Etruscan as an Anatolian Language (Sound Laws)- G Forni
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Transcript of Etruscan as an Anatolian Language (Sound Laws)- G Forni
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 1 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Etruscan as an Anatolian (non-Hittite) Language
Gianfranco [email protected]
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 2 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Agenda
Methodology and sources Sound correspondences Grammar correspondences Lexical correspondences Genetic correspondences Conclusions Next steps
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 3 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Methodology
A language L belongs to family F if most of its basic lexicon and morphemes can be derived from proto-F through regular sound laws and strict semantic correspondences
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 4 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Sources Giuliano Bonfante, Larissa Bonfante - The Etruscan Language: An
Introduction, Revised Editon Manchester University Press, 2002 G. Facchetti - Appunti di morfologia etrusca - Olschki 2002 - ISBN
8822251385 G. Facchetti - L'enigma svelato della lingua etrusca - Newton Compton,
2000 Helmut Rix - Il problema del retico - Atti del Convegno della Societ
Italiana di Glottologia "Variet e continuit nella storia linguistica del Veneto" - ottobre 1996
Mallory, Adams - The Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World - Oxford, 2006 - ISBN: 978-0199296682
A. Kloekhorst Etymological Dictionary of the Hittite Inherited Lexicon Brill 2008 ISBN 978-9004160927
M. de Vaan - Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the Other Italic Languages Brill 2008 ISBN 978-9004167971
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 5 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Input data
Of all lexical items for which Etruscologists have proposed a gloss, 145 belong to basic lexicon
97% of such basic terms have an IE etymology
20 grammar morphemes have also been assigned a value by Etruscologists
95% of them have an IE etymology
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Key sound laws from pIE to Etruscan C > C CC- > CVC- di, ti, gi > zi; g > z b- > f-; g- > h-; d- > - t > ; k, k > c, (> h?); p > p, (> h?) d > t tr > [] : /i, mn > mr
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Sample grammar correspondences -al genitive < *-(o)lo- as in Lydian (siuv-ala of the god) -s genitive < *-s -i locative < *-i -i feminine < *-iha -n accusative (in pronouns) < *-m -pi towards < *h1opi -c, - and < *-ke -m and: cf. Hitt. ma and, but, Lyc. me
Melchert: One of the most famous features of the Anatolian Indo-European languages is the widespread use of an inflected adjective [] in place of the genitive case
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Sample lexical correspondences
ar-, er- do, move, rise < *h3er-, *h1er- ati mother < *anti (cf. HLuw /anati/ mother) avil year < *h2ei-wo- time (Lat. aevum) cap- take < *kap- (Lat. capi) car-, cer- do < *ker- cil people, nation < *kei-uo- (Lat. culits) enas of us < *n- + gen. s far-, har- inside, enter < *per- far(a)n(a)- generate < *perh3-i- (Lat. partus)
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Sample lexical correspondences
he- here < *ge- (Lat. hi-c) ica, eca, ca this < *(h1)i-, h1e- + *ke- (Hitt. k
this) ita, eta, ta that < *(h1)i-, h1e- + *to- lupu die, go < *h1leud- go away, die, with *-ud-
> -up- as in Lat. lber < *h1leudero- lu field < *lu-to- mi I, mini, mene me < *h1m(e)n- me (accus. &
oblique), extended to nominative as in HLuw, Lyd & Lyc (but not Hitt.!)
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Sod. Glott. Mil., 14 giugno 2010 10 Copyright G. Forni 2010
Sample lexical correspondences
mul(u)- offer: cf. Lyd mwnda- offerings (for the dead)', HLuw. /malwa-/ ritual offer', Lyc mle-sacrificial offer', Mil. mla-, mle- 'sacrifice, offer'
mur- dwell < *morh2- (Lat. moror) nefts nephew < *h2nep-t- (not a Latin loan: is
also found in Lemnian nao-) net- inner organs < *h1en-h1eh1tr- puia wife < *pot-niha rasna Etruscan nation < *h3rg-no- (Lat. regnum)
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Sample lexical correspondences
tam- home < *dem- / *dom-; cf. Lyc., HLuw. tama- home, building'
ar there < *tor te- put < *deh1- (Lyc., Mil. ta-) t(e)v- see: cf. Lyc. *tewe- eye, Mil. tewe- meet,
see'
tin day < *deino- tiu(r) moon, month < *dei-wo- (Luw tiwa- Sun-
god) trin say! < *t(e)r- ui here < *to- + -i locative
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Sample lexical correspondences
tur- give (as a present) < *deh3-r- (gr. dron, arm. tur)
val- see < *wel- vatie- ask < *ged- vers- fire < *wer- (Hitt. war- burn) zen-, zin- do, produce < *genh1- ziv- live, alive < *gih3-we/o- zi- show, write < *dik- show
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Numerals
u(n) 1 < *to- this ? zal, zel-, es(a)l- 2 < *dwi- + -al (cf. Lat. dulis) ? ci 3 [< *tri-, trey- hu, hut 4 < *k(e)tw(o)r (> *utur with
deglutination of ur -uple) ma, mac 5 < *mehan-ke and the hand? Or else
< *penke as Lat. elementum < gr. elephant- via Etruscan? Cf. also Italian gomito elbow < cubitum?
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Corrispondenze lessicali (numeri) a 6 < *seks sem 7 < *sept + -p/- (as in 8 & 9) cezp, *usf- 8 < *h3(e)kteh3 (> *kto- > *kut- + -
p/- as in 7 & 9) nur- 9 < *h1newh1mn + -p/- (as in 7 & 8) >
*numr, with *mn > *mr as in Agamemnon > Amemrun and Mmnon > Memrun)
sar(-), ar, -zar 10 < *dekmt > *dehamn > *zehamr > *zear (-mn > -mr > -r as in nur-)
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Correspondences in non-basic lexicon tarun-, tarna-, etc. Tarquinia: cf. Hitt. tarh u- 'to
prevail, conquer, be powerful'; Luw Tarhunt- 'Storm-god', Lyc trqqt- /trknt-/ 'Storm-god'
etera stranger, cliens, slave < *ndero- lower; cf. HLuw. andara-, Lyc., Mil. ntre- lower; possibly influenced by *h1e-tero- (Umbrian etr- other)
maru(n) maron (a magistrate): cf. Mil. mara- law, Lyc. maraza- judge
Porsenna: cf. Hitt. parna- 'leopard-man panti dish: cf. Hitt. ipantuwa- 'libation vessel zil- govern, hold an office: cf. Hitt. alli- 'head, chief,
notable
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Genetic correspondences
Recent genetic studies (Piazza et al., 2007-2010) confirm that Tuscan women, men and cows (as well as Raetian cows) display statistically meaningful resemblances with their Anatolian counterparts:
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Other Etruscoid people
Lemnos is very close to Anatolia
Raetians and Etruscans were probably separated by Celtic invasions
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Conclusions Herodotus was right: Etruscans are Lydians (i.e.
from Anatolia) Sound laws are regular Most basic lexicon and grammar morphemes have
an IE etymology Some interesting isoglosses (mi/mini, -al, -m, -n,
ecc.) point to an Anatolian origin (prob. non-Hittite: cf. innovations such as mi and -al)
Recent genetic data corroborate the linguistic findings
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Useful co-operations for further research
With anatolists (for vertical competencies, especially on non-Hittite Anatolian languages)
With etruscologists (for their philological competencies, useful to validate future attempts at etymologically-driven interpretations of currently obscure Etruscan terms)
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Acid test
Can pIE (/Anatolian) be used as the key to interpret currently obscure Etruscan terms?
If so, this would be a strong confirmation, since the theory of Etruscan as an Anatolian language will turn out to be not just descriptive, but predictive as well
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Likely inverted sound laws (Etr < pIE)For initial consonants only:
These correspondences can be used to identify possible pIE roots underlying currently obscure Etruscan terms