E06298: Fragmentary Greek epitaph for a person affiliated to the Corinthian church of *John (presumably either the Baptist, S00020, or the Apostle and Evangelist, S00042), probably a reader (anagnostes). Found at Corinth (northeastern Peloponnese). Probably 6th c.
Place of evidence - City name in other Language(s)
Corinth
Drizypera
Δριζύπερα
Drizypera
Büyük Karıştıran
Cult activities - Places
Cult building - independent (church)
Cult activities - Places Named after Saint
Church
Cult Activities - Protagonists in Cult and Narratives
Ecclesiastics - lesser clergy
Source
The upper right-hand corner of a slab of green slate. Broken on all sides, but part of the right margin is preserved. Dimensions: H. 0.168 m; W. 0.16 m; Th. (original) 0.025 m; letter height 0.013-0.024 m. Precise find-spot unknown. Now in the Archaeological Museum of Ancient Corinth (inv. no. 2306). First published in 1966 by J. H. Kent who edited all the Corinthian inscriptions found between 1926 and 1950.
Discussion
The expression διαφέρωντα (or rather διαφέροντα) is a false neuter, common in funerary inscriptions and usually relating to μνῆμα or κοιμητήριον. The inscription could thus be an epitaph for a person affiliated to a Corinthian church of Saint John. The saint can be either the Apostle, or John the Baptist. Sironen suggests that the function of the deceased should be restored as anagnostes ('reader’), but the inscription could mention several other functions subsequently held by the deceased (for example, θυρωρός/ostiarius).
Dating: Erkki Sironen dated the inscription to the 6th c., probably based on the shape of letters. The same date is given in Inscriptiones Christianae Graecae database.
Bibliography
Edition:
Inscriptiones Christianae Graecae database, no. 2729: http://www.epigraph.topoi.org/ica/icamainapp/inscription/show/2729
Inscriptiones Graecae IV (2nd ed.) 3, no. 1602 and Tab. XXXI (photograph).
Kent, J. H., Corinth, vol. 8, part 3: The Inscriptions, 1926-1950 (Princeton: American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 1966), 201, no. 666 and Pl. 56 (photograph).
Further Reading:
Wallbank, M.B., "Where have all the names gone? The Christian community in Corinth in the Late Roman and Early Byzantine eras," in S. Friesen, D.N. Schowalter, and J. Walters (eds.), Corinth in Context: Comparative Studies on Religion and Society (Supplements to Novum Testamentum 134, Leiden: Brill, 2010), 299 n. 23, 310 n. 193, 315 n. 250.