The Pisidian language is a member of the extinct
Anatolian branch of the
Indo-European language family spoken in
Pisidia, a region of ancient
Asia Minor. Known from some fifty short inscriptions from the first to second centuries AD, it appears to be closely related to
Lycian,
Milyan, and
Sidetic.
Sources
Pisidian is known from about fifty funeral inscriptions, most of them from Sofular (classical
Tymbrias). The first were discovered in 1890; five years later sixteen of them were published and analyzed by Scottish archaeologist
William Mitchell Ramsay. The texts are basically of a genealogical character (strings of names) and are usually accompanied by a relief picturing the deceased. Recently inscriptions have also been found at
Selge, Kesme (near
Yeşilbağ), and
Deḡirmenözü. Four inscriptions from the Kesme region seem to offer regular text, not merely names. By far the longest of them consists of thirteen lines.
Pisidian script
Pisidian is written left to right in a script that closely resembles the
Greek alphabet
The Greek alphabet has been used to write the Greek language since the late 9th or early 8th century BC. It was derived from the earlier Phoenician alphabet, and is the earliest known alphabetic script to systematically write vowels as wel ...
. A few letters are missing (phi, chi, psi, and possibly theta), and two others were added (characters F and И, both denoting a /w/- or /v/-sound). In recently discovered inscriptions two new signs 𐋌 and ╪ have turned up; they are rare and it is not clear whether they are variants of other signs or entirely different characters (maybe rare sibilants). Texts are written without word dividers.
A typical example (the accompanying relief shows two men and a veiled woman):
: ΔΩΤΑΡΙΜΟΣΗΤΩΣΕΙΗΔΩΤ / ΡΙΣΔΩΤΑΡΙΕΝΕΙΣ
: Δωταρι Μοσητωσ Ειη Δωτ<α>ρισ Δωταρι Ενεισ
:
'Here lie''''Dotari,''
'son''''of Moseto; Eie''
'daughter''''of Dotari;''
'and''''Dotari''
'son''''of Enei.''
Alternatively, the end of the line may (with a different word division) be read as Δωταριε Νεισ, with dative Dotarie, meaning (...) ''to Dotari''
'the son''''of Nei''. In addition, Ειη may also be a dative (= Ειε-ε). The whole line would then mean:
: ''Dotari,''
'son''''of Moseto,''
'has made this tomb''''for Eie''
'daughter''''of Dotari''
'and''''for Dotari''
'son''''of Enei.''
Grammar
Due to the one-sided character of the inscriptions, little is known about the grammar. Two cases are assured:
nominative
In grammar, the nominative case ( abbreviated ), subjective case, straight case, or upright case is one of the grammatical cases of a noun or other part of speech, which generally marks the subject of a verb, or (in Latin and formal variants of E ...
and
genitive; the presence of a
dative is disputed:
About the verb nothing can be said; Pisidian verbal forms have not yet been found.
Vocabulary
Pisidian personal name Δωτάρι ''Dotari'' may reflect the Indo-European root for "daughter". However, as Dotari is documented as a man's name this etymology is not assured.
See also
*
Sidetic language
References
Bibliography
*
Further reading
* Bean, G. E. “Notes and Inscriptions from Pisidia. Part I”. In: ''Anatolian Studies'' 9 (1959): 67–117. https://doi.org/10.2307/3642333.
* Bean, G. E. “Notes and Inscriptions from Pisidia. Part II”. In: ''Anatolian Studies'' 10 (1960): 43–82. https://doi.org/10.2307/3642429.
* Shafer, Robert. “‘Pisidian’.” In: ''The American Journal of Philology'' 71, no. 3 (1950): 239–70. https://doi.org/10.2307/292155.
External links
Pisidic language Indo-European Database
*
*
Anatolian languages
Extinct languages of Asia
Pisidia
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