epigraphically การใช้
- The Phoenician inscriptions are epigraphically from the same period as the Mesha Stele.
- Demeter and Hermes are also epigraphically attested.
- Of these four additional letters, only the " cweor?" rune fails to appear epigraphically.
- Two further units are recorded epigraphically at an earlier date, including an inscription on the Deurne helmet.
- More recently, Blanche Menadier has compared the epithet Limenaia to the Homeric epithet Leukolenos, also attested epigraphically at Perachora.
- In tradition and folklore, Jamshid is described as the fourth and greatest king of the epigraphically unattested Pishdadian Dynasty ( before the Kayanian dynasty ).
- Other evidence is from archeological inscriptions, where " Bhagavan " is documented epigraphically to be from around 100 BCE, such as in the inscriptions of the Heliodorus pillar.
- The name has also been claimed as a variant of " Urmani " ( or " Urmenu " ), attested epigraphically in an inscription of Menuas of Urartu.
- Another major Classical Dravidian language, Kannada is attested epigraphically from the mid-1st millennium AD, and literary Brahmagiri ( dated 230 BCE ) has been suggested to contain a word in identifiable Kannada.
- Although there is no epigraphically attested figure to whom the Bahman of legend corresponds, several post-Sassanid Arabic and Persian commentaries assign the mythological king several features and events that do correspond to historical figures.
- While Kannada is attested epigraphically from the mid-1st millennium CE as Halmidi script of Purvada HaleGannada ( Pre-old Kannada ), and literary Old Kannada Halekannada flourished in the 9th to 10th century Rashtrakuta Dynasty.
- Again, take a look at Aryanism : " The earliest epigraphically-attested reference to the word arya occurs in the 6th century Behistun inscription, which describes itself to have been composed " in arya [ language or script ] " ( ?70 ).
- Chronologically and epigraphically, however, much evidence points to the general ascension of rulers who were sent into the lowland Maya region either as invaders or envoys from Teotihuacan during the late 4th century; particularly the widely known and powerful Yax Nuun Ayiin I of Tikal, son of Teotihuacan lord Spearthrower Owl.
- The sculptures had been published mostly in hand copy, not facsimile, by Auguste Mariette in his " Abydos ", I . The temple has been partially recorded epigraphically by Amice Calverley and Myrtle Broome in their 4 volume publication of " The Temple of King Sethos I at Abydos " ( 1933 1958 ).
- Such a correction concerns the temples dedicated on the Capitol : it does not address the question of the dedication of the temple on the Island, which is puzzling, since the place is attested epigraphically as dedicated to the cult of " Iuppiter Iurarius ", in the " Fasti Praenestini " of " Vediove " and to Jupiter according to Ovid.