055 - Fig1

PHRC055 : Dedication to Sarapis, Isis, the Nile, Ptolemy III and Berenike II (Kanopos) - Egypt (243-221 BC) Rectangular plaque

This limestone plaque bears an elegantly written dedication by a citizen of Bargylia to the divine triad Sarapis, Isis, and Neilos together with the royal couple Ptolemy III and Berenike II, the Theoi Euergetai. The content of the dedication and the actual place where it was accomplished are unknown. Kanopos has delivered various inscriptions testifying to the interaction between Isiac deities and the royal house. As for PHRC 061, the addition of the river god Nile to the list of recipients suggests a possible link with the content of the Kanopos decree (238 BC), where the ruling couple is celebrated for having protected the population in a period of food shortage caused by an insufficient Nile flood, and for a calendar reform meant to reinstate the natural order of seasons. The presence of Neilos therefore evokes the role played by the Euergetai in protecting Egypt and the cosmic order, thus fulfilling the traditional duties of legitimate rulers.

Permanent ID http://s.phrc.it/phrc055

Images

Photo 1: Photo of the stone, from CPI I, p. 191, Fig. 52


Current location

Alexandria, Graeco-Roman Museum
Inv. No. 18402

Support

Thick slab, complete. Traces of red paint in the lettering. The back surface was left rough for insertion into a structure.
Material: Limestone
Dimensions:
Height: 16,5 cm
Width: 32,5 cm
Depth: 5 cm

Layout

Text arranged in 6 lines respecting the word ending. All lines are aligned to the left margin.
Fine letters of the mid-3rd cent., with thickening at the end of long hastae and small but fully formed serifs. A with straight crossbar; Σ and Ν with parallel or slightly diverging outer strokes (just as M); Π with projecting top bar and a half-length right vertical. The round letters (O, Θ, Ω) are slightly smaller; short and broad Δ written in the mid-line.
Letter height between 1,8 and 1,1 cm (O, occasionally Δ).

History

Original Place: Kanopos.
Date: 243-221 BC
Justification: Formulary
Provenance: Found in Maamourah, near Aboukir, in 1907.

Bibliography

Text constituted from: CPI I 94.

Other editions: Breccia 1911 (I.Musée d'Alexandrie), no. 14; SB I 585; I.Delta I, p. 235, no. 5.

See also: Fragaki 2011, p. 36-38; Minas-Nerpel 2019, p. 168; Crowther 2020, p. 240-241 (palaeography); Pfeiffer 2020, p. 90-104, no. 14.

Images: I.Delta I, Pl. 2, Fig. 2; CPI I, p. 191, Fig. 52.

Further bibliography: on the cult of Neilos, Malaise 1994, p. 365; Malaise 2005, p. 66-74. On the link between the Ptolemies and Isiac cults in Kanopos, Bricault 2020, 35-39; see also Pfeiffer 2004, Legras 2004 and Hauben 2011, p. 366-374 on the link between the Ptolemies and the Nile in the Kanopos decree.

Online record: TM 6528; PHI

Edition



Σαράπιδι καὶ Ἴσιδι καὶ Νείλωι
καὶ βασιλεῖ Πτολεμαίωι
καὶ βασιλίσσηι Βερενίκηι,
Θεοῖς Εὐεργέταις,
5 Ἀρτεμίδωρος Ἀπολλωνίου
Βαργυλιώτης


Translation


(J. Dechevez)
To Sarapis and Isis and Neilos, and to King Ptolemy and Queen Berenike, Theoi Euergetai, (by) Artemidoros, (son) of Apollonios, from Bargylia.

Traduzione


(S. Caneva)
A Sarapis e Isis e Nelios, e a re Tolemeo e alla regina Berenice, Theoi Euergetai, (da) Artemidoros, (figlio) di Apollonios, di Bargylia.

Traduction


(J. Dechevez)
À Sarapis et Isis et Nelios, et au roi Ptolémée et à la reine Bérénice, Theoi Euergetai, (par) Artemidoros, (fils) d'Apollonios, de Bargylia

Commentary

The site of Kanopos has delivered two dedications to Sarapis, Isis, Neilos, and the royal couple of Ptolemy III and Berenike II (cf. PHRC 061, without indication of the donor). The text mentions an individual dedicant, probably a member of the Ptolemaic elite (in favour of this social profile see also the quality of writing; cf. Caneva 2020a). The donor was a citizen of Bargylia, in Caria, a region under Ptolemaic control after the Laodikean War. The terminus post quem for the dedication is the introduction of the epithet Theoi Euergetai in 243/2 BC.

The identification of the place where Artemidoros accomplished his dedication is debated, and so are the spatial relationships between the various deities and rulers mentioned as recipients of rituals in Kanopos (for a recent overview of the debate, Bricault 2020, p. 35-39). During the joint reign of Ptolemy II and Arsinoe II, the admiral Kallikrates of Samos dedicated a sanctuary to Isis and Anubis for (hyper) the living royal couple ( CPI I 92; SB I 429; I.Delta I, p. 232, no. 2; ca. 274/3-270 BC). A dedication to Isis (and?) Arsinoe Philadelphos may date to the sole reign of the widowed Ptolemy II or to the early years of Ptolemy III (PHRC 057; 270-240 BC). Under the reign of Ptolemy III, the king together with Berenike II dedicated a sacred precinct to Osiris ( CPI I 96; OGIS 60; I.Delta I, p. 236-237, no. 7; for contemporaneous Alexandria, see the plaque mentioning the dedication of the temple of Sarapis by Ptolemy III, SEG LIV 1723). Finally, a sanctuary of the Theoi Euergetai is mentioned as the meeting place of the Egyptian priests who issued the Kanopos decree in 238 BC ( OGIS 56, line 7). In principle, the priority of the divine triad in our text could be interpreted as a sign that Artemidoros accomplished his dedication in a cult space of Sarapis and Isis, but this must remain a hypothesis due to our limited knowledge about the relationship between this place and the Osireion on the one hand, the sanctuary of the Theoi Euergetai on the other.

It is tempting to interpret the association between this triad and the royal couple as an echo of the Kanopos decree, where a seminal role is acknowledged to the Theoi Euergetai with regard to the protection of wealth and cosmic order in Egypt. Issued in 238, this decree celebrates the ruling couple for their euergetic intervention to rescue the population from an insufficient Nile flood and a consequent famine. The decree eulogistically reports that the ruling couple promoted a calendar reform meant to reinstate the original order of seasons and was celebrated with the introduction of festivals of the Theoi Euergetai. In Egypt, royal commitment to the regulation of the agricultural production was traditionally loaded with religious connotations and the fulfilment of such expectations was intimately connected with the achievements of legitimate pharaohs (Pfeiffer 2004 and 2020, no. 14; Legras 2004; Hauben 2011).

The cult of Neilos in Kanopos is also attested by a later statue base of Arsinoe III, erected by a priest of the river god ( CPI I 98; I.Delta I, p. 237-238, no. 8). Already venerated as the god Hapi in pharaonic times, in the Ptolemaic period the Nile received from the Greeks a new iconography based on the model of personified river gods (for the development of the Greek cult of the Nile, see Malaise 2005, p. 66-74). As part of the triad invoked by this dedication, Sarapis and Isis can also be expected to share some of the functions of Neilos, in particular with regard to their competences related to agricultural activities, fertility, and the association between Isis and the star Sirius/Sothis, whose rising marked the beginning of the yearly Nile flood (cf. Kanopos decree, OGIS 56, line 36 on this star being referred to as ‘the star of Isis’). On the link between Isis and fertility, see Malaise 1994, p. 362; cf. Fragaki 2011, p. 36-38; Malaise 2005, p. 73 on the agrarian aspect of Sarapis, which was inherited from Osiris, and its connection with fresh water in Kanopos.

Author:
Julien Dechevez, Stefano Caneva, on 08.06.2021
Revisions:

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Travocial - Social Travel & Storytelling Practicalities of Hellenistic Ruler Cults
Marie Curie PISCOPIA project no. PISC14IGRU, University of Padova (2015-2017)
FNRS project no. 98368 (2017-2020)
Stefano Caneva
ste.caneva@gmail.com
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The research leading to these results has received funding from the European Commission, Seventh Framework Programme, under Grant Agreement n° 600376 (2015-2017), and from the Fonds National de la Recherche Scientifique (FNRS), Belgium (2017-2020).
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