C 1133
Text Information
- Siglum
- C 1133
- Alternative Sigla
- Vogüé 214
- Transliteration
- l ḫlʾl bn s²rb w wgm ʿl- ʾ{b}rs² mt mn{y}
- Translation
- By Ḫlʾl son of S²rb and he grieved for {ʾbrs²} who died {at the hand of fate}.
Interpretation
- Apparatus Criticus
- C: l ḫlʾl bn s²rb w wgm ʿl- ʾbrs² mt mn{y}
- Provenance
- The name "Rijm Qaʿqūl" was applied by nineteenth-century travellers to at least four large outcrops at the southern end of the Ruḥba, to the south and south-west of the modern water tower. This helps to explain the curious fact that there is no overlapping between the "Rijm Qaʿqūl" copies of de Vogüé, Wetzstein and Dussaud & Macler, and only in a very few cases between those of de Vogüé and Waddington who were travelling together. The probability that there were multiple cairns with this name is supported by the fact that that while Waddington wrote that it was 10 minutes [ride] from al-ʿUdaysīyah to Rijm Qaʿqūl, Dussaud & Macler say that the journey between the two took 30 minutes. In 1995, the Safaitic Epigraphic Survey Programme identified the sites visited by Wetzstein and by Dusaud & Macler but did not find those where de Vogüé and Waddington had worked. The inscriptions found at Rijm Qaʿqūl "A" were all texts copied by Wetzstein and no one else. It is likely therefore that this is the place he regarded as "Rijm Qaʿqūl". Note that the co-ordinates given here are very approximate.
- Original Reading Credit
- OCIANA
- Original Translation Credit
- OCIANA
- Ryckmans, G. Corpus Inscriptionum Semiticarum: Pars Quinta, Inscriptiones Saracenicae Continens: Tomus I, Fasciculus I, Inscriptiones Safaiticae. Paris: E Reipublicae Typographeo, 1950–1951.
- de Vogüé, M. Syrie Centrale. Inscriptions sémitiques. Paris: Baudry, 1868-1877.
- Site
- Ruǧm Qaʿqūl, Rif Dimašq Governorate, Syria
- Date Found
- 1861, 1862
- Current Location
- In situ
- Subject
- Genealogy
- Script
- Safaitic
- Old OCIANA ID
- #0004556
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