Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
I like trying to work out the relationships between dedicator and dedicatee.
Also important are dedications of votive altars by military personnel, which shed light on the dedicator's religious beliefs.
Cloak and beard are symbolic, turning the traditional statue (naked youth) into a 'portrait' of the dedicator making his eternal offering.
Each room also includes an area run, microware, mini fridge, recycle and garbage can, smoke dedicator, closet, and curtains.
An inscription to Epona from Mainz, Germany, identifies the dedicator as Syrian.
Dock11 (Dedicator of cytokinesis), also known as Zizimin2, is a large ( 240 kDa) protein involved in intracellular signalling networks.
Wilhelm Max Müller argued that the stela did not commemorate the victory, but rather expressed the loyalty of the dedicator to his king.
The protein encoded by this gene interacts with the dedicator of cyto-kinesis 1 protein to promote phagocytosis and effect cell shape changes.
The term Nepal Mandala has been used through the centuries in stone and copper inscriptions and the colophons of manuscripts when mentioning the dedicator's address.
It is a figure of Athena (fig. 73), headless, which stood on a column inscribed with the names of Angelitos as dedicator and Euenor as maker.
Herodotus estimated that if Scaeus, the son of Hippocoon was the dedicator and not another of the same name, he would have lived at the time of Oedipus.
One piece of the inscribed marble base survives with them, and shows that the dedicator was a Sicilian, one of the Deinomenid family who made themselves tyrants in these years of Syracuse and other cities.
These are very numerous; and the custom of placing the name of the dedicator in a conspicuous place on the building was prevalent, especially in the case of dedications by emperors or officials, or by public bodies.
Solomon Luria is of the opinion that the dedicator of devoted goods is required to specify that the property or items be given to a priest in order for a priest to be eligible as the recipient.
The Ulcisia altar describes the dedicator, P. Aelius Aelianus, as prefect of the Second legion, thus confirming that he was the same man as the one who had commissioned the sarcophagus of Martialis and Fl.
Other members of this small family of engulfment and cell motility (ELMO) proteins have been shown to interact with the dedicator of cyto-kinesis 1 (DOCK1) protein to promote phagocytosis and effect cell shape changes.
He has been identified as the possible dedicator of a gravestone in Rome, but it has also been supposed that he lived in Narbonese Gaul, because he refers to a species of vine (marcum) which, according to Pliny, was native to that region.
This type of statuette modeled an organ or section of the human body and was given as a votive offering at a healing sanctuary, of which a great many have been found in Latium, in hope that divinity would turn its attention to healing the organ of the dedicator.
It is generally accepted that Traianus Mucianus was the dedicator of both the Aurelianic monuments and that he set them up to express his gratitude to the brothers for the influence they had exercised - presumably with the Emperor (Gallienus) - to the benefit of his career.
Jerome complained: 'One who was yesterday a catechumen is today a bishop; another moves overnight from the amphitheatre to the church; a man who spent the evening in the circus stands next morning at the altar, and another who was recently a patron of the stage is now the dedicator of virgins.'
Augustus (with links to the temple's founders via his Claudian wife) may have funded the rebuilding, or the dedicator may have been yet another Appius Claudius Pulcher (consul of 38 BC, conqueror of the Hirpini and loyal ally and father-in-law to Augustus).