C 28
Text Information
- Siglum
- C 28
- Alternative Sigla
- Dunand 1350 d
- Transliteration
- l drʾl bn mty bn rġḍ bn hḏr w byt ḫyṭ f tẓr h- ʾs¹d f h ʾlt s¹lm
- Translation
- By Drʾl son of Mty son of Rġḍ son of Hḏr and he spent the night while journeying, then he awaited [the appearance of] Leo so, O ʾlt, may he be secure.
Interpretation
- Provenance
- Jabal Says consists of a volcanic cone within a much larger crater. The latter contains the ruins of an Umayyad palace and a semi-permanent lake. De Vogüé (1868–1877: 142–143) found only 2 Safaitic texts (C 3, 3bis) and some Kufic inscriptions by the ruins and Dusaud and Macler found none. None of these seems to have climbed to the top of the inner crater. Von Oppenheim (1899–1900: i, 245), however, reported large numbers on the south-east slope of the inner crater and particularly on its summit, but did not record any. C 5–104 were copied at Jabal Says by the Dunands, with no indication of their exact provenance. Safaitic inscriptions and at least one Greek text are to be found all around the rim of the cone and are particularly numerous on the north, north-east and south-east parts, overlooking the lake. Both published (Dunand) and unpublished texts were found on this section of the rim, as well as C 296–298 which are among those (C 292–321) said in C to have come from "the region between Jabal Says and Zalaf."
- Original Reading Credit
- C
- Original Translation Credit
- OCIANA
- Technique
- Direct hammered
- Associated Inscriptions
- C 25 C 26-27.1
- Ryckmans, G. Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum: Pars Quinta, Inscriptiones Saracenicae Continens: Tomus I, Fasciculus I, Inscriptiones Safaiticae. Paris: E Reipublicae Typographeo, 1950–1951.
- Site
- Ǧabal Says, Rif Dimašq Governorate, Syria
- Date Found
- 1920s and 1930s
- Current Location
- In situ
- Subject
- Genealogy
- Script
- Safaitic
- Old OCIANA ID
- #0003233
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