i. | Geographical area | Eastern Asia Minor |
ii. | Region | Cilicia |
iii. | Site | Flaviopolis |
Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/1015Download as
Last Updated on 23 May 2019
CAPInv. 1015: to euteles synergion ton gnapheon
I. LOCATION
II. NAME
i. | Full name (original language) | τὸ εὐτελὲς συνέργιον τῶν γναφέων (Hicks 1890: 236, no. 1, ll. 1-3) |
ii. | Full name (transliterated) | to euteles synergion ton gnapheon |
III. DATE
i. | Date(s) | iii - Byz. |
IV. NAME AND TERMINOLOGY
ii. | Name elements |
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iii. | Descriptive terms | συνέργιον, synergion | ||
Note | synergion: Hicks 1890: 236, no. 1, l. 2 |
V. SOURCES
i. | Source(s) | Hicks 1890: 236, no. 1 (iii-Byz.) |
Note |
Other editions/commentaries: AGRW Dittmann-Schöne VI.8.1 GRA II no. 153 |
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Online Resources |
AGRW ID# 3322 |
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i.a. | Source type(s) | Epigraphic source(s) |
i.b. | Document(s) typology & language/script | Dedication in Greek by the association of fullers |
i.c. | Physical format(s) | Mosaic inscription |
ii. | Source(s) provenance | The inscription was found in the centre of a tessellated pavement in a reed cottage in Kars-Bazaar (modern Kadirli), probably from the floor of an early church (Hicks 1890). The exact location in the village is unknown. |
X. ACTIVITIES
iii. | Worship | The association of the fullers dedicated for its own well-being and the forgiveness of sins an offering (karpophoria, ll. 4-5) to a god, whom they address with the term despotes (ll. 5-6). The group is characterised as εὐτελής (euteles, ll. 1-2), a typical expression for humility in early Christianity. The members call themselves achreioi douloi (ll. 6-7), worthless slaves. The phrase may be an allusion to Luke 17,10 and Matth. 25,30 (Hicks 1890: 236). The members of this professional association seem to be all Christians, because the dedication is made in the name of the entire group (Dittmann-Schöne 2010: 106). As Hicks 1890: 236 states, "it is interesting to see these trade-guilds, so common under the Empire in Asia Minor, passing unchanged into the Christian Church." |
Deities worshipped | God of the Christians |
XII. NOTES
i. | Comments | Hicks 1890: 237 dates the inscription to the third century AD (the same dating by Poland 1932: 1362 and GRA II, AGRW, who recently suggests to place the inscription in the second or third century AD because of the contemporary use of the term synergion for a professional association in other Cilician inscriptions, cf. GRA II 438-439). Dagron and Feissel 1987: 90, note 14 and Dittmann-Schöne 2010: 106 date the inscription later, to the fourth or fifth century AD. |
ii. | Poland concordance | Poland B *87 |
iii. | Bibliography |
Dagron, G., and Feissel, D. (1987), Inscriptions de Cilicie. Paris. Harland, P.A. (2014), Greco-Roman Associations: Texts, Translations, and Commentary, II. North Coast of the Black Sea, Asia Minor, Berlin, Boston. Hicks, E.L. (1890), ‘Inscriptions from Eastern Cilicia’, JHS 11: 236-54, esp. 236, no. 1. Dittmann-Schöne, I. (2010), Die Berufsvereine in den Städten des kaiserzeitlichen Kleinasiens. 2nd. ed. Regensburg. 260. Poland, F. (1932), ‘συνὲργιον’, RE2 4.2: 1361-2. |
XIII. EVALUATION
i. | Private association | Certain |
Note | The name of the association and the documented activity suggest a private association. | |
ii. | Historical authenticity | Certain |