Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Origins of the Canaanite alphabet and West Semitic consonants' inventory. / Nemirovskaya, Adel V.
In: ACTA LINGUISTICA PETROPOLITANA. ТРУДЫ ИНСТИТУТА ЛИНГВИСТИЧЕСКИХ ИССЛЕДОВАНИЙ, Vol. 3, No. 15, 2019, p. 425–445.Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Origins of the Canaanite alphabet and West Semitic consonants' inventory
AU - Nemirovskaya, Adel V.
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - It has been not infrequently mentioned by Semitists that a few graphemes of the West Semitic consonantal alphabet had been multifunctional. This is witnessed, in particular, by transcriptions of Biblical names in Septuagint, Demotic transcriptions of Aramaic as well as by the Arabic alphabet, Aramaic by its origin, which twenty two graphemes were ultimately developed into twenty eight ones through inventing additional diacritics. The oldest firmly deciphered and convincingly interpreted variety of the West Semitic consonantal script was employed in Ugarit as early as the 13th century BC. Being contemporaneous with the epoch of the invention of the West Semitic consonantal script the most significant evidence is provided with Semitic words occasionally transcribed in Egyptian papyri from the New Kingdom. Examples collected (J. Hoch) demonstrate that one and the same Semitic consonant could be recorded variously with different Egyptian consonants used; even more crucial is that various Semitic consonants could be recorded with the same Egyptian one.E. de Rougé was the first one to state that the immediate prototypes of Semitic letters were to be sought among the Hieratic characters. W. Helck and K.-Th. Zauzich determined that the West Semitic alphabet comprised only those characters which had been used in “Egyptian syllabic writing”. Summarizing philological and historical evidence does allow us to conclude that the Canaanite consonantal alphabet developed as a local adaptation of the Egyptian scribal practice of recording non-Egyptian words. This local adaptation must have occurred under Ramesside rule, when Egyptian or Egyptian-trained scribes resided at Canaanite sites.It seems reasonable to conclude that West Semitic consonantal graphemes were not intended for reflecting Semitic phonetics adequately from the beginning of their existence. Their usage was originally conditioned by the Egyptian scribal practice of rendering Semitic words that was current during the New Kingdom.
AB - It has been not infrequently mentioned by Semitists that a few graphemes of the West Semitic consonantal alphabet had been multifunctional. This is witnessed, in particular, by transcriptions of Biblical names in Septuagint, Demotic transcriptions of Aramaic as well as by the Arabic alphabet, Aramaic by its origin, which twenty two graphemes were ultimately developed into twenty eight ones through inventing additional diacritics. The oldest firmly deciphered and convincingly interpreted variety of the West Semitic consonantal script was employed in Ugarit as early as the 13th century BC. Being contemporaneous with the epoch of the invention of the West Semitic consonantal script the most significant evidence is provided with Semitic words occasionally transcribed in Egyptian papyri from the New Kingdom. Examples collected (J. Hoch) demonstrate that one and the same Semitic consonant could be recorded variously with different Egyptian consonants used; even more crucial is that various Semitic consonants could be recorded with the same Egyptian one.E. de Rougé was the first one to state that the immediate prototypes of Semitic letters were to be sought among the Hieratic characters. W. Helck and K.-Th. Zauzich determined that the West Semitic alphabet comprised only those characters which had been used in “Egyptian syllabic writing”. Summarizing philological and historical evidence does allow us to conclude that the Canaanite consonantal alphabet developed as a local adaptation of the Egyptian scribal practice of recording non-Egyptian words. This local adaptation must have occurred under Ramesside rule, when Egyptian or Egyptian-trained scribes resided at Canaanite sites.It seems reasonable to conclude that West Semitic consonantal graphemes were not intended for reflecting Semitic phonetics adequately from the beginning of their existence. Their usage was originally conditioned by the Egyptian scribal practice of rendering Semitic words that was current during the New Kingdom.
KW - West Semitic, Canaanite, Egyptian, Ugaritic, consonantal, script, alphabet, multifunctional grapheme, scribal practice
KW - западносемитский, ханаанский, египет- ский, угаритский, консонантный, письмо, алфавит, полифункци- ональная графема, писцовая практика
KW - West Semitic
KW - CANAANITE
KW - EGYPTIAN
KW - UGARITIC
KW - CONSONANTAL
KW - script
KW - alphabet
KW - MULTIFUNCTIONAL GRAPHEME
KW - SCRIBAL PRACTICE
UR - https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=42684503
U2 - 10.30842/alp2306573715317
DO - 10.30842/alp2306573715317
M3 - Article
VL - 3
SP - 425
EP - 445
JO - Acta Linguistica Petropolitana
JF - Acta Linguistica Petropolitana
SN - 2306-5737
IS - 15
ER -
ID: 51341330