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Phiale of Megara information


Reproduction of the inscription, after L. H. Jeffery, The local scripts of archaic Greece (Oxford, 1961).[1] Note the B-like glyph for E in the sixth letter from the right.

The Phiale of Megara is an ancient Greek silver phiale, a libation vessel, found in a tomb in Upper Macedonia near present-day Kozani.[2] It bears a one-line inscription in Doric Greek, which reads: "Αθαναιας : ιαρα : τας Μhεγαρο̅ι" ("sacred to the Athena of Megara").[1]

On the basis of the reference to Megara and its well-known sanctuary of Athena, its provenance is usually assumed to be of that city, situated in southern Greece,[3][4][5] and it is dated to the early part of the fifth century. Among the characteristics of its writing system is an archaic, B-like glyph shape for the letter E (epsilon), a feature found regularly in early inscriptions from Megara and nearby Corinth.[6][7]

However, James L. O'Neil,[8] following Hammond and Griffith,[9] conjectures that the inscription could also have been written locally in Macedonia. In this case, it would constitute the earliest known example of a local Greek dialect written in Macedonia, and would confirm the hypothesis – derived from another archaeological find, the Pella curse tablet – that Macedonian Greek was of Doric nature. O'Neil argues that there is evidence that a place in Macedonia was also called Megara, something that is also supported by Plutarch's records,[10] and that the inscription fails to display the specifically Megarian archaic shape of Epsilon. However, the notes by L. H. Jefferey for LSAG do show just this archaic Megarian form.[1]

Of the linguistic forms in the inscription, the word ἰαρά ('sacred') can be identified unambiguously as Doric. The archaic form of the name of the Goddess Athena, Ἀθαναία(ς), is less distinctive and could occur in any dialect except Ionic, while the genitive article form τᾶς points to any dialect except Ionic and Attic. The form of the name Megara, with initial mh-, reflects its etymological origin *sm- and is found frequently in inscriptions from Megara but also elsewhere.[8]

  1. ^ a b c Poinikastas, database of Greek inscriptions
  2. ^ It is described in Supplementum Epigraphicum Graecum (SEG) vol. 13, no. 306; in N. G. Hammond and G. T. Griffith, A history of Macedonia, Oxford: Clarendon 1979, Vol.2, p.96; in T. Rizakis and G. Touratsoglou, Epigraphes Ano Makedonia, Athens 1986, #2; and in L. H. Jefferey, The local scripts of archaic Greece, Oxford 1961, #173.2. See also Poinikastas database of Greek inscriptions, Megara #332 [1]
  3. ^ Poinikastas data base, citing Jeffery, The local scripts of archaic Greece.
  4. ^ Strong, Donald E. (1979). Greek and Roman gold and silver plate. London: Methuen. p. 57. ISBN 0-416-72510-4.
  5. ^ Gill, David, "Plate, precious (Greek and Roman)", in: Oxford Classical Dictionary, edited by Simon Hornblower and Antony Spawforth, 3rd ed, Oxford 1996.
  6. ^ Jefferey, The local scripts of archaic Greece, p. 132f.
  7. ^ Poinikastas, database of Greek inscriptions
  8. ^ a b O'Neil, James L., Doric elements in Macedonian inscriptions, Glotta 82 (2007): 192–210. p.198.
  9. ^ N. G. Hammond and G. T. Griffith, A history of Macedonia, Oxford: Clarendon 1979, Vol.2, p.96
  10. ^ Plutarch Pyrros 2,2

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