Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/510Download as
PDFLast Updated on 09 Jul 2018
i. |
Geographical area |
Macedonia
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ii. |
Region |
Northern Paionia
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iii. |
Site |
Stoboi
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i. |
Full name (original language) |
κολλήγιον (Babamova 2012: no. 100, ll. 4-5)
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ii. |
Full name (transliterated) |
kollegion
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iii. |
Descriptive terms |
κολλήγιον, kollegion
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Note |
kollegion: Babamova 2012: no. 100, ll. 4-5, 7
The transliterated Latin term collegium was common in all sorts of associations in the Greek East.
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i. |
Source(s) |
Babamova 2012: no. 100 (iii AD)
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Note |
Aurelios Seberos, the name of the secunda rudis, suggests a date after the Constitutio Antoniniana of 212 AD. Other editions: SEG 47: 954.
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Online Resources |
SEG 47: 954
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i.a. |
Source type(s) |
Epigraphic source(s)
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i.b. |
Document(s) typology & language/script |
A Greek funerary inscription
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i.c. |
Physical format(s) |
Small undecorated funerary plaque (rather than stele, as the first editors)
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ii. |
Source(s) provenance |
The inscription was found at Mušanci, very close to Stoboi.
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i. |
Archaeological remains |
Nigdelis 2000: 145, tentatively suggests that there may have been a distinct enclosure in a cemetery reserved for members of the gladiatorial association (as was the case in Beroia), which is why there is no reference in the inscription to the weapons used by the deceased during his gladiatorial career.
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ii. |
Leadership |
Aurelios Seberos, προστάτης τοῦ κολληγίου, prostates tou kollegiou (ll. 3-5), was evidently the college's leader.
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ix. |
Privileges |
As so often in the context of associations, the association paid for part of the cost for the funerary monuments of its members.
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i. |
Treasury/Funds |
The funerary monument was paid for partly from the association's own funds (ll. 6-7: ἐκ τοῦ κολληγίου, ek tou kollegiou) and partly from private funds of the leader of the association.
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iv. |
Status |
Given that the leader of the association was a secunda rudis, a second judge in gladiatorial games, this was certainly a gladiatorial association. The first editors of the inscription (Bouley and Proeva 1997) claimed that the members of this gladiatorial association, of the one attested in Beroia (see CAPInv. 512) and of other such associations were never ex-gladiators, unless this was explicitly stated. This view, however, is contradicted by the correct interpretation of the phrase following the name of the deceased: Kaukasos was not a former strategos, supposedly an official of the gladiatorial games as the first editors understood (ll. 5-6: Καυκάσῳ τῷ πρὶν στρατηγῷ, Kaukasoi toi prin strategoi), but simply a gladiator originally named Strategos, who then became known by his professional name Kaukasos (Καυκάσῳ τῷ πρὶν Στρατηγῷ, Kaukasoi toi prin Strategoi); see D. Feissel in An.Ép. 1997: no. 1353 and, independently, Nigdelis 2000: 143-5. The gladiatorial association of Stobi, therefore, consisted both of ex-gladiators and of judges and other ministri of the games.
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iii. |
Bibliography |
Babamova, S. (2012), Inscriptiones Stoborum. Stobi: no 100. Bouley, É., and Proeva, N. (1997), ‘Un secunda rudis président d’un collège à Stobi en Macédoine romaine’, in C. Brixhe (ed.), Poikila Epigraphica, Paris: 83-7. Nigdelis, P.M. (2000), ‘Μακεδονικὰ ἐπιγραφικά’, Tekmeria 5: 133-48.
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i. |
Private association |
Certain
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Note |
This group of gladiatorial professionals at Stobi possessed a collective name and a leader, therefore its nature as a private associations is certain.
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