Armazi stele of Serapit

Armazi stele of Serapit
Material Stone
Writing Ancient Greek and Aramaic
Created 150 AD
Discovered 1940
Place Armazi
Present location Georgian National Museum, Tbilisi

The Armazi stele of Serapit (Georgian: სერაფიტას არმაზის სტელა) or Armazi bilingual (Georgian: არმაზის ბილინგვა) is a funerary stele with bilingual inscriptions written in Ancient Greek and Armazic, a local idiom of Aramaic, found in 1940, at Armazi, near Mtskheta, in the ancient capital of the Kingdom of Iberia. The stele memorialises a short-lived Georgian princess named Serapit.[1] The inscriptions mention Georgian monarchs, Pharnavaz I of Iberia and Pharasmanes II of Iberia, and other members of aristocracy. The inscriptions are dated 150 AD.[2][3]

Inscriptions

Ancient Greek inscription

Aramaic inscription

References

  1. Lang, p. 4
  2. 1 2 3 Rapp, p. 216
  3. Lang, p. 5

Bibliography

  • Stephen H. Rapp Jr (2014) The Sasanian World through Georgian Eyes: Caucasia and the Iranian Commonwealth in Late Antique Georgian Literature
  • David Marshall Lang (1966) Landmarks in Georgian Literature

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.