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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 December 2013
Fragment of white marble, entire at the upper and right edge only, measuring 5¼ in. × 4 in. Found among the ruins of Troy on Apr. 20, 1907, by Mr. F. G. Harman from the ‘Argonaut’: now the property of J. Alison Glover, Esq., M.D.
The date is late, not earlier than the first century B.C., as is indicated by the absence of the iota adscriptum, (1. 4), and the coarse style of the lettering. The form ἑατῶν in 1. 5 is characteristic of the first century B.C. Δίφιλος Ξανθίππου is not otherwise known to me. The πανήγυρις or festival assembly of the Panathenaea at Troy celebrated by the nine cities of the Ilian union is mentioned in numerous inscriptions. It is impossible to define further the outline of the original document, as so much is lost.
1 Meisterhans-Schwyzer, , Grammatik der att. Inschr. 3 p. 154 Google Scholar; Dittenberger, , Syll. 2 328 Google Scholar, note 14.
2 E.g. Dörpfeld, , Troja u. Ilion, ii. p. 454, 461Google Scholar; Dittenberger, , Syll. 2 503 Google Scholar; Or. Gr. Inscr. Sel. 444, notes 1 and 6. τῶ[ν ἐννέα πόλεων is also a possible restoration.
3 Cp. Paus. ii. 26. 8 on the relation between the cults at Pergamon and Epidaurus.
4 Cp. also Fouilles d'Épid. p. 58, No. 140, and the Peiraeus incer. Δελτ 1888, p. 134, No. 20.