i. | Geographical area | Attica with Salamis |
ii. | Region | Attica |
iii. | Site | Piraeus |
Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/362Download as
Last Updated on 23 Feb 2017
CAPInv. 362: thiasos [E]tionidon
I. LOCATION
II. NAME
i. | Full name (original language) | θίασος [Ἐ]τιονιδῶν (IG I3 1016, l. 2) |
ii. | Full name (transliterated) | thiasos [E]tionidon |
III. DATE
i. | Date(s) | f. v (?) BC |
IV. NAME AND TERMINOLOGY
ii. | Name elements |
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iii. | Descriptive terms | θίασος, thiasos | ||
Note | thiasos: IG I3 1016, l. 2 |
V. SOURCES
i. | Source(s) | IG I3 1016 (first half V BC ?) |
Note | Ed. pr.: Polemon 1 (1929): 107, no. 2, SEG 10: 330 | |
Online Resources |
IG I3 1016 SEG 10: 330 |
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i.a. | Source type(s) | Epigraphic source(s) |
i.b. | Document(s) typology & language/script | Greek dedication (?) |
i.c. | Physical format(s) | Rectangular base measuring 0.27x1.06x0.41m. |
ii. | Source(s) provenance | It was found in a house in the district of Kaminia, between Piraeus and Moschato. |
X. ACTIVITIES
iii. | Worship | Given the possible dedication to Heracles, worship by the group may be supposed. |
Deities worshipped | Herakles (?) |
XII. NOTES
i. | Comments | The inscription contains a three-bar sigma. |
iii. | Bibliography |
Arnaoutoglou, I. (2003), Thusias heneka kai sunousias. Private religious associations in Hellenistic Athens. Athens: 64. Ferguson, W. (1944), ‘The Attic orgeones’, HThR 37: 61-140. Guarducci, M. (1935), ‘Orgeoni e tiasoti’, RFIC 14: 332-40. Ismard, P. (2010), La cité des réseaux. Athènes et ses associations VIe – Ier siècle av. J.-C. Paris: 55, 235. Lambert, S. (1993), The phratries of Attica. Ann Arbor, Michigan. Lambert, S. (1999), ‘IG II2 2345, thiasoi of Herakles and the Salaminioi again’, ZPE 125: 93-130, esp. 125-8. Parker, R. (1996), Athenian religion: A history. Oxford. |
XIII. EVALUATION
i. | Private association | Possible |
Note | It is uncertain whether the group was a private one or it was associated with any public subdivision. The ending in -idai suggests a genos-like group for Guarducci 1935, who further argued that the thiasos was a section of a phratry. Ferguson 1944: 133-4 objected on the ground that if this thiasos was part of a phratry it could not have been a genos. He further suggests that the group was one of individuals living in Etioneia grouped together to venerate Herakles. See also Lambert 1993: 88 who considers it as an Heraklean thiasos associated with a phratry. |