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Ancient Greek dialects

Ancient Greek in classical antiquity, before the development of the common Koine Greek of the Hellenistic period, was divided into several varieties.

Distribution of Greek dialects in Greece in the classical period.[1]
Distribution of Greek dialects in Magna Graecia (Southern Italy and Sicily) in the classical period.

Most of these varieties are known only from inscriptions, but a few of them, principally Aeolic, Doric, and Ionic, are also represented in the literary canon alongside the dominant Attic form of literary Greek.

Likewise, Modern Greek is divided into several dialects, most derived from Koine Greek.

Provenance edit

  • The earliest known Greek dialect is Mycenaean Greek, the South/Eastern Greek variety attested from the Linear B tablets produced by the Mycenaean civilization of the Late Bronze Age in the late 2nd millennium BC. The classical distribution of dialects was brought about by the migrations of the early Iron Age[note 1] after the collapse of the Mycenaean civilization. Some speakers of Mycenaean were displaced to Cyprus while others remained inland in Arcadia, giving rise to the Arcadocypriot dialect. This is the only dialect with a known Bronze-Age precedent. The other dialects must have preceded their attested forms but the relationship of the precedents to Mycenaean remains to be discovered.
  • Aeolic was spoken in three subdialects: one, Lesbian, on the island of Lesbos and the west coast of Asia Minor north of Smyrna. The other two, Boeotian and Thessalian, were spoken in the northeast of the Greek mainland (in Boeotia and Thessalia).
  • Doric Greek spread from a probable location in northwestern Greece to the coast of the Peloponnesus; for example, to Sparta, to Crete and to the southernmost parts of the west coast of Asia Minor. Northwest Greek is sometimes classified as a separate dialect, and is sometimes subsumed under Doric. Macedonian is regarded by most scholars as another Greek dialect, possibly related to Doric or NW Greek.[2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9]
  • Ionic was mostly spoken along the west coast of Asia Minor, including Smyrna and the area to the south of it, but also in Euboea. Homer's Iliad and Odyssey were written in Homeric Greek (or Epic Greek), an early East Greek blending Ionic and Aeolic features. Attic Greek, a sub- or sister-dialect of Ionic, was for centuries the language of Athens. Because Attic was adopted in Macedon before the conquests of Alexander the Great and the subsequent rise of Hellenism, it became the "standard" dialect that evolved into the Koiné.

Literature edit

Ancient Greek literature is written in literary dialects that developed from particular regional or archaic dialects. Ancient Greek authors did not necessarily write in their native dialect, but rather chose a dialect that was suitable or traditional for the type of literature they were writing (see belles-lettres).[10][11] All dialects have poetry written in them, but only Attic and Ionic have full works of prose attested.

Homeric Greek is used in the first epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey, and the Homeric Hymns, traditionally attributed to Homer and written in dactylic hexameter. Homeric is a literary dialect with elements of Ionic, Aeolic and Arcadocypriot. Hesiod uses a similar dialect, and later writers imitate Homer in their epics, such as Apollonius Rhodius in Argonautica and Nonnus in Dionysiaca.[12] Homer influenced other types of poetry as well.

Ionic proper is first used in Archilochus of Paros. This dialect includes also the earliest Greek prose, that of Heraclitus and Ionic philosophers, Hecataeus and logographers, Herodotus, Democritus, and Hippocrates. Elegiac poetry originated in Ionia and always continued to be written in Ionic.[13][14]

Doric is the conventional dialect of choral lyric poetry, which includes the Laconian Alcman, the Theban Pindar and the choral songs of Attic tragedy (stasima). Several lyric and epigrammatic poets wrote in this dialect, such as Ibycus of Rhegium and Leonidas of Tarentum. The following authors wrote in Doric, preserved in fragments: Epicharmus comic poet and writers of South Italian Comedy (phlyax play), Mithaecus food writer and Archimedes.

Aeolic is an exclusively poetic lyric dialect, represented by Sappho and Alcaeus for Lesbian (Aeolic) and Corinna of Tanagra for Boeotian.

Thessalic (Aeolic), Northwest Doric, Arcadocypriot, and Pamphylian never became literary dialects and are only known from inscriptions, and to some extent by the comical parodies of Aristophanes and lexicographers.

Attic proper was used by the Attic orators, Lysias, Isocrates, Aeschines and Demosthenes, the philosophers Plato and Aristotle and the historian Xenophon. Thucydides wrote in Old Attic. The tragic playwrights Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides wrote in an artificial poetic language,[15] and the comic playwright Aristophanes wrote in a language with vernacular elements.

Classification edit

Ancient classification edit

The ancients classified the language into three gene or four dialects: Ionic proper, Ionic (Attic), Aeolic, Doric and later a fifth one, Koine.[16][17] Grammarians focus mainly on the literary dialects and isolated words. Historians may classify dialects on mythological/historical reasons rather than linguistic knowledge. According to Strabo, "Ionic is the same as Attic and Aeolic the same as Doric – Outside the Isthmus, all Greeks were Aeolians except the Athenians, the Megarians and the Dorians who live about Parnassus – In the Peloponnese, Achaeans were also Aeolians but only Eleans and Arcadians continued to speak Aeolic".[18] However, for most ancients, Aeolic was synonymous with literary Lesbic.[19] Stephanus of Byzantium characterized Boeotian as Aeolic and Aetolian as Doric.[20] Remarkable is the ignorance of sources, except lexicographers, on Arcadian, Cypriot and Pamphylian.

Finally, unlike Modern Greek[21] and English, Ancient Greek common terms for human speech ( 'glôssa',[22] 'dialektos',[23] 'phônê'[24] and the suffix '-isti' ) may be attributed interchangeably to both a dialect and a language. However, the plural 'dialektoi' is used when dialects and peculiar words are compared and listed by the grammarians under the terms 'lexeis'[25] or 'glôssai'.[26]

Modern classification edit

The dialects of Classical Antiquity are grouped slightly differently by various authorities. Pamphylian is a marginal dialect of Asia Minor and is sometimes left uncategorized. Mycenaean was deciphered only in 1952 and so is missing from the earlier schemes presented here:

Northwestern, Southeastern Ernst Risch, Museum Helveticum (1955): Alfred Heubeck:
Western,
Central,
Eastern
A. Thumb, E. Kieckers,
Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte (1932):
W. Porzig, Die Gliederung des indogermanischen Sprachgebiets (1954):
East Greek
West Greek
C.D. Buck, The Greek Dialects (1955):[note 2]
  • East Greek
  • West Greek
    • The North-West Greek Group
      • Phocian (including Delphian)
      • Locrian
      • Elean
      • The Northwest Greek koine
    • The Doric Group
      • Laconian and Heraclean
      • Messenian
      • Megarian
      • Corinthian
      • Argolic
      • Rhodian
      • Coan
      • Theran and Cyrenaean
      • Cretan
      • Sicilian Doric

A historical overview of how the dialects were classified in different points in time can be found in Van Rooy (2020).[27]

Phonology edit

The Ancient Greek dialects differed mainly in vowels.

Hiatus edit

Loss of intervocalic s and consonantal i and w from Proto-Greek brought two vowels together in hiatus, a circumstance often called a "collision of vowels".[note 3] Over time, Greek speakers would change pronunciation to avoid such a collision, and the way that vowels changed determined the dialect.

For example, the word for the "god of the sea" (regardless of the culture and language from which it came) was in some prehistoric form *poseidāwōn (genitive *poseidāwonos). Loss of the intervocalic *w left poseidāōn, which is seen in both Mycenaean and Homeric dialects. Ionic Greek changed the *a to an e (poseideōn), while Attic Greek contracted it to poseidōn. It changed differently in other dialects:[citation needed]

  • Corinthian: potedāwoni > potedāni and potedān
  • Boeotian: poteidāoni
  • Cretan, Rhodian and Delphian: poteidān
  • Lesbian: poseidān
  • Arcadian: posoidānos
  • Laconian: pohoidān

The changes appear designed to place one vowel phoneme instead of two, a process called "contraction", if a third phoneme is created, and "hyphaeresis" ("taking away") if one phoneme is dropped and the other kept. Sometimes, the two phonemes are kept, sometimes modified, as in the Ionic poseideōn.

Ā edit

A vowel shift differentiating the Ionic and Attic dialects from the rest was the shift of ā () to ē (η). In Ionic, the change occurred in all positions, but in Attic, it occurred almost everywhere except after e, i, and r (ε, ι, ρ). Homeric Greek shows the Ionic rather than the Attic version of the vowel shift for the most part. Doric and Aeolic show the original forms with ā ().[28]

  • Attic and Ionic mḗtēr (μήτηρ); Doric mā́tēr (μᾱ́τηρ) "mother"[29] (compare Latin māter)
  • Attic neāníās (νεᾱνίᾱς); Ionic neēníēs (νεηνίης) "young man"[30]

Ablaut edit

Another principle of vocalic dialectization follows the Indo-European ablaut series or vowel grades. The Proto-Indo-European language could interchange e (e-grade) with o (o-grade) or use neither (zero-grade). Similarly, Greek inherited the series, for example, ei, oi, i, which are e-, o- and zero-grades of the diphthong respectively. They could appear in different verb forms – present leípō (λείπω) "I leave", perfect léloipa (λέλοιπα) "I have left", aorist élipon (ἔλιπον) "I left" – or be used as the basis of dialectization: Attic deíknȳmi (δείκνῡμι) "I point out" but Cretan díknūmi (δίκνῡμι).

Post-Hellenistic edit

The ancient Greek dialects were a result of isolation and poor communication between communities living in broken terrain. All general Greek historians point out the influence of terrain on the development of the city-states. Often, the development of languages dialectization results in the dissimilation of daughter languages. That phase did not occur in Greek; instead the dialects were replaced by Standard Greek.

Increasing population and communication brought speakers more closely in touch and united them under the same authorities. Attic Greek became the literary language everywhere. Buck says:[31]

"… long after Attic had become the norm of literary prose, each state employed its own dialect, both in private and public monuments of internal concern, and in those of a more… interstate character, such as… treaties…."

In the last few centuries BC, regional dialects replaced local ones: Northwest Greek koine, Doric koine and Attic koine. The last came to replace the others in common speech in the first few centuries AD. After the division of the Roman Empire the earliest Modern Greek prevailed, although a version of Attic Greek was still exclusively taught in schools and served as the official language of the state until the early 20th century.[32] The dialect distribution was then as follows:

According to some scholars, Tsakonian is the only modern Greek dialect that descends from Doric, albeit with some influence from the Koine.[33] Others include the Southern Italian dialects in this group, though perhaps they should rather be regarded as descended from the local Doric-influenced variant of the Koine.[34]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Sometimes called the Greek Dark Ages because writing disappeared from Greece until the adaptation of the Phoenician alphabet.
  2. ^ First published in 1928, it was revised and expanded by Buck and republished in 1955, the year of his death. Of the new edition Buck said (Preface): this is virtually a new book." There have been other impressions, but no further changes to the text. The 1955 edition was at the time and to some degree still is the standard text on the subject in the United States. This part of the table is based on the Introduction to the 1955 edition. An example of a modern use of this classification can be found at columbia.edu as Richard C. Carrier's The Major Greek Dialects October 6, 2006, at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Two vowels together are not to be confused with a diphthong, which is two vowel sounds within the same syllable, often spelled with two letters. Greek diphthongs were typically inherited from Proto-Indo-European.

References edit

  1. ^ Roger D. Woodard (2008), "Greek dialects", in: The Ancient Languages of Europe, ed. R. D. Woodard, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, p. 51.
  2. ^ Masson, Olivier (2003) [1996]. "[Ancient] Macedonian language". In Hornblower, S.; Spawforth A. (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (revised 3rd ed.). USA: Oxford University Press. pp. 905–906. ISBN 0-19-860641-9.
  3. ^ Hammond, N.G.L (1993) [1989]. The Macedonian State. Origins, Institutions and History (reprint ed.). USA: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814927-1.
  4. ^ Meier-Brügger, Michael; Fritz, Matthias; Mayrhofer, Manfred (2003). Indo-European Linguistics. Walter de Gruyter. p. 28. ISBN 978-3-11-017433-5.
  5. ^ Roisman, Worthington, 2010, "A Companion to Ancient Macedonia", Chapter 5: Johannes Engels, "Macedonians and Greeks", p. 95: "This (i.e. Pella curse tablet) has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north-western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect".
  6. ^ "[W]e may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North-West Greek.", Olivier Masson, French linguist, “Oxford Classical Dictionary: Macedonian Language”, 1996.
  7. ^ Masson & Dubois 2000, p. 292: "..."Macedonian Language" de l'Oxford Classical Dictionary, 1996, p. 906: "Macedonian may be seen as a Greek dialect, characterized by its marginal position and by local pronunciation (like Βερενίκα for Φερενίκα etc.)."
  8. ^ Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2017). "Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect: Consolidation and New Perspectives". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 299. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  9. ^ Crespo, Emilio (2017). "The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect". In Giannakis, Georgios K.; Crespo, Emilio; Filos, Panagiotis (eds.). Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects: From Central Greece to the Black Sea. Walter de Gruyter. p. 329. ISBN 978-3-11-053081-0.
  10. ^ Greek mythology and poetics By Gregory Nagy. Page 51] ISBN 978-0-8014-8048-5 (1992)
  11. ^ Sihler, Andrew Littleton (1995). New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin. New York, Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 10–12. ISBN 0-19-508345-8.
  12. ^ Homer and the epic: a shortened version of The songs of Homer By Geoffrey Stephen Kirk Page 76 (1965)
  13. ^ A History of Greek Literature: From the Earliest Period to the Death of Demosthenes by Frank Byron Jevons (1894) Page 112
  14. ^ A History of Classical Greek Literature: Volume 2. The Prose Writers (Paperback) by John Pentland Mahaffy Page 194 ISBN 1-4021-7041-6
  15. ^ Euripides (2008). Allan, William (ed.). Helen. Cambridge University Press. p. 43. ISBN 978-0-521-54541-9.
  16. ^ New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity: Volume 5, Linguistic Essays With Cumulative Indexes to Vols. 1–5 Page 30 ISBN 0-8028-4517-7 (2001)
  17. ^ History Of The Language Sciences By Sylvain Auroux Page 440 ISBN 3-11-016736-0 (2000)
  18. ^ Strabo 8.1.2 14.5.26
  19. ^ Mendez Dosuna, The Aeolic dialects[full citation needed]
  20. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnika s.v. Ionia
  21. ^ glossa: language, dialektos: dialect, foní : voice
  22. ^ LSJ glôssa December 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  23. ^ LSJ:dialektos December 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ LSJ phônê December 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  25. ^ LSJ lexis December 2, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
  26. ^ Ataktoi Glôssai (Disorderly Words) by Philitas of Cos
  27. ^ Van Rooy R (2020). Greece's labyrinth of language (pdf). Berlin: Language Science Press. doi:10.5281/zenodo.3478142. ISBN 978-3-96110-211-2.
  28. ^ Smyth, Greek Grammar, paragraph 30 on CCEL: vowel change involving ē, ā
  29. ^ μήτηρ
  30. ^ νεᾱνίας
  31. ^ Greek Dialects[page needed]
  32. ^ Mackridge, Peter. (2009). Language and national identity in Greece, 1766–1976. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-921442-6. OCLC 244417437.
  33. ^ Medieval and modern Greek By Robert Browning Page 124 ISBN 0-521-29978-0 (1983)
  34. ^ Browning, ibid.

Sources edit

  • Masson, Olivier; Dubois, Laurent (2000). Onomastica Graeca Selecta. Geneva, Switzerland: Librairie Droz. ISBN 2-600-00435-1.

Further reading edit

  • Bakker, Egbert J., ed. 2010. A companion to the Ancient Greek language. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Beek, Lucien van [nl]. The Reflexes of Syllabic Liquids in Ancient Greek: Linguistic Prehistory of the Greek Dialects and Homeric Kunstsprache. Brill, 2022. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1163/j.ctv29sfq2v.
  • Blažek, Václav. "Glottochronological analysis of the Greek lexicon: Modern, Tsakonian, Old and Mycenaean Greek". In: Graeco-Latina Brunensia. 2010, vol. 15, iss. 1, pp. [17]-35. ISSN 1803-7402; ISSN 2336-4424.
  • Buck, Carl Darling (2001). The Greek Dialects. London: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 1853995568.
  • Christidis, Anastasios-Phoivos, ed. 2007. A history of Ancient Greek: From the beginnings to Late Antiquity. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.
  • Colvin, Stephen C. 2007. A historical Greek reader: Mycenaean to the koiné. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Horrocks, Geoffrey. 2010. Greek: A history of the language and its speakers. 2nd ed. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Mouzala, Melina G. (2023). Ancient Greek dialect and its reception. Berlin: De Gruyter. ISBN 9783110744064.
  • Palmer, Leonard R. 1980. The Greek language. London: Faber & Faber.
  • Skelton, Christina Michelle. "Borrowing, Character Weighting, and Preliminary Cluster Analysis in a Phylogenetic Analysis of the Ancient Greek Dialects". In: Indo-European Linguistics 3, 1 (2015): 84–117. doi: https://doi.org/10.1163/22125892-00301003

Overviews edit

  • Griechische Dialekte und ihre Verteilung, Titus site, in German. List, map, table of features.
  • Dialects of Greek, Kelley L. Ross. Map and brief description.
  • Excerpts from Margalit Finkelburg, "Greeks and Pre-Greeks: Aegean Prehistory and Greek Heroic Tradition" (PDF). (162 KiB). One of the topics is the origin of the dialects.

Inscriptions edit

  • Searchable Greek Inscriptions. A considerable corpus of ancient Greek inscriptions in various dialects published by The Packard Humanities Institute.
  • , Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents site.

ancient, greek, dialects, ancient, greek, classical, antiquity, before, development, common, koine, greek, hellenistic, period, divided, into, several, varieties, distribution, greek, dialects, greece, classical, period, western, group, doric, proper, northwes. Ancient Greek in classical antiquity before the development of the common Koine Greek of the Hellenistic period was divided into several varieties Distribution of Greek dialects in Greece in the classical period 1 Western group Doric proper Northwest Doric Achaean Doric probably Northwest Doric Central group Aeolic Arcado Cypriot Eastern group Attic IonicDistribution of Greek dialects in Magna Graecia Southern Italy and Sicily in the classical period Western group Doric proper Northwest Doric Achaean Doric probably Northwest Doric Eastern group Attic Ionic Most of these varieties are known only from inscriptions but a few of them principally Aeolic Doric and Ionic are also represented in the literary canon alongside the dominant Attic form of literary Greek Likewise Modern Greek is divided into several dialects most derived from Koine Greek Contents 1 Provenance 2 Literature 3 Classification 3 1 Ancient classification 3 2 Modern classification 4 Phonology 4 1 Hiatus 4 2 A 4 3 Ablaut 5 Post Hellenistic 6 Notes 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 Further reading 8 1 Overviews 8 2 InscriptionsProvenance editThe earliest known Greek dialect is Mycenaean Greek the South Eastern Greek variety attested from the Linear B tablets produced by the Mycenaean civilization of the Late Bronze Age in the late 2nd millennium BC The classical distribution of dialects was brought about by the migrations of the early Iron Age note 1 after the collapse of the Mycenaean civilization Some speakers of Mycenaean were displaced to Cyprus while others remained inland in Arcadia giving rise to the Arcadocypriot dialect This is the only dialect with a known Bronze Age precedent The other dialects must have preceded their attested forms but the relationship of the precedents to Mycenaean remains to be discovered Aeolic was spoken in three subdialects one Lesbian on the island of Lesbos and the west coast of Asia Minor north of Smyrna The other two Boeotian and Thessalian were spoken in the northeast of the Greek mainland in Boeotia and Thessalia Doric Greek spread from a probable location in northwestern Greece to the coast of the Peloponnesus for example to Sparta to Crete and to the southernmost parts of the west coast of Asia Minor Northwest Greek is sometimes classified as a separate dialect and is sometimes subsumed under Doric Macedonian is regarded by most scholars as another Greek dialect possibly related to Doric or NW Greek 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Ionic was mostly spoken along the west coast of Asia Minor including Smyrna and the area to the south of it but also in Euboea Homer s Iliad and Odyssey were written in Homeric Greek or Epic Greek an early East Greek blending Ionic and Aeolic features Attic Greek a sub or sister dialect of Ionic was for centuries the language of Athens Because Attic was adopted in Macedon before the conquests of Alexander the Great and the subsequent rise of Hellenism it became the standard dialect that evolved into the Koine Literature editSee also Category Ancient Greek writers by dialect Ancient Greek literature is written in literary dialects that developed from particular regional or archaic dialects Ancient Greek authors did not necessarily write in their native dialect but rather chose a dialect that was suitable or traditional for the type of literature they were writing see belles lettres 10 11 All dialects have poetry written in them but only Attic and Ionic have full works of prose attested Homeric Greek is used in the first epic poems the Iliad and the Odyssey and the Homeric Hymns traditionally attributed to Homer and written in dactylic hexameter Homeric is a literary dialect with elements of Ionic Aeolic and Arcadocypriot Hesiod uses a similar dialect and later writers imitate Homer in their epics such as Apollonius Rhodius in Argonautica and Nonnus in Dionysiaca 12 Homer influenced other types of poetry as well Ionic proper is first used in Archilochus of Paros This dialect includes also the earliest Greek prose that of Heraclitus and Ionic philosophers Hecataeus and logographers Herodotus Democritus and Hippocrates Elegiac poetry originated in Ionia and always continued to be written in Ionic 13 14 Doric is the conventional dialect of choral lyric poetry which includes the Laconian Alcman the Theban Pindar and the choral songs of Attic tragedy stasima Several lyric and epigrammatic poets wrote in this dialect such as Ibycus of Rhegium and Leonidas of Tarentum The following authors wrote in Doric preserved in fragments Epicharmus comic poet and writers of South Italian Comedy phlyax play Mithaecus food writer and Archimedes Aeolic is an exclusively poetic lyric dialect represented by Sappho and Alcaeus for Lesbian Aeolic and Corinna of Tanagra for Boeotian Thessalic Aeolic Northwest Doric Arcadocypriot and Pamphylian never became literary dialects and are only known from inscriptions and to some extent by the comical parodies of Aristophanes and lexicographers Attic proper was used by the Attic orators Lysias Isocrates Aeschines and Demosthenes the philosophers Plato and Aristotle and the historian Xenophon Thucydides wrote in Old Attic The tragic playwrights Aeschylus Sophocles and Euripides wrote in an artificial poetic language 15 and the comic playwright Aristophanes wrote in a language with vernacular elements Classification editAncient classification edit The ancients classified the language into three gene or four dialects Ionic proper Ionic Attic Aeolic Doric and later a fifth one Koine 16 17 Grammarians focus mainly on the literary dialects and isolated words Historians may classify dialects on mythological historical reasons rather than linguistic knowledge According to Strabo Ionic is the same as Attic and Aeolic the same as Doric Outside the Isthmus all Greeks were Aeolians except the Athenians the Megarians and the Dorians who live about Parnassus In the Peloponnese Achaeans were also Aeolians but only Eleans and Arcadians continued to speak Aeolic 18 However for most ancients Aeolic was synonymous with literary Lesbic 19 Stephanus of Byzantium characterized Boeotian as Aeolic and Aetolian as Doric 20 Remarkable is the ignorance of sources except lexicographers on Arcadian Cypriot and Pamphylian Finally unlike Modern Greek 21 and English Ancient Greek common terms for human speech glossa 22 dialektos 23 phone 24 and the suffix isti may be attributed interchangeably to both a dialect and a language However the plural dialektoi is used when dialects and peculiar words are compared and listed by the grammarians under the terms lexeis 25 or glossai 26 Modern classification edit The dialects of Classical Antiquity are grouped slightly differently by various authorities Pamphylian is a marginal dialect of Asia Minor and is sometimes left uncategorized Mycenaean was deciphered only in 1952 and so is missing from the earlier schemes presented here Northwestern Southeastern Ernst Risch Museum Helveticum 1955 Northern Greek Doric North Western Greek Aeolic Pamphylian Southern Greek Ionic Arcadocypriot Mycenaean Alfred Heubeck Northwestern group Doric North Western Greek Aeolic Ancient Macedonian Southeastern group Ionic Attic ArcadocypriotWestern Central Eastern A Thumb E Kieckers Handbuch der griechischen Dialekte 1932 Western Greek Doric dialects dialect of Achaea dialect of Elis North Western Greek Central Greek Aeolic Boiotic Thessalic Lesbic Arcadocypriot Eastern Greek Ionic Attic Pamphylian W Porzig Die Gliederung des indogermanischen Sprachgebiets 1954 Western Greek North Western Greek Doric Aeolic Eastern Greek Ionic Attic ArcadocypriotEast GreekWest Greek C D Buck The Greek Dialects 1955 note 2 East Greek The Attic Ionic Group Attic Ionic East Ionic Central Ionic West Ionic or Euboean The Arcadocypriot Group Arcadian Cypriot Pamphylian The Aeolic Group Lesbian Thessalian Boeotian West Greek The North West Greek Group Phocian including Delphian Locrian Elean The Northwest Greek koine The Doric Group Laconian and Heraclean Messenian Megarian Corinthian Argolic Rhodian Coan Theran and Cyrenaean Cretan Sicilian DoricA historical overview of how the dialects were classified in different points in time can be found in Van Rooy 2020 27 Phonology editThe Ancient Greek dialects differed mainly in vowels Hiatus edit Loss of intervocalic s and consonantal i and w from Proto Greek brought two vowels together in hiatus a circumstance often called a collision of vowels note 3 Over time Greek speakers would change pronunciation to avoid such a collision and the way that vowels changed determined the dialect For example the word for the god of the sea regardless of the culture and language from which it came was in some prehistoric form poseidawōn genitive poseidawonos Loss of the intervocalic w left poseidaōn which is seen in both Mycenaean and Homeric dialects Ionic Greek changed the a to an e poseideōn while Attic Greek contracted it to poseidōn It changed differently in other dialects citation needed Corinthian potedawoni gt potedani and potedan Boeotian poteidaoni Cretan Rhodian and Delphian poteidan Lesbian poseidan Arcadian posoidanos Laconian pohoidanThe changes appear designed to place one vowel phoneme instead of two a process called contraction if a third phoneme is created and hyphaeresis taking away if one phoneme is dropped and the other kept Sometimes the two phonemes are kept sometimes modified as in the Ionic poseideōn A edit A vowel shift differentiating the Ionic and Attic dialects from the rest was the shift of a ᾱ to e h In Ionic the change occurred in all positions but in Attic it occurred almost everywhere except after e i and r e i r Homeric Greek shows the Ionic rather than the Attic version of the vowel shift for the most part Doric and Aeolic show the original forms with a ᾱ 28 Attic and Ionic mḗter mhthr Doric ma ter mᾱ thr mother 29 compare Latin mater Attic neanias neᾱniᾱs Ionic neenies nehnihs young man 30 Ablaut edit Another principle of vocalic dialectization follows the Indo European ablaut series or vowel grades The Proto Indo European language could interchange e e grade with o o grade or use neither zero grade Similarly Greek inherited the series for example ei oi i which are e o and zero grades of the diphthong respectively They could appear in different verb forms present leipō leipw I leave perfect leloipa leloipa I have left aorist elipon ἔlipon I left or be used as the basis of dialectization Attic deiknȳmi deiknῡmi I point out but Cretan diknumi diknῡmi Post Hellenistic editMain article Varieties of Modern Greek The ancient Greek dialects were a result of isolation and poor communication between communities living in broken terrain All general Greek historians point out the influence of terrain on the development of the city states Often the development of languages dialectization results in the dissimilation of daughter languages That phase did not occur in Greek instead the dialects were replaced by Standard Greek Increasing population and communication brought speakers more closely in touch and united them under the same authorities Attic Greek became the literary language everywhere Buck says 31 long after Attic had become the norm of literary prose each state employed its own dialect both in private and public monuments of internal concern and in those of a more interstate character such as treaties In the last few centuries BC regional dialects replaced local ones Northwest Greek koine Doric koine and Attic koine The last came to replace the others in common speech in the first few centuries AD After the division of the Roman Empire the earliest Modern Greek prevailed although a version of Attic Greek was still exclusively taught in schools and served as the official language of the state until the early 20th century 32 The dialect distribution was then as follows Attic Greek Koine Byzantine Greek language Modern Greek Demotic Greek Katharevousa Yevanic Cypriot Greek Cretan Greek Southern Italian Greek Griko and Calabrian Bovesian retaining some Doric elements Pontic Greek retaining some Ionic elements Cappadocian Greek Romano Greek Doric Greek Doric Koine TsakonianAccording to some scholars Tsakonian is the only modern Greek dialect that descends from Doric albeit with some influence from the Koine 33 Others include the Southern Italian dialects in this group though perhaps they should rather be regarded as descended from the local Doric influenced variant of the Koine 34 Notes edit Sometimes called the Greek Dark Ages because writing disappeared from Greece until the adaptation of the Phoenician alphabet First published in 1928 it was revised and expanded by Buck and republished in 1955 the year of his death Of the new edition Buck said Preface this is virtually a new book There have been other impressions but no further changes to the text The 1955 edition was at the time and to some degree still is the standard text on the subject in the United States This part of the table is based on the Introduction to the 1955 edition An example of a modern use of this classification can be found at columbia edu as Richard C Carrier s The Major Greek Dialects Archived October 6 2006 at the Wayback Machine Two vowels together are not to be confused with a diphthong which is two vowel sounds within the same syllable often spelled with two letters Greek diphthongs were typically inherited from Proto Indo European References edit Roger D Woodard 2008 Greek dialects in The Ancient Languages of Europe ed R D Woodard Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 51 Masson Olivier 2003 1996 Ancient Macedonian language In Hornblower S Spawforth A eds The Oxford Classical Dictionary revised 3rd ed USA Oxford University Press pp 905 906 ISBN 0 19 860641 9 Hammond N G L 1993 1989 The Macedonian State Origins Institutions and History reprint ed USA Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814927 1 Meier Brugger Michael Fritz Matthias Mayrhofer Manfred 2003 Indo European Linguistics Walter de Gruyter p 28 ISBN 978 3 11 017433 5 Roisman Worthington 2010 A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Chapter 5 Johannes Engels Macedonians and Greeks p 95 This i e Pella curse tablet has been judged to be the most important ancient testimony to substantiate that Macedonian was a north western Greek and mainly a Doric dialect W e may tentatively conclude that Macedonian is a dialect related to North West Greek Olivier Masson French linguist Oxford Classical Dictionary Macedonian Language 1996 Masson amp Dubois 2000 p 292 Macedonian Language de l Oxford Classical Dictionary 1996 p 906 Macedonian may be seen as a Greek dialect characterized by its marginal position and by local pronunciation like Berenika for Ferenika etc Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 299 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Crespo Emilio 2017 The Softening of Obstruent Consonants in the Macedonian Dialect In Giannakis Georgios K Crespo Emilio Filos Panagiotis eds Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects From Central Greece to the Black Sea Walter de Gruyter p 329 ISBN 978 3 11 053081 0 Greek mythology and poetics By Gregory Nagy Page 51 ISBN 978 0 8014 8048 5 1992 Sihler Andrew Littleton 1995 New Comparative Grammar of Greek and Latin New York Oxford Oxford University Press pp 10 12 ISBN 0 19 508345 8 Homer and the epic a shortened version of The songs of Homer By Geoffrey Stephen Kirk Page 76 1965 A History of Greek Literature From the Earliest Period to the Death of Demosthenes by Frank Byron Jevons 1894 Page 112 A History of Classical Greek Literature Volume 2 The Prose Writers Paperback by John Pentland Mahaffy Page 194 ISBN 1 4021 7041 6 Euripides 2008 Allan William ed Helen Cambridge University Press p 43 ISBN 978 0 521 54541 9 New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity Volume 5 Linguistic Essays With Cumulative Indexes to Vols 1 5 Page 30 ISBN 0 8028 4517 7 2001 History Of The Language Sciences By Sylvain Auroux Page 440 ISBN 3 11 016736 0 2000 Strabo 8 1 2 14 5 26 Mendez Dosuna The Aeolic dialects full citation needed Stephanus of Byzantium Ethnika s v Ionia glossa language dialektos dialect foni voice LSJ glossa Archived December 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine LSJ dialektos Archived December 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine LSJ phone Archived December 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine LSJ lexis Archived December 2 2009 at the Wayback Machine Ataktoi Glossai Disorderly Words by Philitas of Cos Van Rooy R 2020 Greece s labyrinth of language pdf Berlin Language Science Press doi 10 5281 zenodo 3478142 ISBN 978 3 96110 211 2 Smyth Greek Grammar paragraph 30 on CCEL vowel change involving e a mhthr neᾱnias Greek Dialects page needed Mackridge Peter 2009 Language and national identity in Greece 1766 1976 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 921442 6 OCLC 244417437 Medieval and modern Greek By Robert Browning Page 124 ISBN 0 521 29978 0 1983 Browning ibid Sources edit Masson Olivier Dubois Laurent 2000 Onomastica Graeca Selecta Geneva Switzerland Librairie Droz ISBN 2 600 00435 1 Further reading editBakker Egbert J ed 2010 A companion to the Ancient Greek language Oxford Wiley Blackwell Beek Lucien van nl The Reflexes of Syllabic Liquids in Ancient Greek Linguistic Prehistory of the Greek Dialects and Homeric Kunstsprache Brill 2022 http www jstor org stable 10 1163 j ctv29sfq2v Blazek Vaclav Glottochronological analysis of the Greek lexicon Modern Tsakonian Old and Mycenaean Greek In Graeco Latina Brunensia 2010 vol 15 iss 1 pp 17 35 ISSN 1803 7402 ISSN 2336 4424 Buck Carl Darling 2001 The Greek Dialects London Bristol Classical Press ISBN 1853995568 Christidis Anastasios Phoivos ed 2007 A history of Ancient Greek From the beginnings to Late Antiquity Cambridge UK Cambridge University Press Colvin Stephen C 2007 A historical Greek reader Mycenaean to the koine Oxford Oxford University Press Horrocks Geoffrey 2010 Greek A history of the language and its speakers 2nd ed Oxford Wiley Blackwell Mouzala Melina G 2023 Ancient Greek dialect and its reception Berlin De Gruyter ISBN 9783110744064 Palmer Leonard R 1980 The Greek language London Faber amp Faber Skelton Christina Michelle Borrowing Character Weighting and Preliminary Cluster Analysis in a Phylogenetic Analysis of the Ancient Greek Dialects In Indo European Linguistics 3 1 2015 84 117 doi https doi org 10 1163 22125892 00301003Overviews edit Griechische Dialekte und ihre Verteilung Titus site in German List map table of features Dialects of Greek Kelley L Ross Map and brief description Excerpts from Margalit Finkelburg Greeks and Pre Greeks Aegean Prehistory and Greek Heroic Tradition PDF 162 KiB One of the topics is the origin of the dialects Inscriptions edit Searchable Greek Inscriptions A considerable corpus of ancient Greek inscriptions in various dialects published by The Packard Humanities Institute Inscriptions Listed by Region Centre for the Study of Ancient Documents site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ancient Greek dialects amp oldid 1211319215, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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