Artefact ID | 1289 |
TM ID | TM 97436 |
Findspot (DEChriM ID) | 68 (al-Filusiyya) | Class | Funerary element, Textual |
Material | Stone |
Writing medium | Inscription |
Text content | Documentary |
Language | Greek |
Description | SEG XXVIII 1465; SEG LIX 1880 descr.: Epitaph of Alphios. Epitaph already published in Lifshitz 1971, but new description in Dahari & Di Segni 2009, no. 8 descr.: Anthropomorphic stela of beach-rock of slightly tapering rectangular shape, surmounted by an almost square head; the bottom is missing. H. 149 cm; W. at top of shoulders 50 cm; Th. 12 cm. The letters of the inscription, 6-9 cm high and outlined in red, are round, with cursive alphas. The misspellings and confusion of cases are typical of the epitaphs of the el-Huweinat cemetery. Same consolatory formula as in the other steles sharing the same provenance – a combination restricted to the northern coast of Sinai (el-Huweinat and el-‘Arish) according to Dahari & Di Segni 2009: εὐμοίρει, εὐψύχει, οὐδεὶς ἀθάνατος, “fare thee well, be of good courage, nobody is immortal”, accompanied by the name of the deceased in vocative. Here only, above the inscription, there is a blank strip, where normally a cross would have been engraved: lack of the cross may indicate that the deceased was not a Christian. |
Selection criteria | Christian terms/formulas/concepts |
Date from | 350 |
Date to | 499 |
Dating criteria | Phrasing and palaeography point to 4th-5th c. according to Dahari & Di Segni 2009. |
Absolute/relative date | Relative date |
Archaeological context | SEG LIX-1873-1882: One of the ten anthropomorphic stelai acquired in the antiquities market in the 1970s by the Israel Museum in Jerusalem and the Israel Antiquities Authority; returned to Egypt in 1993; all stelai come from the Byzantine nekropolis at el-Huweinat 2 km south of Ostrakine (east of Lake Sirbonitis = Sbakhat el-Bardawil; northern Sinai). |
Accession number | Formerly: Jerusalem, Israel Museum, Shrine of the book 82.2.960; Tel Aviv, Private collection Dayan number unknown. Returned to Egypt in 1993 (present location unknown). |