Canaanite languages

Large dialect continuum from the Levant and Mesopotamia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Canaanite languages, sometimes referred to as Canaanite dialects, are one of four subgroups of the Northwest Semitic languages of Western Asia.[1] The others are the still spoken Aramaic and the now-extinct Ugaritic and Amorite languages. These closely related languages originated in the Levant and Upper Mesopotamia. Ancient Semitic-speaking peoples spoke them in an area encompassing what is today Israel, Palestine, Jordan, the Sinai Peninsula, Lebanon, Syria, as well as some areas of southwestern Turkey, Iraq, and the northwestern corner of Saudi Arabia. From the 9th century BCE, they also spread to the Iberian Peninsula, Malta, Sicily and North Africa in the form of Phoenician.

Geographic
distribution
Levant, Ancient Carthage
Subdivisions
Quick facts Geographic distribution, Linguistic classification ...
Canaanite
Geographic
distribution
Levant, Ancient Carthage
Linguistic classificationAfroasiatic
Subdivisions
Language codes
Glottologcana1267
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The historical Canaanites are broadly defined to include the Hebrews (Israelites, Samaritans and Judeans), Ammonites, Edomites, Ekronites, Hyksos, Phoenicians (including the Punics/Carthaginians), Moabites, and sometimes the ethno-linguistically closely related Ugarites and Amorites.[2]

The Canaanite languages continued to be spoken languages until at least the 5th century CE but were gradually supplanted by Aramaic, a language which gained influence as the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire and succeeding Neo-Babylonian and Achaemenid Empires, as well as a number of other states such as the Palmyrene Empire.

Modern Hebrew is the only living Canaanite language today and was revived in the 19th century by political and cultural activists as an everyday spoken language in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. This was achieved mainly through the revitalization and cultivation efforts of Zionists throughout Europe and in Palestine. By the mid-20th century, Modern Hebrew had become the primary language of Palestinian Jews and was later made the official language of the State of Israel.[3][4]

Many Jews used Mishnaic Hebrew well into the Middle Ages and up to the present day as both a liturgical and literary language, and they also employed it as a lingua franca for commerce between disparate diasporic communities. Samaritan Hebrew remained a liturgical language among Samaritans.

Classification

Analogous to Serbo-Croatian, the Canaanite dialects operate on a spectrum of mutual intelligibility with one another, with significant overlap occurring in syntax, morphology, phonology, and semantics. This family of languages also has the distinction of being the first historically attested group of languages to use an alphabet, derived from the Proto-Canaanite alphabet, to record their writings, as opposed to the far earlier Cuneiform logographic/syllabic writing of the region, which originated in Mesopotamia and was used to record Sumerian, Akkadian (aka Assyrian and Babylonian), Eblaite, Elamite, Hurrian, Aramaic, Hittite and Old Persian.

In contrast to the Egyptians, the Bronze-Age Canaanites did not write extensively in their native language, nor in sophisticated expressive purposes like history, law codes or stories being documented.[5]

Nonetheless, their inscriptions are heavily attested to throughout the Levant, Mesopotamia, Anatolia, Northern Arabian Peninsula and the Eastern Mediterranean, and after the founding of Carthage by Phoenician colonists, in coastal regions of North Africa and Iberian Peninsula also. Dialects have been labelled primarily with reference to Biblical geography: Hebrew (Israelian, Judean/Biblical, Samaritan), Phoenician/Punic, Amorite, Ammonite, Moabite, Sutean and Edomite; the dialects were all mutually intelligible, being no more differentiated than geographical varieties of Modern English.[6]

The Canaanite languages or dialects can be split into the following:[1][7]

North Canaan

South Canaan

Other

Other possible Canaanite languages:

  • Eblaite (formerly), when it was first discovered in the 1970s epigraphers had classified it as "Paleo-Canaanite" or "Old Canaanite". However, subsequent linguistic scholarship after those years place it firmly as an East Semitic language.[12][13]
  • Ugaritic is also a closely related Northwest Semitic language of the northern Levant, but likely not Canaanitic.[14][15]
  • The Deir Alla inscription, written in a dialect with both Aramaic and South Canaanitic characteristics,[citation needed] which is classified as Canaanite in Hetzron.
  • Sutean, a Semitic language, possibly of the Canaanite branch.
  • Amarna Canaanite – attested only through the Canaano-Akkadian language of the Amarna letters. Hetzron notes that it has distinctive features that mark it as a separate language from the other Canaanite dialects rather than a direct ancestor to any of them.
  • In 2022, two large, 3,800-year-old, Amorite-Akkadian bilingual tablets were published, yielding a large corpus of Northwest Semitic in Assyria and Babylonia.[16] The Amorite text in the tablet showed very close relationship to Canaanite languages.[17] Until then, Amorite was only known from personal names attested in Akkadian language Assyrian and Babylonian texts and its position within Northern Semitic languages was vague.

Comparison to Aramaic

Some distinctive typological features of Canaanite in relation to the still spoken Aramaic are:

  • The prefix h- is the definite article (Aramaic has a postfixed -a), which seems to be an innovation of Canaanite.
  • The first person pronoun is ʼnk (אנכ anok(i), which is similar to Akkadian, Ancient Egyptian and Berber, versus Aramaic ʾnʾ/ʾny.
  • The change of *ā > ō, called the Canaanite shift.

Descendants

Modern Hebrew, revived in the modern era from an extinct dialect of the ancient Israelites preserved in literature, poetry, liturgy; also known as Classical Hebrew, the oldest form of the language attested in writing. The original pronunciation of Biblical Hebrew is accessible only through reconstruction. It may also include Samaritan Hebrew, a variety formerly spoken by the Samaritans. The main sources of Classical Hebrew are the Hebrew Bible and inscriptions such as the Gezer calendar and Khirbet Qeiyafa ostracon. All of the other Canaanite languages seem to have become extinct by the early first millennium CE except Punic, which survived into late antiquity (or possibly even longer).[18]

Slightly varying forms of Hebrew preserved from the first millennium BC until modern times include:

The Phoenician and Punic expansion spread the Phoenician language and the Punic variety spoken in the antique-era colonies in Western Mediterranean for a time, but there too it died out, although it seems to have survived longer than in Phoenicia itself.[18]

Sources

The primary modern reference book for the many extra-biblical Canaanite inscriptions, together with Aramaic inscriptions, is the German-language book Kanaanäische und Aramäische Inschriften which draws together a large corpus of written material from Levant, Mesopotamia and Anatolia, from which inscriptions are often referenced as KAI n (for a number n).[19]

See also

References

Bibliography

Further reading

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