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Etruscan language - Geographic distribution |  | Etruscan language - Geographic distribution: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distribution |  | Etruscan was spoken in north-west and west-central Italy, in the region that even now bears their name: Tuscany, and in the Po valley to the north of Etruria.
Etruscan language - Related Languages.
One language certain to be very closely related to Etruscan is the language once spoken on the island of Lemnos before the Athenian invasion (6th century BC), aptly named Lemnian. A stone tablet called the Lemnos stele was found there written with a script related to Etruscan and is dated to approximately 600 BC ...
See also:Etruscan language, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Writing system |  | | Etruscan language, Etruscan language - Classification, Etruscan language - Consonants, Etruscan language - Geographic distribution, Etruscan language - History, Etruscan language - Other less accepted theories, Etruscan language - Related Languages, Etruscan language - Sounds, Etruscan language - Texts, Etruscan language - Vocabulary, Etruscan language - Vowels, Etruscan language - Writing system, Etruscan civilization, Aegean languages - Language family to which Etruscan belongs., Liber Linteus - An Etruscan inscription., Tabula Cortonensis - An Etruscan inscription., Cippus perusinus - An Etruscan inscription., Pyrgi Tablets - An Etruscan inscription., Lemnian language, Eteocypriot, Eteocretan, Cortona - Ancient Etruscan city (Curtun). |  | |
|  |  | Etruscan language: Encyclopedia II - Etruscan language - Geographic distribution
Etruscan language - Geographic distribution
Etruscan was spoken in north-west and west-central Italy, in the region that even now bears their name: Tuscany, and in the Po valley to the north of Etruria.
Etruscan language - Related Languages
One language certain to be very closely related to Etruscan is the language once spoken on the island of Lemnos before the Athenian invasion (6th century BC), aptly named Lemnian. A stone tablet called the Lemnos stele was found there written with a script related to Etruscan and is dated to approximately 600 BCE. We know that the inhabitants actually spoke this language due to the plethora of ceramic pieces with inscriptions written with this same alphabet. However, we do not know when or how speakers of this dialect arrived on this island.
It is probable that Rhaetic, a language attested in Northern Italy, is also related to Etruscan, sharing with it some common features such as grammatical inflections and vocabulary, although the number of inscriptions in this language are few.
The most notable inscription in a language known to linguists as Eteocypriot is the Amathus Bilingual, so named because it bears a partially translated version of the Eteocypriot text in the ancient Attic dialect of Greek. Like Lemnian, it bears similarities in vocabulary and grammar to Etruscan and is likely to be part of the same family.
Tentatively, some note a possible relationship with Minoan (aka Eteocretan) to Etruscan, written in the Linear A script. While this may seem too bold for some, this view would be perfectly in line with Herodotus' account in Histories that Etruscans originate from Asia Minor, suggesting that an entire family of now extinct languages may have once existed in the area extending from Greece and neighbouring islands to Western Turkey. Indeed, this in turn may remind us of the theory proposed by Beekes of a pre-Greek substrate present in some Greek words of otherwise obscure "non-Indo-European" origin.
In all, the old view that Etruscan is an isolated language can be put to rest. In modern times we see that Etruscan is part of a larger linguistic family that is now known as Tyrrhenian, based on the Greek name for the Etruscans, "Tyrrhenoi".
Other related archives10 BC, 1000 BC, 1498, 1st century, 1st century BC, 200 BC, 4th century, 54, 5th century, 6th century BC, Aegean languages, Anatolia, Anatolian languages, Beekes, Caere, Campania, Capua, Cicero, Cippus perusinus, Claudius, Corsica, Cortona, Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Emilia-Romagna, Eteocretan, Eteocypriot, Etruria, Etruscan civilization, Etruscans, Euboean, Falerii, Gallia Narbonensis, Gauls, Greek alphabet, Herodotus, Hungarian, IPA, Indo-European, Italy, Latin, Latin alphabet, Latium, Lemnian, Lemnian language, Lemnos, Lemnos stele, Liber Linteus, Linear A, Livy, Lombardy, Lydia, Mario Alinei, Minoan, Noricans, North Africa, Nostratic, Old Italic alphabet, Parma, Phoenician, Pinturicchio, Pliny, Po, Pope Alexander VI, Pyrgi Tablets, Raetic, Rhaetians, Rhaetic, Roman Republic, Roman emperor, Sardinia, Servius, Sofia, Bulgaria, Strouma, Tabula Capuana, Tabula Cortonensis, Tarquinia, Tuscany, Tyrrhenians, Umbria, Urnfield, Varro, Veii, Veneto, Villanovan, Vindelicans, Zagreb, Croatia, cabalist, carat, digamma, divination, epitaphs, hegemony, inscriptions, language, loanwords, mass comparison, mermaid, orientalist, ossuaries, phonemes, religious cult, votive gifts
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Geographic distribution", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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