RCIN and OZwRCIN projects

Object

Planned object

Title: De retour sur les lampes ”de Sagalassos” et d’autres lampes ´Egyptiennes sign´ees du II’e si`ecle Ap. J.-C.

Creator:

Chrzanowski, Laurent

Date issued/created:

2012

Resource type:

Text

Subtitle:

Archeologia T. 61 (2010)

Publisher:

Wydawnictwo IAE PAN

Place of publishing:

Warszawa

Description:

ill.; 31 cm

Type of object:

Journal/Article

Abstract:

In 1990, Adam Łukaszewicz published a lamp of a rare type, discovered in Alexandria and bearing the incised word CAFAA/ACCIK/QN on its base. In 1996, in the addenda dedicated to the clay lamps in his fourth volume of the corpus of the British Museum, Donald Bailey unveiled an identical artefact. Working on the lamp collection of Jean-François and Malou Bouvier, the present author found five lamps of the same typology but bearing on their base the inscriptions CAFAAA/THNA, HPQ/ON, IAIOY, and FOPT/TYNIC. Hepublishes them here and comes back to Łukaszewicz 's interpretation of the possible signification of these signatures and the probable origin of the artefacts themselves. The first hypothesis is to confirm Bailey's opinion seeing these lamps as pure Egyptian products, from Alexandria or the Nile Delta area. The second, considering the variety of the inscriptions, is either to regard these inscriptions as potters' marks that indicate a name (Ermon, Gaius) or ethnicon (Sagalassian, Gortynian) of expatriate potters, or to see two distinct categoriesamong them: the first with a potter's name (Gaius) and the second, as Łukaszewicz proposed, with a reference to holy ceremonies of the expatriates of Greek cities (Sagalassos, Gortys) and to their shrine (Herôon). Furthermore, the author connects these five with seven other signed lamps of the same period (2nd cent. AD), all from Egypt, in order to underline the migration phenomenon of well-known foreign lamp-makers such as Phoetaspus, who opened workshops in Egypt and launched there special products, inspired by some characteristicsof the standard Roman lamps but with a new, own identity. Finally, a rare witness of an opposed phenomenon is discussed - a lamp attesting to the willingness of a local lamp maker from the Fayyum area to adopt standard Alexandrine, Greco-Roman iconography

References:

Adriani, A., 1934, Annuario del Museo Greco-Romano 1 (1932-33). Bergamo, 45
Bailey, D. M., 1980, Catalogue of the lamps in the British Museum. 2, Roman lamps made in Italy, London, 99-100
Bailey, D. M., 1988, Catalogue of the lamps in the British Museum. 3, Roman provincial lamps. London, 101
Bailey, D. M., 1996, Catalogue of the lamps in the British Museum. 4, Lamps of metal and stone, and lampstands, London, 132
Bailey, D. M., 1992, Thysdrus, the Troad, Sagalassos and Gortyn. Zeitschrift für Papirologie und Epigraphik 92, 280
Cahn-Klaiber, E. M., 1977, Die antiken Tonlampen des Archäologischen Instituts der Universität Tübingen. Tübinger Studien zur Archäologie und Kunstgeschichte 2,Tübingen, 88 i 217
Georges, C.., 2001, Les lampes. In : J.-Y. Empereur, M.-D. Nenna, Nécropolis. 1, Études alexandrines 5, Le Caire, 440
Hayes, J. W., 1980, Ancient lamps in the Royal Ontario Museum. 1, Greek and roman clay lamp : a catalogue. Toronto, 94
Heres, G., Die römischen Bildlampen der Berliner Antiken-Sammlung. Schriften zur Geschichte und Kultur der Antike 3, Berlin, 49
Łukaszewicz, A., A Terracotta lamp from Alexandria. Étudfes et Travaux 15, 253-255
Mikati, R., 2003, Faustus the early Roman lamp maker visits Beiru : evidence of a tyre-based production. In: L. Chrzanovski (éd.), Nouveautés lychnologiques, Sierre, 175-180
Młynarczyk, J., 1998, Italian and Alexandrian terracotta lamps : a pattern of influence (the 1st through 4th century a.d.). In: N. Bonacasa, M. C. Caro, E. C. Portale, A. Tullio (éds.), L'egitto in Italia : dall'antichità al medioevo, Roma, 453-466
Młynarczyk, J., 1974, Terakotowe lampki oliwne z Tell Atrib. Rocznik Muzeum Narodowego w Warszawie 18, 145-185
Oziol, T., 1977, Salamine de Chypre. 7, Les lampes du Musée de Chypre. Paris, 222
Petrie, W. M. F., 1905, Roman Ehnasya (Heracleopolis Magna). London, pl. 56
Shier, L. A., 1978, Terracotta lamps from Karanis, Egypt : excavations of the University of Michigan. Ann Arbor, n. 300

Relation:

Archeologia

Volume:

61

Start page:

35

End page:

46

Detailed Resource Type:

Article

Format:

application/octet-stream

Resource Identifier:

0066-605X

Source:

IAiE PAN, call no. P III 24 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P III 29 ; IAiE PAN, call no. P III 30 ; click here to follow the link

Language:

fre

Rights:

Rights Reserved - Restricted Access

Terms of use:

Copyright-protected material. Access only on terminals at the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences, may be used within the limits of statutory user freedoms.

Digitizing institution:

Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Original in:

Library of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnology of the Polish Academy of Sciences

Access:

Closed

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