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词条 Etruscan numerals
释义

  1. General consensus

  2. See also

  3. References

  4. Further reading

  5. External links

{{Table Numeral Systems}}

The Etruscan numerals were used by the ancient Etruscans. The system was adapted from the Greek Attic numerals and formed the inspiration for the later Roman numerals via the Old Italic script.

Etruscan numerals include the following symbols:

EtruscanArabicSymbol *Old Italic
θu1𐌠
maχ5𐌡
śar10𐌢
muvalχ50𐌣
?100 or C𐌟

There is very little surviving evidence of these numerals. Examples are known of the symbols for larger numbers, but it is unknown which symbol represents which number.

Thanks to the numbers written out on the Tuscania dice, there is agreement that zal, ci, huθ and śa are the numbers up to six (besides 1 and 5). The assignment depends on whether the numbers on opposite faces of Etruscan dice add up to seven, like nowadays. Some dice found did not show this proposed pattern.

An aspect of the Etruscan numeral system is that some numbers, as in the Roman system, are represented as partial subtractions. So "17" is not written *semφ-śar as users of the Arabic numerals might reason. One instead finds ci-em zaθrum, literally "three from twenty". The numbers 17, 18 and 19 are all written in this way.

General consensus

The general agreement among Etruscologists nowadays is the following (except about which of huθ and śa were "four" or "six", which has always been under discussion; see below the new results):

EtruscanArabic
θu1
zal2
ci3
huθ4
maχ5
śa6
semφ7
*cezp8
nurφ9
śar10
*θuśar11
*zalśar12
*ciśar13
huθzar14
*maχśar15
*śaśar16
ciem zaθrum17
eslem zaθrum18
θunem zaθrum19
zaθrum20
cealχ30
*huθalχ40
muvalχ50
śealχ60
semφalχ70
cezpalχ80
*nurφalχ90

Archaeological evidence strongly supports the correspondence 4/huth and 6/sa. For instance, in the frescos of the Tomb of the Charons in the Monterozzi necropolis, on a hill east of Tarquinia, four Charons are represented, each one accompanied by an inscription: next to the fourth Charon, the text reads charun huths ("the fourth Charon"). In the same necropolis, in the Tomb of the Anina, which contains six burial places, an inscription reads: sa suthi cherichunce, which has been translated as: "he built six tombs/sepulchres". [1] However, other scholars disagree with this attribution. In this connection, in October 2011, Artioli and colleagues presented evidence from 93 Etruscan dice "allowing the firm attribution of the numeral 6 to the graphical value huth and 4 to sa".[2]

In 2006, S. A. Yatsemirsky presented evidence that zar = śar meant ‘12’ (cf. zal ‘2’ and zaθrum ‘20’) while halχ meant ‘10’. According to his interpretation, the attested form huθzar was used for ‘sixteen’, not ‘fourteen’, assuming huθ meant four.[3]

Much debate has been carried out about a possible Indo-European origin of the Etruscan cardinals. In the words of Larissa Bonfante (1990), "What these numerals show, beyond any shadow of a doubt, is the non-Indo-European nature of the Etruscan language".[4] Conversely, other scholars, including Francisco R. Adrados, Albert Carnoy, Marcello Durante, Vladimir Georgiev, Alessando Morandi and Massimo Pittau, have proposed a close phonetic proximity of the first ten Etruscan numerals to the corresponding numerals in other Indo-European languages.[5][6] Italian linguist and glottologist Massimo Pittau has argued that "all the first ten Etruscan numerals have a congruent phonetic matching in as many Indo-European languages" and "perfectly fit within the Indo-European series", supporting the idea that the Etruscan language was of Indo-European origins.[7]

See also

  • Etruscan civilization
  • Etruscan language
  • Old Italic alphabet

References

1. ^Pallottino, M., "Un gruppo di nuove iscrizioni tarquiniesi e il problema dei numerali etruschi", Studi Etruschi 1964, pages 121-122.
2. ^Artioli, G., Nociti, V., Angelini, I., "Gambling with Etruscan Dice: a Tale of Numbers and Letters", Archaeometry, Vol. 53, Issue 5, October 2011, pages 1031–1043 (Abstract).
3. ^Etruscan numerals: problems and results of research (PDF), S. A. Yatsemirsky
4. ^Bonfante, L.,Etruscan, University of California Press (Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1990), page 22.
5. ^Carnoy A., La langue étrusque et ses origines, L'Antiquité Classique, 21 (1952), page 326. ( )
6. ^Morandi, A., Nuovi lineamenti di lingua etrusca, Erre Emme (Roma, 1991), chapter IV.
7. ^Pittau, M., "I numerali Etruschi", Atti del Sodalizio Glottologico Milanese, vol. XXXV-XXXVI, 1994/1995 (1996), pages 95-105. ( )

Further reading

  • Agostiniani, Luciano. "The Etruscan language." In The Etruscan World, edited by Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 457-77. Abingdon: Routledge, 2013.
  • Artioli, G., Nociti, V. and Angelini, I. "Gambling with Etruscan Dice: A Tale of Numbers and Letters." Archaeometry 53, no. 5: 1031–43. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4754.2011.00596.x
  • Gluhak, Alemko. "Etruscan Numerals." Linguistica 17, no. 1 (1978): 25-32.
  • Maras, Daniele. "Numbers and reckoning: A whole civilization founded upon divisions." In The Etruscan World, edited by Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 478-91. Abingdon: Routledge, 2013.
  • Woudhuizen, F. C. "Etruscan numerals in indo-european perspective." Talanta, 20 (1988): 109.
  • Van Heems, Gilles. "Between numbers and letters: about Etruscan notations of numeral sequences." Revue de Philologie de Littérature et d'Histoire Anciennes 83, no. 1 (2009).

External links

{{Commons category|Etruscan numerals}}{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Etruscan numerals
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }}
  • https://web.archive.org/web/20050405165439/http://users.tpg.com.au/etr/etrusk/tex/grammar.html#num
  • http://www.mysteriousetruscans.com/language.html
  • https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1475-4754.2011.00596.x
{{Etruscans}}

2 : Etruscan language|Numerals

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