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FALISCI , a tribe of See also: Sabine origin or connexions, but speaking a dialect closely akin to Latin, who inhabited the See also: town of Falerii (q.v.), as well as a considerable See also: tract of the surrounding country, probably reaching as far See also: south as to include the small town of See also: Capena
.
But at the beginning of the See also: historical See also: period, i.e. from the beginning of the 5th century B.C., and no doubt earlier, the dominant See also: element in the town was See also: Etruscan; and all through the See also: wars of the following centuries the town was counted a member, and sometimes a leading member, of the Etruscan See also: league (cf
.
See also: Livy iv
.
23, V
.
17, vii
.
17)
.
In spite of the Etruscan domination, the Faliscans preserved many traces of their See also: Italic origin, such as the worship of the deities See also: Juno Quiritis (Ovid, See also: Fasti, vi
.
49) and Feronia (Livy See also: xxvi
.
11), the cult of Dis See also: Soranus by the Hirpi or fire-leaping priests on See also: Mount See also: Soracte (See also: Pliny, Nat
.
Hist. vii
.
2, 19; Servius, ad Aen. xi
.
785, 787), above all their language
.
This is preserved for us in some 36 See also: short inscriptions, dating from the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C., and is written in a See also: peculiar See also: alphabet derived from the Etruscan, and written from right to Ieft, but showing some traces of the influence of the Latin alphabet
.
Its most characteristic signs are— 51
51 a, z, t t, 51 r, f tFaliscan dialect, viz.:
i
.
The retention of medial f which in Latin became b;
2
.
The See also: representation of an initial Ind.-Eur. gh by f (foied, contrast Latin hodie);
3
.
The palatalization of d+ consonant i into some See also: sound denoted merely by i– the central sound of foied, from fo-died;
4
.
The loss of final s, at all events before certain following sounds (era beside Latin eras);
Other characteristics, appearing elsewhere, are:
5
.
The retention of the velars (Fah cuando = Latin quando ; contrast Umbrian See also: pan(n,u) ;
6
.
The assimilation of some final consonants to the initial letter of the next word: " pretod de zenatuo sententiad (See also: Conway, See also: lib. nit
.
321), i.e
.
" praetor de senatus sententia (zenatuo for senatuos., an archaic genitive)
.
For further details see Conway, ib. pp
.
370 if., especially pp
.
384-385, where the relation of the names Falisci, Falerii to the See also: local See also: hero Halaesus (e.g
.
Ovid, Fasti, iv
.
73) is discussed, and where reason is given for thinking that the change of initial f (from an See also: original bh or dh) into an initial h was a genuine mark of Faliscan dialect
.
It seems probable that the dialect lasted on, though being gradually permeated with Latin, till at least 150 B.C
.
In addition to the remains found in the See also: graves (see FALER11), which belong mainly to the period of Etruscan domination and give ample evidence of material prosperity and refinement, the earlier strata have yielded more See also: primitive remains from the Italic epoch
.
A large number of inscriptions consisting mainly of proper names may be regarded as Etruscan rather than Faliscan, and they have been disregarded in the account of the dialect just given
.
It should perhaps be mentioned that there was a town Feronia in See also: Sardinia, named probably after their native goddess by Faliscan settlers, from some of whom we have a votive inscription found at S
.
Maria di Falleri(Conway, ib. p
.
335)•
Further information may be sought from W
.
Deecke, Die Falls/zee (a useful but somewhat uncritical collection of the evidence accessible 'in 1888); E
.
Bormann, in C.I.L. xi. pp
.
465 if., and Conway, op. cit
.
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