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Last Updated on 11 Jun 2019

Author: Stella Skaltsa

CAPInv. 59: to koinon ton boukolon

I. LOCATION

i. Geographical area Aegean Islands
ii. Region Euboea
iii. Site Eretria

II. NAME

i. Full name (original language) τὸ κοινὸν τῶν βουκόλ<ω>ν (IG XII.9 262)
ii. Full name (transliterated) to koinon ton boukolon

III. DATE

i. Date(s) ii / i BC

IV. NAME AND TERMINOLOGY

ii. Name elements
Cultic:boukoloi (herdsmen): the term often refers to male members of Dionysiac communities, taking part in dance performances (Lucian, Saltatione 79; schol. Lycoph. 212).

Etymologically the name relates to:
1. shepherds in mythical stories who have been converted to servants of the god by witnessing a miracle (Eur., Bacch. 660-774)
2. the transformation of Dionysos from human to animal form, especially as a bull (Plut., Quaest. Graec. 299b).

According to LSJ9, boukolos stands for: 1. a worshipper of Dionysos in bull-form, 2. a herdsman, 'a man tending kine'.

In Greek novels the boukoloi are depicted as nomadic bandits active in the Nile Delta (Achilleus Tatios 3.9, 21, 4.12; Heliodoros 1.5-6; cf. Rutherford 2000).
Other:The funerary nature of the inscription does not reveal much about the identity of the boukoloi, that is whether the name underlines a cultic element in their identity (followers of Dionysos) or reveals their status/ occupation (herdsmen).
iii. Descriptive terms κοινόν, koinon

V. SOURCES

i. Source(s) IG XII.9 262 (ii/i BC)
Note Edd. pr. Kourouniotis 1911: 37-8 no. 33 (Fig. 34).


Online Resources IG XII.9 262
i.a. Source type(s) Epigraphic source(s)
i.b. Document(s) typology & language/script Funerary inscription in Greek of Zopyros, son of Asklepiades. The name of the deceased is in the accusative in accordance therefore to the formula of funerary inscriptions as attested in Tanagra (Boiotia).
i.c. Physical format(s) Marble stele (H. 37 x W. 25 x Th. 10 cm)
ii. Source(s) provenance The stele along with other funerary stelai was found built into the side walls of graves north of the modern city of Eretria (Kourouniotis 1911: 37 nos. 33-46).

VI. BUILT AND VISUAL SPACE

i. Archaeological remains Western necropolis of ancient Eretria.

IX. MEMBERSHIP

v. Relations According to the editor of IG XII.9 Zopyros, son of Asklepiades, may have been the son of Asklepiades, son of Herakleitos, the latter honoured by a synodos (IG XII.9 239, l. 21; CAPInv. 425).

X. ACTIVITIES

iv. Honours/Other activities The koinon set up a funerary stele for Zopyros, son of Asklepiades.

XII. NOTES

iii. Bibliography Gordon, R. L. (2014), 'Boukoloi', in H. Cancik and H. Schneider (edd.), Brill’s New Pauly. Brill Online.Antiquity volumes.

Kourouniotis, K. (1911), 'Ερετρικαί επιγραφαί', AEph: 1-38.

Rutherford, I. (2000), 'The Genealogy of the Boukoloi: How Greek Literature Appropriated an Egyptian Narrative-Motif', JHS 120: 106-21.

XIII. EVALUATION

i. Private association Certain
Note The name (koinon ton boukolon) suggests a private association. The commemoration of a deceased member points to a formal group rather than an ad hoc group.