Sotto protezione asclepiadea. Filatteri medici e servi lanternarî, un riesame alla luce di nuovi dati (original) (raw)

Vivi fecerunt. Roman Sarcophagi for and by the Living, in Christopher H. Hallett (ed), Flesheaters. An International Symposium on Roman Sarcophagi. University of California at Berkeley 18–19 September 2009 (Wiesbaden 2019) 65-96

This article explores the ›existentialist‹ mood of Roman patrons who had their tomb monuments erected during their lifetime. Drawing upon the epigraphic formula vivi fecerunt/vivus fecit – »the living made it« – common in Roman freedmen’s epitaphs, I propose a new interpretation for two well-known mythological sarcophagi of Alcestis and Protesilaus in the Vatican Museums as monuments by and for living patrons. I argue that their images, breaking away from established visual traditions, explore new means of portraying the owners as morituri (destined to die) in an attitude of meditation upon their own future death. These findings give rise to a series of further considerations on the prospective functions of mythological sarcophagi. I argue that their polysemic visual language creates a semantic flexibility that allows – in one and the same sarcophagus image – for shifts in narrative voice, tense, and meaning and requires a dynamic model of spectatorship which is open to change through time.

LOUTERION FROM A CEMETERY EXCAVATED AT PALAIA KOKKINIA, IN PIRAEUS . FORTHCOMING PUBLICATION BY PROFESSOR NATHAN ARRINGTON, UNIVERSITY OF PRINCETON-PROFESSOR GEORGE SPYROPOULOS, UNIVERSITY OF SAPIENZA, ROME.

THE CEMETERY WAS EXCAVATED BY GEORGE SPYROPOULOS AND IS CURRENTLY BEING PUBLISHED BY: PROFESSOR NATHAN ARRINGTON-PROFESSOR GEORGE SPYROPOULOS. BIG AMOUNT OF POTTERY CLEANED AND PRESERVED BY CONSERVATORS P. TZENETAKIS AND M. DARRA, WHOSE SERVICES WERE KINDLY MADE AVAILABLE BY PROF. NATHAN ARRINGTON, UNIVERSITY OF PRINCETON. BONE-STUDY UNDERTAKEN BY DR D.J.BRELLAS (PhD AWARDED, BOSTON UNIVERSITY), WHO HAS ALREADY SUBMITTED A REMARKABLE PRELIMINARY REPORT ON THE RESULTS OF THE INVESTIGATION OF SKELETAL REMAINS. HIS SERVICES WERE ALSO MADE AVAILABLE BY PROF. N. ARRINGTON. I THANK PROFOUNDLY MY DEAR COLLEAGUE AND FRIEND NATHAN ARRINGTON FOR ALL HIS SUPPORT AND ASSISTANCE. A BIG THANK-YOU TO DR S. CHRISOULAKI, DIRECTOR OF THE PIRAEUS MUSEUM FOR FACILITATING THE STUDY PROCESS. PLEASE NOTE THAT THE VESSEL, FOUND NEXT TO THE LOUTERION, IS ACTUALLY A STANDED, TWO-TIERED BOWL WITH FLARING RIM AND SPREADING FOOT. MORE INFORMATION IN THE FORTHCOMING, FULL PUBLICATION OF THE CEMETERY.

A goldsmith's dedication: new evidence for the cult of Asclepius at Trajanopolis

Ancient West & East, 2003

A dedication to Asclepius and Hygieia, discovered at the top of the hill of St George overlooking the ancient city and plain of Trajanopolis in 1997, supplies motivation for a re-examination of the early history of Trajanopolis in Aegean Thrace. Using archaeological, topographic, epigraphic and numismatic evidence, as well as the testimony of native lore, this study argues for the prominence of the cult of Asclepius in Trajanopolis during the Roman period and for the existence of an important ancient healing center at the site.

Annuario della Scuola Archeologica di Atene e delle Missioni Italiane in Oriente, vol. 100.1, 2022

SAGGI Ilaria Caloi, Pedestalled bowls with a central hole in Protopalatial Crete: a ritual and communal function? Theodore Eliopoulos, A bronze decorated double axe-tool in the Kanellopoulos Museum, Athens Germano Sarcone, Borea e Orizia sull’Acropoli di Atene: il frontone del Barbablù, le Grandi Panatenee e l’Ur-Parthenon Paola Pelagatti, Due crateri corinzi da Camarina Rifriscolaro con vicende cimiteriali diverse: “ritual breaking” e una doppia deposizione. Enchytrismoi e antropologia Nassi-Athanasia Malagardis, Un objet énigmatique du Musée du Louvre ou l’éloge des paradis artificiels Jaimee P. Uhlenbrock, The votive terracottas of Sicilian Naxos. A preliminary report Giovanni Marginesu, Serialità e modularità. Aspetti tecnici ed economici della statuaria bronzea nelle iscrizioni ateniesi d’età classica Evgenia Vikela, Bemerkungen zu einer außergewöhnlichen Kultdarstellung. Zur Bedeutung der Arrephorie und zur Ikonographie der Arrephoren Massimiliano Papini, Inexplicabilis multitudo: le statue in bronzo del IV-I sec. a.C. Rosario Maria Anzalone, Furtim delineavit Halbherr. Nota intorno a ICr IV.101 Χαράλαμπος Κριτζάς, Οι επιγραφές του λεγόμενου βωμού του Θεού Υψίστου της Γορτύνος Enrica Culasso Gastaldi, Il cippo di Hephaistia: bentornato tra noi! Theodosia Stefanidou-Tiveriou, Hadrians Himation: Eigenart eines philhellenischen Kaisers oder Ausdrucksform einer innovativen Politik? Francesco Sorbello, Il Colosso di Porto Rafti nel contesto dei demi di Prasiai e Steiria in età romana Theodosia Stefanidou-Tiveriou, A portrait head of Pupienus from Thebes. Typological commitments and iconographic initiatives in imperial portraits produced by Greek workshops Adalberto Magnelli, Drusilla Firindelli Attività edilizia a Gortina sotto l’episcopato di Vetranio: rilettura di un’iscrizione proveniente da Mavropapa Salvatore Cosentino, Discutendo un’iscrizione di Mavropapa Drusilla Firindelli, Un’iscrizione bizantina dalla chiesa della Metamorphosis tou Sotiros a Skandali (Lemno) Giacomo Fadelli, Il programma anatolico di Alessandro Della Seta Massimiliano Santi, La Scuola e la Colonia Rachele Dubbini, La Scuola Archeologica Italiana di Atene nel contesto politico e culturale del conflitto italo-ellenico David Blackman, Bartoccini and the excavation of the ancient shipsheds at Rhodes Giacomo Fadelli L’Annuario di Alessandro Della Seta