Old Italic Alphabet

Old Italic refers to a number of related historical Latin-related alphabets used on the Italian peninsula which were used for some non-Indo-European (Etruscan and probably North Picene) languages. The alphabets derive from Euboean Greek Cumaean alphabet, used at Ischia and Cumae in the Bay of Naples in the eighth century BC. Cumaean, in turn showed strong similarities to the Phoenician alphabet, lending support to theories of Phoenician influence in the West Mediterranean region. Various Indo-European languages belonging to the Italic branch (Faliscan and members of the Sabellian group, including Oscan, Umbrian, and South Picene, and other Indo-European branches such as Venetic and Messapic. Faliscan, Oscan, Umbrian, North Picene, and South Picene all derive from an Etruscan form of the alphabet.

The Etruscan alphabet

It is not clear whether the process of adaptation from the Greek alphabet took place in Italy from the first colony of Greeks, the city of Cumae, or in Greece/Asia Minor. The Etruscan was mostly written from left to right. It was in any case a Western Greek alphabet. In the alphabets of the West, X had the sound value ks, Psi stood for k_h; in Etruscan: X = s, Psi = k_j or k_X (Rix 202-209). An additional sign, 8, was present in both Lydian and Etruscan (Jensen 513). Its origin is disputed; it may be an altered B or H or an ex novo creation (Rix 202). Its sound value was /f/ and it replaced the Etruscan FH. The Unicode standard includes support for the Etruscan alphabet (your browser may or may not display the characters properly, if at all):

The Oscan alphabet

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
comanche
le havre
seine
shill
sophus lie
rush (band)
1924 winter olympics
ngo dinh diem
cuscuta
eapc
dodder
euro atlantic partnership council
peter bonetti
equity
rubiaceae
uncaria
vanilla sky
brocard
list of horse breeds
misznay schardin effect
jus soli
jus sanguinis
titan arum
talcott parsons
example based machine translation
gothic architecture
bramble fruit
rubus
steppe
typographic unit
wank
rolemaster
lm model
hypanthium
city of westminster
amphitheatre
southwark
emergent organisation
inductive logic programming
euro banknotes
circus
perpetual motion
robert ludlum
gentianales