Series | Antiquity Studies
Edited book | Epigraphic Falsification
Chapter | Il falsario Sententiosus

Il falsario Sententiosus

Abstract

An obviously fake inscription from a recently published collection helps unmasking another inscribed monument, whose genuineness was never doubted so far: a fortunate coincidence allows us to prove beyond reasonable doubt that both were indeed crafted by one and the same hand as part of a rather unique series of forgeries, perhaps drawing from a modern collection of Latin sententiae, captioning macabre imagery. Although both items were on the market in Rome in the early 1900s amidst a plethora of genuine inscriptions from recent excavations, it cannot be safely ruled out that they had been circulating for a long time before that.


Open access | Peer reviewed

Submitted: July 3, 2019 | Accepted: Sept. 10, 2019 | Published Dec. 16, 2019 | Language: it

Keywords Christian forgeriesJohns Hopkins Archaeological MuseumPseudo-antique palaeographyCasa Museo dell’Antiquariato Ivan BruschiAntiquarian market in the early 1900s


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