{
    "type": "FeatureCollection",
    "name": "artefact",
    "crs": {
        "type": "name",
        "properties": {
            "name": "EPSG:4326"
        }
    },
    "features": [
        {
            "type": "Feature",
            "geometry": {
                "type": "Point",
                "coordinates": [
                    33.430636,
                    31.11593
                ]
            },
            "properties": {
                "id": 1291,
                "artefact_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/artefact\/1291",
                "site_id": 68,
                "site_uri": "https:\/\/4care-skos.mf.no\/place\/68",
                "site_name": "al-Filusiyya",
                "clm_id": "TM 97443",
                "material": "Stone",
                "description": "SEG LIX 1882: Epitaph of Phileas.\r\nDahari & Di Segni 2009, no. 10: Anthropomorphic stela of beach-rock, surmounted by a head; bottom tang broken. H. 130 cm; W. 35 cm; Th. 15 cm. The lines of the face and of the script are deeply engraved; no remains of paint.\r\nThe inscription is regular, almost elegantly traced, with use of square and round letters. Some ligatures. Three crosses are engraved in the upper part of the body, above the epitaph.\u00a0\r\nSame consolatory formula as in the other steles sharing the same provenance \u2013 a combination restricted to the northern coast of Sinai (el-Huweinat and el-\u2018Arish): \u03b5\u1f50\u03bc\u03bf\u1f77\u03c1\u03b5\u03b9, \u03b5\u1f50\u03c8\u1f7b\u03c7\u03b5\u03b9, \u03bf\u1f50\u03b4\u03b5\u1f76\u03c2 \u1f00\u03b8\u1f71\u03bd\u03b1\u03c4\u03bf\u03c2, \u201cfare thee well, be of good courage, nobody is immortal\u201d, accompanied by the name of the deceased in vocative.\r\nThe name of the deceased is most likely the masculine Phileas (vocative: Philea), very common in the Greek lands as well as in Egypt \u2013 rather than the female name \u03a6\u03b9\u03bb\u1f73\u03b1.",
                "date_from": 350,
                "date_to": 499,
                "dating_criteria": "Phrasing and palaeography point to late 4th-5th c. according to Dahari & Di Segni 2009. ",
                "selection_criteria": "Christian terms\/formulas\/concepts,Christian symbols\/gestures\/isopsephy",
                "absolute_relative_date": null,
                "stratigraphic_context": "",
                "shelf_mark": "",
                "bibliography": "",
                "external_links": [
                    {
                        "text": "TM 97443",
                        "url": "http:\/\/www.trismegistos.org\/text\/97443"
                    }
                ],
                "classes": "Funerary element,Textual",
                "writing_medium": "Inscription",
                "text_content": "Subliterary",
                "language": "Greek",
                "archive": "",
                "authors": [
                    {
                        "author": "Val\u00e9rie Schram",
                        "year": "2021"
                    }
                ]
            }
        }
    ]
}