Prestino (Lombard: Prestin, ) is a district of Como, Italy, of about 3,000 inhabitants, about 2 km west of that city.
History
Prestino is the site of the discovery of one of the most important inscriptions in the ancient and scantily attested Lepontic language, the Prestino Stone. This is a dedication pictured here, the text of which reads:
:uvamakozis plialeøu uvltiauiopos ariuonepos sitis tetu
Probably: "Uvamakozis dedicated (literally 'gave') to Plialethos [these] uvltiaviop-s, arivonep-s [and] sits ("sacred mounds"? if from *sÃÂdns (accusative plural; compare Old Irish sÃÂdÃÂs and Latin se:de:)."
Demographics
Inhabitants registered within the municipality of Como:
Bibliography
(Ordered by date of publication)
- Roberti, Mario Mirabella (1966) "Un'iscrizione eponzio-ligure a Prestino di Como" Arte Lombarda, Vol. 11, No. 1, pp. 114-115
- Lejeune, M. (1970âÂÂ71) "Documents gaulois et para-gaulois de Cisalpine" ÃÂtudes Celtiques, volume 12, issue 2, pp. 452-462
- Prosdocimi, Aldo L. (1986) "L'iscrizione leponzia di Prestino: Vent'anni dopo" Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie Vol.41, p.225
- de Hox, Javier (1992) "Lepontic, Celtiberian, Gaulish, and the Archeological Evidence" ÃÂtudes celtiques vol. 29 pp. 223-240
- Ball, M. J. and J. Fife (eds.) (2002) The Celtic Language Routledge, p. 44-45
- Markey, Thomas L.; Mees, Bernard (2003) "Prestino, patrimony and the Plinys"Zeitschrift für celtische Philologie, Vol.53 (1), p.116
- Matasovic, Ranko (2006) Etymological Dictionary of Proto-Celtic Brill: Leiden, p. 326
- Mees, Bernard (2008) "Early Celtic metre at Vergiate and Prestino" Historische Sprachforschung, Vol.121 (1), p.188-208
- "Mummified body of Italian woman found sitting at a table, 2 years after her death" February 10, 2022 CBS News. Retrieved June 15, 2023. [^1^][1]
References
External links