Negau helmets#Inscriptions
{{Short description|Etruscan combat helmet discovered in modern Slovenia}}
{{more citations needed|date=December 2010}}
File:Museum für Vor- und Frühgeschichte Berlin 010.jpg, near Vače, Slovenia. Kept by Museum of Prehistory and Early History (Berlin).]]
The Negau helmets are 26 bronze helmets (23 of which are preserved) dating to {{Circa|450 BC}}–350 BC, found in 1812 in a cache in Ženjak, near Negau, Duchy of Styria (now Negova, Slovenia).{{cite book|author=Jeremy J. Smith|author-link=Jeremy J. Smith|title=Old English: A Linguistic Introduction|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=SduG-tIxL-AC&pg=PA125|date=2 April 2009|publisher=Cambridge University Press|isbn=978-0-521-86677-4|pages=125–}} The helmets are of typical Etruscan 'vetulonic' shape, sometimes described as of the Negau type. It is not clear when they were buried, but they seem to have been left at the Ženjak site for ceremonial reasons. The village of Ženjak was of great interest to German archaeologists during the Nazi period and was briefly renamed Harigast during World War II. The site has never been excavated properly.
Inscriptions
File:Helm von Negau; KHM, Wien Inschrift.jpg.]]
On one of the helmets ("Negau B"), there is an inscription in a northern Etruscan alphabet. The date of the inscription is unclear, but it may be as old as 350–300 BC (Teržan 2012). It is read, right-to-left, as:
:{{lang|gem|{{script/Old Italic|𐌇𐌀𐌓𐌉𐌙𐌀𐌔𐌕𐌉𐌕𐌄𐌉𐌅𐌀///𐌉𐌐|rtl=y}}}}
:{{Transliteration|gem|hariχastiteiva\\\ip}}
Many interpretations of the inscription have been proffered in the past, but the most recent interpretation is by Tom Markey (2001), who reads the inscription as {{Transliteration|gem|Hariχasti teiva}}, 'Harigast the priest' (from {{Transliteration|gem|*teiwaz}} 'god'), as another inscribed helmet also found at the site bears several names (mostly Celtic) followed by religious titles. Markey believes the text is Germanic mediated through Rhaetic which accounts for some of the difficulties in the reading, such as the lack of a declensional ending in the first element {{Transliteration|gem|Hariχasti}}. In any case, the Germanic name {{Transliteration|gem|Harigasti(z)}} is almost universally read. Formerly, some scholars have seen the inscription as an early incarnation of the runic alphabet, but it is now accepted that the script is North Etruscan proper, and precedes the formation of the Runic alphabet.
This inscription has been of particular interest to historical linguists, since it has been argued that it provides the earliest attestation of Grimm's law (also known as the First Germanic Sound Shift), the sound shift which distinguishes the Germanic languages from other Indo-European languages. If {{Transliteration|gem|teiva}} is a Germanic cognate of Latin {{lang|la|deus}} 'god', it would reflect Grimm's shift {{Transliteration|gem|*d}} > {{Transliteration|gem|*t}}. This would be the earliest attestation of the shift, which would have relevance for the dating. However, Jeremy J. Smith argues that there are major problems with seeing the helmet as conclusive evidence for such a development.{{explain|date=February 2023|reason=What are the problems?}}
The four discrete inscriptions on the helmet usually called "Negau A" are read by Markey (2001) as: {{Transliteration|cel|Dubni banuabi}} 'of Dubnos the pig-slayer'; {{Transliteration|cel|sirago turbi}} 'astral priest of the troop'; {{Transliteration|cel|Iars'e esvii}} 'Iarsus the divine'; and {{Transliteration|cel|Kerup}}, probably an abbreviation for a Celtic name like Cerubogios.
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
- {{cite journal |last1= Markey|first1= Tom|year= 2001|title= A Tale of Two Helmets: The Negau A and B Inscriptions|journal=Journal of Indo-European Studies |volume= 29|issue=1/2|pages= 69–172}}
- Teržan, B. 2012. ‘Negau (Negova), Slowenien: Benedikt V’, in S. Sievers, O.H. Urban and P.C. Ramsal (eds.), Lexikon zur keltischen Archäologie, pp. 1357-59. Vienna.
External links
{{commons category|Negau helmets}}
- {{cite web|title=The Negau helmet|url=http://titus.uni-frankfurt.de/didact/idg/germ/runealph.htm|publisher=TITUS (project)|year=2001}}
{{Etruscans}}
{{helmets}}
Category:5th-century BC artifacts
Category:4th-century BC artifacts
Category:1812 archaeological discoveries
Category:Archaeological discoveries in Slovenia