CIL III 9527 as Evidence of Spoken Latin in the Sixth-century Dalmatia

dc.creatorKunčer, Dragana
dc.date2020-09-01
dc.descriptionThe epitaph of Priest Iohannes (CIL III 9527, Salona, August 13, 599 or AD 603) is one of the few inscriptions from the sixth-century Salona, which can be dated with precision. It is also one of the rare inscriptions from Dalmatia of this period, which mention a person (proconsul Marcellinus) known from other sources (Registrum epistularum of Pope Gregory the Great). However, its linguistic importance seems to be summarized in the remark of its most recent editor Nancy Gauthier (2010) that the language of the epitaph reflects the features of Latin spoken in Dalmatia at the time (“la langue vivante”). The aim of this paper was to check the plausibility of this statement by comparing the Vulgar Latin features in the inscription with the results of research on Latin in late Dalmatia. Also, a new interpretation of the word obsis l. 13 is proposed.
dc.identifierhttps://ojs.lib.unideb.hu/classica/article/view/9724
dc.identifier10.22315/ACD/2020/6
dc.publisherUniversity of Debrecen.
dc.rightsCopyright (c) 2021 Acta Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis
dc.sourceActa Classica Universitatis Scientiarum Debreceniensis; Vol. 56 (2020); 99-106
dc.source2732-3390
dc.source0418-453X
dc.subjectVulgar Latin
dc.subjectDalmatia
dc.subjectepigraphy
dc.subjectLatin dialectology
dc.subjectSalona
dc.subjectLate Antiquity
dc.titleCIL III 9527 as Evidence of Spoken Latin in the Sixth-century Dalmatia
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
dc.typePeer-reviewed Article
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