Epitaph of Samuel explained

Epitaph of Samuel
Material:Limestone
Writing:Greek script
Language:Ancient Greek
Created:5th-6th century
Discovered:1934
Location:Rockefeller Museum, Jerusalem

The Epitaph of Samuel (Georgian: სამუელის ეპიტაფია|tr) is an Ancient Greek limestone tombstone slab epitaph inscription which was discovered in 1934, in the monastic cemetery of the Byzantine period, at the YMCA area in Jerusalem.[1] [2]

The inscription mentions "Iberian [i.e. Georgian<ref>Tchekhanovets (2018), p. 241</ref>] bishop, Samuel" and the purchase of a tomb or a monastery in the area of Tower of David. Because of the incorrect Greek, it is unclear if the Iberians bought a tomb or a monastery.[3] It is assumed the church belonged to the Iberian clergy and possibly served the whole Georgian monastic community of Jerusalem.[4] It may have been a cemeterial church, extremely rare in Palestine of Byzantine period, and completely absent in ancient Georgia.[5] The slab is partly broken and the whole right corner of it is lost. It is dated to the late 5th or early 6th century AD. The inscription is kept at Rockefeller Museum.[6]

Inscription

ΝΗΜΑΔΙΑΦΡΣΑΜ

ΠΙΣΚΟΠΟΥΙΒΕΡΩ

ΚΤΗΣΜΟΝΗΣΑΥΤΟΥΟΗΓ

ΡΑΣΑΝΕΝΤΩΠΥΡΓΩΔΑΔ

nēmadiaphrsam

piskopouiberō

ktēsmonēsautouoēg

rasanentōpyrgōdad

Translation: Tomb belonging to Samuel, bishop of the Iberians, and to his monastery, which they bought in the area of Tower of David.[7]

See also

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Tchekhanovets, p. 305
  2. Tchekhanovets (2018), p. 223
  3. Di Segni & Tsafrir, p. 438
  4. Tchekhanovets (2017), p. 429
  5. Tchekhanovets (2017), p. 432
  6. CIIP, p. 381
  7. CIIP, p. 382