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Tabula Iliaca

 

Tabula Īliaca, marble relief of c.15 BC, found by the Via Appia near Bovillae, about 20 km. (12 miles) south-east of Rome. It represents scenes from the Trojan War, and indicates the sources from which they are taken. An inscription states that the central panel represents the (lost) Iliupersis of Stesichorus (Greek lyric poet of the early sixth century BC), and its details have been believed to be Stesichorean. Among other things the panel shows Aeneas bearing his father Anchisēs on his shoulders from Troy, accompanied by his son Ascanius, with an inscription saying that he is sailing to ‘Hesperia’ (i.e. Italy). If Stesichorus did indeed include this episode, then he is the first authority for the legend of Aeneas' migration to Italy. Many scholars doubt the authenticity of the attribution to Stesichorus.

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Tabula Iliaca Capitolina, Roman artwork, 1st century AD

A Tabula Iliaca ("Iliadic table") is a generic label for a calculation of the days of the Iliad, probably by Zenodotus, of which numerous fragmentary examples are now known. The Tabulae Iliacae, of which some examples survive, all in fragmentary condition, are pinakes of early Imperial date, which all seem to have come from two Roman workshops, one of which seems to have been designed to satisfy a clientele of more modest aspirations.[1]

The term is conventionally applied to some twenty-one[2] marble panels carved in very low relief in miniature rectangles with labeling inscriptions typically surrounding a larger central relief[3] and short engraved texts on the obverse. Little can be said about their sizes, since none survives complete. It appears that the largest rectangular tablet is 25 cm by 42 cm. The border scenes, where they can be identified, are largely derived from the Epic Cycle; eleven of the small marble tablets are small pictorial representations of the Trojan War portraying episodes from the Iliad, including two circular ones on the Shield of Achilles. Another six panels depict the sack of Ilium. On the reverse of the Borgia Tabula, a list of titles and authors of epic works, with stichometry, a listing of the number of lines in each epic; though these have occasioned great interest W. McLeod demonstrated that, far from representing the tradition of Hellenistic scholarship, in every case where facts can be checked with the accepted canon, the compiler of the Borgia Table errs, citing an otherwise unattested Danaides, ascribing a new poem to Arctinus. McLeod suggests literary fakery designed to impress the nouveaux-riches like Trimalchio, who is convinced that Troy was taken by Hannibal; Nicholas Horsfall[4] finds the "combination of error and erudition" designed to impress just such eager newly-educated consumers of culture with showy but spurious proofs of their erudition: "The Borgia Table is a pretense of literacy for the unlettered," is McLeod's conclusion.[5]

One of the most complete examples surviving is the Tabula Iliaca Capitolina, which was discovered around Bovillae, Rome. The tablet dates from the Augustan period, around 15 BC. Its carvings depicts Aeneas climbing aboard a ship after the sacking of Troy[6]. The carving's caption attributes its depiction to a poem by Stesichorus in the 6th century BC, although there is has been much scholarly skepticism since the mid-19th century[7]. The Tabula Iliaca Capitolina is currently in the Capitoline Museums in Rome.

References

  1. ^ Anna Sadurska Les tables iliaques (Warsaw, 1964), esp. p. 11.
  2. ^ Sadurska 1964 carefully catalogued a corpus of nineteen tabulae; two more had been added to the list by 1985, according to W. McLeod, "The 'Epic Canon' of the Borgia Table: Hellenistic Lore or Roman Fraud?" Transactions of the American Philological Association 11 (1985), pp. 153-65.
  3. ^ The Second Verona Table (Sadurska's 9D, was bordered with two rows of panels.
  4. ^ Horsfall, "Stesichorus at Bovillae?", Journal of Hellenic Studies 99 (1997:26-48) especially pp 33-35; McLeod 1985: 163-65
  5. ^ McLeod 1985:165.
  6. ^ "The Legend of Aeneas and the Foundation of Rome." http://vergil.classics.upenn.edu/comm2/legend/legend.html. Accessed 4 November 2007.
  7. ^ "The Aeneas-Legend from Homer to Virgil." http://theol.eldoc.ub.rug.nl/FILES/root/BremmerJN/1987/117/aeneas.pdf. Accessed 4 November 2007.

 
 

 

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