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NOTES<br />

1. La pensée sauvage (Paris 1962) 240.<br />

2. C. de Firmas, "Des noms et des hommes.<br />

L'homme et ses désignations des sociétés antiques à<br />

l'identifiant chiffré", in: Sources travaux historiques,<br />

no. 45-46 (1996) 3-10, esp. 5.<br />

3. Ulpian, D. II.7.2.6; also II.7.42. See also Servius,<br />

Aen. III.22.6. This conception appears to be particularly<br />

Roman. For Greek thinking on the subject,<br />

see S. Humphreys, "Family, tombs and tomb-cult in<br />

classical Athens: traditions or traditionalism?", in:<br />

The family, women and death. Comparative studies<br />

(1983) 79-130, esp. 93.<br />

4. On the usefulness of prosopographical and onomastic<br />

studies, see H.-G. Pflaum, "Les progrès des<br />

recherches prosopographiques concernant l'époque<br />

du Haut-Empire durant le dernier quart du siècle<br />

(1945-1970)", in ANRW 11.1 (1974) 114-115; J.<br />

Sasel, "Probleme und Möglichkeiten onomastischer<br />

Forschung", in: Akten des IV. internationalen<br />

Kongresses für griechische und lateinische<br />

Epigraphik, Wien 17. bis 22. September 1962<br />

(Vienna 1964) 352-368; H. Solin, "Namengebung<br />

und Epigraphik. Betrachtungen zur onomastischen<br />

Exegese römischer Inscriften", in Akten des VI.<br />

internationalen Kongresses für griechische und<br />

lateinische Epigraphik, München 1972 (1973) 404-<br />

407; id., "Ancient onomastics : Perspectives and<br />

problems", in: Roman onomastics, 1-10.<br />

5. Die griechischen Personnamen in Rom. Ein<br />

Namenbuch I-III (Berlin-New York 1982).<br />

6. His work outlines the interest and limits of onomastic<br />

enterprises, and also reveals how the study of<br />

personal names is not an autonomous field terminating<br />

in list-making, but one which contributes,<br />

together with epigraphy, numismatics, papyrology,<br />

archaeology and literature, to the study of social and<br />

political history: Actes de Vile congrès international<br />

de l'épigraphie grecque et latine, Constanza 1977<br />

(Bucharest 1979)41.<br />

7. H. Solin, "Ancient onomastics: Perspectives and<br />

problems", in: Roman onomastics, 8.<br />

8. The Greek inscriptions of the Péloponnèse have<br />

been published in the CIG (1828) and then, with the<br />

exception of Achaia and Eleia, in the IG series. The<br />

older Latin texts were published in CIL III and the<br />

ROMAN PELOPONNESE I<br />

more recent are included in M. Sasel-Kos,<br />

Inscriptiones latinae in Grecia repertae.<br />

Additamenta ad CIL III (Faenza 1979). After A.<br />

Boeckh's, Corpus Inscriptionum graecarum 1,1542-<br />

1561, Achaean texts were published at the end of the<br />

19th century and the beginning of the 20th by J.<br />

Martha and M. Dubois, and also by F. von Duhn and<br />

Ad. Wilhelm (cf. A.D. Rizakis, "La politela dans les<br />

cités de la confédération achéenne", Tyche 5, 1990,<br />

109-134). In addition to some isolated publications<br />

of Achaean inscriptions, J. Bingen dedicated two<br />

important articles to the subject after the Second<br />

World War, and there have been more recent contributions<br />

from E. Mastrokostas, I. Papapostolou<br />

and myself (see Rizakis, Achaïe II, 3-10); the corpus<br />

of Achaean inscriptions inaugurated by Achaïe II<br />

will be completed with the forthcoming publication<br />

of Achaïe III: Les inscriptions des cités achéennes<br />

(sauf Patras).<br />

The older inscriptions of Corinth were published<br />

by Fränkel in IG IV (1902); the American excavations<br />

that began at Ancient Corinth in 1896<br />

increased the known epigraphical material and led to<br />

the systematic publication of the inscriptions in the<br />

series Corinth VIII. 1, 2 and 3 by B.D. Meriti, A.B.<br />

West and J.H. Kent respectively (see L. Robert,<br />

REG 79, 1966, 773-770 = id., "Inscriptions de<br />

l'Antiquité et du Bas-Empire à Corinthe: Compte<br />

rendu de Corinth VIII. 3", OMS VI, 1989,551-558).<br />

The older Latin texts were published in CIL III and<br />

the more recent are included in M. Sasel-Kos,<br />

Inscriptiones latinae in Grecia repertae.<br />

Additamenta ad CIL IH (Faenza 1979). The<br />

Christian inscriptions have been published by N. A.<br />

Bees, Corpus der griechisch-christlichen Inschriften<br />

von Hellas: I. Isthmos- Korinthos (Athen 1941).<br />

Inscriptions of the Roman period have subsequently<br />

been published by D. J. Geagan, "Notes on the<br />

Agonistic Institutions of Roman Corinth", GRBS 9,<br />

1968,69-80; T. R. Martin, "Inscriptions at Corinth",<br />

Hesperia46,1977,178-198, pis 49-52; Ch. B. Kritzas,<br />

"Δύο επιγράμματα από το Πετρί Νεμέας", in:<br />

Διεθνές συνέδριο για την αρχαία Θεσσαλία στη<br />

μνήμη τον Δημήτρη Θεοχάρη (Athens 1992) 398-413.<br />

The majority of inscriptions from Arcadia is<br />

published in IG V 2 (1913). Inscriptions of the<br />

Roman period have subsequently been published by<br />

M. Mitsos ('"Επιγραφαί εξ 'Αρκαδίας, Έπιδαυρίας

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