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                <title><idno xml:id="PHRC002" type="filename">PHRC002</idno><rs type="title">: Dedication to Arsinoe Philadelphos, Kaunos</rs>
                <rs type="region">Karia</rs>
                    <rs type="time">(270-240 BC)</rs>
                    <location n="36.8251,28.623"/>
                    <rs type="textType" n="space.xml#_dedication">Dedication</rs></title>
                    <author>Stefano Caneva, on 16-11-2016</author>
                      
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                <authority>Practicalities of Hellenistic Ruler Cults, Marie Curie PISCOPIA project no. PISC14IGRU, University of Padova (2015-2017), FNRS project no. 98368 (2017-2020). The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Commission, Seventh Framework Programme, under Grant Agreement n° 600376 (2015-2017), and from the Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (FNRS), Belgium (2017-2020).</authority>
                 <availability>
                    <p>Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License <ref target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0"/>unless otherwise stated.</p>	
                    <p>All citation, reuse or distribution of this work must contain somewhere a link back to the URL <ref target="www.phrc.it">www.phrc.it</ref> and the filename, as well as the date of consultation (see Licences for details of how to cite).</p>
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            <sourceDesc>
                <msDesc>
                    <msIdentifier>
                        <repository>Kaunos, Excavation storehouse</repository>
                        <idno>Inv. No. 70/44</idno>
                    </msIdentifier>
                    <physDesc>
                        <objectDesc>
                            <supportDesc>
                                <support>
                                    <objectType ref="space.xml#_block">Block</objectType>
                                    <objectType n="preservation">Block of grey marble, broken on the left-hand side, originally c. 33 cm large. The bottom and rear faces are rough, while the upper face is worked with regular thin lines. The right side is smooth. The block was certainly not self-standing, but placed in front of, and below other stones, to compose a structure, probably an altar.</objectType>
                                    <material ref="space.xml#_marble">Grey marble</material> 
                                  <dimensions>
                                        <height unit="cm">Height: 26</height> 
                                        <width unit="cm">Width: 22</width>
                                        <depth unit="cm">Depth: 15</depth>
                                        
                                    </dimensions>
                                </support>
                            </supportDesc>
                            <layoutDesc>
                                <layout><p>The two lines occupy the centre of the stone. The position of the inscription suggests that the lost part of the block was about one third of its total width. </p></layout>
                            </layoutDesc>

                        </objectDesc>
                        <handDesc>
                            <handNote><p>Letters of modest quality from the reign of Ptolemy II, with thickening at the end of the long bars.</p>
                            <p>Letter height between <height unit="cm" n="Ο">0.8</height> and <height unit="cm" n="Ρ, Φ">1.2 cm</height>.</p></handNote>

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                    <history>
                        <origin>
                            <origPlace ref="http://bit.ly/PHRC_geoNames">Kaunos</origPlace>
                            <origDate notAfter="-0240" notBefore="-0270">Between 270 and 240 BC</origDate>
                            <desc>Justification: letter shape and formulary</desc>
                        </origin>
                        <provenance type="found">Found at Kaunos, in the <placeName ref="http://bit.ly/PHRC_geoNames">theatre</placeName></provenance>
                       
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            <langUsage>
                <language ident="eng">English</language>
                <language ident="grc">Ancient Greek</language>
                <language ident="lat">Latin</language>
                <language ident="fre">French</language>
                <language ident="ger">German</language>
                <language ident="gre">Modern Greek</language>
                <language ident="ita">Italian</language>
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            <div type="bibliography" xml:lang="en">
                <head>Bibliography</head>
                
 <p>Text constituted from: I.Kaunos 54.</p>		
<p>Other editions: </p>		
<p>See also: Caneva 2014; Caneva - Bricault 2019.</p>		
<p>Images: I.Kaunos, p. 246, no. 54.</p>
<p>Further bibliography: Hauben 2013.</p>
<p>Online record: <ref target="https://goo.gl/sCwNAQ">PHI</ref></p> 
                
            </div>
            
              <div type="textpart" xml:lang="en"> 
                <p>The block was part of a structure dedicated to Arsinoe Philadelphos, probably an altar. The original location is unknown. Two possible options are Aphrodite's sanctuary near the harbour, or the temple of the Egyptian gods, which hosted another dedication to the queen as a member of the ruling couple of the Theoi Adelphoi.</p></div>
            
            <div type="edition" xml:lang="grc"> 
                <head>Text</head>
                <ab>
                  <lb n="1"/>
                    <name type="_dedication" subtype="_genitive">    
                    <persName ref="persons.xml#_Arsinoe_II"><w lemma="Ἀρσινόη" n="Arsinoh">Ἀρσινόης</w></persName> 
                    
                  <lb n="2"/><name type="_epiclesis" ref="divineNames.xml#_Philadelphos"><w lemma="Φιλάδελφος" n="Filadelfos"><supplied reason="lost">Φιλ</supplied>αδέλφου</w></name>
                    </name>
                
                </ab>
            </div>
            
            <div type="apparatus" xml:lang="gr">
                <p></p>
            </div>
            
            <div type="translation" xml:lang="en">
                <head>Translation</head>
                <p>Of Arsinoe Philadelphos</p>
            </div>                
             
             <div type="translation" xml:lang="it">
                <head>Traduzione</head>
                <p>Di Arsinoe Philadelphos
                </p>
            </div>
            
            <div type="translation" xml:lang="fr">
                <head>Traduction</head>
                <p>
                </p>
            </div>
            
           <div type="commentary" xml:lang="en">
                <head>Commentary</head>
                <p>This block provides one of the very numerous specimens of dedications to Arsinoe Philadelphos on small inscribed objects from Egypt and the Aegean world, which make of this queen by far the most frequently attested addressee of ruler cult in the whole Hellenistic period. 
                    In the years between the death of the queen (270 BC) and that of his sibling-husband Ptolemy II (246 BC), cults of Arsinoe Philaldephos spread everywhere the Ptolemies exerted their control and influence in the Aegean world, from Peloponnesos to Cyprus (Caneva 2014). 
                    The presence of Kaunos among the findspots of dedications to Arsinoe is justified by the role this city in particular, and Karia in general, played in the geopolitical interests of the Ptolemies in Asia Minor as well in the recruitment of their officials in the mid-third century (Hauben 2013, p. 43-44).</p>
<p>The treatment of the block surfaces suggests that, in this case, we deal with the inscribed part of a structure composed of various stones, probably an altar. Since the stone was found reused in the theatre, any attempt at identifying its primary context of use must remain a hypothesis. According to Marek (I.Kaunos, p. 246), the altar could have been dedicated in the sanctuary of Aphrodite at the harbour. 
    The sanctuary of the Egyptian gods provides another interesting option, considering that Sarapis and Isis are associated with the Theoi Adelphoi in another dedication from Kaunos (PHRC019<ref target="items.xml#PHRC019"/>; probably from the reign of Ptolemy III).</p>

                
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