Difference between revisions of "iAph150361 (Q3911)"

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Property / Translation EN
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Not even after death have you lost your fine reputation in the whole earth, but still all the splendid [achievements] of your soul remain - both those which you inherited, and those which you learnt, according to your nature, most excellent in intellect. So now, Pytheas, you have also gone to the Island of the Blest.
Property / Translation EN: Not even after death have you lost your fine reputation in the whole earth, but still all the splendid [achievements] of your soul remain - both those which you inherited, and those which you learnt, according to your nature, most excellent in intellect. So now, Pytheas, you have also gone to the Island of the Blest. / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Translation EN: Not even after death have you lost your fine reputation in the whole earth, but still all the splendid [achievements] of your soul remain - both those which you inherited, and those which you learnt, according to your nature, most excellent in intellect. So now, Pytheas, you have also gone to the Island of the Blest. / reference
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Year: 2004
Publication title: Originally published in Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity: The Late Roman and Byzantine Inscriptions (2004)
Author: Charlotte Roueché
Place: London

Latest revision as of 07:55, 16 December 2013

Funerary verse for Pytheas
Language Label Description Also known as
English
iAph150361
Funerary verse for Pytheas

    Statements

    iAph150361
    0 references
    Creative Commons licence Attribution 2.5 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/). All reuse or distribution of this work must contain somewhere a link back to the URL http://insaph.kcl.ac.uk/
    0 references
    Not even after death have you lost your fine reputation in the whole earth, but still all the splendid [achievements] of your soul remain - both those which you inherited, and those which you learnt, according to your nature, most excellent in intellect. So now, Pytheas, you have also gone to the Island of the Blest.
    1 reference
    2004
    Originally published in Aphrodisias in Late Antiquity: The Late Roman and Byzantine Inscriptions (2004)
    Charlotte Roueché
    London