In May 1958, while looking for Classical remains in Eastern Pisidia, I copied the following honorific inscription in the town of Beyşehir, which lies at the south-east corner of the lake of the same name, anciently Karalitis. Its situation and surroundings are shown in Fig. 1.
The text is carved on a rectangular slab of yellowish limestone, exposed to view by the removal of wall plaster. This is probably one face of the shaft of a statue-base, which has been built into the outer corner of a shop facing on to the main square. The shop also forms an outer wall to the Şen hotel, and the inscription is said to have come to light during repairs to the hotel, some six years previously. The final letters of the inscription are slightly damaged on both sides, but otherwise it is complete. Rosette below. H. 0·78 m., W. 0·43 m., Th. unknown. Letters 3 cm. high.
2 Magie, D., Roman Rule in Asia Minor, Princeton, 1950, I, p. 500Google Scholar.
3 For references, see D. Magie, op. cit., II, p. 1405, n. 20 and 21.
4 Swoboda, /Keil, /Knoll, , Denkmäler aus Lykaonien, Pamphylien, und Isaurien, Prague, 1935, p. 33, no. 74Google Scholar, line 6—Ἐγ]ράϕη ἐμ Μιστίαι κτλ. (letter of Attalus to the citizens of Amblada).
5 Assembled by Ramsay, W. M. in his article “Lycaonia”, Jahresheft d. Österreichischen Arch. Inst., VII, 1904, BeiblattGoogle Scholar, Table I.
6 JHS. XXII, 1902, p. 101, no. 5Google Scholar.
7 Jüthner, /Knoll, /Patsch, /Swoboda, , Vorlaüfiger Bericht über eine archäologische Expedition nach Kleinasien, Prague, 1903, p. 25Google Scholar.
8 See note 4.
9 Ramsay, W. M., The Historical Geography of Asia Minor, London, 1890, p. 322Google Scholar.
10 This had been suggested by Sterrett, J. R. S., Papers of the American School at Athens, III, 1884–1885, p. 166Google Scholar.
11 JHS. LIII, 1933, p. 157 (3)Google Scholar.
12 Robert, L., Villes d'Asie Mineure, Paris, 1935, p. 98, note 2Google Scholar. For his complete case, cf. Ètudes Épigraphiques et Philologiques, Paris, 1938, pp. 265–285Google Scholar.
13 In his book, Hist. Geogr. (op. cit.), p. 333, note †, Ramsay had doubted this entry: later, in BSA. IX, 1902, p. 268Google Scholar, he rejected it as a scribe's error.
14 J. R. S. Sterrett, op. cit., no. 275.
15 Bossert, H. Th., Altanatolien, Berlin, 1942, pp. 134–5Google Scholar.
16 Bossert, op. cit., p. 59.
17 See note 4.
18 Ramsay, op. cit., p. 322.
19 Itineraria Romana—Ravennatis Anonymi Cosmographia et Guidonis Geographia (ed. Schnetz, ), Teubner, 1940Google Scholar.
20 To be published shortly.
21 J. R. S. Sterrett, op. cit., p. 187.
22 JRS. XIV, 1924, p. 76, no. 110Google Scholar.
23 For his statement of the evidence as it then stood, but in favour of Parlais, see BSA. IX, 1902, p. 263Google Scholar.
24 For the Çukurkent culture, see BSA. XIX, 1912, pp. 13, 48 ffGoogle Scholar.
25 J. R. S. Sterrett, op. cit., no. 300 (Kavak): no. 276 (Fassıllar): no. 294 (Boyalı). Swoboda/Keil/Knoll, op. cit., p. 38, no. 90 (Akçelar): no. 66 (İncesu). CIL. III, 6799Google Scholar (Sandı). New inscription from Bostandere, to be published shortly.