The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene

This work aims to clarify a number of issues concerning the etymology of personal names attested in Latin epigraphy in the Alpine region, especially in Gallia Transpadana, Venetia et Histria, Pannonia, and Noricum. The author selected a number of comparative and superlative proprial forms which may...

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Main Author: Blanca María Prósper
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Izdatelstvo Uralskogo Universiteta 2018-07-01
Series:Voprosy Onomastiki
Subjects:
Online Access:http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2018.15.2.017.pdf
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spelling doaj-db659fdb4d634c809a15d3b1e87b2a672020-11-24T21:09:52ZrusIzdatelstvo Uralskogo UniversitetaVoprosy Onomastiki1994-24001994-24512018-07-0115210813810.15826/vopr_onom.2018.15.2.017The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-PiceneBlanca María Prósper0University of SalamancaThis work aims to clarify a number of issues concerning the etymology of personal names attested in Latin epigraphy in the Alpine region, especially in Gallia Transpadana, Venetia et Histria, Pannonia, and Noricum. The author selected a number of comparative and superlative proprial forms which may be classified as Celtic or Italic and attempted to establish their language attribution based on the analysis of their etymology, geographic distribution and the sound changes that they presumably underwent. The author also offers an explanation of the different and apparently contradictory types of vowel syncope characteristic of the Gaulish superlative forms, which is based on a hypothesis about the successive accent shifts, before and after the split-up of the Celtic language family. Additionally, this analysis has some bearing on the interpretation of several South-Picene inscriptions, namely that from Penna Sant’Andrea. The paper also seeks to make a methodological point by exhibiting how much the evidence of proper names with clearly discernable patterns may contribute to the understanding of particular issues related to the phonology and morphology of the whole group of languages. Such information may lead, in its turn, to new etymologies, and therefore to better understanding of some particular features of the Celtic languages in their early period.http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2018.15.2.017.pdfItalic languagesCeltic languagesGaulishOscanUmbrianVeneticSouth-Picenepersonal namesIndo-European onomasticsIndo-European word formationLatin epigraphy
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Blanca María Prósper
spellingShingle Blanca María Prósper
The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
Voprosy Onomastiki
Italic languages
Celtic languages
Gaulish
Oscan
Umbrian
Venetic
South-Picene
personal names
Indo-European onomastics
Indo-European word formation
Latin epigraphy
author_facet Blanca María Prósper
author_sort Blanca María Prósper
title The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
title_short The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
title_full The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
title_fullStr The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
title_full_unstemmed The Indo-European Personal Names of Pannonia, Noricum and Northern Italy: Comparative and Superlative Forms in Celtic, Venetic, and South-Picene
title_sort indo-european personal names of pannonia, noricum and northern italy: comparative and superlative forms in celtic, venetic, and south-picene
publisher Izdatelstvo Uralskogo Universiteta
series Voprosy Onomastiki
issn 1994-2400
1994-2451
publishDate 2018-07-01
description This work aims to clarify a number of issues concerning the etymology of personal names attested in Latin epigraphy in the Alpine region, especially in Gallia Transpadana, Venetia et Histria, Pannonia, and Noricum. The author selected a number of comparative and superlative proprial forms which may be classified as Celtic or Italic and attempted to establish their language attribution based on the analysis of their etymology, geographic distribution and the sound changes that they presumably underwent. The author also offers an explanation of the different and apparently contradictory types of vowel syncope characteristic of the Gaulish superlative forms, which is based on a hypothesis about the successive accent shifts, before and after the split-up of the Celtic language family. Additionally, this analysis has some bearing on the interpretation of several South-Picene inscriptions, namely that from Penna Sant’Andrea. The paper also seeks to make a methodological point by exhibiting how much the evidence of proper names with clearly discernable patterns may contribute to the understanding of particular issues related to the phonology and morphology of the whole group of languages. Such information may lead, in its turn, to new etymologies, and therefore to better understanding of some particular features of the Celtic languages in their early period.
topic Italic languages
Celtic languages
Gaulish
Oscan
Umbrian
Venetic
South-Picene
personal names
Indo-European onomastics
Indo-European word formation
Latin epigraphy
url http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2018.15.2.017.pdf
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