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Minoan language

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Minoan
Linear A tablet
RegionCrete
EraAbout 2100–1450 BC
Cretan hieroglyphs,Linear A
Language codes
ISO 639-3Either:
omn– Minoan
lab– Linear A
omnMinoan
labLinear A
Glottologmino1236Minoan

TheMinoan languageis the language (or languages) of the ancientMinoan civilizationofCretewritten in theCretan hieroglyphsand later in theLinear Asyllabary. As the Cretan hieroglyphs are undeciphered and Linear A only partly deciphered, the Minoan language is unknown and unclassified; with the existing evidence, it is impossible to be certain that the two scripts record the same language.

TheEteocretan language,attested in a few alphabetic inscriptions from Crete 1,000 years later, is possibly a descendant of Minoan, but is also unclassified.

Tradition[edit]

Minoan is mainly known from the inscriptions in Linear A, which are fairly legible by comparison withLinear B.The Cretan hieroglyphs are dated from the first half of the 2nd millennium BC. The Linear A texts, mostly written in clay tablets, are spread all over Crete with more than 40 localities on the island.

The Egyptian texts[edit]

From theEighteenth Dynasty of Egyptcome four texts containing names and spells in theKeftiu language[de].They are, as usual in non-Egyptian texts, written in Egyptian hieroglyphs, which has allowed the pronunciation of those names and spells to be reconstructed.

  • Magic Papyrus Harris (Latin:Papyrus magicusHarris XII, 1–5); Beg. 18th Dynasty: a spell in the Keftiu language[1]
  • Writing board (B.M. 5647); early 18th Dynasty: school blackboard with Keftiu names[2]
  • London Medical Papyrus(B.M., 10059); end of the 18th Dynasty: Two Spells Against Disease (#32–33)
  • Aegean placard list[de]:some Cretan place names.

On the basis of these texts, the phonetic system of the Minoan language can be reconstructed to have the following consonants:[3]

Consonant phonemes
Labial Dental Alveolar Palatal Velar Uvular Glottal
Nasal m n
Stop pb td ts k q
Fricative f s ʃ h
Trill r
Approximant j w

Classification[edit]

Minoan is anunclassified language,or perhaps multiple indeterminate languages written in the same script. It has been compared inconclusively to theIndo-European,SemiticandTyrsenianlanguage families and is a language isolate.[4][5][6][7][8][9][10]

Syntax[edit]

Brent Davis, a linguist and archaeologist at the University of Melbourne, has proposed that the basic word order of the language written in Linear A may beverb-subject-object(VSO), based on the properties of a common formulaic sequence found in Linear A.[11]

Footnotes[edit]

  1. ^H. Lange:Der Magische Papyrus Harris;Kopenhagen (1927)
  2. ^T. E. Peet:The Egyptian Writing-Board B.M. 5647 bearing Keftiu Names;Oxford 1927
  3. ^Evangelos Kyriakidis:Indications on the Nature of the Language of the Keftiw from Egyptian Sources.In: Ägypten und Levante / Egypt and the Levant Band 12 (2002), pp. 211–219.
  4. ^Stephanie Lynn Budin; John M. Weeks (2004).The Ancient Greeks: New Perspectives.ABC-CLIO. p. 26.ISBN9781576078143.OCLC249196051.Archivedfrom the original on May 25, 2019.RetrievedMay 25,2019.
  5. ^Facchetti, Giulio M.; Negri, Mario (2003).Creta Minoica: Sulle tracce delle più antiche scritture d'Europa(in Italian). Firenze: L.S. Olschki.ISBN978-88-222-5291-3.
  6. ^Yatsemirsky, Sergei A. (2011).Opyt sravnitel'nogo opisaniya minoyskogo, etrusskogo i rodstvennyh im yazykov[Tentative Comparative Description of Minoan, Etruscan and Related Languages] (in Russian). Moscow: Yazyki slavyanskoy kul'tury.ISBN978-5-9551-0479-9.
  7. ^Beekes, Robert S. P.(2014).Pre-Greek: Phonology, Morphology, Lexicon.Brill.ISBN978-90-04-27944-5.
  8. ^Raymond A. Brown,Evidence for pre-Greek speech on Crete from Greek alphabetic sources.Adolf M. Hakkert, Amsterdam 1985, p. 289
  9. ^Chadwick, John (1967).The Decipherment of Linear B.Cambridge:Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-0-521-39830-5.
  10. ^Kazansky, Nikolai (2012-01-01)."The Evidence for Lycian in the Linear A Syllabary".FS Gregory Nagy Online. Awol - the Ancient World Online.ISSN2156-2253.
  11. ^Brent Davis, 'Syntax in Linear A: The Word-Order of the ‘Libation Formula’ ' Kadmos 52(1), 2013, pp.35-52

References[edit]

External links[edit]