i. | Geographical area | Attica with Salamis |
ii. | Region | Attica |
iii. | Site | Athens |
Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/330Download as
CAPInv. 330: thera[peutai]
I. LOCATION
II. NAME
i. | Full name (original language) | θερα[πευταί] (IG II3 (4) (1) 660, l. 1) |
ii. | Full name (transliterated) | thera[peutai] |
III. DATE
i. | Date(s) | i AD |
IV. NAME AND TERMINOLOGY
ii. | Name elements |
|
V. SOURCES
i. | Source(s) | IG II3 (4) (1) 660 (i AD) |
Note |
Ed. pr.: Hesperia 30 (1961): 273, no. 113 Other publications: Agora 18, C117; SEG 21: 776; SEG 39: 229. BE 1962: no. 107 |
|
Online Resources |
SEG 21: 776 IG II3 (4) (1) 660 English translation |
|
i.a. | Source type(s) | Epigraphic source(s) |
i.b. | Document(s) typology & language/script | Greek dedication to Asklepios and Hygeia, probably accompanied by a list of officials and members. |
i.c. | Physical format(s) | Large cylindrical marble monument broken on all sides, 0.25x0.24m. |
ii. | Source(s) provenance | Found built in the wall of a modern house, W of the Panathenaic Way and SW of the Eleusinion in 1939, now in the Athenian Agora (I 5717). |
VII. ORGANIZATION
iv. | Officials | Life long priest (ἱερε[ὺς διὰ βίου?], hiere[us dia biou?], l. 2) |
IX. MEMBERSHIP
ii. | Gender | Men |
Note | The surviving names of members and officials are male names. | |
iii. | Age | Adults |
iv. | Status | Citizen |
X. ACTIVITIES
iii. | Worship | The deities to which the monument is dedicated are restored as [Ἀσκληπιῶι καὶ Ὑγιείαι], [Asklepioi kai Hygieiai], probably influenced by the perception of associating therapeutai with Asklepios. |
Deities worshipped | Asklepios and Hygieia (?) |
XII. NOTES
i. | Comments | The ed. pr. restored θερα[πευθέντες], thera[peuthentes], implying that this is a dedication by private individuals. The restoration thera[peutai?] was envisaged already in SEG 21: 776. |
XIII. EVALUATION
i. | Private association | Probable |
Note | Although the restoration of the term is quite extensive, I think it probably denotes an association: its exact nature and characteristics remain debatable. |