An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?

In the first volume of the new journal ‹Philia› Mustafa Adak and two of his assistants publish some inedited inscriptions of Side in Pamphylia. Many of the transcriptions and commentaries leave much to be desired, but in this paper Johannes Nollé concentrates only on the extremely defective edition...

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Main Author: Johannes Nollé
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Akdeniz University 2015-05-01
Series:Gephyra
Subjects:
-
Online Access:https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18380/194084?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
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spelling doaj-5aba6ba2199845588ba53d205bdbc8c32020-11-25T01:24:52ZdeuAkdeniz UniversityGephyra1309-39242651-50592015-05-011224524910.37095/gephyra.194084324An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?Johannes NolléIn the first volume of the new journal ‹Philia› Mustafa Adak and two of his assistants publish some inedited inscriptions of Side in Pamphylia. Many of the transcriptions and commentaries leave much to be desired, but in this paper Johannes Nollé concentrates only on the extremely defective edition of an important honorary inscription devoted to the Sidetan doctor and poet Markellos, who lived in the times of the emperor Hadrianus. Nollé criticizes the transcription and the grammatical understanding as well as the interpretation of this interesting text consisting of only five words:  Mάρκελλον | Σίδητον | ἀρχιιατρὸν | ἡ πατρίς. Σίδητον is not an apposition to Μάρκελλον in the accusative, as Adak and his assistants want to make us believe, but a genitive attribute to ἀρχιιατρόν. As the ethnikon is in fact Σιδήτης and a variant Σίδητος – which Adak and his assistants implicitly suggest – is unattested, we have to interpret ΣΙΔΗΤΟΝ as Σιδητ῱ν (= Σιδητῶν). Consequently, in this new inscription Markellos is praised as Side’s city doctor. That is why we have no reason to assume, as Adak and his assistants did, that this inscription shows that Markellos was emperor Hadrianus’s personal doctor. Exactly the opposite is probable: This new inscription as well as already existing evidence make it very likely that Markellos was a famous city doctor of Side whose medical knowledge and poetical abilities made him known far beyond Side. It is not even certain that he was ever in Rome.https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18380/194084?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahinsideli markellosi̇mparator hadrianuskent hekimikişisel hekimmarkellos of sideemperor hadrianuscity doctorpersonal doctor-
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johannes Nollé
spellingShingle Johannes Nollé
An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
Gephyra
sideli markellos
i̇mparator hadrianus
kent hekimi
kişisel hekim
markellos of side
emperor hadrianus
city doctor
personal doctor
-
author_facet Johannes Nollé
author_sort Johannes Nollé
title An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
title_short An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
title_full An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
title_fullStr An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
title_full_unstemmed An Error with Consequences: Marcellus of Side, a personal physician of the Emperor Hadrianus?
title_sort error with consequences: marcellus of side, a personal physician of the emperor hadrianus?
publisher Akdeniz University
series Gephyra
issn 1309-3924
2651-5059
publishDate 2015-05-01
description In the first volume of the new journal ‹Philia› Mustafa Adak and two of his assistants publish some inedited inscriptions of Side in Pamphylia. Many of the transcriptions and commentaries leave much to be desired, but in this paper Johannes Nollé concentrates only on the extremely defective edition of an important honorary inscription devoted to the Sidetan doctor and poet Markellos, who lived in the times of the emperor Hadrianus. Nollé criticizes the transcription and the grammatical understanding as well as the interpretation of this interesting text consisting of only five words:  Mάρκελλον | Σίδητον | ἀρχιιατρὸν | ἡ πατρίς. Σίδητον is not an apposition to Μάρκελλον in the accusative, as Adak and his assistants want to make us believe, but a genitive attribute to ἀρχιιατρόν. As the ethnikon is in fact Σιδήτης and a variant Σίδητος – which Adak and his assistants implicitly suggest – is unattested, we have to interpret ΣΙΔΗΤΟΝ as Σιδητ῱ν (= Σιδητῶν). Consequently, in this new inscription Markellos is praised as Side’s city doctor. That is why we have no reason to assume, as Adak and his assistants did, that this inscription shows that Markellos was emperor Hadrianus’s personal doctor. Exactly the opposite is probable: This new inscription as well as already existing evidence make it very likely that Markellos was a famous city doctor of Side whose medical knowledge and poetical abilities made him known far beyond Side. It is not even certain that he was ever in Rome.
topic sideli markellos
i̇mparator hadrianus
kent hekimi
kişisel hekim
markellos of side
emperor hadrianus
city doctor
personal doctor
-
url https://dergipark.org.tr/en/pub/gephyra/issue/18380/194084?publisher=nalan-eda-akyurek-sahin
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