Anat Athena Bilingual
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The Anat Athena bilingual is a late fourth century BCE bilingual Greek-Phoenician inscription on a rock-cut stone found in the outskirts of the village of Larnakas tis Lapithou, Cyprus. It was discovered just above the village, at the foot of a conical
agger Agger may refer to: * Agger (surname) * Agger (ancient Rome), a type of ancient Roman rampart or embankment * Agger (river), a river in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany * Agger nasi, an anatomical feature of the nose * Agger Rockshelter, in Wisconsi ...
, 6m high and 40 meters in circumference. It was originally found in c.1850.


Text of the inscription

The inscription reads: ::


Comments

It has been called "The most striking and interesting evidence for the identification of Anat with Athena", as the altar's Phoenician dedication to Anat is directly translated into Athena in the Greek. The inscription also provided the first known reference to Anat in a Canaanite inscription. It is also dedicated to the Egyptian king Ptolemaeus ( Ptolemy I Soter) (note that Athena's Greek
epitheton An epithet (, ), also byname, is a descriptive term (word or phrase) known for accompanying or occurring in place of a name and having entered common usage. It has various shades of meaning when applied to seemingly real or fictitious people, di ...
in line 2, "Soteira", ''Protectress'', is the female equivalent of Ptolemy's epitheton " Soter"). The victory referred to in the Greek text is the final victory of this Ptolemy over a Cypriot coalition in 312 BCE. The inscription is cut into a wall of rock on the southern slope of a peak of the
Kyrenia Mountains The Kyrenia Mountains ( el, Κερύνειο Όρος; tr, Girne Dağları) is a long, narrow mountain range that runs for approximately along the northern coast of the island of Cyprus. It is primarily made of hard crystalline limestone ...
. The inscription was first published by Melchior de Vogüé in 1867.Caquot André, Masson Olivier
Deux inscriptions phéniciennes de Chypre
In: Syria. Tome 45 fascicule 3-4, 1968. pp. 295-321. DOI : 10.3406/syria.1968.6016: "D'autre part, à l'époque hellénistique, sur le site de Larnaka tis Lapithou, l'auteur d'une dédicace bilingue à Anat-Athéna et Ptolémée, CIS, I, 95 = KAI, 42, est un certain Praxidemos, fils de Sesmas (au génitif dialectal ....) (6), appelé dans le texte phénicien B'islm fils de my. [Footnote: II s'agit bien d'un génitif, pour un nominatif de la flexion chypriote en ..., cf. Masson, l. c. ; on écrit très souvent, à tort, «Sesmaos» comme nom du personnage, encore chez Donner-Rollig, KAI, pp. 44, 59, etc. Le premier éditeur, Vogué, J. Asiat. 1867, II, p. 121 sq., opposait bien «Sesmas» (transcription du grec alphabétique) à «Sesmaï» (partie phénicienne); le même individu pouvait être appelé ssm' et ssmy.]"
Max Ohnefalsch-Richter wrote that:
There is a bilingual inscription in Kypros whose importance has not been sufficiently realized... There is no trace here of a cultus with images. If such had existed, the very thorough examination to which the ground has been subjected must have brought some fragments to light. Remains of narrow walls seem to belong to a peribolos, which further excavation would probably reveal more completely. A sacred enclosure round the altar is dedicated to Anat-Athene, as the enclosures on Sinai to Yahve, on Ida to Zeus, and on the hill of Paphos to Aphrodite. While, however, we have only literary tradition for the dedication to the last three divinities, we have in the present instance the votive inscription itself cut on the living rock of the wild mountain district, the rock which may well have been the symbol, of the goddess, as Mount Carmel and the Arkadian Olympos were symbols of Yahve and Zeus. We can scarcely conceive of a more poetical idea than to present Anat-Athene, the vigour of life, the victorious goddess of Peace, wounding, but healing the wounds she makes, by a mighty peak of rock which lifts its summit to Heaven. This is perhaps the only known example of a purely imageless cultus attested by a bilingual inscription, and practised in the open air on a mountain.
The Phoenician inscription is known as KAI 42,
CIS Cis or cis- may refer to: Places * Cis, Trentino, in Italy * In Poland: ** Cis, Świętokrzyskie Voivodeship, south-central ** Cis, Warmian-Masurian Voivodeship, north Math, science and biology * cis (mathematics) (cis(''θ'')), a trigonome ...
I 95 and R 1515.


Bibliography

* G. M. Lee (1969) On a Phoenician Bilingual Inscription at Larnax, Lapethos, Palestine Exploration Quarterly, 101:2, 122-122, DOI: 10.1179/peq.1969.101.2.122


See also

* Bilingual inscriptions * Idalion bilingual * Tamassos bilinguals


Notes

{{reflist 4th-century BC inscriptions 1850 archaeological discoveries Greek religion inscriptions Phoenician inscriptions Archaeological artifacts Archaeological discoveries in Cyprus Athena Multilingual texts Anat