This article aims to present a limited selection of Middle Iranian graffiti while proposing a definition of the term ‘graffito’ in the Iranian area. Middle Iranian languages were spoken over a vast region that stretches from Mesopotamia to Central Asia. Traditionally, scholars in our field consider the Middle Iranian period to cover the fourth century BCE to the end of the first millennium CE. The number of known written artefacts dating from this period has progressively increased and today we possess a sizeable epigraphic corpus, of which languages such as Middle Persian, Parthian and Sogdian take the lion’s share. Here the author presents a selection of written artefacts that, on material and linguistic grounds, seem to better fit the idea of ‘graffito’, and briefly focuses on a few drawings scratched into palace walls in ancient Persepolis. Furthermore, the article aims at contributing to the growing debate on graffiti across different traditions, while remaining well aware that the definition of ‘graffiti’ in the Iranian area is still an open question and requires further discussion to establish a shared classification.

Graffiti in Middle Iranian: Some Preliminary Notes / Cereti, Carlo G.. - (2023), pp. 327-354. [10.1515/9783111326306].

Graffiti in Middle Iranian: Some Preliminary Notes

Carlo G. Cereti
2023

Abstract

This article aims to present a limited selection of Middle Iranian graffiti while proposing a definition of the term ‘graffito’ in the Iranian area. Middle Iranian languages were spoken over a vast region that stretches from Mesopotamia to Central Asia. Traditionally, scholars in our field consider the Middle Iranian period to cover the fourth century BCE to the end of the first millennium CE. The number of known written artefacts dating from this period has progressively increased and today we possess a sizeable epigraphic corpus, of which languages such as Middle Persian, Parthian and Sogdian take the lion’s share. Here the author presents a selection of written artefacts that, on material and linguistic grounds, seem to better fit the idea of ‘graffito’, and briefly focuses on a few drawings scratched into palace walls in ancient Persepolis. Furthermore, the article aims at contributing to the growing debate on graffiti across different traditions, while remaining well aware that the definition of ‘graffiti’ in the Iranian area is still an open question and requires further discussion to establish a shared classification.
2023
Graffiti Scratched, Scrawled, Sprayed: Towards a Cross-Cultural Understanding.
9783111326283
Iran, pre-Islamic Iran, Epigraphy; Graffiti; Middle Iranian
02 Pubblicazione su volume::02a Capitolo o Articolo
Graffiti in Middle Iranian: Some Preliminary Notes / Cereti, Carlo G.. - (2023), pp. 327-354. [10.1515/9783111326306].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1692260
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