Results 1 to 10 of about 99 (83)
A Rock-cut Tomb from Arpacık Boyalı Mevkii with an Inscription in Lycian
The research project entitled “Byzantine Settlements around Alacadağ in the Lycian Region” has been underway since 2014 with the aim of identifying and documenting Late Antique and Medieval rural settlements in the mountainous area north of Demre (Myra),
Ş. Recai Tekoğlu, Bülent İşler
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The Ancient Routes and New Lycian Inscriptions around Fethiye
The first part of this contribution contains the results of the field surveys made in recent years for the ancient road network around Fethiye, including the routes between Pinara, Telmessos, Kalynda, Kadyanda, Araxa and Tlos. According to these results,
Fatih ONUR, Ş. Recai TEKOĞLU
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The tomb inscription TL 150 is terminated by a sacrifice formula. The addressee of the sacrifice seems to be the tomb builder itself, but ‚to sacrifice yearly‘ is probably dependent from zasãni, which should be a finite verb with the tomb builder as the ...
Diether SCHÜRR
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Ein Lesevorschlag zur lykischen Inschrift TL 106
It is proposed that the inscription be segmented at a different point to the usual, namely, immediately before ñneti. The content of the second curse is then that the perpetrator shall be defiled commensurately with the defilement of the tomb, i.e., a ...
Diether Schürr
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Ergänzungen in den lykisch-griechischen Fragmenten TL 45 und TL 45B
The beginning of the Lycian text TL 45 is restored with the usual topicalization of the direct object, but with the verb not appearing until line 3. The content of the sentence does not corre-spond to the first sentence of the Greek version.
Diether Schürr
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The Lycian Name of Iranian Origin Miθrapata and Its variants
In this paper, the new coin legends of the dynast Miθrapata with a spelling variant mizrapata are analyzed, particularly regarding its possible connection to another variant form, mizrp-pata, whose existence can now be questioned.
İ̇gnasi Xavier Adi̇ego Lajara
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Syllable Weight Gradation in the Luwic Languages
Abstract This paper offers a new perspective on Čop's Law and Open Syllable Lengthening, two commonly accepted sound laws that lengthened both consonants and vowels in the Luwic languages. It is proposed that both developments take similar inputs and ultimately yield the same effect: neutralisation of the syllable weight opposition in accented ...
Alexander Vertegaal
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It is shown that the Sidetic Y was not a vowel sign and probably signifies /w/. Therefore, the Sidetic alphabet has only four vowel signs, and the Sidetic language was in this respect similar to Lycian and to Luwian in its latest form. The sound-value /w/
Diether Schür
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On the Extinction of the Luwian ziti-Names, on Lycian Ipresida and the Caunian Imbros
The Luwian personal names formed with -ziti ‘man’ did not survive into the later hieroglyphic inscriptions; the latest clear example is attested at Carchemish around 975 BC.
Diether Schürr
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Enduring Crises of the Nation‐State: How Spatial Imaginations Reshape Identity and Dis/Unity
ABSTRACT This article reframes the contemporary “crisis” of the nation‐state not as a simple erosion of sovereignty but as a problem of spatial misalignment: adaptive states remain strategically embedded in dense transnational regimes, yet domestic legitimacy falters when unitary national imaginaries confront heterogeneous, multi‐sited social realities.
Erdem Bekaroğlu, Suat Yazan
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