Տիր
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See also: տիր
Old Armenian
[edit]Etymology
[edit]An Iranian borrowing. Compare Middle Persian [Book Pahlavi needed] (tyl /Tīr/), Manichaean Middle Persian 𐫤𐫏𐫡 (tyr /Tīr/, “a god (confused with Tištar); Mercury; 4th month; 13th day”), Persian تیر (tir).
Proper noun
[edit]Տիր • (Tir)
- (Armenian mythology) Tir (scribe/writer god)
- 5th century, Agatʻangełos, Patmutʻiwn Hayocʻ [History of the Armenians] 778:[1]
- Նախ դիպեալ ի ճանապարհի երազացոյց երազահան պաշտաման Տրի դից (var. Տիւր դից?), դպրի գիտութեան քրմաց, անուանեալ Դիւան գրչի Որմզդի, ուսման ճարտարութեան մեհեան
- Nax dipeal i čanaparhi erazacʻoycʻ erazahan paštaman Tri dicʻ (var. Tiwr dicʻ?), dpri gitutʻean kʻrmacʻ, anuaneal Diwan grčʻi Ormzdi, usman čartarutʻean mehean
- Translation by R. W. Thomson
- On the road he first came across the shrine of the god Tir, the interpreter of dreams, the scribe of pagan learning, who was called the secretary of Ormizd, a temple of learned instruction.
- Նախ դիպեալ ի ճանապարհի երազացոյց երազահան պաշտաման Տրի դից (var. Տիւր դից?), դպրի գիտութեան քրմաց, անուանեալ Դիւան գրչի Որմզդի, ուսման ճարտարութեան մեհեան
Usage notes
[edit]According to Thomson, the spelling Տիւր (Tiwr) found in some publications of Agatʻangełos has no manuscript authority. The original form Տիր (Tir) is corroborated by the etymology and by the transliteration of Տրի դից (Tri dicʻ) as Τρίδις (Trídis) in the Greek version of Agatʻangełos.
Declension
[edit]i-a-type or i-type
Related terms
[edit]Descendants
[edit]- → Armenian: Տիր (Tir)
References
[edit]- ^ Thomson, R. W. (1976) Agathangelos, History of the Armenians[1], Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, pages 316–317
Further reading
[edit]More information
- Տիր on the Armenian Wikipedia.Wikipedia hy
- Ačaṙyan, Hračʻya (1940) Hayocʻ lezvi patmutʻyun (in Armenian), volume I, Yerevan: University Press, page 308
- Ačaṙyan, Hračʻya (1962) “Տիւր”, in Hayocʻ anjnanunneri baṙaran (in Armenian), volume V, Yerevan: University Press, page 169
- Ananikian, Mardiros H. (1925) “Armenian Mythology”, in Canon John Arnott MacCulloch and George Foot Moore, editors, The Mythology of All Races (in 13 vols.); volume 7, Boston: Marshall Jones Company, pages 29–33
- Eilers, Wilhelm (1976) Sinn und Herkunft der Planetennamen (Bayerische Akademie der Wissenschaften: Philosophisch-historische Klasse. Sitzungsberichte; 1975.5)[2] (in German), Munich: Verl. der Bayerischen Akad. der Wiss., pages 43–50
- Émin, M. (1864) M. A. de Stadler, transl., Recherches sur le paganisme arménien (in French), Paris: Vve Benjamin Duprat, pages 18–20
- Gelzer, H. (1896) “Zur armenischen Götterlehre”, in Berichte über die Verhandlungen der Königlich sächsischen Gesellschaft der Wissenschaften zu Leipzig[3] (in German), volume 48, pages 109–110
- J̌ahukyan, Geworg (1987) Hayocʻ lezvi patmutʻyun; naxagrayin žamanakašrǰan[4] (in Armenian), Yerevan: Academy Press, pages 579, 581, 582
- J̌ahukyan, Geworg (1992) “Lezvakan nor tvyalner hayocʻ naxakʻristoneakan kroni ew havatalikʻneri masin”, in Patma-banasirakan handes[5] (in Armenian), number 1, page 26
- Justi, Ferdinand (1895) Iranisches Namenbuch[6] (in German), Marburg: N. G. Elwert’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, page 325
- Martirosyan, Hrach (2019) “Traces of Indo-European ‘Father Sky, God’ in Armenian”, in U. Bläsing, J. Dum-Tragut, T.M. van Lint, editors, Armenian, Hittite, and Indo-European Studies: A Commemoration Volume for Jos J.S. Weitenberg (Hebrew University Armenian Studies; 15), Leuven: Peeters, pages 196–197
- Petrosyan, Armen (2015) Problems of Armenian Prehistory. Myth, Language, History, Yerevan: Academy Press, pages 96–98
- Russell, James R. (1987) “Armenia and Iran III. Armenian religion”, in Ehsan Yarshater, editor, Encyclopædia Iranica[7], volume 2, London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul, pages 434b, 441–442
- Russell, James R. (1987) Zoroastrianism in Armenia (Harvard Iranian Series; 5), Cambridge: Harvard University Department of Near Eastern Languages and Civilizations and National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, pages 289–321
- Taġawarean, Nazarētʻ (1909) Hayocʻ hin krōnnerə (in Armenian), 2nd edition, Constantinople: K. Mattʻēosean Press, pages 73–75
- Thomson, R. W. (1976) Agathangelos, History of the Armenians[8], Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, pages 483 and Introduction lxi