AK-1.5

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Inscription
Transliteration: ]ḳẹụ
Original script: ]K4 dE3 dU5 d

Object: AK-1 rock (stone)
(Inscriptions: AK-1.1, AK-1.2, AK-1.3, AK-1.4, AK-1.5, AK-1.6, AK-1.7, AK-1.8, AK-1.9, AK-1.10, AK-1.11, AK-1.12, AK-1.13, AK-1.14, AK-1.15, AK-1.16, AK-1.17, AK-1.18, AK-1.19, AK-1.20, AK-1.21)
Position: left area"left area" is not in the list (front, back, top, bottom, inside, outside, neck, shoulder, foot, handle, ...) of allowed values for the "position" property.
Orientation: 90°
Script: North Italic script
Direction of writing: dextroverse
Number of letters: 3
Number of lines: 1
Craftsmanship: engraved
Current condition: damaged
Archaeological culture: La Tène
Date of inscription: 5th–1st centuries BC
Date derived from:

Language: unknown
Meaning: unknown

Alternative sigla: none

Images

Commentary

Unpublished. Autopsied by TIR in July 2014.

Pictures in Mandl 2011: Abb. 137 and 140 (photos). Photo of the entire rock wall in Mandl 2011: Abb. 136.

The doubtful remains of a vertical inscription, running upwards, on Bildstelle 2. After a patch which has been intentionally corraded, the scratches are clearly visible in an area of porous surface. Mandl 2011 assumes them to be the upper part of an erased image, but despite the unusual curved bars of E3 d, an interpretation of the group as the remains of an inscription is not unlikely (but note the superfluous small straight bar between the curved bars of K4 d).

Bibliography

Mandl 2011 Franz Mandl, Felsbilder. Österreich – Bayern: Nördliche Kalkalpen [= Anisa – Verein für alpine Forschung 4], Haus im Ennstal: 2011.