This article intends to be a comprehensive reassessment of a previous hypothesis connecting the Linear A sequence du-pu2-re and the Hittite royal title t/labarna, as well as a series of Anatolian words, toponyms and personal names allegedly related to the latter and belonging to the semantic sphere of power. In the course of this survey, several Anatolian onomastic elements, mostly dated to the 1st millennium BCE, are disconnected from the Minoan sequence and the Hittite title, and receive new explanations (with various levels of security) in the framework of the Luwic (IE) languages. Likewise, I separate Labranios (a Cypriot epithet of Zeus) from Hittite labarna and argue instead for the old theory that it is an adaptation of the Phoenician name of Mount Lebanon. The conclusion of this reassessment is that, while there may have been a Luwian noun *tapara- ‘rule’, there are no independent grounds for linking any Anatolian material to Minoan dupu2re and no basis for assuming the latter meant ‘master’ (or similar).
Miguel Valério (2015). Linear A du-pu2-re, Hittite tabarna and their alleged relatives revisited. VESTNIK RGGU. SERIA: FILOLOGIA, VOPROSY AZYKOVOGO RODSTVA, 13/3-4, 329-354.
Linear A du-pu2-re, Hittite tabarna and their alleged relatives revisited
Miguel Valério
2015
Abstract
This article intends to be a comprehensive reassessment of a previous hypothesis connecting the Linear A sequence du-pu2-re and the Hittite royal title t/labarna, as well as a series of Anatolian words, toponyms and personal names allegedly related to the latter and belonging to the semantic sphere of power. In the course of this survey, several Anatolian onomastic elements, mostly dated to the 1st millennium BCE, are disconnected from the Minoan sequence and the Hittite title, and receive new explanations (with various levels of security) in the framework of the Luwic (IE) languages. Likewise, I separate Labranios (a Cypriot epithet of Zeus) from Hittite labarna and argue instead for the old theory that it is an adaptation of the Phoenician name of Mount Lebanon. The conclusion of this reassessment is that, while there may have been a Luwian noun *tapara- ‘rule’, there are no independent grounds for linking any Anatolian material to Minoan dupu2re and no basis for assuming the latter meant ‘master’ (or similar).I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.