Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
This article, which concerns six inscriptions from Galatia, is dedicated with gratitude to Seton Lloyd, whose wide-ranging scholarship, shrewd guidance and unstinted generosity provided a constant inspiration to those of us fortunate enough to have lived and worked in the Institute in its early days. I hope he will find it appropriate that the text brings together allusions to the traditional epigraphical links between the University of Aberdeen and Anatolia, and illustrations of the kindly attitudes of the Turkish village folk towards nomadic epigraphers.
1 I am indebted to Dr J. Morris for his help with the commentary on inscriptions nos. 1 and 4, and to Dr M. H. Ballance for several useful suggestions.
2 Ramsay, , HGAM, p. 224Google Scholar.
3 Ramsay, o.c., 225.
4 BSA, 1897/1898, p. 91Google Scholar.
5 JHS XIX (1899), 86Google Scholar.
6 Head, HN2 p. 748Google Scholar; cf. Ramsay, , Rev. Num. (1894), 169Google Scholar.
7 From Imperium to Auctoritas, p. 239, cf. 249.
8 Grant, o.c., 302.
9 Cf. Vittinghoff, , Römische Kolonisation und Bürgerrechtspolitik unter Caesar und Augustus (Wiesbaden 1951), p. 131Google Scholar; cf. id. in Ztsch. Sav. Stift. 1951.
10 Ballance, , in Reallexikon z. byz. Kunst, p.608Google Scholar.