In a fourth-century B.C. cemetery near Athens, a team led by archaeologist Maria Petritaki recently discovered a cache of five lead tablets pierced with iron nails in a grave holding a woman’s cremated remains. Four of the tablets were inscribed with text that Yale classicist Jessica Lamont recently translated. She found they contain nearly identical ritual curses that beseech the gods Hecate, Artemis, and Hermes to punish several sets of husband-and-wife business owners, probably tavern keepers. According to Lamont, it is difficult to know exactly why the person who commissioned the tablets targeted the couples, but they were likely involved in some kind of commercial rivalry. “It is possible that this cache was commissioned in connection with a court case,” she says. Lamont also notes that the style of the curse texts, which were well-written in clean, beautiful script, complete with a phrase from Homer, suggests that some sort of professional scribe or “magician,” well versed in the supernatural, was paid a considerable amount to write them. “This was an elaborate, if not desperate, ritual undertaking,” says Lamont. The tablets were likely interred with the woman’s remains because graves were seen as conduits to the gods.
Cursing the Competition
SHARE:
Recommended Articles
Artifacts May/June 2022
Greek Curse Pot
(Craig Mauzy/Athenian Agora Excavations)
(Angelafoto/Getty Images)
(Courtesy Ephorate of West Attica, Piraeus and Islands, Yiannis Asvestas, @All rights reserved)
Ancient Tattoos November/December 2013
Red-Figure Vessel
(Erich Lessing/ Art Resource, NY)
-
Features July/August 2016
Franklin’s Last Voyage
After 170 years and countless searches, archaeologists have discovered a famed wreck in the frigid Arctic
(Courtesy Parks Canada, Photo: Marc-André Bernier) -
Letter from England July/August 2016
Stronghold of the Kings in the North
Excavations at one of Britain’s most majestic castles help tell the story of an Anglo-Saxon kingdom
(Colin Carter Photography/Getty Images) -
Artifacts July/August 2016
Spanish Horseshoe
(Courtesy Peter Eeckhout) -
Digs & Discoveries July/August 2016
Is it Esmeralda?
(Courtesy David Mearns)