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  • Nov. 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, Nov. 1, 1875: Page 39

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    Article THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 39

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Etruscan Language

remaining , the Egyptian and Assyrian having been long deciphered and translated . The phonetic powers of the letters of the Etruscan al phabet were all known , and it was not the transforation of the language which constituted the difficulty . Mr .

Taylor then proceeded to give an account of the origin of the Etruscan alphabet . AA ith the help of a diagram exhibiting that alphabet , with the Latin , Phoenician , and the corresponding Egyptian hieroglyphs , in four parallel columns , he showed the derivation of the Etruscan letters from

the Egyptian through the Phcenician . The few bilingual inscriptions in Etruscan and Latin were referred to , and a copy of the principal one , that of Volumnius , consisting of little more than about half a dozen words , nearly all of them proper

names , was exhibited and commented upon . It was with the aid of these inscriptions that the powers of the Etruscan characters had been ascertained as long as eighty years ago . But their paucity and brevit y barred further progress for more than half

a century . The discovery of a specimen of inscribed Etruscan dice , about thirt y years since , opened up a prospect of penetrating deeper into the mystery , it being fairly presumable that the words on the six faces of the die are so many numerals .

For it was admitted on all hands that the numerals of a language , especially its units , offer the very best means of ascertaining its affinities with kindred tongues , and so

of revealing its translation and sense Unfortunately , the die , soon after it was found , was lost again for many years , aud its very existence began to be called in question by sceptical persons . Recentl y it had been recovered , and was now at Paris .

Copies of an engraving of this important die were distributed amongst toe numeious audience , and an enlarged model of it was exhibited . The words on the six faces were read in the following order by Mr . Taylorwho attributes to them the numeral

, values enclosed in brackets : —Mach ( 1 ) Huth ( 6 ) , Oi ( 2 ) , Sa ( 4 ) , Zal ( 3 ) , Thu ( 5 ) . He admitted , however , that there were fifteen possible ways of arranging them . In answer to those eminent philologists—Professor Corssen in particular—whodenied

their being numerals at all , he cited their occurence as numerals in several Etruscan sepulchral inscri ptions , of which there were no fewer than 3 , 000 extant . At the same

time the lecturer frankly owned that other scholars interpreted the expressions on the tombstones , ivhich he regarded as statements of the age of the deceased , in a totally different manner . Professor Corssen read the inscription on the die as follows : — " Mach Thu-zal huth ci-sa . Deeming the Etruscan language an Aryan one , and akin to the various Italic branches of that

family , the Umbrian , Oscan , and Latin , he had proposed the translation : — " Mach cut with a chisel this gift . " Mr . Taylor , Avho perceives in the Avorcls on the die not only numerals , but numerals Avhich can be identified with those of the Finno Ugrian group of the Turanian family of tongues

ridiculed this rendering . He excited considerable laughter by remarking that , ou Professor Corssen ' s system , an equally felicitous explanation of the inscription might be arrived at through the Gaelic , He developed his own argument from the

die in a very ingenious way , produced numerous proofs in its favour , and commented on the comparative grammar of the Etruscan and the Altaic and other

Turanian languages . A full-length portrait of an Etruscan , copied from one of the very nuir erous tomb frescoes , was exhibited , and excited much interest . Feature by feature Mr . Taylor compared the figure Avith the distinctive types of Laplanders

and other Turanian tribes , remarking particularly on the obesity and high cheekbones of all alike . AVifch the same point iu view , he referred the audience to the famous Castellani Etruscan sarcophagus in the British Museum , with the large

recumbent figures of the Etruscan magnate and his wife . Copies of the beautiful Etruscan mirrors also , ivhich often give subjects from the Graek mythology , but with the names of the gods in Etruscan , were pressed into the service of the learned

gentleman ' s argument , e . g ., one representing the birth of Minerva from the Head of Jupiter . Here Vulcan , who with his axe splits open the god's head , is called Sethlans , which is well known to be the Etruscan name of the divine blacksmith .

This name Mr . Taylor explains from the Turanian tongues as meaning " god of fire . Mr . Taylor was inclined to think , with Count Conestabile , that the Etruscans were a mixed people , consisting of two elements , both Turanian . There was an earlier aboriginal stock , closely allied to the

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-11-01, Page 39” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 9 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01111875/page/39/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 2
RANDOM RECOLLECTIONS OF FOREIGN TRAVEL. Article 3
TO LOIS. Article 7
THE DUVENGER CURSE Article 7
THE BADGE OF INNOCENCE." Article 10
LIGHTS AND SHADOWS OF SCOTTISH FREEMASONRY. Article 14
ODE. Article 16
THE ORIGIN AND REFERENCES OF THE HERMESIAN SPURIOUS FREEMASONRY. Article 18
SHADOWS. Article 22
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 24
NARRATIVE OF AN UNRECORDED ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Article 27
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 28
THE ATTACK OF THE CHURCH OF ROME ON FREEMASONS AND FREEMASONRY. Article 29
THE MYSTIC TEMPLE. Article 33
Review. Article 34
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 35
THE ETRUSCAN LANGUAGE Article 38
SONNET. Article 40
THE FAMILY GHOST. Article 40
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

The Etruscan Language

remaining , the Egyptian and Assyrian having been long deciphered and translated . The phonetic powers of the letters of the Etruscan al phabet were all known , and it was not the transforation of the language which constituted the difficulty . Mr .

Taylor then proceeded to give an account of the origin of the Etruscan alphabet . AA ith the help of a diagram exhibiting that alphabet , with the Latin , Phoenician , and the corresponding Egyptian hieroglyphs , in four parallel columns , he showed the derivation of the Etruscan letters from

the Egyptian through the Phcenician . The few bilingual inscriptions in Etruscan and Latin were referred to , and a copy of the principal one , that of Volumnius , consisting of little more than about half a dozen words , nearly all of them proper

names , was exhibited and commented upon . It was with the aid of these inscriptions that the powers of the Etruscan characters had been ascertained as long as eighty years ago . But their paucity and brevit y barred further progress for more than half

a century . The discovery of a specimen of inscribed Etruscan dice , about thirt y years since , opened up a prospect of penetrating deeper into the mystery , it being fairly presumable that the words on the six faces of the die are so many numerals .

For it was admitted on all hands that the numerals of a language , especially its units , offer the very best means of ascertaining its affinities with kindred tongues , and so

of revealing its translation and sense Unfortunately , the die , soon after it was found , was lost again for many years , aud its very existence began to be called in question by sceptical persons . Recentl y it had been recovered , and was now at Paris .

Copies of an engraving of this important die were distributed amongst toe numeious audience , and an enlarged model of it was exhibited . The words on the six faces were read in the following order by Mr . Taylorwho attributes to them the numeral

, values enclosed in brackets : —Mach ( 1 ) Huth ( 6 ) , Oi ( 2 ) , Sa ( 4 ) , Zal ( 3 ) , Thu ( 5 ) . He admitted , however , that there were fifteen possible ways of arranging them . In answer to those eminent philologists—Professor Corssen in particular—whodenied

their being numerals at all , he cited their occurence as numerals in several Etruscan sepulchral inscri ptions , of which there were no fewer than 3 , 000 extant . At the same

time the lecturer frankly owned that other scholars interpreted the expressions on the tombstones , ivhich he regarded as statements of the age of the deceased , in a totally different manner . Professor Corssen read the inscription on the die as follows : — " Mach Thu-zal huth ci-sa . Deeming the Etruscan language an Aryan one , and akin to the various Italic branches of that

family , the Umbrian , Oscan , and Latin , he had proposed the translation : — " Mach cut with a chisel this gift . " Mr . Taylor , Avho perceives in the Avorcls on the die not only numerals , but numerals Avhich can be identified with those of the Finno Ugrian group of the Turanian family of tongues

ridiculed this rendering . He excited considerable laughter by remarking that , ou Professor Corssen ' s system , an equally felicitous explanation of the inscription might be arrived at through the Gaelic , He developed his own argument from the

die in a very ingenious way , produced numerous proofs in its favour , and commented on the comparative grammar of the Etruscan and the Altaic and other

Turanian languages . A full-length portrait of an Etruscan , copied from one of the very nuir erous tomb frescoes , was exhibited , and excited much interest . Feature by feature Mr . Taylor compared the figure Avith the distinctive types of Laplanders

and other Turanian tribes , remarking particularly on the obesity and high cheekbones of all alike . AVifch the same point iu view , he referred the audience to the famous Castellani Etruscan sarcophagus in the British Museum , with the large

recumbent figures of the Etruscan magnate and his wife . Copies of the beautiful Etruscan mirrors also , ivhich often give subjects from the Graek mythology , but with the names of the gods in Etruscan , were pressed into the service of the learned

gentleman ' s argument , e . g ., one representing the birth of Minerva from the Head of Jupiter . Here Vulcan , who with his axe splits open the god's head , is called Sethlans , which is well known to be the Etruscan name of the divine blacksmith .

This name Mr . Taylor explains from the Turanian tongues as meaning " god of fire . Mr . Taylor was inclined to think , with Count Conestabile , that the Etruscans were a mixed people , consisting of two elements , both Turanian . There was an earlier aboriginal stock , closely allied to the

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