A Celtiberian tessera and some inscriptions on instrumentum from Graccurris (Alfaro, La Rioja)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.36707/palaeohispanica.v0i16.32Keywords:
Celtiberian tessera, Celtiberian epigraphy, Celtiberian language, Gracurris, Celtiberian graffitoAbstract
This paper presents two new Celtiberian inscriptions, a tes-sera and a new graffito, and assesses two already known graffiti from Graccurris (Alfaro, La Rioja).
References
Alföldy et al. 2009: G. Alföldy, J.M. Abascal y J.M., Millán, “Otro testimonio meridional de las ‘Organizaciones supramiliares’ indígenas de la Hispania Citerior”, ZPE 168 2009, 283-285.
Almagro y Torres 1999: M. Almagro y M. Torres, Las fíbulas de jinete y de caballito, Zaragoza.
Ariño et al. 1995: E. Ariño, J.A. Hernández, J.M. Martínez y J. Núñez, Graccurris: conjuntos monumentales en la periferia urbana: puentes, presas y ninfeos, Alfaro 1995.
Ballester 2008: X. Ballester, “Las inscripciones arqueoibéricas sobre cerámica de La Rioja: una revisión de detalle”, Kalakorikos 13, 2008, 195-212.
Barril e.p.: M. Barril, “Ejemplos de romanización a través de la onomástica y la iconografía en la provincia de Cuenca”, Vides monumenta ueterum. Madrid y su entorno en época romana. Congreso del 14 al 16 de octubre de 2015, Alcalá de Henares, en prensa.
Beltrán et al. 2013: F. Beltrán, J.A. Hernández, J.J. Bienes y C. Jordán, “El bronce celtibérico en alfabeto latino de Novallas (Zaragoza). Avance”, PalHisp 13, 2013, 615-635.
CECI: C. Jordán, “Chronica Epigraphica Celtiberica I. Novedades en epigrafía celtibérica”, PalHisp 1, 2001 369-391.
CECII: C. Jordán, “Chronica Epigraphica CeltibericaII”, PalHisp 3, 2003, 285-293.
CECVII: C. Jordán, “Chronica Epigraphica CeltibericaVII”, PalHisp 12, 2012, 255-281.
de Hoz 2013: J. de Hoz, “A celtiberian inscription from the Rainer Daehnhardt collection and the problem of the cetiberian gentive plural”, en: J.L. García (ed.), Continental celtic word formation. The onomastic data, Salamanca 2013, 51-62.
Delamarre 2003: X. Delamarre, Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise, Paris 2003.
Delamarre 2007: X. Delamarre, Noms de personnes celtiques dans l’épigraphie classique, Paris 2007.
Delamarre 2012: X. Delamarre, Noms de lieux celtique de l’Europe Ancienne, Paris 2012.
Evans 1967: D.E. Evans, Gaulish Personal Names, A Study of some Continental Celtic Formations, Oxford 1967.
Falileyev 2010: A. Falileyev, Dictionary of Continental Celtic Place-Names, Aberystwyth 2010.
Faria 1998: A. Marques de Faria, “Duas novas tésseras celtibéricas de procedência desconhecida”, RPA 1, 2, 1998, 119-122.
Gómara 2007: M. Gómara, “Una inscripción paleohispánica sobre una cerámica alto-imperial en Cascante (Navarra)”, PalHisp 7, 2007, 263-268.
González Rodríguez 1986: MªC. González Rodríguez, Las unidades organizativas indígenas del área indoeuropea de Hispania, Vitoria-Gasteiz 1986.
Gorrochategui 1984: J. Gorrochategui, Estudio sobre la onomástica indígena de Aquitania, Bilbao 1984.
Gorrochategui 1995: J. Gorrochategui, “Los Pirineos entre Galia e Hispania”, Veleia 12, 1995, 181-234.
Gorrochategui 2006: J. Gorrochategui, “Onomástica vascona y aquitana: Elementos para el conocimiento de la Historia Antigua de Navarra”, en: J. Andreu (ed.), Navarra en la Antigüedad. Propuesta de Actualización, Pamplona 2006, 111-134.
Hernández 2002: J.A. Hernández, “La fundación de Graccurris”, en: A. Ribera y J.L. Jiménez (eds.), Valencia y las primeras ciudades romanas de Hispania, Valencia, 2002, 173-182.
Hernández y Casado 1976: J.A. Hernández y P. Casado, “Graccurris: La primera fundación romana en el valle del Ebro”, en:Symposion de ciudades augusteasII, Zaragoza 1976, 23-29.
Hernández y Núñez 1989: J.A. Hernández y J. Núñez, “Un nuevo antropónimo indígena, sobre cerámica, procedente de Graccurris”, Veleia 6, 1989, 207-214.
Hernández y Jordán 2001: J.A. Hernández y C. Jordán, “Titulus Pictus celtibérico procedente de Alfaro, La Rioja”, en: F. Villar y Mª P. Fernández (eds.), Religión, Lengua y Cultura Prerromanas de Hispania. VIII CLCP, Salamanca 2001, 439-449.
IEW: J. Pokorny, Indogermanisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch, München 1959-1969.
IRMN: C. Castillo, J. Gómez-Pantoja y Mª D. Mauleón, Inscripciones romanas del Museo de Navarra, Pamplona 1981.
Jimeno et al. 2004: A. Jimeno, J.I. de la Torre, R. Berzoso, J.P. Martínez, La Necrópolis celtibérica de Numancia, Valladolid 2004.
Jordán 2004: C. Jordán Cólera, Celtibérico, Zaragoza 2004.
Lorrio 2005: A. Lorrio, Los celtíberos, Madrid 20052 [1998].
Lorrio 2010: A. Lorrio, “Los signa equitum: origen y evolución”, PalHisp 10, 2010, 427-446.
Lorrio y Graells 2011: A. Lorrio y R. Graells, “Nuevo signum equitum celtibérico”, BSAA77-78, 2010-11, 203-218.
MLHIV: J. Untermann, Monumenta Linguarum Hispanicarum IV.Die tar-tessischen, keltiberischen und lusitanischen Inschriften, Wiesbaden 1997.
Marcos 1996: A. Marcos, “De situ Graccurris: Desde el siglo XVIhasta las excavaciones inéditas de 1969”. Cuadernos de arqueología de la Universidad de Navarra 4, 1996, 107-172.
Martínez 2000: J.M. Martínez, “Excavaciones arqueológicas en las Eras de San Martín de Alfaro: Campaña 1999”, Estrato: Revista riojana de arqueología 11, 2000, 65-67.
Martínez y Del Fresno 2006: J.M. Martínez y P. del Fresno, “Evolución del poblamiento en las Eras de San Martín. Avance de los resultados de las campañas de 2000 a 2005”,Graccurris: Revista de estudios alfareños 17, 2006, 87-129.
Olcoz y Medrano 2011: S. Olcoz y M. Medrano, “Inscripciones celtibéricas con fórmulas de filiación onomástica expresa”, Em 79, 2011, 81-104.
Olcoz, Luján y Medrano 2007: S. Olcoz, E. Luján y M. Medrano, “Las inscripciones paleohispánicas sobre cerámica de La Rioja: una revisión de conjunto”, Kalakorikos 12, 2007, 115-134.
Rodríguez 2009: J. Rodríguez, “Una nueva tésera con leyenda Avilaca”, en: G. Bravo y R. González (eds.), Formas de integración en el mundo romano, Madrid 2009, 225-236.
Romero 1976: F. Romero, Las cerámicas polícromas de Numancia, Soria 1976.
Rubio 2003: F. Rubio, “Acerca de nuevas y viejas inscripciones”, PalHisp 3, 2003, 141-161.
Schmidt 1957: K. H. Schmidt, Die Komposition in gallischen Personennamen, Tübingen 1957.
Simón 2013: I. Simón, Los soportes de la epigrafía paleohispánica. Inscripciones sobre piedra, bronce y cerámica, Zaragoza 2013.
Vallejo 2005: J.Mª Vallejo, Antroponimia indígena de la Lusitania romana, Vitoria, 2005.
Villar 1999: F. Villar, “La tésera de Slania y los nombres de familia con determinante”, en: P. Anreiter y E. Jerem (eds.), Studia Celtica et Indogermanica. Festschrift für W. Meid zum 70. Geburtstag, Budapest 1999, 531-537.
VCI: F. Villar y B.Mª Prósper, Vascos, celtas e indoeuropeos. Genes y lenguas, Salamanca 2005.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Professional standards and ethical policies
a) Palaeohispanica’s editorial board
Details concerning the journal’s internal organization can be found at this website.
b) Authors’ responsibilities
As an implicit condition for publishing in Palaeohispanica, authors are expected to adhere to all the ethical and professional principles that are shared across all research fields and academic publications. By submitting a contribution for peer review, potential authors guarantee that their work is original, that it constitutes a significant contribution to its research field and has not been published elsewhere.
All submitted manuscripts ought to contain bibliographic references at the end of the paper as well as an indication of how the research that culminated in the article was funded.
Likewise, authors must agree to incorporate any relevant changes that peer reviewers suggest as well as to include any recommendations that the editorial committee includes in the manuscript’s proofs at the end of the editorial process.
The journal expects its authors, reviewers, editors and staff members to all conduct themselves professionally by treating others with respect and civility. Should any sort of untoward situation arise, such as (self) plagiarism, conflicts of interest or aggressive behaviour on the author’s part, the following actions will be taken:
- Plagiarism and the republication of articles
Plagiarism is defined as the reproduction of a text or other materials found in different publications without the original source being adequately cited. Accordingly, material can still be plagiarized even when it has been tweaked or paraphrased. Plagiarism constitutes a serious ethical violation; furthermore, there can be legal ramifications for violating an author’s rights in cases where the reproduced material has been previously published. Authors who want to cite published work must do so by including complete references to the original materials and by including any quotations within quotation marks. Graphs and images can only be reproduced with the express permission of the original author and must include a citation below said image or graphic according to the rules laid out on the journal’s website. If a peer reviewer or the editorial board detects any instance of plagiarism (whether of one’s own or another’s work), the manuscript will automatically be disqualified.
- Conflicts of interest
In most instances an individual who works at the same institution as an author or one of the co-authors is automatically barred from evaluating a potential contribution. The journal’s editors must always be aware of possible conflicts of interest and are required to recuse themselves from any decision-making process, whenever there is even the appearance of a possible conflict of interest.
c) The peer-review process
Palaeohispanica employs peers to evaluate externally all contributions, with this being understood as obtaining the opinion of an established expert over the merits of every potential contribution. In addition to completing the relevant form, reviewers are expected to suggest any pertinent bibliography that was not included in the original version of the manuscript.
Furthermore, the peer-review process is double blind, meaning that both authors’ anonymity as well as the reviewers’ impartiality and independence are guaranteed. Reader reviews will be treated with the utmost confidentiality. As is the case with all respectable research journals, the editors of Palaeohispanicawill not share with a third party the identity of a peer reviewer, the contents of his or her review or any correspondence resulting from the review process. Likewise, reviewers are required to adhere to the same strict standard of confidentiality: neither manuscripts nor the contents of any correspondence between an author and the editors can be shared with a third party without the written and express consent of the journal’s editors.
While strictly speaking authors are not held to the same standards (they can, for instance, solicit advice from co-authors and colleagues as they revise and amend a manuscript in accordance with the recommendations found in a reviewer’s report), the public airing of a reviewer’s report or of the correspondence with the editorial team constitutes untoward behavior. Any author who acts in such a way will automatically forfeit his or her right to the journal’s confidentiality.
- Aggressive behaviour
Should the editorial committee be made aware of any untoward behaviour on the author’s part towards external reviewers, other authors or the journal’s editors/staff, that author’s submission will immediately be withdrawn from the consideration process.
All participants in the publication process, including editors, authors, peer reviewers, and member’s of the journal’s staff are expected to meet basic standards of professional courtesy and to respect the fundamental rules and guidelines concerning the peer-review and publication processes. Under any circumstance, personal attacks and verbal assault (whether expressed orally or through writing) are completely unacceptable. Accordingly, the journal reserves the right to reject the contribution of any author who repeatedly violates these principles or refuses to cooperate with the editors and reviewers during the normal evaluation and publication processes.
d) Editorial ethics
The editorial team at Palaeohispanica will bring an end to any dishonest research practice by submitting every proposal to a careful review process that will begin before the selection of possible peer reviewers. Should anything questionable be detected, an author will be asked to provide relevant explanations and then be told to review his/her text so as to meet the journal’s quality standards. If an author does not make the requested changes, the manuscript will not be submitted for double-blind peer review and, accordingly, will not be published. The editorial board is always available to discuss and debate with authors any misunderstanding that could have given rise to such a situation.
e) Copyright and journal access
Journal content falls under the protection of licence Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA. Access the all journal content is open and free of charge.
f) Journal archive
Given that the Institución Fernando el Católico is an established and important publishing house, it is extremely unlikely that access to the journal’s contents could be compromised in anyway within the foreseeable future. The contents of Palaeohispanica will be stored in IFC’s servers even if the journal ceases to be published.
g) Ownership and management of the journal
The journal Palaeohispanica is edited and run by the institution «Fernando el Católico», an independent entity of the Excelentísima Diputación de Zaragoza.
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portability by contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
Ethical and confidentiality policy of Palaeohispanica can be consulted here.
Privacy policy
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portabilityby contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
The IFC’s privacy and data protection policy can be consulted at https://tiendaifc.dpz.es/Sites/dpz/paginasPersonalizadas/Modelo2/inicio.aspx. It can also be found in the journal’s the top navigation menu: http://ifc.dpz.es/ojs/index.php/palaeohispanica/dpd
Names and email addresses submitted to this journal will only be used for tasks related to the journal and will not be shared with any third party or used for any other purpose.
In accordance with the Regulation UE 2016/679, information gathered by the Institución Fernando el Católico de la Excma. Diputación de Zaragoza (IFC) will be used for carrying out the functions of an academic publication, the handling of claims, appeals, complaints, suggestions, surveys as well as any other activity involved in the management of the journal.
Cubic Factory is in charge of handling said data. They can be contacted at cubic@cubicfactory.com.
Data can be given to public agencies with the relevant competencies and in case of legal obligations.
Those who are interested can exercise their rights of access, correction, suppression, limitation of the use, opposition and portability by contacting ifc@dpz.es.
Users can also go to the Agencia Española de Protección de Datos to make any complaints that they feel is necessary.
User information will be kept during the period in which it is needed to complete the task for which said information was provided in the first place or for the period necessary to comply with any legal obligations. Once a given objective has been completed, personal data that is not part of fulfillment of public service will be blocked until the applicable period has ended.
Ethical and confidentiality policy of Palaeohispanica can be consulted here.