April 2021 (125.2)

Article

Cursing Theophrastos in Paros

By Jessica L. Lamont

Read Article
Read Article

This article publishes a cast-lead figurine from the early fourth century BCE, excavated in a tile grave on the Cycladic island of Paros. The figurine was pierced with seven iron nails, the arms were bound behind the back, and a lead collar shackled the neck. Inscriptions on the body in the epichoric Parian alphabet suggest that the object was produced locally. The aggressive nailing, binding, shackling, inscribing, and modulation of the figurine, combined with the mortuary context and abundant parallels, suggest that the object was ritual in nature, implicated as an effigy (κολοσσός, Rachepuppe, or so-called voodoo doll) in a binding curse. Examination of the object in relation to the growing corpus of curse effigies sheds new light on private curse rituals, onomastics, the local Parian script, and notions of sexuality and competition in the classical Aegean.

Two views of the lead effigy of Theophrastos, early fourth century BCE, figurine ht. 10.2 cm, Vitsi necropolis, Paros. Paros Archaeological Museum B 5984, excav. 1983.

Two views of the lead effigy of Theophrastos, early fourth century BCE, figurine ht. 10.2 cm, Vitsi necropolis, Paros. Paros Archaeological Museum B 5984, excav. 1983.

More articles like this:

EpigraphySmall FindsClassical PeriodReligion/CultGreece > Cyclades
Two views of the lead effigy of Theophrastos, early fourth century BCE, figurine ht. 10.2 cm, Vitsi necropolis, Paros. Paros Archaeological Museum B 5984, excav. 1983.

Two views of the lead effigy of Theophrastos, early fourth century BCE, figurine ht. 10.2 cm, Vitsi necropolis, Paros. Paros Archaeological Museum B 5984, excav. 1983.

Cursing Theophrastos in Paros

By Jessica L. Lamont

American Journal of Archaeology Vol. 125, No. 2 (April 2021), pp. 207-222

DOI: 10.3764/aja.125.2.0207

© 2021 Archaeological Institute of America