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Título
The Use of San in the Lugano Alphabet. A Survey of Cisalpine Celtic Onomastics
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Celtic languages
Lepontic
Gaulish
Lugano script
Sibilant sounds
Anthroponymy
Indo-European language reconstruction
Clasificación UNESCO
5505.10 Filología
Fecha de publicación
2023
Citación
Prósper, B.M. (2023). The Use of San in the Lugano Alphabet. A Survey of Cisalpine Celtic Onomastics. Вопросы Ономастики. 20(3),pp 63–102. DOI 10.15826/vopr_onom.2023.20.3.032
Resumen
[EN] The so-called “Lugano alphabet” is a northern Italian script that derives from the Etruscan
alphabet. It was used to write Celtic texts belonging to the Lepontic language, uncovered
in the centre of the Gallia Transpadana (Lombardy in Italy and Ticino in southern Switzerland),
ranging from the 6th c. to the 1st c. BC, and a later variety called Cisalpine Gaulish, again
located in the Transpadana (Lombardy and Piedmont in Italy), whose earliest texts date from
the 4th c. BC, and which represents a later wave of immigrants or invaders. This dialect is
distinguished from the former by a few morphological traits, like the patronymic suffi x -iknovs.
Lepontic -alo-. While the Lugano script is deciphered in its entirety, some pending issues
remain as to the actual use of some of its letters, its evolution and possible external infl uence
from related alphabets. This work will address the problem of the so-called “butterfl y sign,”
a letter transliterated as <ś>, which shows diff erent shapes, some of them easily confusable with
<m>, and goes back to Greek san. For the “butterfl y sign” a high number of synchronic values
and etymological origins has been proposed. The article attempts to show that its use overlaps
with that of zeta, transliterated as <z>. Both may have had a single value, and the refl ected
phoneme is in both cases a voiceless aff ricate that goes back to Indo-European /st/, /ts/ or /ds/,
to epenthesis of /t/ in a sequence *-ns#, or to aff rication of /d/ in coda position. The author also
evaluates the possibility that the occurrence of san and tau gallicum in some contexts, specifi cally
in codas, is due to mere phonemic reallocation not mediated by sound change.
URI
ISSN
1994-2400
DOI
10.15826/vopr_onom.2023.20.3.032
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