Stable URL: http://ancientassociations.ku.dk/assoc/1909Download as 
PDFLast Updated on 21 Jun 2019
 
        
        
                
                
                    
                            | i. | Geographical area | Aegean Islands | 
                            | ii. | Region | Kos | 
                            | iii. | Site | Kephalos (ancient deme of Isthmos) | 
                  
              
                
                
                    
                            | i. | Full name (original language) | οἱ θιασῖται (IG XII.4 3282 l. 1) | 
                            | ii. | Full name (transliterated) | hoi thiasitai | 
                  
              
                
                
                    
                | i. | Date(s) | 55 (?)  - 200  (?) AD | 
             
              
              
                
                
                    
                            | i. | Source(s) | IG XII.4 3282 (55-200 AD) | 
                            |  | Note | Segre, ICos EV 346a 
 NSER 680
 | 
                            |  | Online Resources | EV 346a | 
                            | i.a. | Source type(s) | Epigraphic source(s) | 
                            | i.b. | Document(s) typology & language/script | Funerary inscription of the thiasitai. Greek.
 The inscription was added to an already inscribed marble slab, bearing a dedication of a temple to the emperor Claudius by the demos of Isthmos.
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                            | i.c. | Physical format(s) | Marble slab. H. 20-27 x W. 34 x Th. 7 cm. | 
                            | ii. | Source(s) provenance | ancient Kephalos, by the church of Aghios Georgios in the bay of Kamares; necropolis of Isthmos. | 
                  
              
                
                
                    
                            | i. | Comments | The association honoured the deceased here in the dative after his death. | 
                  
              
                
                
                    
                            | i. | Private association | Probable | 
                            |  | Note | The cultic element in the name (thiasitai) and the personal element ([syn] Menandroi Thrasymachou) would point towards a private association, whose durability however escapes us. |