Print

Print


NEWS: Cursing the grocer

From
<http://www.livescience.com/17589-ancient-curse-translated-greengrocer.html>
:
[Go there for pict. of document]
==================================================

A fiery ancient curse inscribed on two sides of a thin lead tablet was
meant to afflict, not a king or pharaoh, but a simple greengrocer
selling fruits and vegetables some 1,700 years ago in the city of
Antioch, researchers find.

Written in Greek, the tablet holding the curse was dropped into a well
in Antioch, then one of the Roman Empire's biggest cities in the East,
today part of southeast Turkey, near the border with Syria.

The curse calls upon Iao, the Greek name for Yahweh, the god of the
Old Testament, to afflict a man named Babylas who is identified as
being a greengrocer. The tablet lists his mother's name as Dionysia,
"also known as Hesykhia" it reads. The text was translated by
Alexander Hollmann of the University of Washington.

The artifact, which is now in the Princeton University Art Museum, was
discovered in the 1930s by an archaeological team but had not
previously been fully translated. The translation is detailed in the
most recent edition of the journal Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und
Epigraphik.