Numismatische Zeitschrift

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Numismatische Zeitschrift puRc:iiAsi;i) roi\ ihe VNIVERSITY Ol- TCmONlO LIBRARY FROM II IE CANADA COUNCIL SPECIAL GRANT 1 ou C L AS S 1 C S B HANDHulND AT THE NUMISMATISCHE ZEIT SCHRIFT HERAUSGEGEBEN VON DER NUMIS- MATISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT IN WIEN NEUE FOLGE, BAND VII, 1914. DER GANZEN REIHE BAND XLVII. MIT EINER LICHTDRUCKTAFEL UND 47 TEXTABBILDUNGEN WIEN 1915 SELBSTVERLAG DER NUMISMATISCHEN GESELLSCHAFT KOMMISSION BEI MANZ, K. UND K. HOF-VERLAGS- UND UNIVERSITÄTS- BUCHHANDLUNG IN WIEN BERLIN: MITTLERS SORT. BUCHH. LEIPZIG: K F. KÖHLER ; \ I :.' III Inhalt Kiidolf Miinstcrborp Die licaiiiti-miariicn ;nil diu irrirrliisi-licn Mihizcn 1 — '.is Fortsi Uuiif un.l ?rliluß ir.ii l!.,n.l XI.V ll'Jlil 1 III Arnold Luscliin R. t. Eboni^n-utli I'isamis pic-tor '.i'.i K"'. Aus. Ort. K. V. Liilir Miin/.i' und Medaille als Kiiltiiiilciikiiial liiT III l'.io Eduard K. v. Xamliaiir Nouvelirs i'uutrilititions a la iiiiiiiisiiiaiic|ii>' nrii-iilalc . Il'i >Villii>liii Kiil>ils<-lii-k Ein Kricirszahlnicistir des Se|itiinius Seveiiis \'.i] I'.il Karl Stockort Zwei iinedicrte Ilroiizemiinzen von Serliien l'.i.'i 1^: Hilhelin Kiil>itscli«-k (iiistav Kicliter _'l."i Jl'.i Eduard Kadlor IHe Mlin/.saininluiij: des f Majors (;ii>ia\ liirlmr -JJii Jll Litorari.sclie Anzci)ci>n: J. Allan Cataio^nie ot" tlie i-uins dI' tlie (inpia Uyiiasties E. |{. v. /iiiiiltiiur Ki? !;: J. de Mor^^an (iiiitrilniliulis a Telinle de> aleliiis iiMiiietains soiis la dviiaslie des riiis Sassanides de l'erse E. K. v. /aniliaur r.i>< jn] K. li. Mliilclicad Catalojrtle ol" (I oiiis in tlie raiijali Miiseiiiii, Lalmir E. K. T. Zanilmur' JdI l'(i:! X. MusrhuiotT 1 Mimiiaies IndL'ans avee lai^de liieepliali' und 2. jieuxniun- naiis liuljrares inedites A. Lusrliin K. v. El)en?reullr L'tM F. Ercllicrr t. Sclirötlor I>ie Miin/en IVii(lii.-|i Willielnis de> (iroGen Kur- fürsten inid Friedrielis III. \c>n l!randenliur'_' A. I.uscliin y. Ebenffreulll -"1 -"T Mlttoiluni^en der Itayeriselnn Nuniisinatischen (Jesellscliatt A. liUscIiln T. Ebenifri'uth' Jd IV M. Catriati I. Le numete di-l naine delle due Sii'ilie t'a.-e (i uml _'. Mnneie assei.'nate ad alrune i-ilta drlla Calaliria A. Euscliln v. El>en?reiitli . -"^ V. Casairrandi La |iistriee sui |iriiiii tetradrannui c|i (ataiia >V, killdts<diek -Mi^lV J. >. Svoronos Enislelmn;.' und lledentuiiL' de> /«eikepÜLren Adlers de- hwari- tiiusc-lieu Kaiserreii-hes \\. kuldlscliek -"'.• I'- (i. S«'lilunil)er)f<'r et A. Illanrlit-t ('olleetinns sij:ill(PL'raphii|Ues \\. Kuliltst-hek -In ('_' L. Tudecr I)ie 'retradrai-linieii|iräL'un;.' viui S\ rakus in ilir Perindi- der siirnii- renden Klinstier W. Kuhitsriiek -'II -MI Jahresbericht iler Numisniati-ehen (M-ellsc-liall l'iir Ulli l'I.'I -J.")! Mit}rlieder%er/.ei.-lmis 'JIT J.'i:; '-'i HeelinuiiL'sabwIiluB I IV Verzeichnis der Mitarbeiter an Band XLI bis XLVII ') .Max V. IJalird'ldf Xl-Il (u— S(; tUolierl Monat XLII s7 -! Ic,. XLIV 2:17 -212 Adricii ISliinrlict XLVI l:i_'--iOi) Kiidolf Miinslerlii'ri? XLI .!! .iC. XLIII (;2 bis Alfred v. «oiuiiszcnski XLIV 1-1l' Cd. XLIV eil -]:!2. XLV 1 — 112. XLVII l.is fKai-l »omaniir WA Ml f- IC.L'-ITT. l-}^:' •20-2; XIJI i'd.-ifji-. XLIII |i<Hfe. Alfred Xa^'! XLI ITh ICl. 17s l,s7. [2ss fo-.]. fKarl V. Ernst XIJL'71— '-'So. !29l(;n'.2!)i;;.XLII Xl.iV 1(;7-170. XLVI S7-12S. 211— 21S 27(;--27S, -.'Sil— •28;!;. XLIII 2.-5:i-24() ;2li» Alfred Xo.s.s XLVI IC! l<;o iiis 2:.i. 2rM— 2(;2. 21;:! -2(;7;. Eduard Xowotiij XLIII 12'.i-17s ,I(.scf Kiscilcr XM 121 -12fl (Jüiitlicr l»r((l(s/t Freiherr v. Ohstorff XLIV Paul (uTiii XI. \I 222 |;!:l— IL.i Fricdricli Im! t-HIiniiir XI. IV K;!) 2(;s. Kurt Ifeirlintr XLI IL". 12o. XLII lO-lS j:i2 XIA'I 171— t(iiistav Hiehler XLI :,r, i;i Kduard Kadicc XLVII 220 211. Karl Uoll XLIII 17;i — 212. XLIV 21— .'.o, löO llaii.s Freiherr v. Kolilft/ .XLIII .'S;!- .'!i; Li> 1.'.2 AVillieliri KuliMseliek XLI .m — .'iL (u- 77. Ii;2 Karl Sehalk XLI |ss.-l):!:!. xLII 220 — 2(i2. liis I. 1 i2S(;- 2SSI. n 127rL:-. 12:) 10. XLII XLIII 21.-! 2.!2. XLVI (S.'i f-.] i'.i-ci;. |2(;:i-27.'i]. .;7 XLIII (:i.f2ii 211. (iii.stav Sehöttle XLI 2.!l 27o. \MI l'.H -220 2.M fV]. i;; 20. XLi\' .'ii"(;2. i.'ii icc. Jdsef Sehol/ XLI |2'.i:i tV.|. XLIII 7 — .12. [2.')1. IS.')- -(;,s). 2()i.|(;;! XLV|20!i 2l(;|. XI. \i 2i;:l|. XLI\" 20. XLV |21(;] 1(11- 170. 22;!-2.!2. [SC. 2:i!t|. 2;!:! X L\'II E. .1. SeHiiiaii XL\ l."i7 ir,2. XLVI 2o.! -210 — 21.'j IUI I'.)L 21'.t. |2(.'S 21 ('. || Miehe! Sciiilzo XLV 1 l'.i I."ii; I'liilii»!» 22s. Lrdcrer XLIII I C, Karl Stoekert XLII 221 XLIII <;7 — 12S l'etcr XLIV 2' 2 2:!i;. XL\' ILl-lls. XLVII LennaHi! \L\'I I M i:i.")i;-. Aiijrii.s) Okt. V. IaicUi- XLI |2'.)2— 2".i l|. XLII Otto Voeller XLI 7s KU. 117 ]:)i;. \\.]y |27.-). 2Si;|. XL\- |2ir,]. .\LVII 107-1 IL 171- ls|. \L\- ir,:!--I(;.<. XL\I I2;i-112 AriMild LiLscIiiii v. Ebeiii^reudi XLII 1:17 liis Karl AVesselv XLVI 2l'.i 221 liio. XLVII ii;i kk;. |20(-2os] Eduard v. Zaiiiltaiir XLI 1 I.! — l.'i(;. [2'.i7 Lis Alfred .Maier XLI 1 ;l;i •ioi;]. XLVII ll.'i-l!)o. [i;i7- 2(«] ' In [eeki-cji Khiiiiineiii! sind die Sciteiizalllcii der .\iizei.-eii eiii-rselili.>>t.ii. ]>\v .Mit- arbuitei- an den friilicren Länden iicimt dir Kc-isl e ihand XXXIX XL 1907, 1 V Sachregister Zwi'iköpli^'iT Adler ili-s liy/antinisrlirii Kai.-ci- '•. l'. Hill, l'i>;iiirllu 'i'.l IV rcirlirs 2»'.) KatiilKi L'dSiV Area cxpfditioiialis l'.i:; K ult ii idiiik iiia I. Miiii/c iiml Mi il.iillr al.- Kayi-risi-lif Xiiiiiisinatischc Ci-srllsrlialt .."iTlV. li'T ii /.st 1 Sa»aiiidriirri,lic> ]'.<> W. ncaiiitcnnaiiicii auf den L'ricrlii^.licn Mlin/ni M n ä 1 i?i des -I'.ii- 1— :i8; Iidialtsiil.crsli-lit '.i-^ H ri ein a Ii >rlic Miin/iii II-'. Inli.ili-- iil.ersielit 11'. iJ.-rlin. küiil;:!. Miiii/.kal.iiK'lt jn] iV. (i. IJiade;.'.!. an-liivalisrlie Naelif.M>elmtiL'eii l'a "jaK MiiMiini Jiil iV. l'i>aiiii~ ü'.i ilber I'isaims i.ieti.r W ({ l.ietni M; lilan.-liets Sie-. Isaiiiiiiliin;.- iMii pisliix -'iMV aie.ie expediiimiali- l'Jl l'.M llul^'aricn l'.'.'.. l>(i1 pru.-inatur "iii-la\ er L'l.".--.M'.i; -eine Miiii/en-ai I{}-/.aii/.. s. Adler; l.v/.antiiiiM-lie Si,-cl .'II Kieht " In,,- -2:.-.'l 1 Calal.ria .'.i> l:.iin,sel,e S,ei:,.| JIl ./.W> auf lli.i-ien v.M, S,i|,„r :." :; Sassa,, idc>„-Mini/.e,i l'.is IV. Dirne,,, i'<i-i • , , i i , ,, 1 >ell I IUI, lie r'-'e r. Mei.'el>a,IIIMll1llJ J 1 Doinaiii;,'. I)eiitselie l'rivai,,iedaille luT IV , .... ,. ,, . ,,.. • ,, , >ehnnle. (ii'ld lind .Mllll/.l' Im \ cilk-.llirl - |) vrrliacl, ioii. I)eanite,,,ia„ie Cum Tiiiinvo:. , , ,,, , L'laiiiMii 1 I I i,ii-l,l Cumituvoc L'l I .... i,.i , II 11 r.i| >P|lt , ,11 s .'^exerns, l.eu-loil^ileiiaii- e.xpe.litid. s. ar.-a Serl.i.ii. Knnii: Sie|,|iai, llad.islav I'.m; FVieilen-ilnirL', Miin/.i- in der Kullii,L'e>el,iel,ti- .<ieilien. \j| Ka,a,ia iiml Syiakii- lOS I . Kcini'.'ieieli l.ejder Sieiliiii J^ > Fricdricl, III. von I!raiide,ilMir- .''llV S ie-e l>a in ,ii 1 1, n i'e n mhi Seliiiinil") j' i und Friedrii-I, Will, ein,. derfirnGe K,irlVir>l J"\ (f. Illaiieln t iMn (iiaii Frai,ee>eu di tion/.ai'a Ii'.'iI'l'. ."^xiakii-. reiradiaehiiieiiiii.äjiini; JIl IV. (•ii|ita-I)y,,astini l!i7 'l'e.sMre ili ininaulia ln.'i Rudolf Münsterbergr Die Beamtennamen auf den griechischen Münzen geographisch und alphabetisch geordnet (Fortsetzung und Schluß von Band XLIV (N. F. IV) 69 132 und XLV (N. F. V) 1 111) Abkürzungen: AiXkx;). 'Avtii/jvio^). "Ann loc; . Aü Xog. AupnXioc;). Tidioc . rv.diod. AoM(tTio<;). |ouXiio<;y. KX(aubio<; . Kopv'r|Xi(x;). A(€Okio<;\ MdpKoc;'. Okt dßiog. OuaX'^pio^ . OüXtt io<;). TTiönXKx;). CiElrcx;). Ceitr inio<;!. C^pr io<;). Tiitck'. Tiißipio<;\ Odß. loc;). <t)X dßioc\ Ooup loi; . Die Schlagwörter simi im NVnninativ jjeffebcn. Nahelicfrenilc Ergänzungen abge- kürzter oder am Schluß uiivullKtiimliger Xanien wurden ohne weitere Kenntlieliniaohuiij,' eiii^^esetzt. Falsche Lesungen oder Zuteilungen stehen in [eckigen Klaniineni]. Für die Anordnung der griechisch-römischen Xainen waren die Cognomina matgehend, da die Gentilicia meist eine untergeordnete Bolle spielen. Mit N wird auf die am Schlüsse folgenden Nachträge verwiesen. 1. Griechisches Namensregister T <^\ 'AßdöKavTo; Erjthrae '.»2 'ATaeo Antiochia l'isid. 120 'AßiöXa; Ephesus 89 "ATciÖoKXfn Dyrrhaeiiiuni 'M. Atlien 48. Argos 8. 'AouiöXa(; Arg. 55. Cius 62 'Aßpujv Apollonia 111. 3ö. Arges Amphil. 43. — "ATtoXXoiÖTou Erttlirae 81» Athen 4G. Er>-thrae 89 M. Aup — Thyatira 151 At Dyrrhachium 37. 38 (viennalj. 39 dreimal,. 0X — Colophon 83 40 (dreimal,!. 41. Sicyon .")4 ATo6önou(; s. KüXXiötoi; ». "EoiTcpoc; 'ATa6o<; Mr|vo(p Ilium 74 Afa Tarent 14.15 (zweimal. Agrigent 16. Olbia 'AfaOocpdvni; Cnidus 116 18. Odessu» 21. Alexander M. 21 lOdessus .
Recommended publications
  • A Week in Angoon and a Month of Reflection on Xutsnoowú Aaní
    A WEEK IN ANGOON AND A MONTH OF REFLECTION ON XUTSNOOWÚ AANÍ Richard Carstensen Discovery Southeast, Juneau for: Angoon Community Association & USFS Summer, 2012 2 • A week in Angoon CONTENTS Navigating this NAVIGATING THIS DIGITAL JOURNAL ..................................................................... 2 digital journal PLACE-NAME REVOLUTION ......................................................................................3 Try reading this journal on the couch with your iPad in INTRODUCTION ....................................................................................4 Goodreader, or an Android tablet DAILY JOURNAL ..................................................................................5 in ezPDF reader. Colors are spectacular. Beats paper (>$100 20120814 JUNEAU TO ANGOON ................................................................................5 to print in color!), or sitting at a ALASKA SHOREZONE ...........................................................................................19 computer for 6 hours. Annotate your copy with yellow stickies 20120815 EEY TLIEN—XUNYÉI (KOOTZNAHOO‑MITCHELL) ............................ 21 using voice recognition. PLACE NAMES: ANGOON TIDAL LABYRINTH ..................................................... 21 • This pdf is “bookmarked.” On your tablet/smartphone, tap 20120816 KANALKU LAKE ........................................................................................33 any of the chapters in Contents INGNS (IMPORTANT NATIVE GUY NAMES) ..........................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Profile of a Plant: the Olive in Early Medieval Italy, 400-900 CE By
    Profile of a Plant: The Olive in Early Medieval Italy, 400-900 CE by Benjamin Jon Graham A dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (History) in the University of Michigan 2014 Doctoral Committee: Professor Paolo Squatriti, Chair Associate Professor Diane Owen Hughes Professor Richard P. Tucker Professor Raymond H. Van Dam © Benjamin J. Graham, 2014 Acknowledgements Planting an olive tree is an act of faith. A cultivator must patiently protect, water, and till the soil around the plant for fifteen years before it begins to bear fruit. Though this dissertation is not nearly as useful or palatable as the olive’s pressed fruits, its slow growth to completion resembles the tree in as much as it was the patient and diligent kindness of my friends, mentors, and family that enabled me to finish the project. Mercifully it took fewer than fifteen years. My deepest thanks go to Paolo Squatriti, who provoked and inspired me to write an unconventional dissertation. I am unable to articulate the ways he has influenced my scholarship, teaching, and life. Ray Van Dam’s clarity of thought helped to shape and rein in my run-away ideas. Diane Hughes unfailingly saw the big picture—how the story of the olive connected to different strands of history. These three people in particular made graduate school a humane and deeply edifying experience. Joining them for the dissertation defense was Richard Tucker, whose capacious understanding of the history of the environment improved this work immensely. In addition to these, I would like to thank David Akin, Hussein Fancy, Tom Green, Alison Cornish, Kathleen King, Lorna Alstetter, Diana Denney, Terre Fisher, Liz Kamali, Jon Farr, Yanay Israeli, and Noah Blan, all at the University of Michigan, for their benevolence.
    [Show full text]
  • The Expansion of Christianity: a Gazetteer of Its First Three Centuries
    THE EXPANSION OF CHRISTIANITY SUPPLEMENTS TO VIGILIAE CHRISTIANAE Formerly Philosophia Patrum TEXTS AND STUDIES OF EARLY CHRISTIAN LIFE AND LANGUAGE EDITORS J. DEN BOEFT — J. VAN OORT — W.L. PETERSEN D.T. RUNIA — C. SCHOLTEN — J.C.M. VAN WINDEN VOLUME LXIX THE EXPANSION OF CHRISTIANITY A GAZETTEER OF ITS FIRST THREE CENTURIES BY RODERIC L. MULLEN BRILL LEIDEN • BOSTON 2004 This book is printed on acid-free paper. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mullen, Roderic L. The expansion of Christianity : a gazetteer of its first three centuries / Roderic L. Mullen. p. cm. — (Supplements to Vigiliae Christianae, ISSN 0920-623X ; v. 69) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 90-04-13135-3 (alk. paper) 1. Church history—Primitive and early church, ca. 30-600. I. Title. II. Series. BR165.M96 2003 270.1—dc22 2003065171 ISSN 0920-623X ISBN 90 04 13135 3 © Copyright 2004 by Koninklijke Brill nv, Leiden, The Netherlands All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, translated, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission from the publisher. Authorization to photocopy items for internal or personal use is granted by Brill provided that the appropriate fees are paid directly to The Copyright Clearance Center, 222 Rosewood Drive, Suite 910 Danvers, MA 01923, USA. Fees are subject to change. printed in the netherlands For Anya This page intentionally left blank CONTENTS Preface ........................................................................................ ix Introduction ................................................................................ 1 PART ONE CHRISTIAN COMMUNITIES IN ASIA BEFORE 325 C.E. Palestine .....................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Board of Missions
    PROCEEDING-S OF THE BOARD OF MISSIONS OF TH E PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, A T T H E IH iFttst gftfronfal Sttnttna, Held in the City o f Philadelphia, on the 6th day of September, A. D. 1838, and continued by adjournments to the 11th of the same month. TOGETHEB WITH THE REPORTS OF TH E DOMESTIC AND FOREIGN COMMITTEES, THE REPORT OF THE BOARD TO THE GENERAL CONVENTION, AND TH E REPORT OF A SPECIAL COMMITTEE, MADE BY THE REV. DR. JARVIS. NEW-YORK: t PRINTED BY WILLIAM OSBORN, 88 William-street. M DCCC XXXVIII. PROCEEDINGS OF T H E BOARD OF MISSIONS. TRIENNIAL MEETING. Philadelphia, September 6, 1838. T h e Triennial Meeting of the Board of Missions of the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, was held this day at St. Andrew’s church, at 5 o’clock, P. M. Present: The Rt.Rev. Bishops Moore, Bowen, Chase, Brow­ nell, H. U. Onderdonk, Meade, B. T. Onderdonk, M‘Ilvaine, Doane, and McCoskry;—The Rev. Messrs. Allen, Anthon, Boyd, Burroughs, Carder, Croswell, De Lancey, Dorr, Dunn, Ducachet, Edson, Forbes, Hawks, Jackson, Jarvis, Johns, Jones, Mason, Mead, Milnor, Morehouse, Prestman, Rodney, Tyng, Vaughan, Watson, and the Secretary,—Messrs. Ec- cleston. Huntington, Lovell, Morris, Newton, Nicklin, Stuy- vesant and Wharton. The Rt. Rev. Bishop Moore opened the meeting with prayer. The roll having been called, it was on motion of the Se­ cretary, Resolved, That the reading of the minutes of the last meeting be dispensed with. The Rev. Mr. Vaughan, the Secretary and General Agent of the Foreign Committee, reported that Henry I.
    [Show full text]
  • The Whole Works of Roger Ascham
    THE WHOLE WORKS OF EOGER ASCHAM, NOW FIRST COLLECTED AND REVISED, WITH A LIFE OF THE AUTHOR; BY THE REV. DR. GILES, FORMERLY FELLOW OF C. C. C. , OXFORD. VOL. III. LONDON: JOHN RUSSELL SMITH, SOHO SQUARE. 3864. PRINTED BY BOWDEN AND BRAWN, 13, PRINCES STREET, LITTLE QUEEN STREET, HOLBORN, LONDON. PKEFACE TO VOL. III. OF the first work contained in this volume, "A Report and Discourse of the Affairs and State of Germany, <kc" I have seen but one edition afac-simile separate ; of its title is prefixed to our reprint of the work. It is in small quarto, and has no date; but it is known to have been printed in 1552, and again in 1570. The copy which I have seen, is in the British Museum, and has furnished, besides many smaller cor rections, more than one whole sentence that had been omitted in the last edition of the English Works, 8vo, 1815. 2. The School-master also is here printed from the " English Works of Roger Ascham," collated through out with the earlier editions, which have furnished several important corrections of the text. This work was first published by Mrs Ascham, small 8vo, 1570, after her husband's death : a fac-simile of IV PREFACE. the title to that edition is prefixed to the work in the present reprint. The School-master was again printed in 1571, 1573, 1579, 1583, 1589, these editions vary very little the one from the other. It was again published, with notes by the Rev. James Upton, London, 8vo, 1711, and reprinted 1743.
    [Show full text]
  • CROSSJNG the STRAITS: the PERSIANS in THRACE' Jan P. Stronk Tn Or Shortly Before 5131, King Darius Collected a Large Fleet From
    TALANTA XXX-XXXJ (1998-1999) CROSSJNG THE STRAITS: THE PERSIANS IN THRACE' Jan P. Stronk Tn or shortly before 5131, King Darius collected a large fleet from among the Greek cities in Asia Minor and sent it to the Pontic coast. A Greek engineer, Mandrocles, constructed a boat-bridge across the Bosporus. As Herodotus states (Hdt. IV.87), two marble memorial ste­ lae commemorated this feat in Greek and "Assyrian characters", by which he can have meant Old Persian, Elamite, or Akkadian. The Persian army crossed the bridge and entered Thrace, following the fleet. People from the West Pontic coast until the Ister, including Greek colonies and Thracian tribes, submitted to the Persians without resist­ ance. Without problems the army continued its march to the Ister. Meanwhile a pontoon bridge had been constructed across the river. Darius crossed the Danube and started a campaign against the Scythians of the South Russian steppes. As Bury puts it: "Cyrus had conquered the eastern coasts of the Mediterranean; Cambyses had completed and secured that conquest on the south side by the subjec­ tion of Egypt; it remained for Darius to complete and secure his empire on the north side by the reduction of Thrace" (Bury 1970, 238). A key function in this policy was preserved for "The Straits", the Bosporus and the Dardanelles. Control of the Straits was in more than one respect important for Persia. First because the Straits connected rather than divided the Thracians living on either sides of the Straits (cf. Stronk 1995, 59-60), second because mastery of the Straits facili­ tated the hegemony of the Ionian states in the Euxine region,2 third * In 1994, I submitted a paper with this title to the Thracia Pontica VI conference at Soz.opol (Bulgaria).
    [Show full text]
  • Vii. Aelii Augusti Liberti
    Paul Weaver: Repertorium Familiae Caesaris – Aelii Augusti Liberti 223 VII. AELII AUGUSTI LIBERTI 1401 T. Aelius Aug. lib. A[---] AE 1973, 39 Rome: [t ae]LIUS T F PAL [---] / T AELI AUG LIB A[--- et] ULPIAE MARCEL[linae theatr. filius?] / HABUIT VIVAR[ium et curam?] SUPRA IUMENTA [caesaris] / Marcelli MILITAVIT ¢ LEG[---] / COH III HASTAT P[rior v ann] / XXXVI M [---] A B R *3:’vivarium’= ‘game park, animal reserve’. A freeborn citizen son of a freedman of Antoninus Pius and an Ulpia could not have been born before 138. If it can be assumed that he lived for 36 years, reaching the rank of centurion in the army and a post in charge of pack animals, this inscription must date from the last years of M. Aurelius or even the reign of Commodus. His mother Ulpia Marcellina, with a nomen from two reigns earlier than that of her husband and a cognomen that is rarely servile, was most probably freeborn, whether or not the latter had been manumitted at the time of their marriage. 1402 T. Aelius [Aug. lib.] A[---] Miscellanea greca e romana 11, 1987, 239-41 = AE 1987, 100 Rome D[m] / T T AELII [aug lib] / FELIX ET A[---] / MATRI DULC[issimae et] / LIB C D LIBERTAB[usque] / POSTERISQUE [eorum] / ET AUREL URBANAE FELI[cis san]/CTISSIMAE ET LIB LIBERTA[busque poste]/RISQ EORUM *2: the reading ‘TT’ is confirmed from the photo in MGR. It is plausible that both Felix and A[---] are Augusti liberti. The name of their mother, the dedicand, either has to be squeezed into the end of line 3 (or 4?) or curiously, appears not to have been recorded.
    [Show full text]
  • Freedom from Passions in Augustine
    UNIVERSITY OF HELSINKI FACULTY OF THEOLOGY FINLAND FREEDOM FROM PASSIONS IN AUGUSTINE Gao Yuan 高 源 ACADEMIC DISSERTATION To be publicly discussed, by due permission of the Faculty of Theology at the University of Helsinki in Lecture Hall 13, University Main Building, on 4 November 2015, at 12 noon Helsinki 2015 ISBN 978-951-51-1625-3 (paperback) ISBN 978-951-51-1626-0 (PDF) Copyright © Gao Yuan (高源) https://ethesis.helsinki.fi/en Cover: Wang Rui and Gao Yuan Juvenes Print Oy Helsinki 2015 ABSTRACT This study presents a general overview of Augustine’s insights into passions as well as his approach to the therapy of emotions and their sanctification. Attending to various phases of his writings, this work explores the systematic structure of Augustine’s tenets on passions and on the freedom from passions in the context of his philosophical and theological convictions on the issue of amor sui and amor Dei. The analysis begins by examining Augustine’s language of passions and the doctrinal connections between Augustine and his predecessors. I provide a survey of Augustine’s usage of emotional terms and criticise the position that Augustine suggested a dichotomy between passio and affectus as well as the claim that none of Augustine’s Latin terms can be justifiably translated by the modern term “emotion”. On the basis of terminological and doctrinal observations, I clarify the general features of Augustine’s psychology of passions in Chapter 2. In addressing the issue of how Augustine transformed his predecessors’ therapy of passions and their ideal of freedom from emotion into his theological framework in Chapter 3, I examine a series of related concepts, such as propatheia, metriopatheia, apatheia and eupatheia, to determine how he understood them in various stages of his philosophical and theological thinking.
    [Show full text]
  • Heathen Contact with Christianity
    0/2 .~ h · h h·· · /(6 ~He~t e? C~ntact WIt C flsttamty /Is dUrIng Its FIrst Century and a Half - Being all references to Christianity recorded in Pagan writings during that Period BY c. R. HAINES, M.A., B.D., F.S.A. Graffito of Christ crucified with an Ass's Head (now in the Kircher Museum). LIBRARY CALI FOANtA STATE UNIVERSrrv, Fw.ER1'ON RJllERTON. CA 92634 CAMBRIDGE DEIGHTON, BELL AND CO., LTD. - 19 2 3 PREFACE HE present book is put forward as the first T in a projected series of little works on early Christianity up to the end of the second century. They are intended to provide the student with con­ venient materials for the proper understanding of the relations that progressively subsisted between it and the Roman Empire. If this volume is found satisfactory, and meets with success, it will be followed by a reconstruction of the anti-christian polemic of Celsus, to be succeeded by other volumes on the Early Apologists, the first authentic martyrdoms, and a General Sketch of the attitude of the Roman Administration towards the Christian religion, and in particular a separate treat­ ment of the reign of Marcus Aurelius in this respect. My best thanks are due to the Rev. F. A. Haines for kindly reading the proofs of this little work and making most valuable criticisms and suggestions. C. R. HAINES. PETERSFIELD, September 1923. PRINTI£1J IN GRKAT HRITAIN f TO MY DEAR WIFE Ecclesiasticus vii. 19 Proverbs xxxi. 1 I, 12 INTRODUCTION THE fact of Christ's death at the hands of the Jews under Pontius Pilatus must have been well known to the Home Government.
    [Show full text]
  • The Histories
    Place Names Latitude Longitude Numbers of Times Mentioned Adriatic Sea 42.7752864 15.885196 3 Paphos 34.757212 32.406593 1 Oaxos 35.3080415 24.8441326 2 Petra 35.25 26.25 2 Siphnus 35.208535 26.108246 4 Abae 38.5831615 22.929852 5 Abdera 40.93950935 24.9795992 13 Abydos 26.409131 31.91627145 18 Acarnania 38.71765475 21.19036225 2 Achaia 38.10212147 22.22458591 8 Achelous river 38.3388321 21.1067111 3 Acheron river 39.2348296 20.4831346 2 Achilleum 39.914982 26.1511315 1 Achilles 46.5 31.5 1 Pyrene 42.468926 2.866662 1 Adramytteum 39.5023635 26.936321 1 Aegaen Sea 37.44094966 25.85418454 9 Aegina island 37.7409397 23.430141 51 Egyptian sea 31.15802 32.68554 1 Egypt 19.21140877 30.56732963 263 Aeolia 38.84644288 26.95080175 2 Ethiopia 14.125005 38.721522 22 Aetolia 38.51650426 21.75966982 1 Agathyrsi 47.5 27.5 11 Agora 40.513545 26.786353 1 Aegae 38.154879 22.314637 2 Aegaleos Mountain 37.154 21.721 1 Aege 39.978627 23.666064 1 Aegira 38.1297925 22.377887 1 Aegilea island 38.1771519 24.1749085 2 Aegion 38.252707 22.081952 1 Aenea 40.439481 22.879124 2 Aenus 40.7248985 26.085729 2 Aenyra 40.683333 24.65 1 Aesa 40.309275 23.060368 1 Acanthus 40.39975 23.880112 8 Acragas 37.29289215 13.58945448 4 Acrothoum 38.4526062 23.2197021 1 Akrothooi 40.183833 24.34933 1 Alabanda 37.59557847 27.97571613 2 Alalia 42.10240033 9.511828 2 Alopecae 37.95 23.749997 1 Alpeni 38.801852 22.586084 4 Amathus 34.712264 33.13708095 3 Ampelus headland 37.75 26.75 2 Amphicaea 38.642319 22.598214 1 Amphissa 38.518403 22.374172 2 Anagyrous 37.8300155 23.804843 1 Anaphlystus
    [Show full text]
  • An Atlas of Antient [I.E. Ancient] Geography
    'V»V\ 'X/'N^X^fX -V JV^V-V JV or A?/rfn!JyJ &EO&!AElcr K T \ ^JSlS LIBRARY OF WELLES LEY COLLEGE PRESENTED BY Ruth Campbell '27 V Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Boston Library Consortium Member Libraries http://www.archive.org/details/atlasofantientieOObutl AN ATLAS OP ANTIENT GEOGRAPHY BY SAMUEL BUTLER, D.D. AUTHOR OF MODERN AND ANTJENT GEOGRAPHY FOR THE USE OF SCHOOLS. STEREOTYPED BY J. HOWE. PHILADELPHIA: BLANQHARD AND LEA. 1851. G- PREFATORY NOTE INDEX OF DR. BUTLER'S ANTIENT ATLAS. It is to be observed in this Index, which is made for the sake of complete and easy refer- ence to the Maps, that the Latitude and Longitude of Rivers, and names of Countries, are given from the points where their names happen to be written in the Map, and not from any- remarkable point, such as their source or embouchure. The same River, Mountain, or City &c, occurs in different Maps, but is only mentioned once in the Index, except very large Rivers, the names of which are sometimes repeated in the Maps of the different countries to which they belong. The quantity of the places mentioned has been ascertained, as far as was in the Author's power, with great labor, by reference to the actual authorities, either Greek prose writers, (who often, by the help of a long vowel, a diphthong, or even an accent, afford a clue to this,) or to the Greek and Latin poets, without at all trusting to the attempts at marking the quantity in more recent works, experience having shown that they are extremely erroneous.
    [Show full text]
  • Josephus Geographicus
    Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism Texte und Studien zum Antiken Judentum Edited by Martin Hengel and Peter Schäfer 98 Yuval Shahar Josephus Geographicus The Classical Context of Geography in Josephus Mohr Siebeck YUVAL SHAHAR, born 1953; 1983 BA, 1987 MA at Tel Aviv University; 1996 Ph.D at Tel Aviv University, School of Jewish Studies; since 1984 lecturer at the Department of Jewish History, Tel Aviv University. ISBN 3-16-148256-5 ISSN 0721-8753 (Texts and Studies in Ancient Judaism) Die Deutsche Bibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliographie; detailed bibliographic data is available in the Internet at http://dnb.ddb.de. © 2004 by Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen, Germany. This book may not be reproduced, in whole or in part, in any form (beyond that permitted by copyright law) without the publisher's written permission. This applies particularly to reproductions, translations, microfilms and storage and processing in electronic systems. The book was printed by Guide-Druck in Tiibingen on non-aging paper and bound by Buchbinderei Spinner in Ottersweier. Printed in Germany. Acknowledgements First and foremost, my heartfelt thanks go to Professor Aharon Oppenheimer and Professor Benjamin Isaac, the two teachers who have accompanied me through all my years at Tel Aviv University, patiently working with me and my ideas. Without you, whither should I go? I came to maturity under the leadership of Aharon Oppenheimer, and it was through his guidance that I learned, and am still learning, the paths of the Talmudic Land of Israel, little by little beginning to feel at home in the world of its sages.
    [Show full text]