To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

Eteocypriot language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eteocypriot
Native toFormerly spoken in Cyprus
RegionEastern Mediterranean Sea
Era10th to 4th century BC[1]
Cypriot syllabary
Language codes
ISO 639-3ecy
ecy
Glottologeteo1240
One of the Eteocypriot inscriptions from Amathus

Eteocypriot is an extinct non-Indo-European language that was spoken in Cyprus by a non-Hellenic population during the Iron Age. The name means "true" or "original Cypriot" parallel to Eteocretan, both of which names are used by modern scholars to mean the non-Greek languages of those places.[2] Eteocypriot was written in the Cypriot syllabary, a syllabic script derived from Linear A (via the Cypro-Minoan variant Linear C). The language was under pressure from Arcadocypriot Greek from about the 10th century BC and finally became extinct in about the 4th century BC.

The language is as yet unknown except for a small vocabulary attested in bilingual inscriptions. Such topics as syntax and possible inflection or agglutination remain an enigma. Partial translations depend to a large extent on the language or language group assumed by the translator, but there is no consistency.

Due to the small number of texts found, there is currently much unproven speculation about the origin of the language and its speakers. It is conjectured by some to be related to the Etruscan and Lemnian languages[citation needed], Hurrian,[3] Northwest Semitic[citation needed], an unknown pre-Indo-European language[citation needed], or a language used in some of the Cypro-Minoan inscriptions[citation needed], a collection of poorly-understood inscriptions from Bronze Age Cyprus,[4] as both Cypro-Minoan and Eteocypriot share a common genitive suffix -o-ti.[5]

YouTube Encyclopedic

  • 1/5
    Views:
    313
    514
    626
    4 908
    383
  • Eteocypriot language
  • Ancient Undeciphered Language of #Cyprus #Eteocypriot
  • Eteocretan language
  • Minoan (Keftiw) incantation - a sample of Minoan language
  • Lemnian language

Transcription

Corpus

Several hundred inscriptions written in the Cypriot syllabary (VI-III BC) cannot be interpreted in Greek. While it does not necessarily imply that all of them are non-Greek, there are at least two locations where multiple inscriptions with clearly non-Greek content were found:

  • Amathus (including a bilingual Eteocypriot-Greek text)
  • a few short inscriptions from Golgoi (currently Athienou: Markus Egetmeyer suggested that their language (which he calls Golgian resp. Golgisch in German) may be different from those of Amathus[6]).

While the language of Cypro-Minoan inscriptions is often supposed to be the same as (or ancestral to) Eteocypriot, that has yet to be proven, as the script is only partly legible.

Amathus bilingual

The most famous Eteocypriot inscription is a bilingual text inscribed on a black marble slab found on the acropolis of Amathus about 1913, dated to around 600 BC and written in both the Attic dialect of Ancient Greek and Eteocypriot. The Eteocypriot text in Cypriot characters runs right to left; the Greek text in all capital Greek letters, left to right. The following are the syllabic values of the symbols of the Eteocypriot text (left to right) and the Greek text as is:

Eteocypriot:
1: a-na . ma-to-ri . u-mi-e-s[a]-i . mu-ku-la-i . la-sa-na . a-ri-si-to-no-se . a-ra-to-wa-na-ka-so-ko-o-se
2: ke-ra-ke-re-tu-lo-se . ta-ka-na-[?-?]-so-ti . a-lo . ka-i-li-po-ti[7]
A suggested pronunciation is:
1: Ana mator-i umiesa-i mukla-i lasna Ariston-ose Artowanax-oko-ose
2: Kerakertul-ose takna[?-?]s-oti alo kailp-oti.
[citation needed]
Greek:
3: Η ПΟΛΙΣ Η АΜАΘΟΥΣΙΩΝ ΑΡΙΣΤΩΝΑ
4: ΑΡΙΣΤΩΝΑΚΤΟΣ ΕΥΠΑΤΡΙΔΗΝ
which might be rendered into modern script as:
3: Ἡ πόλις ἡ Ἀμαθουσίων Ἀριστῶνα
4: 'Ἀριστώνακτος, εὐπατρίδην.

Cyrus H. Gordon translates this text as

The city of the Amathusans (honored) the noble Ariston (son) of Aristonax.[8]

Gordon's translation is based on Greek inscriptions in general and the fact that "the noble Ariston" is in the accusative case, implying a transitive verb. Gordon explains that "the verb is omitted ... in such dedicatory inscriptions".

The inscription is important as verifying that the symbols of the unknown language, in fact, have about the same phonetic values as they do when they are used to represent Greek. Gordon says, "This bilingual proves that the signs in Eteocypriot texts have the same values as in the Cypriot Greek texts...."[8]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Eteocypriot". Archived from the original on February 17, 2015. Retrieved 2024-01-27.
  2. ^ The derivation is given in Partridge, Eric (1983) Origins: A short Etymological Dictionary of Modern English, New York: Greenwich House, ISBN 0-517-41425-2. The term Eteocypriot was devised by Friedrich in 1932, according to Olivier Masson in ETEO-CYPRIOT, an article in Zbornik, Issues 4–5, 2002–2003. Eteocretan is based on a genuine Ancient Greek word.
  3. ^ Petit, Thierry (1999). "Eteocypriot myth and amathusian reality" (PDF). Journal of Mediterranean Archaeology. 12 (1): 108–120. doi:10.1558/jmea.v12i1.108. HAL ffhalshs-00001435. [Eteocypriot] is a Hurrian dialect [and] was not the first spoken language in Cyprus.
  4. ^ Steele, Philippa M. (24 January 2018). "Eteocypriot". Oxford Classical Dictionary. Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.8218. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5. Retrieved 17 February 2024. Eteocypriot had survived from the Cypriot Bronze Age (perhaps related to a language written in the undeciphered Cypro-Minoan script.)
  5. ^ Valério, Miguel Filipe Grandão (2016). Investigating the Signs and Sounds of Cypro-Minoan (PhD thesis). Universitat de Barcelona. Retrieved 17 February 2024.
  6. ^ M. Egetmeyer, '"Sprechen Sie Golgisch?" Anmerkungen zu einer übersehenen Sprache' Études mycéniennes 2010: 427-434
  7. ^ The inscription is given as portrayed in Gordon, Evidence, Page 5. Breaks in the stone obscure the syllables in brackets.
  8. ^ a b Forgotten Scripts, p. 120.

Sources

External links

This page was last edited on 10 April 2024, at 06:35
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.