SZ-14

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Inscription
Transliteration: φelipuriesielukuslepile / kạṛapaśna
Original script: E sL2 sI sP2 sE sL2 sS sU2 sK sU2 sL2 sE sI sS sE sI sR sU2 sP2 sI sL2 sE sΦ2 s
A sN sŚ sA sP2 sA sR sA sK s
Variant Reading: kạṛapanina
A sN sI sN sA sP2 sA sR sA sK s

Object: SZ-14 bronze (bronze)
Position: top, bottom, foot
Script: North Italic script (Sanzeno alphabet)
Direction of writing: sinistroverse
Letter height: 0.9 cm
Number of letters: 22 – 23
Number of lines: 2
Craftsmanship: embossed
Current condition: complete
Date of inscription: 4th–3rd centuries BC [from object]
Date derived from: typology [from object]

Language: Raetic
Meaning: 'of/by Φelipurie X-ed (and) Slepi, son(s)/daughter(s) of Karapaś*'

Alternative sigla: IR 27
LIR SA-8
Sources: Schumacher 2004: 135

Images

Commentary

First published in Pellegrini 1951: 315 (no. 14). Autopsied by TIR in October 2014.

Images in Pellegrini 1951: no. 14a (photo) and 131 (14a and b) (drawings), Ciurletti 1992: 30 (drawings), LIR (photos and drawings = IR).

Inscribed on the lower side (line 1) and on the upper side (line 2) of the bronze's base, to be read from the front; length 6.4 cm and 4.3 cm resp. The letters are well visible. The two sequences are highly likely to belong together as one inscription; our arrangement of the lines is based on the interpretation (see below); see Schumacher 1998: 109.

The reading of line 1 is unambiguous. The writer started out with slender and rather densely packed characters, then began to space them out more after E s in eluku – maybe after deciding that the whole inscription couldn't be fit on the lower side anyway. In line 2, initial K s is clear. Then, apparently a writer's mistake: two strokes, slightly inclined to the left, and another one inclined to the right, which has been struck before the second one, followed by a straight hasta considered to belong to the next letter R s. The group between K s and R s can be and is usually interpreted as an A s which had to be squeezed in, maybe after the hasta of R s was struck prematurely. After R s, A s, then a comparatively broad gap (the letters tend to overlap, where that is possible (A sR s, A sN s), but do not in this instance), but an intentional space is unlikely in regard to line 1. A sP2 sA s are clear; then, four strokes which can be read Ś s ś as well as I sN s ni, as the inscription displays both very small gaps between letters on the one hand and gaps of pretty much equal breadth between lines of one letter (tips of R s, secure N s) on the other hand. Final A sN s is unambiguous. After the last letter, two broad indentations on top and bottom of the line, filling the line between it and the horse's foreleg.

Line 1 can be segmented φelipuriesi eluku slepile, i.e. two individual names in the pertinentive separated by a ku-form. Concerning φelipuriesi: The name must be compared with the individual name on NO-3, which is usually read φeluriesi, but might indeed be φelpuriesi (written with lp in ligature). If the name on SZ-14 appears with an epenthetic vowel i, the names could be considered to be identical. Despite the lack of case correlation, the sequence in line 2 is best interpreted as the patronymic in -na on which the individual names in line 1 depend; so Schumacher 1998: 109 f., cp. also 112 and SZ-9.1 with (possibly) only the individual name appearing in the pertinentive. Note that the patronymic appears with -na, which – if Schumacher's assumption that -nu is employed in patronymics for mixed couples (p. 296) is correct – contradicts the evidence of NO-3, where the patronymic formed with -nu would determine φel(p)urie to be a male name. A less likely alternative for line 2 is reading the second dubious point as ni, which results in a sequence (a)panina, which might be compared with (a)pani(u)n. While this word is associated with the votive sphere, it does not occur on the Sanzeno bronzes except once on the atypical warrior statuette; also, what to do with final a – a genitive? The second A s might belong with panina (see the word page), which would leave obscure kar. A reading of the problematic second letter as E s for ker (attested elsewhere) is not possible.

Further references: Pellegrini 1951: 325 ff., Mayr 1952: 176 (no. 14), Vetter 1954: 72 (no. 14), Tibiletti Bruno 1978: 224, Ciurletti 1992.

Bibliography

Ciurletti 1992 Gianni Ciurletti, "Omaggio al cavaliere di Sanzeno", in: Ingrid R. Metzger, Paul Gleirscher, Die Räter / I Reti [= Schriftenreihe der Arbeitsgemeinschaft Alpenländer, Neue Folge 4], Bozen: Athesia 1992, 27–39.
IR Alberto Mancini, "Iscrizioni retiche", Studi Etruschi 43 (1975), 249–306.
LIR Alberto Mancini, Le Iscrizioni Retiche [= Quaderni del dipartimento di linguistica, Università degli studi di Firenze Studi 8–9], Padova: Unipress 2009–10. (2 volumes)
Mayr 1952 Karl M. Mayr, "Zu den Inschriften der Votive von Sanzeno", Der Schlern 26 (1952), 175–177.