Information about Iberian Scripts

History of the alphabet
Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
Meroitic 3rd c. BC
Hangul 1443
Zhuyin 1913
complete genealogy
The Iberian scripts are the scripts that Iberians use to represent the Iberian language.

Description

The oldest date of ancient Iberian writing has been dated to the 4th century BC. After the Roman invasions in the 3rd century BC, the script and the language from which it was written in were replaced with Latin writing.

Northeastern Iberian scripts have been found on the Iberian peninsula, in southern France and on the Balearic Islands. The southern Iberian scripts have been found in Andalucia and Murcia. Both styles contain monophonematic as well as syllabic signs. The Celtiberian version of the script was used to record the Celtiberian language, for example on the Botorrita tablet.

Monophonematic signs are five vowels, transcribed a, e, i, o, u, six resonants, transcribed r, ŕ, l, m, , n, and two sibilants or fricatives, transcribed s and ś. Syllabic signs combine an occlusive, t-, k-, p-, with a following vowel.

Swiggers assumes that the Iberic scripts are the result of a fusion of the Punic and Greek alphabetic traditions. The fact that the Iberian scripts are both alphabetic and syllabic is probably due to the nature of Iberian phonology. There are, as a matter of fact, "pro-Greek and pro-Semitic camps."

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See also

Further reading

  • Rodríguez Ramos, Jesús, Análisis de Epigrafía Íbera, Vitoria-Gasteiz 2004, ISBN 84-8373-678-0. Spanish.
  • Untermann, Jürgen, Monumenta Linguarum Hispanicarum. Band III: Die iberischen Inschriften aus Spanien, Wiesbaden 1990. German.
  • Ferrer i Jané, Joan (2005): «Novetats sobre el sistema dual de diferenciació gràfica de les oclusives sordes i sonores», Palaeohispanica 5, pp. 957-982. Catalan.
  • Correa, José Antonio (1992): «Representación gráfica de la oposición de sonoridad en las oclusivas ibéricas (semisilabario levantino)», AIΩN 14, pp. 253-292. Spanish.

External links

Images of Iberian inscriptions

The history of the alphabet begins in Ancient Egypt, more than a millennium into the history of writing. The first pure alphabet emerged around 2000 BCE to represent the language of Semitic workers in Egypt (see Middle Bronze Age alphabets), and was derived from the
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Middle Bronze Age alphabets are two similar undeciphered scripts, dated to be from the Middle Bronze Age (2000-1500 BCE), and believed to be ancestral to nearly all modern alphabets:
  • the Proto-Sinaitic

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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Ugaritic alphabet is a cuneiform abjad (alphabet without vowels), used from around 1500 BC for the Ugaritic language, an extinct Canaanite language discovered in Ugarit, Syria. It has 31 distinct letters.
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Proto-Canaanite alphabet

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The Proto-Canaanite alphabet is an abjad of twenty-plus acrophonic glyphs, found in Levantine texts of the Late Bronze Age (from ca.
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Phoenician alphabet
Child systems Paleo-Hebrew alphabet
Aramaic alphabet
Greek alphabet
Many hypothesized others
Sister systems South Arabian alphabet
Unicode range U+10900 to U+1091F
ISO 15924 Phnx

Note
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Paleo-Hebrew alphabet

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The Paleo-Hebrew alphabet also know as Ktav Ivri is an offshoot of the Phoenician alphabet used to write the Hebrew language from about the 10th century BCE until it began to
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Aramaic alphabet
Child systems Hebrew
Nabataean
Syriac
Palmyrenean
Mandaic
Brāhmī
Pahlavi
Sogdian
Kharoṣṭhī

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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History of the alphabet
Middle Bronze Age 18–15th c. BC
  • Ugaritic 15th c. BC
  • Proto-Canaanite 14th c. BC
  • Phoenician 11th c. BC
  • Paleo-Hebrew 10th c.

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Tibetan

ISO 15924 Tibt

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
The Tibetan script
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Khmer
Child systems Thai
Lao
Sister systems Old Mon (Burmese)

ISO 15924 Khmr

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Java

Sister systems Balinese
Batak
Baybayin
Buhid
Hanunó'o
Rejang
Tagbanwa

ISO 15924 Java

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Syriac alphabet
Child systems Sogdian   →Orkhon (Turkic)
    →Old Hungarian
  →Uyghur
    →Mongolian
Nabataean
  → Arabic
Georgian (disputed)
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Nabataean
Child systems Arabic alphabet

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Nabatean alphabet is a consonantal alphabet (abjad) that was used by the Nabateans in the 2nd century BC.
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Arabic abjad

Unicode range U+0600 to U+06FF
U+0750 to U+077F
U+FB50 to U+FDFF
U+FE70 to U+FEFF
ISO 15924 Arab (#160)

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
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Avestan

ISO 15924 Avst

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Avestan alphabet is a writing system developed during the Sassanid era (226-651) to render the Avestan language.
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Greek alphabet
Child systems Gothic
Glagolitic
Cyrillic
Coptic
Old Italic alphabet
Latin alphabet

ISO 15924 Grek

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Old Italic
Child systems Latin alphabet, Runic alphabet
Sister systems Anatolian alphabets

ISO 15924 Ital

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Latin alphabet
Child systems Numerous: see Alphabets derived from the Latin
Sister systems Cyrillic
Coptic
Armenian
Runic/Futhark
Unicode range See Latin characters in Unicode
ISO 15924 Latn

Note
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Runic
Child systems Younger Futhark, Anglo-Saxon Futhorc

ISO 15924 Runr

Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.

The Runic alphabets are a set of related alphabets using letters (known as runes
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Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
Ogham (Old Irish: Ogam) is an Early Medieval alphabet used primarily to represent the "Old Irish" language.
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Gothic

ISO 15924 Goth

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The Gothic alphabet is an alphabetic writing system attributed by Philostorgius to Wulfila, used exclusively for writing the ancient Gothic language.
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Armenian alphabet

Sister systems Latin
Cyrillic
Coptic
Unicode range U+0530 to U+058F,
U+FB13 to U+FB17
ISO 15924 Armn

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Glagolitic

ISO 15924 Glag

A page from the Zograf Kodex with text of the Gospel of Luke
Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode.
The Glagolitic alphabet or Glagolitsa is the oldest known Slavic alphabet.
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Cyrillic alphabet

Sister systems Latin alphabet
Coptic alphabet
Armenian
Unicode range U+0400 to U+052F
ISO 15924 Cyrl

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The Samaritan alphabet is a direct descendant of the paleo-Hebrew variety of the Phoenician alphabet. The more commonly known "square letter" form of the Hebrew alphabet was adapted from the Aramaic alphabet which the Israelites absorbed from the Persian Empire.
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Epigraphic South Arabian
Child systems Ge'ez
Sister systems Phoenician alphabet

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The ancient South Arabian alphabet (also known as musnad
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Ge'ez abugida

ISO 15924 Ethi

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Meroitic
Child systems Old Nubian

ISO 15924 Mero

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The Meroitic script
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Hangul (한글) or Chosŏn'gŭl (조선글) [2]

ISO 15924 Hang

Note
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