On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um

The article deals with the etymology of the Slovene place-name Trbiž (standard Slovene form), relating to a small settlement in the Canal Valley (Val Canale, North-Eastern Italy) in a traditionally multilingual area with people speaking Slovene, Friulian and Bavarian. The name’s contemporary dialect...

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Main Author: Luka Repanšek
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Izdatelstvo Uralskogo Universiteta 2016-07-01
Series:Вопросы ономастики
Subjects:
Online Access:http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2016.13.1.003.pdf
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author Luka Repanšek
author_facet Luka Repanšek
author_sort Luka Repanšek
collection DOAJ
description The article deals with the etymology of the Slovene place-name Trbiž (standard Slovene form), relating to a small settlement in the Canal Valley (Val Canale, North-Eastern Italy) in a traditionally multilingual area with people speaking Slovene, Friulian and Bavarian. The name’s contemporary dialectal variants are attested in the Gail Valley dialect and the Resian dialect of the Slovene language, as well as in the Carinthian dialects of Southern Bavarian (the contemporary Friulian form is a late adaptation of the Bavarian variant and thus irrelevant for the analysis). The extant Slovene dialectal forms lead to reconstruct a common Slovene prototype with a satisfactory Slavic etymology. However, for reasons of historical phonology, a Slavic starting point can hardly be the ultimate source of the Bavarian form, which makes it reasonable to conclude that both Slavic and Bavarian forms originate in a Romance (Old Friulian) place-name which must go back to some Pre-Romance source. We are thus probably dealing with an independent integration of the Romance source into the two superstratal linguistic systems in the region (viz. Slavic and Bavarian). In the context of the ethnic and linguistic history of the region, this scenario seems plausible, yet it is very difficult to establish the etymology of the postulated Pre-Romance form. The article provides a detailed analysis of its likely wordformation, which confirms a transparently Indo-European pedigree of the name and enables the author to isolate the stem that is most likely to be related to Celtic *taruo- ‘aurochs’. The author shows that the validity of this already familiar suggestion is etymologically feasible, the same etymon being also attested in the ancient place-name Taruisium in Northern Italy. Nevertheless, there exists a number of extralinguistic factors which prevent from considering this etymology as definitive.
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spelling doaj.art-bcf226f99a02440d8924edf082e080f82022-12-21T18:33:59ZrusIzdatelstvo Uralskogo UniversitetaВопросы ономастики1994-24001994-24512016-07-01131436110.15826/vopr_onom.2016.13.1.003On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-umLuka Repanšek0University of LjubljanaThe article deals with the etymology of the Slovene place-name Trbiž (standard Slovene form), relating to a small settlement in the Canal Valley (Val Canale, North-Eastern Italy) in a traditionally multilingual area with people speaking Slovene, Friulian and Bavarian. The name’s contemporary dialectal variants are attested in the Gail Valley dialect and the Resian dialect of the Slovene language, as well as in the Carinthian dialects of Southern Bavarian (the contemporary Friulian form is a late adaptation of the Bavarian variant and thus irrelevant for the analysis). The extant Slovene dialectal forms lead to reconstruct a common Slovene prototype with a satisfactory Slavic etymology. However, for reasons of historical phonology, a Slavic starting point can hardly be the ultimate source of the Bavarian form, which makes it reasonable to conclude that both Slavic and Bavarian forms originate in a Romance (Old Friulian) place-name which must go back to some Pre-Romance source. We are thus probably dealing with an independent integration of the Romance source into the two superstratal linguistic systems in the region (viz. Slavic and Bavarian). In the context of the ethnic and linguistic history of the region, this scenario seems plausible, yet it is very difficult to establish the etymology of the postulated Pre-Romance form. The article provides a detailed analysis of its likely wordformation, which confirms a transparently Indo-European pedigree of the name and enables the author to isolate the stem that is most likely to be related to Celtic *taruo- ‘aurochs’. The author shows that the validity of this already familiar suggestion is etymologically feasible, the same etymon being also attested in the ancient place-name Taruisium in Northern Italy. Nevertheless, there exists a number of extralinguistic factors which prevent from considering this etymology as definitive.http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2016.13.1.003.pdfSlovene languageGaulish languageFriulian languagesubstrate toponymyetymologyTrbiž
spellingShingle Luka Repanšek
On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
Вопросы ономастики
Slovene language
Gaulish language
Friulian language
substrate toponymy
etymology
Trbiž
title On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
title_full On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
title_fullStr On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
title_full_unstemmed On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
title_short On the Origin of Trbiž, Ancient *Taruisia/-um
title_sort on the origin of trbiz ancient taruisia um
topic Slovene language
Gaulish language
Friulian language
substrate toponymy
etymology
Trbiž
url http://onomastics.ru/sites/default/files/doi/10.15826/vopr_onom.2016.13.1.003.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT lukarepansek ontheoriginoftrbizancienttaruisiaum