Etruscans - pannous/hieros GitHub Wiki

The decipherment of Etruscan is far from being successfully solved.

πŒ“πŒ€πŒ”πŒπŒ€ Rasna persona after 1200BC
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etruscan_civilization

Red Ones

To understand the Etruscan (πŒ“πŒ€πŒ”πŒπŒ€ Rasna πŒ“πŒ€πŒ”πŒ„πŒπŒπŒ€ Rasenna ) one needs to investigate their connections with red ⲧⲱⲣϣ ΀υρσηνοί Tyrsenoi ΀υ῀αΏ₯Ξ·Ξ½ΞΏΞ― Tyrrhenian πŒ“πŒ€πŒ”πŒπŒ€ Rasna rose red πŒŠπŒ“πŒπŒ–πŒ„ krove "blood" π“˜ π“…“ π“‹΄ π“ž kΔ±rmΔ±zΔ± 𓍿 π“…“ π“‹΄ π“ž crimson red 𓏏 π“…“ π“‹΄ π“ž π“œ *tyrmis 𓏏 π“„Ÿ π“‹΄ π“ž π“œ 𓂧 π“ˆ™ π“‚‹ π“…Ÿ | red | <> 𐀁-𐀬-𐀲-𐀨 Λ’e-ru-ta-ra Λ’Ξ΅ΟΟ…ΞΈΟΟŒ πŸ”΄ red π“…‚ β‰ˆ π“…Ÿ tara tyr

Aeneas Sage tale: Virgil's Aeneid
The Aeneid explains that Aeneas is one of the few Trojans who were not killed or enslaved when Troy fell.
He was the progenitors of Romans.

This is corroborated by connections between Luwian and Etruscan

The phonology of Etruscan is known through the alternation of Greek and Etruscan letters in some inscriptions (for example, the Iguvine Tablets), and many individual words are known through loans into or from Greek and Latin, as well as explanations of Etruscan words by ancient authors. A few concepts of word formation have been formulated (see below). Modern knowledge of the language is incomplete.

Etruscan mythology

Etrusca Disciplina

Libri Haruspicini, containing the theory and rules of divination from animal entrails**
Libri Fulgurales, describing divination from lightning strikes;
Libri Acherontici, dealing with the hereafter;
Libri Ostentaria, containing rules for interpreting prodigies.
Libri Rituales. : prophetess Vegoia in the Libri Vegoici at Vigian?
Libri Tagetici The revelations of the prophet Tages pavatarchies at Tarquinia/Tuscania/Etroys
Libri Fatales, detailing the religiously correct methods of founding cities and shrines, draining fields, formulating laws and ordinances, measuring space and dividing time;

Used as mummy wrapping

Divination was undertaken in Roman society by priestly officials called haruspices. Political officials also, such as the augures, lituus, the crooked staff of the augur

Cicero on auspices: we run the risk of committing a crime against the gods if we disregard them, or of becoming involved in old women's superstition if we approve them.
Who could suppose that frogs had this foresight? And yet they do have by nature some faculty of premonition, clear enough of itself, but too dark for human comprehension.

pavatarchies / avl tarchunus
pava ⋍ 'Bube' puer : son

Tarchis

GOD / prophet / founder
Tarchis ⇔ Tarsis https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tarshish
Tyrrhenus arator ("a Tyrrhenian ploughman") Terra Earthgod
visage of a child, but the prudence of a sage
foundation of the science of the soothsayers (haruspicinae disciplina)

Tages' recorded response is "in ancient letters", presumably in the Etruscan language. Lydus says it is not very understandable, and that he relies on translations.

Winged figures, representing divinity, are also common, especially on funerary urns from Tarquinia (CorNeto)
there appears to be no standard way to depict Tages. Art historians have inserted Tages freely among them but entirely in a speculative fashion.

The Etruscans, as evidenced by the inscriptions, used several words: capen (Sabine cupencus), maru (Umbrian maron-), eisnev, hatrencu (priestess). They called the art of haruspicy ziχ neθsrac.
Carsthien? really? Carthago!

No public event was conducted without the netsvis, the haruspex, or his female equivalent, the nethsra,

A special magistrate, the cechase, looked after the cecha or rath, sacred things.
Rights Rat rath res publica!!
Cecha check Czech Old Persian 𐏋 (XΕ  /xőāyaΞΈiya/, β€œking”,

religious responsibilities, which were expressed in an alumnathe or slecaches, a sacred society.
Allumni alumnathe illuminate srsly?

Egyptian belief that survival and prosperity in the hereafter depend on the treatment of the deceased's remains.

mixed inhumation and cremation rites (the proportion depending on the period), cremated ashes and bones might be put into an urn in the shapes of a house or a representation of the deceased. world beyond the grave, patterned after the Greek Hades[citation needed]. It was ruled by Aita, and the deceased was guided there by Charun, the equivalent of Death, who was blue and wielded a hammer. The Etruscan Hades was populated by Greek mythological figures and a few such as Tuchulcha, of composite appearance.

Heiden ⋍ Hades hAitar Osir π“Š¨π“Ήπ“€­ Seer Vaides!!!
Aitas wife is Persipnei, the Etruscan equivalent to the Greek Persephone, Hades wife

On one ash urn appears humanized Aita, bearded and fur-capped, about to lead away into the Underworld the man whose ashes were inside the box, and whose spirit is seen on the outside passing through the portal to the world beyond. He wears the pointed metal cap of a haruspex (Horusphex), a seer.[4]

Charun Xarun Xaru Cherub 𓐍𓂋𓉐

Xaru ⋍ Thor guarding HimmelsTor with Hammer, ferrying the dead (with oar)
pointed ears, snakes around his arms, and a blueish coloration symbolizing the decay of death.
π“Œ¨π“ŠΉπ“…‚π“€€ Charun π“Š»π“‚‹π“ˆ‰ ⋍ Seth Dog? π“‹΄ 𓏏 π“…“ 𓐕 𓏏 π“ˆ‰
Has no Hell Hound Cerberus makaber Cer-BΓ€r
but some Gorgon
Charon and Vanth (Venus) ΟˆΟ…Ο‡ΞΏΟ€ΞΏΞΌΟ€ΟŒΟ‚, psycho'pompeis, literally meaning the "guide of souls": ferry(men) of Hades
horses, deer, dogs, whip-poor-wills, ravens, crows, owls, sparrows and cuckoos.
In some images he has enormous wings. He is also depicted as a large creature with snake-like hair,[2] a vulture's hooked nose, large tusks like a boar,[3] heavy brow ridges,[4] large lips, fiery eyes,[5] pointed ears[6] a black beard, enormous wings,[7] discolored (pale cream, bluish or greyish)[8] skin, and snakes around his arm.[9] apotropaic ⋍ ab-tΓΆrnend, sometimes on horseback (mare)
⇔ carryon xaru azur?
An Etruscan krater depicts Charun with Ajax or Achilles (left, cropped out) slaughtering Trojan prisoners.
Hammer swung at serpents attacking the deceased / hit the loser with a hammer to make sure he was dead
Charun is similar to Chaldean demons or the Hindu divinities Shiva and Kali.
comparable to the Greeks' Thanatos, the Erinyes, and the Keres, Caronte in Italian

The Charon of Vergil in the Aeneid is particularly cruel; "Vergil's Charon is not only the Greek ferryman of Aristophanes [in The Frogs], but a torturing death-devil, no ferryman at all."

Vanth ( Fai Venus)

possession of a torch, key, or scroll, and she is shown often to be bare-chested with cross-straps across her breast, adorned with fur boots, a rolled short chiton, and sometimes with unattached sleeves. In fact her dress has been attributed by Scheffer as specifically the dress of a huntress.
interpreted as a goddess of fate (thus scroll)
common types associate her presence with occasions of slaughter and murder, including scenes from the Trojan cycle. Occasionally she is shown rising up out of the ground in such contexts, as seen on an ash urn.
Other scenes in which Vanth is present involve the meeting and escort of the dead, in the role of psychopompos, who are either walking or being transported on horseback, wagon, or chariot.

chthonic Greek Mythology Of or relating to the underworld.
Etruscan Chthonic (or underworld) figures include Charun, Vanth, Calu, Phersipnai, Turms, Aita, and Culsu

FOUR Charun (Horsemen)

Charun Chunchules, the heavily blistered
Charun Huths (Hatti)
Charun Lufe (Luwi)
Charun xxx

[These]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theseus] Tys

These and his friend Peirithous are playing a board game, attended by Tuchulcha, Charuns Gorgon.

Liver with regions:

Riders πŒ“πŒ€πŒ”πŒπŒ€ Rasna Etruskan:

alternations in the Etruscan language dropping last n such as
lev "lion" (from Greek leōn)
Apulu (from Greek Apóllōn)
ΞΈu "The-one"
ΞΈunΕ›na θ…Eins! "first" Theon⇨Theo !!

 Achilles Achle, Achile. Legendary hero of the Trojan War.  
 Agamemnon Achmemrun. Legendary king of Mycenaean Greece.  
 Ajax, son of Telamon and Ajax, son of Oileus Aivas Tlamunus, Aivas Vilates; also Eivas or Evas.  
 Amycus Amuce, Amuche, Amuke. The Greek legendary figure of the Argonauts myth.  
 Atlas Aril.  
 Actaeon Ataiun.  
 Admetus Atmite.  
 Adonis Atunis.  
 Kallinikos Calanice. Greek name of Hercle.  
 Capaneus Capne, Kapne.  
 Castor Castur.  
 Jason Easun, Heasun, Heiasun. Asklepios Esplace. Legendary healer,  
 Aitolos Etule. Confused with his brother, Epeios, who built the Trojan horse.  
 Eteocles Evtucle, [Ev]thucle.  
 Amphiaraus Hamphiare, Amphare. Legendary seer.  
 HΔ“raklΔ“s (greek) and Hercules (Latin) Hercle, Hercele, Herecele, Herkle, Hrcle.  
 Lynceus Lunc, Lnche.  
 Meleager Meleacr.  
 Menelaus Menle. The hero of Trojan War fame.  
 Nestor Nestur.  
 Palamedes Palmithe, Talmithe.  
 Patroclus Patrucle.  
 Peleus Pele.  
 Perseus Perse, Pherse.  
 Phaon Phaun, Faun, Phamu.  
 Phoinix Phuinis. The friend of Peleus.  
 Prometheus Prumathe.  
 Pollux Pultuce, Pulutuce, Pulutuke, Pultuke. One of the mythological twins.  
 Sisyphus Sispe, Sisphe. The legendary king.  
 Daedalus Taitle.  
 Teucer Techrs. The Trojan War hero.  
 Telamon Telmun, Tlamun, Talmun, Tlamu. A legendary Argonaut.  
 Tiresias Teriasals, Teriasa. Legendary blind prophet.  
 Theseus These. Dioscuri Tinas cliniar, "sons of Tina", designating the twins.  
 Tyndareus Tuntle.  
 Tydeus Tute.  
 Orpheus Urphe.  
 Orestes Urusthe. The homeric legendary character.  
 Odysseus Uthste Elpenor Velparun.  
 Icarus Vikare. Son of Taitle.  
 Iolaos Vile, Vilae. Nephew of Hercle.  

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Etruscan_names_for_Greek_heroes See also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Etruscan_mythological_figures