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Eteocretan | A Wisdom Archive on Eteocretan |  | Eteocretan A selection of articles related to Eteocretan |  |
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eteocretan, Eteocretan language, Eteocretan language - Known inscriptions, Etruscan civilization, Aegean languages - Language family to which Eteocretan belongs., Etruscan language, <i>Liber Linteus</i> - An Etruscan inscription., <i>Tabula Cortonensis</i> - An Etruscan inscription., <i>Cippus perusinus</i> - An Etruscan inscription., <i>Pyrgi Tablets</i> - An Etruscan inscription., Lemnian language, Eteocypriot, Cortona - Ancient Etruscan city (<i>Curtun</i>).
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ARTICLES RELATED TO Eteocretan | |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Discovery
Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy.
In 1848, Mihajlo Barić (1791–1859), a Croatian minor official in the Hungarian Royal Chancellery, resigned his post and embarked upon a tour of several countries, including Egypt. While in Alexandria, he purchased a sarchophagus containing a female mummy, as a souvenir of his travels.
Barić displayed the mummy at his home in Vienna, standing it upright in the corner of his sitting room. He often told his visitors that it was the body of King Stephen of Hungary's s ...
See also:Liber Linteus, Liber Linteus - Discovery, Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy, Liber Linteus - Initial examinations, Liber Linteus - Production, Liber Linteus - Text, Liber Linteus - Structure, Liber Linteus - Content, Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal Read more here: » Liber Linteus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Discovery |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - HistoryThe Etruscans are thought by some to be indigenous people of Italy, living there before the Indo-European migration and the arrival of the Latins, around 1000 BC. Herodotus (Histories I.94), however, describes the Tyrrhenians as immigrants from Lydia in western Anatolia, led west, fleeing famine, by their leader Tyrrhoeus, to settle in Umbria [1]; the Tyrrhenians of Herodotus are sometimes identified with the Etruscans, although there is no material cultural evidence to back this up. Literacy was fairly common, as can be seen by the g ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - History |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - ClassificationDue to the high degree of similarity between Lemnian and Etruscan, it has been concluded that the two languages are closely related within a family which is called the Tyrrhenian or Aegean language family. It itself is isolate, that is, unrelated to other language groups as far as we can tell. There is no doubt that Rhaetic and Etruscan are among this family. In his Natural History (1st century AD), Pliny wrote about Alpine peoples: "The Rhaetians and the Vindelicans border with these [Noricans], all distributed in numerous cit ...
See also:Lemnian language, Lemnian language - Relationships to Other Languages, Lemnian language - Classical sources, Lemnian language - The Lemnos stela, Lemnian language - Translation of the Lemnos Stele, Lemnian language - Classification Read more here: » Lemnian language: Encyclopedia II - Lemnian language - Classification |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposalAs the Etruscan tongue slowly died out the meaning of the Liber Linteus would have been forgotten: first as a text, and then as a sacred object. New calendars were written in Latin, and new customs would have prevailed. Perhaps the community who wrote it, like the language and the book itself, declined and fell into obscurity. For many years the book would have lain untouched, its owners considering it no more than a worthless anachronism.
In the first century BCE, the Roman Empire conquered Egypt. Like the Hellenes before them, Roman ...
See also:Liber Linteus, Liber Linteus - Discovery, Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy, Liber Linteus - Initial examinations, Liber Linteus - Production, Liber Linteus - Text, Liber Linteus - Structure, Liber Linteus - Content, Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal Read more here: » Liber Linteus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Text
Liber Linteus - Structure.
The book is laid out in twelve columns from right to left, each one representing a "page". Much of the first three columns is missing, and it is not known where the book begins. Closer to the end of the book the text is almost complete (there is a strip missing that runs the entire length of the book). By the end of the last page the cloth is blank and the selvage is intact, showing the definite end of the book.
There are 230 lines of text, with 1200 legible words. Black ink has been used for the main text, ...
See also:Liber Linteus, Liber Linteus - Discovery, Liber Linteus - Purchase of the mummy, Liber Linteus - Initial examinations, Liber Linteus - Production, Liber Linteus - Text, Liber Linteus - Structure, Liber Linteus - Content, Liber Linteus - Disuse and disposal Read more here: » Liber Linteus: Encyclopedia II - Liber Linteus - Text |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distributionEtruscan was spoken in north-west and west-central Italy, in the region that even now bears their name: Tuscany, and in the Po valley to the north of Etruria.
Etruscan language - Related Languages.
One language certain to be very closely related to Etruscan is the language once spoken on the island of Lemnos before the Athenian invasion (6th century BC), aptly named Lemnian. A stone tablet called the Lemnos stele was found there written with a script related to Etruscan and is dated to approximately 600 BC ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distribution |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Other less accepted theoriesThe interest in Etruscan antiquities and the mysterious Etruscan language found its modern origin in a book by a Dominican monk, Annio da Viterbo, "il Pastura" (1432—1502), the cabalist and orientalist who guided Pinturicchio's allegorical frescoes for Pope Alexander VI's Vatican apartments. In 1498 Annio published his antiquarian miscellany titled Antiquitatum variarum (in 17 volumes) where he put together a fantastic theory in which both the Hebrew and Etruscan languages were said to originate from a single source, the "Aramaic" s ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - ClassificationThe majormost consensus is that Etruscan is related only to other members of what is called the Tyrrhenian language family which in itself is isolate, that is, unrelated to other language groups as far as we can tell. There is no doubt that Rhaetic and Lemnian are among this family. In his Natural History (1st century AD), Pliny wrote about Alpine peoples: "The Rhaetians and the Vindelicans border with these [Noricans], all distributed in numerous cities. The Gauls maintain that the Raetians descend from the Etruscans, pushed b ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Classification |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - TextsHelmut Rix, Etruskische Texte, works as a kind of incomplete thesaurus, a main key to studying the Etruscan language.
First of all Rix and his collaborators present the only two unified (though fragmentary) texts available in Etruscan: the Liber Linteus used for mummy wrappings (now at Zagreb, Croatia) and the Tabula Capuana (the inscribed tablet from Capua).
All the rest of the recovered inscriptions follow, grouped according to the localities in which they were found: Campania, Latium, Falerii and Ager Fa ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Texts |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - SoundsThe reconstructed phonemes of Etruscan (IPA encoding):
Etruscan language - Vowels.
/a/ letter: A
/e/ letter: E
/i/ letter: I
/u/ letter: V
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Sounds |
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 |  |  | Eteocretan: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - VocabularyDue to its isolation, no significant certain translations from Etruscan into modern languages have been produced yet, however we can be fairly certain of how the language was pronounced as the Etruscan speakers wrote using a variant of the Greek alphabet.
Latin borrowed a few dozen words from Etruscan, many of them related to culture, like elementum (letter), litterae (writing), cera (wax), arena, etc.
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See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system Read more here: » Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Vocabulary |
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More material related to Eteocretan can be found here:
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