Old Italic refers to several now extinct alphabet systems used on the Italian peninsula in ancient times for various Indo-European (predominantly Italic) and non-Indo-European (e.g. Etruscan) languages.
The alphabets derive from Euboean Greek Cumaean alphabet, used at Ischia and Cumae in the Bay of Naples in the eighth century BC. Cumaean, in turn showed strong similarities to the Phoenician alphabet, lending support to theories of Phoenician influence in the West-Central Mediterranean region.
Various Indo-European languages belonging to the Italic branch (Faliscan and members of the Sabellian group, including Oscan, Umbrian, and South Picene, and other Indo-European branches such as Venetic and Messapic) originally used the alphabet. Faliscan, Oscan, Umbrian, North Picene, and South Picene all derive from an Etruscan form of the alphabet. The Germanic runic alphabet was most likely derived from one of these alphabets in about the 2nd century.
It is not clear whether the process of adaptation from the Greek alphabet took place in Italy from the first colony of Greeks, the city of Cumae, or in Greece/Asia Minor. It was in any case a Western Greek alphabet. In the alphabets of the West, X had the sound value , Ψ stood for ; in Etruscan: X = , Ψ = or (Rix 202-209).
The earliest Etruscan abecedarium, the Masiliana tablet which dates to c. 700 BC, lists 26 letters corresponding to contemporary forms of the Greek alphabet which retained san and qoppa but which had not yet developed omega.
| Ψ | Φ | X | U | T | S | R | Q | Ś | P | O | Ξ | N | M | L | K | I | Θ | H | Z | V | E | D | G | B | A |
| Ψ | Φ |
Until about 600 BC, the archaic form of the Etruscan alphabet remains practically unchanged, and the direction of writing is free. From the 6th century, however, there are evolutions of the alphabet, guided by the phonology of the Etruscan language, and letters representing phonemes inexistent in Etruscan are dropped. By 400 BC, it appears that all of Etruria was using the classical Etruscan alphabet of 20 letters, mostly written from left to right:
This classical alphabet remained in use until the 2nd century BC when it began to be contaminated by the rise of the Latin alphabet. Soon after the Etruscan language itself became extinct.
The alphabet does not distinguish voiced and unvoiced occlusives, i.e. P represents /b/ or /p/, T is for /t/ or /d/, K for /g/ or /k/. Z is probably for /ts/. U /u/ and V /w/ are distinguished. Θ is probably for /t/ and X for /g/. There are claims of a related script discovered in Glozel.
Old_Futhark_b.pngOld_Futhark_k.pngOld_Futhark_d.pngEFOld_Futhark_w.pngEtruscanZ-01.pngEtruscanH-01.pngOld_Futhark_th.pngOld_Futhark_i.pngKOld_Futhark_l.pngMEtruscanN-01.pngPhoenician samekh.pngOld_Futhark_u.pngΠϘOld_Futhark_r.pngOld_Futhark_s.pngOld_Futhark_t.pngOld_Futhark_g.pngOld_Futhark_o.png
The alphabet of Sondrio, west Raetian and Kamunian inscriptions.
The alphabet of Magrè, east Raetian inscriptions.
21 of the 26 archaic Etruscan letters were adopted for Old Latin from the 7th century BC, either directly from the Cumae alphabet, or via archaic Etruscan forms, compared to the classical Etruscan alphabet retaining B, D, K, O, Q, X but dropping Θ, Ś, Φ, Ψ, F (Etruscan U is Latin V, Etruscan V is Latin F).
| Letter | Translit. | Name | Letter | Translit. | Name | Letter | Translit. | Name |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 𐌀 | a | a | 𐌁 | b | be | 𐌂 | c | ke |
| 𐌃 | d | de | 𐌄 | e | e | 𐌅 | v | ve |
| 𐌆 | z | ze | 𐌇 | h | he | 𐌈 | b | the |
| 𐌉 | i | i | 𐌊 | k | ka | 𐌋 | l | el |
| 𐌌 | m | em | 𐌍 | n | en | 𐌎 | š | esh |
| 𐌏 | o | o | 𐌐 | p | pe | 𐌑 | ś | she |
| 𐌒 | q | ku | 𐌓 | r | er | 𐌔 | s | es |
| 𐌕 | t | te | 𐌖 | u | u | 𐌗 | x | eks |
| 𐌘 | ph | phe | 𐌙 | ch | khe | 𐌚 | f | ef |
| 𐌛 | ř | ers | 𐌜 | ç | che | 𐌝 | í | ii |
| 𐌞 | ú | uu | 𐌠 | I | 1 | 𐌡 | V | 5 |
| 𐌢 | X | 10 | 𐌣 | D | 50 |
Alphabetic writing systems | Etruscans
Altitalisches Alphabet | Etruska alfabeto | Alphabet étrusque | Etruszk ábécé | 에트루리아 문자 | Этрусский алфавит | Etruskiska alfabetet
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"Old Italic alphabet".
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