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The Collection of Ancient Marbles at Leeds

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

The collection of antiquities which forms the subject of this paper was presented in the year 1863—4 to the Museum of the Leeds Philosophical Society by the Rev. John Gott, D.D., then Vicar of Leeds and now Dean of Worcester. He tells me that it came into his hands in the following way. Mr. Benjamin Gott, elder brother of the Dean's father, made a tour in Greece about the year 1815, in the company of an intimate friend, Mr. Rawson. They visited Smyrna, and returned through the islands to Athens, purchasing, in the course of their travels, a number of ancient marbles. Mr. Benjamin Gott died of fever at the Piraeus, and was buried at Athens in the Theseium. Many years afterwards, when an English cemetery was opened at Athens, his body, with two others, was removed from the temple to this more fitting resting-place.

Upon Mr. B. Gott's death, the marbles passed into the possession of his fellow-traveller Mr. Rawson, in whose house at Halifax they remained for years. Here six of the inscriptions were copied and sent to Böckh for insertion in the Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum which he was then preparing.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1890

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References

page 255 note 1 See C. I. G. 2265 (‘Lapis, in Delo effossus, est nunc in oppido Halifax Britanniae in domo Rawsoni; misit Rosius ex schedis ab amico missis’); 2284; 2312; 2323; Add. 864 b; 937 b. The first volume of the Corpus appeared in 1843.

page 261 note 1 The term ἐπάκοος is found in a similar sense in Laconia: Roberts, , Introduction to Greek Epigraphy, p. 267Google Scholar.

page 265 note 1 See the remarks of Loch, E. on this point, De titulis Graecis scpulcralibus, p. 35Google Scholar (Königsberg, 1890); and my paper ‘On the Characters of Theophrastus’ in the Hellenic Journal, iii. (1882) p. 143.