Oscan language

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Not to be confused with Old Scandinavian, sometimes abbreviated 'OScan'.
Oscan
Denarius-Marsic Federation-Syd 627-1-.jpg
Denarius of Marsican Confederation with Oscan legend
Native to Samnium, Campania, Lucania, Calabria and Abruzzo
Region south and south-central Italy
Era attested 5th–1st century BC[1]
Old Italic alphabet
Language codes
ISO 639-3 osc
Linguist list
osc
Glottolog osca1244[2]
Iron Age Italy.svg
Approximate distribution of languages in Iron Age Italy during the 6th century BC
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters.

Oscan is an extinct Indo-European language of southern Italy. The language is also the namesake of the language group to which it belonged. As a member of the Italic languages, Oscan is therefore a sister language to Latin and Umbrian.

Oscan was spoken by a number of tribes, including the Samnites,[3] the Aurunci (Ausones), and the Sidicini. The latter two tribes were often grouped under the name "Osci". The Oscan group is part of the Osco-Umbrian or Sabellic family, and includes the Oscan language and three variants (Hernican, Marrucinian and Paelignian) known only from inscriptions left by the Hernici, Marrucini and Paeligni, minor tribes of eastern central Italy. The language was spoken from approximately 500 BC to AD 100.[4]

Evidence

Oscan is known from inscriptions dating as far back as the 5th century BC. The most important Oscan inscriptions are the Tabula Bantina, the Oscan Tablet or Tabula Osca[5] and the Cippus Abellanus.

General characteristics

Oscan had much in common with Latin, though there are also many striking differences, and many common word-groups in Latin were absent or represented by entirely different forms. For example, Latin volo, velle, volui, and other such forms from the Proto-Indo-European root *wel ('to will') were represented by words derived from *gher ('to desire'): Oscan herest ('he shall want, he shall desire', English cognate 'yearn') as opposed to Latin vult (id.). Latin locus (place) was absent and represented by the hapax slaagid (place), which Italian linguist Alberto Manco has recently referred to a local surviving toponym.[6]

In phonology, Oscan also showed differences from Latin: Oscan 'p' in place of Latin 'qu' (Osc. pis, Lat. quis) (similar to the P-Celtic/Q-Celtic change in the Celtic languages); 'b' in place of Latin 'v'; medial 'f' in contrast to Latin 'b' or 'd' (Osc. mefiai, Lat. mediae).[citation needed].

Oscan is considered the most conservative of all the known Italic languages, and among attested Indo-European languages it is rivaled only by Greek in the retention of the inherited vowel system with the diphthongs intact[citation needed].

Writing system

Oscan was written in the Latin and Greek alphabets, as well as in a variety of the Old Italic alphabet.

The Z of the native alphabet is pronounced [ts].[7] The letters Ú and Í are "differentiations" of U and I, and do not appear in the oldest writings.[7] The Ú represents an o-sound,[8] and Í is a tense [ẹ]. Doubling of vowels was used to denote length but a long I is written .[7]

There are also examples of Oscan written with in the Latin or Greek alphabet.[9]

When it was written in the Latin alphabet, then the Z does not represent [ts] but instead [z], which is not written differently from [s] in the native alphabet.[9]

When Oscan was written in the Greek alphabet, it used an alphabet identical to the standard, with the addition of two letters, one for the native alphabet's H and one for its V.[8] The letters η and ω do not indicate quantity.[8] Sometimes, the clusters ηι and ωϝ denote the diphthongs /ei/ and /ou/ respectively while ει and are saved to denote monophthongs /iː/ and /uː/ of the native alphabet.[8] Other times, ει and are used to denote diphthongs, in which case o denotes the /uː/ sound.[8]

History of sounds

Vowels

Vowels are regularly lengthened before ns and nct (in the latter of which the n is lost) and possibly before nf and nx as well.[10] Anaptyxis, the development of a vowel between a liquid or nasal and another consonant, preceding or following, occurs frequently in Oscan; if the other consonant precedes, the new vowel is the same as that of the preceding vowel. If the other consonant follows, the new vowel is the same as that of the following vowel.[11]

Monophthongs

A

Short a remains in most positions.[12] Long ā remains in an initial or medial position. Final ā starts to sound similar to [ɔː] so that it is written ú or, rarely, u.[13]

E

Short e "generally remains unchanged;" before a labial in a medial syllable, it becomes u or i and before another vowel, e becomes í.[14] Long ē becomes the sound of í or íí.[15]

I

Short i becomes written í.[16] Long ī is spelt with i but when written with doubling as a mark of length with .[17]

O

Short o remains mostly unchanged, written ú;[18] before a final -m, o becomes more like u.[19] Long ō becomes denoted by u or uu.[20]

U

Short u generally remains unchanged; after t, d, n, the sound becomes that of iu.[21] Long ū generally remains unchanged; it may have changed to an ī sound for final syllables.[22]

Diphthongs

The sounds of diphthongs remain unchanged.[23]

Example of an Oscan text (the Cippus Abellanus)

The Oscan language in the 5th century BC.

ekkum svaí píd herieset
trííbarak avúm tereí púd
liímítúm pernúm púís
herekleís fíísnú mefiíst,ú
ehtrad feíhúss pús
herekleís fíísnam amfr
et, pert víam pússtíst
paí íp íst, pústin slagím
senateís suveís tangi
núd tríbarakavúm lí
kítud. íním íúk tríba
rakkiuf pam núvlanús
tríbarakattuset íúk trí
barakkiuf íním úíttiuf
abellanúm estud. avt
púst feíhúís pús físnam am
fret, eíseí tereí nep abel
lanús nep núvlanús pídum
tríbarakattíns. avt the
savrúm púd eseí tereí íst,
pún patensíns, múíníkad tan
ginúd patensíns, íním píd eíseí
thesavreí púkkapíd eestit
aíttíúm alttram alttrús
herríns. avt anter slagím
abellanam íním núvlanam
súllad víú uruvú íst . edú
eísaí víaí mefiaí teremen
niú staíet.

See also

References

  1. Oscan at MultiTree on the Linguist List
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  5. http://www.sanniti.info/smagnony.html
  6. Alberto Manco, "Sull’osco *slagi-", AIΩN Linguistica 28, 2006.
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Bibliography

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External links

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