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Demotic (Egyptian)

Demotic (from Ancient Greek: δημοτικός dēmotikós, 'popular') is the ancient Egyptian script derived from northern forms of hieratic used in the Nile Delta. The term was first used by the Greek historian Herodotus to distinguish it from hieratic and hieroglyphic scripts. By convention, the word "Demotic" is capitalized in order to distinguish it from demotic Greek.

Demotic
Demotic script on a replica of the Rosetta Stone
Script type
Logographic
Time period
c. 650 BC–5th century AD
DirectionMixed
LanguagesDemotic (Egyptian language)
Related scripts
Parent systems
Child systems
ISO 15924
ISO 15924Egyd (070), ​Egyptian demotic
 This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet (IPA). For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA. For the distinction between [ ], / / and  , see IPA § Brackets and transcription delimiters.

Script Edit

The Demotic script was referred to by the Egyptians as sš/sẖ n šꜥ.t, "document writing," which the second-century scholar Clement of Alexandria called ἐπιστολογραφική, "letter-writing," while early Western scholars, notably Thomas Young, formerly referred to it as "Enchorial Egyptian." The script was used for more than a thousand years, and during that time a number of developmental stages occurred. It is written and read from right to left, while earlier hieroglyphs could be written from top to bottom, left to right, or right to left. Parts of the Demotic Greek Magical Papyri were written with a cypher script.[1]

Early Demotic Edit

Early Demotic (often referred to by the German term Frühdemotisch) developed in Lower Egypt during the later part of the Twenty-fifth Dynasty, particularly found on steles from the Serapeum of Saqqara. It is generally dated between 650 and 400 BC, as most texts written in Early Demotic are dated to the Twenty-sixth Dynasty and the subsequent rule as a satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire, which was known as the Twenty-seventh Dynasty. After the reunification of Egypt under Psamtik I, Demotic replaced Abnormal Hieratic in Upper Egypt, particularly during the reign of Amasis II, when it became the official administrative and legal script. During this period, Demotic was used only for administrative, legal, and commercial texts, while hieroglyphs and hieratic were reserved for religious texts and literature.

Middle (Ptolemaic) Demotic Edit

Middle Demotic (c. 400–30 BC) is the stage of writing used during the Ptolemaic Kingdom. From the 4th century BC onwards, Demotic held a higher status, as may be seen from its increasing use for literary and religious texts. By the end of the 3rd century BC, Koine Greek was more important, as it was the administrative language of the country; Demotic contracts lost most of their legal force unless there was a note in Greek of being registered with the authorities.

Late (Roman) Demotic Edit

From the beginning of Roman rule of Egypt, Demotic was progressively less used in public life. There are, however, a number of literary texts written in Late Demotic (c. 30 BC – 452 AD), especially from the 1st and 2nd centuries AD, though the quantity of all Demotic texts decreased rapidly towards the end of the second century. In contrast to the way Latin eliminated languages in the western part of the Empire, Greek did not replace Demotic entirely.[2] After that, Demotic was only used for a few ostraca, subscriptions to Greek texts, mummy labels, and graffiti. The last dated example of the Demotic script is a graffito on the walls of the temple of Isis at Philae, dated to December 12, 452. The text simply reads "Petise, son of Petosiris"; who Petise was is unknown.[3]

Uniliteral signs and transliteration Edit

Like its hieroglyphic predecessor script, Demotic possessed a set of "uniliteral" or "alphabetical" signs that could be used to represent individual phonemes. These are the most common signs in Demotic, making up between one third and one half of all signs in any given text; foreign words are also almost exclusively written with these signs.[4] Later (Roman Period) texts used these signs even more frequently.[5]

The table below gives a list of such uniliteral signs along with their conventional transcription, their hieroglyphic origin, the Coptic letters derived from them, and notes on usage.[4][5][6]

Transliteration Sign Hieroglyphic origin[6] Coptic descendant Notes
 
Mostly used word-initially, only rarely word-finally.
  Never used word-initially.
ı͗   or   or  
[a] Only used word-initially.
e  
Marks a prothetic ı͗ or word-internal e.
 

[a] Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign.
 
Usually used when stacked under a horizontal sign.
  Usually used when stacked on top of a horizontal sign.
y  
w   or  
Used word-medially and word-finally.
  or  
Used word-initially; consonantal.
 
Used when w is a plural marker or the 3rd person plural suffix pronoun.
b  

Used interchangeably.
 
p   or  
The first form developed from the second and largely supplanted it.
f   or  
ϥ
m   or  
Used interchangeably. The second form developed from the first.
n  

Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign, but never for the preposition n or the genitive particle n.
 
[a] Usually used when stacked above or below another sign.
r  
The normal form of r when it is retained as a consonant and not lost to sound change.
  or  
Used interchangeably to indicate a vowel corresponding to Coptic ⲉ, sometimes resulting from a loss of a consonant such as in the preposition r; also used for prothetic ı͗.
  or  
l  
h  
[a]
  or  
[a] Used interchangeably.
  or  

ϩ, [a]
 
[a], [a]
  or  

 
ϧ Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign.
 
Usually used when stacked above or below another sign.
s  
Most common form when not stacked above or below another sign.
 

Used often in names and Greek loanwords. Never used word-initially in native Egyptian words.
  or  
Usually used when stacked under a horizontal sign.
  Usually used when stacked on top of a horizontal sign.
  or    or   
Used as a pronoun.
š   or  
ϣ, [a] Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign. The second form developed from the first.
 
[a] Used when stacked above or below another sign.
q  
[a]
k  
ϭ Often written below the line.
 
Originally biliteral for kꜣ. In late texts often used as q.
g   or  
[a]
t   or   or  
 

ϯ[b] Less common, except as the verb ḏj ‘to give’.
d  

  or  
Used interchangeably. Marks a word-final t which is actually pronounced, distinguished from the silent t of the feminine suffix.
 
 

Originally the writing of the verb ṯꜣj ‘to take’, sometimes used as a phonogram.
 
[a] Used interchangeably. The cobra form is rare.
 
ϫ, [a]
 
  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Only found in Old Coptic texts.
  2. ^ Alternatively, ϯ may be a ligature of and .[7]

Decipherment Edit

The Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799. It is inscribed with a proclamation, written in three scripts: Egyptian hieroglyphs, Demotic, and the Greek alphabet. There are 32 lines of Demotic, which is the middle of the three scripts on the stone. The Demotic was deciphered before the hieroglyphs, starting with the efforts of Antoine Isaac Silvestre de Sacy. Scholars were eventually able to translate the hieroglyphs by comparing them with the Greek words, which could be readily translated, and fortifying that process by applying knowledge of Coptic (the Coptic language being descended from earlier forms of Egyptian represented in hieroglyphic writing). Egyptologists, linguists and papyrologists who specialize in the study of the Demotic stage of Egyptian script are known as Demotists.

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Hans Dieter Betz (1992). The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation, Including the Demotic Spells, Volume 1. University of Chicago Press.
  2. ^ Haywood, John (2000). Historical atlas of the classical world, 500 BC–AD 600. Barnes & Noble Books. p. 28. ISBN 978-0-7607-1973-2. However, Greek did not take over as completely as Latin did in the west and there remained large communities of Demotic...and Aramaic speakers
  3. ^ Cruz-Uribe, Eugene (2018). "The Last Demotic Inscription". In Donker van Heel, Koenraad; Hoogendijk, Francisca A. J.; Marin, Cary J. (eds.). Hieratic, Demotic, and Greek Studies and Text Editions: Of Making Many Books There Is No End. Festschrift in Honour of Sven P. Vleeming. Leiden. pp. 6–8. ISBN 978-9-0043-4571-3.
  4. ^ a b Clarysse, Willy (1994) Demotic for Papyrologists: A First Acquaintance, pages 96–98.
  5. ^ a b Johnson, Janet H. (1986). Thus Wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy: An Introductory Grammar of Demotic. Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization, No. 45. Chicago: The Oriental Institute. pp. 2–4.
  6. ^ a b The Demotic Palaeographical Database Project, accessed 11 November 2020.
  7. ^ Quack (2017). "How the Coptic Script Came About". Greek Influence on Egyptian-Coptic: Contact-Induced Change in an Ancient African Language. Widmaier Verlag. p. 75. It has normally been claimed that it derives from the form of the infinitive ti in Demotic, but the actual forms do not fit well; and furthermore it is a point of some concern that this sign never turns up in any 'Old Coptic' text (where we always have ⲧⲓ for this sound sequence). For this reason the proposal by Kasser that it is actually a ligature of t and i seems to me quite convincing.

References Edit

  • Betrò, Maria Carmela (1996). Hieroglyphics: The Writings of Ancient Egypt. New York; Milan: Abbeville Press (English); Arnoldo Mondadori (Italian). pp. 34–239. ISBN 978-0-7892-0232-1.
  • Depauw, Mark (1997). A Companion to Demotic Studies. Papyrologica Bruxellensia, No. 28. Bruxelles: Fondation égyptologique reine Élisabeth.
  • Johnson, Janet H. (1986). Thus Wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy: An Introductory Grammar of Demotic. Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization, No. 45. Chicago: The Oriental Institute.

External links Edit

  • Demotic and Abnormal Hieratic Texts
  • Chicago Demotic Dictionary
  • The American Society of Papyrologists
  • Thus Wrote 'Onchsheshonqy: An Introductory Grammar of Demotic by Janet H. Johnson 2013-12-21 at the Wayback Machine
  • Demotische Grammatik by Wilhelm Spiegelberg (in German)
  • Hieratic/Demotic Fonts

demotic, egyptian, this, article, about, egyptian, script, later, phase, egyptian, language, egyptian, language, demotic, demotic, from, ancient, greek, δημοτικός, dēmotikós, popular, ancient, egyptian, script, derived, from, northern, forms, hieratic, used, n. This article is about the Egyptian script For the later phase of the Egyptian language see Egyptian language Demotic Demotic from Ancient Greek dhmotikos demotikos popular is the ancient Egyptian script derived from northern forms of hieratic used in the Nile Delta The term was first used by the Greek historian Herodotus to distinguish it from hieratic and hieroglyphic scripts By convention the word Demotic is capitalized in order to distinguish it from demotic Greek DemoticDemotic script on a replica of the Rosetta StoneScript typeLogographicTime periodc 650 BC 5th century ADDirectionMixedLanguagesDemotic Egyptian language Related scriptsParent systemsEgyptian hieroglyphsHieraticDemoticChild systemsMeroiticCoptic influenced ISO 15924ISO 15924Egyd 070 Egyptian demotic This article contains phonetic transcriptions in the International Phonetic Alphabet IPA For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA For the distinction between and see IPA Brackets and transcription delimiters Contents 1 Script 1 1 Early Demotic 1 2 Middle Ptolemaic Demotic 1 3 Late Roman Demotic 1 4 Uniliteral signs and transliteration 2 Decipherment 3 See also 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksScript EditThe Demotic script was referred to by the Egyptians as ss sẖ n sꜥ t document writing which the second century scholar Clement of Alexandria called ἐpistolografikh letter writing while early Western scholars notably Thomas Young formerly referred to it as Enchorial Egyptian The script was used for more than a thousand years and during that time a number of developmental stages occurred It is written and read from right to left while earlier hieroglyphs could be written from top to bottom left to right or right to left Parts of the Demotic Greek Magical Papyri were written with a cypher script 1 Early Demotic Edit Early Demotic often referred to by the German term Fruhdemotisch developed in Lower Egypt during the later part of the Twenty fifth Dynasty particularly found on steles from the Serapeum of Saqqara It is generally dated between 650 and 400 BC as most texts written in Early Demotic are dated to the Twenty sixth Dynasty and the subsequent rule as a satrapy of the Achaemenid Empire which was known as the Twenty seventh Dynasty After the reunification of Egypt under Psamtik I Demotic replaced Abnormal Hieratic in Upper Egypt particularly during the reign of Amasis II when it became the official administrative and legal script During this period Demotic was used only for administrative legal and commercial texts while hieroglyphs and hieratic were reserved for religious texts and literature Middle Ptolemaic Demotic Edit Middle Demotic c 400 30 BC is the stage of writing used during the Ptolemaic Kingdom From the 4th century BC onwards Demotic held a higher status as may be seen from its increasing use for literary and religious texts By the end of the 3rd century BC Koine Greek was more important as it was the administrative language of the country Demotic contracts lost most of their legal force unless there was a note in Greek of being registered with the authorities Examples of Ptolemaic Demotic nbsp Ostracon with Demotic inscription Ptolemaic Kingdom c 305 30 BC Probably from Thebes It is a prayer to the god Amun to heal a man s blindness nbsp Contract in Demotic writing with signature of a witness on the verso Papyrus Ptolemaic era Late Roman Demotic Edit From the beginning of Roman rule of Egypt Demotic was progressively less used in public life There are however a number of literary texts written in Late Demotic c 30 BC 452 AD especially from the 1st and 2nd centuries AD though the quantity of all Demotic texts decreased rapidly towards the end of the second century In contrast to the way Latin eliminated languages in the western part of the Empire Greek did not replace Demotic entirely 2 After that Demotic was only used for a few ostraca subscriptions to Greek texts mummy labels and graffiti The last dated example of the Demotic script is a graffito on the walls of the temple of Isis at Philae dated to December 12 452 The text simply reads Petise son of Petosiris who Petise was is unknown 3 Uniliteral signs and transliteration Edit Like its hieroglyphic predecessor script Demotic possessed a set of uniliteral or alphabetical signs that could be used to represent individual phonemes These are the most common signs in Demotic making up between one third and one half of all signs in any given text foreign words are also almost exclusively written with these signs 4 Later Roman Period texts used these signs even more frequently 5 The table below gives a list of such uniliteral signs along with their conventional transcription their hieroglyphic origin the Coptic letters derived from them and notes on usage 4 5 6 Transliteration Sign Hieroglyphic origin 6 Coptic descendant Notesꜣ nbsp Mostly used word initially only rarely word finally nbsp Never used word initially i nbsp or nbsp or nbsp ⲳ a Only used word initially e nbsp Marks a prothetic i or word internal e ꜥ nbsp ⲵ a Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign nbsp Usually used when stacked under a horizontal sign nbsp Usually used when stacked on top of a horizontal sign y nbsp w nbsp or nbsp Used word medially and word finally nbsp or nbsp Used word initially consonantal nbsp Used when w is a plural marker or the 3rd person plural suffix pronoun b nbsp Used interchangeably nbsp p nbsp or nbsp The first form developed from the second and largely supplanted it f nbsp or nbsp ϥm nbsp or nbsp Used interchangeably The second form developed from the first n nbsp Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign but never for the preposition n or the genitive particle n nbsp ⲻ a Usually used when stacked above or below another sign r nbsp The normal form of r when it is retained as a consonant and not lost to sound change nbsp or nbsp Used interchangeably to indicate a vowel corresponding to Coptic ⲉ sometimes resulting from a loss of a consonant such as in the preposition r also used for prothetic i nbsp or nbsp l nbsp h nbsp ⳏ a ḥ nbsp or nbsp ⳕ a Used interchangeably nbsp or nbsp ϩ ⳍ a ḫ nbsp ⳓ a ⳋ a h nbsp or nbsp ẖ nbsp ϧ Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign nbsp Usually used when stacked above or below another sign s nbsp Most common form when not stacked above or below another sign nbsp Used often in names and Greek loanwords Never used word initially in native Egyptian words nbsp or nbsp Usually used when stacked under a horizontal sign nbsp Usually used when stacked on top of a horizontal sign nbsp or nbsp nbsp or nbsp nbsp Used as a pronoun s nbsp or nbsp ϣ ⳅ a Usually used when not stacked above or below another sign The second form developed from the first nbsp ⳇ a Used when stacked above or below another sign q nbsp ⲹ a k nbsp ϭ Often written below the line nbsp Originally biliteral for kꜣ In late texts often used as q g nbsp or nbsp ⳛ a t nbsp or nbsp or nbsp nbsp ϯ b Less common except as the verb ḏj to give d nbsp ṱ nbsp or nbsp Used interchangeably Marks a word final t which is actually pronounced distinguished from the silent t of the feminine suffix nbsp ṯ nbsp Originally the writing of the verb ṯꜣj to take sometimes used as a phonogram ḏ nbsp ⳙ a Used interchangeably The cobra form is rare nbsp ϫ ⳗ a nbsp a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Only found in Old Coptic texts Alternatively ϯ may be a ligature of ⲧ and ⲓ 7 Decipherment EditThe Rosetta Stone was discovered in 1799 It is inscribed with a proclamation written in three scripts Egyptian hieroglyphs Demotic and the Greek alphabet There are 32 lines of Demotic which is the middle of the three scripts on the stone The Demotic was deciphered before the hieroglyphs starting with the efforts of Antoine Isaac Silvestre de Sacy Scholars were eventually able to translate the hieroglyphs by comparing them with the Greek words which could be readily translated and fortifying that process by applying knowledge of Coptic the Coptic language being descended from earlier forms of Egyptian represented in hieroglyphic writing Egyptologists linguists and papyrologists who specialize in the study of the Demotic stage of Egyptian script are known as Demotists See also EditTransliteration of Ancient EgyptianNotes Edit Hans Dieter Betz 1992 The Greek Magical Papyri in Translation Including the Demotic Spells Volume 1 University of Chicago Press Haywood John 2000 Historical atlas of the classical world 500 BC AD 600 Barnes amp Noble Books p 28 ISBN 978 0 7607 1973 2 However Greek did not take over as completely as Latin did in the west and there remained large communities of Demotic and Aramaic speakers Cruz Uribe Eugene 2018 The Last Demotic Inscription In Donker van Heel Koenraad Hoogendijk Francisca A J Marin Cary J eds Hieratic Demotic and Greek Studies and Text Editions Of Making Many Books There Is No End Festschrift in Honour of Sven P Vleeming Leiden pp 6 8 ISBN 978 9 0043 4571 3 a b Clarysse Willy 1994 Demotic for Papyrologists A First Acquaintance pages 96 98 a b Johnson Janet H 1986 Thus Wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy An Introductory Grammar of Demotic Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization No 45 Chicago The Oriental Institute pp 2 4 a b The Demotic Palaeographical Database Project accessed 11 November 2020 Quack 2017 How the Coptic Script Came About Greek Influence on Egyptian Coptic Contact Induced Change in an Ancient African Language Widmaier Verlag p 75 It has normally been claimed that it derives from the form of the infinitive ti in Demotic but the actual forms do not fit well and furthermore it is a point of some concern that this sign never turns up in any Old Coptic text where we always have ⲧⲓ for this sound sequence For this reason the proposal by Kasser that it is actually a ligature of t and i seems to me quite convincing References EditBetro Maria Carmela 1996 Hieroglyphics The Writings of Ancient Egypt New York Milan Abbeville Press English Arnoldo Mondadori Italian pp 34 239 ISBN 978 0 7892 0232 1 Depauw Mark 1997 A Companion to Demotic Studies Papyrologica Bruxellensia No 28 Bruxelles Fondation egyptologique reine Elisabeth Johnson Janet H 1986 Thus Wrote ꜥOnchsheshonqy An Introductory Grammar of Demotic Studies in Ancient Oriental Civilization No 45 Chicago The Oriental Institute External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Demotic Demotic and Abnormal Hieratic Texts Chicago Demotic Dictionary The American Society of Papyrologists Directory of Institutions and Scholars Involved in Demotic Studies Thus Wrote Onchsheshonqy An Introductory Grammar of Demotic by Janet H Johnson Archived 2013 12 21 at the Wayback Machine Demotische Grammatik by Wilhelm Spiegelberg in German Hieratic Demotic Fonts Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Demotic Egyptian amp oldid 1173861898, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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