
A western Celtiberian signary (Based
on Ferrer i Jané 2005)

An eastern Celtiberian signary
The
Celtiberian script is a
paleohispanic script that was the main
mean of written expression of the
Celtiberian language, an extinct
Continental Celtic language, also
expressed in
Latin alphabet. This
script is a direct adaptation of the
northeastern Iberian script the
most frequently used of the
Iberian
scripts.
All the
paleohispanic scripts,
with the exception of the
Greco-Iberian alphabet, share a
common distinctive typological characteristic: they represent
syllabic values for the
occlusives, and
monophonemic values for the rest of
consonants and
vowels. From
the
writing systems point of view
they are neither
alphabets nor
syllabaries, rather, they are mixed scripts that
are normally identified as
semi-syllabaries. There is no agreement
about how the
paleohispanic
semi-syllabaries originated; some researchers conclude that
their origin is linked only to the
Phoenician alphabet, while others
believe the
Greek alphabet was also
involved.
The basic Celtiberian signary contains 26
signs, instead of the 28 signs of the original model,
the
northeastern Iberian
script, because the
Celtiberians
exclude one of the two
rhotic and one of the
three
nasals: 5
vowels,
15 syllabic signs and 8 consonants (one
lateral, two
sibilants, one
rhotic and
two
nasals). Additionally, it is necessary to
point out that the Iberian sign “s” is transcribed as “z” in
Celtiberian, because it is assumed that sometimes express the
fricative result of an ancient dental occlusive ("d"), while the
Iberian sign “s´” is transcribed as “s”. Attending to the use of
the nasals signs, there are two variants of the Celtiberian script:
In the eastern variant the excluded nasal sign was the Iberian sign
“m´”, while in the western variant the excluded nasal sign was the
Iberian sign “m”. This fact is interpreted as an evidence of a
double origin of the Celtiberian script. Additionally, it has to be
pointed out that like the dual variant of the
northeastern Iberian script, the
western variant shows evidence of the use of the dual system. This
system allows differentiation of the
occlusive signs (those writing
dental and
velar sounds) between
voiced and
unvoiced
by the use of an additional stroke, with the result that the simple
sign represent the
voiced value and the
complex sign represent the
unvoiced
value.
The
Celtiberian inscriptions have been found mainly in the Ebre valley and near the sources of the Tejo and Douro
rivers,
where the Roman and Greek sources locate the Celtiberian
people. The Celtiberian inscriptions were made on different
object types (
silver and
bronze coins,
ceramic recipients,
bronze
plaques and
tesseras,
amphores, stones,
spindle-whorls etc.).
They are only almost
two hundred surviving inscriptions, but one of them is
exceptionally long: the third Botorrita
bronze (Zaragoza
) with more
than three thousand signs containing a census of near 250
people. Almost always the direction of the writing is left
to right. The fact that almost all the Celtiberian inscriptions
were found out of archaeological context does not allow a precise
chronology to be established, but it seem that the oldest
inscriptions in Celtiberian script date to the 2nd century BCE and
the recent ones date from the 1st century BCE.
Image:Zaragoza - Museo - Bronce epigráfico.jpg|Cortono plaque.
Unknown procedence. Western signary.
Image:Bronce luzaga.jpg|Luzaga plaque
(Guadalajara
). Western signary.
Image:Tesera
hospitalidad.jpg|Uxama tessera (Osma,
Soria
. Western signary.
Image:Botorrita 1.jpg|First Botorrita plaque
(Zaragoza
).
Eastern signary.
Image:Zaragoza - Museo - Grafito
01.jpg|Another Botorrita plaque (Zaragoza
).
Eastern signary.Image:Alfabeto.jpg|Fröhner
tessera. Unknown procedence. Eastern signary.
Bibliography
- Ferrer i Jané, Joan (2005): «Novetats sobre el sistema dual de diferenciació gràfica
de les oclusives sordes i sonores», Palaeohispanica 5,
pp. 957-982.
- Hoz, Javier de (2005): «La lengua y la escritura celtibéricas»,
Celtiberos. Tras la estela de Numancia, pp.
417-426.
- Jordán, Carlos (2004): Celtibérico, Zaragoza.
- Jordán, Carlos (2005): «¿Sistema dual de escritura en celtibérico?»,
Palaeohispanica 5, pp. 1013-1030.
- Rodríguez Ramos, Jesús (1997): «Sobre el origen de la escritura
celtibérica», Kalathos 16, pp. 189-197.
- Untermann, Jürgen (1997):
Monumenta Linguarum Hispanicarum. IV Die
tartessischen, keltiberischen und lusitanischen Inschriften,
Wiesbaden.
- Schmoll, Ulrich (1960) : «Die iberischen und keltiberischen
Nasalzeichen», KZ 76, 280-295.
- Villar, Francisco (1993): «Las silbantes en celtibérico»,
Lengua y cultura en la Hispania prerromana, pp.
773-812.
- Villar, Francisco (1995): Estudios de celtibérico y
toponimia prerromana, Salamanca.
External links