Additional examples are adjusted to the entries in an automated way - we cannot guarantee that they are correct.
It is not attested epigraphically, and first appears in 11th century manuscript tradition.
Epigraphically, the early letter appears in an angular shape ().
Tibur too had his own vestals who are attested epigraphically.
Of these four additional letters, only the cweorð rune fails to appear epigraphically.
Two further units are recorded epigraphically at an earlier date, including an inscription on the Deurne helmet.
Tombs from this complex date to earlier than the epigraphic record, and as such cannot be equated to epigraphically known individuals.
There may have been an earlier shrine (fanum), since the Jupiter's cult is attested epigraphically.
Demeter and Hermes are also epigraphically attested.
Epigraphically the Dravidian languages have been attested since the 6th century BCE.
Epigraphically from 520 BC in the form of Old Persian (Behistun inscription).
Another rhyming psalter of much the same style is assigned epigraphically to the time of Edward II of England.
Epigraphically from the 3rd century BC in the form of Prakrit (Edicts of Ashoka).
Gēr is consistently written epigraphically and on artifacts, while the form for [j] appears only rarely in later manuscripts (as does a separate symbol for Ior).
The many individual Treveri attested epigraphically in other civitates may attest to the development of a Treveran commercial network within the western parts of the Empire.
In tradition and folklore, Jamshid is described as the fourth and greatest king of the epigraphically unattested Pishdadian Dynasty (before Kayanian dynasty).
The name has also been claimed as a variant of Urmani (or Urmenu), attested epigraphically in an inscription of Menuas of Urartu.
Given that such gladiatorial combat was as a rule intertwined with the imperial cult, Verlinde argued that the epigraphically attested cult of the emperor, was once again confirmed.
More recently, Blanche Menadier has compared the epithet Limenaia to the Homeric epithet Leukolenos, also attested epigraphically at Perachora.
The name as recorded by Lucan is unattested epigraphically, but variants of the name include the forms Tanarus, Taranucno-, Taranuo-, and Taraino-.
These plates are valuable epigraphically as they give us an insight into the social conditions of medieval South India and help fill chronological gaps to connect the history of the ruling dynasties.
Early Bronze Age: A series of rulers and dynasties whose existence is based mostly on the Sumerian King List besides some that are attested epigraphically (e.g. En-me-barage-si).
Arsaces is the eponymous Greek form of the dynastic name (rather than the personal names of the kings) adopted by all epigraphically attested rulers of the 'phil-hellenenic' Arsacid dynasties.
Another major Classical Dravidian language, Kannada is attested epigraphically from the mid-1st millennium AD, and literary Old Kannada flourished in the 9th- to 10th-century Rashtrakuta Dynasty.
Kannada is attested epigraphically for about one and a half millennia, and literary Old Kannada flourished in the 6th century Ganga dynasty and during the 9th century Rashtrakuta Dynasty.
The decisive point, often assumed implicitly, that it is possible to derive nationalist or ethnic pride from a population that lived millennia ago and, being known only archaeologically or epigraphically, is not remembered in living tradition.