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The World of the Panhellenion II. Three Dorian Cities*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2012
Extract
The first part of this study (hereafter Panhellenion I) considered the nature of Hadrian's Panhellenion by looking at its known membership and activities and its social context, and reviewed the impact of the league's foundation on Athens, its capital city, and Eleusis, Attica's most prestigious sanctuary.
Here we concentrate on three Dorian member-cities: Sparta and Argos in the province of Achaia, and Cyrene in Crete-and-Cyrene. In doing so we sometimes need to go beyond the evidence relating specifically to the Panhellenion, since certain features of Greek city-life under the Antonines are best explained in the larger framework of Hadrian's initiatives in the Greek world: in particular a pre-occupation with civic origins, relations of kinship (syngeneia) and recognition through ‘diplomacy’ of the historic primacy of Achaia's most famous cities. In the archaeology of Cyrene and Argos it is possible to discern, as at Athens, a phase of urban development which owed its impetus to Hadrian and which, at Cyrene, embraced a marked archaism of style.
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References
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5 REG LXXIX (1966), 357–8, no. 144.
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13 Archonship: Panhellenion I, 91.
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26 FGH II, A 463, 9.
27 As is implied by the archonship of the Rhodian M. Cocceius Timasarchus: Panhellenion I, 87.
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38 See A. Spawforth, ABSA lxxv (1980), 203–8.
39 Herald: Panhellenion I, 91 n. 74. Ambassador: IG in, 485, where Μάρκου Τιγελ λίου / [Λούτιπου] can be restored in 11. 6–7.
40 IG v, 1, 71, col. iii, b, 11. 18 and 25 with Woodward, ABSA xliii (1948), 258–9; C. Habicht, MDAI(I) ix/x (1959–1960), 109–25. On Charax see now the excellent monograph by Andrei, O., A. Claudius Charax di Pergamo (1984).Google Scholar
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44 Habicht, ibid. (n. 40).
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49 Philostr., VS 533.
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51 Pera, ibid. (n. 46).
52 SEG xi, 491.
53 See R. Meister, JÖAI xxvii (1932), Beiblatt 243; Robert, L., ‘Les juges étrangers dans la cité grecque’, Xenion. Festschrift für P.J. Zepos (1973), 765–82Google Scholar.
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55 SEG xi, 496, 4–5 (early in the reign of Pius) and IG v, 1, 819, re-edited by L. Robert, BCH lii(1928), 417–18, and dating shortly before the Parthian war of 163–6. The destination of this dikastagogos was restored by R. as .
56 e.g., Sparta: SEG xi. 468–9 and 472; Klio xv (1918), 33–4. no. 54Google Scholar and xviii (1923). 284–5 no. 37; Alabanda: IG xii, 9, 4; Samos: Robert, L., Hellenica xi–xii (1960), 204–13Google Scholar; SEG 1, 363; C. Habicht, AM lxxii (1957), 233–41. Generally, see Robert, art. cit. (n. 53).
57 The best evidence comes from a series of dedications in the sanctuary of Zeus Osaga in Mylasan territory by visiting judicial embassies: Le Bas-Waddington, op. cit. (n. io), nos. 349; 351 = A. W. Persson, BCH xlvi (1922), 415–16, no. 201; 352; 358; 353–6 = Meister, art. cit. (n. 53), Beiblatt, d, f, h, i, k; G. Doublet and G. Deschamps, BCH xiv (1890), 620 ff., nos. 19–21 = Meister, loc. cit., a, b, c. Two of these dedications (Le Bas-Waddington, 358 and Meister, a) are firmly dated respectively by the pro-consulships of Caesennius Paetus (93/4) and the historian Tacitus (c.112/13): Eck, W., Senatoren von Vespasien bis Hadrian (1970), 144, 146Google Scholar.
58 See P. Cartledge, ‘Sparta and Samos: a Special Relationship?’, CQ n.s. xxxii (1982), 243–65.
59 Or. xliv, 6.
60 cf. Strab. viii, 6, 18, classing Sparta and Argos as the ‘most famous’ (ἐνδοξόταται) of the Peloponnesian cities.
61 Briefly, Bowie, E. in Finley, M. I. (ed.), Studies in Ancient Society (1974), 172Google Scholar; Tigerstedt, E. N., The Legend of Sparta in Classical Antiquity ii (1971), 168–264.Google Scholar
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64 As suggested by Woodward, art. cit. (n. 3), 879–83 (see the remarks of Robert, loc. cit. (n. 14)).
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66 Polyb. IX, i, 4. Cf. Asclep. Myrl., ap. Sex. Empir., adv. gramm. i, 252–3, categorizing genealogy as ‘false history’.
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70 IG v, 1, 32b, 13–14; 33, 5; 1314b, 26; SEG xi, 489. 5.
71 Spawforth, art. cit. (n. 15), 251–2. L. Robert conjectured that Roman Sparta owed her possession of Cretan Caudus (SEG xi, 494, 1) and Messenian Corone (IG v, 1, 34 (SEG xi, 479), n; 36 (SEG xi, 486), 24–5; 44 (SEG xi, 486), 7–8; SEG xi, 495, 5–6) to ‘faveurs d'Hadrien’: Hellenica 1 (1940), 112.Google Scholar
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75 See now Applebaum, S., Jews and Greeks in Ancient Cyrene (1979).Google Scholar
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78 ibid., 11. 29–30: συνελθεῖν καὶ συναυξῆσαι τ[ὴν ὑμετέραν πόλιν καὶ οὐ μόνον ο]ἰ̣κήτορας ἀλλα/καὶ οἱκιστὰς γενέσθαι τῆς πατρίδος.
79 For the problematic meaning here of Ἀχαιόν see Reynolds, art. cit. (n. 76), 116. Perhaps the Laconian colonists of Thera were later believed to have included elements from Laconia's pre-Dorian—that is, Achaean —population.
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82 See in this sense Andrei, op. cit. (n. 40), 135–6 n. 58, pointing also to signs of literary interest in Cyrene's history in the same period.
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85 SEG ix, 173, with Robert, L., Hellenica 1 (1940), 11–13Google Scholar:
[–] Μ. Ạὐρῃλίου [[Κομμόδου]] Ἀντωνείνου
[Σε]βαστοῦ Δ. Κασκέλλιος Ἀριστοτέλ[ης]
[ἱε]ρεὺς καλλιέτης καί
[.] Κασκέλλιος Ἀριστοτέλης ΝΑṆ[–]
[ἐφ’] ὧν ὸ ṿεῶς ἐγένετο καὶ ἀφ[ιερώθη].
86 SEG ix, 189 = G. Oliverio, art. cit. (n. 84), 230, no. 9b, 9–12.
87 Compare the inscription on the Arch of Hadrian at Athens, discussed in Panhellenion I, 93.
88 IG v, 1, 39, 24–5; 69, 1; 70, 1; 71, col. iii, 9–10, 13, 19, 22, 26, 30; SEG xi, 554 (cf. 526). Identification: Woodward, art. cit. (n. 37), 258. Date: id., 258 (c.150); Chrimes, op. cit. (n. 29), 467 (c.162/3).
89 Woodward, ibid. The Cascellii at Ephesus (SIG 3 833, 14) and Blaundus (SEG xiv, 617) probably also derived their nomen from a Roman businessman; see above, n. 83.
90 Robert, op. cit. (n. 80).
91 But note IG v, 1, 5, a Spartan proxeny decree of mid-Hellenistic date for a Cyrenaean.
92 L. Bacchielli, Arch. Class, xxxi (1979), 158–64, drawing on Robert, L., AEphem 1969, 30–4Google Scholar, and Moretti, L., Epigraphica xxxi (1969), 139–43.Google Scholar
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94 Panhellenion I, 99–100.
95 Benjamin, A. S., ‘Two dedications in Athens to archons of the Panhellenion’, Hesperia xxxvii (1968), 338–44CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Oliver, 101, no. 10.
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98 Bacchielli, art. cit. (n. 92). Mingazzini, P., L'Insula di Giasone Magno a Cirene (1966)Google Scholar; Reynolds, art. cit. (n. 76), 118.
99 Bacchielli, art. cit. (n. 92), 161. Some sculptures are now in the collections of the British Museum: A. Smith, BM Cat. Sculpture 11, nos. 1463 (Pius), 1464 (Marcus), 1465 (Lucius Verus), 1466 (torso of Hadrian). See most recently Huskinson, J., Roman Sculpture from Cyrenaica in the British Museum, CSIR II, i (1975), nos. 73, 77, 79 and 70 respectivelyGoogle Scholar. A portrait of the elder Faustina is in Cyrene Museum: Rosenbaum, E., Cyrenaican Portrait Sculpture (1960), no. 48Google Scholar; for those identified as Jason Magnus, see nos. 68 and 69.
100 Bacchielli, art. cit. (n. 92), 161, tav. Ixiii, 1. See also Stucchi, S., Architettura Cirenaica (1975), 297, fig. 305 and 326, fig. 339.Google Scholar
101 See n. 96.
102 SEG ix, 161 = Moretti, art. cit. (n. 92), no. 5. On the baths, see Goodchild, op. cit. (n. 76), 128–33. On the temple, see R. G. Goodchild, J. M. Reynolds, C. J. Hetherington, PBSR n.s. xiii (1958), 35 = Moretti, ibid. The interior of the cella was at this time adorned with an order of Corinthian columns enveloping the cult statue in an apparently deliberate evocation of the earliest use of the order.
103 See Moretti, L., Olympionikai (1957), 168, no. 889Google Scholar with Moretti, , Epigraphica xxxi (1969), 139–43, no- 7.Google Scholar
104 Moretti, art. cit., no. 6. See Bacchielli, art. cit. (n. 92), 163.
105 See A. Spawforth, ‘Families at Roman Sparta and Epidaurus: Some Prosopographical Notes’, ABSA lxxx (1985), 247–8.
106 e.g. Russell, D. A. and Wilson, N. G., Menander Rhetor (1981), 1, 354, 12 and 19–20Google Scholar; Cassius Dio liii, 27; [Dio Chrys.], Or. xxxvii, 27; Plut., Lyc. 20. 5.
107 SEG ix, 172; see Oliver, 101. The marked emphasis on Apollo Ktistes in inscriptions of this period is a new development.
108 Goodchild, op. cit. (n. 76), 109–28; fig. 13, no. 14.
109 Pugliese Carratelli, art. cit. (n. 83), 361.
110 Temple of Isis: SEG ix, 174 = Vidman, L., Sylloge Inscriptionum Religionis Isiacae et Sarapiacae (1969), 336, no. 805CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See Goodchild, op. cit. (n. 76), 122. Temple of Apollo Nymphagetes: SEG ix, 175; Goodchild, loc. cit., cautions that the inscription is not necessarily in situ.
111 Goodchild, 127, 8; fig. 13, no. 26.
112 SEG ix, 176.
113 E. Groag, RE xvii, 2, 1400, s.v. N. Marcellianus = SEG ix, 174, 175 with p. 121.
114 For this and the observations made in the following paragraph see Stucchi, op. cit. (n. 100) under discussions of the individual sites, and the remarks made in the general discussion of architecture at Cyrene in this period, pp. 318–29. See also J. B. Ward-Perkins, PBSR n.s. xin (1958), 193 on the second-century temple in the Caesareum at Cyrene.
115 See Panhellenion I, 102–3.
116 Stucchi, op. cit. (n. 100), 244. Sear, F., Libyan Studies vi (1974–1975), 9Google Scholar supports Stucchi's view for buildings at Sidi Khrebish.
117 Ward-Perkins, art. cit. (n. 114), 194.
118 Ward-Perkins, J. B., Roman Imperial Architecture2 (1982)Google Scholar contains many references to the impact of the marble trade upon provincial architecture. See also S. Walker, AA 1979, 103–29. Ward-Perkins's articles on detailed aspects of the marble trade are collected in a forthcoming volume.
119 Ward-Perkins, op. cit. (n. 118), 368, who observes, ‘it would not be surprising if further research were to reveal architectural links, too, with Athens and with mainland Greece’.
120 Walker, art. cit. (n. 118), on the export of Pentelic marble elements. See Day, J., An Economic History of Athens under Roman Domination (1942), 197 and 203Google Scholar for exploitation of the Pentelic marble quarries at this period.
121 Strong, D. E.,Libyan Studies iv (1972–1973), 27–35Google Scholar, pls. VII–x. Some of his identifications are disputed by Bonanno, A., Libyan Studies viii (1976–1977), 19–25.Google Scholar
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123 For instances of such diplomacy note Arr., Anab. II, 5, 9 (Mallus and Alexander) and Lawrence, A. W., Greek Aims in Fortification (1979), 118Google Scholar, citing an unpublished Hellenistic inscription which refers to diplomacy, on the basis of alleged syngeneia, between Dorian Cytinium and the Ptolemies and Seleucids.
124 See Kahrstedt, U., Das wirtschaftliche Gesicht Griechenlands in der Kaiserzeit (1954), 162–74Google Scholar. Outside links: Kahrstedt, ibid., 78, with Spawforth, ABSA Lxxix (1984), 2487–58 passim (Epidaurus); SEG xvi, 258b and ILS 8863 with Kent, J. H., Corinth 8. iii. The Inscriptions 1926–1950 (1966), no. 224 (Corinth)Google Scholar; Spawforth, , JHS cii (1982), 274–5 (Methone).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
125 Note the intrusion of figures from local mythology into the language of civic administration: e.g. the Argive gerousia styled as η αφó Δαναοῦ κι γφερμησΤρας κι Λυγκεος(IG ivI, 579; SEG xvi, 259; Vollgraff, W., Mnemosyne xLvii, old series (1919), 263 ff., no. 28Google Scholar), the bestowal of Περσέος καὶ Ήρακλέος τιμαί (IG iv, 606, 157ndash;16; BCH XXVIII (1904), 260, no. 2), and the civic title ‘new Hypermestra’ borne by an Argive matron (SEG xvi, 259). Note too the Roman statues of Hypermestra (IG vr, 656) and Danaus, the last paid for by a local notable (Vollgraff, art. cit., 165–6, no. 12; for Tib. Claudius Antigonus see BCH cii (1978), 784). Local families also claimed descent from Perseus and Phoroneus: Spawforth, art. cit. (n. 105), 251–2.
126 Paus. vi, 16, 4.
127 Paus. ii, 17, 6.
128 Aqueduct: W. Vollgraff, BCH xliv (1920), 224; P. Aupert, BCH cvii (1983), 8497–50. Nymphaeum: Vollgraff, BCH LXVIII–IX (1946), 3977–400, nos. 77–8; BCH LXXXII (1958), 516 ff. See also Ginouves, R., Laodicée du Lykos: le Nymphée (1969), 141Google Scholar, and Le Théâtron à Gradins Droits et I'Odéon d'Argos (1972), 2347–6Google Scholar, and a brief survey by S. Walker in the forth coming proceedings of a conference held at the Society of Antiquaries of London in March 1985, entitled Rome in the Greek World: an archaeological approach.
129 See Panhellenion I, 98.
130 For the statue type, see Wegner, M., Das Bildnis des Kaisers Hadrians (1956), 105, 115–16Google Scholar; Taf. 14b. For a similar statue found in a Hadrianic nymphaeum at Perge, Pamphylia, see (with recent bibl.) Alföldi-Rosenbaum, J. Inan-E., Römische und frühbyzantinische Porträtplastik aus der Turhei (1979), 95–7Google Scholar, no. 45 with Taf. 38. 1, 39. 2, 40. 1–2.
131 Vollgraff, art. cit. (n. 128, 1946), no. 9, 401, fig. 3.
132 Paus. II, 19, 4–24, 6. For Pausanias's attitudes in general see now Habicht, op. cit. (n. 45), esp. 124 ff. Much of the following summary is based upon preliminary reports of excavations in the section of BCH devoted to ‘Rapports sur les travaux de I'École Française en Grèce’. The buildings and inscriptions in question are now undergoing detailed study by the excavators.
133 BCH CII (1978), 784, E 92; 782, fig. 19. For the baths near the theatre, see most recently BCH CVI (1982), 637–43, and those near the Agora, BCH CVII (1983), 849–53; plan, p. 848, and CVIII (1984), 846–9.
134 BCH XCIX (1975), 703; CI (1976), 753; CI (1977), 672–3
135 IG IV, 593; for Tib. Claudius Tychicus, see SEG XVI, 253.
136 BCH LXXVIII (1954), 160 ff.; LXXXI (1957), 663 ff.; XCIX (1975), 73; CI (1976), 753; CI (1977), 6727–3 CII (1978), 798.
137 For the grave, see BCH CII (1978), 677–8. For the shrine, BCH CIV (1980), 694; 697, fig. 8. Plut., Pyrrhus 32, 8; Paus. II, 19, 6.
138 Piérart-J.-P., M. Thalmann, Etudes Argiennes, BCH Suppl. (1980), 4597–60Google Scholar. See also BCH cv (1981), 9047–6.
139 Ginouvès, op. cit. (n. 128, 1972), 133–41 (mosaics); 203–4 (date); 204–9 (function).
140 Panhellenion I, 85–6, nos. 32 and 42.
141 W Vollgraff, BCH XXIII (1904), 421–4, no. 6 = L. Robert, BCH CI (1977), 1197–32.
142 Philostr., VS 568 and 524; see Avotins, I., CalStClassAnt IV (1971), 677–71Google Scholar and Robert, art. cit. (n. 141), 125.
143 Note especially IG XII, 9, 4, 11. 7–8 (Carystus and Alabanda); also Strab. IX, 4, 2.
144 cf. Dio Chrys., Or. XXXIII, 51; XXXIV, 10; above, n. 122.
145 Note the remarks of Andrei, op. cit. (n. 40), 132 ff., together with the review by A. Spawforth below.
146 Panhellenion I, 85.
147 Without attempting a complete survey, note the coins struck by Tabae (in 235−8) and Selge (in 249−50) celebrating homonoia with Sparta: respectively Babélon, E., Inventaire sommaire de la collection Waddington (1898), 428, no. 7052 with Robert, loc. cit. (n. 63)Google Scholar; Gaebler, H., Zeitschrift für Numismatik XXXIX (1929), 294–5 with Pl III no 6Google Scholar; also the homonoia with Delphi commemorated by Side under Valerian I: BMC Lycia 297, no. 128 with the observations of Weiss, P., Chiron XI (1981), 322Google Scholar. Note too the continuing reference to syngeneiai on the third-century coinages, as in the case of Alabanda (above n. 18).
148 For the third century see Millar, F., ‘P. Herennius Dexippus: the Greek World and the Third-Century Invasions’, JRS LIX (1969), 12ndash;29Google Scholar; also the remarks of L. Robert, art. cit. (n. 21), 17.
149 Epp. LVII (ed. J.-P. Migne), 76.
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