Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/738Download as
PDFLast Updated on 03 Mar 2017
i. |
Geographical area |
Thrace
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ii. |
Region |
Aegean Thrace
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iii. |
Site |
Abdera
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i. |
Association with unknown name |
U-THR-011
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i. |
Source(s) |
I.Thrac.Aeg. E18 (iii AD)
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Note |
See also: Jaccottet II no. 35; GRA I 83; AGRW 60
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Online Resources |
I.Thrac.Aeg. E18 and AGRW ID# 2554
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i.a. |
Source type(s) |
Epigraphic source(s)
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i.b. |
Document(s) typology & language/script |
Dedication in Greek of the archiboukolos Gaius Cassius Sextus to Dionysos and the synmystai.
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i.c. |
Physical format(s) |
Monolithic limestone pediment (h. 0.43 and l. 0.81 at its base), with one central and two small side acroteria. The inscription was engraved in the pediment's tympanon.
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ii. |
Source(s) provenance |
Seen in 1937 by Bousquet at the basement of a private house at the village of Bouloustra (modern village of Abdera, appr. 5 km to the N of the archaeological site). According to the owners of the house, the stone originated from the acropolis of ancient Abdera. No recorded autopsy since then; present whereabouts unknown.
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i. |
Archaeological remains |
The acropolis of Hellenistic and Roman Abdera is located on Polystylon Hill; no important architectural remains of these periods have as yet been reported there.
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ii. |
References to buildings/objects |
The text mentions a μάγαρον, magaron.
The physical format of the stone on which the inscription is engraved (small pediment, see above section V.i.c) indicate an entrance to a small structure; but the actual architectural form of the structure itself evades us. In the past, scholars have suggested a Dionysiac grotto (Nilsson 1957: 53, no. 47), a grotto or a small chapel (Bousquet 1938: 53). But modern references are more generic and refer to a place that, regardless of its physical appearance, served the cultic activities of the association; thus Nigdelis 2006: 132-3: a place of sacrifice and possibly of initiation ceremonies; GRA I 83: 'it could be translated "sanctuary", "shrine" or "grotto", but its sense is clearly indicative of a meeting place, most likely for rituals'; Jaccottet 2003: 73-4: 'le terme ne contient aucune obligation architecturale... cette structure devait servir de lieu d'initiation'.
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ii. |
Leadership |
ἀρχιβούκολος, archiboukolos (ll. 3-4: Γ(άϊος) Κάσσιος Σέξτος, G(aios) Kassios Sextos).
According to GRA I 83 (following Bousquet 1938: 54, no. 2) the fact that the archiboukolos refers to the other members of the association as synmystai and not as boukoloi may indicate a superior category of initiate and not a leadership role. Jaccottet 2003: 73 also notes that the reference to mystai and not to boukoloi may indicate that the title has gradually lost its original functional meaning.
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iii. |
Members |
συνμύσται, synmystai, l. symmystai (l. 5)
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ii. |
Realty |
The association possessed a μάγαρον, magaron (l. 6).
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iv. |
Status |
The only person named was a Roman citizen.
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iii. |
Worship |
The existence of a μάγαρον, magaron, indicates cultic activities, see above section VI.ii.
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i. |
Comments |
No name and no descriptive term occur in the text. But references to an ἀρχιβούκολος, archiboukolos (1. 4), to a μάγαρον, magaron (1. 6), and to συνμύσται, synmystai (l. 5), point to the cult of Dionysos.
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iii. |
Bibliography |
Bousquet, J. (1938), ‘Inscription d'Abdère’, BCH 62: 51-4. Jaccottet, A.-F. (2003), Choisir Dionysos. Les associations dionysiaques ou la face cachée du dionysisme. 2 vols. Zürich: 73-4, no. 35. Kloppenborg, J.S., and Ascough, R.S. (2011), Greco-Roman Associations: Texts, Translations, and Commentary. I. Attica, Central Greece, Macedonia, Thrace. Göttingen: 381-2, no. 83. Nilsson, M.P. (1957), The Dionysiac Mysteries of the Hellenistic and Roman Age. Lund.
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i. |
Private association |
Certain
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Note |
A more permanent associative organisation is indicated by the presence of the term ἀρχιβούκολος, archiboukolos.
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