M14 Cat. 399
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
2nd–3rd century AD. (Roman)
Fragment of marble probably from the upper part of a base; broken on all sides.
M14 Cat. 400
Inscription
Marble, Stone
2nd–3rd century AD? (letter shape). (Roman)
Fragment of white marble, assembled from two pieces; broken on all sides except for a part of the left and upper edges.
M14 Cat. 401
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Reign of Severus Alexander. (Roman)
Rectangular base of white marble with moldings above and below; partly damaged. On the upper surface are anathyrosis and a lifting hole. Ll. 1–3 of the inscription are on the upper molding, and ll. 4ff. are in a recessed field.
M14 Cat. 402
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Reign of Severus Alexander. (Roman)
Three joining pieces of a fragment of white marble, probably from a base; broken on all sides except for a portion of the right edge.
M14 Cat. 403
Inscription
Marble, Stone
Reign of Severus Alexander(?). (Roman)
Upper right corner of a plaque of white marble; broken on the left, lower, and rear sides.
M14 Cat. 404
Inscription
Marble, Stone
218 AD until soon after 222 (or after 253 AD; see l. 4 comm.). (Roman)
Block of marble; the top is preserved while the back, sides, and bottom are broken.
M14 Cat. 405
Inscription
Marble, Stone
284–305 AD. (Roman)
Two joining fragments of brownish-white marble. The left piece (a) preserves a portion of the upper and left edges; the right piece (b) is broken on all sides.
M14 Cat. 406
Inscription
Marble, Stone
Originally after Galerius’s death (311 AD), under the three Augusti Maximinus Daia, Constantinus I, and Licinius (until 313 AD); Maximinus’s name was erased after his defeat in 313 AD. (Roman)
Plaque of white marble. The first one and a half lines are erased (⟦ ⟧; the letters, which are not included in brackets [ ], are faintly visible).
M14 Cat. 407
Inscription
Marble, Stone
Roman Imperial period. (Roman)
Fragment of marble; part of the right edge is preserved. Some letters bear the remains of red paint.
M14 Cat. 408
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Roman Imperial period. (Roman)
Upper left corner, with cornice, of a statue base of white marble; broken on all other sides. The letter A has a broken horizontal stroke; Y has a horizontal stroke under the fork.
M14 Cat. 409
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Roman Imperial period. (Roman)
Right front corner of a base; broken on the left and lower sides; the cornice is on the right, and the top is rough, with the remains of a recess, the rear is also rough. Letters of remarkable size with long apices.
M14 Cat. 410
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Roman Imperial period (reign of an Antonine or Severan emperor?). (Roman)
Fragment of the top of a base of white marble with cornice; the bottom is smoothed, and all other sides are broken.
M14 Cat. 411
Statue Base, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Period of the second neokorate, before 212 AD. (Roman)
Partly broken and damaged base of white marble with moldings at the top and bottom. On the rectangular upper surface there are holes for the insertion of a statue.
M14 Cat. 412
Sculpture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
“2nd century AD” (Hanfmann and Ramage). (Roman)
Stele of white marble, with semicircular top. The relief shows a nude athlete (a gladiator?), who holds a weight(?) in his right hand and a javelin in his left. Additional objects represented include a hoe and a pair of cylinders held suspended by a ...
M14 Cat. 413
Sculpture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
“3rd century A.D.?” (Hanfmann and Ramage, R2). (Roman)
The name Nympheros is attested for gladiators; see L. Robert, Gladiateurs, nos. 191a, 300, 302, and p. 301; also SEG 38, 589. Stele fragment of white marble. The relief shows a heavily armed gladiator with helmet and shield striding toward the right;...
M14 Cat. 414
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
17–37 AD. (Roman)
Four joining fragments of white marble (a–d), plus a fifth (e) and a sixth (f) whose positions in the inscription are uncertain. The fragments (a–e) are broken on all sides and belonged to a building of considerable size. The bilingual Greek and Lati...
M14 Cat. 415
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
1st century AD? (letter shape). (Roman)
Architrave of local bluish-white marble; broken on the left. There are moldings above and clamp traces at the top, and anathyrosis on the right face shows that another block followed. The very carefully incised inscription is on the fascia.
M14 Cat. 416
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
1st–2nd century AD? (letter shape). (Roman)
Upper left corner of a plaque of white marble; broken on the right and lower sides. The inscribed surface is damaged, and the rear surface is rough.
M14 Cat. 417
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Roman Imperial period. (Roman)
Cornice of a relatively complete aedicula, probably from the stage building of the Roman Theater; broken in two fragments.
M14 Cat. 418
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
“Fine del II o agli inizi del III secolo” (Moretti, ed. pr. 301 [= p. 316], n. 1). (Roman)
Piece of an architrave; broken on all sides.
M14 Cat. 419
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
211–212 AD. (Roman)
First story architrave of marble from the Marble Court; broken into twenty-five fragments. The text runs through on the architrave in two lines. The division signs (|) indicate individual fragments and correspond to the lines in SEG.
M14 Cat. 420
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Antonine or Severan period (138–235 AD). (Roman)
Marble voussoir from a vault, perhaps the central stone of an arch if Θεοῖς occupied the center. The inscription is given in curbed lines on the three fasciae. It is not possible to reconstruct with certainty the original length of ll. 2–3.
M14 Cat. 421
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
Julio-Claudian or early Flavian period. (Roman)
Two-fascia architrave block with inscription applied in bronze letters, now missing; partly trimmed on the top, and broken on the right.
M14 Cat. 422
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
398 AD. (Roman)
Reused block.
M14 Cat. 423
Architecture, Inscription
Marble, Stone
400 AD (SEG 41). (Roman)
“Two joining blocks of an engaged wall architrave of the first story; traces of red paint in many letters” (SEG 36).