Coronis (textual symbol)

Coronis (textual symbol)
The final lines of Hypereides' In Philippidem with a coronis (in concert with forked paragraphos) marking the end of the speech (P.Lit.Lond. 134 col. ix, 2nd century BCE).

A coronis or koronis (Ancient Greek: κορωνίς, plural κορωνίδες, korōnides) is a textual symbol found in ancient Greek papyri that was used to mark the ends of entire works or major sections in poetic and prose texts.[1] Coronides were placed most often in the left-hand margin of the text and were generally accompanied by a paragraphos or forked paragraphos.

Contents

Etymology

Liddell and Scott's Greek–English Lexicon gives the basic meaning of korōnis as "crook-beaked" from which a general meaning of "curved" is supposed to have derived.[2] Pierre Chantraine concurs and derives the word from κορώνη (korōnē), "crow", assigning the meaning of the epithet's use in reference to the textual symbol to the same semantic range of "curve".[3] But, given the fact that the earliest coronides actually take the form of birds, there has been debate about whether the name of the textual symbol initially referred to use of a decorative bird to mark a major division in a text or if these pictures were a secondary development that played upon the etymological relation between korōnē, "crow", and korōnis, as in "curved".[4]

Examples

See also

Works Cited

  • Chantraine, P. Dictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque (Paris: Éditions Klincksieck, 1968).
  • Liddell, H. G. et al. A Greek–English Lexicon, 9th ed. (Oxford: OUP, 1996).
  • Schironi, F. Τὸ Μέγα Βίβλιον: Book-Ends, End-Titles, and Coronides in Papyri with Hexametric Poetry (Durham, NC: The American Societ of Papyrologists, 2010).
  • Turner, E. G. Greek Manuscripts of the Ancient World, 2nd rev. ed. P.J. Parsons (London: Institute of Classical Studies, 1987).

Notes

  1. ^ Schironi 2010: 10
  2. ^ Liddel et al. 1996: 983 s.v. κορωνίς ii. 2.
  3. ^ P. Chantraine 1968: 570 s.v. κορώνη.
  4. ^ Schironi 2010: 16–17.)

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