Script

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Transmission of the alphabet to and in Italy

In the 8th century BC, the island of Pithekoussai (modern Ischia) off the coast of Campania was colonized by Greeks from Euboia. While it is not quite clear whether the settlement was a proper colony or just a trading post, it spawned the foundation of historically important Kyme around the middle of the 8th century on mainland Italy. Pithekoussai itself seems to have lost importance at the turn of the century. The alphabet used by the colonists was that of the Euboic mother-cities Chalkis und Eretria - indeed, one of the oldest testimonies of early Greek writing is from Pithekoussai: the so-called Cup of Nestor, dated to the last quarter of the 8th century. (Jeffery 1990: 235) The Etruscans would have been in contact with the Greek settlers from the beginning, and the acquisition of their script was not a long time coming: The oldest document of written Etruscan, a kotyle from Tarquinia, is dated to about 700 (Wallace 2008: 17).

As the oldest abecedarium on an ivory tablet from Marsiliana d’Albegna (about 650) shows, the Etruscans adopted the Greek alphabet, in its Eastern Greek "red" variety as used in Euboia, without any changes with regard to the different phonemic systems of the two languages. (For details see Jeffery 1990: 236ff.) Only by and by do the documented abecedaria reflect a process of adaptation to writing practice. The apparently obsolete signs for the mediae dropped out - all exept Gamma, which together with Kappa and Qoppa became part of a curious orthographic rule for writing allophones, and only later replaced both the other signs as the exclusive sign for the velar stop. Due to the lack of /o/ in Etruscan, Omikron fell away. In the 6th century, an additional sign in the shape of an 8 was created for /f/, after a phase of writing the sound with a digraph <vh> oder <hv>, and added to the end of the sign row. As concerns the writing of sibilants, a certain confusion on the part of the Greeks (see Jeffery 1990: 25ff., Swiggers 1996: 266f.) seems to have been propagated to the Etruscans: The Etruscan language seems to have had - apart from a dental affricate written with Zeta - two sibilants /s/ and probably /ʃ/ which were written with Sigma and San – in the South Sigma for /s/, San for /ʃ/, the other way round in the North. In the Southern cities Caere und Veii, where a number of divergences from general Etruscan writing practice can be observed over the course of time, a Sigma with more than three strokes appears instead of San. Finally in Cortona, a monophthongised, possibly long /e/ was consistently written with the sign E turned against the direction of writing. As is customary in archaic Greek inscriptions, Etruscan inscriptions are generally sinistroverse, apart from a short phase around 600 in Caere and Veii. Unlike Greek practice, boustrophedon writing is rare. While word separation is consistently executed on Nestor's Cup, the archaic Etruscan texts often dispense with it, until it establishes itself in neo-Etruscan time (after 470). (For details see Wallace 2008: 17ff.; a collection of Etruscan abecedaria in Pandolfini & Prosdocimi 1990: 19-94.)

As things present themselves to us now, the Etruscan script must have found its way to the peoples north of the river Po more than once, but not from the Etruscan settlements in Transpadania. Etruscan inscriptions in the very North are known from Adria and Spina, which only became relevant as Etruscan settlements towards the end of the 6th century, from the area around Mantova, which also yields inscriptions only from the 5th century onwards, and from Feltre. According to the theory of Prosdocimi, the first version of the Venetic script, attested securely only in one (*Es 120, dated to the beginning of the 6th c. at the latest) and possibly in two more inscriptions, was based on a model from Northern Etruria, while a seperate tradition lies at the basis of the younger alphabet of Este. The latter is unusually well documented on a number of votive writing tablets from a sanctuary-cum-writing school and distinguished by syllabic punctuation, both of which phenomena, together with the actual content of the inscriptions, connect it with the 6th century writing tradition of the Portonaccio sanctuary in Veii. dentalschreibung, p, l, u? The background of syllabic punctuation is debated (see silbenschreibung schon in kyme). Syllabic punctuation became the key feature of Venetic script, even though alphabet variants from other parts of the Venetic realm deviate from the Este alphabet, most prominently in the writing of the dental stops. Matters are complicated by the fact that the Venetic people must have known the Greek alphabet, probably through contact with Greeks settling in rechts von Bologna, as they did not get the letter o as a lettre morte in its ancestral place, but added it at the end of the sign row as a new letter - this at least can be seen ja woran eigentlich? nur am akeo? is das dann ein zufall, oder auch abschauung von den griechen? (For details see Fogolari & Prosdocimi 1988: 328-351.)

weiters die räter ohne silbenpunktierung, können sich das von den venetern wiederhergestellte plosivschreibungssystem wieder auf den bauch hauen, obwohl anscheinend reste davon da sind - welche venetische tradition? gemischt? beziehungen zu cadore oder nicht, und wenn ja, über welche route? welche rolle spielen die venetoiden inschriften im gebirge - zeugnis für alpentransit, oder chronologischer faktor? ist das alphabet von magrè eh einfach venetische schrift mit einem sonderzeichen? wieso schauen die sonderzeichen so unterschiedlich aus?

lepontisch dagegen seinerseits vom etruskischen, aber auch mit o, verweis aufs lexlep, ältestes dokument eigentlich von jenseits mit fraglicher stellung, archaisch-lepontisches zentrum an den südspitzen von lago maggiore und lago di como (comer arm), dann auch im tessin (s. uhlich), und sonst is aus der gegend zwischen dort und mantua, wo eigentlich die etrusker sitzen, recht viel undefinierbares zeugl.

und schließlich die camuner im oglio-tal oberhalb vom lago d'iseo, was mit denen verkehrt is, weiß keiner.

Nestor's Cup

725-700 ←

Kyme 2

700-675 →

Marsiliana d'Albegna

~650 ←

Clusium

7th-6th c. ←

Portonaccio

6th c. ←

*Es 120

600-575 ←

Este

votive plaques ←

Padua Cadore Magrè

Sanzeno

Steinberg

Lugano
A19 s A3 s A3d s A19 s A15 s A19 s addA1 s A3 s A s A3d s
addB1d s addB2 s
addG1 s addG1 s ! addG2 s
addD1 s addD1d s addD2 s
E s Ed s E s E s E s E s E s E s E s E s
Vd s V s V s V s V s V s V s V s V s
Z3d s Z3 s ! addZ2 s addZ1 s
addH1 s addH2 s addH3 s H3d s addH1 s H4 s H3 s H s
addΘ1 s ? addΘ1 s addΘ2 s ? Θ s Θ s Θ s
I s I s I s I s I s I s I s I s I s
K2 s K2 s K2 s K2 s K2 s K2 s K s K s K s
L2 s L2 s L2 s L2 s L2 s L s L s L2 s L s
addM1 s addM1 s ! addM1 s addM1 s M s M s M s
N s N s N s N s N s N s N s N s N s
addKsi1 s
addO1 s addO1 s addO1 s addO2 s
addP1 s addP1 s ! addP2 s addP1 s P s P2 s
Ś s Ś s ? Ś s Ś s Ś s Ś s
addQ1 s addQ2 s
addR1 s addR1 s ! addR1 s R s addR2 s R2 s R s R s R2 s
S s S s Sd s S s Sd s S s S s S s
T s T s T s T s addT1 s ? T s T s
addU1 s addU1 s U2 s addU1 s U2 s ? U s U2 s U s
?
addΦ1 s addΦ2 s Φ2 s Φ s Φ2 s
Χ s Χ s Χ s Χ s Χ s Χ s Χ s

Alphabets of Transpadania and the Alps as distinguished in TIR

Greek

Etruscan

North Italic

The archaic Venetic alphabet

Alphabet of Este

Alphabet of Padua

Alphabet of Cadore

Alphabet of Magrè

Alphabet of Sanzeno

Alphabet of Steinberg

Alphabet of Lugano

Camunic

Latin


Images

Bibliography

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Colonna 1972 Giovanni Colonna, "Clusium et Orvieto", Studi Etruschi 40 (1972), 470–471.
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