NO·20 Cureggio: Difference between revisions

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|type_object=stela
|type_object=stela
|material=stone
|material=stone
|dimension=height 105 cm, width 72 cm, thickness 16 cm (of fragment)
|dimension=max. height 105 cm, max. width 72 cm, thickness 16 cm (of fragment)
|dimension_max=105 cm
|dimension_max=105 cm
|condition=broken, fragmentary, repaired
|condition=broken, fragmentary, repaired
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|date_autopsy=Apr 24 2024
|date_autopsy=Apr 24 2024
|culture_archaeological=unknown
|culture_archaeological=unknown
|sortdate=-100
|sortdate=-60
|date=end of 2<sup>nd</sup> / beginning of 1<sup>st</sup> century BC
|date=1<sup>st</sup> c. BC
|date_derivation‎=palaeography
|date_derivation‎=palaeography
|site=Cureggio
|site=Cureggio
|coordinate_n=45.67529851183434
|coordinate_e=8.461698889732363
|find_circumstances=survey
|sortdate_find=1983
|sortdate_find=1983
|location=Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
|location=Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
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|morandi=96
|morandi=96
|source_detail=Morandi 2004: 564 no. 96
|source_detail=Morandi 2004: 564 no. 96
|checklevel=5
|checklevel=1
|problem=coordinates, dating, commentary
|problem=dating
}}
}}
== Commentary ==
== Commentary ==
Images in {{bib|Gambari 1984}}: tav. LXXXV A (photo of two fragments), {{bib|Gambari 1991}}: 231, fig. 2 (photo), {{bib|Morandi 2004}}: tav. XII.96 (photo)
The roughly rectangular orthogneiss slab which is preserved represents the remains of what must have been a stela of considerable size, viz. well over 1 m in width (1.2 m and weighing up to a tonne according to {{bib|Gambari 1991}}: 228). It is broken into four adjacent fragments, which were found during a survey of the church S. Maria Assunta among a heap of slabs beside an outside wall; only two fragments were published initially ({{bib|Gambari 1984}}), but the ensuing search for the rest of the stela yielded two more soon afterward. Remains of plaster, which were removed during the restauration and repair of the slab in the 1980s, show that the slab was used as building material for the church, and was cast aside during a renovation. The round recess on the right of the upper corner is thought to have been created intentionally when the slab was incorporated into the wall; the disintegration into four pieces was caused by a hammer blow in the upper area (today covered with filling material), conceivably when the slab was removed from the wall. The stone comes from the Pennidico inferiore of the Monte Rosa or Ossola region, probably transported to the Agogna valley by a glacier. The surface bearing the inscription was smoothed. See {{bib|Gambari 1991}}: 227–229.
<p style="text-align:right;>[[User:Corinna Salomon|Corinna Salomon]]</p>
{{bibliography}}
{{bibliography}}

Latest revision as of 20:00, 19 October 2024

Object
Classification: stela

Material: stone
Size: max. height 105 cm, max. width 72 cm, thickness 16 cm (of fragment)
Condition: broken, fragmentary, repaired
Autopsy by: Corinna Salomon
Date of autopsy: Apr 24 2024

Archaeological culture: unknown
Date: 1st c. BC
Date derived from: palaeography

Site: Cureggio (Novara, Piemonte, Italy)
Coordinates (approx.): 45° 40' 31.07" N, 8° 27' 42.12" E
Find date: 1983
Find circumstances: survey
Current location: Musei Reali – Museo di Antichità (Torino)
Inventory no.: none

Inscription: NO·20 (]?ọ[/]ṭọ[]ịkṇọṣ/ṃatopokios/sola/nimoniknạ)

Alternative sigla: Solinas 1995: 123
Morandi 2004: 96

Sources: Morandi 2004: 564 no. 96

Images

Commentary

Images in Gambari 1984: tav. LXXXV A (photo of two fragments), Gambari 1991: 231, fig. 2 (photo), Morandi 2004: tav. XII.96 (photo)

The roughly rectangular orthogneiss slab which is preserved represents the remains of what must have been a stela of considerable size, viz. well over 1 m in width (1.2 m and weighing up to a tonne according to Gambari 1991: 228). It is broken into four adjacent fragments, which were found during a survey of the church S. Maria Assunta among a heap of slabs beside an outside wall; only two fragments were published initially (Gambari 1984), but the ensuing search for the rest of the stela yielded two more soon afterward. Remains of plaster, which were removed during the restauration and repair of the slab in the 1980s, show that the slab was used as building material for the church, and was cast aside during a renovation. The round recess on the right of the upper corner is thought to have been created intentionally when the slab was incorporated into the wall; the disintegration into four pieces was caused by a hammer blow in the upper area (today covered with filling material), conceivably when the slab was removed from the wall. The stone comes from the Pennidico inferiore of the Monte Rosa or Ossola region, probably transported to the Agogna valley by a glacier. The surface bearing the inscription was smoothed. See Gambari 1991: 227–229.

Corinna Salomon

Bibliography

Gambari 1984 Filippo M. Gambari, "Cureggio. Stele di reimpiego con iscrizione preromana", Quaderni della Soprintendenza Archeologica del Piemonte 3 (1984), 263.
Gambari 1991 Filippo M. Gambari, "La stele di Cureggio: una nuova iscrizione epicorica preromana dal Novarese", Sibrium 21 (1990–1991), 227–237.