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Topic: Botorrita tablet


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In the News (Thu 16 Feb 12)

  
  NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Thai alphabet   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Tablet inscribed with the Glagolitic alphabet The Glagolitic alphabet or Glagolitsa is the oldest known Slavonic alphabet.
The Cyrillic alphabet (or azbuka, from the old name of the first letters) is an alphabet used to write six natural Slavic languages (Belarusian, Bulgarian, Macedonian, Russian, Serbian, and Ukrainian) and many other languages of the former Soviet Union, Asia and Eastern Europe.
An alphabet is a complete standardized set of letters — basic written symbols — each of which roughly represents a phoneme of a spoken language, either as it exists now or as it may have been in the past.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Thai_alphabet   (2202 words)

  
 Iberian scripts - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
photograph of Botorrita 1 (both sides), 1st century BC.
The Iberian scripts (or Iberian alphabet) are two scripts (or two styles of the same script) found on the Iberian peninsula, the Northeast and South Iberian script.
The Celtiberian version of the script was used to record the Celtiberian language, for example on the Botorrita tablet.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Iberian_scripts   (240 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Botorrita plaque
The Botorrita plaques are four bronze plaques discovered in Botorrita (Roman Contrebia Belaisca,), near Saragossa, dating to the early 1st century BC, labelled Botorrita I, II, III and IV Botorrita II is in the Latin language, but Botorrita I, III and IV, inscribed in the Iberian script, constitute the main part of the Celtiberian corpus.
It is the longest inscription in Celtiberian consisting of a text in 11 lines, on the front face, continued by a list of names on the back side.
Botorrita III, discoverred in 1979, is inscribed in four columns on one side of a plaque, introduced by a heading risatioka:lestera:ia:tarakuai:nouiz:auzanto / eskeninum:taniokakue:soisum:albana.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Botorrita_tablet   (329 words)

  
 Botorrita plaque   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Botorrita III, discovered in 1979, is inscribed in four columns on one side of a plaque, introduced by a heading of two lines.
Botorrita IV Botorrita IV, discovered in 1994, consists of 18 lines on both faces of the plaque.
The tirikantam of Botorrita I reappears in line A.1.
www.tocatch.info /en/Botorrita_tablet.htm   (256 words)

  
 Richardson, Romans in Spain
This bronze tablet, found in the excavation of a Celtiberian town in the hills on the southern side of the Ebro valley, contains a record of a judgement made by the senate of the town, Contrebia Belaisca, on a water-rights dispute between two other tribes.
The form of the judgement, which had been set up for them on application by C. Valerius Flaccus in his capacity as proconsul, and which is dated to 87 BC, is based almost entirely on the formula used by the praetors in the courts in Rome.
In the north, Contrebia (Botorrita) and Azaila both had Roman-style buildings at the time of their destruction, probably during the Ilerda campaign, and the latter in particular possessed baths and a temple.
lamar.colostate.edu /~jgaughan/HY492/RomansinSpain.htm   (8888 words)

  
 e-Keltoi: Volume 6, Religion and Religious Practices of the Ancient Celts of the Iberian Peninsula, by Francisco Marco ...
On the other hand, the poet Macrobius (Saturnalia 1, 19, 5) mentions in relation to the inhabitants of Acci (Guadix, in Granada) the god Neto, specifying his solar character and his interpretatio (assimilation with) Mars.
This deity appears in inscriptions from Condeixa-a-Velha (Beira Litoral: CIL II 365) and Trujillo (Cáceres: ILER 889), and probably appears in its Celtic form, Neito, on side A of the Celtiberian bronze plaque from Botorrita (Beltrán and Tovar 1982).
The personality of Proserpina, with whom the goddess is equated in an execration tablet from Mérida (CIL II 462), proves that those two elements, although they seem to be incompatible, are related to each other.
www.uwm.edu /Dept/celtic/ekeltoi/volumes/vol6/6_6/marco_simon_6_6.html   (15759 words)

  
 Digitizing Tablet - Information   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
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Why PC is in PC Edition about Tablet PC, we XP PC Edition.
Capuana Tablet from Capua The was uncovered untranslated tablet believed to twelfth of Gilgamesh...
www.freewebs.com /information24/digitizing-tablet.html   (174 words)

  
 Egipcios, bereberes, guanches y vascos. LM Mujika.
He was obviously unfamiliar with the Botorrita Bronze Plate, written in Hispano-Celtic, which uses the word silaber for "silver".
This certainly looks as though it has the same source as the Germanic word, and could be the progenitor of zilar.
PS: On the lazy assumption that conjugation with auxilliaries is a relatively recent development, here are examples of both synthetic and periphrastic conjugation from Iberian alphabet texts (all taken from the Alcoy Lead Tablet):-
www.eskunabarra.org /Angus_J_Huck/Egipcios.htm   (2820 words)

  
 Stifter: Celtiberian -unei, Luguei   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-11)
Abstract: The infinitives in -unei and the form Luguei suggest that in Celtiberian the dative singulars of proterokinetic stems were reshaped and took on the appearance of hystero- or amphikinetic stems.
Basically two reasonable approaches exist to explain the Celtiberian infinitival suffix -unei attested four times on the first bronze tablet from Botorrita (taunei [K.1.1,A-2], tizaunei [K.1.1,A-2], u]ertaunei [K.1.1,A-2], a]mbitinkounei [K.1.1,A-6]).
Both build on the assumption that the forms in question are dative singulars of neutral verbal abstracts, from heteroclitic
www.univie.ac.at /keltologie/luguei.html   (2091 words)

  
 Ernest Metzger | Roman Judges, Case Law, and Principles of Procedure | Law and History Review, 22.2 | The History ...
The most outstanding example of such a record under the formulary procedure is probably the Tabula Contrebiensis (87 BC) from Botorrita in Spain, which recites two formulae and adds a judgment at the end.
It would be difficult to make a "written submission" of points and arguments with the usual means of recording matters for litigation: the waxed, wooden tablet.
It was disposable, not permanent, and easily forged.
www.historycooperative.org /journals/lhr/22.2/metzger.html   (13780 words)

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