LUSITANIAN LANGUAGE


One of the inscriptions of Arroyo de la Luz.

'Lusitanian' (so named after the Lusitani or Lusitanians) was a paleo-Iberian Indo-European language. It is known by only five inscriptions and numerous names of places (toponyms) and of gods (). The language was spoken before the Roman conquest of Lusitania, in the territory inhabited by Lusitanian tribes, from Douro to the Tagus rivers in Portugal.

Contents
History
Classification and related languages
Geographical distribution
Writing system
See also
External links

History


The Lusitanians were the most numerous people in the western area of the Iberian peninsula, and there are those who consider that they came from the Alps; others believe the Lusitanians were a Iberian tribe. In any event, it is known that they were established in the area by the 6th century BC.
Circa 150 BC, Lusitania began being conquered by the Roman Empire. Like all other Iberian languages, except for the Basque language, the Lusitanian language succumbed to the pressure and prestige of Latin over time.

Classification and related languages


Main language areas in Iberia circa 200 BC.

Lusitanian appears to have been an Indo-European language which was quite different from the languages spoken in the centre of the Iberian Peninsula. It would be more archaic than the Celtiberian language.
The filiation of the Lusitanian language is still in debate. There are those who endorse that it is a Celtic language. This Celtic theory is largely based upon the historical fact that the only Indo-European tribes that are known to have existed in Portugal at that time were Celtic tribes. The apparent "Celticity" of most of the lexicon — the anthroponyms and toponyms — may also support a Celtic affiliation.
There is a substantial problem in the Celtic theory however: the preservation of initial /p/, as can be seen in PORCOM. The Celtic languages had lost that initial /p/ in their evolution: comparing with ''athir'' / ''orc'' (Gaelic) and ''pater'' / ''porcum'' (Latin) meaning "father" and "pig", respectively. However, the presence of this /p/ does not necessarily preclude the possibility of Lusitanian being Celtic: Lusitanian could have split off from the other Celtic languages before the loss of /p/, or when /p/ had become (before shifting to /h/ and then being lost); the letter P could be used to represent either sound.
A second theory, defended by Francisco Villar and Rosa Pedrero, relates Lusitanian with the Italic languages. The theory is based on parallels in the names of deities (Latin ''Consus'' / Lusitanian ''Cossue'', Latin ''Seia'' / Lusitanian ''Segia'', Marrucinian ''Iovia'' / Lusitanian ''Iovea(i)'') and other lexical items (Umbrian ''gomia'' / Lusitanian ''comaiam''), with some other grammatical elements.
Finally, Ulrich Schmoll proposed a new branch which he called "Galician-Lusitanian".
No Lusitanian text of sufficient length, however, has surfaced in order for its affiliation to be clearly determined, one way or the other.

Geographical distribution


Inscriptions have been found in Arroyo de la Luz (in Cáceres), Cabeço das Fragas (in Guarda) and in Moledo (Viseu). Taking into account Lusitanian theonyms, anthroponyms and toponyms, the Lusitanian sphere would include modern northeastern Portugal and adjacent areas in Spain, with the centre in Serra da Estrela.
There are fundamental suspicions that the area of the Gallaecian tribes (North of Portugal and Galicia), Asturian and, probably, Vetonian; that is, all the northwestern area of the Iberian peninsula, spoke related languages with the Lusitanian and not with Celtic language, as it is commonly believed.

Writing system


The most famous inscriptions are those from Cabeço das Fráguas and Lamas de Moledo in Portugal and Arroyo de la Luz in Spain. All the known inscriptions are written in the Latin alphabet.
'Lamas de Moledo:' 'Cabeço das Fráguas:' 'Arroyo de la Luz (I & II):' 'Arroyo de la Luz (III):'
RUFUS ET
TIRO SCRIP
SERUNT
VEAMINICORI
DOENTI
ANGOM
LAMATICOM
CROUCEAO
MACA
REAICOI PETRANOI R(?)
ADOM PORCOM IOUEAS(?)
CAELOBRICOI
OLIAM TREBOPALA
INDO PORCOM LAEBO
COMAIAM ICONA LOIM
INNA OILAM USSEAM
TREBARUNE INDI TAUROM
IFADEM REUE...A sheep [lamb?] for Trebopala
and a pig for Laebo,
[a sheep] of the same age for Iccona Loiminna,
a one year old sheep for
Trebaruna and a fertile bull...
for Reve...
AMBATVS
SCRIPSI
CARLAE PRAISOM
SECIAS ERBA MVITIE
AS ARIMO PRAESO
NDO SINGEIETO
INI AVA INDI VEA
VN INDI VEDAGA
ROM TEVCAECOM
INDI NVRIM INDI
VDEVEC RVRSENCO
AMPILVA
INDI
LOEMINA INDI ENV
PETANIM INDI AR
IMOM SINTAMO
M INDI TEVCOM
SINTAMO
ISACCID·RVETI ·
PVPPID·CARLAE·EN
ETOM·INDI·NA.[
....CE·IOM·


See also



Pre-Roman peoples of the Iberian Peninsula

External links



Lusitanian in LINGVÆ·IMPERII (Spanish)

Detailed map of the Pre-Roman Peoples of Iberia (around 200 BC)

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