Le iscrizioni di Dodone, vescovo di Rieti (original) (raw)

Le iscrizioni della Madonna del Belvedere

Oro e colore nel cuore dell’Appennino. Ottaviano Nelli e il ’400 a Gubbio, 2021

An inscription on Ottaviano Nelli's most celebrated fresco in his hometown of Gubbio, the Belvedere Madonna, revealed the long-forgotten identity of the painting's patron, local merchant Antonio di Mucciolo.

Alcune iscrizioni sacre ostiensi

Archeologia Classica, 2019

Il lavoro di revisione – ancora in corso – delle iscrizioni raccolte nei nuovi magazzini del Parco Archeologico di Ostia ha consentito di effettuare – tra i numerosi frammenti conservati – ulteriori abbinamenti; se ne presentano alcuni dei più interessanti relativi a documenti di carattere sacro.

L'iscrizione di Mnesiepes dall'Archilocheion di Paro

Axon 4 (1), 2020

La nota iscrizione, risalente al III secolo a.C. e conservata su due blocchi marmorei non combacianti, testimonia l’esistenza, a Paro, di un’area sacra dedicata ad Archiloco. Tale Ἀρχιλοχείον, istituito da un privato cittadino di nome Mnesiepes con il consenso del santuario di Delfi e della comunità locale, era delimitato da un τέμενος e ospitava almeno due altari. Il testo dell’epigrafe, oltre a riferire alcuni dettagli per l’osservanza del culto, riporta diversi oracoli e parte di un inedito racconto sulla vita del poeta, la cui figura viene esaltata anche tramite la diretta citazione dei suoi versi. The inscription, dated to the 3rd century BC, was carved on a series of marble blocks, of which only two were recovered. It informs us about the existence, on Paros, of an open-air shrine dedicated to Archilochus. This sacred area, called Ἀρχιλοχείον, was instituted by Mnesiepes, a private citizen who seems to have acted as a representative of the local community, even submitting his project to the approval of Delphi. Despite the fragmentary status of the stones, the text has preserved an important tale about some episodes of the poet’s life, which are displayed also using true metrical quotations.

Tucidide, Pausania e l’iscrizione nel portico degli Ateniesi a Delfi

Klio, 2014

ABSTRACT Pausanias saw in the Athenian Stoa at Delphi an inscription, different from the one still visible on the Stoa’s stylobate, which he rightly connected with Phormio’s victories in the Corinthian Gulf in 429 BC (10, 11, 6). The not exact correspondence between its contents reported by Pausanias and some details of the narrative in Thucydides enables us to reconstruct with a greater precision the movements of Phormio after the two battles. On the other hand, the quite unnoticed exact correspondence between the Spartan allies listed in the inscription as reported by Pausanias and the catalogue of Spartan naval allies in Thuc. 2, 9, 3, as well as the absence from these lists of Anactorion, although her ships had joined the Peloponnesian fleet at least in the earliest phases of that campaign, give grounds for the suggestion that Thucydides’ catalogue mirrors the make-up of the Peloponnesian fleet that actually fought in 429 and that just the inscription seen by Pausanias may have been (one of) his source(s).