A One-of-a-Kind Roman Tomb with Bilingual Inscription: The First Monumental Discovery in Dibra, Albania (arkeonews.net)
from nemeski@mander.xyz to archaeology@mander.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 14:26
https://mander.xyz/post/37561197

#archaeology

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ileftreddit@piefed.social on 08 Sep 2025 15:34 next collapse

Dang what’s with all the ads about mites on my face? They’re literally microscopic they don’t bother me until those fucking ads make me want to flamethrower myself

orbituary@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 08 Sep 2025 15:36 collapse

People still go through life without uBlock Origin, I see. Raw-doggin’ the internet like it’s 2013.

ileftreddit@piefed.social on 08 Sep 2025 17:52 collapse

Lol what is this sorcery of which you speak?

acockworkorange@mander.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 18:03 collapse

Do yourself a favor and install LibreWolf and uBlock Origin.

ileftreddit@piefed.social on 09 Sep 01:42 collapse

I’d love to but I am using iOS

acockworkorange@mander.xyz on 09 Sep 10:29 collapse

Brave browser.

Gork@sopuli.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 15:51 collapse

What is the other language? Article only mentions Roman as being one of them.

BertramDitore@lemmy.zip on 08 Sep 2025 18:24 next collapse

Probably Greek, though it’s hard to tell, and you’re right they don’t say it. I’m not too familiar with the history of the region, but I believe that area shared a similar material culture as nearby Hellenistic states, and was eventually ruled by Rome, so Greek would make sense. Might be common-enough knowledge to locals that they didn’t even think to mention it, but anyone who knows for sure please correct me.

The thing that bothers me most about that piece though is the photos (not the publication’s fault). The archaeologists broke most of the basic rules of archaeological photography. If I was their supervisor I would have insisted they straighten their sections, re-clean, and re-take all those photos. Those are terrible shots of an amazing find.

lvxferre@mander.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 18:34 collapse

Another site claims that “reports identify the second language of the inscription as Greek”.

Kind of a let-down to be honest. Latin or Greek plus another language (preferably a poorly attested one) would be way better.

Gork@sopuli.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 19:12 collapse

Indeed. Latin and Greek bilingualism must have been super common, I was hoping it to be something a bit more exotic given its location.

lvxferre@mander.xyz on 08 Sep 2025 19:48 collapse

It was, specially in two situations: wealthy = educated elites, and in the “border” between the Latin and Greek areas of influence.
<img alt="" src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a7/Roman_Empire_330_CE.png/1920px-Roman_Empire_330_CE.png">
This tomb fits both criteria. Strikçan is ~100km to the east and a bit to the north of Dyrrachium (modern Durrës), so it’s right in the border. And there was stuff like textiles woven with gold, that Gellianos guy was probably swimming in money.