The inscriptions on one of the dice. From top, left to right: śa, zal, huθ, maχ, θu, ci

The Tuscanian dice or dice of Toscanella are a pair of dice, found in 1848 in the town of Tuscania, on which are inscribed the numerals 'one' to 'six' in Etruscan. It is one of the primary pieces of evidence for the numerals of the Etruscan language.

The sides are inscribed,

θu, zal, ci, huθ, maχ, śa,

which are thought to have been pronounced

[tʰu], [tsal], [ki], [hutʰ], [makʰ] (or maybe [makʷʰ]) and [ʃa].

Opposite faces of both dice display θu and huθ, zal and maχ, and ci and śa.

It is universally agreed, based on other inscriptions, that θu, zal, ci and maχ are 'one', 'two', 'three' and 'five'. Huθ and śa must therefore be 'four' and 'six', but it is debated which is which.

Etruscan dice marked with pips show two arrangements, an older (1:2, 3:4, 5:6), with each pair differing by one, and a younger (1:6, 2:5, 3:4), with each pair adding to seven (the now universal pattern). In both arrangements, the numbers 3 and 4 are opposite each other, so śa, which is opposite ci 'three', must be the Etruscan word for 'four'.[1]

However, this conclusion contradicts a long line of evidence that śa is 'six' and huθ is 'four'.[2][3]

References

  1. Artioli, G.; Nociti, V.; Angelini, I. (October 2011). "Gambling with Etruscan Dice: A tale of numbers and letters". Archaeometry. 53 (5): 1031–1043. doi:10.1111/j.1475-4754.2011.00596.x.
  2. Pallottino, M. (1964). "Un gruppo di nuove iscrizioni tarquiniesi e il problema dei numerali etruschi". Studi Etruschi: 121–122.
  3. Etruscan numerals: problems and results of research (PDF), S. A. Yatsemirsky
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.