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Faience Polyhedron with Greek Letters in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, February 2008

Faience Polyhedron with Greek Letters in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, February 2008
Faience polyhedron inscribed with letters of the Greek alphabet
Roman, 2nd-3rd century AD

Accession # 37.11.3

A number of polyhedra made in various materials are known from the Roman world. They may have been used in conjunction with with an oracle inscribed on a pillar set up in a public place. The polyhedron was thrown in order to choose a letter at random. One consulted the inscription to find the matching letter and read the oracle's response. There would be twenty oracular messages, each beginning with a letter of the alphabet that corresponds to one side of the dice.

Text from the Metropolitan Museum of Art electronic kiosk in the study collection.

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