Anatolian hieroglyphs are an indigenous
logographic script native to central
Anatolia, consisting of some 500 signs. They were once commonly known as Hittite hieroglyphs, but the language they encode proved to be
Luwian, not
Hittite, and the term Luwian hieroglyphs is used in English publications. They are typologically similar to
Egyptian hieroglyph
Egyptian hieroglyphs (, ) were the formal writing system used in Ancient Egypt, used for writing the Egyptian language. Hieroglyphs combined logographic, syllabic and alphabetic elements, with some 1,000 distinct characters.There were about 1,00 ...
s, but do not derive graphically from that script, and they are not known to have played the sacred role of hieroglyphs in Egypt. There is no demonstrable connection to
Hittite cuneiform.
History
Individual Anatolian hieroglyphs are attested from the second and early first millennia BC across Anatolia and into modern Syria. A biconvex bronze personal seal was found in the Troy VIIb level (later half of the 12th century BC) inscribed with Luwian Hieroglyphs. The earliest examples occur on personal
seals, but these consist only of names, titles, and auspicious signs, and it is not certain that they represent language. Most actual texts are found as monumental inscriptions in stone, though a few documents have survived on lead strips.
The first inscriptions confirmed as Luwian date to the
Late Bronze Age, ca. 14th to 13th centuries BC. After some two centuries of sparse material, the hieroglyphs resume in the Early
Iron Age, ca. 10th to 8th centuries BC. In the early 7th century BC, the Luwian hieroglyphic script, by then aged some 700 years, was marginalized by competing
alphabetic scripts and fell into oblivion.
Language
While almost all the preserved texts employing Anatolian hieroglyphs are written in the
Luwian language, some features of the script suggest its earliest development within a bilingual Hittite-Luwian environment. For example, the sign which has the form of a "taking" or "grasping" hand has the value /ta/, which is precisely the Hittite word ta-/da- "to take," in contrast with the Luwian cognate of the same meaning which is la-. There was occasionally some use of Anatolian hieroglyphs to write foreign material like
Hurrian theonyms, or glosses in
Urartian (such as
''á - ḫá+ra - ku'' for
''aqarqi'' or
''tu - ru - za'' for
''ṭerusi'', two units of measurement).
File:Kahramanmaras_Museum_Löwe_vorn.jpg, The Marash Lion, with Anatolian hieroglyphs
File:Kahramanmaras_Museum_Löwe.jpg, The Marash Lion, with Anatolian hieroglyphs
File:IvrizReliefA.jpg, God Tarḫunz with inscription in Anatolian hieroglyphs
File:Slab with Hittite hieroglyphic inscriptions mentioning the activities of king Urhilina and his son. 9th century BC. From Hama. Museum of the Ancient Orient, Istanbul.jpg, Slab with Luwian hieroglyphic inscriptions mentioning the activities of king Urhilina and his son. 9th century BC. From Hama. Museum of the Ancient Orient, Istanbul
Typology
As in Egyptian, characters may be logographic or phonographic—that is, they may be used to represent words or sounds. The number of phonographic signs is limited. Most represent CV syllables, though there are a few disyllabic signs. A large number of these are ambiguous as to whether the vowel is ''a'' or ''i.'' Some signs are dedicated to one use or another, but many are flexible.
Words may be written logographically, phonetically, mixed (that is, a logogram with a
phonetic complement), and may be preceded by a
determinative.
Other than the fact that the phonetic glyphs form a
syllabary
In the linguistic study of written languages, a syllabary is a set of written symbols that represent the syllables or (more frequently) moras which make up words.
A symbol in a syllabary, called a syllabogram, typically represents an (optiona ...
rather than indicating only consonants, this system is analogous to the system of Egyptian hieroglyphs.
A more elaborate monumental style is distinguished from more abstract linear or cursive forms of the script. In general, relief inscriptions prefer monumental forms, and incised ones prefer the linear form, but the styles are in principle interchangeable. Texts of several lines are usually written in
boustrophedon style. Within a line, signs are usually written in vertical columns, but as in
Egyptian hieroglyphs, aesthetic considerations take precedence over correct reading order.
Decipherment
Anatolian hieroglyphs first came to Western attention in the nineteenth century, when European explorers such as
Johann Ludwig Burckhardt
Johann Ludwig (also known as John Lewis, Jean Louis) Burckhardt (24 November 1784 – 15 October 1817) was a Swiss traveller, geographer and Orientalist. Burckhardt assumed the alias ''Sheikh Ibrahim Ibn Abdallah'' during his travels in Arabia ...
and
Richard Francis Burton described pictographic inscriptions on walls in the city of
Hama
, timezone = EET
, utc_offset = +2
, timezone_DST = EEST
, utc_offset_DST = +3
, postal_code_type =
, postal_code =
, ar ...
,
Syria
Syria ( ar, سُورِيَا or سُورِيَة, translit=Sūriyā), officially the Syrian Arab Republic ( ar, الجمهورية العربية السورية, al-Jumhūrīyah al-ʻArabīyah as-Sūrīyah), is a Western Asian country loc ...
. The same characters were recorded in
Boğazköy, and presumed by
A. H. Sayce
The Rev. Archibald Henry Sayce (25 September 18454 February 1933) was a pioneer British Assyriology, Assyriologist and linguistics, linguist, who held a chair as Professor of Assyriology at the University of Oxford from 1891 to 1919. He was abl ...
to be Hittite in origin.
By 1915, with the Luwian language known from cuneiform, and a substantial quantity of Anatolian hieroglyphs transcribed and published, linguists started to make real progress in reading the script.
In the 1930s, it was partially deciphered by
Ignace Gelb
Ignace Jay Gelb (October 14, 1907, Tarnau, Austria-Hungary (now Tarnów, Poland) - December 22, 1985, Chicago, Illinois) was a Polish-American ancient historian and Assyriologist who pioneered the scientific study of writing systems.
Early life ...
, Piero Meriggi,
Emil Forrer, and
Bedřich Hrozný. Its language was confirmed as Luwian in 1973 by J.D. Hawkins,
Anna Morpurgo Davies and Günther Neumann, who corrected some previous errors about sign values, in particular emending the reading of symbols *376 and *377 from ''i, ī'' to ''zi, za''.
Sign inventory
The script consists of on the order of 500 unique signs, some with multiple values; a given sign may function as a logogram, a determinative or a
syllabogram, or a combination thereof. The signs are numbered according to Laroche's sign list, with a prefix of 'L.' or '*'. Logograms are transcribed in Latin in capital letters.
For example, *90, an image of a foot, is transcribed as PES when used logographically, and with its phonemic value ''ti'' when used as a syllabogram. In the rare cases where the logogram cannot be transliterated into Latin, it is rendered through its approximate Hittite equivalent, recorded in Italic capitals, e.g. *216 ''ARHA''. The most up-to-date sign list was compiled by Massimiliano Marazzi in 1998.
Hawkins, Morpurgo-Davies and Neumann corrected some previous errors about sign values, in particular emending the reading of symbols *376 and *377 from ''i, ī'' to ''zi, za''.
List of CV syllabograms:
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Transliteration of logograms is conventionally the term represented in Latin, in capital letters (e.g. PES for the logogram for "foot"). The
syllabograms are transliterated, disambiguating homophonic signs analogously to
cuneiform transliteration
Cuneiform is a Logogram, logo-Syllabary, syllabic writing system, script that was used to write several languages of the Ancient Near East, Ancient Middle East. The script was in active use from the early Bronze Age until the beginning of the ...
, e.g. ta=ta
1, tá=ta
2, and ta
6 transliterate three distinct ways of representing phonemic /ta/. Some of the homophonic signs have received further attention and new phonetic interpretation in recent years, e.g. tà has been argued to stand for /da/, and á seems to have stood for /ʔa/ (distinct from /a/), representing the descendant of
Proto-Indo-European . One of the latest confirmed discoveries pertaining to the decipherment of Anatolian Hieroglyphs is the re-interpretation of the signs ta
4 and ta
5 as and respectively
[Rieken, E. and Yakubovich I (2010): "The New Values of Luwian Signs L 319 and L 172." In: Singer, I.(ed.): ''Ipamati kistamati pari tumatimis: Luwian and Hittite studies presented to J. D. Hawkins on the occasion of his 70th birthday.'' Tel Aviv: Tel Aviv University, Institute of Archaeology, 199-219.]
List of Anatolian ideograms
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, , = } (earlier variant), }
, , (?) = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , (?) = }
, , (?) = }
, , (?) = }
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, -style="text-align:center"
, , - = }
, , -+ = }
, , -?+ = }
, , +- = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , +?- = }
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, , = }
, , = = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , = }
, , = }
, , = }, }, }
, , +. = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , ++ = }
, , = }
, , = } (earlier variant), }
, , = } (word separator)
, -style="text-align:center"
, , . = }
, , = }
, , = }
, , = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , 2 = }
, , 3 = }
, , 4 = }
, , 5 = }
, -style="text-align:center"
, , 8 = }
, , 9 = }
, , 12 = }
, ,
Unicode
Anatolian hieroglyphs were added to the
Unicode Standard in June, 2015 with the release of version 8.0.
The Unicode block for Anatolian Hieroglyphs is U+14400–U+1467F:
See also
*
Hieroglyphic Luwian
References
Sources
*
*
External links
Luwian Hieroglyphicsfrom the Indo-European Database
Sign list with logographic and syllabic readings
{{list of writing systems
Obsolete writing systems
Bronze Age writing systems
Luwian language