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Demetrius of Tarsus in two Greek votive tablets from York? RIB 662 and 663 re-examined

The Archaeological Journal, 2023
Two small votive plates from York, recorded as RIB 662 and 663, represent unique examples of the Greek language in Roman Britain. Though traditionally attributed to Plutarch’s Demetrius of Tarsus, the authorship of these artefacts is disputed, due to the
Kelsey Koon
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VOTIVE PAINTING AS A NARRATIVE ABOUT A MIRACLE

Folklore: structure, typology, semiotics, 2022
The article deals with votive paintings of the Alpine region. These attractive works of folk art (and the religious culture of the Catholic South of Europe as well) are observed from the point of view of their functional aims as testimonies of a miracle ...
Liudmila V. Fadeyeva
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The inscription on the Vimose plane and (other) West Germanic finds from Denmark

NOWELE, 2022
The Vimose plane features an early runic inscription that has long remained opaque, with none of the attempts to explain it having commanded assent in the historiography.
B. Mees
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An inscription from the Badia: Documenting evidence for the plague in the Mameluke Period

Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 2022
This research addresses the study of an Arabic inscription found in the northern region of Wadi al-Ṣarār, north-east of the town of Safawi in the Jordanian north-east Badia.
Khaled Suleman al-Jbour
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A NEW VOTIVE ROMAN INSCRIPTION FROM ROGATICA DEDICATED TO LIBER PATER (EAST DALMATIA)

Classica et Christiana
Recently, in the riverbed of the Rakitnica River in Rogatica, during the construction of the embankment, a monument with an inscription in Latin was noticed, which originates from the immediate surroundings and was brought with the remaining large pieces
Vladimir P. Petrovic
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Saturnus Cryptensis sur une nouvelle inscription des environs de Maxula (Tunisie)

Libyan Studies, 2021
A new votive inscription to Saturn cryptensis using vulgar and poor Latin, but with a very original content, enriches the corpus of Saturnian names with a new topical epithet and sheds light on a mystical aspect of the cult of the most revered god in ...
H. Ben Romdhane, Samir Aounallah
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Two Kassite Votive Inscriptions

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1968
The first of the two inscriptions published here was inscribed, in Sumerian, on the back of a terra-cotta dog 1 by one Ninurta-resiiu, gatammU 2 of the E-u-gal under King Nazi-MaruttaA. The second was inscribed, in Akkadian, by the same gentleman at a later stage in his career-he was then ne-s'akkcu 3 of Enlil-, on a clay quadrangular prism.4 The dog ...
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Votive Coins in Delian Inscriptions

The Journal of Hellenic Studies, 1883
In the very important Delian inscriptions of which one is published by M. Homolle in the sixth volume of the Bulletin dc Correspondance Hellénique, mention is made among the votive offerings preserved in the temple of Apollo of several sorts of coins. In his comments upon these mentions, both in the inscription which he publishes, and in others which ...
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Votive Inscriptions from Ras Shamra

Journal of the American Oriental Society, 1941
Chinese, Siamese and Lao -ais represented in 0. B., Bu., and L. by what is written here as -a-: 92) 0. B. dzag "robbery," M dz'ak "robber" (949); 93) 0. B. dah "meadow," Lao dah "plain, the country"; 94) 0. B. dhahs (pf.), pres. dhah-ba "to be out of breath; to fear, to be terrified," S.
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