Revision as of 11:23, 13 December 2022 editVelthuru (talk | contribs)328 edits Adding some interesting information.Tag: Reverted← Previous edit | Revision as of 10:50, 14 December 2022 edit undoVelthuru (talk | contribs)328 edits Explatery text to indicate what the words relate to.Tag: RevertedNext edit → | ||
Line 31: | Line 31: | ||
circumference:<ref>beginning in the "north" (the left side in the image shown above) and going clockwise, c.f. Nancy Thomson De Grummond, ''Etruscan Myth, Sacred History and Legend'' (2006), .</ref> | circumference:<ref>beginning in the "north" (the left side in the image shown above) and going clockwise, c.f. Nancy Thomson De Grummond, ''Etruscan Myth, Sacred History and Legend'' (2006), .</ref> | ||
([[7002 9 i<s>vei tule ilucve api rase leoam'sul | |||
ilucu savcnes satiriasaxi ia ci ( three ) tartiria cim | |||
cleva acasri halx tei vacil iceusuni savlasieis | |||
mulu rizile picasri savlasieis vacil lunas1e / | |||
mulu is one of the Etruscan base words for a vessel or wine vessel . | |||
The word leoam relates to mulu ,the vessel in this text. | |||
<ref> Studies in the Etruscan language prepared by Murry Fowler and Richard George Wolfe </ref> | |||
9001 262 caoe • xim • enax • unxva • meolumo•puts | |||
9001 263 muo • hilarouna . tecum • etrinoi | |||
Both tecum and meolumo relating to vinum or wine in the liber Linteus. | |||
<ref>The Liber Linteus, Studies in the Etruscan language prepared by Murry Fowler and Richard George Wolfe </ref> | |||
# ]]/] | # ]]/] | ||
tini.a N 1 1 ABL S F | tini.a N 1 1 ABL S F | ||
tina, tinae N (1st) F | tina, tinae N (1st) F | ||
cask; tub; | cask; tub; | ||
William Whitakers Words , Latin,,University of NOTRE DAME/ | |||
# tin/θvf | # tin/θvf | ||
# tins/θneθ | # tins/θneθ |
Revision as of 10:50, 14 December 2022
The Etruscan name for the Greek god Zeus is Tinia or Tina and can be seen on several mirrors in the volumes of Etrusci Spiegel or Etruscan mirrors. Satres relates to the wine.
9001 224 hausti (Latin to drink). fanuse • neris sane
9001 224 /i .neri
9001 225 «««» , »<xx»««««««««><»»«
9001 226 santic vinum (wine). oui . oapnai . oui aras
9001 226 /. mucum
9001 tuxlac eori suntnam . cexa rinus streta satrs enac. oucu hamphthe rinus oui aras mucum aniaxes rasna .
( source, Liber Linteus , Materials for the study of the Etruscan language.
Etruscan artifactThe Liver of Piacenza is an Etruscan artifact found in a field on September 26, 1877, near Gossolengo, in the province of Piacenza, Italy, now kept in the Municipal Museum of Piacenza, in the Palazzo Farnese.
It is a life-sized bronze model of a sheep's liver covered in Etruscan inscriptions (TLE 719), measuring 126 × 76 × 60 mm (5 × 3 × 2.4 inches) and dated to the late 2nd century BC, i.e. a time when the Piacenza region would already have been Latin-dominated (Piacenza was founded in 218 BC as a Roman garrison town in Cisalpine Gaul). While it may look like a liver it is the horned head of a baccanti with a puckered cheek a horn and an ear.
Description
The liver is subdivided into sections for the purposes of performing haruspicy (hepatoscopy); the sections are inscribed with names of individual Etruscan deities.
The Piacenza liver is a striking conceptual parallel to clay models of sheep's livers known from the Ancient Near East, reinforcing the evidence of a connection (be it by migration or merely by cultural contact) between the Etruscans and the Anatolian cultural sphere. A Babylonian clay model of a sheep's liver dated to the Middle Bronze Age is preserved in the British Museum. The Piacenza liver parallels the Babylonian artifact by representing the major anatomical features of the liver (the gall bladder, caudate lobe and posterior vena cava) as sculpted protrusions.
The outer rim of the Piacenza liver is divided into 16 sections; since according to the testimony of Pliny and Cicero, the Etruscans divided the heavens into 16 astrological houses, it has been suggested that the liver is supposed to represent a model of the cosmos, and its parts should be identified as constellations or astrological signs. Each of the 16 houses was the "dwelling place" of an individual deity. Seers would e.g. draw conclusions from the direction in which lightning was seen. Lightning in the east was auspicious, lightning in the west inauspicious (Pliny 2.143f.). Stevens (2009) surmises that Tin, the main god of lightning, had his dwelling due north, as lightning in the north-east was most lucky, lightning in the north-west most unlucky, while lightning in the southern half of the compass was not as strong an omen (Servius ad. Aen. 2.693). The deciphering of the complex content of the Liver of Piacenza was the subject of two scientific monographs by the University of Bologna researcher Antonio Gottarelli, published between 2017 and 2018. These books represent the most complete analysis of its content and they reveal its nature of a handheld instrument for the digital calculation of a liturgical-ritual calendar. Its dating would be at fourth century BC and the position of place of discovery at 45° of latitude would be consistent with its instrumental use.
The theonyms are abbreviated and in many cases, the reading even of the abbreviation is disputed. As a result, there is a consensus for the interpretation of individual names only in a small number of cases. The reading given below is that of Morandi (1991) unless otherwise indicated:
circumference:
([[7002 9 ivei tule ilucve api rase leoam'sul
ilucu savcnes satiriasaxi ia ci ( three ) tartiria cim
cleva acasri halx tei vacil iceusuni savlasieis
mulu rizile picasri savlasieis vacil lunas1e / mulu is one of the Etruscan base words for a vessel or wine vessel . The word leoam relates to mulu ,the vessel in this text. 9001 262 caoe • xim • enax • unxva • meolumo•puts 9001 263 muo • hilarouna . tecum • etrinoi Both tecum and meolumo relating to vinum or wine in the liber Linteus.
tini.a N 1 1 ABL S F tina, tinae N (1st) F cask; tub;
William Whitakers Words , Latin,,University of NOTRE DAME/
interior:{{ordered list | start = 17| tur (Venus) |leθn (as no. 11) |la/sl (Lares?) |tins/θvf (as no. 2) |θufl/θas |tins/neθ (as no. 3?) |caθa (as no. 8) |fuf/lus (as no. 9) |θvnθ(?)|marisl/latr|leta (Leda) |neθ (as no. 7)| herc (Hercules)| mar (Mars) |selva (as no. 10) |leθa |tlusc (as no. 12) |lvsl/velch | satr/es (Saturnus) |cilen (as no. 16)| leθam(as n. 32) |meθlvmθ| mar (as no. 30) |tlusc (as no. 12) Two words are on the bottom side of the artefact:
See also
Notes
- The Liver Tablet, ME 92668
- beginning in the "north" (the left side in the image shown above) and going clockwise, c.f. Nancy Thomson De Grummond, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History and Legend (2006), p. 50.
- Studies in the Etruscan language prepared by Murry Fowler and Richard George Wolfe
- The Liber Linteus, Studies in the Etruscan language prepared by Murry Fowler and Richard George Wolfe
- Nancy T. de Grummond, Moon Over Pyrgi: Catha, an Etruscan Lunar Goddess?, American Journal of Archaeology 112.3 (July 2008).
Further reading
- Van der Meer, L.B. (1987). The bronze liver of Piacenza. Amsterdam: J.C. Gieben, 1987.
- Alessandro Morandi, Nuovi lineamenti di lingua etrusca, Massari, 1991.
- Natalie L. C. Stevens, A New Reconstruction of the Etruscan Heaven American Journal of Archaeology 113.22 (April 2009), 153-164.
- Antonio Gottarelli,Cosmogonica. Il fegato di Tiāmat e la soglia misterica del Tempo. Dai miti cosmologici del Vicino Oriente antico ad una nuova interpretazione del fegato etrusco di Piacenza, collana di "Archeologia del Rito", n.2, Te.m.p.l.a., Bologna, 2017.
- Antonio Gottarelli,Padānu. Un’ombra tra le mani del tempo. La decifrazione funzionale del fegato etrusco di Piacenza, collana di "Archeologia del Rito", n.3, Te.m.p.l.a., Bologna, 2018.