8.11. Graffiti of a ?pyrrhic dancer
- Description:
- Wall of stage building. The blocks were left rough, with a smooth outline along the edges.
- Text:
- Cut on a small space which has been smoothed, on an otherwise rough surface, but is not filled by the inscription (W. 0.12 x H. 0.13).
- Letters:
- Small letters, 0.01-0.018; rough, irregular, and difficult.
- Date:
- First to sixth centuries A.D. (context).
- Findspot:
- Theatre: on the front face of the stage buildings, on the stretch of wall between the fifth and sixth doorways from the north
- Original Location:
- Findspot
- Last recorded location:
- Findspot
- History of discovery:
- Recorded by the NYU expedition.
- Bibliography:
- Published by Roueché, PPA 7.e
- Text constituted from:
- Preliminary transcription (Reynolds, Roueché). This edition Roueché and Bodard (2007).
- 1 ?
- 2 Αὐρ(ήλιος)Συμ[·· ? ··]
- 1?
- 2ΑΥΡΣΥΜ[ - - - ]
Apparatus
...
Translation:
?The first pyrrhich(istes), Aur(elius) Sym[ . ..
Commentary:
The reading and interpretation of this text is extremely uncertain; but it does seem likely to be a reference to the Pyrrhiche, a kind of war-dance which was very popular in the Roman imperial period, and is attested in contests at Aphrodisias (11.305.IV.i.5, 11.21.iii.9; see also Robert, Hell. I, 151-2, J. and L. Robert, Claros I, 58-9, W. Slater, ‘Orchestopala’, ZPE 81 (1990), 215-20). ὁ α´ can probably be taken as ὁ πρῶτος ‘the first’. If the phrasing has been interpreted correctly, the performer’s name was never completed. See Performers and Partisans, ad loc..
Photographs:
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