Results 31 to 40 of about 326 (158)

New Inscriptions from the Kayseri Museum I

open access: yesGephyra, 2006
New Inscriptions from the Kayseri Museum IThis paper presents 13 new funerary inscriptions from the Kayseri Museum. With the exception of stele no. 1, which is from Comana, their origins are not recorded in the inventory lists of the museum. Most of them
Burak Takmer   +2 more
doaj  

Inscriptions of unknown soldiers of the Roman army

open access: yesGephyra, 2012
This article presents three fragmentary inscriptions of Roman soldiers: no. 1 mentions an officer, probably a prefect of a cohort; no. 2 is the funerary inscription of a legionary tribune and no.
Konrad Stauner, Livia Stauner
doaj  

Épitaphes paléochrétiennes et médiévales d’Eğri Taş kilisesi à Ihlara en Cappadoce

open access: yesGephyra
The Eğri Taş kilisesi complex is located on the right bank of Melendiz Suyu, in the Ihlara Valley in Cappadocia. Excavated in the rock at the foot of the cliff which looms over the river, it is centered around a church dedicated ...
Maria Xenaki
doaj   +1 more source

New Inscriptions from Stratonikeia and Its Territory

open access: yesGephyra, 2009
The article comprises 37 new inscriptions from Stratonikeia in Caria and its territory. Of historical interest is inscription no. 15, an offering in which Divus Caesar is mentioned.
Murat Aydaş
doaj  

New Epigraphic Evidence from the Territory of Phaselis: Funerary Inscriptions and Local Cults

open access: yesGephyra
Recent epigraphic findings from the territory of Phaselis, including funerary inscriptions obtained through field surveys in the district of Palamut at Hisarçandır in 2018 and excavation results from Idyros in 2024, provide critical new evidence for ...
Nihal Tüner Önen, Murat Arslan
doaj   +1 more source

Neue Inschriften im Museum von Bolu (Bithynion/Klaudiupolis)

open access: yesGephyra, 2008
This article presents some 40 hitherto unpublished inscriptions from the Bolu museum, most of which stem from Klaudiupolis, though in some cases the provenance remains unclear.
Mustafa Adak   +2 more
doaj  

Relief Stelae From Athens: The External Evidences Regarding Heracleia Pontica (The 5th to 4th Centuries B.C.)

open access: yesAnadolu Araştırmaları
Heracleia Pontica despite having such an important place in the ancient world, the settlement constitutes one of the areas in the southwestern Black Sea where the need for archaeological studies is felt intensely.
Ali Bora
doaj   +1 more source

New Inscriptions from Tyraion and Philomelion

open access: yesGephyra, 2007
New Inscriptions from Tyraion and PhilomelionIn this article four new inscriptions from the Akşehir Museum are presented. The first three were brought from Tyraion (Ilgın) and the fourth from Philomelion (Akşehir).
Murat Arslan, Nuray Gökalp
doaj  

Formulae used in funerary inscriptions in Algeria in the Roman period

open access: yesRevue d'Histoire Méditerranéenne, 2022
The Latin inscriptions discovered in Algeria represent very important documents to study the African societies during the roman period. The Latin gravestones, including pagan and Christian ones formed the biggest number; they vary between the simple ...
Djahida Mehentel, Nedjma Serradj
doaj  

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