ISic004427: Inscribed boundary stone
- ID
- ISic004427
- Language
- Latin
- Text type
- terminus
- Object type
- stele
- Status
- No data
- Links
- View in current site
Edition
Apparatus criticus
- Text from Marini;
- line.1: Pace omits the cross and splits the text across three lines
- line.2: Pace, Ferrua: ECL
Physical description
Support
- Description
- Not directly described by Marini, but the use of 'item' after an initial description of a quadrangular column of volcanic stone, with reference to ISic004425, suggests the same form
- Object type
- stele
- Material
- volcanic
- Condition
- No data
- Dimensions
- height: cm, width: cm, depth: cm
Inscription
- Layout
- The text is recorded on a single line, beneath a plain cross
- Text condition
- No data
- Lettering
-
- Letter heights
- Line 1: mm
- Interlinear heights
- Interlineation line 1 to 2: mm
Provenance
- Place of origin
- Paternò
- Provenance found
- The only record is in the manuscript collection of Gaetano Marini, whence later editions. Marini records it as being found in the 'ager Catinensis', in the locale known as 'le Timpe', and in his time preserved in front of the church of the village of Sferri
- Map
Current location
Lost.
Date
5th century CE or later (?) (AD 401 â AD 700)- Evidence
- No data
Text type
commentary
The text of this inscription appears to be written in Latin letters (in other comparable examples such as ISic001404 the letters appear either to be Greek or a mixture; cf. ISic001338, ISic004424, ISic004425, ISic004426). Nonetheless the presence of variations on the formulation of EĚ KĚ LĚ KAT which is found also in those texts, and the broadly similar geographical area of origin, strongly suggest that this stone has a similar context, namely as a boundary stone relating to the lands of the early church in Sicily. Like Pace before him, Ferrua interpreted these in this way, and expands this text speculatively as: ek(k)l(esiae) Kat(inensis) n(o)va(le). This text, together with ISic004425 and ISic004426, is only reported by Gaetano Marini, and the texts in Angelo Mai, Pace, and Ferrua all derive directly from this one record. Pace understood Marini to refer to four sides of a single stone, but Ferrua more reasonably interprets the annotations of Marini to refer firstly to two sides of one stone (ISic004425: 'hinc', 'inde'); and then to two further separate texts (ISic004426: 'item altera reperta in agro'(?)) and in this case: 'item altera inscripta'. It is not impossible that this text and ISic004426 are in fact the same as the two recorded by Gualtherus (ISic001338 and ISicc4424), but the differences, especially in this case, are sufficient to suggest not.
The date of the stone is very difficult to ascertain. If the interpretation suggested by Ferrua is adopted, making this one of several boundary markers for church property from the wider area of the Catania hinterland, then a date of the fifth century AD or later seems likely. It would be possible to accept the reading of KAT as refering to Catania, without accepting the need to interpret ECL or EKL as a reference to the church.
Bibliography
- Digital editions
- TM: -
- EDR: -
- EDH: -
- EDCS: -
- PHI: -
- Printed editions
- Gaetano Marini, âInscriptiones christianae latinĂŚ et graecĂŚ ĂŚvi milliarii conlegit, digessit, adnotationibus audit Caietanus Marinus a Bibliotheca Vaticana item Scrinis Sedis Apostolicaeâ (Vatican, 1815 1742), Cod. Vat. lat. 9071, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, https://digi.vatlib.it/mss/detail/Vat.lat.9071, at p.149 no.4
- Angelo Mai, Scriptorum veterum nova collectio e vaticani codicibus edita, vol. 5, 10 vols (Rome: Typis Vacticanis, 1831), https://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015012371624, at p.352 no.5
- B. Pace, Arte e civiltĂ della Sicilia antica. Volume quarto. Barbari e Bizantini (Rome, Naples, CittĂ di Castello: SocietĂ anonima editrice Dante Alighieri, 1949), at 225 n.2
- Antonio Ferrua, Note e giunte alle iscrizioni cristiane antiche della Sicilia (Vatican, 1989), at 123-124 no.471
- Giacomo Manganaro, ÂŤPer una storia della âchora KatanaiaâÂť, in Stuttgarter Kolloquium zur historischen Geographie des Altertums 4 (1990) / Geographica Historica 7. Herausgegeben von Ernst Kirsten., a c. di E. Olshausen e H. Sonnabend (Amsterdam: Verlag Adolf M. Hakkert, 1994), 127â74, at 174 n.175
Citation and editorial status
- Editor
- Jonathan Prag
- Principal contributor
- Jonathan Prag
- Contributors
- Jonathan Prag
- James Chartrand
- Valeria Vitale
- Michael Metcalfe
- system
- Simona Stoyanova
- Last revision
- 1/19/2021