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This ancient memorial tablet from a household slave will be part of the display.
This ancient memorial tablet from a household slave will be part of the display.
4 June 2014

Tombstones and other memorials to the dead bring life to some of the more interesting residents of ancient Greece and Rome at an exhibition opening in Brisbane this week.

Õ¬Äе¼º½’s RD Milns Antiquities Museum’s latest exhibition, , tells the story of characters such as imperial freedman Tiberius Claudius Amianthus, and Theophile, a woman who ‘possessed every virtue’.

Museum Director Dr Janette McWilliam said the exhibition featured artefacts from five Australian collections, including the Australian National University Classics Museum and the University of Sydney’s Nicholson Museum.

“One of the few ways to explore the lives of ancient people below the upper classes is to study their memorials and funerary practices,” Dr McWilliam said.

“This exhibition highlights the important role that epigraphy – the study of Greek and Roman inscriptions – particularly memorial inscriptions, plays in helping us to understand the lives of people who lived in ancient Greece and Rome.”

The exhibition includes 12 ancient burial inscriptions and a dozen rare books from Õ¬Äе¼º½’s Fryer Library.

A Study in Stone: The History of Epigraphy opens at 6pm Friday, followed by a lecture by the RD Milns Visiting Scholar, Professor John Bodel, the W. Duncan MacMillan II Professor of Classics and Professor of History at Brown University at 10am, Saturday 7 June.

The free exhibition will continue into 2015 at the , Level 2, Building 9 (Michie) at Õ¬Äе¼º½’s St Lucia campus.

The museum is open 9am-5pm Monday to Friday and on selected .

Media: RD Milns Antiquities Museum Senior Museum Officer James Donaldson, 3365 3010, antiquitiesmuseum@uq.edu.au.