Sit tibi terra levis (commonly abbreviated as S·T·T·L or S.T.T.L. or STTL) is a
Latin inscription used on
funerary items from
ancient Roman times[1] onwards. The English language translation is approximately "May the earth rest lightly on you" or "May the ground be light to you"; the more literal, word by word, translation, is
sit "may be",
tibi "to you",
terra "ground, soil",
levis "light" (in the sense of the opposite of "heavy").
The origin of the phrase can be found in
Euripides' Alcestis; the phrase in
Greek is κούφα σοι χθὼν ἐπάνωθε πέσοι, koupha soi chthon epanothe pesoi.[2][3] Euripides' phrase "underwent all kinds of variations",[4][n 1] especially in Latin poets like
Propertius,
Ovid,
Martial, and
Persius;[9][5][10][11][12] although some minor variants like Sit Ei Terra Levis – abbreviated to SETL – are attested,[13] and excluding
Roman Africa which developed its own stock formula (Ossa Tibi Bene Quiescant – OTBQ – or similar),[3][14] in Latin
epitaphs the phrase became formulaic, acquiring the aforementioned abbreviation. On the contrary, in
Greek epitaphs, it never became such a fixed formula; it is found in various forms,[3] e.g. γαῖαν ἔχοις ἐλαφράν, κούφη σοι κόνις ἥδε πέλοι, κούφη σεῖο γαῖ' ὀστέα κεύθοι.[15]
The Latin formula was usually located at the end of the inscription;[16][17] at the beginning, another formulaic phrase was often used: Dis Manibus, i.e. "To the spirits of the dead"; first thus, then shortened to Dis Man and finally to DM. The latter, along with STTL, had replaced in about the mid-first century CE, the older model, common during the first century BCE and first century CE, of ending the inscription with Hicsitusest or Hic
sita est ("he or she lies here"; abbreviated to HSE), and the name of the dead person.[17][n 2]
Notes and references
Notes
^A later
satirical example of this in Greek, is the following
epigram (cf. Martial's Epigrammata 9.29.11-12)[5] by Ammianus Epigrammaticus (1st and/or 2nd century CE): Εἴη σοι κατὰ γῆς κούφη κόνις, οἰκτρὲ Νέαρχε, ὄφρα σε ῥηϊδίως ἐξερύσωσι κύνες.May the dust lie light on thee when under earth, wretched Nearchus, so that the dogs may easily drag thee out.[6][7][8]
^A very common, through space and time, phrase in Greek and the analogue of the Latin one is Ἐνθάδεκεῖται, Enthade keitai, "Here lies".