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Dedications to Zeus Hypsistos in Beroea1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 September 2012
Extract
In a garden, stated to have been formerly a Turkish cemetery, belonging to Ἰωάννης Ὑφαντίδης, situated on a hill to the SW of Beroea, part of a grey stone column, broken away at the bottom (fig. I); found with a considerable number of ancient marbles and grey (granite ?) stone columns, many of which were subsequently buried in a spot said to be to the left of the walk leading to the back-door of the house.
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- Research Article
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- Copyright
- Copyright © J. M. R. Cormack 1941. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies
Footnotes
Examined during an epigraphical journey to Bottiaea in the autumn of 1936 in the company of Mr. C. F. Edson of Harvard University. I am indebted to Mr. M. N. Tod and Professor A. Cameron for some helpful suggestions in preparing this paper.
References
2 First published by Rostovtzeff, in Bull.de l'inst. arch, russe à Constantinople (in Russian) iv, 3, 1899, 170–1Google Scholar, no. 2; reproduced in Rev. arch. xxxvii, 1900, 489, no. 131Google Scholar; republished as new by Orlandos, Ἀχ Δελτ., ii, 1916, 148–150, no. 4; cf. Robert, L., Rev. phil. xiii, 1939, 131–2Google Scholar.
3 Delacoulonche, , ‘Mémoire sur le berceau de la puissance macédonienne des bords de l'Haliacmon et ceux de l'Axius,’ Archives des missions scientifiques et littéraires viii, 1859, 264Google Scholar, no. 76, reproduced by Demitsas, Ἡ μακεδονία, Athens, 1896, 72–3, no. 64, on which Demitsas remarks: ‘ἀποβαίνει ἀδủνατον νὰ εἰκἀση τις ποἰο ἦν ἡ Ếννοια τοῦ περιεχομένου ὡς ḗγγιστα.’