Since the 1970s, the excavations on Thasos have brought to light two inscriptions relating to the imperial family. The first, dated between 14 and 29 AD, is owed to Komis, the priestess of Livia. Engraved on the back face of the north-west portico, it was the dedication of the exedra in the west part of the agora. The second, completed by a fragment discovered in 2006, is the dedication of a statue for Agrippa Postumus, adoptive son of Augustus honoured as a benefactor in the ancestral tradition. The two texts attest to the transformations in monumentality and in Thasian society at the beginning of the Empire.