|
SICULI , an See also: ancient Sicilian tribe, which in See also: historical times occupied the eastern See also: half of the See also: island to which they gave their name
.
It plays a large though rather shadowy See also: part in the early traditions of pre-See also: Roman See also: Italy
.
There is abundant evidence that the Siculi once lived in Central Italy See also: east and even See also: north of See also: Rome (e.g
.
Servius ad Aen. vii
.
795; See also: Dion
.
See also: Hal. i
.
9
.
22; See also: Thucydides vi
.
2)
.
Thence they were dislodged by the Umbro-Safine tribes, and finally crossed to See also: Sicily
.
Archaeologists are not yet agreed as to the particular stratum of remains in Italy to which the name of the Siculi should be attached (see for instance B
.
Modestov, Introduction d l'histoire romaine, See also: Paris, 1907, pp
.
135 sqq.) . They were distinct from the See also: Sicani (q.v.; Virg
.
Aen. viii
.
328) who inhabited the western half of the island, and who according to Thucydides came from See also: Spain, but whom Virgil seems to recognize in Italy
.
Both traditions may be true (cf
.
W
.
Ridgeway, Who were the See also: Romans
?
See also: London, 1908, p
.
23)
.
Of the language of the Siculi we know a very little from glosses preserved to us by ancient writers, most of which were collected by E
.
A
.
Freeman (Sicily, vol. i
.
App. note iv.), and from an inscription upon what is presumably an ornamental earthen-See also: ware See also: wine vessel, which has very much the shape of a See also: tea-pot, preserved and transcribed by R
.
S
.
See also: Conway in the Collection of the See also: Grand Duke of See also: Baden at See also: Karlsruhe (Winnefeld, Grossherzogl. vereinigte Sammlungen, 1887, 120), which has been discussed by R
.
Thurneysen (Kuhn's Zeitschrift, See also: xxxv
.
214)
.
The inscription was found at Centuripa, and the See also: alphabet is See also: Greek of the 5th or 6th century B.C
.
We have not enough evidence to make a See also: translation possible, despite Thurneysen's valiant effort, but the recurrence of the phrase hemiton esti durom in a varied See also: order (durom hemiton esti)—presumably a drinking See also: song or proverb, " half a cup is sorry cheer,' though it is possible that the sign read as m may really denote some kind of s—makes the division of these three words quite certain, and renders it highly probable that we have to do with an Indo-See also: European language
.
None of
the See also: groups of sounds occurring in the rest of the inscription, nor any of the endings of words so far as they may be guessed, See also: present any reason for doubting this hypothesis; and the glosses already mentioned can one and all be easily connected with Greek or Latin words (e.g
.
µoirov, mutuum); in fact it would be difficult to rebut the contention that they should all be regarded as See also: mere borrowings
.
(R
.
S
.
C.)
The towns of the Siculi, like those of the Sicani, formed no See also: political union, but were under See also: independent rulers
.
They played an important part in the See also: history of the island after the arrival of the Greeks (see SICILY)
.
Their agricultural pursuits and the volcanic nature of the island made them worshippers of the gods of the nether See also: world, and they have enriched See also: mythology with some distinctly See also: national figures
.
The most important of these were the Palici, protectors of See also: agriculture and sailors, who had a lake and See also: temple in the neighbourhood of the See also: river Symaethus, the chief seat of the Siceli; Adranus, See also: father of the Palici, a See also: god akin to See also: Hephaestus, in whose temple a fire was always kept burning; See also: Hybla (or Hyblaea), after whom three towns were named, whose sanctuary was at Hybla Gereatis
.
The connexion of See also: Demeter and Kore with See also: Henna (the rape of See also: Proserpine) and of See also: Arethusa with Syracuse is due to Greek influence
.
The chief Sicel towns were: Agyrium (See also: San Filippo d' Argirb); Centuripa (or Centuripae; Centorbi) ; Henna (Castrogiovanni, a corruption of Castrum Herniae through the Arabic Casr-janni); Hybla, three in number, (a) Hybla Major, called Geleatis or Gereatis, on the river Symaethus, probably the Hybla famous for its honey, although according to others this was (b) Hybla Minor, on the E. See also: coast N. of Syracuse, afterwards the site of the Dorian colony of See also: Megara, (c) Hybla Heraea in the S. of the island
.
For authorities see SICILY
.
|
|
|
[back] DANIEL EDGAR SICKLES (1825– ) |
[next] SICYON, or SECYON (the latter being the older form ... |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.