Venetic language
Venetic is an extinct Indo-European language, usually classified into the Italic subgroup, that was spoken by the Veneti people in ancient times in northeast Italy (Veneto and Friuli) and part of modern Slovenia, between the Po River delta and the southern fringe of the Alps.[2][1][3]
Venetic | |
---|---|
Native to | Italy |
Region | Veneto |
Ethnicity | Adriatic Veneti |
Era | attested 6th–1st century BCE[1] |
Indo-European
| |
Old Italic (Venetic alphabet) | |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 | xve |
xve | |
Glottolog | vene1257 |
The language is attested by over 300 short inscriptions dating from the 6th to the 1st century BCE. Its speakers are identified with the ancient people called Veneti by the Romans and Enetoi by the Greeks. It became extinct around the 1st century when the local inhabitants assimilated into the Roman sphere. Inscriptions dedicating offerings to Reitia are one of the chief sources of knowledge of the Venetic language.[4]
Linguistic classification
Venetic is a centum language. The inscriptions use a variety of the Northern Italic alphabet, similar to the Etruscan alphabet.
The exact relationship of Venetic to other Indo-European languages is still being investigated, but the majority of scholars agree that Venetic, aside from Liburnian, shared some similarities with the Italic languages and so is sometimes classified as Italic. However, since it also shared similarities with other Western Indo-European branches (particularly Celtic languages and Germanic languages), some linguists prefer to consider it an independent Indo-European language. Venetic may also have been related to the Illyrian languages once spoken in the western Balkans, though the theory that Illyrian and Venetic were closely related is debated by current scholarship.
While some scholars consider Venetic plainly an Italic language, more closely related to the Osco-Umbrian languages than to Latin, many authorities suggest, in view of the divergent verbal system, that Venetic was not part of Italic proper, but split off from the core of Italic early.[5]
Recent research has concluded that Venetic was a relatively archaic language significantly similar to Celtic, on the basis of morphology, while it occupied an intermediate position between Celtic and Italic, on the basis phonology. However these phonological similarities may have arisen as an areal phenomenon.[6] Phonological similarities to Rhaetian have also been pointed out.[7]
Fate
During the period of Latin-Venetic bilingual inscriptions in the Roman script, i.e. 150–50 BCE, Venetic became flooded with Latin loanwords. The shift from Venetic to Latin resulting in language death is thought by scholarship to have already been well under way by that time.[8]
Features
Venetic had about six, possibly seven, noun cases and four conjugations (similar to Latin). About 60 words are known, but some were borrowed from Latin (liber.tos. < libertus) or Etruscan. Many of them show a clear Indo-European origin, such as vhraterei < PIE *bʰréh₂trey = to the brother.
Phonology
In Venetic, PIE stops *bʰ, *dʰ and *gʰ developed to /f/, /f/ and /h/, respectively, in word-initial position (as in Latin and Osco-Umbrian), but to /b/, /d/ and /g/, respectively, in word-internal intervowel position (as in Latin). For Venetic, at least the developments of *bʰ and *dʰ are clearly attested. Faliscan and Osco-Umbrian have /f/, /f/ and /h/ internally as well.
There are also indications of the developments of PIE *kʷ > kv, *gʷ- > w- and PIE *gʷʰ- > f- in Venetic, the latter two being parallel to Latin; as well as the regressive assimilation of the PIE sequence *p...kʷ... > *kʷ...kʷ..., a feature also found in Italic and Celtic.[9]:p.141
Language sample
A sample inscription in Venetic, found on a bronze nail at Este (Es 45):[2]:
Venetic Mego donasto śainatei Reitiiai porai Egeotora Aimoi ke louderobos Latin (literal) Me donavit sanatrici Reitiae bonae Egetora [pro] Aemo liberis-que English Egetora gave me to Good Reitia the Healer on behalf of Aemus and the children
Another inscription, found on a situla (vessel such as an urn or bucket) at Cadore (Ca 4 Valle):[2]:
Venetic eik Goltanos doto louderai Kanei Latin (literal) hoc Goltanus dedit liberae Cani English Goltanus sacrificed this for the free Kanis
Scholarship
The most prominent scholars who have deciphered Venetic inscriptions or otherwise contributed to the knowledge of the Venetic language are Pauli,[10] Krahe,[11] Pellegrini,[2] Prosdocimi,[2][12][13] and Lejeune.[9] Recent contributors include Capuis[14] and Bianchi.[15]
See also
References
- Wallace, Rex (2004). "Venetic". In Woodard, Roger D. (ed.). The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World’s Ancient Languages. University of Cambridge. pp. 840–856. ISBN 0-521-56256-2.
- Pellegrini, Giovanni Battista; Prosdocimi, Aldo Luigi (1967). La Lingua Venetica: I – Le iscrizioni; II – Studi. Padova: Istituto di glottologia dell'Università di Padova.
- Wilkes, J.J. (9 January 1996). The Illyrians (1st ed.). Wiley-Blackwell. p. 77. ISBN 0-631-19807-5 – via Google Books.
- The Ancient Languages of Europe. Cambridge e‑Books.
- de Melo, Wolfgang David Cirilo (2007). "The sigmatic future and the genetic affiliation of Venetic: Latin faxō "I shall make" and Venetic vha.g.s. to "he made"". Transactions of the Philological Society. 105 (105): 1–21. doi:10.1111/j.1467-968X.2007.00172.x.
- Gvozdanović, Jadranka (2012). "On the linguistic classification of Venetic" (PDF). Journal of Language Relationship [Вопросы языкового родства]. 7: 33–46. doi:10.31826/jlr-2012-070107. S2CID 212688857.
- Silvestri, M.; Tomezzoli, G. (2007). Linguistic distances between Rhaetian, Venetic, Latin, and Slovenian languages (PDF). Int'l Topical Conf. Origin of Europeans. pp. 184–190.
- Woodard, Roger D., ed. (2008). The ancient languages of Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 139.
- Lejeune, Michel (1974). Manuel de la langue vénète. Heidelberg: Carl Winter – Universitätsverlag.
- Pauli, Carl Eugen (1885–1894). Altitalische Forschungen. Leipzig: J.A. Barth.
- Krahe, Hans (1954). Sprache und Vorzeit: europäische Vorgeschichte nach dem Zeugnis der Sprache (in German). Heidelberg: Quelle & Meyer.
- Prosdocimi, Aldo Luigi (2002). Veneti, Eneti, Euganei, Ateste.
- Prosdocimi, Aldo Luigi (2002). "Trasmissioni alfabetiche e insegnamento della scrittura". AKEO. I Tempi della Scrittura. Veneti Antichi: Alfabeti e Documenti. Montebelluna: 25–38. (Catalogue of an exposition at Montebelluna, 12/2001–05/2002)
- Capuis, Loredana. "Selected bibliography". Archived from the original on 2005-08-06.
- Bianchi, Anna Maria Chieco; et al. (1988). Italia: omnium terrarum alumna: la civiltà dei Veneti, Reti, Liguri, Celti, Piceni, Umbri, Latini, Campani e Iapigi (in Italian). Milano: Scheiwiller.
Further reading
- Beeler, Madison Scott (1949). The Venetic Language. Berkeley, CA: Univ. of California Press. (archive.org)
- Gambacurta, Giovanna (2013). "I Celti e il Veneto". Etudes Celtiques. 39: 31–40. doi:10.3406/ecelt.2013.2396.
- Gérard, Raphaël (2001). "Observations sur les inscriptions vénètes de Pannonie". Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire. Antiquité – Oudheid. 79 (1): 39–56. doi:10.3406/rbph.2001.4506.
- Marinetti, Anna (2020). "Venetico". Palaeohispanica: Revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua (20): 367–401. doi:10.36707/palaeohispanica.v0i20.374. ISSN 1578-5386.
- Prósper, Blanca Maria (Spring–Summer 2018). "The Venetic inscription from Monte Manicola and three termini publici from Padua: A reappraisal". Journal of Indo-European Studies (JIES). 46 (1–2): 1–61.CS1 maint: date format (link)
- Šavli, Jožef; Bor, Matej; Tomažič, Ivan; Škerbinc, Anton (1996). Veneti: First builders of European community: Tracing the history and language of early ancestors of Slovenes. Wien: Editiones Veneti.
External links
Library resources about Venetic language |
- "Víteliú". The Languages of Ancient Italy.
- Zavaroni, Adolfo. "Venetic inscriptions".
- Babaev, Cyril. "Indo-European database: The Venetic language". Archived from the original on 2005-04-05.
- "Additional reading". Encyclopædia Britannica. Italic languages. Archived from the original on 2008-08-27.