Open main menu
Home
Random
Recent changes
Special pages
Community portal
Preferences
About Wikipedia
Disclaimers
Incubator escapee wiki
Search
User menu
Talk
Dark mode
Contributions
Create account
Log in
Editing
Etruscan language
(section)
Warning:
You are not logged in. Your IP address will be publicly visible if you make any edits. If you
log in
or
create an account
, your edits will be attributed to your username, along with other benefits.
Anti-spam check. Do
not
fill this in!
==== Anatolian Indo-European family hypothesis ==== Some have suggested that Tyrsenian languages may yet be distantly related to early [[Indo-European languages]], such as those of the [[Anatolian languages|Anatolian branch]].<ref>For example, Steinbauer (1999), RodrΓguez Adrados (2005).</ref> More recently, [[Robert S. P. Beekes]] argued in 2002 that the people later known as the Lydians and Etruscans had originally lived in northwest [[Anatolia]], with a coastline to the [[Sea of Marmara]], whence they were driven by the [[Phrygians]] ''circa'' 1200 BC, leaving a remnant known in antiquity as the [[Tiras|Tyrsenoi]]. A segment of this people moved south-west to [[Lydia]], becoming known as the [[Lydian language|Lydians]], while others sailed away to take refuge in Italy, where they became known as Etruscans.<ref>Beekes, Robert S. P.[http://www.knaw.nl/Content/Internet_KNAW/publicaties/pdf/20021051.pdf "The Origin of the Etruscans"]{{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120117190941/http://www.knaw.nl/Content/Internet_KNAW/publicaties/pdf/20021051.pdf|date=2012-01-17}}. In: ''Biblioteca Orientalis'' '''59''' (2002), 206β242.</ref> This account draws on the well-known story by [[Herodotus]] (I, 94) of the Lydian origin of the Etruscans or Tyrrhenians, famously rejected by [[Dionysius of Halicarnassus]] (book I), partly on the authority of Xanthus, a Lydian historian, who had no knowledge of the story, and partly on what he judged to be the different languages, laws, and religions of the two peoples. In 2006, Frederik Woudhuizen went further on Herodotus' traces, suggesting that Etruscan belongs to the [[Anatolian languages|Anatolian]] branch of the Indo-European family, specifically to [[Luwian]].<ref name="luwianseapeoples">{{cite book |last=Woudhuizen |first=Frederik Christiaan |url=http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/7686/Woudhuizen%20bw.pdf |title=The Ethnicity of the Sea Peoples |publisher=Erasmus Universiteit |year=2006 |location=Rotterdam |page=139}}</ref> Woudhuizen revived a [[Etruscan origins#Historical claims of allochthonous (outside) origin|conjecture]] to the effect that the Tyrsenians came from [[Anatolia]], including [[Lydia]], whence they were driven by the [[Cimmerians]] in the early Iron Age, 750β675 BC, leaving some colonists on [[Lemnos]]. He makes a number of comparisons of Etruscan to [[Luwian]] and asserts that Etruscan is modified Luwian. He accounts for the non-Luwian features as a [[Mysia]]n influence: "deviations from Luwian [...] may plausibly be ascribed to the dialect of the indigenous population of Mysia."<ref>Woudhuizen 2006 p. 86</ref> According to Woudhuizen, the Etruscans were initially colonizing the Latins, bringing the alphabet from Anatolia. For historical, archaeological, genetic, and linguistic reasons, a relationship between Etruscan and the Indo-European Anatolian languages (Lydian or Luwian) and the idea that the Etruscans initially colonized the Latins, bringing the alphabet from Anatolia, have not been accepted, since the account by Herodotus is no longer considered reliable.<ref name="Wallace2010" /><ref name=Posth2021/><ref name=Barker>{{cite book |last1=Barker |first1=Graeme |author-link1= Graeme Barker|last2=Rasmussen |first2=Tom |author-link2=Tom Rasmussen |author-mask1= |author-mask2= |author-mask3= |author-mask4= |author-mask5= |name-list-style= |translator-last1= |translator-first1= |translator-link1= |translator-last2= |translator-first2= |translator-link2= |display-translators= |translator-mask1= |translator-mask2= |year=2000 |orig-year= |script-chapter= |trans-chapter= |chapter-format= |display-editors= |title=The Etruscans |script-title= |trans-title= |url-status= |url-access= |series= The Peoples of Europe|location=Oxford |publisher=Blackwell Publishing |page=44 |no-pp= |isbn=978-0-631-22038-1 }}</ref><ref name=Turfa2017>{{cite book |last1=Turfa|first1= Jean MacIntosh |author-link1=Jean MacIntosh Turfa|year= 2017|chapter= The Etruscans|editor1-last= Farney|editor1-first=Gary D. |editor2-last=Bradley |editor2-first=Gary |title=The Peoples of Ancient Italy |location=Berlin |publisher= De Gruyter|pages=637β672 |doi=10.1515/9781614513001 |isbn=978-1-61451-520-3 }}</ref><ref name=DeGrummond2014>{{cite book |last1= De Grummond |first1=Nancy T.|author-link1= Nancy Thomson de Grummond|year=2014 |chapter=Ethnicity and the Etruscans|editor1-last=McInerney |editor1-first=Jeremy |title=A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean |location=Chichester, UK |publisher= John Wiley & Sons, Inc |pages=405β422 |doi=10.1002/9781118834312 |isbn=978-1-4443-3734-1 }}</ref><ref name=Shipley2017>{{cite book |last1=Shipley |first1=Lucy |year= 2017|chapter=Where is home? |title= The Etruscans: Lost Civilizations|location=London |publisher=Reaktion Books |pages=28β46 |isbn=978-1-78023-862-3 }}</ref>
Edit summary
(Briefly describe your changes)
By publishing changes, you agree to the
Terms of Use
, and you irrevocably agree to release your contribution under the
CC BY-SA 4.0 License
and the
GFDL
. You agree that a hyperlink or URL is sufficient attribution under the Creative Commons license.
Cancel
Editing help
(opens in new window)