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An Imperial Estate in Galatia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2012

Extract

Tentative suggestions which conform to the conditions of a scientific hypothesis may play a useful part in furthering the slow and unending process of rediscovering antiquity. Proof or disproof of them must naturally await the discovery of fresh evidence, and such evidence may never come; but if it does, its appearance is doubly welcome when it furnishes proof. It is nearly forty years since my travels in Anatolia took me into the angle of north-western Galatia, lying between north-eastern Phrygia and the southern boundary of Bithynia, which ran along the watershed between the middle Sangarius and its chief tributary the Tembrogius or Tembris. The southern side of this watershed, immediately to the west of the junction of the two rivers, is an infertile and thinly populated district, but farther west, towards the Phrygian border, the mountain slopes open out into a broad plain which runs down to the Tembrogius; near its head are the two villages of Upper (or Great) and Lower Igde-agatch. Westward of this plain and separated from it only by a low ridge is a pleasant valley, watered by an affluent of the Tembrogius.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright ©J. G. C. Anderson 1937. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

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References

1 JHS xix, 1899, 75 ffGoogle Scholar.

2 Klio ii, 1902, n. 5Google Scholar.

3 See Mon. As. Min. Ant., vol. v, where two of Schönewolf's inscriptions belonging to Eski-sheher will be published.

4 JHS, l.c., nos. 49, 50, 52, 53, 54, 55.

5 (a) Mamurjeh bei Beylik Ahour. Ἐτείμησεν Λαδί[κ]η ἴ|δια τέκνα Πασι[κρά]|την καὶ Διονύσιον | τοὺς [Θε]οϕίλου [κὲ] Ἀϕ[ί] α ἀδελϕὴ ὁμογάστ |[ρ]ιος κ̣[ὲ] Ἀφία μητρά̣δ̣ε̣λ̣| [ϕος.

(b) ibid. ∣∣∣ TNHNOIKATOIKOIMHNI.

(c) Igde-Agatch, engraved on a column, lettering rather baroque : [Γ]λύκερος Ἑρμῆδος τ[εῦ]|ξεν [τ]όδε δῶρον ἄνακτ[ο]|ς [τ]ὴν ἀρετὴν ἐσορῶν〈ρ〉 (in ligature with N) ὧδ᾿ ε[ὐ]σ|[τ]ά̣θε̣άν τε κὲ ὄλβον δοίη̣ ε̣(? κὲ)| γονέα[ς] κὲ τ[οὺ]ς ἰδίους ὁ|λοκλ[ή]ρους.

(d)ibid. Fragment in the wall of the mosque … αν Διονὐσιον [γ]υνὴ μ.

6 See the bilingual inscriptions of Miletus, CIL iii, 447 (ILS 1862)Google Scholar, and Athens, IG iii 1446Google Scholar (CIG 963).

7 CR xix, 1905, p. 370Google Scholar : cf. AJA xxxi, 1927, 49; Mon. As. Min. Ant. i, 16, no. 22 bGoogle Scholar.

8 Kais. Verwalt. 133, 136.

9 CIL viii, 5384 (and 17500); Gsell, ILAl. 323 and P. 20.

10 Trans. Am. Phil Assoc. lxv, 1934, 207 ffGoogle Scholar.