• m14-444-10
    Inscribed Cylindrical Altar (©Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/President and Fellows of Harvard College)
  • m14-444-20
    Inscribed Cylindrical Altar, Squeeze (©Archaeological Exploration of Sardis/President and Fellows of Harvard College)

Inscribed Cylindrical Altar (marble collapse in area of late antique Spolia Wall): Dedication to Bacchos Dionysos and Octavian (as Caesar Imperator Maximus), by the association of 'spearmen'

Date
Probably between 31 and 28 BC (see ll. 1–2 comm.)., Roman
Sardis or Museum Inv. No.
S14.078
Material
Marble, Stone
Object Type
Altar, Inscription
Inscription Type
Religious Inscription
Inscription language
Greek
Inscription Text
		Καίσαρι Αὐτοκρ-
		άτορι μεγίσστῳ
		καὶ Διὸς Βάχῳ Διο-
	4	νύσῳ ὁ θίασος
		τῶν δορυφόρων
		ἀνέθηκεν ἐπιμελη-
		θέντος τῆς ἀνασ-
	8	στάσεως καὶ τοῦ 
		ἔργου ⟦		   ⟧
		⟦		   ⟧
		⟦		   ⟧
Inscription Translation
“The association (thiasos) of the ‘spearmen’ dedicated (the altar) to Caesar Imperator Maximus and to Ba(k)chos Dionysos, son of Zeus; [ -deleted male name- ] took care of its erection and of the building.”
Inscription Comment
Site
Sardis
Sector
F55
Trench
F55 14.1
Locus
F55 05.3 Locus 4
B-Grid Coordinates
E777.4 / S177.2 *127.92
Findspot
Field 55, east side of Wadi B Temple terrace, marble collapse in area of late antique Spolia Wall.
Description

Upper part of a cylindrical altar; the upper molding is damaged. In the middle of the upper surface there is a shallow circular hole. The lower part with molding is broken off and kept separately.

Dimensions
Max. H. ca. 0.70, max. Diam. above 0.40, H. of letters 0.02; hole: diam. 0.17); lower part: max. H. 0.23.
Comments

1–2 The Roman ruler, here called Καῖσαρ Αὐτοκράτωρ Μέγισ(σ)τος, is probably Octavianus after the battle of Actium, which gave him rule also over the empire’s eastern part, and before the bestowal of the cognomen Augustus (January 16, 27 BC); from the same time dates the honorific inscription from Claros, J.-L. Ferrary, BCH 124 (2000), pp. 357–59, no. 8 (SEG 51, 1593, l. 2: [Αὐτοκρ]άτορα Θεοῦ υἱὸν Καίσαρα). For Augustus being called simply Καῖσαρ, see I.Didyma, no. 234 B II, 2–3 (17/16 BC) and I.Didyma, no. 346, 6–7, both quoted in the commentary on no. 582, 1–2. He is called Καῖσαρ Αὐτοκράτωρ in SB 8428, 5; Καῖσαρ Αὐτοκράτωρ Θεὸς ἐκ Θεοῦ in OGI 655 (Gizeh, 24 BC); in 28/27 BC Caesar is called Καῖσαρ ὁ πρεσβύτερος Αὐτοκράτωρ Θεός, Augustus in the same inscription: Καῖσαρ ὁ νεώτερος Αὐτοκράτωρ Θεοῦ υἱός (TAM V 2, 1229; Apollonis). - The lack of syllabification and the free space between the two last letters of l. 1 (-TOKvP) seem to point to difficulties of the mason.

2 and 7–8 The doubling of Σ in μεγίσστῳ is a frequent phenomenon (cf. the Index “Phonology-Grammar”). Gignac, Grammar I, p. 159 n. 1, on doubling of Σ in medial position, before a stop: “Doubling of σ in this position is often explained as a graphic device to indicate the syllable boundary between σ and the foll. consonant.” This explanation is corroborated by the spelling ἀνασ/στάσεως in ll. 7–8.

3–4 The well-known filiation of Βάχος (for this spelling instead of -χχ- or -κχ- see, e.g., SEG 41, 1064) Διόνυσος is underlined by the mention and position of the father’s name: Διός.

4–5 ὁ θίασος τῶν δορυφόρων: As F. Poland has shown, θίασος can mean all kind of associations, often related to the cult of gods, in particular, like here, of Dionysos (Geschichte des griechischen Vereinswesens [1909], p. 641, Index s.v.; cf. R. Merkelbach and J. Stauber, Steinepigramme aus dem griechischen Osten 1 [1998], p. 492, no. 04/25/04). This may suggest that the present δορυφόροι (corrected from ΔΩΡΥ-) were practicing as mute characters in the theater; for this meaning of the word see Etymologicum Magnum 283.21–22: (apart from the meaning “bodyguard”) καὶ τὸ κωφὸν πρόσωπον (cf. LSJ s.v. II 4). See my discussion of ὁ θίασος τῶν μουσικῶν (northeastern Lydia, 239 AD; SEG 55, 1311), in EpAnat 38 (2005), pp. 28–30.

9–11 The name of the person (or institution?) responsible for the erection of the altar “and of the building” was intentionally deleted.

See Also
Bibliography
Unpublished.
Author
GP