Luwian Language

Luwian (sometimes spelled Luwiyan) is part of the Anatolian branch of the Indo European language family and has been preserved in three forms: (1) Cuneiform Luwian, (2) Hieroglyphic-Luwian and (3), the somewhat later Lycian. Luwian was among the languages spoken by population groups in Arzawa and the Hittite Empire (in modern Turkey), attested in the Bronze and early Iron ages. Luwian (and Hittite) groups are now believed by most academic specialists to have moved south into Amurru, Aram Naharaim, Canaan and the Hejaz (modern Syria, Lebanon, Israel, Palestine, Jordan and northern Saudi Arabia) after ca. the 14th century BC, and to have had an influence on the various West Semitic languages its speakers came into contact with (Amorite dialects and especially Hebrew). Hieroglyphic Luwian has been attested in areas of Syria and Palestine as late as the 7th century B.C.

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
operation storax
pierre rode
rosalind chao
the sunrays
crest of the stars
the renegades
the snowmen
the rangers
a. philip randolph
albino (chess)
passport to pimlico
guanghua temple
vasily grigoryevich zaitsev
guides
brownies (girl guides)
operation dominic i and ii
pablo soto
matthias flacius
richard jobson (explorer)
richard jobson (television presenter)
operation niblick
a. j. muste
nicholas udall
meizhou island
ralph roister doister
hydrangeaceae
fellowship of reconciliation
gutenberg museum
zadok scale
march on washington for jobs and freedom
nondestructive testing
1993 governor general's awards
i know what you did last summer
destructive testing
strike command
tensor (intrinsic definition)
the circle
guide
meadowsweet
bash street school
somoza
lance ito
symphony no. 8 (beethoven)
symphony no. 8