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Carian language edit
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| Carian | ||
|---|---|---|
| Spoken in: | Ancient southwestern Anatolia | |
| Language extinction: | Early CE | |
| Language family: | Anatolian Luwian subgroup Carian |
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| Writing system: | Carian script | |
| Language codes | ||
| ISO 639-1: | None | |
| ISO 639-2: | ine | |
| ISO 639-3: | xcr | |
| Note: This page may contain IPA phonetic symbols in Unicode. | ||
The Carian language was the language of the Carians. It was an Anatolian language, apparently closer to Lycian than to Lydian. Prior to the late 20th century CE the language remained a total mystery even though many characters of the script appeared to be Greek. Using Greek values investigators of the 19th and 20th centuries were unable to make headway and classified the language as non-Indo-European. Speculations multiplied, none very substantial. Progress finally came as a result of rejecting the presumption of Greek values.
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Carian is known from these sources:1
Two features that help identify the language as Anatolian:2
| Greek | Transliterated | Translation |
|---|---|---|
| ἄλα | ala | horse |
| βάνδα | banda | victory |
| γέλα | gela | king |
| γίσσα | gissa | stone |
| σοῦα | soua | tomb |
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The Athenian Bilingual
The Greek is:3
The translation is:
The first line is repeated in Carian:
where san is equivalent to τόδε and evidences the Anatolian language assibilation, parallel to Luwian za-, "this." If śías is not exactly the same as soua it is roughly equivalent.
The Achaean Greeks arriving in small numbers on the coasts of Anatolia in the Late Bronze Age found them occupied by a population that did not speak Greek and were generally involved in political relationships with the Hittite Empire. After the fall of the latter the region became the target of heavy immigration by Ionian and Dorian Greeks who enhanced Greek settlements and founded or refounded major cities. They assumed for purposes of collaboration new regional names based on their previous locations: Ionia, Doris.
The writers born in these new cities reported that the people among whom they had settled, and with whom they had intermarried, were called Carians and spoke a language that was "barbarian", "barbaric" or "barbarian-sounding." No clue has survived from these writings as to what exactly the Greeks might mean by "barbarian." The reportedly Carian names of the Carian cities did not and do not appear to be Greek. Such names as Andanus, Myndus, Bybassia, Larymna, Chysaoris, Alabanda, Plarasa and Iassus were puzzling to the Greeks, some of whom attempted to give etymologies in words they said were Carian. For the most part they still remain a mystery, to be accepted on faith until further evidence turns up.
Writing disappeared in the Greek Dark Ages but no earlier Carian writing has survived. When inscriptions, some bilingual, began to appear in the 7th century BCE it was already some hundreds of years after the city-naming phase. The earlier Carian may not have been exactly the same.
If Carian and Lycian are closely related then the tree model of language development requires a common ancestor language, which is most likely to have been Luwian. It was spoken in the Late Bronze Age mainly in eastern Anatolia, with pockets extending westward reaching the vicinity of Smyrna and Miletus down the Maeander and Cayster River valleys and to a lesser degree south of there; i.e., into Caria and Lycia.
Carian and Lycian therefore did not then exist but were local developments of the Greek Dark Ages. The disappearance of Luwian there coincides with the appearance of the daughter languages; i.e., Luwian was extinguished by cultural evolution rather than by Hellenization. The supposed Carian city names may have been more nearly Luwian or were assigned partly by some Lelege population.
The local development of Carian excludes some other theories as well: it was not widespread in the Aegean, is not related to Etruscan, was not written in any ancient Aegean scripts, and was not a substrate Aegean language. Its occurrence in various places of Classical Greece is due only to the travel habits of Carians, who apparently became co-travellers of the Ionians. The Carian cemetery of Delos probably represents the pirates mentioned in classical texts. The Carians who fought for Troy if they did were not classical Carians any more than the Greeks there were classical Greeks.
Being penetrated by larger numbers of Greeks and under the domination from time to time of the Ionian League Caria eventually Hellenized and Carian became a dead language. The interludes under the Persian Empire perhaps served only to delay the process. Hellenization would lead to the extinction of the Carian language in the first century BCE or early in the Common Era.