The Department of Classical Languages and Literatures at Smith College owns a small collection of six Latin inscriptions, which were acquired around the turn of the century by Albert William Van Buren from antiquities dealers in Rome and were subsequently purchased from Van Buren by F. Warren Wright of the Smith Latin Department, along with a handwritten catalogue of the collection, in 1925. Three of the stones collected by Van Buren were published by Huelsen in CIL VI among the sepulchral inscriptions of Rome.
The Smith College Museum of Art has a small marble ash urn from Rome and a stamped moldmade terracotta lamp on display.
( Total: 16 ) Jump to: Greek | Latin
Greek
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MA.North.SC.G.25.83 (transcription)
fragmentary amphora handle stamp
Latin
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MA.North.SC.L.25.70 (transcription)
Fragment of a stamped terra sigillata base -
MA.North.SC.L.25.71 (transcription)
Stamped fragment of terra sigillata cup -
MA.North.SC.L.25.72 (transcription)
Triangular stamped fragment of terra sigillata ware -
MA.North.SC.L.25.80 (transcription)
Fragmentary brick stamp from the reign of Theoderic the Great -
MA.North.SC.L.25.84 (transcription)
Fragmentary stamped amphora handle -
MA.North.SC.L.25.85 (transcription)
Stamped fragment of an amphora handle -
MA.North.SC.L.25.89 (transcription)
honorific inscription for Gaius Furnius -
MA.North.SC.L.25.93 (transcription)
Fragmentary inscription -
MA.North.SC.L.87.52 (transcription)
epitaph of Aurelius Augustianus -
MA.North.SC.L.87.53 (transcription)
fragmentary inscription (possibly epitaph for a centurion?) -
MA.North.SC.L.87.54-54a (transcription)
epitaph of a soldier -
MA.North.SC.L.88.7 (transcription)
brickstamp from the workshop of Fortunatus -
MA.North.SC.L.88.8 (transcription)
epitaph of Fortunata -
MA.North.SC.L.1920.21-1 (transcription)
epitaph of Aulus Seius Zosimianus -
MA.North.SC.L.1961.31 (transcription)
label naming C. Oppius