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Garigliano bowl

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Garigliano bowl is a small impasto bowl with bucchero glaze likely to have been produced around 500 BC, with an early Latin inscription written in a form of the western Greek or Etruscan alphabet.[1] It was found along the river Garigliano, between Lazio and Campania, in the vicinity of ancient Minturnae (now Minturno, Italy), in the ancient territory occupied by the Aurunci.[1]

A: AHUIDIES
B: NEI[- - -]PARIMEDESOMKOMMEOISSOKIOISTRIVOIADDEOMDUO

As for word division, NEI PARI MED ESOM KOM MEOIS SOKIOIS is clear; the rest is controversial. Brent Vine, however, offers the following interpretation:[2]

Archaic Latin text: NEI PARI MED ESOM KOM MEOIS SOKIOIS TRIFOS AUDEOM DUO[M]

Classical Latin version: nē pare (nōlī capere) mē! sum cum meīs sociīs tribus Audiōrum duōrum

English translation: Do not take me! I am with my three companions (property) of the two Audii

References

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  1. ^ a b Cf. page 200, BALDI (2002)
  2. ^ Vine, Brent (1998). "Remarks on the Archaic Latin "Garigliano Bowl" Inscription" (PDF). Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 121: 257–262. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2012. Retrieved 13 August 2014.

Sources

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