Table 5.6.
The calendar of Asia and its variants according to the
hemerologia
Ephesus (Florence MS)= Asia (Leiden MS)
a
Asia(FlorenceMS)
Asia-Pamphylia(Vatican MS)
Bithynia (Florence,Vatican MSS)
Bithynia(Leiden MS)
Cyprus(FlorenceMS)
Cyprus(VaticanMS)
Crete(FlorenceMS)
Crete(VaticanMS)
23/9
24/9
23/9
23/9
23/9
23/9
22/9
23/9
23/9
24/10
24/10
24/10
24/10
24/10
24/10
23/10
24/10
23/10
23/11
23/11 or24/11
b
23/11
c
23/11
23/11
23/11
23/11
23/11
23/11
24/12
24/12
24/12
24/12
24/12
24/12
23/12
24/12
24/12
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
24/1
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
21/2
24/3
24/3
24/3
23/3
23/3
23/3
23/3
24/3
23/3
23/4
23/4
23/4
d
23/4
23/4
23/4
23/4
23/4
23/4
24/5
24/5
24/5
24/5
23/5
24/5
24/5
24/5
24/5
23/6
23/6
23/6
e
23/6
23/6
23/6
23/6
23/6
23/6
24/7
24/7
23/
7
24/7
24/7
24/7
23/
f 7
24/7
23/
7
24/8
g
24/8
24/8
h
23/8
i
23/8
j
23/8
23/8
23/8
23/8
a
This calendar is identical with that of the Priene inscription.
b
On 23/11 the text reads
ðæïô
’(for
ðæïôæØÆŒÜò
, i.e. the penultimate day of the month; see Ch. 1 n .68), but this must be an error, since 21/11 is already
ðæïô
’, and 22/11 is 30 (of
month Tiberion), whilst 24/11 is 1 (of month Apatourion). Clearly, the correct entry for 23/11 must be either 31 Tiberion or 1 Apatourion (if the latter
, 1 Apatourion would be
duplicated on 23/11 and 24/11; duplication of day 1 is common in the calendars of the
hemerologia
). Internal evidence supports the latter, because in the
‘Asia
’column of the
Florence MS there is no
‘day 31
’(instead, all 31-day months duplicate day 1 of the month and end on day 30), and moreover, all other Asian-type calendars in the
hemerologia
begin
this month on 23/11, as this table shows. However, a month beginning on 24/11 is attested in the calendar inscription of Metropolis (located south of Sm
yrna,
firmly within the
province of Asia: Engelmann 1999: 142
- 3), with months beginning on 24/9 and 24/10 (just as in this column of the Florence manuscript), followed by 24/11. In this light, the date of
this month must be left uncertain.c
In this month, 20/11 is 3 (in backward count, i.e. 3rd day from the end of the month; see Ch. 1 n. 67), 21/11 is at once
ðæïô
’and 1 (which does not make sense:
ðæïôæØÆŒÜò
is the
penultimate or 2nd day from the end of the month, and 1, presumably also in backward count, is the last day), 22/11 and 23/11 are both
Sebaste
(i.e.
‘of Augustus
’a common
alternative designation of the
first day of the month, here duplicated), and 24/11 is 2. In Greek lunar hollow months (i.e. of 29 days) it was not uncommon for
ðæïôæØÆŒÜò
to be
omitted (and thus for the count of days to jump from backward 3 to 1: ibid. n. 68), but there is no attestation of a day
’s being reckoned as both
ðæïôæØÆŒÜò
and 1; anyway, the
omission of the penultimate day of the month has no place in a Julianized calendar, which has no 29-day months. It is likely, therefore, that 21/11 is
ðæïô
’, 22/11 is 1 (of the old
month, in backward count), and the next month has only one
Sebaste
day, on 23/11. Kubitschek (1915: 96) rightly remarks that the duplication of
Sebaste
here is suspect (but I see