Coronis (textual symbol)

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "For".

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

A coronis ⸎ (Template:Langx, korōnís, pl. Script error: No such module "Lang"., korōnídes) is a textual symbol found in ancient Greek papyri that was used to mark the end of an entire work or of a major section in poetic and prose texts.[1] The coronis was generally placed in the left-hand margin of the text and was often accompanied by a paragraphos or a forked paragraphos (diple obelismene).

The coronis is encoded by Unicode as part of the Supplemental Punctuation block, at Template:Unichar.

Etymology

Liddell and Scott's Greek–English Lexicon gives the basic meaning of Script error: No such module "Lang". as "crook-beaked" from which a general meaning of "curved" is supposed to have derived.[2] Script error: No such module "Lang". concurs and derives the word from Script error: No such module "Lang". (Script error: No such module "Lang".), "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 Script error: No such module "Lang"., "crow", and Script error: No such module "Lang"., as in "curved".[4]

Examples

See also

Notes

Template:Reflist

Sources

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

Template:Authority control

  1. Schironi 2010: 10.
  2. Liddell-Scott 1996: 983 s.v. Script error: No such module "Lang". ii. 2.
  3. P. Chantraine 1968: 570 s.v. Script error: No such module "Lang"..
  4. Schironi 2010: 16–17.