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Victors in the Meleagria and the Balbouran Élite*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 31 May 2012
Extract
A sizeable part of the epigraphic record of the North Lycian city of Balboura concerns the erection of statues honouring athletics victors of the Antoninia Meleagria, a “musical” festival founded A.D. 158–161 by the local notable Meleager, the subject of J. J. Coulton, N. P. Milner, A. T. Reyes, “Balboura Survey: Onesimos and Meleager Part II”, AS XXXIX (1989) 41–60. In this paper the whole series of 12 Meleagria bases is published, five for the first time, together with other inscriptions demonstrating the victors' membership of the leading families of Balboura, with one possible exception (Inscr. 11). The Meleagria bases are presented in chronological order, and are referred to by the same numbers as the inscriptions they carry. The tops and front elevations of the better-preserved ones are shown on Fig. 2.
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References
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6 Another example of a closed festival is the Augusteia at Olbasa, Pisidia, cf. J. Jüthner, Wiener Studien XXIV (1902) 285–91.
7 J. J. Coulton AS XXXIX (1989) 62.
8 TAM II 1200, 1202; also, from Carian Sebastopolis, “εὐγενὴς καὶ τῆς πρώτης τάξεως ἀπὸ προγόνων”, L. Robert, Études Anatoliennes (1937) 342 ff.
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62 M. Wörrle, op. cit. (n. 1) 99–100.
63 Loc. cit. (n. 28) 51.
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70 Loc. cit.
71 M. Wörrle, op. cit. (n. 1) 157: 4,450 d.
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73 Loc. cit. (n. 28) 56 ff., Inscr. 5.
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91 IGR I 612 = CIL III 7540 is so restored, probably wrongly.
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106 Wörrle 110, and n. 190.
107 C. Naour, Ancient Society IX (1978) 171 no. 2. The honorand is Stephanos II; cf. IGR III 475.
108 Dig. L 4.18.26; cf. Wörrle. p. 162–3.
109 Inv. no. 63. The transition from dekaprôtoi to eikosaprôtoi took place in Lycia in the early years of Hadrian's reign. Cf. Wörrle, p. 162, n. 65.
110 IGR III 472 (Balboura).
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113 AS XXXIX (1989) 53, Inscr. 2, lines 18–22.
114 Demostheneia festival inscription (Wörrle), lines 3 and 12.
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120 SEG VI 59.
121 OGIS 509.
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123 Republished in AS XXXIX (1989) 56, Inscr. 5.
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