𐎤𐎢𐎽𐎢𐏁

Old Persian

Etymology

Of disputed origin. One theory is that it is from Elamite 𒁹𒆪𒊏𒀾 (mku-ra-aš2 /⁠kuraš⁠/, shepherd, bestowed care, protector); earliest cuneiform attestations of the name, even instances prior to the founder of the Achaemenid Empire, always end in /-aš/ as opposed to /-uš/, an unexplainable development for Akkadian and Elamite phonologically if the original was the Iranian /-uš/. This has suggested rather that the later, more well-known Iranian version is in fact the adaptation, perhaps brought on by the fact that Old Persian a stems never have a final /-š/ in the nominative but u stems do.[1]

Proper noun

𐎤𐎢𐎽𐎢𐏁 (ku-u-ru-u-š /Kuruš/)

  1. a male given name: Cyrus

Descendants

  • Classical Persian: کُورُش (kūruš)
    Dari: کورش (kūruš)
    Iranian Persian: کوروش (kuroš)
    • Old Armenian: քորէշ (kʻorēš)
    Tajik: Куруш (Kuruš)
  • Akkadian:[1]
    Late Babylonian: 𒆪𒆪𒊏𒀾 (ᵏᵘku-ra-áš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆪𒆪𒊏𒀾𒋙 (ᵏᵘku-ra-áš-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆪𒊏𒀾 (ku-ra-áš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆪𒊏𒀾𒋙 (ku-ra-áš-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆪𒆜 (ku-raš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆪𒊏𒋗 (ku-ra-šu /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆪𒊏𒋙 (ku-ra-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆪𒆜𒋙 (ku-raš-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆳𒀸 (kur-aš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆳𒀾 (kur-áš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆪𒊕 (ku-reš /⁠Kureš⁠/), 𒆳𒊏𒀸 (kur-ra-aš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆳𒁺𒀸 (kur-rá-aš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆳𒆜 (kur-raš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆳𒌇 (kur-ráš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆳𒊏𒋙 (kur-ra-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆳𒊕 (kur-reš /⁠Kureš⁠/), 𒆪𒌨𒊏𒀾 (ku-ur-ra-áš /⁠Kuraš⁠/), 𒆪𒌨𒊏𒋙 (ku-ur-ra-šú /⁠Kurašu⁠/), 𒆪𒌨𒋙 (ku-ur-šú /⁠Kuršu⁠/)[1]
  • Ancient Greek: Κῦρος (Kûros) (see there for further descendants)
  • Aramaic:
    Imperial Aramaic: 𐡊𐡓𐡔 (krš)[1]
    Classical Syriac: ܟܘܪܫ (Kūreš)
  • Biblical Hebrew: כּוֹרֶשׁ (kóresh)
  • Egyptian:
    Late Egyptian:
    kAwArwSA
    (kꜣwꜣrwšꜣ)[1]
  • ? Elamite:
    Achaemenid Elamite: 𒆪𒌇 (ku-ráš /⁠Kuraš⁠/)[1]
  • Sanskrit: कुरुष (kuruṣa)

References

  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
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