Elymian | |
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Region | Sicily |
Extinct | 3rd century BC? |
Language codes | |
ISO 639-3 |
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Linguist list
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xly |
Glottolog | elym1237 |
Elymian is the extinct language of the ancient Elymian people of western Sicily. Its characteristics are little known because of the extremely limited and fragmentary nature of the surviving texts.
The origins of Elymian and its relationships with other languages are unclear. It is widely believed to have been part of the Indo-European language family, but even that is uncertain. Within the Indo-European languages, it has been speculated that Elymian was related to either the Italic languages or the Anatolian languages (such as Hittite), although both theories are disputed.
Only a handful of Elymian texts have survived, dating from between the 6th and 4th Centuries BCE. These comprise: a few proper names recorded by non-Elymian sources; inscriptions in Greek script on several coins, which include the names of Elymian cities; and inscriptions in Greek script on about 170 fragments of pottery (found mostly in a votive deposit at the ruined Elymian city of Segesta). These texts have been identified as Elymian, based on their evidently non-Hellenic characteristics, location and age.
The majority of textual artifacts are very short and fragmentary, comprising only a few letters. A small number of longer texts apparently contain a personal name and may have been dedicatory epigraphs. They sometimes appear to resemble Hellenic dedicatory epigraphs, in which an anthroponym in genitive form is followed by a verb literally meaning "I am" in order to convey "belonging".
A vase found at Montedoro, around 15 km southwest of Palermo, features one of the few complete inscription in Elymian. It has been tentatively translated to read "I [the pot] am [a gift] of Ata Tuka", or "I am [a gift] of Ata of [= son of] Tuka".
Proposed classifications the Elymian language can be summarized under two main positions, both of which relate to Indo-European languages.