the library and his heirs finished it.^32 The building was in fact a heroon,
enclosing Celsus’s sarcophagus in a crypt directly below the library’s
vaulted central apse, which likely held his statue.^33 A long foundation
document, again in Greek but this time dedicated more normally to
Celsus in the dative, stood to the right of the center door, and stated
the conditions of the bequest, as well as amounts given for construction
and purchase of books, specifying that Celsus’s statues were to be
crowned three times a year.^34 This inscription would have taken more
effort to read, as it was over a statue niche and stood 4.80–6.30 meters
from floor level; though its 24 closely written lines began with letters
4.5 cm tall, they dwindle to 2 cm at the bottom.
The bilingual aspect comes to the fore—literally—on the bases of
two equestrian statues of Celsus that flanked the library staircase. Their
inscriptions, in Latin on the right, Greek on the left, both show Celsus’s
name and his most important titles (consul and proconsul of Asia) on the
front, whereas those entering the library would see the long sides listing
Celsus’s official career to either side as they climbed the stairs.
35
The
- Ma (2007, esp. 220) discusses the meaning behind the use of the accusative for
statues, which may be extended to this building: ‘‘The honorific formula and decree, in their
determination to speak of civic culture, say ‘Look around you.’’’ - Neudecker (2004, 303 4) on library as heroon, though he misattributes the sar
cophagus to Aquila. For intramural burial, infra n. 61.
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ðÆôÝæÆ;IðÆæôØóÜíôøí=ôHí ŒºÅæïíüìøí’`ŒýºÆ:
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cos. f./
Left side: Ti. Iulio Ti. f. Cor. Celso Polemaeano, cos., procos. Asiae, trib. legionis III /
Cyrenaicae, adlecto inter aedilicios ab divo Vespasiano, pr(aetori) p(opuli) R(omani), leg
80 Situating Literacies