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Gaulish

Gaulish was an ancient Celtic language spoken in parts of Continental Europe before and during the period of the Roman Empire. In the narrow sense, Gaulish was the language of the Celts of Gaul (now France, Luxembourg, Belgium, most of Switzerland, Northern Italy, as well as the parts of the Netherlands and Germany on the west bank of the Rhine). In a wider sense, it also comprises varieties of Celtic that were spoken across much of central Europe ("Noric"), parts of the Balkans, and Anatolia ("Galatian"), which are thought to have been closely related.[1][2] The more divergent Lepontic of Northern Italy has also sometimes been subsumed under Gaulish.[3][4]

Gaulish
RegionGaul
EthnicityGauls
Era6th century BC to 6th century AD
Old Italic, Greek, Latin
Language codes
ISO 639-3Variously:
xtg – Transalpine Gaulish
xga – Galatian
xcg – ?Cisalpine Gaulish
xlp – ?Lepontic
xtg Transalpine Gaulish
 xga Galatian
 xcg ?Cisalpine Gaulish
 xlp ?Lepontic
Glottologtran1289  Transalpine–Galatian Celtic
This article contains IPA phonetic symbols. Without proper rendering support, you may see question marks, boxes, or other symbols instead of Unicode characters. For an introductory guide on IPA symbols, see Help:IPA.

Together with Lepontic and the Celtiberian spoken in the Iberian Peninsula, Gaulish helps form the geographic group of Continental Celtic languages. The precise linguistic relationships among them, as well as between them and the modern Insular Celtic languages, are uncertain and a matter of ongoing debate because of their sparse attestation.

Gaulish is found in some 800 (often fragmentary) inscriptions including calendars, pottery accounts, funeral monuments, short dedications to gods, coin inscriptions, statements of ownership, and other texts, possibly curse tablets. Gaulish was first written in Greek script in southern France and in a variety of Old Italic script in northern Italy. After the Roman conquest of those regions, writing shifted to Latin script.[5] During his conquest of Gaul, Caesar reported that the Helvetii were in possession of documents in the Greek script, and all Gaulish coins used the Greek script until about 50 BC.[6]

Gaulish in Western Europe was supplanted by Vulgar Latin[7] and various Germanic languages from around the 5th century AD onward. It is thought to have gone extinct some time around the late 6th century.[8]

Classification

It is estimated that during the Bronze Age, Proto-Celtic started splitting into distinct languages, including Celtiberian and Gaulish.[9] Due to the expansion of Celtic tribes in the 4th and 3rd centuries BC, closely related forms of Celtic came to be spoken in a vast arc extending from Britain and France through the Alpine region and Pannonia in central Europe, and into parts of the Balkans and Anatolia. Their precise linguistic relationships are uncertain due to fragmentary evidence.

The Gaulish varieties of central and eastern Europe and of Anatolia (called Noric and Galatian, respectively) are barely attested, but from what little is known of them it appears that they were quite similar to those of Gaul and can be considered dialects of a single language.[1] Among those regions where substantial inscriptional evidence exists, three varieties are usually distinguished.

  • Lepontic, attested from a small area on the south slopes of the Alps, near the modern Swiss town of Lugano, is the oldest Celtic language known to have been written, with inscriptions in a variant of Old Italic script appearing circa 600 BC. It has been described as either an "early dialect of an outlying form of Gaulish" or a separate Continental Celtic language.[10]
  • Attestations of Gaulish proper in present-day France are called "Transalpine Gaulish". Its written record begins in the 3rd century BC with inscriptions in Greek script, found mainly in the Rhône area of southern France, where Greek cultural influence was present via the colony of Massilia, founded circa 600 BC. After the Roman conquest of Gaul (58–50 BC), the writing of Gaulish shifted to Latin script.
  • Finally, there are a small number of inscriptions from the 2nd and 1st centuries BC in Cisalpine Gaul (northern Italy), which share the same archaic alphabet as the Lepontic inscriptions but are found outside the Lepontic area proper. As they were written after the Gallic conquest of Cisalpine Gaul, they are usually called "Cisalpine Gaulish". They share some linguistic features both with Lepontic and with Transalpine Gaulish; for instance, both Lepontic and Cisalpine Gaulish simplify the consonant clusters -nd- and -χs- to -nn- and -ss- respectively, while both Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaulish replace inherited word-final -m with -n.[11] Scholars have debated to what extent the distinctive features of Lepontic reflect merely its earlier origin or a genuine genealogical split, and to what extent Cisalpine Gaulish should be seen as a continuation of Lepontic or an independent offshoot of mainstream Transalpine Gaulish.

The relationship between Gaulish and the other Celtic languages is also debated. Most scholars today agree that Celtiberian was the first to branch off from other Celtic.[12] Gaulish, situated in the centre of the Celtic language area, shares with the neighboring Brittonic languages of Britain, the change of the Indo-European labialized voiceless velar stop /kʷ/ > /p/, while both Celtiberian in the south and Goidelic in Ireland retain /kʷ/. Taking this as the primary genealogical isogloss, some scholars divide the Celtic languages into a "q-Celtic" group and a "p-Celtic" group, in which the p-Celtic languages Gaulish and Brittonic form a common "Gallo-Brittonic" branch. Other scholars place more emphasis on shared innovations between Brittonic and Goidelic and group these together as an Insular Celtic branch. Sims-Williams (2007) discusses a composite model, in which the Continental and Insular varieties are seen as part of a dialect continuum, with genealogical splits and areal innovations intersecting.[13]

History

Early period

Though Gaulish personal names written by Gauls in Greek script are attested from the region surrounding Massalia by the 3rd century BC, the first true inscriptions in Gaulish appeared in the 2nd century BC.[14][15]

At least 13 references to Gaulish speech and Gaulish writing can be found in Greek and Latin writers of antiquity. The word "Gaulish" (gallicum) as a language term is first explicitly used in the Appendix Vergiliana in a poem referring to Gaulish letters of the alphabet.[16] Julius Caesar says in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico of 58 BC that the Celts/Gauls and their language are separated from the neighboring Aquitani and Belgae by the rivers Garonne and Seine/Marne, respectively.[17] Caesar relates that census accounts written in Greek script were found among the Helvetii.[18] He also notes that as of 53 BC the Gaulish druids used the Greek alphabet for private and public transactions, with the important exception of druidic doctrines, which could only be memorised and were not allowed to be written down.[19] According to the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises, nearly three quarters of Gaulish inscriptions (disregarding coins) are in the Greek alphabet. Later inscriptions dating to Roman Gaul are mostly in Latin alphabet and have been found principally in central France.[20]

Roman period

Latin was quickly adopted by the Gaulish aristocracy after Roman conquest to maintain their elite power and influence,[21] trilingualism in southern Gaul being noted as early as the 1st century BC.[22]

Early references to Gaulish in Gaul tend to be made in the context of problems with Greek or Latin fluency until around 400, whereas after c. 450, Gaulish begins to be mentioned in contexts where Latin has replaced "Gaulish" or "Celtic" (whatever the authors meant by those terms), though at first these only concerned the upper classes. For Galatia (Anatolia), there is no source explicitly indicating a 5th-century language replacement:

  • During the last quarter of the 2nd century, Irenaeus, bishop of Lugdunum (present-day Lyon), apologises for his inadequate Greek, being "resident among the Keltae and accustomed for the most part to use a barbarous dialect".[23]
  • According to the Vita Sancti Symphoriani, Symphorian of Augustodunum (present-day Autun) was executed on 22 August 178 for his Christian faith. While he was being led to his execution, "his venerable mother admonished him from the wall assiduously and notable to all (?), saying in the Gaulish speech: Son, son, Symphorianus, think of your God!" (uenerabilis mater sua de muro sedula et nota illum uoce Gallica monuit dicens: 'nate, nate Synforiane, mentobeto to diuo' [24]). The Gaulish sentence has been transmitted in a corrupt state in the various manuscripts; as it stands, it has been reconstructed by Thurneysen. According to David Stifter (2012), *mentobeto looks like a Proto-Romance verb derived from Latin mens, mentis ‘mind’ and habere ‘to have’, and it cannot be excluded that the whole utterance is an early variant of Romance, or a mixture of Romance and Gaulish, instead of being an instance of pure Gaulish. On the other hand, nate is attested in Gaulish (for example in Endlicher's Glossary[25]), and the author of the Vita Sancti Symphoriani, whether or not fluent in Gaulish, evidently expects a non-Latin language to have been spoken at the time.
  • The Latin author Aulus Gellius (c. 180) mentions Gaulish alongside the Etruscan language in one anecdote, indicating that his listeners had heard of these languages, but would not understand a word of either.[26]
  • The Roman History by Cassius Dio (written AD 207–229) may imply that Cis- and Transalpine Gauls spoke the same language, as can be deduced from the following passages: (1) Book XIII mentions the principle that named tribes have a common government and a common speech, otherwise the population of a region is summarized by a geographic term, as in the case of the Spanish/Iberians.[27] (2) In Books XII and XIV, Gauls between the Pyrenees and the River Po are stated to consider themselves kinsmen.[28][29] (3) In Book XLVI, Cassius Dio explains that the defining difference between Cis- and Transalpine Gauls is the length of hair and the style of clothes (i.e., he does not mention any language difference), the Cisalpine Gauls having adopted shorter hair and the Roman toga at an early date (Gallia Togata).[30] Potentially in contrast, Caesar described the river Rhone as a frontier between the Celts and provincia nostra.[17]
  • In the Digesta XXXII, 11 of Ulpian (AD 222–228) it is decreed that fideicommissa (testamentary provisions) may also be composed in Gaulish.[31]
  • Writing at some point between c. AD 378 and AD 395, Latin poet and scholar Decimus Magnus Ausonius, from Burdigala (now Bordeaux), characterizes his deceased father Iulius' ability to speak Latin as inpromptus, "halting, not fluent"; in Attic Greek, Iulius felt eloquent enough.[32] This remark is sometimes taken as indicating that the first language of Iulius Ausonius (c. AD 290–378) was Gaulish,[33] but may alternatively mean his first language was Greek. As a physician, he would have cultivated Greek as part of his professional proficiency.
  • In the Dialogi de Vita Martini I, 26 by Sulpicius Seuerus (AD 363–425), one of the partners in the dialogue utters the rhetorical commonplace that his deficient Latin might insult the ears of his partners. One of them answers: uel Celtice aut si mauis Gallice loquere dummodo Martinum loquaris ‘speak Celtic or, if you prefer, Gaulish, as long as you speak about Martin’.[34]
  • Saint Jerome (writing in AD 386/387) remarked in a commentary on St. Paul's Epistle to the Galatians that the Belgic Treveri spoke almost the same language as the Galatians, rather than Latin.[35] This agrees with an earlier report in AD180 by Lucian.[36]
  • In an AD 474 letter to his brother-in-law, Sidonius Apollinaris, bishop of Clermont in Auvergne, says that in his younger years, "our nobles... resolved to forsake the barbarous Celtic dialect", evidently in favour of eloquent Latin.[37]

Middle Ages

  • Cassiodorus (ca. 490–585) cites in his book Variae VIII, 12, 7 (dated 526) from a letter to king Athalaric: Romanum denique eloquium non suis regionibus inuenisti et ibi te Tulliana lectio disertum reddidit, ubi quondam Gallica lingua resonauit ‘Finally you found Roman eloquence in regions that were not originally its own; and there the reading of Cicero rendered you eloquent where once the Gaulish language resounded’[38]
  • In the 6th century Cyril of Scythopolis (AD 525–559) tells a story about a Galatian monk who was possessed by an evil spirit and was unable to speak, but if forced to, could speak only in Galatian.[39]
  • Gregory of Tours wrote in the 6th century (c. 560–575) that a shrine in Auvergne which "is called Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue" was destroyed and burnt to the ground.[40] This quote has been held by historical linguistic scholarship to attest that Gaulish was indeed still spoken as late as the mid to late 6th century in France.[8][41]

Final demise

Despite considerable Romanization of the local material culture, the Gaulish language is held to have survived and coexisted with spoken Latin during the centuries of Roman rule of Gaul.[8] The exact time of the final extinction of Gaulish is unknown, but it is estimated to have been about the sixth century AD,[42] after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.[43]

The language shift was uneven in its progress and shaped by sociological factors. Although there was a presence of retired veterans in colonies, these did not significantly alter the linguistic composition of Gaul's population, of which 90% was autochthonous;[44][45] instead, the key Latinizing class was the coopted local elite, who sent their children to Roman schools and administered lands for Rome. In the fifth century, at the time of the Western Roman collapse, the vast majority (non-elite and predominantly rural) of the population remained Gaulish speakers, and acquired Latin as their native speech only after the demise of the Empire, as both they and the new Frankish ruling elite adopted the prestige language of their urban literate elite.[43]

Bonnaud[46] maintains that Latinisation occurred earlier in Provence and in major urban centers, while Gaulish persisted longest, possibly as late as the tenth century[47] with evidence for continued use according to Bonnaud continuing into the ninth century,[48] in Langres and the surrounding regions, the regions between Clermont, Argenton and Bordeaux, and in Armorica. Fleuriot,[49] Falc'hun,[50] and Gvozdanovic[51] likewise maintained a late survival in Armorica and language contact of some form with the ascendant Breton language; however, it has been noted that there is little uncontroversial evidence supporting a relatively late survival specifically in Brittany whereas there is uncontroversial evidence that supports the relatively late survival of Gaulish in the Swiss Alps and in regions in Central Gaul.[52] Drawing from these data, which include the mapping of substrate vocabulary as evidence, Kerkhof argues that we may "tentatively" posit a survival of Gaulish speaking communities in the "at least into the sixth century" in pockets of mountainous regions of the Central Massif, the Jura, and the Swiss Alps.[52]

Corpus

Summary of sources

 
The re-assembled tablet of the Coligny calendar

According to Recueil des inscriptions gauloises, more than 760 Gaulish inscriptions have been found throughout France, with the notable exception of Aquitaine, and in northern Italy.[53] Inscriptions include short dedications, funerary monuments, proprietary statements, and expressions of human sentiments, but also some longer documents of a legal or magical-religious nature,[2] the three longest being the Larzac tablet, the Chamalières tablet and the Lezoux dish. The most famous Gaulish record is the Coligny calendar, a fragmented bronze tablet dating from the 2nd century AD and providing the names of Celtic months over a five-year span; it is a lunisolar calendar trying to synchronize the solar year and the lunar month by inserting a thirteenth month every two and a half years.

Many inscriptions are only a few words (often names) in rote phrases, and many are fragmentary.[54][55] They provide some evidence for morphology and better evidence for personal and mythological names. Occasionally, marked surface clausal configurations provide some evidence of a more formal, or poetic, register. It is clear from the subject matter of the records that the language was in use at all levels of society.

Other sources contribute to knowledge of Gaulish: Greek and Latin authors mention Gaulish words,[20] personal and tribal names,[56] and toponyms. A short Gaulish-Latin vocabulary (about 20 entries headed De nominib[us] Gallicis) called "Endlicher's Glossary", is preserved in a 9th-century manuscript (Öst. Nationalbibliothek, MS 89 fol. 189v).[25]

French has Gaulish loanwords. French now has about 150 to 180 words known to be of Gaulish origin, most of which concern pastoral or daily activity.[57][58] If dialectal and derived words are included, the total is about 400 words. Though overall low, this is still the highest number among the Romance languages.[59][60]

Inscriptions

Gaulish inscriptions are edited in the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises (R.I.G.), in four volumes: [date missing]

The longest known Gaulish text is the Larzac tablet, found in 1983 in l'Hospitalet-du-Larzac, France. It is inscribed in Roman cursive on both sides of two small sheets of lead. Probably a curse tablet (defixio), it clearly mentions relationships between female names, for example aia duxtir adiegias [...] adiega matir aiias (Aia, daughter of Adiega... Adiega, mother of Aia) and seems to contain incantations regarding one Severa Tertionicna and a group of women (often thought to be a rival group of witches), but the exact meaning of the text remains unclear.[62][63]

The Coligny calendar was found in 1897 in Coligny, France, with a statue identified as Mars. The calendar contains Gaulish words but Roman numerals, permitting translations such as lat evidently meaning days, and mid month. Months of 30 days were marked matus, "lucky", months of 29 days anmatus, "unlucky", based on comparison with Middle Welsh mad and anfad, but the meaning could here also be merely descriptive, "complete" and "incomplete".[64]

The pottery at La Graufesenque[65] is our most important source for Gaulish numerals. Potters shared furnaces and kept tallies inscribed in Latin cursive on ceramic plates, referring to kiln loads numbered 1 to 10:

  • 1st cintus, cintuxos (Welsh cynt "before", cyntaf "first", Breton kent "in front" kentañ "first", Cornish kynsa "first", Old Irish céta, Irish céad "first")
  • 2nd allos, alos (W ail, Br eil, OIr aile "other", Ir eile)
  • 3rd tri[tios] (W trydydd, Br trede, OIr treide)
  • 4th petuar[ios] (W pedwerydd, Br pevare)
  • 5th pinpetos (W pumed, Br pempet, OIr cóiced)
  • 6th suexos (possibly mistaken for suextos, but see Rezé inscription below; W chweched, Br c'hwec'hved, OIr seissed)
  • 7th sextametos (W seithfed, Br seizhved, OIr sechtmad)
  • 8th oxtumeto[s] (W wythfed, Br eizhved, OIr ochtmad)
  • 9th namet[os] (W nawfed, Br naved, OIr nómad)
  • 10th decametos, decometos (CIb dekametam, W degfed, Br degvet, OIr dechmad)

The lead inscription from Rezé (dated to the 2nd century, at the mouth of the Loire, 450 kilometres (280 mi) northwest of La Graufesenque) is evidently an account or a calculation and contains quite different ordinals:[66]

  • 3rd trilu
  • 4th paetrute
  • 5th pixte
  • 6th suexxe, etc.

Other Gaulish numerals attested in Latin inscriptions include *petrudecametos "fourteenth" (rendered as petrudecameto, with Latinized dative-ablative singular ending) and *triconts "thirty" (rendered as tricontis, with a Latinized ablative plural ending; compare Irish tríocha). A Latinized phrase for a "ten-night festival of (Apollo) Grannus", decamnoctiacis Granni, is mentioned in a Latin inscription from Limoges. A similar formation is to be found in the Coligny calendar, in which mention is made of a trinox[...] Samoni "three-night (festival?) of (the month of) Samonios". As is to be expected, the ancient Gaulish language was more similar to Latin than modern Celtic languages are to modern Romance languages. The ordinal numerals in Latin are prīmus/prior, secundus/alter (the first form when more than two objects are counted, the second form only when two, alius, like alter means "the other", the former used when more than two and the latter when only two), tertius, quārtus, quīntus, sextus, septimus, octāvus, nōnus, and decimus.

A number of short inscriptions are found on spindle whorls and are among the most recent finds in the Gaulish language. Spindle whorls were apparently given to girls by their suitors and bear such inscriptions as:

  • moni gnatha gabi / buððutton imon (RIG l. 119) "my girl, take my penis(?)[67]"
  • geneta imi / daga uimpi (RIG l. 120) '"I am a young girl, good (and) pretty".

Inscriptions found in Switzerland are rare. The most notable inscription found in Helvetic parts is the Bern zinc tablet, inscribed ΔΟΒΝΟΡΗΔΟ ΓΟΒΑΝΟ ΒΡΕΝΟΔΩΡ ΝΑΝΤΑΡΩΡ (Dobnorēdo gobano brenodōr nantarōr) and apparently dedicated to Gobannus, the Celtic god of metalwork. Furthermore, there is a statue of a seated goddess with a bear, Artio, found in Muri bei Bern, with a Latin inscription DEAE ARTIONI LIVINIA SABILLINA, suggesting a Gaulish Artiū "Bear (goddess)".

Some coins with Gaulish inscriptions in the Greek alphabet have also been found in Switzerland, e.g. RIG IV Nos. 92 (Lingones) and 267 (Leuci). A sword, dating to the La Tène period, was found in Port, near Biel/Bienne, with its blade inscribed with KORICIOC (Korisos), probably the name of the smith.

Phonology

Vowel phonemes of Gaulish
Front Central Back
Close i iː u uː
Mid e eː o oː
Open a aː
  • vowels:
    • short: a, e, i, o, u
    • long: ā, ē, ī, (ō), ū
    • diphthongs: ai, ei, oi, au, eu, ou
Consonant phonemes of Gaulish
  Bilabial Dental
Alveolar
Palatal Velar
Nasals m n
Stops p  b t  d k  ɡ
Affricates ts
Fricatives s x  ɣ1
Approximants j w
Liquids r, l
  1. [x] is an allophone of /k/ before /t/.
  • occlusives:
    • voiceless: p, t, k
    • voiced: b, d, g
  • resonants
    • nasals: m, n
    • liquids r, l
  • sibilant: s
  • affricate: ts
  • semi-vowels: w, y

The diphthongs all transformed over the historical period. Ai and oi changed into long ī and eu merged with ou, both becoming long ō. Ei became long ē. In general, long diphthongs became short diphthongs and then long vowels. Long vowels shortened before nasals in coda.

Other transformations include unstressed i became e, ln became ll, a stop + s became ss, and a nasal + velar became /ŋ/ + velar.

The lenis plosives seem to have been voiceless, unlike in Latin, which distinguished lenis occlusives with a voiced realization from fortis occlusives with a voiceless realization, which caused confusions like Glanum for Clanum, vergobretos for vercobreto, Britannia for Pritannia.[68]

Orthography

 
RIG G-172 Gallo-Greek inscription ϹΕΓΟΜΑΡΟϹ ΟΥΙΛΛΟΝΕΟϹ ΤΟΟΥΤΙΟΥϹ ΝΑΜΑΥϹΑΤΙϹ ΕΙωΡΟΥ ΒΗΛΗϹΑΜΙ ϹΟϹΙΝ ΝΕΜΗΤΟΝ (Segomaros Uilloneos toutius Namausatis eiōru Bēlēsami sosin nemēton) "Segomaros, son of Uillū, citizen[69][70] (toutious) of Namausos, dedicated this sanctuary to Belesama"
 
The name ARAÐÐOVNA on a Gaulish tomb, illustrating the use of the tau gallicum (in this case doubled).
 
Lepontic alphabet

The alphabet of Lugano used in Cisalpine Gaul for Lepontic:

AEIKLMNOPRSTΘVXZ

The alphabet of Lugano does not distinguish voicing in stops: P represents /b/ or /p/, T is for /d/ or /t/, K for /g/ or /k/. Z is probably for /ts/. U /u/ and V /w/ are distinguished in only one early inscription. Θ is probably for /t/ and X for /g/ (Lejeune 1971, Solinas 1985).

The Eastern Greek alphabet used in southern Gallia Narbonensis:

αβγδεζηθικλμνξοπρϲτυχω
ΑΒΓΔΕΖΗΘΙΚΛΜΝΞΟΠΡϹΤΥΧΩ

Χ is used for [x], θ for /ts/, ου for /u/, /ū/, /w/, η and ω for both long and short /e/, /ē/ and /o/, /ō/ while ι is for short /i/ and ει for /ī/. Note that the sigma, in the Eastern Greek alphabet, is a Ϲ (lunate sigma). All Greek letters were used except phi and psi.

Latin alphabet (monumental and cursive) in use in Roman Gaul:

ABCDꟇEFGHIKLMNOPQRSTVXZ
abcdꟈefghiklmnopqrstvxz

G and K are sometimes used interchangeably (especially after R). /, ds and s may represent /ts/ and/or /dz/. X, x is for [x] or /ks/. Q is only used rarely (Sequanni, Equos) and may represent an archaism (a retained *kw) or, as in Latin, an alternate spelling of -cu- (for original /kuu/, /kou/, or /kom-u/).[71] Ð and ð are used to represent the letter   (tau gallicum, the Gaulish dental affricate). In March, 2020 Unicode added four characters to represent tau gallicum:[72]

  • U+A7C7 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY
  • U+A7C8 LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY
  • U+A7C9 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY
  • U+A7CA LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY

Sound laws

  • Gaulish changed the PIE voiceless labiovelar to p, a development also observed in the Brittonic languages (as well as Greek and some Italic languages like the Osco-Umbrian languages), while other Celtic languages retained the labiovelar. Thus, the Gaulish word for "son" was mapos,[73] contrasting with Primitive Irish *maq(q)os (attested genitive case maq(q)i), which became mac (gen. mic) in modern Irish. In modern Welsh the word map, mab (or its contracted form ap, ab) is found in surnames. Similarly one Gaulish word for "horse" was epos (in Old Breton eb and modern Breton keneb "pregnant mare") while Old Irish has ech, the modern Irish language and Scottish Gaelic each, and Manx egh, all derived from proto-Indo-European *h₁eḱwos.[74] The retention or innovation of this sound does not necessarily signify a close genetic relationship between the languages; Goidelic and Brittonic are, for example, both Insular Celtic languages and quite closely related.
  • The Proto-Celtic voiced labiovelar *gʷ (From PIE *gʷʰ) became w: *gʷediūmiuediiumi "I pray" (but Celtiberian Ku.e.z.o.n.to /gueðonto/ < *gʷʰedʰ-y-ont 'imploring, pleading', Old Irish guidim, Welsh gweddi "to pray").
  • PIE ds, dz became /tˢ/, spelled ð: *neds-samoneððamon (cf. Irish nesamh "nearest", Welsh nesaf "next", Modern Breton nes and nesañ "next").
  • PIE ew became eu or ou, and later ō: PIE *tewtéh₂teutā/toutātōtā "tribe" (cf. Irish túath, Welsh tud "people").
  • PIE ey became ei, ē and ī PIE *treyes → treis → trī (cf. Irish trí "three").
  • Additionally, intervocalic /st/ became the affricate [tˢ] (alveolar stop + voiceless alveolar stop) and intervocalic /sr/ became [ðr] and /str/ became [θr]. Finally, labial and velar stops merged into the fricative [χ] when occurring before /t/ or /s/.

Morphology

There was some areal (and genetic, see Indo-European and the controversial Italo-Celtic hypothesis) similarity to Latin grammar, and the French historian Ferdinand Lot argued that it helped the rapid adoption of Vulgar Latin in Roman Gaul.[75]

Noun cases

Gaulish had seven cases: the nominative, vocative, accusative, genitive, dative, instrumental and the locative case. Greater epigraphical evidence attests common cases (nominative and accusative) and common stems (-o- and -a- stems) than for cases less frequently used in inscriptions or rarer -i-, -n- and -r- stems. The following table summarises the reconstructed endings for the words *toṷtā "tribe, people", *mapos "boy, son", *ṷātis "seer", *gutus "voice", *brātīr "brother".[76][77]

Case Singular   Plural
ā-stem o-stem i-stem u-stem r-stem ā-stem o-stem i-stem u-stem r-stem
Nominative *toṷtā *mapos (n. *-on) *ṷātis *gutus *brātīr *toṷtās *mapoi *ṷātīs *gutoṷes *brāteres
Vocative *toṷtā *mape *ṷāti *gutu *brāter *toṷtās *mapoi *ṷātīs *gutoṷes *brāteres
Accusative *toṷtan ~ *toṷtam > *toṷtim *mapon ~ *mapom (n. *-on) *ṷātin ~ *ṷātim *gutun ~ *gutum *brāterem *toṷtās *mapōs > *mapūs *ṷātīs *gutūs *brāterās
Genitive toṷtās > *toṷtiās *mapoiso > *mapi *ṷātēis *gutoṷs > *gutōs *brātros *toṷtanom *mapon *ṷātiom *gutoṷom *brātron
Dative *toṷtai > *toṷtī *mapūi > *mapū *ṷātei > *ṷāte *gutoṷei > gutoṷ *brātrei *toṷtābo(s) *mapobo(s) *ṷātibo(s) *gutuibo(s) *brātrebo(s)
Instrumental *toṷtia > *toṷtī *mapū *ṷātī *gutū *brātri *toṷtābi(s) *mapuis > *mapūs *ṷātibi(s) *gutuibi(s) *brātrebi(s)
Locative *toṷtī *mapei > *mapē *ṷātei *gutoṷ *brātri *toṷtābo(s) *mapois *ṷātibo(s) *gutubo(s) *brātrebo(s)

In some cases, a historical evolution is attested; for example, the dative singular of a-stems is -āi in the oldest inscriptions, becoming first *-ăi and finally as in Irish a-stem nouns with attenuated (slender) consonants: nom. lámh "hand, arm" (cf. Gaul. lāmā) and dat. láimh (< *lāmi; cf. Gaul. lāmāi > *lāmăi > lāmī). Further, the plural instrumental had begun to encroach on the dative plural (dative atrebo and matrebo vs. instrumental gobedbi and suiorebe), and in the modern Insular languages, the instrumental form is known to have completely replaced the dative.

For o-stems, Gaulish also innovated the pronominal ending for the nominative plural -oi and genitive singular -ī in place of expected -ōs and -os still present in Celtiberian (-, -o). In a-stems, the inherited genitive singular -as is attested but was subsequently replaced by -ias as in Insular Celtic. The expected genitive plural -a-om appears innovated as -anom (vs. Celtiberian -aum).

There also appears to be a dialectal equivalence between -n and -m endings in accusative singular endings particularly, with Transalpine Gaulish favouring -n, and Cisalpine favouring -m. In genitive plurals the difference between -n and -m relies on the length of the preceding vowel, with longer vowels taking -m over -n (in the case of -anom this is a result of its innovation from -a-om).

Verbs

Gaulish verbs have present, future, perfect, and imperfect tenses; indicative, subjunctive, optative and imperative moods; and active and passive voices.[77][78] Verbs show a number of innovations as well. The Indo-European s-aorist became the Gaulish t-preterit, formed by merging an old 3rd personal singular imperfect ending -t- to a 3rd personal singular perfect ending -u or -e and subsequent affixation to all forms of the t-preterit tense. Similarly, the s-preterit is formed from the extension of -ss (originally from the third person singular) and the affixation of -it to the third person singular (to distinguish it as such). Third-person plurals are also marked by addition of -s in the preterit.

Syntax

Word order

Most Gaulish sentences seem to consist of a subject–verb–object word order:

Subject Verb Indirect Object Direct Object
martialis dannotali ieuru ucuete sosin celicnon
Martialis, son of Dannotalos, dedicated this edifice to Ucuetis

Some, however, have patterns such as verb–subject–object (as in living Insular Celtic languages) or with the verb last. The latter can be seen as a survival from an earlier stage in the language, very much like the more archaic Celtiberian language.

Sentences with the verb first can be interpreted, however, as indicating a special purpose, such as an imperative, emphasis, contrast, and so on. Also, the verb may contain or be next to an enclitic pronoun or with "and" or "but", etc. According to J. F. Eska, Gaulish was certainly not a verb-second language, as the following shows:

ratin briuatiom frontu tarbetisonios ie(i)uru
NP.Acc.Sg. NP.Nom.Sg. V.3rd Sg.
Frontus Tarbetisonios dedicated the board of the bridge.

Whenever there is a pronoun object element, it is next to the verb, as per Vendryes' Restriction. The general Celtic grammar shows Wackernagel's Rule, so putting the verb at the beginning of the clause or sentence. As in Old Irish[79] and traditional literary Welsh,[80] the verb can be preceded by a particle with no real meaning by itself but originally used to make the utterance easier.

sioxt-i albanos panna(s) extra tuꟈ(on) CCC
V-Pro.Neut. NP.Nom.Sg. NP.Fem.Acc.Pl. PP Num.
Albanos added them, vessels beyond the allotment (in the amount of) 300.
to-me-declai obalda natina
Conn.-Pro.1st.Sg.Acc.-V.3rd.Sg. NP.Nom.Sg. Appositive
Obalda, (their) dear daughter, set me up.

According to Eska's model, Vendryes' Restriction is believed to have played a large role in the development of Insular Celtic verb-subject-object word order. Other authorities such as John T. Koch, dispute that interpretation.[citation needed]

Considering that Gaulish is not a verb-final language, it is not surprising to find other "head-initial" features:

  • Genitives follow their head nouns:
atom deuogdonion
The border of gods and men.
  • The unmarked position for adjectives is after their head nouns:
toutious namausatis
citizen of Nîmes
  • Prepositional phrases have the preposition, naturally, first:
in alixie
in Alesia
  • Passive clauses:
uatiounui so nemetos commu escengilu
To Vatiounos this shrine (was dedicated) by Commos Escengilos

Subordination

Subordinate clauses follow the main clause and have an uninflected element (jo) to show the subordinate clause. This is attached to the first verb of the subordinate clause.

gobedbi dugijonti-jo ucuetin in alisija
NP.Dat/Inst.Pl. V.3rd.Pl.- Pcl. NP.Acc.Sg. PP
to the smiths who serve Ucuetis in Alisia

Jo is also used in relative clauses and to construct the equivalent of THAT-clauses

scrisu-mi-jo uelor
V.1st.Sg.-Pro.1st Sg.-Pcl. V.1st Sg.
I wish that I spit

This element is found residually in the Insular Celtic languages and appears as an independent inflected relative pronoun in Celtiberian, thus:

  • Welsh
    • modern sydd "which is" ← Middle Welsh yssyd ← *esti-jo
    • vs. Welsh ys "is" ← *esti
  • Irish
    • Old Irish relative cartae "they love" ← *caront-jo
  • Celtiberian

Clitics

Gaulish had object pronouns that infixed inside a word:

to- so -ko -te
Conn.- Pro.3rd Sg.Acc - PerfVZ - V.3rd Sg
he gave it

Disjunctive pronouns also occur as clitics: mi, tu, id. They act like the emphasizing particles known as notae augentes in the Insular Celtic languages.

dessu- mii -iis
V.1st.Sg. Emph.-Pcl.1st Sg.Nom. Pro.3rd Pl.Acc.
I prepare them
buet- id
V.3rd Sg.Pres.Subjunc.- Emph.Pcl.3rd Sg.Nom.Neut.
it should be

Clitic doubling is also found (along with left dislocation), when a noun antecedent referring to an inanimate object is nonetheless grammatically animate. (There is a similar construction in Old Irish.)

Modern usage

In an interview, Swiss folk metal band Eluveitie said that some of their songs are written in a reconstructed form of Gaulish. The band asks scientists for help in writing songs in the language.[81] The name of the band comes from graffiti on a vessel from Mantua (c. 300 BC).[82] The inscription in Etruscan letters reads eluveitie, which has been interpreted as the Etruscan form of the Celtic (h)elvetios ("the Helvetian"),[83] presumably referring to a man of Helvetian descent living in Mantua.

See also

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b Stifter 2012, p. 107
  2. ^ a b Eska 2008, p. 166
  3. ^ Eska (2008); cf. Watkins 1999, p. 6
  4. ^ McCone, Kim, Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change, Maynooth, 1996
  5. ^ Eska 2008, pp. 167–168
  6. ^ The European Iron Age by John Collis p.144 ff
  7. ^ for the early development of Vulgar Latin (the conventional term for what could more adequately be named "spoken Latin") see Mohl, Introduction à la chronologie du latin vulgaire (1899) and Wagner, Introduction à la linguistique française, avec supplément bibliographique (1965), p. 41 for a bibliography.
  8. ^ a b c Hélix, Laurence (2011). Histoire de la langue française. Ellipses Edition Marketing S.A. p. 7. ISBN 978-2-7298-6470-5. Le déclin du Gaulois et sa disparition ne s'expliquent pas seulement par des pratiques culturelles spécifiques: Lorsque les Romains conduits par César envahirent la Gaule, au 1er siecle avant J.-C., celle-ci romanisa de manière progressive et profonde. Pendant près de 500 ans, la fameuse période gallo-romaine, le gaulois et le latin parlé coexistèrent; au VIe siècle encore; le temoignage de Grégoire de Tours atteste la survivance de la langue gauloise.
  9. ^ Forster & Toth 2003.
  10. ^ Eska 2012, p. 534.
  11. ^ Stifter 2012, p. 27
  12. ^ Eska 2008, p. 165.
  13. ^ Cited after (Stifter 2012, p. 12)
  14. ^ Vath & Ziegler 2017, p. 1174.
  15. ^ de Hoz, Javier (2005). "Ptolemy and the linguistic history of the Narbonensis". In de Hoz, Javier; Luján, Eugenio R.; Sims-Williams, Patrick (eds.). New approaches to Celtic place-names in Ptolemy's Geography. Ediciones Clásicas. p. 174. ISBN 978-8478825721.
  16. ^ Corinthiorum amator iste uerborum, iste iste rhetor, namque quatenus totus Thucydides, tyrannus Atticae febris: tau Gallicum, min et sphin ut male illisit, ita omnia ista uerba miscuit fratri. — Virgil, Catalepton II: "THAT lover of Corinthian words or obsolete, That--well, that spouter, for that all of Thucydides, a tyrant of Attic fever: that he wrongly fixed on the Gallic tau and min and spin, thus he mixed all those words for [his] brother".
  17. ^ a b "The Internet Classics Archive - The Gallic Wars by Julius Caesar". mit.edu. from the original on 2017-01-06.
  18. ^ BG I 29,1 In castris Helvetiorum tabulae repertae sunt litteris Graecis confectae et ad Caesarem relatae, quibus in tabulis nominatim ratio confecta erat, qui numerus domo exisset eorum qui arma ferre possent, et item separatim, quot pueri, senes mulieresque. "In the camp of the Helvetii, lists were found, drawn up in Greek characters, and were brought to Caesar, in which an estimate had been drawn up, name by name, of the number who had gone forth from their country who were able to bear arms; and likewise the numbers of boys, old men, and women, separately."
  19. ^ BG VI 6,14 Magnum ibi numerum versuum ediscere dicuntur. Itaque annos nonnulli vicenos in disciplina permanent. Neque fas esse existimant ea litteris mandare, cum in reliquis fere rebus, publicis privatisque rationibus Graecis litteris utantur. Id mihi duabus de causis instituisse videntur, quod neque in vulgum disciplinam efferri velint neque eos, qui discunt, litteris confisos minus memoriae studere: quod fere plerisque accidit, ut praesidio litterarum diligentiam in perdiscendo ac memoriam remittant. "They are said there to learn by heart a great number of verses; accordingly some remain in the course of training twenty years. Nor do they regard it divinely lawful to commit these to writing, though in almost all other matters, in their public and private transactions, they use Greek letters. That practice they seem to me to have adopted for two reasons: because they neither desire their doctrines to be divulged among the mass of the people, nor those who learn, to devote themselves the less to the efforts of memory, relying on writing; since it generally occurs to most men, that, in their dependence on writing, they relax their diligence in learning thoroughly, and their employment of the memory."
  20. ^ a b Pierre-Yves Lambert, La langue gauloise, éditions errance 1994.
  21. ^ Bruno Rochette, "Language Policies in the Roman Republic and Empire," translated by James Clackson, in A Companion to the Latin Language (Blackwell, 2011), p. 550; Stefan Zimmer, "Indo-European," in Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia (ABC-Clio, 2006), p. 961; Leonard A. Curchin, "Literacy in the Roman Provinces: Qualitative and Quantitative Data from Central Spain," American Journal of Philology 116.3 (1995), p. 464; Richard Miles, "Communicating Culture, Identity, and Power," in Experiencing Rome: Culture, Identity and Power in the Roman Empire (Routledge, 2000), pp. 58–59.
  22. ^ Alex Mullen, Southern Gaul and the Mediterranean: Multilingualism and Multiple Identities in the Iron Age and Roman Periods (Cambridge University Press, 2013), p. 269 (note 19) and p. 300 on trilingualism.
  23. ^ On the Detection and Overthrow of the So-Called Gnosis; Adv. haer., book I, praef. 3 "You will not expect from me, as a resident among the Keltae, and accustomed for the most part to use a barbarous dialect, any display of rhetoric"
  24. ^ R. Thurneysen, "Irisches und Gallisches," in: Zeitschrift für Celtische Philologie 14 (1923) 1-17.
  25. ^ a b "Institut für Sprachwissenschaft". from the original on 2013-11-02. Retrieved 2013-10-31.
  26. ^ Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae, Extract: ueluti Romae nobis praesentibus uetus celebratusque homo in causis, sed repentina et quasi tumultuaria doctrina praeditus, cum apud praefectum urbi uerba faceret et dicere uellet inopi quendam miseroque uictu uiuere et furfureum panem esitare uinumque eructum et feditum potare. "hic", inquit,"eques Romanus apludam edit et flocces bibit". aspexerunt omnes qui aderant alius alium, primo tristiores turbato et requirente uoltu quidnam illud utriusque uerbi foret: post deinde, quasi nescio quid Tusce aut Gallice dixisset, uniuersi riserunt. "For instance in Rome in our presence, a man experienced and celebrated as a pleader, but furnished with a sudden and, as it were, hasty education, was speaking to the Prefect of the City, and wished to say that a certain man with a poor and wretched way of life ate bread from bran and drank bad and spoiled wine. 'This Roman knight', he said, 'eats apluda and drinks flocces.' All who were present looked at each other, first seriously and with an inquiring expression, wondering what the two words meant; thereupon, as if he might have said something in, I don’t know, Gaulish or Etruscan, all of them burst out laughing."(based on BLOM 2007: 183)
  27. ^ Cassius Dio Roman History XIII, cited in Zonaras 8, 21 "Spain, in which the Saguntines dwell, and all the adjoining land is in the western part of Europe. It extends for a great distance along the inner sea, past the Pillars of Hercules, and along the Ocean itself; furthermore, it includes the regions inland for a very great distance, even to the Pyrenees. This range, beginning at the sea called anciently the sea of the Bebryces, but later the sea of the Narbonenses, reaches to the great outer sea, and contains many diverse nationalities; it also separates the whole of Spain from the neighboring land of Gaul. The tribes were neither of one speech, nor did they have a common government. As a result, they were not known by one name: the Romans called them Spaniards, but the Greeks Iberians, from the river Iberus [Ebro]."
  28. ^ Cassius Dio Roman History XII,20 "The Insubres, a Gallic tribe, after securing allies from among their kinsmen beyond the Alps, turned their arms against the Romans"
  29. ^ Cassius Dio Roman History XIV, cited in Zonoras 8 "Hannibal, desiring to invade Italy with all possible speed, marched on hurriedly, and traversed without a conflict the whole of Gaul lying between the Pyrenees and the Rhone. Then Hannibal, in haste to set out for Italy, but suspicious of the more direct roads, turned aside from them and followed another, on which he met with grievous hardships. For the mountains there are exceedingly precipitous, and the snow, which had fallen in great quantities, was driven by the winds and filled the chasms, and the ice was frozen very hard. ... For this reason, then, he did not turn back, but suddenly appearing from the Alps, spread astonishment and fear among the Romans. Hannibal ... proceeded to the Po, and when he found there neither rafts nor boats — for they had been burned by Scipio — he ordered his brother Mago to swim across with the cavalry and pursue the Romans, whereas he himself marched up toward the sources of the river, and then ordered that the elephants should cross down stream. In this manner, while the water was temporarily dammed and spread out by the animals' bulk, he effected a crossing more easily below them. [...] Of the captives taken he killed the Romans, but released the rest. This he did also in the case of all those taken alive, hoping to conciliate the cities by their influence. And, indeed, many of the other Gauls as well as Ligurians and Etruscans either murdered the Romans dwelling within their borders, or surrendered them and then transferred their allegiance."
  30. ^ Cassius Dio Roman History XLVI,55,4-5 "Individually, however, in order that they should not be thought to be appropriating the entire government, they arranged that both Africas, Sardinia, and Sicily should be given to Caesar to rule, all of Spain and Gallia Narbonensis to Lepidus, and the rest of Gaul, both south and north of the Alps, to Antony. The former was called Gallia Togata, as I have stated, [evidently in a lost portion of Cassius Dio's work] because it seemed to be more peaceful than the other divisions of Gaul, and because the inhabitants already employed the Roman citizen-garb; the other was termed Gallia Comata because the Gauls there for the most part let their hair grow long, and were in this way distinguished from the others."
  31. ^ Fideicommissa quocumque sermone relinqui possunt, non solum Latina uel Graeca, sed etiam Punica uel Gallicana uel alterius cuiuscumque genti Fideicommissa may be left in any language, not only in Latin or Greek, but also in Punic or Gallicanian or of whatever other people. David Stifter, ‘Old Celtic Languages’, 2012, p110
  32. ^ Ausonius, Epicedion in patrem 9–10 (a first-person poem written in the voice of his father), "Latin did not flow easily, but the language of Athens provided me with sufficient words of polished eloquence" (sermone inpromptus Latio, verum Attica lingua suffecit culti vocibus eloquii); J.N. Adams, Bilingualism and the Latin Language (Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 356–357, especially note 109, citing R.P.H. Green, The Works of Ausonius (Oxford: Clarendon Press, p. 1991), p. 276 on the view that Gaulish was the native language of Iulius Ausonius.
  33. ^ Bordeaux [Burdigala] was a Gaulish enclave in Aquitania according to Strabo's Geographia IV, 2,1
  34. ^ David Stifter, ‘Old Celtic Languages’, 2012, p110
  35. ^ Jerome (Latin: Hieronymus), writing in AD 386-7, Commentarii in Epistulam ad Galatas II, 3 =Patrologia Latina 26, 357, cited after David Stifter, Old Celtic Languages, 2012, p.110. Galatas excepto sermone Graeco, quo omnis oriens loquitur, propriam linguam eandem paene habere quam Treuiros "Apart from the Greek language, which is spoken throughout the entire East, the Galatians have their own language, almost the same as the Treveri".
  36. ^ Lucian, Pamphlet against the pseudo-prophet Alexandros, cited after Eugenio Luján, The Galatian Place Names in Ptolemy, in: Javier de Hoz, Eugenio R. Luján, Patrick Sims-Williams (eds.), New Approaches to Celtic Place-Names in Ptolemy's Geography, Madrid: Ediciones Clásicas 2005, 263. Lucian, an eye-witness, reports on Alexandros (around AD 180) using interpreters in Paphlagonia (northeast of Galatia): ἀλλὰ καὶ βαρβάροις πολλάκις ἔρχησεν, εἴ τις τῇ πατρίῳ ἔροιτο φωνῇ, Συριστὶ ἢ Κελτιστὶ, ῥᾳδίως ἐξευρίσκων τινὰς ἐπιδημοῦντας ὁμοεθνεῖς τοῖς δεδωκόσιν. "But he [Alexandros] gave oracles to barbarians many times, given that if someone asked a question in his [the questioner's] native language, in Syrian or in Celtic, he [Alexandros] easily found residents of the same people as the questioners"
  37. ^ Sidonius Apollinaris (Letters, III.3.2) mitto istic ob gratiam pueritiae tuae undique gentium confluxisse studia litterarum tuaeque personae quondam debitum, quod sermonis Celtici squamam depositura nobilitas nunc oratorio stilo, nunc etiam Camenalibus modis imbuebatur. I will forget that your schooldays brought us a veritable confluence of learners and the learned from all quarters, and that if our nobles were imbued with the love of eloquence and poetry, if they resolved to forsake the barbarous Celtic dialect, it was to your personality that they owed all. Alternate translation according to David Stifter: ...sermonis Celtici squamam depositura nobilitas nunc oratorio stilo, nunc etiam Camenalibus modis imbuebatur ‘...the (Arvernian) nobility, wishing to cast off the scales of Celtic speech, will now be imbued (by him = brother-in-law Ecdicius) with oratorial style, even with tunes of the Muses’.
  38. ^ after BLOM 2007:188, cited from David Stifter, ‘Old Celtic Languages’, 2012, p110
  39. ^ εἰ δὲ πάνυ ἐβιάζετο, Γαλατιστὶ ἐφθέγγετο. ‘If he was forced to, he spoke in Galatian’ (Vita S. Euthymii 55; after Eugenio Luján, ‘The Galatian Place Names in Ptolemy’, in: Javier de Hoz, Eugenio R. Luján, Patrick Sims-Williams (eds.), New Approaches to Celtic Place-Names in Ptolemy's Geography, Madrid: Ediciones Clásicas 2005, 264).
  40. ^ Hist. Franc., book I, 32 Veniens vero Arvernos, delubrum illud, quod Gallica lingua Vasso Galatæ vocant, incendit, diruit, atque subvertit. And coming to Clermont [to the Arverni] he set on fire, overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatæ in the Gallic tongue.
  41. ^ Blom, Alderik. "Lingua gallica, lingua celtica: Gaulish, Gallo-Latin, or Gallo-Romance?." Keltische Forschungen 4 (2009).
  42. ^ Stifter 2012, p. 109.
  43. ^ a b Mufwene, Salikoko S. "Language birth and death." Annu. Rev. Anthropol. 33 (2004): 201-222. Page 213: "... the Romans did not colonize Europe on the settlement model... However, the local rulers, who had Romanized already, maintained Latin as the language of their administrations... (footnote) Latin was spread outside Rome largely by foreign mercenaries in Roman legions, similar to how English is spreading today as a world lingua franca significantly by nonnative speakers using it and teaching it to others.. (main) More significant is that the Roman colonies were not fully Latinized in the fifth century. When the Romans left, lower classes (the population majority) continued to use Celtic languages, especially in rural areas..." Page 214: "The protracted development of the Romance languages under the substrate influence of Celtic languages is correlated with the gradual loss of the latter, as fewer and fewer children found it useful to acquire the Celtic languages and instead acquired [regional Latin]... Today the Celtic languages and other more indigenous languages similar to Basque, formerly spoken in the same territory, have vanished." Page 215: "[In contrast to the Angles and Saxons who kept Germanic speech and religion], the Franks surrendered their Germanic traditions, embracing the language and religion of the indigenous rulers, Latin and Catholicism."
  44. ^ Lodge, R. Anthony (1993). French: From Dialect to Standard. p. 46. ISBN 9780415080712.
  45. ^ Craven, Thomas D. (2002). Comparative Historical Dialectology: Italo-Romance Clues to Ibero-Romance Sound Change. John Benjamins Publishing. p. 51. ISBN 1588113132.
  46. ^ Bonnaud, P (1981). Terres et langages. Peuples et régions. Clermont-Ferrand: Auvernha Tara d'Oc. pp. 109–110.
  47. ^ Lodge, R. Anthony (1993). French: From Dialect to Standard. p. 43. ISBN 9780415080712.
  48. ^ Bonnaud, P (1981). Terres et langages. Peuples et régions. Clermont-Ferrand: Auvernha Tara d'Oc. p. 38.
  49. ^ Fleuriot, Léon. Les origins de la Bretagne. Paris: Bibliothèque historique Payot, Éditions Payot. p. 77.
  50. ^ Falc'hun, François. "Celtique continental et celtique insulaire en Breton". Annales de Bretagne. 70 (4): 431–432.
  51. ^ Gvozdanovic, Jadranka (2009). Celtic and Slavic and the Great Migrations. Heidelberg: Winter Verlag.
  52. ^ a b Kerkhof, Peter Alexander (2018). "Language, law and loanwords in early medieval Gaul: language contact and studies in Gallo-Romance phonology". Page 50
  53. ^ Peter Schrijver, "Gaulish", in Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe, ed. Glanville Price (Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), 192.
  54. ^ Schmidt, Karl Horst, "The Celtic Languages of Continental Europe" in: Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies volume XXVIII. 1980. University of Wales Press.
  55. ^ Article by Lambert, Pierre-Yves, Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies volume XXXIV. 1987. University of Wales Press.
  56. ^ C. Iulius Caesar, "Commentarii de Bello Gallico"
  57. ^ Pierre-Yves Lambert, La langue gauloise, éditions errance 1994. p. 185.
  58. ^ M. H. Offord, French words: past, present, and future, pp. 36-37
  59. ^ W. Meyer-Lübke, Romanisches etymologisches Wörterbuch, Heidelberg, 3rd edition 1935.
  60. ^ Lambert 185
  61. ^ Koch 2005, p. 1106
  62. ^ Lejeune, Michel; Fleuriot, L.; Lambert, P. Y.; Marichal, R.; Vernhet, A. (1985), Le plomb magique du Larzac et les sorcières gauloises, CNRS, ISBN 2-222-03667-4
  63. ^ Inscriptions and French translations on the lead tablets from Larzac 2008-06-29 at the Wayback Machine
  64. ^ Bernhard Maier: Lexikon der keltischen Religion und Kultur. S. 81 f.
  65. ^ "la graufesenque". ac-toulouse.fr. from the original on 2005-03-05.
  66. ^ Pierre-Yves Lambert, David Stifter ‘Le texte gaulois de Rezé’, Études Celtiques 38:139-164 (2012)
  67. ^ Delamarre 2008, p. 92-93
  68. ^ Paul Russell, An Introduction to the Celtic Languages, (London: Longman, 1995), 206-7.
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  74. ^ Delamarre 2008, p. 163
  75. ^ La Gaule (1947); for the relevance of the question of the transition from Gaulish to Latin in French national identity, see also Nos ancêtres les Gaulois.
  76. ^ Lambert 2003 pp.51–67
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  79. ^ Thurneysen, Rudolf (1993). A Grammar of Old Irish. School of Celtic Studies, Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies. ISBN 978-1-85500-161-9.
  80. ^ Williams, Stephen J., Elfennau Gramadeg Cymraeg. Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru, Caerdydd. 1959.
  81. ^ "Interview With Eluveiti". Headbangers India. from the original on 2015-04-02.
  82. ^ Reproduction in Raffaele Carlo De Marinis, Gli Etruschi a nord del Po, Mantova, 1986.
  83. ^ Stifter, David. . An Interactive Online Etymological Dictionary of Lepontic. University of Vienna. Archived from the original on 6 November 2015. Retrieved 9 July 2014.

Bibliography

  • Delamarre, Xavier (2003). Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise: Une approche linguistique du vieux-celtique continental (in French). Errance. ISBN 9782877723695.
  • Delamarre, Xavier (2012), Noms de lieux celtiques de l'Europe Ancienne. -500 +500, Arles: Errance
  • Eska, Joseph F. (2004), "Celtic Languages", in Woodard, Roger D. (ed.), Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World's Ancient Languages, Cambridge: Cambridge UP, pp. 857–880
  • Eska, Joseph F. (2008), "Continental Celtic", in Woodard, Roger D. (ed.), The Ancient Languages of Europe, Cambridge: Cambridge UP, pp. 165–188
  • Eska, Joseph F (1998), "The linguistic position of Lepontic", Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistics Society, 24 (2): 2–11, doi:10.3765/bls.v24i2.1254
  • Eska, Joseph F. (2010), "The emergence of the Celtic languages", in Ball, Martin J.; Müller, Nicole (eds.), The Celtic Languages (2nd ed.), London: Routledge, pp. 22–27
  • Eska, Joseph F. (2012), "Lepontic", in Koch, John T.; Minard, Antoine (eds.), The Celts: History, Life, and Culture, Santa Barbara: ABC Clio, p. 534
  • Eska, Joseph F.; Evans, D. Ellis (2010), "Continental Celtic", in Ball, Martin J.; Müller, Nicole (eds.), The Celtic Languages (2nd ed.), London: Routledge, pp. 28–54
  • Evans, David E. (1967). Gaulish Personal Names: A Study of Some Continental Celtic Formations. Clarendon Press.
  • Dottin, Georges (1920), La langue gauloise: grammaire, textes et glossaire, Paris: C. Klincksieck
  • Forster, Peter; Toth, Alfred (2003), "Toward a phylogenetic chronology of ancient Gaulish, Celtic, and Indo-European", Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA, 100 (15): 9079–9084, Bibcode:2003PNAS..100.9079F, doi:10.1073/pnas.1331158100, PMC 166441, PMID 12837934
  • Koch, John T. (2005), Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, ABC-CLIO, ISBN 1-85109-440-7.
  • Lacroix, Jacques (2020), Les irréductibles mots gaulois dans la langue française, Lemme Edit, ISBN 978-2-917575-89-5.
  • Lambert, Pierre-Yves (1994). La langue gauloise: description linguistique, commentaire d'inscriptions choisies (in French). Errance. ISBN 978-2-87772-089-2.
  • Lejeune, Michel (1971), Lepontica, Paris: Belles Lettres
  • Meid, Wolfgang (1994), Gaulish Inscriptions, Archaeolingua
  • Recueil des inscriptions gauloises (XLVe supplément à «GALLIA»). ed. Paul-Marie Duval et al. 4 vols. Paris: CNRS, 1985–2002. ISBN 2-271-05844-9
  • Russell, Paul (1995), An Introduction to the Celtic Languages, London: Longman
  • Savignac, Jean-Paul (2004), Dictionnaire français-gaulois, Paris: Éditions de la Différence
  • Savignac, Jean-Paul (1994), Les Gaulois, leurs écrits retrouvés: "Merde à César", Paris: Éditions de la Différence
  • Sims-Williams, Patrick (2007), "Common Celtic, Gallo-Brittonic and Insular Celtic", in Lambert, Pierre-Yves; Pinault, Jean (eds.), Gaulois et celtique continental, Genève: Librairie Droz, pp. 309–354
  • Solinas, Patrizia (1995), "Il celtico in Italia", Studi Etruschi, 60: 311–408
  • Stifter, David (2012), Old Celtic Languages (lecture notes), University of Kopenhagen
  • Vath, Bernd; Ziegler, Sabine (2017). "The documentation of Celtic". In Klein, Jared; Joseph, Brian; Fritz, Matthias (eds.). Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo-European Linguistics. Vol. 2. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-054243-1.
  • Watkins, Calvert (1999), "A Celtic miscellany", in K. Jones-Blei; et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the Tenth Annual UCLA Indo-European Conference, Los Angeles 1998, Washington: Institute for the Study of Man, pp. 3–25

Further reading

  • Beck, Noémie. "Celtic Divine Names Related to Gaulish and British Population Groups." In: Théonymie Celtique, Cultes, Interpretatio - Keltische Theonymie, Kulte, Interpretatio. Edited by Hofeneder, Andreas and De Bernardo Stempel, Patrizia, by Hainzmann, Manfred and Mathieu, Nicolas. Wein: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2013. 51-72. www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv8mdn28.7.
  • Hamp, Eric P. "Gaulish ordinals and their history". In: Études Celtiques, vol. 38, 2012. pp. 131–135. [DOI: https://doi.org/10.3406/ecelt.2012.2349]; [www.persee.fr/doc/ecelt_0373-1928_2012_num_38_1_2349]
  • Lambert, Pierre-Yves. "Le Statut Du Théonyme Gaulois." In Théonymie Celtique, Cultes, Interpretatio - Keltische Theonymie, Kulte, Interpretatio, edited by Hofeneder Andreas and De Bernardo Stempel Patrizia, by Hainzmann Manfred and Mathieu Nicolas, 113-24. Wein: Austrian Academy of Sciences Press, 2013. www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctv8mdn28.11.
  • Kennedy, James (1855). "On the Ancient Languages of France and Spain". Transactions of the Philological Society. 2 (11): 155–184. doi:10.1111/j.1467-968X.1855.tb00784.x.
  • Mullen, Alex; Darasse, Coline Ruiz. "Gaulish". In: Palaeohispanica: revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua n. 20 (2020): pp. 749–783. ISSN 1578-5386 DOI: 10.36707/palaeohispanica.v0i20.383
  • Witczak, Krzysztof Tomasz. "Gaulish SUIOREBE ‘with two sisters’", Lingua Posnaniensis 57, 2: 59–62, doi: https://doi.org/10.1515/linpo-2015-0011

External links

  • (in French) Langues et écriture en Gaule Romaine by Hélène Chew of the Musée des Antiquités Nationales
  • two sample inscriptions on TITUS

gaulish, ethno, linguistic, group, gauls, this, article, section, should, specify, language, english, content, using, lang, transliteration, transliterated, languages, phonetic, transcriptions, with, appropriate, code, wikipedia, multilingual, support, templat. For the ethno linguistic group see Gauls This article or section should specify the language of its non English content using lang transliteration for transliterated languages and IPA for phonetic transcriptions with an appropriate ISO 639 code Wikipedia s multilingual support templates may also be used See why June 2020 Gaulish was an ancient Celtic language spoken in parts of Continental Europe before and during the period of the Roman Empire In the narrow sense Gaulish was the language of the Celts of Gaul now France Luxembourg Belgium most of Switzerland Northern Italy as well as the parts of the Netherlands and Germany on the west bank of the Rhine In a wider sense it also comprises varieties of Celtic that were spoken across much of central Europe Noric parts of the Balkans and Anatolia Galatian which are thought to have been closely related 1 2 The more divergent Lepontic of Northern Italy has also sometimes been subsumed under Gaulish 3 4 GaulishRegionGaulEthnicityGaulsEra6th century BC to 6th century ADLanguage familyIndo European CelticContinental CelticGaulishWriting systemOld Italic Greek LatinLanguage codesISO 639 3Variously a href https iso639 3 sil org code xtg class extiw title iso639 3 xtg xtg a Transalpine Gaulish a href https iso639 3 sil org code xga class extiw title iso639 3 xga xga a Galatian a href https iso639 3 sil org code xcg class extiw title iso639 3 xcg xcg a Cisalpine Gaulish a href https iso639 3 sil org code xlp class extiw title iso639 3 xlp xlp a LeponticLinguist Listxtg Transalpine Gaulish xga Galatian xcg Cisalpine Gaulish xlp LeponticGlottologtran1289 Transalpine Galatian CelticThis article contains IPA phonetic symbols Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols instead of Unicode characters For an introductory guide on IPA symbols see Help IPA Together with Lepontic and the Celtiberian spoken in the Iberian Peninsula Gaulish helps form the geographic group of Continental Celtic languages The precise linguistic relationships among them as well as between them and the modern Insular Celtic languages are uncertain and a matter of ongoing debate because of their sparse attestation Gaulish is found in some 800 often fragmentary inscriptions including calendars pottery accounts funeral monuments short dedications to gods coin inscriptions statements of ownership and other texts possibly curse tablets Gaulish was first written in Greek script in southern France and in a variety of Old Italic script in northern Italy After the Roman conquest of those regions writing shifted to Latin script 5 During his conquest of Gaul Caesar reported that the Helvetii were in possession of documents in the Greek script and all Gaulish coins used the Greek script until about 50 BC 6 Gaulish in Western Europe was supplanted by Vulgar Latin 7 and various Germanic languages from around the 5th century AD onward It is thought to have gone extinct some time around the late 6th century 8 Contents 1 Classification 2 History 2 1 Early period 2 2 Roman period 2 3 Middle Ages 2 3 1 Final demise 3 Corpus 3 1 Summary of sources 3 2 Inscriptions 4 Phonology 4 1 Orthography 4 2 Sound laws 5 Morphology 5 1 Noun cases 5 2 Verbs 6 Syntax 6 1 Word order 6 2 Subordination 6 3 Clitics 7 Modern usage 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Citations 9 2 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksClassification EditIt is estimated that during the Bronze Age Proto Celtic started splitting into distinct languages including Celtiberian and Gaulish 9 Due to the expansion of Celtic tribes in the 4th and 3rd centuries BC closely related forms of Celtic came to be spoken in a vast arc extending from Britain and France through the Alpine region and Pannonia in central Europe and into parts of the Balkans and Anatolia Their precise linguistic relationships are uncertain due to fragmentary evidence The Gaulish varieties of central and eastern Europe and of Anatolia called Noric and Galatian respectively are barely attested but from what little is known of them it appears that they were quite similar to those of Gaul and can be considered dialects of a single language 1 Among those regions where substantial inscriptional evidence exists three varieties are usually distinguished Lepontic attested from a small area on the south slopes of the Alps near the modern Swiss town of Lugano is the oldest Celtic language known to have been written with inscriptions in a variant of Old Italic script appearing circa 600 BC It has been described as either an early dialect of an outlying form of Gaulish or a separate Continental Celtic language 10 Attestations of Gaulish proper in present day France are called Transalpine Gaulish Its written record begins in the 3rd century BC with inscriptions in Greek script found mainly in the Rhone area of southern France where Greek cultural influence was present via the colony of Massilia founded circa 600 BC After the Roman conquest of Gaul 58 50 BC the writing of Gaulish shifted to Latin script Finally there are a small number of inscriptions from the 2nd and 1st centuries BC in Cisalpine Gaul northern Italy which share the same archaic alphabet as the Lepontic inscriptions but are found outside the Lepontic area proper As they were written after the Gallic conquest of Cisalpine Gaul they are usually called Cisalpine Gaulish They share some linguistic features both with Lepontic and with Transalpine Gaulish for instance both Lepontic and Cisalpine Gaulish simplify the consonant clusters nd and xs to nn and ss respectively while both Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaulish replace inherited word final m with n 11 Scholars have debated to what extent the distinctive features of Lepontic reflect merely its earlier origin or a genuine genealogical split and to what extent Cisalpine Gaulish should be seen as a continuation of Lepontic or an independent offshoot of mainstream Transalpine Gaulish The relationship between Gaulish and the other Celtic languages is also debated Most scholars today agree that Celtiberian was the first to branch off from other Celtic 12 Gaulish situated in the centre of the Celtic language area shares with the neighboring Brittonic languages of Britain the change of the Indo European labialized voiceless velar stop kʷ gt p while both Celtiberian in the south and Goidelic in Ireland retain kʷ Taking this as the primary genealogical isogloss some scholars divide the Celtic languages into a q Celtic group and a p Celtic group in which the p Celtic languages Gaulish and Brittonic form a common Gallo Brittonic branch Other scholars place more emphasis on shared innovations between Brittonic and Goidelic and group these together as an Insular Celtic branch Sims Williams 2007 discusses a composite model in which the Continental and Insular varieties are seen as part of a dialect continuum with genealogical splits and areal innovations intersecting 13 History EditEarly period Edit Though Gaulish personal names written by Gauls in Greek script are attested from the region surrounding Massalia by the 3rd century BC the first true inscriptions in Gaulish appeared in the 2nd century BC 14 15 At least 13 references to Gaulish speech and Gaulish writing can be found in Greek and Latin writers of antiquity The word Gaulish gallicum as a language term is first explicitly used in the Appendix Vergiliana in a poem referring to Gaulish letters of the alphabet 16 Julius Caesar says in his Commentarii de Bello Gallico of 58 BC that the Celts Gauls and their language are separated from the neighboring Aquitani and Belgae by the rivers Garonne and Seine Marne respectively 17 Caesar relates that census accounts written in Greek script were found among the Helvetii 18 He also notes that as of 53 BC the Gaulish druids used the Greek alphabet for private and public transactions with the important exception of druidic doctrines which could only be memorised and were not allowed to be written down 19 According to the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises nearly three quarters of Gaulish inscriptions disregarding coins are in the Greek alphabet Later inscriptions dating to Roman Gaul are mostly in Latin alphabet and have been found principally in central France 20 Roman period Edit Latin was quickly adopted by the Gaulish aristocracy after Roman conquest to maintain their elite power and influence 21 trilingualism in southern Gaul being noted as early as the 1st century BC 22 Early references to Gaulish in Gaul tend to be made in the context of problems with Greek or Latin fluency until around 400 whereas after c 450 Gaulish begins to be mentioned in contexts where Latin has replaced Gaulish or Celtic whatever the authors meant by those terms though at first these only concerned the upper classes For Galatia Anatolia there is no source explicitly indicating a 5th century language replacement During the last quarter of the 2nd century Irenaeus bishop of Lugdunum present day Lyon apologises for his inadequate Greek being resident among the Keltae and accustomed for the most part to use a barbarous dialect 23 According to the Vita Sancti Symphoriani Symphorian of Augustodunum present day Autun was executed on 22 August 178 for his Christian faith While he was being led to his execution his venerable mother admonished him from the wall assiduously and notable to all saying in the Gaulish speech Son son Symphorianus think of your God uenerabilis mater sua de muro sedula et nota illum uoce Gallica monuit dicens nate nate Synforiane mentobeto to diuo 24 The Gaulish sentence has been transmitted in a corrupt state in the various manuscripts as it stands it has been reconstructed by Thurneysen According to David Stifter 2012 mentobeto looks like a Proto Romance verb derived from Latin mens mentis mind and habere to have and it cannot be excluded that the whole utterance is an early variant of Romance or a mixture of Romance and Gaulish instead of being an instance of pure Gaulish On the other hand nate is attested in Gaulish for example in Endlicher s Glossary 25 and the author of the Vita Sancti Symphoriani whether or not fluent in Gaulish evidently expects a non Latin language to have been spoken at the time The Latin author Aulus Gellius c 180 mentions Gaulish alongside the Etruscan language in one anecdote indicating that his listeners had heard of these languages but would not understand a word of either 26 The Roman History by Cassius Dio written AD 207 229 may imply that Cis and Transalpine Gauls spoke the same language as can be deduced from the following passages 1 Book XIII mentions the principle that named tribes have a common government and a common speech otherwise the population of a region is summarized by a geographic term as in the case of the Spanish Iberians 27 2 In Books XII and XIV Gauls between the Pyrenees and the River Po are stated to consider themselves kinsmen 28 29 3 In Book XLVI Cassius Dio explains that the defining difference between Cis and Transalpine Gauls is the length of hair and the style of clothes i e he does not mention any language difference the Cisalpine Gauls having adopted shorter hair and the Roman toga at an early date Gallia Togata 30 Potentially in contrast Caesar described the river Rhone as a frontier between the Celts and provincia nostra 17 In the Digesta XXXII 11 of Ulpian AD 222 228 it is decreed that fideicommissa testamentary provisions may also be composed in Gaulish 31 Writing at some point between c AD 378 and AD 395 Latin poet and scholar Decimus Magnus Ausonius from Burdigala now Bordeaux characterizes his deceased father Iulius ability to speak Latin as inpromptus halting not fluent in Attic Greek Iulius felt eloquent enough 32 This remark is sometimes taken as indicating that the first language of Iulius Ausonius c AD 290 378 was Gaulish 33 but may alternatively mean his first language was Greek As a physician he would have cultivated Greek as part of his professional proficiency In the Dialogi de Vita Martini I 26 by Sulpicius Seuerus AD 363 425 one of the partners in the dialogue utters the rhetorical commonplace that his deficient Latin might insult the ears of his partners One of them answers uel Celtice aut si mauis Gallice loquere dummodo Martinum loquaris speak Celtic or if you prefer Gaulish as long as you speak about Martin 34 Saint Jerome writing in AD 386 387 remarked in a commentary on St Paul s Epistle to the Galatians that the Belgic Treveri spoke almost the same language as the Galatians rather than Latin 35 This agrees with an earlier report in AD180 by Lucian 36 In an AD 474 letter to his brother in law Sidonius Apollinaris bishop of Clermont in Auvergne says that in his younger years our nobles resolved to forsake the barbarous Celtic dialect evidently in favour of eloquent Latin 37 Middle Ages Edit Cassiodorus ca 490 585 cites in his book Variae VIII 12 7 dated 526 from a letter to king Athalaric Romanum denique eloquium non suis regionibus inuenisti et ibi te Tulliana lectio disertum reddidit ubi quondam Gallica lingua resonauit Finally you found Roman eloquence in regions that were not originally its own and there the reading of Cicero rendered you eloquent where once the Gaulish language resounded 38 In the 6th century Cyril of Scythopolis AD 525 559 tells a story about a Galatian monk who was possessed by an evil spirit and was unable to speak but if forced to could speak only in Galatian 39 Gregory of Tours wrote in the 6th century c 560 575 that a shrine in Auvergne which is called Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue was destroyed and burnt to the ground 40 This quote has been held by historical linguistic scholarship to attest that Gaulish was indeed still spoken as late as the mid to late 6th century in France 8 41 Final demise Edit Despite considerable Romanization of the local material culture the Gaulish language is held to have survived and coexisted with spoken Latin during the centuries of Roman rule of Gaul 8 The exact time of the final extinction of Gaulish is unknown but it is estimated to have been about the sixth century AD 42 after the collapse of the Western Roman Empire 43 The language shift was uneven in its progress and shaped by sociological factors Although there was a presence of retired veterans in colonies these did not significantly alter the linguistic composition of Gaul s population of which 90 was autochthonous 44 45 instead the key Latinizing class was the coopted local elite who sent their children to Roman schools and administered lands for Rome In the fifth century at the time of the Western Roman collapse the vast majority non elite and predominantly rural of the population remained Gaulish speakers and acquired Latin as their native speech only after the demise of the Empire as both they and the new Frankish ruling elite adopted the prestige language of their urban literate elite 43 Bonnaud 46 maintains that Latinisation occurred earlier in Provence and in major urban centers while Gaulish persisted longest possibly as late as the tenth century 47 with evidence for continued use according to Bonnaud continuing into the ninth century 48 in Langres and the surrounding regions the regions between Clermont Argenton and Bordeaux and in Armorica Fleuriot 49 Falc hun 50 and Gvozdanovic 51 likewise maintained a late survival in Armorica and language contact of some form with the ascendant Breton language however it has been noted that there is little uncontroversial evidence supporting a relatively late survival specifically in Brittany whereas there is uncontroversial evidence that supports the relatively late survival of Gaulish in the Swiss Alps and in regions in Central Gaul 52 Drawing from these data which include the mapping of substrate vocabulary as evidence Kerkhof argues that we may tentatively posit a survival of Gaulish speaking communities in the at least into the sixth century in pockets of mountainous regions of the Central Massif the Jura and the Swiss Alps 52 Corpus EditSummary of sources Edit The re assembled tablet of the Coligny calendar According to Recueil des inscriptions gauloises more than 760 Gaulish inscriptions have been found throughout France with the notable exception of Aquitaine and in northern Italy 53 Inscriptions include short dedications funerary monuments proprietary statements and expressions of human sentiments but also some longer documents of a legal or magical religious nature 2 the three longest being the Larzac tablet the Chamalieres tablet and the Lezoux dish The most famous Gaulish record is the Coligny calendar a fragmented bronze tablet dating from the 2nd century AD and providing the names of Celtic months over a five year span it is a lunisolar calendar trying to synchronize the solar year and the lunar month by inserting a thirteenth month every two and a half years Many inscriptions are only a few words often names in rote phrases and many are fragmentary 54 55 They provide some evidence for morphology and better evidence for personal and mythological names Occasionally marked surface clausal configurations provide some evidence of a more formal or poetic register It is clear from the subject matter of the records that the language was in use at all levels of society Other sources contribute to knowledge of Gaulish Greek and Latin authors mention Gaulish words 20 personal and tribal names 56 and toponyms A short Gaulish Latin vocabulary about 20 entries headed De nominib us Gallicis called Endlicher s Glossary is preserved in a 9th century manuscript Ost Nationalbibliothek MS 89 fol 189v 25 French has Gaulish loanwords French now has about 150 to 180 words known to be of Gaulish origin most of which concern pastoral or daily activity 57 58 If dialectal and derived words are included the total is about 400 words Though overall low this is still the highest number among the Romance languages 59 60 Inscriptions Edit The Curse tablet from L Hospitalet du Larzac Musee de Millau 61 Gaulish inscriptions are edited in the Recueil des Inscriptions Gauloises R I G in four volumes date missing Volume 1 Inscriptions in the Greek alphabet edited by Michel Lejeune items G 1 G 281 date missing Volume 2 1 Inscriptions in the Etruscan alphabet Lepontic items E 1 E 6 and inscriptions in the Latin alphabet in stone items l 1 l 16 edited by Michel Lejeune date missing Volume 2 2 inscriptions in the Latin alphabet on instruments ceramic lead glass etc edited by Pierre Yves Lambert items l 18 l 139 date missing Volume 3 The Coligny calendar 73 fragments and that of Villards d Heria 8 fragments edited by Paul Marie Duval and Georges Pinault date missing Volume 4 inscriptions on Celtic coinage edited by Jean Baptiste Colbert de Beaulieu and Brigitte Fischer 338 items date missing The longest known Gaulish text is the Larzac tablet found in 1983 in l Hospitalet du Larzac France It is inscribed in Roman cursive on both sides of two small sheets of lead Probably a curse tablet defixio it clearly mentions relationships between female names for example aia duxtir adiegias adiega matir aiias Aia daughter of Adiega Adiega mother of Aia and seems to contain incantations regarding one Severa Tertionicna and a group of women often thought to be a rival group of witches but the exact meaning of the text remains unclear 62 63 The Coligny calendar was found in 1897 in Coligny France with a statue identified as Mars The calendar contains Gaulish words but Roman numerals permitting translations such as lat evidently meaning days and mid month Months of 30 days were marked matus lucky months of 29 days anmatus unlucky based on comparison with Middle Welsh mad and anfad but the meaning could here also be merely descriptive complete and incomplete 64 The pottery at La Graufesenque 65 is our most important source for Gaulish numerals Potters shared furnaces and kept tallies inscribed in Latin cursive on ceramic plates referring to kiln loads numbered 1 to 10 1st cintus cintuxos Welsh cynt before cyntaf first Breton kent in front kentan first Cornish kynsa first Old Irish ceta Irish cead first 2nd allos alos W ail Br eil OIr aile other Ir eile 3rd tri tios W trydydd Br trede OIr treide 4th petuar ios W pedwerydd Br pevare 5th pinpetos W pumed Br pempet OIr coiced 6th suexos possibly mistaken for suextos but see Reze inscription below W chweched Br c hwec hved OIr seissed 7th sextametos W seithfed Br seizhved OIr sechtmad 8th oxtumeto s W wythfed Br eizhved OIr ochtmad 9th namet os W nawfed Br naved OIr nomad 10th decametos decometos CIb dekametam W degfed Br degvet OIr dechmad The lead inscription from Reze dated to the 2nd century at the mouth of the Loire 450 kilometres 280 mi northwest of La Graufesenque is evidently an account or a calculation and contains quite different ordinals 66 3rd trilu 4th paetrute 5th pixte 6th suexxe etc Other Gaulish numerals attested in Latin inscriptions include petrudecametos fourteenth rendered as petrudecameto with Latinized dative ablative singular ending and triconts thirty rendered as tricontis with a Latinized ablative plural ending compare Irish triocha A Latinized phrase for a ten night festival of Apollo Grannus decamnoctiacis Granni is mentioned in a Latin inscription from Limoges A similar formation is to be found in the Coligny calendar in which mention is made of a trinox Samoni three night festival of the month of Samonios As is to be expected the ancient Gaulish language was more similar to Latin than modern Celtic languages are to modern Romance languages The ordinal numerals in Latin are primus prior secundus alter the first form when more than two objects are counted the second form only when two alius like alter means the other the former used when more than two and the latter when only two tertius quartus quintus sextus septimus octavus nōnus and decimus A number of short inscriptions are found on spindle whorls and are among the most recent finds in the Gaulish language Spindle whorls were apparently given to girls by their suitors and bear such inscriptions as moni gnatha gabi buddutton imon RIG l 119 my girl take my penis 67 geneta imi daga uimpi RIG l 120 I am a young girl good and pretty Inscriptions found in Switzerland are rare The most notable inscription found in Helvetic parts is the Bern zinc tablet inscribed DOBNORHDO GOBANO BRENODWR NANTARWR Dobnoredo gobano brenodōr nantarōr and apparently dedicated to Gobannus the Celtic god of metalwork Furthermore there is a statue of a seated goddess with a bear Artio found in Muri bei Bern with a Latin inscription DEAE ARTIONI LIVINIA SABILLINA suggesting a Gaulish Artiu Bear goddess Some coins with Gaulish inscriptions in the Greek alphabet have also been found in Switzerland e g RIG IV Nos 92 Lingones and 267 Leuci A sword dating to the La Tene period was found in Port near Biel Bienne with its blade inscribed with KORICIOC Korisos probably the name of the smith Phonology EditVowel phonemes of Gaulish Front Central BackClose i iː u uːMid e eː o oːOpen a aːvowels short a e i o u long a e i ō u diphthongs ai ei oi au eu ouConsonant phonemes of Gaulish Bilabial DentalAlveolar Palatal VelarNasals m nStops p b t d k ɡAffricates tsFricatives s x ɣ 1Approximants j wLiquids r l x is an allophone of k before t occlusives voiceless p t k voiced b d g resonants nasals m n liquids r l sibilant s affricate ts semi vowels w yThe diphthongs all transformed over the historical period Ai and oi changed into long i and eu merged with ou both becoming long ō Ei became long e In general long diphthongs became short diphthongs and then long vowels Long vowels shortened before nasals in coda Other transformations include unstressed i became e ln became ll a stop s became ss and a nasal velar became ŋ velar The lenis plosives seem to have been voiceless unlike in Latin which distinguished lenis occlusives with a voiced realization from fortis occlusives with a voiceless realization which caused confusions like Glanum for Clanum vergobretos for vercobreto Britannia for Pritannia 68 Orthography Edit RIG G 172 Gallo Greek inscription ϹEGOMAROϹ OYILLONEOϹ TOOYTIOYϹ NAMAYϹATIϹ EIwROY BHLHϹAMI ϹOϹIN NEMHTON Segomaros Uilloneos toutius Namausatis eiōru Belesami sosin nemeton Segomaros son of Uillu citizen 69 70 toutious of Namausos dedicated this sanctuary to Belesama The name ARADDOVNA on a Gaulish tomb illustrating the use of the tau gallicum in this case doubled Lepontic alphabet The alphabet of Lugano used in Cisalpine Gaul for Lepontic AEIKLMNOPRST8VXZThe alphabet of Lugano does not distinguish voicing in stops P represents b or p T is for d or t K for g or k Z is probably for ts U u and V w are distinguished in only one early inscription 8 is probably for t and X for g Lejeune 1971 Solinas 1985 The Eastern Greek alphabet used in southern Gallia Narbonensis abgdezh8iklmn3oprϲtyxw ABGDEZH8IKLMN3OPRϹTYXWX is used for x 8 for ts oy for u u w h and w for both long and short e e and o ō while i is for short i and ei for i Note that the sigma in the Eastern Greek alphabet is a Ϲ lunate sigma All Greek letters were used except phi and psi Latin alphabet monumental and cursive in use in Roman Gaul ABCDꟇEFGHIKLMNOPQRSTVXZ abcdꟈefghiklmnopqrstvxzG and K are sometimes used interchangeably especially after R Ꟈ ꟈ ds and s may represent ts and or dz X x is for x or ks Q is only used rarely Sequanni Equos and may represent an archaism a retained kw or as in Latin an alternate spelling of cu for original kuu kou or kom u 71 D and d are used to represent the letter tau gallicum the Gaulish dental affricate In March 2020 Unicode added four characters to represent tau gallicum 72 U A7C7 Ꟈ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER D WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY U A7C8 ꟈ LATIN SMALL LETTER D WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY U A7C9 Ꟊ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAY U A7CA ꟊ LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH SHORT STROKE OVERLAYSound laws Edit Gaulish changed the PIE voiceless labiovelar kʷ to p a development also observed in the Brittonic languages as well as Greek and some Italic languages like the Osco Umbrian languages while other Celtic languages retained the labiovelar Thus the Gaulish word for son was mapos 73 contrasting with Primitive Irish maq q os attested genitive case maq q i which became mac gen mic in modern Irish In modern Welsh the word map mab or its contracted form ap ab is found in surnames Similarly one Gaulish word for horse was epos in Old Breton eb and modern Breton keneb pregnant mare while Old Irish has ech the modern Irish language and Scottish Gaelic each and Manx egh all derived from proto Indo European h eḱwos 74 The retention or innovation of this sound does not necessarily signify a close genetic relationship between the languages Goidelic and Brittonic are for example both Insular Celtic languages and quite closely related The Proto Celtic voiced labiovelar gʷ From PIE gʷʰ became w gʷediumi uediiumi I pray but Celtiberian Ku e z o n to guedonto lt gʷʰedʰ y ont imploring pleading Old Irish guidim Welsh gweddi to pray PIE ds dz became tˢ spelled d neds samo neddamon cf Irish nesamh nearest Welsh nesaf next Modern Breton nes and nesan next PIE ew became eu or ou and later ō PIE tewteh teuta touta tōta tribe cf Irish tuath Welsh tud people PIE ey became ei e and i PIE treyes treis tri cf Irish tri three Additionally intervocalic st became the affricate tˢ alveolar stop voiceless alveolar stop and intervocalic sr became dr and str became 8r Finally labial and velar stops merged into the fricative x when occurring before t or s Morphology EditThere was some areal and genetic see Indo European and the controversial Italo Celtic hypothesis similarity to Latin grammar and the French historian Ferdinand Lot argued that it helped the rapid adoption of Vulgar Latin in Roman Gaul 75 Noun cases Edit Gaulish had seven cases the nominative vocative accusative genitive dative instrumental and the locative case Greater epigraphical evidence attests common cases nominative and accusative and common stems o and a stems than for cases less frequently used in inscriptions or rarer i n and r stems The following table summarises the reconstructed endings for the words toṷta tribe people mapos boy son ṷatis seer gutus voice bratir brother 76 77 Case Singular Plurala stem o stem i stem u stem r stem a stem o stem i stem u stem r stemNominative toṷta mapos n on ṷatis gutus bratir toṷtas mapoi ṷatis gutoṷes brateresVocative toṷta mape ṷati gutu brater toṷtas mapoi ṷatis gutoṷes brateresAccusative toṷtan toṷtam gt toṷtim mapon mapom n on ṷatin ṷatim gutun gutum braterem toṷtas mapōs gt mapus ṷatis gutus braterasGenitive toṷtas gt toṷtias mapoiso gt mapi ṷateis gutoṷs gt gutōs bratros toṷtanom mapon ṷatiom gutoṷom bratronDative toṷtai gt toṷti mapui gt mapu ṷatei gt ṷate gutoṷei gt gutoṷ bratrei toṷtabo s mapobo s ṷatibo s gutuibo s bratrebo s Instrumental toṷtia gt toṷti mapu ṷati gutu bratri toṷtabi s mapuis gt mapus ṷatibi s gutuibi s bratrebi s Locative toṷti mapei gt mape ṷatei gutoṷ bratri toṷtabo s mapois ṷatibo s gutubo s bratrebo s In some cases a historical evolution is attested for example the dative singular of a stems is ai in the oldest inscriptions becoming first ăi and finally i as in Irish a stem nouns with attenuated slender consonants nom lamh hand arm cf Gaul lama and dat laimh lt lami cf Gaul lamai gt lamăi gt lami Further the plural instrumental had begun to encroach on the dative plural dative atrebo and matrebo vs instrumental gobedbi and suiorebe and in the modern Insular languages the instrumental form is known to have completely replaced the dative For o stems Gaulish also innovated the pronominal ending for the nominative plural oi and genitive singular i in place of expected ōs and os still present in Celtiberian os o In a stems the inherited genitive singular as is attested but was subsequently replaced by ias as in Insular Celtic The expected genitive plural a om appears innovated as anom vs Celtiberian aum There also appears to be a dialectal equivalence between n and m endings in accusative singular endings particularly with Transalpine Gaulish favouring n and Cisalpine favouring m In genitive plurals the difference between n and m relies on the length of the preceding vowel with longer vowels taking m over n in the case of anom this is a result of its innovation from a om Verbs Edit Gaulish verbs have present future perfect and imperfect tenses indicative subjunctive optative and imperative moods and active and passive voices 77 78 Verbs show a number of innovations as well The Indo European s aorist became the Gaulish t preterit formed by merging an old 3rd personal singular imperfect ending t to a 3rd personal singular perfect ending u or e and subsequent affixation to all forms of the t preterit tense Similarly the s preterit is formed from the extension of ss originally from the third person singular and the affixation of it to the third person singular to distinguish it as such Third person plurals are also marked by addition of s in the preterit Syntax EditWord order Edit Most Gaulish sentences seem to consist of a subject verb object word order Subject Verb Indirect Object Direct Objectmartialis dannotali ieuru ucuete sosin celicnonMartialis son of Dannotalos dedicated this edifice to Ucuetis dd Some however have patterns such as verb subject object as in living Insular Celtic languages or with the verb last The latter can be seen as a survival from an earlier stage in the language very much like the more archaic Celtiberian language Sentences with the verb first can be interpreted however as indicating a special purpose such as an imperative emphasis contrast and so on Also the verb may contain or be next to an enclitic pronoun or with and or but etc According to J F Eska Gaulish was certainly not a verb second language as the following shows ratin briuatiom frontu tarbetisonios ie i uruNP Acc Sg NP Nom Sg V 3rd Sg Frontus Tarbetisonios dedicated the board of the bridge dd Whenever there is a pronoun object element it is next to the verb as per Vendryes Restriction The general Celtic grammar shows Wackernagel s Rule so putting the verb at the beginning of the clause or sentence As in Old Irish 79 and traditional literary Welsh 80 the verb can be preceded by a particle with no real meaning by itself but originally used to make the utterance easier sioxt i albanos panna s extra tuꟈ on CCCV Pro Neut NP Nom Sg NP Fem Acc Pl PP Num Albanos added them vessels beyond the allotment in the amount of 300 dd to me declai obalda natinaConn Pro 1st Sg Acc V 3rd Sg NP Nom Sg AppositiveObalda their dear daughter set me up dd According to Eska s model Vendryes Restriction is believed to have played a large role in the development of Insular Celtic verb subject object word order Other authorities such as John T Koch dispute that interpretation citation needed Considering that Gaulish is not a verb final language it is not surprising to find other head initial features Genitives follow their head nouns atom deuogdonionThe border of gods and men dd The unmarked position for adjectives is after their head nouns toutious namausatiscitizen of Nimes dd Prepositional phrases have the preposition naturally first in alixiein Alesia dd Passive clauses uatiounui so nemetos commu escengiluTo Vatiounos this shrine was dedicated by Commos Escengilos dd Subordination Edit Subordinate clauses follow the main clause and have an uninflected element jo to show the subordinate clause This is attached to the first verb of the subordinate clause gobedbi dugijonti jo ucuetin in alisijaNP Dat Inst Pl V 3rd Pl Pcl NP Acc Sg PPto the smiths who serve Ucuetis in Alisia dd Jo is also used in relative clauses and to construct the equivalent of THAT clauses scrisu mi jo uelorV 1st Sg Pro 1st Sg Pcl V 1st Sg I wish that I spit dd This element is found residually in the Insular Celtic languages and appears as an independent inflected relative pronoun in Celtiberian thus Welsh modern sydd which is Middle Welsh yssyd esti jo vs Welsh ys is esti Irish Old Irish relative cartae they love caront jo Celtiberian masc nom sing ios masc dat sing iomui fem acc plural iasClitics Edit Gaulish had object pronouns that infixed inside a word to so ko teConn Pro 3rd Sg Acc PerfVZ V 3rd Sghe gave it dd Disjunctive pronouns also occur as clitics mi tu id They act like the emphasizing particles known as notae augentes in the Insular Celtic languages dessu mii iisV 1st Sg Emph Pcl 1st Sg Nom Pro 3rd Pl Acc I prepare them dd buet idV 3rd Sg Pres Subjunc Emph Pcl 3rd Sg Nom Neut it should be dd Clitic doubling is also found along with left dislocation when a noun antecedent referring to an inanimate object is nonetheless grammatically animate There is a similar construction in Old Irish Modern usage EditIn an interview Swiss folk metal band Eluveitie said that some of their songs are written in a reconstructed form of Gaulish The band asks scientists for help in writing songs in the language 81 The name of the band comes from graffiti on a vessel from Mantua c 300 BC 82 The inscription in Etruscan letters reads eluveitie which has been interpreted as the Etruscan form of the Celtic h elvetios the Helvetian 83 presumably referring to a man of Helvetian descent living in Mantua See also EditItalo Celtic Lepontic language Celtiberian language Languages of France List of English words of Gaulish origin List of French words of Gaulish originReferences EditCitations Edit a b Stifter 2012 p 107 a b Eska 2008 p 166 Eska 2008 cf Watkins 1999 p 6 McCone Kim Towards a relative chronology of ancient and medieval Celtic sound change Maynooth 1996 Eska 2008 pp 167 168 The European Iron Age by John Collis p 144 ff for the early development of Vulgar Latin the conventional term for what could more adequately be named spoken Latin see Mohl Introduction a la chronologie du latin vulgaire 1899 and Wagner Introduction a la linguistique francaise avec supplement bibliographique 1965 p 41 for a bibliography a b c Helix Laurence 2011 Histoire de la langue francaise Ellipses Edition Marketing S A p 7 ISBN 978 2 7298 6470 5 Le declin du Gaulois et sa disparition ne s expliquent pas seulement par des pratiques culturelles specifiques Lorsque les Romains conduits par Cesar envahirent la Gaule au 1er siecle avant J C celle ci romanisa de maniere progressive et profonde Pendant pres de 500 ans la fameuse periode gallo romaine le gaulois et le latin parle coexisterent au VIe siecle encore le temoignage de Gregoire de Tours atteste la survivance de la langue gauloise Forster amp Toth 2003 Eska 2012 p 534 Stifter 2012 p 27 Eska 2008 p 165 Cited after Stifter 2012 p 12 Vath amp Ziegler 2017 p 1174 de Hoz Javier 2005 Ptolemy and the linguistic history of the Narbonensis In de Hoz Javier Lujan Eugenio R Sims Williams Patrick eds New approaches to Celtic place names in Ptolemy s Geography Ediciones Clasicas p 174 ISBN 978 8478825721 Corinthiorum amator iste uerborum iste iste rhetor namque quatenus totus Thucydides tyrannus Atticae febris tau Gallicum min et sphin ut male illisit ita omnia ista uerba miscuit fratri Virgil Catalepton II THAT lover of Corinthian words or obsolete That well that spouter for that all of Thucydides a tyrant of Attic fever that he wrongly fixed on the Gallic tau and min and spin thus he mixed all those words for his brother a b The Internet Classics Archive The Gallic Wars by Julius Caesar mit edu Archived from the original on 2017 01 06 BG I 29 1 In castris Helvetiorum tabulae repertae sunt litteris Graecis confectae et ad Caesarem relatae quibus in tabulis nominatim ratio confecta erat qui numerus domo exisset eorum qui arma ferre possent et item separatim quot pueri senes mulieresque In the camp of the Helvetii lists were found drawn up in Greek characters and were brought to Caesar in which an estimate had been drawn up name by name of the number who had gone forth from their country who were able to bear arms and likewise the numbers of boys old men and women separately BG VI 6 14 Magnum ibi numerum versuum ediscere dicuntur Itaque annos nonnulli vicenos in disciplina permanent Neque fas esse existimant ea litteris mandare cum in reliquis fere rebus publicis privatisque rationibus Graecis litteris utantur Id mihi duabus de causis instituisse videntur quod neque in vulgum disciplinam efferri velint neque eos qui discunt litteris confisos minus memoriae studere quod fere plerisque accidit ut praesidio litterarum diligentiam in perdiscendo ac memoriam remittant They are said there to learn by heart a great number of verses accordingly some remain in the course of training twenty years Nor do they regard it divinely lawful to commit these to writing though in almost all other matters in their public and private transactions they use Greek letters That practice they seem to me to have adopted for two reasons because they neither desire their doctrines to be divulged among the mass of the people nor those who learn to devote themselves the less to the efforts of memory relying on writing since it generally occurs to most men that in their dependence on writing they relax their diligence in learning thoroughly and their employment of the memory a b Pierre Yves Lambert La langue gauloise editions errance 1994 Bruno Rochette Language Policies in the Roman Republic and Empire translated by James Clackson in A Companion to the Latin Language Blackwell 2011 p 550 Stefan Zimmer Indo European in Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC Clio 2006 p 961 Leonard A Curchin Literacy in the Roman Provinces Qualitative and Quantitative Data from Central Spain American Journal of Philology 116 3 1995 p 464 Richard Miles Communicating Culture Identity and Power in Experiencing Rome Culture Identity and Power in the Roman Empire Routledge 2000 pp 58 59 Alex Mullen Southern Gaul and the Mediterranean Multilingualism and Multiple Identities in the Iron Age and Roman Periods Cambridge University Press 2013 p 269 note 19 and p 300 on trilingualism On the Detection and Overthrow of the So Called Gnosis Adv haer book I praef 3 You will not expect from me as a resident among the Keltae and accustomed for the most part to use a barbarous dialect any display of rhetoric R Thurneysen Irisches und Gallisches in Zeitschrift fur Celtische Philologie 14 1923 1 17 a b Institut fur Sprachwissenschaft Archived from the original on 2013 11 02 Retrieved 2013 10 31 Aulus Gellius Noctes Atticae Extract ueluti Romae nobis praesentibus uetus celebratusque homo in causis sed repentina et quasi tumultuaria doctrina praeditus cum apud praefectum urbi uerba faceret et dicere uellet inopi quendam miseroque uictu uiuere et furfureum panem esitare uinumque eructum et feditum potare hic inquit eques Romanus apludam edit et flocces bibit aspexerunt omnes qui aderant alius alium primo tristiores turbato et requirente uoltu quidnam illud utriusque uerbi foret post deinde quasi nescio quid Tusce aut Gallice dixisset uniuersi riserunt For instance in Rome in our presence a man experienced and celebrated as a pleader but furnished with a sudden and as it were hasty education was speaking to the Prefect of the City and wished to say that a certain man with a poor and wretched way of life ate bread from bran and drank bad and spoiled wine This Roman knight he said eats apluda and drinks flocces All who were present looked at each other first seriously and with an inquiring expression wondering what the two words meant thereupon as if he might have said something in I don t know Gaulish or Etruscan all of them burst out laughing based on BLOM 2007 183 Cassius Dio Roman History XIII cited in Zonaras 8 21 Spain in which the Saguntines dwell and all the adjoining land is in the western part of Europe It extends for a great distance along the inner sea past the Pillars of Hercules and along the Ocean itself furthermore it includes the regions inland for a very great distance even to the Pyrenees This range beginning at the sea called anciently the sea of the Bebryces but later the sea of the Narbonenses reaches to the great outer sea and contains many diverse nationalities it also separates the whole of Spain from the neighboring land of Gaul The tribes were neither of one speech nor did they have a common government As a result they were not known by one name the Romans called them Spaniards but the Greeks Iberians from the river Iberus Ebro Cassius Dio Roman History XII 20 The Insubres a Gallic tribe after securing allies from among their kinsmen beyond the Alps turned their arms against the Romans Cassius Dio Roman History XIV cited in Zonoras 8 Hannibal desiring to invade Italy with all possible speed marched on hurriedly and traversed without a conflict the whole of Gaul lying between the Pyrenees and the Rhone Then Hannibal in haste to set out for Italy but suspicious of the more direct roads turned aside from them and followed another on which he met with grievous hardships For the mountains there are exceedingly precipitous and the snow which had fallen in great quantities was driven by the winds and filled the chasms and the ice was frozen very hard For this reason then he did not turn back but suddenly appearing from the Alps spread astonishment and fear among the Romans Hannibal proceeded to the Po and when he found there neither rafts nor boats for they had been burned by Scipio he ordered his brother Mago to swim across with the cavalry and pursue the Romans whereas he himself marched up toward the sources of the river and then ordered that the elephants should cross down stream In this manner while the water was temporarily dammed and spread out by the animals bulk he effected a crossing more easily below them Of the captives taken he killed the Romans but released the rest This he did also in the case of all those taken alive hoping to conciliate the cities by their influence And indeed many of the other Gauls as well as Ligurians and Etruscans either murdered the Romans dwelling within their borders or surrendered them and then transferred their allegiance Cassius Dio Roman History XLVI 55 4 5 Individually however in order that they should not be thought to be appropriating the entire government they arranged that both Africas Sardinia and Sicily should be given to Caesar to rule all of Spain and Gallia Narbonensis to Lepidus and the rest of Gaul both south and north of the Alps to Antony The former was called Gallia Togata as I have stated evidently in a lost portion of Cassius Dio s work because it seemed to be more peaceful than the other divisions of Gaul and because the inhabitants already employed the Roman citizen garb the other was termed Gallia Comata because the Gauls there for the most part let their hair grow long and were in this way distinguished from the others Fideicommissa quocumque sermone relinqui possunt non solum Latina uel Graeca sed etiam Punica uel Gallicana uel alterius cuiuscumque genti Fideicommissa may be left in any language not only in Latin or Greek but also in Punic or Gallicanian or of whatever other people David Stifter Old Celtic Languages 2012 p110 Ausonius Epicedion in patrem 9 10 a first person poem written in the voice of his father Latin did not flow easily but the language of Athens provided me with sufficient words of polished eloquence sermone inpromptus Latio verum Attica lingua suffecit culti vocibus eloquii J N Adams Bilingualism and the Latin Language Cambridge University Press 2003 pp 356 357 especially note 109 citing R P H Green The Works of Ausonius Oxford Clarendon Press p 1991 p 276 on the view that Gaulish was the native language of Iulius Ausonius Bordeaux Burdigala was a Gaulish enclave in Aquitania according to Strabo s Geographia IV 2 1 David Stifter Old Celtic Languages 2012 p110 Jerome Latin Hieronymus writing in AD 386 7 Commentarii in Epistulam ad Galatas II 3 Patrologia Latina 26 357 cited after David Stifter Old Celtic Languages 2012 p 110 Galatas excepto sermone Graeco quo omnis oriens loquitur propriam linguam eandem paene habere quam Treuiros Apart from the Greek language which is spoken throughout the entire East the Galatians have their own language almost the same as the Treveri Lucian Pamphlet against the pseudo prophet Alexandros cited after Eugenio Lujan The Galatian Place Names in Ptolemy in Javier de Hoz Eugenio R Lujan Patrick Sims Williams eds New Approaches to Celtic Place Names in Ptolemy s Geography Madrid Ediciones Clasicas 2005 263 Lucian an eye witness reports on Alexandros around AD 180 using interpreters in Paphlagonia northeast of Galatia ἀllὰ kaὶ barbarois pollakis ἔrxhsen eἴ tis tῇ patriῳ ἔroito fwnῇ Syristὶ ἢ Keltistὶ ῥᾳdiws ἐ3eyriskwn tinὰs ἐpidhmoῦntas ὁmoe8neῖs toῖs dedwkosin But he Alexandros gave oracles to barbarians many times given that if someone asked a question in his the questioner s native language in Syrian or in Celtic he Alexandros easily found residents of the same people as the questioners Sidonius Apollinaris Letters III 3 2 mitto istic ob gratiam pueritiae tuae undique gentium confluxisse studia litterarum tuaeque personae quondam debitum quod sermonis Celtici squamam depositura nobilitas nunc oratorio stilo nunc etiam Camenalibus modis imbuebatur I will forget that your schooldays brought us a veritable confluence of learners and the learned from all quarters and that if our nobles were imbued with the love of eloquence and poetry if they resolved to forsake the barbarous Celtic dialect it was to your personality that they owed all Alternate translation according to David Stifter sermonis Celtici squamam depositura nobilitas nunc oratorio stilo nunc etiam Camenalibus modis imbuebatur the Arvernian nobility wishing to cast off the scales of Celtic speech will now be imbued by him brother in law Ecdicius with oratorial style even with tunes of the Muses after BLOM 2007 188 cited from David Stifter Old Celtic Languages 2012 p110 eἰ dὲ pany ἐbiazeto Galatistὶ ἐf8eggeto If he was forced to he spoke in Galatian Vita S Euthymii 55 after Eugenio Lujan The Galatian Place Names in Ptolemy in Javier de Hoz Eugenio R Lujan Patrick Sims Williams eds New Approaches to Celtic Place Names in Ptolemy s Geography Madrid Ediciones Clasicas 2005 264 Hist Franc book I 32 Veniens vero Arvernos delubrum illud quod Gallica lingua Vasso Galatae vocant incendit diruit atque subvertit And coming to Clermont to the Arverni he set on fire overthrew and destroyed that shrine which they call Vasso Galatae in the Gallic tongue Blom Alderik Lingua gallica lingua celtica Gaulish Gallo Latin or Gallo Romance Keltische Forschungen 4 2009 Stifter 2012 p 109 a b Mufwene Salikoko S Language birth and death Annu Rev Anthropol 33 2004 201 222 Page 213 the Romans did not colonize Europe on the settlement model However the local rulers who had Romanized already maintained Latin as the language of their administrations footnote Latin was spread outside Rome largely by foreign mercenaries in Roman legions similar to how English is spreading today as a world lingua franca significantly by nonnative speakers using it and teaching it to others main More significant is that the Roman colonies were not fully Latinized in the fifth century When the Romans left lower classes the population majority continued to use Celtic languages especially in rural areas Page 214 The protracted development of the Romance languages under the substrate influence of Celtic languages is correlated with the gradual loss of the latter as fewer and fewer children found it useful to acquire the Celtic languages and instead acquired regional Latin Today the Celtic languages and other more indigenous languages similar to Basque formerly spoken in the same territory have vanished Page 215 In contrast to the Angles and Saxons who kept Germanic speech and religion the Franks surrendered their Germanic traditions embracing the language and religion of the indigenous rulers Latin and Catholicism Lodge R Anthony 1993 French From Dialect to Standard p 46 ISBN 9780415080712 Craven Thomas D 2002 Comparative Historical Dialectology Italo Romance Clues to Ibero Romance Sound Change John Benjamins Publishing p 51 ISBN 1588113132 Bonnaud P 1981 Terres et langages Peuples et regions Clermont Ferrand Auvernha Tara d Oc pp 109 110 Lodge R Anthony 1993 French From Dialect to Standard p 43 ISBN 9780415080712 Bonnaud P 1981 Terres et langages Peuples et regions Clermont Ferrand Auvernha Tara d Oc p 38 Fleuriot Leon Les origins de la Bretagne Paris Bibliotheque historique Payot Editions Payot p 77 Falc hun Francois Celtique continental et celtique insulaire en Breton Annales de Bretagne 70 4 431 432 Gvozdanovic Jadranka 2009 Celtic and Slavic and the Great Migrations Heidelberg Winter Verlag a b Kerkhof Peter Alexander 2018 Language law and loanwords in early medieval Gaul language contact and studies in Gallo Romance phonology Page 50 Peter Schrijver Gaulish in Encyclopedia of the Languages of Europe ed Glanville Price Oxford Blackwell 1998 192 Schmidt Karl Horst The Celtic Languages of Continental Europe in Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies volume XXVIII 1980 University of Wales Press Article by Lambert Pierre Yves Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies volume XXXIV 1987 University of Wales Press C Iulius Caesar Commentarii de Bello Gallico Pierre Yves Lambert La langue gauloise editions errance 1994 p 185 M H Offord French words past present and future pp 36 37 W Meyer Lubke Romanisches etymologisches Worterbuch Heidelberg 3rd edition 1935 Lambert 185 Koch 2005 p 1106 Lejeune Michel Fleuriot L Lambert P Y Marichal R Vernhet A 1985 Le plomb magique du Larzac et les sorcieres gauloises CNRS ISBN 2 222 03667 4 Inscriptions and French translations on the lead tablets from Larzac Archived 2008 06 29 at the Wayback Machine Bernhard Maier Lexikon der keltischen Religion und Kultur S 81 f la graufesenque ac toulouse fr Archived from the original on 2005 03 05 Pierre Yves Lambert David Stifter Le texte gaulois de Reze Etudes Celtiques 38 139 164 2012 Delamarre 2008 p 92 93 Paul Russell An Introduction to the Celtic Languages London Longman 1995 206 7 Delamarre Xavier Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Editions Errance Paris 2008 p 299 Woolf Greg 2007 Ancient civilizations the illustrated guide to belief mythology and art Barnes amp Noble p 415 ISBN 978 1 4351 0121 0 Stifter David Recension of Helmut Birkhan Kelten Celts Bilder ihrer Kultur Images of their Culture Wien 1999 in Die Sprache 43 2 2002 2003 pp 237 243 Everson Michael Lilley Chris 2019 05 26 L2 19 179 Proposal for the addition of four Latin characters for Gaulish PDF Delamarre 2008 p 215 216 Delamarre 2008 p 163 La Gaule 1947 for the relevance of the question of the transition from Gaulish to Latin in French national identity see also Nos ancetres les Gaulois Lambert 2003 pp 51 67 a b Vaclav Blazek Gaulish language digilib phil muni cz ISBN 9788021047051 Retrieved 2018 10 20 David Stifter 2008 Old Celtic Languages Gaulish General Information eprints maynoothuniversity ie Retrieved 2018 10 20 Thurneysen Rudolf 1993 A Grammar of Old Irish School of Celtic Studies Dublin Institute for Advanced Studies ISBN 978 1 85500 161 9 Williams Stephen J Elfennau Gramadeg Cymraeg Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru Caerdydd 1959 Interview With Eluveiti Headbangers India Archived from the original on 2015 04 02 Reproduction in Raffaele Carlo De Marinis Gli Etruschi a nord del Po Mantova 1986 Stifter David MN 2 Lexicon Leponticum An Interactive Online Etymological Dictionary of Lepontic University of Vienna Archived from the original on 6 November 2015 Retrieved 9 July 2014 Bibliography Edit Delamarre Xavier 2003 Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Une approche linguistique du vieux celtique continental in French Errance ISBN 9782877723695 Delamarre Xavier 2012 Noms de lieux celtiques de l Europe Ancienne 500 500 Arles Errance Eska Joseph F 2004 Celtic Languages in Woodard Roger D ed Cambridge Encyclopedia of the World s Ancient Languages Cambridge Cambridge UP pp 857 880 Eska Joseph F 2008 Continental Celtic in Woodard Roger D ed The Ancient Languages of Europe Cambridge Cambridge UP pp 165 188 Eska Joseph F 1998 The linguistic position of Lepontic Proceedings of the Berkeley Linguistics Society 24 2 2 11 doi 10 3765 bls v24i2 1254 Eska Joseph F 2010 The emergence of the Celtic languages in Ball Martin J Muller Nicole eds The Celtic Languages 2nd ed London Routledge pp 22 27 Eska Joseph F 2012 Lepontic in Koch John T Minard Antoine eds The Celts History Life and Culture Santa Barbara ABC Clio p 534 Eska Joseph F Evans D Ellis 2010 Continental Celtic in Ball Martin J Muller Nicole eds The Celtic Languages 2nd ed London Routledge pp 28 54 Evans David E 1967 Gaulish Personal Names A Study of Some Continental Celtic Formations Clarendon Press Dottin Georges 1920 La langue gauloise grammaire textes et glossaire Paris C Klincksieck Forster Peter Toth Alfred 2003 Toward a phylogenetic chronology of ancient Gaulish Celtic and Indo European Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA 100 15 9079 9084 Bibcode 2003PNAS 100 9079F doi 10 1073 pnas 1331158100 PMC 166441 PMID 12837934 Koch John T 2005 Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 1 85109 440 7 Lacroix Jacques 2020 Les irreductibles mots gaulois dans la langue francaise Lemme Edit ISBN 978 2 917575 89 5 Lambert Pierre Yves 1994 La langue gauloise description linguistique commentaire d inscriptions choisies in French Errance ISBN 978 2 87772 089 2 Lejeune Michel 1971 Lepontica Paris Belles Lettres Meid Wolfgang 1994 Gaulish Inscriptions Archaeolingua Recueil des inscriptions gauloises XLVe supplement a GALLIA ed Paul Marie Duval et al 4 vols Paris CNRS 1985 2002 ISBN 2 271 05844 9 Russell Paul 1995 An Introduction to the Celtic Languages London Longman Savignac Jean Paul 2004 Dictionnaire francais gaulois Paris Editions de la Difference Savignac Jean Paul 1994 Les Gaulois leurs ecrits retrouves Merde a Cesar Paris Editions de la Difference Sims Williams Patrick 2007 Common Celtic Gallo Brittonic and Insular Celtic in Lambert Pierre Yves Pinault Jean eds Gaulois et celtique continental Geneve Librairie Droz pp 309 354 Solinas Patrizia 1995 Il celtico in Italia Studi Etruschi 60 311 408 Stifter David 2012 Old Celtic Languages lecture notes University of Kopenhagen Vath Bernd Ziegler Sabine 2017 The documentation of Celtic In Klein Jared Joseph Brian Fritz Matthias eds Handbook of Comparative and Historical Indo European Linguistics Vol 2 Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 054243 1 Watkins Calvert 1999 A Celtic miscellany in K Jones Blei et al eds Proceedings of the Tenth Annual UCLA Indo European Conference Los Angeles 1998 Washington Institute for the Study of Man pp 3 25Further reading EditBeck Noemie Celtic Divine Names Related to Gaulish and British Population Groups In Theonymie Celtique Cultes Interpretatio Keltische Theonymie Kulte Interpretatio Edited by Hofeneder Andreas and De Bernardo Stempel Patrizia by Hainzmann Manfred and Mathieu Nicolas Wein Austrian Academy of Sciences Press 2013 51 72 www jstor org stable j ctv8mdn28 7 Hamp Eric P Gaulish ordinals and their history In Etudes Celtiques vol 38 2012 pp 131 135 DOI https doi org 10 3406 ecelt 2012 2349 www persee fr doc ecelt 0373 1928 2012 num 38 1 2349 Lambert Pierre Yves Le Statut Du Theonyme Gaulois In Theonymie Celtique Cultes Interpretatio Keltische Theonymie Kulte Interpretatio edited by Hofeneder Andreas and De Bernardo Stempel Patrizia by Hainzmann Manfred and Mathieu Nicolas 113 24 Wein Austrian Academy of Sciences Press 2013 www jstor org stable j ctv8mdn28 11 Kennedy James 1855 On the Ancient Languages of France and Spain Transactions of the Philological Society 2 11 155 184 doi 10 1111 j 1467 968X 1855 tb00784 x Mullen Alex Darasse Coline Ruiz Gaulish In Palaeohispanica revista sobre lenguas y culturas de la Hispania antigua n 20 2020 pp 749 783 ISSN 1578 5386 DOI 10 36707 palaeohispanica v0i20 383 Witczak Krzysztof Tomasz Gaulish SUIOREBE with two sisters Lingua Posnaniensis 57 2 59 62 doi https doi org 10 1515 linpo 2015 0011External links Edit For a list of words relating to Gaulish language see the Gaulish language category of words in Wiktionary the free dictionary L A Curchin Gaulish language in French Langues et ecriture en Gaule Romaine by Helene Chew of the Musee des Antiquites Nationales two sample inscriptions on TITUS Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Gaulish amp oldid 1131326912, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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