TV-1.1

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Inscription
Transliteration: ]iaṇ·aθare / ]armatan·̣ / ]??es·̣śaruś·̣?·̣ / ]ḷ·s·salusruśn?(?) / ]?ạṛṃạ[
Original script: ]I dA3 dN dpunctuation7 dA3 dΘ dA3 dR2 dE d
]A3 dR2 dM dA3 dΘ dA3 dN dpunctuation d
]??E dS spunctuation dŚ dA3 dR2 dU dŚ dpunctuation d?punctuation d
]L dpunctuation dS spunctuation dS sA3 dL dU dS sR2 dU dŚ dN d?(?)
]?A3 dR2 dM dA3 d[

Object: TV-1 slab (sandstone)
(Inscriptions: TV-1.1, TV-1.2)
Position:
Script: North Italic script (Magrè alphabet)
Direction of writing: dextroverse
Letter height: 3.53.5 cm <br /> – 4.5 cm
Number of letters: 40
Number of characters: 48
Number of lines: 5
Craftsmanship: engraved
Current condition: damaged, fragmentary
Date of inscription:
Date derived from:

Language: unknown
Meaning: unknown

Alternative sigla: IR 98
LIR TV-1
Sources: Schumacher 2004: 173

Images

Commentary

First published in Lejeune 1951.

Images in Moschetti 1932: fig. 114 (photo = Sartori 1951: fig. 2 = Lejeune 1951: 210 = Pellegrini 1959: Tav. XLII, fig. 20), Lejeune 1951: 211 (drawing), Pellegrini 1952: 239 (drawing = Pellegrini 1959: 194), Pellegrini & Prosdocimi 1967: 398 and 399 (photos), Morandi 1999: fig. 3, 5, 8–10, 12 and 13 (photos) and 11 and 14 (drawings), LIR: 279 and 280 (drawings).

Written in five (preserved) lines, dextroverse, on the smoothed surface of a slab, covering its entire breadth. The lines appear to be incomplete in the beginning, the slab being broken on the left side. Morandi reckons, on the basis of his reading of the inscription on the reverse, that about half of each line is missing – provided that the Latin text was not written on an already broken slab. In addition to this, a layer of stone has broken off next to the breaking edge, further shortening the first two lines and damaging the first letters of the third. The preserved lines are neatly executed, running parallel with a widely consistent letter height of 4–4.5 cm and a distance of about 1–1.5 cm between them.

The letters are mostly well legible despite erosion. In line 1, no trace of a letter can be made out at the breaking edge before Iota. Morandi's reading of the third letter as Nu rather than Lambda can be confirmed. The separator in line 1 is a short vertical punctuation7 d, rather than a dot as in the rest of the inscription. The sequence R2 dE d is written on the side of the slab, close to the left edge. It may be assumed that the two letters represent the ending of line 1, belonging with A3 dΘ dA3 d. That the writer did not simply complete the word in the next line might be taken as an indication that the text is written in tabulatory form, with one line constituting one entry. Lines 2 and 3 end with separators. The effort to avoid division of words may, however, just testify to a heightened sense of orderliness on the part of the writer. Line 2 is unambiguous, including the first letter Alpha, where the stone has broken off along the left hasta. The final punctuation mark is faint, but probably dot-shaped like the following ones.

The beginning of line 3 is problematic. The first two (?) letters are damaged by the break on top. Morandi reads ]R2 dI d. R2 d is most probably correct, but the vertical following it appears to curve slightly to the left. Even if this impression is just due to the damage, the gap between the vertical and Epsilon is much wider than between the other letters. A bar line d 20 s, faint but hardly unintentional, extends into it from the breaking edge. What looks like a separator between Epsilon and Sigma is likely just the remains of the more pronounced end of the lower bar of Epsilon, which has completely straight bars, just like the one in line 1. The separator seen by Morandi between Sigma and San is really a cavity more extensive than a punct. It may well be the consequence, after erosion, of a punct, but note that the space between Sigma and San is particularly small. Then again, sś is an unlikely cluster. The final letter between two puncts, the left part of which is heavily eroded, is read San by Morandi; if so, the letter is noticeably smaller than the others.

In line 4, a bar line d 20 s of what is probably Lambda next to the breaking edge, and a separator below it. The separator between the two Sigmas is a very short and slightly inclined line. The end of the line is damaged and not entirely clear. Morandi reads Θ dI d, which is indeed the most likely interpretation of the group of lines – Iota being small and touching Theta in the bottom can be explained by lack of space towards the end of the line. The cluster śnθ, however, is awkward. The bar line d 2 s of Theta is fainter than the others, but there is no motivation for a lopsided U3 s unlike the symmetrical ones in the rest of the inscription. Of line 5, only the top parts of some letters in the left area are left. The sequence A3 dR2 dM dA3 d can be securely identified by comparison with line 2 – the letters are even written straight beneath their respective counterparts. Of the letter on the very left, whose possible counterpart has disappeared with the layer of stone on the top left, only a hasta remains.

The Raetic characteristics of the inscription are lack of Omikron, Alpha with the bar rising in writing direction, and Mu with three bars. "Inverted" Upsilon and Lambda with the bar on top put it in the context of the Magrè alphabet. Sigma is consistently turned with its upper angle opening in writing direction; the most curious feature epigraphically is Epsilon with perfectly straight bars.

Further references: Sartori 1951: 15, Ribezzo 1952: 523 ff., Vetter 1954: 76 ff., Pisani 1964: 327, Pellegrini 1964: 78, Tibiletti Bruno 1978: 241 f., Pellegrini 1985: 115 f.

Bibliography

IR Alberto Mancini, "Iscrizioni retiche", Studi Etruschi 43 (1975), 249–306.
Lejeune 1951 Michel Lejeune, "L'Inscription Rétique de Castelcies", Studi Etruschi 21 (1951), 209–214.
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)