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ugaritic [2012/07/12 12:46] – hawkins | ugaritic [2015/01/07 11:02] (current) – [The Writing System] hawkins | ||
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+ | ====== Ugaritic ====== | ||
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Ugarit was located on the Mediterranean coast in what is now modern Syria, almost directly east of the northernmost tip of Cyprus. The ancient site was an important port city that acted as an intermediary between the ancient Near East and the greater Mediterranean world, but despite this the first written records at Ugarit appear only in the middle of the 14th century BC, only about 150 years before the merchant centre was destroyed around 1190 BC. The tablets were found in several contexts, both in palatial and in private archives, giving a clear picture of the lives and activities of the kings and prominent merchant families of the city. The international correspondence also provides evidence for the activities of interregional politics, particularly with Egypt, Hattusha, Mittani and Assyria. | Ugarit was located on the Mediterranean coast in what is now modern Syria, almost directly east of the northernmost tip of Cyprus. The ancient site was an important port city that acted as an intermediary between the ancient Near East and the greater Mediterranean world, but despite this the first written records at Ugarit appear only in the middle of the 14th century BC, only about 150 years before the merchant centre was destroyed around 1190 BC. The tablets were found in several contexts, both in palatial and in private archives, giving a clear picture of the lives and activities of the kings and prominent merchant families of the city. The international correspondence also provides evidence for the activities of interregional politics, particularly with Egypt, Hattusha, Mittani and Assyria. | ||
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+ | ===== The Corpus ===== | ||
The excavations at Ras Shamra, the modern site of ancient Ugarit, have yielded over two thousand texts and fragments bearing the cuneiform script. | The excavations at Ras Shamra, the modern site of ancient Ugarit, have yielded over two thousand texts and fragments bearing the cuneiform script. | ||
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+ | ====== The Writing System ====== | ||
The alphabetic cuneiform writing system invented at Ugarit is written from left to right, like the cuneiform script of Mesopotamia, | The alphabetic cuneiform writing system invented at Ugarit is written from left to right, like the cuneiform script of Mesopotamia, | ||
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͗a b g ḫ d h w z ḥ ṭ y k š l | ͗a b g ḫ d h w z ḥ ṭ y k š l | ||
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- | The last letter, ś, is rare and usually only occurs in loanwords (such as śśw from Indo-European ‘horse’) but can also interchange with s. It has been posited that ś represents s plus long or short /u/, in other words su or sū (Huehnergard 2002, 1). Another theory is that ś represents the evolution of the phoneme s, corresponding to Hebrew samekh, where the former expressed an affricate when the later had become, or was in the process of becoming, a fricative (Pardee 2007, 183; cf. Tropper 1995, 505-528). | + | The last letter, ś, is rare and usually only occurs in loanwords (such as śśw from Indo-European ‘horse’) but can also interchange with s. It has been posited that ś represents s plus long or short /u/, in other words su or sū (Huehnergard 2002, 1). Another theory is that ś represents the evolution of the phoneme s, corresponding to Hebrew samekh, where the former expressed an affricate when the later had become, or was in the process of becoming, a fricative (Pardee 2007, 183; Tropper 1995, 505-528). |
There are three signs that represent the glottal stop, or ‘aleph, | There are three signs that represent the glottal stop, or ‘aleph, | ||
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- | **Selected | + | ===== Bibliography |
Al-Yasin, Izz-al-Din. 1952. //The Lexical Relation between Ugaritic and Arabic//. New York: Shelton College. | Al-Yasin, Izz-al-Din. 1952. //The Lexical Relation between Ugaritic and Arabic//. New York: Shelton College. | ||
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Tropper, J. 1995. “Die letzte Zeichen des ugaritischen Alphabets.” // | Tropper, J. 1995. “Die letzte Zeichen des ugaritischen Alphabets.” // | ||
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+ | Tropper, J. 2000. // | ||
Walker, C.B.F. 1990. " | Walker, C.B.F. 1990. " |