ἀρτάβη

Ancient Greek

Alternative forms

  • ἀρτέβη (artébē)

Etymology

The word is of Iranian origin (see Old North Iranian *ṛdba-, Old Persian *ṛdva-[1]) and ultimately from Akkadian 𒅈𒁕𒁉 (/ardabu/, capacity measure of about 56 litres), found as Aramaic 𐡀𐡓𐡃𐡁 (ʾrdb) / אַרְדְּבָא (ʾardəḇā) / ܐܪܕܒܐ (ʾardəḇā), (Classical Syriac also ܐܪܛܒܐ (ʾarṭəḇā)), Arabic إِرْدَبّ (ʔirdabb) and Coptic ⲉⲣⲧⲟⲃ (ertob), ⲁⲣⲧⲁⲃ (artab).

Pronunciation

 

Noun

ἀρτάβη (artábē) f (genitive ἀρτάβης); first declension

  1. Persian measure of capacity, equivalent to 1 medimnus + 3 choenices
  2. Egyptian measure of capacity, varying from 24 to 42 choenices

Inflection

Derived terms

  • ἀρταβία (artabía)
  • ἀρταβίειος (artabíeios)

Descendants

  • Ge'ez: አርጣባስ (ʾärṭabas), አርጣቦስ (ʾärṭabos), አርጢባስ (ʾärṭibas)
  • Latin: artaba

Further reading

  1. Tavernier, Jan (2007) Iranica in the Achaemenid Period (ca. 550–330 B.C.): Lexicon of Old Iranian Proper Names and Loanwords, Attested in Non-Iranian Texts, Peeters Publishers, →ISBN, page 449
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