Tuesday, 25 February 2020

THE LYCIAN ALPHABET


Lycian was an Anatolian language spoken in what is now the Antalya region of Turkey up to about the 3rd Century BCE, when the Lycians adopted Greek as their language. Lycian is thought to have developed from Luwian, a language spoken in Asia Minor before the arrival of the Hittites (c. 18th century BCE), and was related to Lydian.



The Lycian alphabet was adapted from an archaic version of the Doric Greek alphabet. Only a few of the Lycian letters were original inventions, or possibly borrowed from other alphabets. Around 180 inscriptions in Lycian dating from the fifth and fourth centuries BCE have been found. As current knowledge of the language, particularly its grammar, is quite limited, not all the inscriptions have been fully deciphered.

Notable features
Type of writing system: alphabet
Writing direction: left to right in horizontal lines
Number of letters: 29 (23 consonants and 6 vowels)
Some letters have several variant forms
A colon-like symbol was generally used to separate words.

Source : https://www.omniglot.com/index.htm

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