 260, 15 6,
17 25 28, 29 41, 34 500, 65 77, 70
437, 75 364; in 2 39, 5 39, i6 22, 18
39,
22 354, 45 2, 50 14 21 50, 58 384,
56 36, 95 413, 104 352, i05 42; iv 9
195, 39 306, 41 306, 48 361, 52 50,
53 307, 76 413, 98 21, 201 413, il<9
5 41, 129 42, 166 306; v 19 51, 23 83,
24 51, 42 2 376, 46 2 376, 47 53;
vi 27 sqq. 308, 54 438, 58 5;
vn 28
290, 29 441, 57 17; vm 1 18, 22 59,
64 441, 92 138 263, 97 2
Thucydides, decree recalling from exile
63 ; errors in mss. of 262 ; inscription
at variance with (i 51
3)
98 262;
Laurentian Codex of 28; text of, in
v 47, how arrived at 54; text of,
v 47, differs from inscription 21 53
dvyxoos 117 i 79 325, 282 470
6vr)xov pa/ios 118 c i 62 330
dvev 70 29 191
dvpLia.Tr)piov 103 7 282
dvp.eXiK7) (avvodos) 90 3 235
dupa, dvpaia 365
Thurii, commissioners for founding 21
dvpls 126 35
-t 365
dvpw/uLCL 117 i 78 325
dvpovv 4 A 4 9, 66 26 181
dvpvov (iTTupepeiv) 91 238 240
dvaiafeiv, 6vaida^Lv 141 7 386
dvarpa (Coan) 383
Thymochares, father of Phaedrus,
praises of 113
Tiberius, orthography dating from 248
ticket, dicast's, stamped with symbols
515 516 ; used a second time 398 516
Tifxa or i-n-cuvei to be supplied 53 35 138
Timarchus
apx^v
in Andros 94
rifxyjixa 130 27 375
TL/u,r]fxa =
diroTLfx-qixa 78 21 213
INDEX. 599
Timocles, comic poet, plays of 122
Timocrates 102
TVo/cAtjs, actor 171 17 428
Ti/Aoadtvrjs 107
TifAodeos, statue-base of 453
Timotheus, dithyrambic poet of Miletus
450 ; Olynthian war of 85 ; sculptor
334
Tisamenus, decree proposed by 68
tithe for 17 ded in confiscations 32 A 56
81 ; from public lands let to indi-
viduals 32 1
Tidivai (intercalate) 27 28
tltXol 94 26 251
Tlepolemus {o-Tpar-qyos) 17
T(b, feminine dual 9 51 27
toga praetextata 464
roixos, laws inscribed on 68
t6kol, eKarocrtatot 92 4 245 ; e7ride'/carot
121 12 346
t6kos 78 22 213
ToAwo-a 324 10 485
tomb, boundary-stone of 337 491
;
pro-
hibition against placing additional
bodies in 387 513
jovos 126 48 366
TOCplWV 175
torchrace, dedication to Hermes by
victor in 240 460
toreador, Spanish 461
torus 324
tos 70 14 194
ro^orat, as police, chosen from <pvXrj
wpvTavevovaa 6 15 14; list of killed
359 67 500; not 2/ct^cu 14
to6tt)s (ephebic) 147, 65 53 111
trades specified after name 288
tragedies, inscription containing list of
171 428
rpa-yrjjxaTa 64 20 171
TpdyiXos 51
rpaycpdois xcuvoh 144, 61 33 163
rpayubQiv dyuv kcuvos 55 76 142
training, military and intellectual 145
Trajan, alimentation scheme of 253
;
statue-base of 313 479 ; titles of 313
479
rpdwefa, i] drjfxoaia 64 4 171
rpdirefav, Koa/nijo-ai 138 a 11 383, 155 2
408 536; irXypovv 141 20 385
Tpawe^ovu 536
treasure, borrowed, from what sources
repaid 32; Brauronian treasure 278;
care in preservation of 256; inven-
tories of 256, 97 257; key to, held by
chairman of prytanies 33 ; trans-
ferred to Parthenon 256
treasure-houses 256
treasure-lists
65; examples of 256;
series of 31
treasurers, see rafxiai
treasurers and secretaries, chrono-
logical list of, in BMI 257
treasury, bills drawn on, by generals
on service 257; lawsuits with 310;
transfer of, from Delos to Athens 288
treatiesAthenians, Argives, Man-
tineans and Eleans 20 53 ; Athens
and Chalcis 82 83; Athens and
Chios
77;
Athens and Ceos 21;
Athens and Phaselis 30 77; Athens
with Thebes etc. against Sparta 32
82 ; Leontini and Athens 13 37
;
Leontini and Rhegium 37 ; Rhegium
and Athens 12 36 ; Rhegium and
Leontini 37
treaty in Thuc. v 47, fragment of, pre-
served in inscription 20 53
Treb. Pollio Gallien. 13 458
trees, prohibition against cutting, in
lease 85 31 228
TpcaKovra, oi = logistae 108 7 299, 106 a
2 292, 29 12 75
rpLOLKovTopoi 120 a 4 343
TpLCLKOLS 129
Tpt/3aXAot, low estimation of 415
tribe, as victor in chorus 434 ; error in
name of 124 1 + 354 ; name of, erased
('
'kvTiyovis and Arj/x-qTpLds) 138 154,
59 3 157 451; -name, inferred from
deme-name 435, two, in choragic
dedications 434 ; -prytanising, in
post-Euclidean decrees 85
tribes, 'Avnyovis and A-qixrjrpLds, duration
of 128 154; erased 138; Avnyovis,
precedence of 127, when added 127
;
'AvTioxi-s, deme transferred from 393
;
Athenians drawn up in, for battle
500; 'ArraXts created 128; confusion
of 167; Ar]/j.r)Tpids 49 1 129, pre-
cedence of 127, when added 127,
second in precedence 118
;
formulae
of decrees of 205; Hadrianis 128;
later additions to 181 ; list of 525
526; new 118 127; Oeneis 88;
official order of precedence of 118
138 299 340 359 403 503 ; Olvrjis 44
21 117; period of the thirteen 157;
ITroXe/xais 181 ; UroXefxais, creation
of 128 393; Roman 315 9 480, 327 10
487, 328 4 488; sequence of, in Im-
perial period 420 ; thirteen 128
;
twelve, period of 517 ;
two, combined
for choregia 182 436 ; victorious 170
428 ; voting by 71
rpipwviov 102 22 279
tributaries, conditions imposed by
Athens on 14
tributary states, enumeration of 17 50,
106 a 5 sqq. 292294; list of 17 50
tribute, annual proceeds of 33
; arrears
of, remitted to Methonaeans 41
;
600 INDEX.
assessment of 49 2S8; Carian 50;
doubling of 49; five regions for
collection of 289 ; Hellespontine 50
;
increase in assessment of 49 ;
Ionian
50; Ionian-Carian 50; islands 50;
net proceeds of deposited in temple
33
;
procedure in assessment of 291
tribute-lists 49; fifteen years' series
294; headings of 294
tribute-quota, amounts paid by Chal-
cidians 17; diminution granted to
Methonaeans 17
trierarch, no proper, of the Paralus 446
trierarchs 412 ; foreigners as 342
;
liability of 341 ; names of 118 ; obli-
gations of 341 ; exemption from 407
rpirjpoiroLoi 14 9 39
rplyXvcpos 126 21 365
rpiy\v<pos,
77, collective 126 30 365
rpt'/cw/xat

Ilrj\r}^, l<jV7rvpl5ai, KpcoTridat


215
rpiKTeva 70 34 196, 536
rpiKTeva ktjvo. 7 196
trilogy, not always produced 429
Trinemean deme, belongs to Cecropis
147
Tpub(3o\ov, pay of dicasts 515
tripod, provided by choregus 434
tripods as prizes 122 33 349 434; dedi-
cated in the Pythium 449
Tripods, Street of the 449
tripolis, Plotheia, Semachidae, Icaria(?)
214
Tpi7roX?rat of Phoenice honour a legatus
Augusti pro praetore 323 483
TpiirrdXepioi 3 4 7, 9 38 23
TpiTTTVS 536
triremes, number of, assigned to phyle
and trittys 492
rpiTroa {rpLTTOia) (36apxos 3 5 7, 9 37 27
Tpirrua 7
rpiTTvapxoL, functions of 51 31 131
tpcttvs 131; (rpiTToia) 196; boundary
stone of 334 490, 338 339 340 491
Troas, wife of Arybbas 111
rpoxiXem 118 ii a 23 333
Trojan shore, cities of, tributary to
Athens 50
rpoiraiov (battle of Salamis) 65 27 180
Tpocpiou (|36es) 65 16 176
trophy, restoration of 433
Truce, Sacred 70 191; offences against 4
TpvyrjTos 142 7 388
Tvxv
'Ayadr), sacrifice to 100 A a 12 268
tvxocto 91 136 243
Tv-rria 60 79 160
tvttol 60 18 + 159 161, 103 30 284 334
Tvpavvot., oi 5 32 12
Ttipavvos, M.7]u 386
Tyrrhenian pirates 345
Tyrtaeus, ed. Bergk ix 23 501
v, forms of 9 13, 42 113, 137, 91 236,
192 439, 204 443, 206 444
-via, -eia in participles 180
units and tens, order of, in later
numeral alphabet 476
underlining in inscriptions 53 43 + 136
v-, words beginning, see under H
Valerius Eclectus, his titles and victories
242 463
Valerius Maximus vin 12 2 363
Varro R. R. 1 57 63 26
vase, the Francois 243
vase-paintings, patterns of robes on
279
vase-pictures, tunic in 280
vases, Attic, names on 51; Ionic and
Attic 243; prize-, inscription on
424
Vatican, taurobolic altars discovered
beneath site of 389
vegetation, deities associated with 242
Veleia, Tablet of 253
vermilion, export of 21
vessels, history of 341
victims, flesh of, distributed by priests
12; flesh of, sold 211; portions of,
distributed 243
victories in games, inscription con-
taining long list of 242 462
Viereck Sermo Graecus 390
Vitruvius, authoritvfor name Caryatids
325
Vitruvius quoted 159 364; iv 6 4 326,
7 323; v 9 1 482, 11 2 180; vn 1 4
510, praef. 27 98
vocalism, varieties of 146 395
voting, record of 42, 15 29 40
votive inscriptions 231 233 456
votive offering 175 431; to the Hero
Physician 160
vowels, double, to denote length in
Latin inscriptions 520
wages, daily, of an artisan 333; rate
of, at Athens in 5th century 331
Walls, the Long 493
war spoils, tenth of 256
wax tablets, original copies written on
215
weapons in Parthenon 258
weights and measures, revision of 174
weights, expressed in drachmas 273;
Greek, arbitrarily raised 175
wills, examples of 252
witness, false, prosecution for 231
words, natural order of, inverted 9
29 27
wreath, names inscribed in 56 150, 65
177; engraved on decrees 45 81
121
INDEX.
601
writers, the great Greek, illustrated by
inscriptions vi
by error for

10
,
forms of xvi, 36 94, 58 153, 59 155,
60 158 etc. ; modes of writing 266
;
peculiar form of, in inscription con-
taining list of books 402 518
Xanthippus, father of Pericles, banish-
ment of 514
Xanthus, Lycian slave, founds sanc-
tuary 141 385
eVot, Zdv-t) or tQvCbv Ta.yjj.aTa composed
of 166
&voi, how designated 452
Eej/6/cXea (-eta) 104 15 286
Xenophon An. n 2 6 489 ; Cyr. n 4 12
21, in 1 10 21, v 23 279, vi 2 37
42, vn 4 1
57 ; Be re equ. xi 2 167,
33 334 ; Hell, i 1 12 62, 3 9 290, 3 10
71, 4 9 62, 5 16 65, 6 1 322, 6 29 65,
6 37 522, 7 2 65, 7 9 71; n 3 2 266,
3 39 267, 4 32 215; iv 9-23 3 16
504, 5 7 354
; v 1 25 26 79, 1 26 84
;
vi I 7 85, 6 175, 2 12 85, 5 1-3
91, 5
5 50; vn 1 43 4 15 92, 4 4 93, 5 1-3
91, 5 3 92, 5 4 88, 5 24 91 ; Mem. n
.5 5 373, in 3 426, 5 263 ; Oecow.
vin 14 413, x 3 260, 10 11 359;
Ue*p. Ath. i 14, in 3 17, 4 407;
Symp. iv 44, vi 3 429
BevoTreidrjs 74 col. 4 0 206
i/U-, 1^-, see cu/a-, crui'-
l-fo and cup 32
w>6s 77 a 16 212
Ei>7reTeu6i/es 75 20 209
vo-ti8ut6s 102 22 279
year, uncertain when it began in time
of Septimius Severus 187
f=sd 386
f,
forms of 56 147, 63 169, 142 387,
156 408, 210 446
Z, symbol at beginning of lines 91
237
fafldWu), fddeos 465
faKopeueLV 244 13 465
laKopos 132 14 377 ; etymology of
465
fa/uuibeiv, Delphian 115
Zea, Zeia 126 4 364
^vfiiai of ephebi, cancelled by KovfAWTrjs
65 SI 180
feirytrat and OrJTes, colonists drawn
from 8 B 9 21
zeugma 139 20 384
fciryos ddrjfpayop 169 6 ii 6 425 ; ttcoXikov
169 & ii 3 425 ; irofiwacdv 169 6 ii 26
426; TiXeiov 426
Zeus, Apollo and Demeter united in
oath-formula 5 15 10
Zeus Hypatos, altar of 334 335; 'Ao--
Tpairaios 200; (3ov\a?os 272 473;
EeVios 170 ; 'E\eu0e>os, porch of 271
;
'EXevdtpios, temple of 32 65 83 ; 2wr?7/3
41 ce 23 112; Swr^p, procession to
47 0+ 126; Sw-nfa,
sacrifice to 100
A a 25 269; 'Ep/cetos 227; TeXeW 67
6 183; rewpy6s, sacrifice to 142 12
388 ; Mai/xaKTvs 388 ; 'OXv/ulttios at
Chalcis 17; 'OXi^'os 41 c e 25 112;
4>pdrpios 84 2 222
;
Tpoira'tos, ephebi
sacrifice to 65 27 111
&8ia 118 c ii 39 335
fu)p;a 102 15 279
fcoaw (Skat) 68
co<popos 324
Zwctttj/), a drjfxos fxtKpos 109 90 307
i"t>ya, of door of Parthenon 326
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