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Inscriptions copied by Cockerell in Greece.—II

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 December 2013

Extract

In the earlier number of the present volume (p. 143 sqq.) I gave some account of a MS. collection of inscriptions made by C. R. Cockerell in 1810–1814, and also gave copies of all those from the mainland of Greece, which appeared to be hitherto unpublished. The present paper will cover the rest of that collection, which is mostly derived from Asia Minor.

I add a complete list of the remaining contents of Cockerellľs volumes. Those unpublished are reproduced below; in the case of all those previously edited, a collation with the published copy has been made and kept, and I should be very glad to show these collations to any one interested in the matter.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 1885

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References

page 340 note 1 In my last paper I numbered all the inscriptions consecutively; it has since appeared more convenient to follow Cockerellľs system of numbering, though inconsistent. When the two systems overlap, I have added a C, to avoid confusion in references.

page 342 note 1 In the above list the word ‘unpublished’ must not be pressed. But I have taken reasonable precautions against mistakes on this point by a careful search in Boeckh's Corpus, Le Bas and Waddington, and such periodicals as the Ἀθηναὼον, Bulletin de Correspondence Hellénique, Mittheilungen des deutschen Instituts zu Athen, &c. The numbers marked with an asterisk are reproduced below.

page 343 note 1 [These two additional lines are inscribed on a passage of the theatre at Hierapolis (C.I.G. 3906). ΑΡΧΗΓΕΤΗΣ is the true reading.—Ed.]

page 344 note 1 [The reading of Pococke in the last two lines περιόδὼ κβ′, which Franz discredits in C.I.G., is confirmed by Cockerellľs copy. It denotes the twenty-second periodic celebration of the Trajaneia, which were certainly penteteric. They were founded in honour or in memory of Trajan, and the twenty-second celebration was about 195–220 A.D.—Ed.]