WallInscriptionsCopyrightPg102704.qxp 11/2/2004 2:26 PM Page 1 An Introduction to W ALL I NSCRIPTIONS from Pompeii and Herculaneum REX E. WALLACE Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. Wauconda,Illinois USA WallInscriptionsCopyrightPg102704.qxp 11/2/2004 2:26 PM Page 2 General editor: Laurie Haight Keenan An Introduction to WallInscriptions From Pompeii an Herculaneum by Rex E.Wallace © 2005 Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. All Rights Reserved Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc. 1000 Brown Street, Unit 101 Wauconda, Illinois 60084 www.bolchazy.com ISBN 0-86516-570-X Printed in the United States of America by United Graphics 2005 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Wallace, Rex. An introduction to wall inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum : introduction, inscriptions with notes, historical commentary, vocabulary / Rex E. Wallace. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-86516-570-X (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Inscriptions, Latin--Italy--Pompeii (Extinct city) 2. Inscriptions, Latin--Italy--Herculaneum (Extinct city) 3. Pompeii (Extinct city)--Antiquities. 4. Herculaneum (Extinct city)--Antiquities. I. Title. CN533.W35 2003 937'.7--dc22 2003023037 CONTENTS Preface v Grammatical Abbreviations vii Introduction ix 1. Inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum ix 2. The Language of the Wall Inscriptions xxiv 3. Features of the Text xxxvii 4. Bibliography xliii Wall Inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum 1 I. Dipinti from Pompeii 2 1. Electoral Announcements 2 2. Gladiatorial Announcements 20 3. Gladiatorial Dipinti 28 4. Advertisements for Rentals and Sales 29 5. Lost and Found 31 6. Public Acclamations and Salutations 32 7. Miscellaneous Dipinti 36 II. Graffiti from Pompeii 42 1. Salutations and Wishes 42 2. Curses and Insults 50 3. Gladiators 55 4. Soldiers 61 5. Entertainers 63 6. Lists, Memoranda, Notices 64 7. Love and Lust 71 8. Citations from Latin Poets 80 9. Miscellaneous Graffiti 83 iii iv Contents III. Dipinti and Graffiti from Herculaneum 98 1. Dipinti 98 2. Graffiti 99 Facsimiles of Inscriptions 105 Abbreviations In Wall Inscriptions 111 Index of Proper Names 115 Vocabulary 121 PREFACE The aim of this text is to provide Latinists with a reasonably comprehensive introduction to wall inscriptions from the Campanian cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum. There is much to be learned about Latin and about the Roman world from these inscriptions, particularly the graffiti, of which a good portion was written by less educated members of society. In composing this book, I attempted to balance the needs of undergraduates with those of more advanced students. I also hope that classicists, historians and linguists, particularly Romance linguists, will find it a useful resource. This text is organized into two parts. Part I is introductory material. This includes a short overview of inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum, a more detailed discussion of wall inscriptions, and a description of orthographic and linguistic features characteristic of the dipinti and graffiti from these two cities. Part I concludes with a short bibliography. Part II is a selection of wall inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum. A selection of facsimiles of dipinti and graffiti, a list of abbreviations used in the inscriptions, an index of proper names, and a list of vocabulary are located at the end of the text. The inscriptions presented here were chosen in order to provide the reader with a representative selection of the different types of wall inscriptions that have been recovered at Pompeii and Herculaneum. The selection includes inscriptions that illustrate variation in the orthography, pronunciation, morphology and syntax of Latin during the first century AD. These features are attested with greater frequency in graffiti and for this reason I have included a greater number of this type of wall inscription in the text. Translating wall inscriptions is not always as easy as it appears at first glance. This is particularly true of graffiti because it is often difficult, if not impossible, to reconstruct the contexts in which they were written, and also because orthography and grammar may diverge rather sharply from the literary norms to which most Latinists are accustomed. Accordingly, I have supplied notes and commentary as an aid to readers unfamiliar with the language of the v vi Preface inscriptions. All words used in the inscriptions are alphabetized in the Vocabulary. Proper names found in the wall inscriptions are given in an Index of Proper Names. The final section of this text includes facsimiles of wall inscriptions. Mat Olkovikas, a former graduate student at the University of Massachusetts Amherst, copied, detailed and digitized the facsimiles from drawings published in the Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum, Volume IV. Many of the inscriptions in this text were field-tested in undergraduate and graduate classes that I taught at the University. I am especially grateful to the students who participated in my undergraduate seminar on Wall Inscriptions. They worked through large portions of the inscriptions and the commentary, and provided valuable feedback. I thank Charles Babcock, Joe Eska, Gilbert Lawall, Willis Regier, George Ryan, and Maureen Ryan for comments on earlier versions of the text. I alone am responsible for any errors in the text, but there would have been many more had these folks not given generously of their time and expertise. I am indebted to Mat Olkovikas for cheerfully undertaking the task of preparing and editing the digital images of the facsimiles. I also thank Wendy Watkins, Curator of the Center of Epigraphical Studies at The Ohio State University, who helped me track down several articles on Pompeiian inscriptions. Finally, I wish to acknowledge the assistance of Katherine Hofmann and Bethanie Sawyer. During the final stages of editing and proofreading the text their keen eyes were invaluable. Rex E. Wallace University of Massachusetts Amherst July 9, 2004 GRAMMATICAL ABBREVIATIONS abl. ablative acc. accusative act. active adv. adverb cond. conditional conj. conjunction dat. dative dep. deponent fem. feminine fut. future gen. genitive impf. imperfect impv. imperative indecl. indeclinable indef. pron. indefinite pronoun inter. pron. interrogative pronoun masc. masculine neut. neuter nom. nominative num. number part. particle pass. passive perf. perfect pers. pro. personal pronoun pl. plural pres. present rel. adv. relative adverb rel. pron. relative pronoun sent. sentence sg. singular subj. subjunctive vii ii INTRODUCTION §1. Inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum The ancient Roman cities of Pompeii and Herculaneum are two of the most abundant sources for Latin inscriptions. There are over 8,000 inscriptions incised or painted on the walls of homes, businesses, and public buildings in these two cities. If inscriptions on wax tablets and inscriptions incised on stone, ceramic, and metal are included in the count, the total is closer to 11,000. Most of these inscriptions are written in Latin, but there are also inscriptions in Etruscan, Greek, and Oscan. Thus, Pompeii and Herculaneum constitute one of classical antiquity’s most precious epigraphic resources. §1.1 Types of Inscriptions Latin inscriptions from Pompeii and Herculaneum can be arranged into categories based on the function or purpose that they served and based on the material on which they were written. The most familiar types of inscription at Pompeii and Herculaneum are those incised on stone. These were carved by professional stonecutters and were erected at public expense in order to commemorate the construction of public buildings, the careers of distinguished political figures, and so forth. Professional craftsmen also carved funerary inscriptions, especially those of prominent Pompeiians. These inscriptions were set up on funerary monuments in the necropolises located outside of the city gates. One of the most important epigraphic finds at Pompeii was made in the house of a businessman named Lucius Caecilius Iucundus (V, 1, 26). In a wooden box stashed in the atrium Iucundus had stored 153 receipts of business transactions. These were incised in cursive style on wooden tablets whose writing surface was coated, in most cases, with a thin layer of a wax-like substance (hence the label, wax tablets). These tablets, together with those from Herculaneum and those recently discovered in a luxury hospitality center located just south of Pompeii in Agro Murecine, are invaluable for the study of business and economy at Pompeii. ix
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