Palmyra Tariff
| Palmyra Tariff | |
|---|---|
The tariff in the Hermitage Museum | |
| Material | Limestone |
| Created | 2nd century CE |
| Discovered | 1881 Palmyra, Homs, Syria |
| Discovered by | Semyon Abamelek-Lazarev |
| Present location | Saint Petersburg, Russia |
| Part of a series on |
| Canaanite and Aramaic inscriptions |
|---|
The Palmyra Tariff is an ancient bilingual Greek and Palmyrene inscription discovered in Palmyra, Syria. Dating to the 2nd century CE, the inscription provides valuable insights into the economic and political structure of the city and the wider Roman Empire. It is the longest lapidary Canaanite or Aramaic inscription ever found.
It was discovered in 1881 by Semyon Abamelek-Lazarev, and in 1901 was gifted by the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II to Tsar Nicholas II and is now in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg.
Historian John Matthews described the limestone tariff as "one of the most important single items of evidence for the economic life of any part of the Roman Empire".
The inscription is known as PAT 0259, CIS II 3913, NSI 147 and TSSI IV 37.