Results 181 to 190 of about 85,957 (213)
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Hermes as Visible in Votive Inscriptions

2019
The chapter presents a corpus of votive inscriptions to Hermes. Who dedicated to the god, for what reasons, and to which gods was he associated? It comments on chronological and geographical aspects and proceeds to discuss some themes visible in the collected material.
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Marin, marchand ou voyageur ? Relecture d’une inscription de Marseille accompagnée d’un relief de bateau (CIL, XII, 402).

Revue archéologique de narbonnaise, 2019
Cet article revient sur un petit monument de marbre, inscrit, jadis découvert sur la place de Lenche, à Marseille, et aujourd’hui conservé au Musée d’Histoire de Marseille.
S. Agusta-Boularot, A. Hermary
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Votive inscriptions in Linear A

2002
Paper discusses votive inscriptions in the Bronze Age Cretan Linear A script still undeciphered. Votive inscriptions on libation tablets, votive cups, a ladle, a figurine, axes, silver pins and a golden ring, are continious texts and should offer some ideas on the sintax of the language as well as of the ritual cotext in which they were used.
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Visualized rituals and dedicatory inscriptions on votive offerings to the nymphs

Opuscula. Annual of the Swedish Institutes at Athens and Rome, 2008
This article explores the religious meaning of Archaic and Classical dedications with images of rituals (e.g. sacrificial procession, libation) and dedicatory inscriptions. I argue that these objects ought to be treated as meaningful expressions of individuals’ piety rather than as reflections of actual cult practices.
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Excavations at Sparta, 1924–1928: II.—Votive Inscriptions from the Acropolis

The Annual of the British School at Athens, 1930
Among the votive inscriptions discovered during the excavations of 1924–27 by far the most numerous are those on vase-fragments, which number upwards of one hundred and twenty, in contrast to the modest total of thirty-four yielded by the previous campaigns on the Acropolis in 1907–08.
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Votive Inscriptions on the Sculptures of Early Medieval Samatata-Harikela, Bengal

Religions of South Asia, 2011
In this paper, I attempt to look into the patterns of social patronage to Buddhism and Brahmanism in the Samatata-Harikela subregion of early medieval Bengal through the prism of votive inscriptions on sculptures. I have also looked into some of the social and religious processes that were in operation in this part of early medieval Bengal.
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Discoveries by the American School at Plataia in 1890. VI. Votive Inscription

The American Journal of Archaeology and of the History of the Fine Arts, 1891
R. B. Richardson
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