Antiquity Studies

Series | Antiquity Studies
Volume 25 | Edited book | Epigraphic Falsification

Epigraphic Falsification

Methods and Case Studies

open access | peer reviewed
    edited by
  • Lorenzo Calvelli - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile

Abstract
The book investigates the complex articulations of epigraphic forgery, a phenomenon widely attested in Italy between the late Middle Ages and the 18th century. Non-genuine inscriptions or falsae, as Theodor Mommsen called them, are those that present themselves as ancient, but in reality are not. They can be produced either on material support or simply on paper. Within them, different types of documents can be distinguished: forgeries made for malicious purposes, replicas of ancient inscriptions, and texts or monuments inspired by classical epigraphic models. The book brings together fifteen scholarly essays, which examine individual cases of forgery, reconstruct the epistemology of forgery criticism and rehabilitate numerous epigraphs mistakenly believed to be forgeries, while confirming their actual antiquity.

Keywords Latin epigraphyIntellectual historyMarcheAmphoraCritical editionsSpurious imitationsThomas HollisTheodor MommsenEpigraphic forgeries on paperForgeryCoarse altarPrinted editionsMeyranesioNon-alphabetic graphemesPirro LigorioLeponticInternetInscribed zone as decorative surfaceCounterfeit instrumentum inscriptumDecretum RubiconisSavoy PiedmontLatin poets of RenaissanceEpigraphic forgeriesAger MediolanensisAncient restorationsPrimacy of SardiniaAntonio TrevisiEpitaphCIL VI 991*Pseudo-antique palaeographyEpigraphic modelsSenatus consultumAqueductsForged blunderFalse inscriptionsLuigi BiraghiCasa Museo dell’Antiquariato Ivan BruschiHouse of SavoyPingoneRoman LiguriaCiriaco de’ PizzicolliJohn DisneyForgeriesSpainManuscriptJohns Hopkins Archaeological MuseumAqua VergineJacopo ValvasoneManuscriptsEpigraph balanced between dimensions and inscriptiFLucas PetoAntiquarian market in the early 1900sAntiquariansAquileiaCouncil of TrentLex de imperio Vespasiani Antonio AgustínCitiesDigital editionsMariangelo AccursioCopiesGClassical scholarshipEpigraphic researchCIL VI 990*Fitzwilliam MuseumEpigraphyFake inscriptionsDocumentary forgeriesForged inscriptionsRenaissanceFakeChristian forgeries

Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-386-1 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-386-1 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-387-8 | Number of pages 312 | Dimensions 16x23cm | Published Dec. 16, 2019 | Language it, fr, en

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