Difference between revisions of "IRT396 (Q458)"
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(Created claim: Translation EN (P11): a.[...][of Emperor Caesar Lucius Septimius] Severus [Pius Pertinax Augustus, victor in Arabia], victor in Adiabene, greatest victor in Parthia, chief [priest], holding [tribunician] power for [at leas...) |
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Property / Translation EN: a.[...][of Emperor Caesar Lucius Septimius] Severus [Pius Pertinax Augustus, victor in Arabia], victor in Adiabene, greatest victor in Parthia, chief [priest], holding [tribunician] power for [at least] ten times, acclaimed victor [...] [times, consul] [...] [times father] of the country, and of Emperor [Caesar Marcus Aurellius Antoninus] and of Julia Augusta [mother of Augustus and] of the camps [and of the whole] divine household, [...] Rusonianus, flamen (priest), augur (priest) quinquennial duovir [gave] the main chamber of the cold bath and [...] which had collapsed in ruins, instead of the gladiatorial show promised on account of the office of the quinquennial duumvirate [...] with the permission of the most sacred emperor, son of deified Marcus Antoninus, from the foundations [...]; he adorned it with marbles and columns, [gave] a new statue of Aesculapius, restored [...] others new among many other generous gifts made to his city and [...] in the name [...]. / reference | |||
+ | Year: 2009 Publication title: IRT2009 Author: J. M. Reynolds Place: London Publisher: King's College London |
Revision as of 09:39, 19 October 2013
Fragmentary building inscription under Septemius Severus
Language | Label | Description | Also known as |
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English |
IRT396
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Fragmentary building inscription under Septemius Severus
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Statements
IRT396
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HD059316
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Creative Commons licence Attribution UK 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/uk/). All reuse or distribution of this work must contain somewhere a link back to the URL http://irt.kcl.ac.uk/
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a.[...][of Emperor Caesar Lucius Septimius] Severus [Pius Pertinax Augustus, victor in Arabia], victor in Adiabene, greatest victor in Parthia, chief [priest], holding [tribunician] power for [at least] ten times, acclaimed victor [...] [times, consul] [...] [times father] of the country, and of Emperor [Caesar Marcus Aurellius Antoninus] and of Julia Augusta [mother of Augustus and] of the camps [and of the whole] divine household, [...] Rusonianus, flamen (priest), augur (priest) quinquennial duovir [gave] the main chamber of the cold bath and [...] which had collapsed in ruins, instead of the gladiatorial show promised on account of the office of the quinquennial duumvirate [...] with the permission of the most sacred emperor, son of deified Marcus Antoninus, from the foundations [...]; he adorned it with marbles and columns, [gave] a new statue of Aesculapius, restored [...] others new among many other generous gifts made to his city and [...] in the name [...].
1 reference
2009
IRT2009
J. M. Reynolds
London
King's College London