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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: RON-SAC |
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SABELLIC ,1 the name originally given by Mommsen in his Unteritalische Dialekte to the pre-Roman dialects of Central Italy which was neither Oscan nor Umbrian. The progress of study has, however, grouped them under more specific names, such as the " North Oscan " group (see PAEZIGNI) and the " Latinian " group (see LATIN LANGUAGE), and the only content now left for the term Sabellic consists of a group of 8 or 9 inscriptions to which it certainly cannot be applied with truth. They are probably, if not ,certainly, the most ancient inscriptions in existence on Italian soil. Since they were all found on a strip of the eastern coast running from the mouth of the Aternus on the south to Pesaro on the north, it is probably best to call them simply " East Italic " or " Adriatic."Not even the transcription of their alphabet has reached the stage of certainty, for even in this small number of inscriptions the alphabet seems to vary. The chief
VENETI
Etruscan
Capua
letter turned so as to face the left, and with its head downwards. This arrangement appears in some of the Venetic inscriptions also. The longest of the inscriptions is that from Grecchio, now preserved in the Naples Museum. The probability is that this and all the rest were epitaphs, but a translation is as yet out of the question. The stone from Castrignano gives us 1certain forms which seem to be recognizable as Indo-European, namely paterefo, materefo, though it is far from certain that the symbol N, which is here represented by f, really has that value.Pauli's conjecture that these inscriptions probably represented the language of some settlers from Illyria has little support except that of some coincidences in tribal and local names on the two sides of the Adriatic (e.g. " Truentum, quod solum Liburnorum in Italia relicuum est " (Plin. Nat. Hist. iii. 1 ro), -entum being a frequent Illyrian ending, and Liburni an Illyrian tribe), though it is a priori likely enough. For the authorities for the alphabets and the text of the inscriptions as known down to 1897, see R. S. Conway's Italic Dialects 1 For the Sabellian tribes, see SABINE.( Cambridge , 1897), ii. 528; and nothing has yet (1908) been added to what was written about the alphabets by Karl Pauli (Altital. Stud. iii., " Die Venter,''. Leipzig
It is to be noticed that a much longer and far more legible inscription from Novilara (now in the museum at Pesaroa cast of it is at Bologna) sometimes spoken of as Sabellic, whose first two words are mimnis et-id, is perhaps more probably to be regarded as containing some variety of Etruscan
pastoral
late
With a companion fragment it is fully described by Brizio in Monumenti antichi, v. (1895), and it has also been discussed by Ella Lattes in Hermes (xxxi. 465 and xliii. 32). (R. S. C.) End of Article: SABELLIC If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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