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Satre (Etruscan god) : ウィキペディア英語版
Satre (Etruscan god)

Satre or Satres〔''Satres'' is probably the genitive form: Giuliano Bonfante and Larissa Bonfante, ''The Etruscan Language: An Introduction'' (Manchester University Press, 2002 rev. ed.), p. 204; Susanne William Rasmussen, ''Public Portents in Republican Rome'' («L'Erma» di Bretschneider, 2003), p. 132.〕 was an Etruscan god who appears on the Liver of Piacenza, a bronze model used for haruspicy. He occupies the dark and negative northwest region, and seems to be a "frightening and dangerous god who hurls his lightning from his abode deep in the earth."〔H.S. Versnel, ''Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion: Transition and Reversal in Myth and Ritual'' (Brill, 1993, 1994), p. 145, citing Pliny the Elder, ''Natural History'' 2.138, 52; Massimo Pallottino, "Religion in Pre-Roman Italy," in ''Roman and European Mythologies'' (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 31.〕 It is possible that Satre is also referred to with the word ''satrs'' in the ''Liber Linteus'' ("Linen Book," IX.3), the Etruscan text preserved in Ptolemaic Egypt as mummy wrappings.〔Bonfante, ''The Etruscan Language'', p. 204; Jean-René Jannot, ''Religion in Ancient Etruria'', translated by Jane K. Whitehead (University of Wisconsin Press, 2005), p. 166.〕
Satre is usually identified with the Roman god Saturn, who in a description by Martianus Capella holds a position similar to that of Satre on the liver.〔Versnel, ''Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion,'' pp. 138 (especially note 10) and 145.〕 The name ''Satre'' may be only an Etruscan translation of ''Saturnus'',〔Jannot, ''Religion in Ancient Etruria'', p. 167.〕 or ''Saturnus'' may derive from the Etruscan;〔Bonfante, ''The Etruscan Language'', p. 204.〕 it is also possible that the two deities are unrelated.〔As is the case with the similarly named Roman Mars and Etruscan Maris: Erika Simon, "Gods in Harmony: The Etruscan Pantheon," in ''The Religion of the Etruscans'' (University of Texas Press, 2006), p. 59.〕 No image in Etruscan art has been identified as Satre: "this deity remains a riddle."〔Simon, "Gods in Harmony," p. 59.〕
==References==


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