The Tartessian language was a pre-Roman extinct language spoken in southern Spain. It is seemingly unrelated to all other languages, including the Indo-European or Iberian language families, and is therefore a language isolate.
The oldest known indigenous texts of Iberia are written in Tartessian and are dated from the 7th to 6th centuries BC. The inscriptions are written in a semi-syllabic writing system and were found in the general area where Tartessos is supposed to have been and surrounding areas of influence.
Tartessian language texts have been found in parts of Southwestern Spain and Southern Portugal (namely in the Conii areas of the Algarve and southern Alentejo - this variety is often referred as Southwest script).
Therefore, the discovery of the stela called "Tartessian" do not allow the formation of a certain hypothesis. Many historians have been praised for a giving a different name to these stelae: South Lusitanian. They have pointed out that the texts do not appear in the zone generally considered Tartessian (between Huelva and the valley of the Guadalquivir). On the other hand, the name "South Lusitanian" is inconvenient, as it implies a relation with the Lusitanian language. Other name proposals include Bastulo-Turdetanian, Southeastern, and Algarvan.
The Turdetani of the Roman period are generally considered the heirs of the Tartessian culture and it is possible that the word Turd-etanian is a variant of Tart-essian. Estrabón mentions that "…most sects of the Iberians and had historic writing and script in prose and verse and laws in metric form, which claim to go back 6000 years."
Nor is it known when Tartessian ceased to be spoken, but it can be supposed that like with the rest of the peninsula, Romanization took place fairly quickly after the conquest.
Paleo-Iberian languages | Language isolates | Languages of Spain | Languages of Portugal | Extinct languages of Europe
Idioma tartésico | Lingua tartésica | Tartessico | Tartessisk språk
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"Tartessian language".
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