Kesecek Köyü inscription

The Kesecek Köyü inscription is a 4th century BCE Aramaic inscription originally located on the cliffs overlooking the Berdan River near the village of Kesecek Köyü about 25-35 km north-east of Tarsus, Mersin.[1][2]

The inscription

It is similar in nature to the Sarıaydın inscription.[3]

Text

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One interpretation following clues from the Daskyleion inscription:

This relief NNŠT erected before ˀDRSWN to the end that he protect the tomb which belongs to him, and whoever does injury to this relief, let Śahar and Šamaš require (it) of him.[4]

The inscription measures 46 cm wide by 30 cm high. It is known at KAI 258.

It is currently at the Peabody Museum of Natural History at Yale.

Bibliography

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References

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  1. ^ Charles Cutler Torrey, "An Aramaic Inscription from Cilicia, in the Museum of Yale University" JAOS 35 (1915): 370–74: "The ancient Aramaic monument described in the following pages was brought to the United States recently by an Armenian merchant, and was purchased in 1915 by Colonel Isaac Morris Ullman of New Haven for the Museum of Yale University. It is a block of yellowish gray flint, said to have been cut out of a cliff above the river Cydnus, in the neighborhood of the village Kesejek Keoyew, about fifteen miles northeast of the city of Tarsus."
  2. ^ Butterweck, Christel; Conrad, Diethelm; Delsman, Wilhelmus C.; et al. (8 July 2019). Grab-, Sarg-, Votiv- und Bauinschriften (in German). Gütersloher Verlagshaus. p. 578. ISBN 978-3-641-21767-9.
  3. ^ Charles Cutler Torrey, "An Aramaic Inscription from Cilicia, in the Museum of Yale University" JAOS 35 (1915): 370–74: "Of the inscriptions hitherto published, those most nearly resembling ours in the forms of the characters used are the Memphis inscription, CIS II, 122, dated 482 B. C, the Teima stele, CIS II, 113, belonging to the fifth century, and the Cilician hunting inscription, Lidzbarski, Kandbuch, Plate XXVI, 3, probably also dating from the fifth century."
  4. ^ Hanfmann, George M. A. (1966). "The New Stelae from Daskylion". Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research. 184 (184): 10–13. doi:10.2307/1356199. JSTOR 1356199.