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Movement screening involves a series of tests designed to evaluate your body's functional movements. These assessments identify imbalances, weaknesses, and dysfunctional movement patterns that could lead to injuries. By pinpointing these issues, movement screening enables you to address them proactively, leading to better performance and a lower risk of injury. mymovementpt.com/blog/f/how-movement-screening-can-improv...
Marble relief of an Athenian physician called Jason, shown examining a patient. Jason is shown seated on a cushioned cirule chair (sella curulis, a foldable chair), bearded and wearing a tunic and draped in a himation; he is styled to look like an ancient Greek philosopher. He examines a patient, who appears to be either a young male child or a slave (who were depicted as tiny adults) with an unnaturally enlarged stomach and a thin chest. To the right is an egg-shaped object resembling a cupping vessel.
The relief was originally thought to be a funerary monument (and the British Museum still lists it that way), but it is now generally interpreted as a dedication to Asklepios on the grounds of the discovery at the Asklepieion of a dedication to Asklepios and Hygieia of the second century AD by the same Dekmos son of Theomnestos of Acharnai as is named here on the inscription.
In translation the inscription reads:
'Jason, also known as Decimus, of the Archarnian deme [an administrative division of Athens] a physician . . .'. It then goes on to mention other members of his family.
The full inscription translates as:
'Jason, known also as Dekmos (equivalent to the Roman name Decimus), of Acharnai (the Archarnian deme, an administrative division of Athens), physician. Dionysios son of Jason of Acharnai, by birth son of Theodoros of Athmonon. Theomnestos son of Dionysios of Acharnai and of Eirene daughter of Jason of Acharnai. Philostrate daughter of Aphrodisios son of Aphrodisios of Rhamnous and of Aristion daughter of Karpodoros 5 of Melite.'
It becomes clear from ll. 2-3 that Jason’s daughter, Eirene, married Dionysios of Athmonon, whom Jason then adopted as his son. This was common practice where a man’s only child was a daughter (an heiress, epikleros) and was designed to ensure that the man’s property remained in his household (oikos) after his death. Though not made explicit, Philostrate was perhaps the wife of Jason’s grandson, Theomnestos. Philostrate was the daughter of Aphrodisios son of Aphrodisios of Rhamnous and of Aristion daughter of Karpodoros of Melite. It may be nothing more than coincidence that the demes of Acharnai and Melite are associated some five hundred years earlier in a funerary monument for the midwife-doctor, Phanostrate of Melite, which was discovered at Acharnai.
This relief is an example of a "Familienweihung", that is a "family dedication" in which several generations of a family appear as co-dedicants. This practice commemorated a dedication made by, or on behalf of, several members of a family. The setting up of family portrait dedications emerged as a practice in the middle of the fourth century in Athens and Attica; such dedications tend to be set up by a relatively narrow range of kin: usually spouses, siblings, parents and offspring. **
The top of the relief is worked into a series of mock architectural antefixes.
This relief was discovered at Athens by Louis Fauvel (1753-1838) at an unknown location and purchased by the British Museum in 1865.
Roman Imperial
Athens, Greece
2nd c. CE
British Museum (1865,0103.3)
** Thanks to atticinscriptions.com for the assistance in placing this relief into the context of 2nd century Athens. www.atticinscriptions.com/inscription/AIUK45/10