Supplement.
c. 1.
The sum of the money which he gave in to the treasury or to the Roman people, or to discharged soldiers, was six hundred million denarii.158
The text presents a first-person funerary inscription offering an official summary of a ruler's public life, listing offices held, military and diplomatic actions, legislative measures, public benefactions, and building projects. This edition reproduces the original Latin text alongside a Greek translation and an English rendering, and it includes a historical introduction recounting the inscription's discovery and transmission. Philological notes, textual variants, and a bibliography accompany the texts, with the Greek often supplying readings where the Latin is damaged and the commentary explaining emendations and interpretive choices for students and scholars.
The sum of the money which he gave in to the treasury or to the Roman people, or to discharged soldiers, was six hundred million denarii.158