The Idalion Temple inscriptions are six Phoenician inscriptions found by Robert Hamilton Lang in his excavations at the Temple of Idalium (modern Dali, Cyprus) in 1869,[1] whose work there had been inspired by the discovery of the Idalion Tablet in 1850.
[2][3] The most famous of these inscriptions is known as the Idalion bilingual.
The Phoenician inscriptions are known as KAI 38-40 and CIS I 89-94.
They are currently at the British Museum.
[4] The discovery was first announced by Paul Schröder in 1872.