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More on Celtic (and non-Celtic) names from Pannonia: CIL III 3593 = 10544, revisited
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Alexander Falileyev
Published/Copyright:
November 25, 2025
Zusammenfassung
Dieser Beitrag diskutiert eine Reihe von Personennamen in der lateinischen Inschrift CIL III 3593=10544 aus Pannonien. Da er ein unbestreitbar keltisches Anthroponym enthält, ist der Text in der Keltologie wohlbekannt. Dennoch gibt es Gründe, diese Inschrift noch einmal zu betrachten. Die Neulektüre der Inschrift ermöglicht eine wesentliche Neubetrachtung des Textes. Die darin enthaltenen Personennamen werden überprüft und die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse innerhalb der Familie aus Aquincum wesentlich neugeordnet.
Online erschienen: 2025-11-25
Erschienen im Druck: 2025-11-01
© 2025 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
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Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Aufsätze
- John Rhŷs in the Isle of Man (1886–1893): Profiles of his informants
- A reassessment of the manuscripts of the Reeves Agallamh na Seanórach and a new version of Acallam na Senórach
- Three early Irish love triangles: men, women, society in early medieval Ireland
- More on Celtic (and non-Celtic) names from Pannonia: CIL III 3593 = 10544, revisited
- The Old Irish conjunct particle (‑)ro‑ in verbal compounds with the lexical preverb ar‑
- On the inflection of ū-stems in Brittonic: Modern Breton bri ‘cliff, bank, edge of a field’ as a cognate of Old Irish brú ‘edge, brink, bank’
- ‘Lig dasyn ren geid, dyn geid nyssmoo’: A Manx sermon against theft from 1752
- An Old Irish poem of praise and censure
- On the meaning of lághar and other words
- Besprechungen
- John Carey (ed.): Táin Bó Cúalnge from the Book of Leinster: Reassessments
- Thomas Charles-Edwards (ed.): Bretha Comaithcheso. An Old-Irish Law Tract on Neighbouring Farms
- Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel: The accents of Celtic. New light on the older and oldest
- Elena Parina & Erich Poppe (ed.), with Sergey Ivanov: Pwyll y Pader: A medieval Welsh tract on the meaning of the Lord’s Prayer according to Hugh of Saint-Victor
Articles in the same Issue
- Titelei
- Inhalt
- Aufsätze
- John Rhŷs in the Isle of Man (1886–1893): Profiles of his informants
- A reassessment of the manuscripts of the Reeves Agallamh na Seanórach and a new version of Acallam na Senórach
- Three early Irish love triangles: men, women, society in early medieval Ireland
- More on Celtic (and non-Celtic) names from Pannonia: CIL III 3593 = 10544, revisited
- The Old Irish conjunct particle (‑)ro‑ in verbal compounds with the lexical preverb ar‑
- On the inflection of ū-stems in Brittonic: Modern Breton bri ‘cliff, bank, edge of a field’ as a cognate of Old Irish brú ‘edge, brink, bank’
- ‘Lig dasyn ren geid, dyn geid nyssmoo’: A Manx sermon against theft from 1752
- An Old Irish poem of praise and censure
- On the meaning of lághar and other words
- Besprechungen
- John Carey (ed.): Táin Bó Cúalnge from the Book of Leinster: Reassessments
- Thomas Charles-Edwards (ed.): Bretha Comaithcheso. An Old-Irish Law Tract on Neighbouring Farms
- Patrizia de Bernardo Stempel: The accents of Celtic. New light on the older and oldest
- Elena Parina & Erich Poppe (ed.), with Sergey Ivanov: Pwyll y Pader: A medieval Welsh tract on the meaning of the Lord’s Prayer according to Hugh of Saint-Victor