BZ-4

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Inscription
Transliteration: pevaśniχesiupikuθiuθisaχvilipiperisnaθi
Original script: I sΘ sA3 sN sS sI sR sE3 sP2 sI sP2 sI sL2 sI sV3 sΧ sA3 sS sI sΘ sU2 sI sΘ sU2 sK sI sP2 sU2 sI sS dE sΧ sI sN sŚ sA3 sV3 sE3 sP2 s

Object: BZ-4 fragment (bronze)
Position: inside
Frame: Frame middle: top and bottomFrame middle: top and bottom   (none, top and bottom, none)
Script: North Italic script (Sanzeno alphabet)
Direction of writing: sinistroverse
Letter height: 1.21.2 cm <br /> – 1.8 cm
Number of letters: 39
Number of lines: 1
Craftsmanship: engraved
Current condition: complete, damaged
Date of inscription:
Date derived from:

Language: Raetic
Meaning: '(?) to/by/for ? X-ed as a gift to/of Tiuti ?' (?)

Alternative sigla: PID 192
LIR BZ-4
MLR 273
Sources: Schumacher 2004: 179

Images

Commentary

First published in Conestabile 1863: 40 f. Autopsied by TIR in April 2014.

Images in Conestabile 1863: Pl. 1,4 (drawing), CII: Tab. VI,60 (drawing), Corssen 1874: 937 (drawing), AIF I: Taf. II (33) (drawing = Marstrander 1927: 24, Fig. 20), Mayr 1960c: Abb. 1 (photo) and LIR (drawing). An excellent copy of the inscription can be seen on a copy of the bronze fragment in the Tiroler Landesmuseum Ferdinandeum. To the latter, therefore to the copy and not to the original, the alternative sigla BZ-4 (cp. LIR: 48–49) and MLR 273 refers (cp. MLR: 239). At least Mancini mentions that his study is related to the copy (cp. LIR: 48).

Neatly executed apart from the first S d, where the writer started with a hasta (maybe anticipating the following I s), then erased the lower part with tiny scratches and added the lower angle – this lapse is probably responsible for the first S d being oriented against the direction of writing. The fragment is broken along the first hasta of A s in aχvil and has a crack along the final I s, but both letters are legible unambiguously. Two lines enclose the inscription top and bottom; the fact that they are scratched, somewhat untidily, in steps, and more slightly than the inscription, indicates that they are not meant as an ornamental frame, but were made for guidance. Almost all characters cross the lines.

An alternative reading was suggested by Marstrander 1927: 23 f. Assuming that the sequence conventionally read ]perisna[ could be identified with þerisna on the Vače helmet, he argued that the character P2 s must in all four instances be read T d. The presence of Θ s he explained by separating the sequences containing the latter from the text and interpreting them as non-phonetic, as on the Negau helmet B. He read tevaśniχesiutiku Θ sI sU2 sΘ sI s saχvilititerisna Θ sI s. Marstrander's observations concerning the execution of letters with scratches meeting on top are not decisive: While it is true that E3 s and V3 s with the bars pretty consistently crossing the hasta may be counted out, and the other letters (A s, Ś s, N s, R s) are scratched with tidy angles, the hasta and bar of P2 s never cross below the drawn line, and the bar does not extend significantly to the other side of the hasta. Besides that, perisna with initial labial is unambiguously documented on BZ-26. Compare, however, uθiku with a dental in the stem on VR-3 and the entry for letter Φ for a discussion of labial vs. dental in Raetic inscriptions.

Following the reading going back to Pauli (no. 33), the only two forms which can be identified without doubt are upiku and aχvil. pevaśniχesi features a pertinentive ending -si, which indicates a personal name. While the length of the sequence allows for further segmentation, the separation into an individual name peva plus śniχe-si is unlikely both because of the unusual auslaut of the individual name and the lack of a patronymic suffix in the second name. Rix (p. 31 f.) segments like this, but interprets peva as a substantive. Cp. ]?niχesi on WE-4: The doubtful letter in the beginning cannot be Ś s, which may indicate that niχe-si is a discrete element. Rix further identifies a genitive tiutis dependent on aχvil 'gift of/to Tiuti', with a parallel on PA-1 ataris akvil. The sequence after aχvil he interprets as a locative syntagma ipi perisnati. If -na is the prevalent derivational suffix, the ending -ti is obscure. Mayr 1960c refers to pipe on BZ-11 (Vetter 1943: 80), suggesting a segmentation pipe risnati, which would leave the first i as a suffix belonging to aχvil.

Further references: CII 60, Corssen 1874: 937 ff (no. 33), Pichler 1880: 41 (no.4), Oberziner 1883: 175 f. (?), AIF I 33, Deecke 1886: 63 f. Meyer 1901: 7, Torp 1906: 10 ff., Pisani 1935: 95, Vetter 1943: 80, Battisti 1944: 225 f., Kretschmer 1943: 200, Mayr 1960c, Tibiletti Bruno 1978: 227 f.

Bibliography

AIF I Carl Pauli, Altitalische Forschungen. Band 1: Die Inschriften nordetruskischen Alphabets, Leipzig: 1885.
Battisti 1944 Carlo Battisti, "Osservazioni sulla lingua delle iscrizioni nell'alfabeto etrusco settentrionale di Bolzano", Studi Etruschi 18 (1944), 199–236.
CII Ariodante Fabretti, Corpus inscriptionum italicarum, Torino: 1867. (2 volumes)
Conestabile 1863 Giancarlo Conestabile, Second spicilegium de quelques monuments écrits ou épigraphes des Étrusques. Musées de Londres, de Berlin, de Manheim, de La Haye, de Paris, de Pérouse (Italie), Paris: Librairie Académique - Didier et Cie 1863.
Corssen 1874 Wilhelm Paul Corssen, Ueber die Sprache der Etrusker. Band 1, Leipzig: 1874.
Deecke 1886 Wilhelm Deecke, "–", review of: Carl Pauli, Altitalische Forschungen. Band 1: Die Inschriften nordetruskischen Alphabets, Leipzig: 1885, Göttingische gelehrte Anzeigen 2 (1886), 49–70.
Kretschmer 1943 Paul Kretschmer, "Die vorgriechischen Sprach- und Volksschichten (Fortsetzung)", Glotta 30 (1943), 84–218.
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)
Marstrander 1927 Carl Johan Sverdrup Marstrander, "Remarques sur les inscriptions des casques en bronze de Negau et de Watsch", Avhandlinger utgitt av Det Norske Videnskaps-Akademi i Oslo. Hist.-filos. klasse 1926/2 (1927), 1–26.