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Urtzi (also ortzi) is a Basque term that has no convincing explanation as yet. It either represents an old common noun for the sky, or is the name for a pre-Christian sky deity.〔Trask, L. ''The History of Basque'' (1997) Routledge ISBN 0-415-13116-2〕〔Jose M. de Barandiaran ''Mitologia Vasca'' (1996) Txertoa ISBN 84-7148-117-0〕 ==The Urtzi controversy== The existence of a Basque mythological figure, ''Urtzi'', has been questioned in numerous discussions. The argument for ''Urtzi'' being a Basque sky god is based on two main arguments. The first main argument is that Basque has numerous calendric and meteorological terms which contain forms of the root ''ortzi'' (with the variants ''urtz'', ''ortz'', ''orz'' and ''ost''), for example:〔〔 *''ortzadar'' 'rainbow' (''ortzi'' + ''adar'' 'horn') *''ortzi'' 'sky, thunder' *''orzgorri'' (> ''oskorri'') 'red sky' (''ortzi'' + ''gorri'' 'red') *''ostargi'' 'daylight' (''ortzi'' + ''argi'' 'light') *''ostegun'' 'Thursday' (''ortzi'' + ''egun'' 'day') *''oskarbi'' 'clear sky' (''ortzi'' + ''garbi'' 'clean') This has led to a popular modern interpretation of Urtzi as a sky god. It should also be mentioned that the modern Basque word for sky, ''zeru'', is a loanword from Latin ''caelum'' and that the word ''urtzi'' or ''ortzi'' is not productive anymore.〔 The second argument is based on the 12th-century account, the Codex Calixtinus, of Aymeric Picaud, a French pilgrim, who recorded a number of Basque words and expressions. He wrote about Urtzi: ''et Deus uocant Urcia'' ("and they name God as Urcia".) Since the remaining material Picaud recorded appears to be very accurate, this bears some weight.〔 However, there are no legends at all related to such a god and Picaud remains the only explicit reference to date. This had led to the alternative theory that this may have been a generic term for 'sky' and that Picaud may have simply "pointed at the sky" looking for the word for God and been supplied the word for 'sky.' This explanation is to some degree supported by the unexpected absolutive case ending ''-a'' in ''Urcia'', which neither in Proto-Basque or modern Basque appears on proper nouns. To date neither theory has been able to convince fully.〔 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Urtzi」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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