ISic020737: ISic020737

I.Sicily with the permission of the Assessorato Regionale dei Beni Culturali e dell’Identità Siciliana - Dipartimento dei Beni Culturali e dell’Identità Siciliana
ID
ISic020737
Language
Sikel
Text type
private (graffito), label indicating the content of the vessel (?)
Object type
oinochoe (local manufacture)
Status
No data
Links
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Edition

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Apparatus criticus

  • Text after Mussinano 1970

Physical description

Support

Description
Bowl painted in brown with lighter spots due to poor firing.
Object type
oinochoe (local manufacture)
Material
ceramic
Condition
complete
Dimensions
height: 2.8 cmdim: 7.8 cmwidth: cmdepth: cm

Inscription

Layout
The text is scratched on the underside of the foot.
Text condition
complete
Letter heights
Line 1: mm
Interlinear heights

Provenance

Place of origin
Herbessus (?)
Provenance found
Found during the excavations (Soprintendenza alle Antichità di Siracusa, 1966—1968) in the East archaic necropolis of Montagna di Marzo, on the bottom niche, East grave 31.
Map

Current location

Place
Agrigento, Italy
Repository
Museo Regionale Archeologico Pietro Griffo , 65589, n. sc. 16C
Autopsy
None
Map

Date

500—450 BCE (500 BC – 450 BC)
Evidence
archaeological-context, material-context, lettering

Text type

private (graffito), label indicating the content of the vessel (?)

commentary

The inscription is on one of the 14 inscribed vessels that were part of the grave goods of tomb East 31 of the archaic necropolis of Montagna di Marzo, part itself of a larger set of objects (on which see Albanese Procelli in Agostiniani, Albanese Procelli 2018, pp. 151-182) belonging to two different burials, one more recent than the other, inside a hypogeic chamber with a platform, which was used for the pottery (and not for the deceased, as in the other hypogeic tombs of this type). The burials were contained in two clay sarcophagi. The vessels found in the tomb can be divided into two groups (Agostiniani, in Agostiniani, Albanese Procelli 2018, 194): large Attic (imported) drinking vessels (cups, 'stemless cups', a skyphos, i.e. luxury vessels, typically related to the consumption of wine in the symposium); vessels of different types, all of a smaller size. To the first group belong 7 vases, of which 3 belong to the deceased in the front of the chamber, 4 to the second, in the back. On the latter group there are monorematic inscriptions: twice ϝολα (ISic020732 and ISic020733), three times ϝιταριον (two in full, see ISic020735 and ISic020736, one with an abbreviated form, ϝι, in this case), once γελε (ISic020734). Each word appears to be associated with a particular type of vessel (Agostiniani, in Agostiniani, Albanese 2018, p. 194): ϝολα to the Attic 'small stemless cup', ϝιταριον to the small colonial oinochoe, γελε to the Attic jug. This has led to the convincing argument that the inscribed words indicate the contents for which the vessels were intended, a hypothesis in some case confirmed by the root of the words inscribed. In the case of γελε, the root would in fact appears to be related to the Latin noun for "ice", 'as well as, above all, the word γέλα "πάχνη" attributed by Stephanus Byzantius to the language of the Opics and Sikels, and considered constitutive of the name of the city of Gela (and of its homonymous river).' (editor's translation of Agostiniani, in Agostiniani, Albanese 2018, p. 194). All of these inscriptions, with the exception of γελε, whose alphabetical types are not comparable to those of the other inscriptions, appear to have been written by the same hand. These types of inscriptions are of great interest, if they can be read as the actual label bearing the name of the content, because they might show an epigraphic use not otherwise known among the Greek documents of the island (an exception to this consideration might be a still unpublished document from Selinus of forthcoming publication, see ISic020875).

Bibliography

Digital editions
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  • EDR: -
  • EDH: -
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Printed editions
Discussion

Citation and editorial status

Editor
Jonathan Prag
Principal contributor
Valentina Mignosa
Contributors
Last revision
10/14/2021